Page:The Portrait of a Lady (1882).djvu/378

370 370 THE PORTRAIT OF A LADY. eyes ; and for a long time, far into the night, and still further, she sat in the silent drawing-room, given up to her meditation. A servant came in to attend to the fire, and she bade him bring fresh candles and then go to bed. Osmond had told her to think of what he had said ; and she did so indeed, and of many other things. The suggestion, from another, that she had a peculiar influence on Lord Warburton, had given her the start that accompanies unexpected recognition. Was it true that there was something still between them that might be a handle to make him declare himself to Pansy a susceptibility, on his part, to approval, a desire to do what would please her 1 Isabel had hitherto not asked herself the question, because she had not been forced ; but now that it was directly presented to her, she saw the answer, and the answer frightened her. Yes, there was something something on Lord Warburton's part. When he first came to Rome she believed that the link which united them had completely snapped ; but little by little she had been reminded that it still had a palpable existence. It was as thin as a hair, but there were moments when she seemed to hear it vibrate. For herself, nothing was changed; what she once thought of Lord Warburton she still thought ; it was needless that feeling should change ; on the contrary, it seemed to her a better feeling than ever. But he 1 had he still the idea that she might be more to him than other vomen 1 Had he the wish to profit by the memory of the few moments of intimacy through which they had once passed 1 Isabel knew that she had read some of the signs of such a disposition. But what were his hopes, his pretensions, and in what strange way were they mingled with his evidently very sincere appreciation of poor Pansy? Was he in love with Gilbert Osmond's wife, and if so, what comfort did he expect to derive from it 1 If he was in love with Pansy, he was not in love with her stepmother; and if he was in love with her stepmother, he was not in love with Pansy. Was she to cultivate the advantage she possessed, in order to make him commit himself to Pansy, knowing that he would do so for her sake, and not for the young girl's was this the service her husband had asked of her] This at any rate was the duty with which Isabel found herself confronted from the moment that she admitted to herself that Lord Warburton had still an uneradicated predilection for her society. It was not an agreeable task ; it was, in fact, a repulsive one. She asked herself with dismay whether Lord Warburton were pre- tending to be in love with Pansy in order to cultivate another satisfaction. Of this refinement of duplicity she presently