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@@ -1,30 +1,4 @@
- THE SIXTY-FIRST SECOND
-
-
-
-
-This ebook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this ebook or online at
-http://www.gutenberg.org/license. If you are not located in the United
-States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are
-located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: The Sixty-First Second
-Author: Owen Johnson
-Release Date: March 12, 2015 [EBook #37113]
-Reposted: May 06, 2016 [text corrections applied]
-Language: English
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SIXTY-FIRST SECOND ***
-
-
-
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 37113 ***
Produced by Al Haines.
@@ -12327,384 +12301,4 @@ That’s why a few of us get ahead," said McKenna in a matter-of-fact way,
but for a moment Gunther seemed to perceive the faintest trace of a
smile, lurking maliciously in the corners of his eyes.
-
-
-
-
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SIXTY-FIRST SECOND ***
-
-
-
-
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+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 37113 ***
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- THE SIXTY-FIRST SECOND
-
-
-
-
-This ebook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this ebook or online at
-http://www.gutenberg.org/license. If you are not located in the United
-States, you'll have to check the laws of the country where you are
-located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: The Sixty-First Second
-Author: Owen Johnson
-Release Date: March 12, 2015 [EBook #37113]
-Reposted: May 06, 2016 [text corrections applied]
-Language: English
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SIXTY-FIRST SECOND ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Al Haines.
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: "'I shall have the detectives here--a man and a
-woman--within half an hour. There is nothing to do but wait'"--Page 61]
-
-
-
-
- *THE
- SIXTY-FIRST
- SECOND*
-
-
- BY
-
- OWEN JOHNSON
-
- AUTHOR OF "STOVER AT YALE," ETC.
-
-
-
- _ILLUSTRATED BY A. B. WENZELL_
-
-
-
- NEW YORK
- FREDERICK A. STOKES COMPANY
- PUBLISHERS
-
-
-
-
- _Copyright, 1912, 1913, by_
- THE MCCLURE PUBLICATIONS, INC.
-
- _Copyright, 1913, by_
- FREDERICK A. STOKES COMPANY
-
- _All rights reserved, including that of translation into foreign
- languages, including the Scandinavian_
-
- _March, 1913_
-
-
-
-
- *ILLUSTRATIONS*
-
-
-"'I shall have the detectives here--a man and a woman--within half an
-hour. There's nothing to do but wait'" . . . . . . _Frontispiece_
-
-"In that gay party one person was a thief--but which one? ... A match
-sputtered. There was a cry of amazement and horror. The table was
-absolutely bare"
-
-"'Look here, Rita. Can't I help out some way?'"
-
-"'Come outside--in the garden. I want to speak to you. Come quietly'"
-
-"'I have not hesitated to trust in you--you must in me'"
-
-"'Aha! I made them sit up, didn't I--your cold women!'"
-
-
-
-
- *The Sixty-First Second*
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER I*
-
-
-In the year 19--, toward the end of the month of October, the country
-was on the eve of a stupendous panic. A period of swollen prosperity
-had just ended in which Titans had striven in a frenzy for the millions
-that opportunity had spilled before them.
-
-For months the stock market had steadily lowered, owing to the flight of
-the small investor, affrighted by the succession of investigations, the
-fear of readjustments, and the distrust of the great manipulators. The
-public, which understands nothing of the secret wars and hidden
-alliances of finance, had begun tremulously to be aware of the
-threatening approach of a stupendous catastrophe. So in the ominous,
-grumbling days of October, when the air was full of confusing rumors and
-violent alarms, the public, with its necessity for humanizing all
-sensations, perceived distinctly only two figures, each dramatically in
-peril, about whose safety or ruin the whole comprehensible drama of the
-financial cataclysm seemed to center.
-
-These two figures, both presidents of great trust companies, giants in
-their own sphere, represented two opposite elements of that great mass
-of society which seeks its level in Wall Street. Bernard L. Majendie,
-president of the Atlantic Trust Company, member of every exclusive club,
-patron of the arts, representative of one of the oldest American
-families, accustomed to leadership and wealth from colonial times, was
-linked in a common danger with John G. Slade, president of the
-Associated Trust Company, promoter, manipulator, owner of a chain of
-Western newspapers, a man who had hauled himself out of the lowest
-depths of society. Many believed that both, in the relentless
-readjustment which the banks were forcing on the trust companies, were
-destined to be blotted out in the general catastrophe. Many others,
-perceiving the strange oppositeness of the two individuals, speculated
-on which would survive the other, if indeed either were to persist.
-
-About three o'clock of a certain afternoon, when each extra brought a
-new alarm, John G. Slade came abruptly from the great library, down the
-sounding marble descent that was a replica of the famous rampe of the
-Chteau of Gerny, into the tapestry-hung vestibule of his palace on
-upper Fifth Avenue.
-
-He stood a moment in blank meditation, while the third man held his
-overcoat open and ready, watching anxiously the frown on the face of the
-master, who stood before him, a massive six-foot-four. Already in the
-great marble home itself was that feeling of alarm from the outer world
-which had communicated itself to the servants. Suddenly Slade,
-returning to himself, detected the furtive scrutiny of the footman and
-the butler, who had so far departed from their correctly petrified
-attitudes as to exchange wondering glances. He frowned, pointed to his
-loose black felt hat and his favorite cane, and tore so rapidly through
-the heavily ironed doors and down the steps to the waiting automobile
-that the second footman stumbled twice in his haste to be before him.
-Two or three reporters, who had been lurking behind the great marble
-bastions, sprang forward as Slade, disappearing in the motor, was
-whirled away.
-
-"Up river," he said briefly, and sank back in his seat.
-
-He was in the middle forties, a man noticeable anywhere for the
-overmastering vitality of his carriage and the defiant poise of his
-head. Nature had admirably designed him for what he was intended to
-be--a being always at war with men and surrounding circumstances. His
-face was devoid of any fine indications of sensibility, of reflection,
-or humorous perception of life. The upper and lower maxillary bones
-were in such gaunt relief they seemed rather steel girders hung to
-support a granite will. The head was square, sunk rather than placed
-upon his shoulders, and the line of the head at the back was straight
-and full of crude power. He had, at the same time, a suggestion in the
-shoulders of the obstinacy of the buffalo, the most distinctive of
-American beasts, and in the eye-pits of the fatalism of the Indian,
-which as a type often seems not so much the physical tenacity of an
-unexplained race as it does the peculiar impress of a continent and an
-atmosphere surcharged with vitality.
-
-The eyes were a clear blue, the eyes of a boy in mischief who is still
-sublimely defiant of the tripping obstacles of an ethical code. This
-quality of the boy, characteristic too of the American, was the secret
-of all his seeming inconstancy of unrelenting cruelty and sudden
-sentimental impulsiveness. Life was to him a huge dare, and all the
-perils of finance the hazards of a monstrous gamble, which alone were
-able to supply him with that overwhelming quality of sensation that such
-men covet in life.
-
-A waif at six; a wharf rat at twelve, endowed with the strength of a
-man; leader of a gang at sixteen, hated, feared, always fighting;
-gaining his first start in politics, and then, by making a lucky strike
-in the silver mines of Colorado, educating himself with primitive
-necessary knowledge, always acquiring, never relaxing what his fingers
-touched, a terrible antagonist, risking his all a dozen times in the
-hunger for a greater stake--he had emerged at last from the churning
-vortex of a brutal struggle, possessor of a fortune that fifty times had
-hung on the events of a day. For five years he had been involved in
-countless lawsuits, accused of chicanery, extortion, conspiracy, and
-even murder. At the end of which period he came forth victorious,
-without losing a single suit, surrounded, it is true, by every calumny
-that could be invented, accused of manipulating legislatures, corrupting
-judges, and removing witnesses.
-
-Through it all he had remained unshattered, boyishly delighted, his body
-unyielding to the strain of sleepless nights and months of unrelenting
-vigilance. He had lived hard, ready to gamble for a thousand or a
-hundred thousand, cynically announcing his motto:
-
-"No friends. So long as every man is my enemy, I am safe."
-
-And this theory of life he had carried out to the minutest detail. Men
-represented to him simply the male of the species, to be met head on, to
-strive with and overthrow. So completely did this obsess him that no
-one, not even his secretaries (whom he changed constantly), had the
-slightest inkling of his plans. Two of his subordinates, hoping to
-profit by their intimacy, had foolishly invested on his deliberately
-given tips--and had been ruined. Afterward he cited their cases as a
-warning to other applicants.
