read it, "there you have it."
These politicians--her father among them as she gathered after his
conversation with her--were trying to put the blame of their own evil
deeds on her Frank. He was not nearly as bad as he was painted. The
report said so. She gloated over the words "an effort to divert public
attention from more guilty parties." That was just what her Frank
had been telling her in those happy, private hours when they had
been together recently in one place and another, particularly the new
rendezvous in South Sixth Street which he had established, since the
old one had to be abandoned. He had stroked her rich hair, caressed her
body, and told her it was all a prearranged political scheme to cast the
blame as much as possible on him and make it as light as possible for
Stener and the party generally. He would come out of it all right, he
said, but he cautioned her not to talk. He did not deny his long and
profitable relations with Stener. He told her exactly how it was. She
understood, or thought she did. Anyhow, her Frank was telling her, and
that was enough.
As for the two Cowperwood households, so recently and pretentiously
joined in success, now so gloomily tied in failure, the life was going
out of them. Frank Algernon was that life. He was the courage and force
of his father: the spirit and opportunity of his brothers, the hope of
his children, the estate of his wife, the dignity and significance
of the Cowperwood name. All that meant opportunity, force, emolument,
dignity, and happiness to those connected with him, he was. And his
marvelous sun was waning apparently to a black eclipse.
Since the fatal morning, for instance, when Lillian Cowperwood had
received that utterly destructive note, like a cannonball ripping
through her domestic affairs, she had been walking like one in a trance.
Each day now for weeks she had been going about her duties placidly
enough to all outward seeming, but inwardly she was running with a
troubled tide of thought. She was so utterly unhappy. Her fortieth year
had come for her at a time when life ought naturally to stand fixed and
firm on a solid base, and here she was about to be torn bodily from
the domestic soil in which she was growing and blooming, and thrown out
indifferently to wither in the blistering noonday sun of circumstance.
As for Cowperwood, Senior, his situation at his bank and elsewhere was
rapidly nearing a climax. As has been said, he had had trem
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