-
-From the start, always counting on the year ahead, he had outrun his
-income. When he had ten thousand, he was spending fifteen; at fifty
-thousand, seventy-five. Every one who came in contact with him was paid
-twice over, and robbed him in the bargain--a fact on which he counted
-and to which he was quite indifferent.
-
-Coming to Wall Street in that period of fevered speculation, he had been
-among the first to perceive the enormous instruments at hand in the
-development of a chain of trust companies which would supply a
-conveniently masked agency for the enormous capital that he needed to
-compete on equal terms with the leaders of the Street.
-
-That now, for the first time, he was confronted with a situation of
-absolute and impending ruin, brought him not the slightest depression,
-but rather that exhilaration and sudden clearness of mind which is
-characteristic of the gambler face to face with the supreme hour which
-means absolute bankruptcy or a fortune.
-
-At every block some one on the crowded sidewalk, or a group in a passing
-carriage, turned with a hasty exclamation at the sight of his bulky
-figure under the black sombrero, fleeing in the red automobile that was
-itself at this period a rarity. At one point where a blockade compelled
-him to halt, a newsboy, jumping on the sideboard, thrust a newspaper in
-his face. He flung a dime and glanced at the headlines:
-
-
- MARKET STILL GOING DOWN
-
- RUMORED SUSPENSIONS
-
-
-Then he tossed it aside and returned to his own calculations. All at
-once he roused himself and addressed the chauffeur:
-
-"Harkness, Mrs. Braddon's. Take the park."
-
-But as the automobile, turning from the river, descended by way of green
-woods, he began restlessly to repent of his choice. His hatred of men
-had made him strangely dependent on women. It was not that they were
-able to establish any empire over his senses, but that they supplied a
-curious outlet to his vanity. At times, especially as in the present,
-when he felt the necessity of assembling every resource to meet a
-crisis, it became absolutely necessary for him to find, in the tribute
-he exacted from them, that self-confidence which he needed to override
-other obstacles. Often he would take in his automobile three or four
-women of that class which is half professional, half of the world, and,
-running slowly through the pleasant country, recount stories of his
-early struggles, of how he had railroaded an enemy to prison, or caught
-an adversary in a turn of the market and broken him. And when these
-tales of unrelenting enmity made his audience shudder, he keenly
-perceived it, and enjoyed almost a physical delight.
-
-But this afternoon, as the car came to a stop before one of the great
-apartment-houses that front the park, he remained seated, unsatisfied
-and defrauded. It was not a woman of the superficial wit of Mrs. Braddon
-who could occupy and stimulate his mind in this crisis.
-
-"Drive on," he said sharply. "Turn the corner and stop at the hotel."
-
-There he descended, and entering went to the telephone.
-
-"Mrs. Kildair?" he said eagerly, a moment later.
-
-"Who is it, please?"
-
-"This is Slade--John Slade. I'm coming over."
-
-"I can't see you now," said a voice with a curious musical quality of
-self-possession. "I told you five o'clock."
-
-"What difference does half an hour make?" he said impatiently.
-
-"I have other company. You will have to be patient. At five."
-
-The connection was shut off. He rose angrily, unaccustomed to any check
-to his immediate impulses. At the steps a boy came skipping down for the
-toll he had forgotten. He paid the exact amount, contrary to his
-custom, and drove his body back into the cushioned seat.
-
-"Where to, sir?" said Harkness, turning.
-
-"Anywhere," he answered gruffly, and, thwarted in his desire, he said to
-himself furiously: "That woman always opposes me! I must teach her a
-lesson. I won't go at all."
-
-But at the end of a moment he pulled out his watch impatiently and
-calculated the time.
-
-"Home," he said suddenly.
-
-At the house, he ran rapidly through the opening doors and up the stairs
-to his bedroom, where he unlocked a little safe fixed in the wall behind
-a tapestry that hid it, and took out a tray of rings. Sorting them
-quickly, with a low, cynical chuckle, he selected a magnificent ruby,
-slipped it into his pocket, closed the safe, and passed out of the house
-with the same rapidity with which he had entered.
-
-"Mrs. Kildair's, Harkness," he said. "Drive so as to get me there at
-five-fifteen."
-
-"Now we shall see," he said to himself, with a smile, gazing at the ring
-in the palm of his hand with a man's contemptuous contemplation of the
-stone which could hold such fascination over a woman's soul. For him it
-was absolutely necessary, as a first step toward his conquest of all his
-enemies, to feel his power over this one present resistance.
-
-The idea that had come into his head restored his good humor and aroused
-in him a certain joy of energy. He had forgot momentarily his errand,
-absorbed in his own battle for existence.
-
-"Today is Thursday," he said, with renewed energy. "Next Wednesday will
-be the crisis. I must find out what Majendie is going to do.
-Snelling's the man to know--or Garraboy."
-
-The car stopped. He sprang out and, without giving his name, entered
-the elevator. At the apartment a Japanese servant took his things and
-ushered him into the low-lit greens of the studio, which ran the height
-of the two floors that formed the duplex apartment.
-
-Mrs. Rita Kildair was stretched on a low Rcamier sofa, watching him
-with amused eyes as he entered with that atmosphere of strife and fury
-that seemed always to play about him. She waited until he had come to
-her side before she raised her hand to his, in a gesture that had no
-animation, saying:
-
-"How do you do?"
-
-Something in the tranquil, amused self-possession of her pose made him
-stupidly repeat the question. Then, forgetting his resolve to show no
-impatience, he said impetuously:
-
-"Why did you keep me waiting?"
-
-"Because I did not wish to see your highness then."
-
-"Not dressed?"
-
-"No, I was simply amusing myself with a very nice boy."
-
-"Who?"
-
-She smiled, and, without heed to his question, motioned him to a chair
-with a little gesture, not of her arm, but of her fingers, on which she
-wore several rings of unusual luster. She had, as a woman, that same
-magnetic self-consciousness that distinguishes the great actress, aware
-that every eye is focused on her and that the slightest change of her
-hand or shift of her head has an instantaneous importance.
-
-Slade obeyed her with a sudden sense of warm content.
-
-"Smoke?" he said, taking out a cigar. "Permission?"
-
-He helped himself to a match, sunk himself in the great chair, crossed
-his legs, and looked at her.
-
-Rita Kildair gave that complex appearance of a woman much younger than
-she seemed, or of a woman much older. She was at that mental phase in
-her life when she exhaled to the fullest that perfume of mystery which
-is the most feminine and irresistible of all the powers that a woman
-exerts over the masculine imagination, if indeed it is not the sum of
-all seductions. The inexplicable in her own life and individuality was
-heightened in every way by the subservience of outward things, whether
-by calculation or by an instinctive sense of interpretation.
-
-The great studio, to the neglect of the electric chandelier, was lit by
-half a dozen candles, which flung about conflicting eddies of wavering
-lights and shadows. In farther corners were a divan, a piano, a
-portrait on an easel, lounges, waiting like so many shadows to be called
-forth. A standing lamp, not too near, bathed the couch on which she lay
-with a softened luster. Her tea-gown of liberty silk, with tones that
-changed and mingled with each other, was of the purple of the grape, an
-effect produced, too, by the superimposition of one filmy garment on the
-other. A slippered foot and ankle came forth from the fragrant disorder
-of the skirt, either by studied arrangement or by the impulse of a woman
-who is confident of all her poses. Her nose, quite the most individual
-feature, was aquiline, yet not such as is associated with a masculine
-character. Rather, it was vitally sensitive, and gave, in conjunction
-with the intent and instantaneous aspect of her grayish eyes, the
-instinctive, almost savage appetite for possession and sensation that is
-characteristic of her sex. No one looked at her without asking himself a
-question. Those who believed her under thirty wondered at the
-experiences that must have crowded in upon her. Those who believed her
-nearer forty still marveled at her mastery over youth. Those of an
-analytical mind left her always with a feeling of speculation framed in
-two questions--whence had she come and where would she end?
-
-It was this latter speculation more than any other that absorbed Slade,
-irresistibly intrigued by the elusiveness of a fascination which he
-could not analyze. She endured his fixed glance without annoyance,
-absorbed, too, in the thoughts which his entrance had brought her.
-Finally, adapting her manner to his, she said with his own abruptness:
-
-"Well, what do you want to say to me?"
-
-"I'm wondering what you are after in this life, pretty lady?" he said
-directly.
-
-"What do you want?"
-
-"Power."
-
-"Not to be bored."
-
-They smiled by common consent.
-
-"And now we know no more than we did before," he said.
-
-She stretched out her slender hand against the purple folds of her gown,
-and her eyes lingered on the jewels that she held caressingly before
-them--a look that did not escape the man.
-
-"By thunder, you're the strangest thing I've run into," he said,
-shifting his legs.
-
-"On each of the eight times we have been alone," she said, smiling, "you
-have made precisely that same discovery. Did you forget?"
-
-"I'd like to know something about you," he said.
-
-"How old I am--about my husband--what I am doing here--am I rich--what's
-my past--and so on. Consider all these questions asked and refused--for
-the ninth time. And now, what--why did you come here?"
-
-He put aside his cigar impatiently, propelled himself to his feet, and
-came forward until his knee touched the couch. She looked up,
-pleasantly aware of so much brute strength held in leash above her.
-
-"Sit down."
-
-And, as he remained standing, she took a little electric button attached
-to a coil that was on the couch, and pressed it. In the hall outside a
-buzz was heard, and then the soft, sliding step of Kiki.
-
-"Tea?" she said, turning to him with an amused look, the little button
-pressed against her thin, sharp row of teeth, that were clear and tiny
-as a child's.
-
-"No, of course not," he said furiously.
-
-"No tea, Kiki," she said, in that same round, musical tone from which
-she seldom varied. She held the button in her long fingers, caressing
-her cheek with it, and, looking at him with half-closed eyes, repeated:
-
-"Sit down."
-
-Though the forward movement of Slade had been unconscious and quite
-devoid of any personal object, he was angrily aware that she had availed
-herself of his action to introduce a tantalizing defiance which awakened
-all the savage in him, as he realized the helplessness of his crude
-strength before the raillery that shone from her eyes.
-
-He drew his chair closer to her, sat down on its edge, one knee forward,
-his chin in his hand half concealing his face, looking at her with the
-shrewd cruelty of a prosecuting attorney.
-
-"What's your game?" he said.
-
-"The game itself," she answered, with a little animation in her eyes and
-a scarcely perceptible, gradual turning of her whole body toward him.
-
-"What's your game?" he repeated.
-
-She looked at him a moment as she might have looked at a child, and
-then, imitating the gesture with which he had sunk his chin in his palm,
-said:
-
-"What a convenient formula! And is that the way you always begin?"
-
-"Perhaps."
-
-"Do you know," she continued, "it is extraordinary how simple you big
-men--you trust kings--are. You have the vision of an eagle on one side,
-and the groping glance of a baby when you deal with us. Sometimes I
-think that it's all instinct, that all you understand is to throw down
-what resists you--that you haven't great minds at all, and that that is
-all that interests you in business and in us. That is why a big man will
-always end up by meeting some little woman who will lead him around by
-the nose. Any little fool of a woman who knows enough never to cease
-resisting you can do it."
-
-"Do you like me?" he said brutally.
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Much?"
-
-"Quite a good deal."
-
-"Are you planning to marry me?"
-
-She smiled her languid, amused smile without shifting her glance from
-his.
-
-"Why don't you come to the point?" she said.
-
-"What do you mean?"
-
-"I don't have to ask your game; I know it."
-
-"What do you know?"
-
-"Shall I tell you why you came here at a moment when you are at bay,
-attacked everywhere?"
-
-"Why?"
-
-"To find out what I know about Majendie."
-
-"Do you know anything?"
-
-"He is coming here tonight," she said.
-
-"No, that is not it," he said scornfully, rising and again approaching
-her. "You know better. You exhilarate me--you wake me up; and I need
-to be stimulated. So you've got it back in your little brain to marry
-me," he said, looking down with amused contemplation at the reclining
-figure, that was not so much human as a perfumed bed of flowers; "that
-is, if I pull through and keep my head above water."
-
-He hesitated a moment, and then said:
-
-"Why did you keep me waiting? Just to annoy me?"
-
-"I wonder," she said, looking up from under her eyelashes at his
-towering figure. "Perhaps it was to teach you some things are
-difficult."
-
-"That's it, eh?"
-
-"Perhaps--and I'm afraid I shall irritate you many more times."
-
-He took a step nearer and said abruptly:
-
-"Look out! I don't play fair."
-
-"Neither do I," she said.
-
-She took the button up again, frowning in a nonchalant way, and held it
-a moment while she waited for his decision. He shrugged his shoulders
-and stood back, taking several steps toward the center of the room.
-
-"Listen, John G. Slade," she said, her tone changing from the felinely
-feminine to the matter-of-fact, "don't let's continue as children. You
-are no match for me at this game. I warn you. Come. Be direct. Will
-you have me as an ally?"
-
-He turned and looked at her, considering.
-
-"In what way?"
-
-"Is it of importance to you to know the probable fate of Majendie and
-the Atlantic Trust?"
-
-"Yes--in a way."
-
-"I may have means of learning just that information tonight."
-
-"What do you want in return?"
-
-"Full confidence. I want two questions answered."
-
-"What?"
-
-She had raised herself to a sitting position out of the languor which
-was not the indolence of the Oriental, but rather the volcanic
-slumbering of the Slav, always ready to break forth into sudden
-tremendous exertion.
-
-"Can the Associated Trust meet its Wednesday obligations without
-assistance?"
-
-"And second?" he said, amazed at the detailed knowledge that her
-question implied.
-
-"Second, if it can't, will the Clearing-house help it through?"
-
-"What difference to you would it make to know?"
-
-"It would."
-
-"How long have you known Bernard Majendie?" he said slowly.
-
-She accepted the question as a rebuff.
-
-"There are my terms," she said, sinking back on the couch. "You don't
-wish an ally, then?"
-
-"No."
-
-"You don't trust me?"
-
-"No."
-
-"I knew you wouldn't," she said indolently; "and yet, I could help you
-more than you think."
-
-"I trusted a man once," he said scornfully. "I have never made that
-mistake with a woman."
-
-"As you wish."
-
-"Are you trying a flyer?" he said, smiling. "That's the game, is it--a
-tip?"
-
-"I have told you," she said coldly and in a tone that carried
-conviction, "that what interests me is to win the game itself, the
-excitement and the perils. And I have been behind the scenes many
-times."
-
-"I believe it," he said abruptly. "I should like to hear--"
-
-"I am a woman who keeps the secrets of others and her own," she
-answered, interrupting his question.
-
-"And if you marry?" he said curiously.
-
-"Even then." She dismissed the return to the personal with the first
-quick movement of her hand and continued: "I should say, you are the
-best hated man in Wall Street."
-
-"That's not exactly inside information."
-
-"No one is going to come to your help out of friendship."
-
-"True."
-
-"If Majendie and the Atlantic Trust Company fail, nothing in this world
-can pull you through," she said, seeking in some uncontrolled movement
-of his an answer to the statement that was in reality a question.
-
-From the moment she had begun to question him, he experienced a sudden
-change. He was no longer dealing with a woman, but with an element he
-had outguessed a hundred times.
-
-All at once an odd idea came to him which struck him as stupendously
-ridiculous, and yet made him glower in covert admiration at the woman
-who watched him while seemingly engaged with the rearrangement of her
-draperies.
-
-"Is it possible, after all," he thought, "that that ambitious little
-head is playing with both Majendie and me, and that she is setting her
-cap for the survivor?"
-
-He came back, reseated himself, and said, with an appearance of candor
-which would have deceived most people:
-
-"You say Majendie is coming here tonight?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Do you know where he is this afternoon?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"And the object of his visit?"
-
-"The object is easy to guess," she said indifferently. "You know
-perfectly well that he is in conference with Fontaine, Marx, and
-Gunther, and what you wish to know is whether they are going to stand
-aside and let him sink. Are you ready to answer my two questions?"
-
-"And when will you know if he has failed or succeeded?"
-
-"Tonight."
-
-"He will tell you?"
-
-"I shall know tonight," she said, with an evasive smile.
-
-"What's your private opinion?"
-
-"They will come to his assistance," she said carefully.
-
-"Because they are his personal friends," he said, with an accent of
-raillery.
-
-"Naturally."
-
-"You believe Majendie will pull through?"
-
-"I do." She looked at him a moment, and asked the question, not so much
-to receive an answer as to judge from his manner: "Can the Associated
-Trust meet its obligations on Wednesday without assistance?"
-
-"I can," he said quietly, and to himself he added: "There--if Majendie
-has set her to pump me, little good that'll do him."
-
-"But if the Atlantic Trust Company shuts its doors," she persisted, "you
-are caught?"
-
-"That is the general opinion."
-
-"Will you fail?"
-
-"No."
-
-She was quiet a moment, dissatisfied, looked away from him and then
-said:
-
-"So you don't care to know what I shall learn to-night?"
-
-"My dear lady, I won't tell you a thing," he said, with a laugh, "so
-stop trying. Leave us to fight our own battles. Plot all you want in
-your cunning head your little feminine plans, but don't get beyond your
-depth."
-
-"I see you believe I'm interested in Majendie," she said, with a shrug
-of her shoulders. "You are not very well informed."
-
-"No," he said bluntly; "you are interested in no one but Rita Kildair.
-I know that much." He rose, took several strides back and forth, and,
-returning, stood by her. "I hate allies," he said; "I prefer to
-consider you as a woman."
-
-His remark brought a sharp gleam of curiosity to her eyes, a spark of
-instinctive sex antagonism that flashed and disappeared.
-
-"Remember, I have warned you," she said, retiring as abruptly into the
-feline languor of her pose.
-
-He stood, swayed by two emotions, the purely gentle, almost caressing
-effect her indolence brought him, and the desire to establish some
-sudden empire over her--to feel his strength above hers.
-
-"What's the weak point in your armor?" he said savagely.
-
-"I wouldn't tell you."
-
-"I think I know one."
-
-"Really?"
-
-He drew his chair still closer, and, leaning over, touched with his
-stubby forefinger the rings on her outstretched hand.
-
-"Jewels?" she said, smiling.
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Any woman is the same."
-
-"Why?"
-
-"I don't know--it is so," she said, and, raising the deep lusters, she
-allowed her glance to rest on them as in a dream of opium.
-
-He drew from his pocket the ring with the ruby, and held it out.
-
-"Try this on."
-
-She took it between her finger-tips slowly, looking at him with a glance
-that was a puzzled frown, and slipped it on her finger. Then she
-extended her hand gradually to the full length of her white arm against
-the purple, and half closed her eyes. There was no outward sign; only a
-deep breath went through her, as though an immense change had taken
-place in the inner woman.
-
-"Now I know what I want to know," he said, watching her closely with
-almost an animal joy in this sudden revelation of an appetite in her.
-
-"It's a wonderful stone," she said in a whisper; then she drew it off
-slowly, as though the flesh rebelled, and held it out to him, turning
-away her eyes.
-
-"Keep it."
-
-She raised her eyes and looked at him steadily.
-
-"You are cleverer than I thought," she said.
-
-"Keep it."
-
-"Is this for information about Majendie?" she said slowly.
-
-"Not for that."
-
-"For what, then?" she said steadily.
-
-"For a whim."
-
-"Thanks; I don't trust your whims."
-
-For all reply, he took her hand and again placed the ring on it.
-
-"Wear it," he said.
-
-She turned the stone quickly inside her palm as though unable to endure
-its lure, and looked at him profoundly.
-
-"_Are_ you going to pull through?" she said angrily.
-
-"Will it make a difference?" he asked, rising, with a quick glance at
-his watch.
-
-She rose in her turn, facing him with a sudden energy.
-
-"Do you know the one great mistake you have made?"
-
-"What?"
-
-"You have condemned yourself to success."
-
-"What do you mean by that?" he said.
-
-"You must always succeed, and that is terrible! At the first defeat
-every one will be up in arms against you--because every one wants to see
-you ruined."
-
-"Every one?" he said, looking in her eyes.
-
-A second time she took off the ring and gave it to him, and as he
-protested she said coldly:
-
-"Don't make me angry. The comedy has been amusing. Enough. Also,
-don't trouble yourself about my motives. I haven't the slightest
-intention of marrying you or any one else."
-
-And she accompanied the words with a gesture so imperative that, amazed
-at the change, he no longer insisted. As he put out his hand, she said
-suddenly, as if obeying an intuition:
-
-"I will tell you what you want to know. Gunther is almost sure to come
-to Majendie's aid. I know it by a woman. Take care of yourself."
-
-"And I will tell you exactly the opposite," he said, bluffing. "Gunther
-will not lend a cent; Majendie will go under, and I'll pull through."
-
-"You'll pull through even if the Atlantic Trust closes?"
-
-"Exactly."
-
-"Good-by," she said, with a shrug.
-
-"Remember what I said," he repeated, and went out.
-
-Five minutes later the bell rang, and Kiki brought her a little box and
-an envelope. She recognized Slade's writing, and read:
-
-
-DEAR LADY,
-
-Apologies for my rudeness. If you won't accept a gift, at least wear
-the ring for a week. I should like to know what effect it could have on
-your cold little soul. Oblige my curiosity. It's only a little
-reparation for the disappointment I gave you. J.G.S.
-
-
-"Decidedly, he is cleverer than I thought," she said musingly. In the
-box was the great ruby ring. She took it up, examined it carefully, made
-a motion as though to replace it in the box, and then suddenly slipped
-it on her finger.
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER II*
-
-
-Mrs. Kildair knew pretty nearly every one in that indescribable society
-in New York which is drawn from all levels, without classification, and
-imposes but one condition for membership--to be amusing. Her home, in
-fact, supplied that need of all limited and contending superimposed
-sets, a central meeting-ground where one entered under the protection of
-a flag of truce and departed without obligation. She knew every one,
-and no one knew her. No one knew beyond the vaguest rumors her history
-or her resources. No one had ever met a Mr. Kildair. There was always
-about her a certain defensive reserve the moment the limit of
-acquaintanceship had been touched. Mrs. Enos Bloodgood, who saw her
-most and gave her the fullest confidence, knew no more than that she had
-arrived from Paris five years before, with letters of introduction from
-the best quarters. Her invitations were eagerly sought by leaders of
-fashionable society, prima donnas, artists, visiting European
-aristocrats, and men of the moment. Her dinners were spontaneous, and
-the discussions, though gay and usually daring, were invariably under
-the control of wit and good taste.
-
-As soon as Slade's present had been received she passed into the
-dining-room to assure herself that everything was in readiness for the
-informal chafing-dish supper to which she had invited some of her most
-congenial friends, all of whom, as much as could be said of any one,
-were habitus of the studio. Then, entering her Louis Quinze bedroom,
-which exhaled a pleasant stirring atmosphere of perfume, she slipped off
-her filmy purple tea-gown and chose an evening robe of absolute black,
-of warm velvet, unrelieved by any color, but which gave to her shoulders
-and arms that softness and brilliancy which no color can impart.
-
-Several times she halted, and, seating herself at her dressing-table,
-fell into a fascinated contemplation of the great ruby that trembled
-luminously on her finger like a bubble of scarlet blood. When, in the
-act of deftly ordering the masses of her dark ruddy hair, her white
-fingers lost themselves among the tresses, she stopped more than once,
-entranced at the brilliancy of the stone against the white flesh and the
-sudden depths of her hair.
-
-She rose and began to move about the room; but her hand from time to
-time continued its coquetries above her forehead, as though the ring had
-suddenly added to her feminine treasury a new instinctive gesture.
-
-At half-past seven, having finished dressing, she opened the doors which
-made a thoroughfare between the studio and the small dining-room, and
-passed into the larger room, where, at one end, Kiki had brought forth
-three Sheraton tables, joined them, and set them with crystal and
-silver.
-
-"Put in order my bedroom," she said, with an approving nod, "and then
-you can go."
-
-She moved about the studio, studying the arrangements of the furniture,
-seeing always from the tail of her eye the scarlet spot on her finger.
-
-"I wonder what it's worth," she said softly. "Ten, fifteen thousand at
-the least." She held the ring from her, gazed at it dreamily. "I
-wonder what woman's eye has looked upon you, you wonderful gem," she
-whispered; and, as though transported with the vision of the past, she
-drew it slowly toward her and pressed her lips against it.
-
-At this moment a buzz sounded from the hall, and she recovered herself
-hastily and, a little ashamed, said with a feeling of alarm as she went
-to the door:
-
-"Slade is entirely too clever; I must send it back tomorrow morning."
-
-Before she could reach the door it had opened, and there entered, with
-the informality of assured acquaintance, a young man of twenty-five or
--six, smiling, boyish, delighted at having stolen a march on the other
-guests.
-
-"You are early," said Mrs. Kildair, smiling with instinctive reflection
-of the roguish enjoyment that shone on his handsome, confident face.
-
-"Heavens, haven't I been beating the pavements for fourteen minutes by
-the watch!" he said, laughing. "Regular kid trick." He took her hand,
-carrying it to his lips. "The way they do in France, you know."
-
-"You're a nice boy, Teddy," she said, patting his hand. "Now, hang up
-your coat, and help me with the candles."
-
-She watched him as he slipped his overcoat from the trim wide shoulders,
-revealing all at once the clean-cut, well-tailored figure, full of
-elasticity and youth. Teddy Beecher always gave her a sense of
-well-being and pleasant content, with his harum-scarum ways and inviting
-impudence. As he roused no intellectual resistance in her, she was all
-the more sensitive to the purely physical charm in him, which she
-appreciated as she might appreciate the finely strung body and
-well-modulated limbs of a Perseus by Benvenuto Cellini.
-
-"Will I help you? Command me," he said, coming in eagerly. "Don't you
-know, there's a little silver collar about my neck, and the inscription
-is, 'This dog belongs to Rita Kildair.' Jove, Rita, but you're stunning
-tonight!"
-
-He stood stock-still in frank amazement. He had known her but a short
-while, and yet he called her by her first name--a liberty seldom
-accorded; but the charm he unconsciously exerted over women, and which
-impatiently mystified other men, was in the very audacity of his
-enjoyment of life, which imparted to women the precious sense of their
-own youth.
-
-"Really?" she said, raising her hand to her hair, that he might notice
-the glorious ruby.
-
-"Look here--I've only got a miserable thirty thousand a year, but I've
-got a couple of uncles with liver trouble and a bum heart. Say the
-word--I'm yours."
-
-While he said it with a mock-heroic air, there was in his eyes a flash
-of excited admiration that she understood and was well pleased with.
-
-"Come, Teddy," she said, a little disappointed that he did not perceive
-the ring. "To work. Take this taper."
-
-He took the wax, contriving to touch her fingers with feigned
-artlessness.
-
-"I say, Rita, who's the mob here tonight? Do I know any one? I get the
-place next to you, of course?"
-
-"Begin over there," she directed. "The Enos Bloodgoods are coming;
-you've met her here."
-
-"I thought they were separated, or something."
-
-"Not yet."
-
-"By George, Rita, there's no one like you--serving us up a couple on the
-verge."
-
-"That is not all--I like situations," she said, with her slow smile.
-
-"I like Elise; but as for the old boy, he can slip on a banana peel and
-break his neck, for all I care.
-
-"Then there's a broker, Garraboy, Elise's brother."
-
-"Don't know him."
-
-"Maud Lille, who's written clever books--a journalist."
-
-"Don't know her--hate clever women."
-
-"Nan Charters--"
-
-"Who?" said Beecher, with upraised wick.
-
-"Nan Charters, who played in 'Monsieur Beaucaire.'"
-
-"Bully!"
-
-She smiled at his impetuousness, and continued:
-
-"Mr. Majendie and the Stanley Cheevers."
-
-"Oh, I say--not those--"
-
-"Well?" she said as he stopped.
-
-"You know the gambling story," he said reluctantly.
-
-"Club gossip."
-
-"Of course," he said, correcting himself. "One of my friends was
-present. The Cheevers play a good game, a well-united game, and have an
-unusual system of makes. They are very successful--let it go at that.
-You don't mean to say that Majendie'll be here?"
-
-"I expect him."
-
-"He was a friend of the dad's--a corker, too. I don't know much about
-those things, but isn't he supposed to be up against it?"
-
-Three knocks in close succession sounded on the outer door, and Garraboy
-entered with an air of familiarity that was displeasing to the younger
-man. The two saluted impertinently, with polite antagonism, detesting
-each other from the first look.
-
-"Go on with the candles, Teddy," said Mrs. Kildair, signaling to the
-newcomer, a young man of forty who seemed to have been born bald,
-wrinkled, and heavy-eyed. The long, bald head on the thin, straight
-little body, and the elongated white collar, gave him somewhat the look
-of an interrogation-mark. He was heavily perfumed.
-
-"What's the news of the market?" she asked.
-
-"Another odd turn--went up a couple of points," he said, looking at her
-hand. Unlike Beecher, he had instantly noted the new acquisition with a
-malicious smile. His thumb gave a little jerk and he added softly:
-"Something new?"
-
-"Yes. Why should the market go up?" she said, seeming to be intent only
-on the effect of the bracketed candles, that now licked the tapestried
-walls with their restless tongues.
-
-"There's a general belief that a group of the big fellows will stand
-behind the trust companies in return for certain concessions. I say,"
-he continued, watching the ruby ring, which instinctively she tried to
-conceal from him, "I hope Elise isn't going to make a fool of herself
-about Majendie."
-
-"Teddy, Teddy, you've forgotten the two over the plaque!" she said
-aloud--and, a little lower: "She won't; don't fear."
-
-"I know her better," he said, without, however, betraying the slightest
-brotherly agitation. "She is apt to do something crazy if anything went
-wrong with Majendie. Bloodgood's a hard-skinned old brute, but if there
-was anything public he'd cut up ugly."
-
-"I hear he's in the market."
-
-"Yes--on the short side, too--in deep."
-
-"And you?"
-
-He shrugged his shoulders.
-
-"I thought we never told secrets, Mrs. Kildair. Who else is coming? Am
-I representing the element of respectability again tonight?"
-
-"The what?" She looked at him steadily until he turned away nervously,
-with the unease of an animal. "Don't be an ass with me, my dear
-Garraboy."
-
-"By George," he said irritably, "if this were Europe I'd wager you were
-in the Secret Service, Mrs. Kildair."
-
-"Thank you," she said, smiling appreciatively, and returned toward young
-Beecher, who was waiting by the piano with ill-concealed resentment.
-
-The Stanley Cheevers entered--a short, chubby man with a bleached,
-vacant face tufted with mustache and imperial, devoid of eyebrows, with
-watery eyes that moved slowly with the motion of his gourd-like head;
-Mrs. Cheever, voluble, nervous, over-dressed, young with the youth of a
-child and pretty with the prettiness of a doll.
-
-Beecher, who knew them, bowed with a sense of curiosity to Mrs. Cheever,
-who held him a little with a certain trick she had of opening wide her
-dark, Oriental eyes; and dropped, with a sense of physical discomfort,
-the hand that Cheever flabbily pressed into his.
-
-"Decidedly, I am going to have a grand little time by myself," he said
-moodily. "Where the deuce does Rita pick up this bunch?"
-
-The Enos Bloodgoods were still agitated as they entered. His lips had
-not quite banished the scowl, nor her eyes the scorn.
-
-"Permit me, my dear," he said, taking off her wrap, and the words struck
-those who heard them with a sudden chill.
-
-He was of the unrelenting type that never loses its temper, but causes
-others to lose theirs, immovable in his opinions, with a prowling walk,
-a studied antagonism in his manner, while in his bulgy eyes was an
-impudent stare which fastened itself like a leech on the person
-addressed, to draw out his weakness.
-
-Elise Bloodgood, who seemed tied to her husband by an invisible leash,
-had a hunted, resisting quality back of a certain desperate dash which
-she assumed, rather than felt, in her attitude toward society--just as
-she touched with red, cheeks that were meant to be simply the background
-of eyes that were extraordinary, with a lurking sense of tragedy.
-
-"Rita, dear, I am almost frantic tonight," she said hastily, in one of
-those intimate moments of which women avail themselves in the midst of
-their enemies.
-
-"The last rumors are good," said Mrs. Kildair, bending over her
-ostensibly to arrange her scarf.
-
-"Who told you?"
-
-"Your brother. Every one downtown believes the panic is stopped. The
-market has gone up. Gunther and Snelling are Bernard's personal
-friends."
-
-"Friends?" she said bitterly. "Yes, that's just the trouble."
-
-"Besides, he is coming tonight--you knew?"
-
-"Yes, I knew," said Mrs. Bloodgood, with a glance at her husband, who,
-at the other side of the studio, seemed intent only on examining a
-reliquary in carved stone.
-
-"Then he will tell you himself," said Mrs. Kildair, rearranging a little
-ornament that made a splash of gold on the black hair of her companion.
-"Be careful---don't talk too much now."
-
-"What do I care?" she said rebelliously. "It has got to end sometime."
-
-She passed her husband, her dark shoulder flinching unconsciously at his
-near presence, and gave her hand to Stanley Cheever and young Beecher,
-who, though utterly unconscious of the entanglements of the evening, was
-struck by the moody sadness in her eyes that so strangely contradicted
-the laugh that was on her lips. But as he was wondering, a little
-constrained, how best to open the conversation, the door opened once
-more and two women entered--Nan Charters, who arrived like a little
-white cloud, vibrantly alert and pleased at the stir her arrival
-occasioned, and Maud Lille, who appeared behind her as a shadow, very
-straight, very dark, Indian in her gliding movements, with masses of
-somber hair held in a little too loosely for neatness.
-
-"Oh, dear, am I dreadfully late?" said Nan Charters, who swept into the
-studio the better to display her opera-cloak, a gorgeous combination of
-white and gold Japanese embroideries, which, mounting above her throat
-in conjunction with a scarf of mingling pinks, revealed only the tip of
-her vivacious nose and sparkling eyes.
-
-"You are strangely early," said Mrs. Kildair, who presented Beecher with
-a gesture which at the same time directed him to attend to the wraps.
-
-"Thank you," said Miss Charters, with a quick smile, and by an
-imperceptible motion she allowed the cloak to slip from her shoulders
-and glide into the waiting hands, revealing herself in a white satin
-shot with pigeon red, which caused the eyes of all the women present to
-focus suddenly. Garraboy, Cheever, and Bloodgood, who knew her, came up
-eagerly.
-
-Teddy Beecher, his arms crowded with the elusive garment, which gave him
-almost the feeling of a human body, bore it to the hall and arranged it
-with care, pleasantly aware of the perfume it exhaled. He returned
-eagerly, conscious of the instantaneous impression her smile had made on
-him as she turned to thank him, a look that had challenged and aroused
-him. She was still chatting gaily, surrounded by the three men, and he
-was forced to occupy himself with Mrs. Bloodgood. His eyes, however,
-remained on the young girl, who was listening with unaffected pleasure
-to the compliments of her male audience. Something in the chivalry of
-the younger man revolted at the spectacle of the sophisticated Garraboy
-and the worldly appetites in the eyes of Cheever and Bloodgood. He felt
-almost an uneasy sense of her peril, which was in effect an instinctive
-emotion of jealousy, and, profiting by the moment in which Mrs.
-Bloodgood turned to Miss Lille, he slipped to Miss Charters' side and
-contrived to isolate her.
-
-The studio was now filled with chatter. Mrs. Kildair passed from group
-to group, animating it with a word or two. With the exception of Teddy
-Beecher and Nan Charters, in the several groups there was but one
-question--the events of the day in the financial world and the probable
-outcome of the secret conference at Gunther's.
-
-Every one watched the clock, awaiting the last arrival with an
-impatience that was too truly founded on the safety of their personal
-fortunes to be concealed.
-
-"The conference ended at six-thirty," said Maud Lille to Bloodgood and
-Cheever; "Majendie left for his house immediately after. I had it from
-the city editor on the telephone."
-
-"Was any statement given out?" said Cheever, who put one finger to his
-lip, as he did when a little nervous.
-
-"None."
-
-"If he goes under, it means the bottom out of the market," said Cheever,
-fixing his owlish stare on Bloodgood's smug face.
-
-"Are you long?" asked Bloodgood, turning on him with curiosity.
-
-"A thousand shares," answered Cheever, but in a tone that carried no
-conviction.
-
-"He won't come," said Maud Lille obstinately.
-
-"If he does," said Cheever slowly, "he's pulled through and the market
-ought to go up." And a second time his finger jerked up to his lips,
-with the gesture of the stutterer.
-
-"He won't come," repeated Maud Lille.
-
-Bloodgood gave her a short look, trying to fathom the reason of her
-belief, a question he did not care to put before Cheever.
-
-At this moment Majendie appeared at the entrance of the studio. The
-conversation, which had been mounting in nervous staccatos, fell with
-the hollowness that one sometimes feels in the air before the first
-crash of a storm. By an uncontrollable impulse, each turned, eager to
-read in the first indication some clue to his personal fate.
-
-The last arrival had opened the outer door unheard, and, profiting by
-the commotion, had removed his overcoat and hat in the anteroom.
-
-When the rest of the party perceived him, Majendie was standing erect
-and smiling under the Turkish lamp that, hanging from the balcony, cast
-a mellow light on his genial, aristocratic forehead. In every detail,
-from the ruddy, delicately veined cheeks and white mustache to the
-slight, finely shaped figure at ease in the evening coat that fitted him
-as a woman's ball gown, he radiated the patrician, but the patrician of
-urbanity, tact, and generous impulses.
-
-"My dear hostess," he said at once, bending over Mrs. Kildair's hand
-with a little extra formality, "a thousand excuses for keeping you and
-your guests waiting. But just at present there are quite a number of
-persons who seem to be determined to keep me from my engagements. Am I
-forgiven?"
-
-"Yes," she answered, with a sudden feeling of admiration for the air of
-absolute good humor with which he pronounced these words, mystifying
-though they were to her sense of divination.
-
-"I think I know every one," he said, glancing around without a trace of
-emotion at Bloodgood and Cheever, whose presence could not have failed
-to be distasteful. "You are very good to be so lenient, and I will
-accept whatever penance you impose. Are we going to have one of those
-delightful chafing-dish suppers that only you know how to provide?"
-
-"What pride!" she murmured to herself, as he passed over to Miss
-Charters with a compliment that made her and Beecher break out laughing.
-
-Up to the moment, the group had found not the slightest indication of
-the probable outcome of the afternoon's conference. If anything, there
-was in his carriage a quiet exhilaration. But the moment was
-approaching when he must come face to face with Mrs. Bloodgood, who,
-either in order to gain time for the self-control that seemed almost
-beyond her, or that she might draw him into more immediate converse, had
-withdrawn so as to be the last he should greet. Majendie perceived
-instantly the imprudence of the maneuver, and by a word addressed to
-Mrs. Kildair, who followed at his side, contrived to bring himself to
-the farther side of the group, of which little Mrs. Cheever and Garraboy
-were the other two.
-
-"I make my excuses to the ladies first," he said, with a nod to
-Garraboy, whom he thus was enabled to pass. He offered his hand to Mrs.
-Bloodgood, saying: "Grant me absolution, and I promise to do everything
-I can to make you as gay as I feel now."
-
-Elise Bloodgood took his hand, glancing into his face with a startled
-glance, and immediately withdrew, murmuring something inaudible.
-
-Mrs. Kildair, who with everyone had been listening to his words for the
-double meaning that seemed to be conveyed, stepped in front of Mrs.
-Bloodgood to cover her too evident agitation.
-
-"Elise," she said sharply, pressing her hand, "get hold of yourself.
-You must! Everything is all right. Didn't you understand him?"
-
-"Ah, if he were going to die tomorrow he would never tell me," said Mrs.
-Bloodgood, pressing her handkerchief against her lips. "Nothing will
-ever break through his pride."
-
-"But he told you in so many words," said Mrs. Kildair--who, however,
-didn't believe what she said.
-
-"He told me nothing--nothing!"
-
-"You must control yourself," said Mrs. Kildair, alarmed at her emotion.
-
-"What do I care?"
-
-"But you must! Listen. When I go into the dining-room don't follow me.
-I will contrive to take your husband with me. Profit by the chance.
-Besides, you are in no state to judge. Does Bernard look like a man who
-has just been told he is ruined? Come, a little courage."
-
-She left her and, stepping into her bedroom, donned a Watteau-like
-cooking-apron, and, slipping her rings from her fingers, fixed the three
-on her pin-cushion with a hatpin. From the mirror in which she surveyed
-herself she could see the interior of the studio--Nan Charters' laughing
-face above the piano, where she was running off a succession of topical
-songs, surrounded by a chorus of men, while Beecher, at her side,
-solicitously turned the pages.
-
-"Teddy seems quite taken," she thought. But the tensity of the drama
-drove from her all other considerations. Completely mystified by
-Majendie's manner, she was studying the moment when she could throw him
-together with Elise Bloodgood, convinced that from the woman she would
-learn what the man concealed.
-
-"Your rings are beautiful, dear, beautiful," said the deep voice of Maud
-Lille, who, with Garraboy and Mrs. Cheever, was in the room.
-
-"I never saw the ruby before," said Mrs. Cheever in a nervous voice.
-"My dear, you are the most mysterious woman in the world. Think of
-having a ring like that, and never wearing it!"
-
-"It is a wonderful stone," said Mrs. Kildair, touching with her thin
-fingers the ring that lay uppermost.
-
-"It is beautiful--very beautiful," said the journalist, her eyes
-fastened on it with an uncontrollable fascination.
-
-Mrs. Cheever, her lips parted, her black eyes wide with eagerness,
-leaned over. She put out her fingers and let them rest caressingly on
-the ruby, withdrawing them as though the contact had burned them, while
-on either cheek little spots of red excitement showed.
-
-"It must be very valuable," she said, her breath catching slightly.
-
-Garraboy, moving forward, suddenly looked at the ring.
-
-"Yes, it is valuable--very much so," said Mrs. Kildair, glancing down.
-Then she went to the door that led into the studio, and clapped her
-hands:
-
-"Attention, everybody! Beecher and Garraboy are the chefs. Each one
-must choose his scullery-maid. Mr. Majendie is to make the punch.
-Everyone else is butler and waitress. Mrs. Cheever, did you ever peel
-onions?"
-
-"Good heavens, no!" said Mrs. Cheever, delicately recoiling.
-
-"Well, there are no onions to peel," said Mrs. Kildair, laughing. "All
-you have to do is to carry dishes or make the toast--on to the kitchen!"
-
-"Miss Charters, you are engaged at any salary you may name," said
-Beecher, forestalling Garraboy, who was coming forward.
-
-"But I shall drop every dish," said Nan Charters, rising from the piano.
-"I don't know anything about cooking."
-
-"Splendid! Then you'll make no mistakes."
-
-He installed her at one end of the table, and went off for the
-chafing-dish. When he returned, gingerly balancing it on a silver
-platter, Garraboy, profiting by his absence, was seated beside Nan
-Charters, speaking in a purposely low voice. She was listening,
-perfectly composed, looking straight before her with a tolerant,
-uninterested smile.
-
-If women often can conceal their true natures from women, men seldom
-deceive one another. There was a fixity in Garraboy's glance which
-Beecher understood and hotly resented. But at the moment when, setting
-the tray on the table, he was meditating some ill-advised remark, Mrs.
-Cheever, passing by, said with ill-concealed impatience in her thin,
-hurried voice:
-
-"Mr. Garraboy, I am sorry for you, but I have been assigned as your
-assistant, and I should like to know what I am to do."
-
-Garraboy rose immediately, bowed with perfect suavity, and rejoined Mrs.
-Cheever, who said to him something that the others did not hear, but at
-which they saw him shrug his shoulders.
-
-"Well, what are we going to make?" said Nan Charters, with the enjoyment
-that this exhibition of feminine jealousy had brought still in her eyes.
-
-"I don't like Garraboy," said Beecher directly.
-
-"Why not?" she said, smiling a little, and raising her eyebrows as
-though interrogating a child.
-
-"Because I like you," he answered abruptly.
-
-Accustomed to contend with men, she was surprised by the genuineness of
-his remark, which was inspired by a sentiment deeper than jealousy. She
-looked at him again with that sudden second estimate which is vital.
-
-"He is not difficult to handle," she said carelessly, unaware of the
-touch of intimacy which her reply permitted.
-
-"I don't like him," he said obstinately, "and I don't like his
-crowd--the crowd that is here to-night. They're like a pack of wolves.
-What the deuce does Rita see in them?"
-
-"Mrs. Kildair has generally, I should say, a very good reason for whom
-she invites," she said carelessly.
-
-"But these Cheevers--they're impossible. How the deuce do they live?"
-
-"I thought Mr. Majendie very charming."
-
-"Oh, Majendie--yes, I except him," he said enthusiastically. "He's a
-gentleman."
-
-"That counts a good deal with you?" she said, with a touch of raillery.
-
-"It does. I think a gentleman is almost the rarest thing you meet with
-today," he said, holding his ground, "a gentleman in the heart. I know
-only four or five."
-
-"Yes, you are right," she said, changing her tone. She looked at him a
-third time, at the honest, boyish loyalty so plainly written on his
-face, and said: "You haven't gone out much here?"
-
-"No; I'm just back from knocking around the world, hunting in Africa and
-all that sort of uselessness."
-
-"Come and tell me about it sometime.
-
-"May I?"
-
-She laughed at his impetuousness, and pointed to the contents of the
-chafing-dish, which had been simmering neglected; but more than once
-during the operation her glance returned to the eager, earnest face.
-
-Meanwhile, Garraboy, at the other end of the table, assisted by Mrs.
-Cheever and Maud Lille, was busy with a lobster la Newburg. Mrs.
-Kildair, having finished in the kitchen, had entered the dining-room,
-where she established a sort of provisional serving-table. She called
-to her side Cheever and Bloodgood, and, under the pretext of arranging
-the dishes from the china-closet, kept them isolated. At this moment
-Elise Bloodgood approached Majendie, who, at the rear end of the studio,
-was occupied with the brewing of a punch. Natural as was the movement,
-it was instantly perceived by the four or five persons vitally
-interested. A moment afterward Mrs. Bloodgood passed into the bedroom;
-but there was in her carriage a triumph that she did not care to
-conceal.
-
-"He's won out," thought Bloodgood.
-
-"The shorts will be caught," thought Cheever. "The devil! I must
-cover."
-
-"Has he lied to her?" said Mrs. Kildair to herself. "If everything is
-all right, why should he conceal it from any one?"
-
-She went across the room, stopping at the punch-table.
-
-"Have you everything you need?" she asked.
-
-"Everything, thank you," Majendie answered gently; but there was in his
-voice a tired note, as if some effort had suddenly exhausted him.
-
-"I understood what you meant," she said, looking at him not without a
-little pity--an emotion which was rare with her. "Let me congratulate
-you on the result of this afternoon."
-
-"Thank you very much for your congratulations," he said quietly, taking
-her hand. "If you knew, you will understand why I was kept so late."
-
-As he bowed, the front of his jacket opening a little, she saw or
-fancied she saw in the inner pocket a strip of green, slightly
-protruding. She left him, still unconvinced, and turned to the company.
-
-"Everything ready, Teddy? All right. Every one sit down. Mrs. Cheever
-and Mrs. Bloodgood are appointed butlers--because real work will do them
-good. Sit down, sit down. I'll be back in a minute."
-
-As she turned to her bedroom, there came a strong ring, twice repeated.
-She paused, astonished.
-
-"Who can that be?" she thought, frowning, and directing her steps toward
-the antechamber. "No one is allowed to come up. It must be a
-telegram."
-
-She opened the door, and Slade entered.
-
-"I came right up," he said directly, "because I had no success on the
-telephone. You rather excited my curiosity this afternoon. Please
-invite me to your party."
-
-The first moment of irritation was succeeded, on her part, by the
-feeling of elation. The impulse that had brought Slade so unexpectedly
-there was a feeling of jealousy, in which Beecher and Majendie were
-confusedly mixed.
-
-"He wishes to watch me with his own eyes," she said triumphantly. "Very
-well; he shall be well punished."
-
-Slade's arrival produced a moment of profound astonishment. Bloodgood
-and Maud Lille exchanged quick glances, believing the meeting between
-Majendie and Slade had been premeditated. Garraboy plucked Cheever
-nervously by the sleeve, while Majendie, as if realizing that he was
-dealing with an antagonist of a different caliber, rose with a little
-nervous inflation of the chest. Rapid as had been the interim in the
-antechamber, Mrs. Kildair had had time to say:
-
-"Majendie is here. Do you know what happened this afternoon?"
-
-"I do," said Slade, with malicious enjoyment, and he added: "Do you?"
-
-"Yes," she replied, convinced, likewise, of the falsity of his
-statement. Then aloud she added: "Ladies and gentlemen, Mr. Slade, an
-impromptu guest."
-
-She passed with him about the table, introducing him where it was
-necessary. Slade and Majendie did not offer hands; each bowed with a
-quiet, measured politeness. On the contrary, when Beecher was reached,
-the older man grasped the hand of the younger, and held it a moment with
-a grip that, despite Beecher's own strength, made him wince.
-
-"Teddy, be a good boy and place Mr. Slade somewhere," she said, resting
-her hand purposely on the young man's shoulder. "I'll take off my apron
-and be back immediately."
-
-She stopped near Majendie, who had returned to the punch-table for an
-extra glass, and, seeing that her movements were followed by Slade,
-said:
-
-"Bernard, believe me, I did not plan it. I had no idea he was coming."
-
-"It makes not the slightest difference," he said instantly. "Mr. Slade
-and I have no quarrel. Please don't worry about me."
-
-"You're an awfully good sort," she said abruptly.
-
-"That is high praise from you," he said, with a little critical smile
-which showed he was not entirely the dupe of her maneuvers.
-
-She went into her bedroom, and, divesting herself of her apron, hung it
-in the closet. Then, going to her dressing-table, she drew the hatpin
-from the pin-cushion and carelessly slipped the rings on her fingers.
-All at once she frowned and looked quickly at her hand. Only two rings
-were there. The third one--the ring with the ruby--was gone!
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER III*
-
-
-Her first emotion was of irritation.
-
-"How stupid!" she said to herself, and, returning to her dressing-table,
-began to search among the silver and ivory boxes. All at once she
-stopped. She remembered with a vivid flash putting the pin through the
-three rings.
-
-She made no further search, but remained without moving, her fingers
-slowly tapping the table, her head inclined, her lips drawn in a little
-between her teeth, watching in the glass the crowded table reflected
-from the outer studio.
-
-In that gay party, one person was the thief--but which one? Each guest
-had had a dozen opportunities in the course of the time she had been in
-the kitchen.
-
-"Too much prinking, pretty lady," called out Garraboy, who, from where
-he was seated, could see her.
-
-"Not he," she said quickly. Then she reconsidered: "Why not? He's
-shifty--who knows? Let me think."
-
-To gain time, she went slowly back to the kitchen, her head bowed, her
-thumb between her teeth.
-
-"Who has taken it?"
-
-She ran over the characters of her guests and their situations as she
-knew them. Strangely enough, with the exception of Beecher and
-Majendie, at each her mind stopped upon some reason that might explain a
-sudden temptation.
-
-"And even Majendie--if he is bankrupt or running away," she thought.
-"No, I shall find out nothing this way. That is not the important thing
-just now. The important thing is to get the ring back. But how?"
-
-All at once she realized the full disaster of the situation. Slade
-would never believe her; and yet, how was it possible to admit before
-others who had lent her the ring?
-
-"What could I say to him?" she thought desperately. "No, no; I must have
-the ring back, whatever happens. I won't give him that hold. I must
-get it back--some way--somehow."
-
-And mechanically, deliberately, she continued to pace back and forth,
-her clenched hand beating the deliberate, rhythmic measure of her
-journey.
-
-In the studio, meanwhile, under the gay leadership of Majendie and Nan
-Charters, the spirits of the company began to rise. The rival chefs
-were surrounded by anxious admirers, who shouted laughing instructions
-or protested with mock agony against the shower of red pepper.
-
-The ceremony had served to bring Beecher and Nan Charters on terms of
-sympathetic familiarity. The young actress had the secret of what is
-meant by that much abused word--charm. Her vivacious movements were all
-charming. The eagerness with which her eyes seized the excitement of
-the moment, the soft and yet animated tones of her voice, the most
-casual gesture she made, or the most evident reply, all seemed invested
-with a peculiar charm which was at the same time a delight in pleasure
-and a happiness in the consciousness of pleasing.
-
-Beecher did not or could not conceal the empire she had so suddenly
-acquired over his imagination, while Nan Charters, quite aware of what
-was happening, laughingly provoked him further, a little excited beyond
-the emotions of an ordinary flirtation.
-
-During the progress of this personal duel, which, however, every one
-perceived with different emotions, Slade, placed at the middle of the
-table, followed only the expressions of Bernard Majendie, his scrutiny
-at times becoming so insistently profound that the banker several times
-noticed it with a swift glance of annoyed interrogation, which, however,
-did not alter in the least the fixity of the other's gaze.
-
-Meanwhile, two or three conversations, expressed in snatched phrases,
-took place between those whose interests in the stock market were put in
-jeopardy by the mystery as to Majendie's fate.
-
-"There'll be a rush of the shorts to cover tomorrow, if this is true,"
-said Cheever in a low whisper to his wife. "Pump Mrs. Bloodgood all you
-can."
-
-"How quick do you suppose they'll give the news out?" said Bloodgood to
-Garraboy. "It means a buying movement as soon as they do."
-
-"Any paper may have the news tomorrow," said the broker, and the glass
-that he took from the punch-table shook as he raised it.
-
-"Do you think Slade knows?"
-
-"I'm not sure--but I think he does," said Garraboy carefully. "Better
-meet me at the Waldorf at eleven. I'll get another line on it by then."
-
-"Why the deuce should he pull through?" said Bloodgood, with a quick,
-dull fury.
-
-Garraboy, with his malicious smile, perceiving that Bloodgood's hatred
-was purely financial, chuckled to himself, took a couple of glasses in
-rapid succession, and returned to the table under perfect control, not
-without a scowl at the other end of the table, where Nan Charters and
-young Beecher were laughingly disputing the possession of the
-pepper-shaker.
-
-A moment later, as Mrs. Cheever was exclaiming at their hostess'
-prolonged delay to Garraboy, who was dipping into the lobster la
-Newburg, which he was preparing to serve, Mrs. Kildair slipped into the
-room like a lengthening shadow. Her entrance had been made with
-scarcely a perceptible sound, and yet each guest was aware of it, at the
-same moment, with the same uncontrollable nervous start.
-
-"Heavens, dear lady," exclaimed Garraboy, with a twitch of his arms.
-"You come in on us like a Greek tragedy. What is the surprise?"
-
-As he spoke, Beecher, looking up, saw her turn suddenly on him, drawing
-her forehead together until the eyebrows ran in a straight line.
-
-"I have something to say to you all," she said in a quiet, discordant
-voice, while her eyes ran restlessly through the company with a
-predatory sharpness.
-
-There was no mistaking the gravity in her voice. Garraboy extinguished
-the oil-lamp, covering the chafing-dish clumsily with a disagreeable
-tinny sound; Mrs. Cheever and Mrs. Bloodgood swung about abruptly; Maud
-Lille rose a little from her seat; Nan Charters, dramatically sensitive,
-seized unconsciously the arm of young Beecher; while the men, with the
-exception of Slade, who still watched Majendie like a terrier, imitated
-their movements of expectancy with a clumsy shuffling of the feet.
-
-"Mr. Bloodgood."
-
-"Yes, Mrs. Kildair?"
-
-"Kindly do as I ask."
-
-"Certainly."
-
-She had spoken his name with a peremptory positiveness that was almost
-an accusation. He rose, placing his napkin carefully at the side of his
-plate, raising his short eyebrows a little in surprise.
-
-"Go to the vestibule," she continued, immediately shifting her glance
-from him to the others. "Are you there? Shut the sliding doors that
-lead into the studio. Lock them. Bring me the key."
-
-He executed the order without bungling, while the company, in growing
-amazement, fascinated, watched his squat figure returning with the key.
-
-"You've locked it?" she said, making the question an excuse to bury her
-glance in his.
-
-"As you wished me to."
-
-"Thanks."
-
-She took from him the key, and, shifting slightly, likewise locked the
-door into her bedroom through which she had come.
-
-Then, transferring the keys to her left hand, seemingly unaware of
-Bloodgood, who still composedly awaited her further instructions, her
-eyes studied a moment the possibilities of the apartment and then
-returned to her guests.
-
-"Mr. Cheever," she said abruptly.
-
-"Yes, Mrs. Kildair."
-
-"Put out all the candles except the candelabrum on the table."
-
-"Put out the lights?" he said, rising, with his peculiar nervous
-movement of the fingers to the lips.
-
-"At once."
-
-Mr. Cheever, in rising, met the glance of his wife, and the look of
-questioning and wonder that passed did not escape the others.
-
-"But, my dear Mrs. Kildair," cried Nan Charters, with a little nervous
-catch of her breath, "what is it? I'm getting terribly worked up."
-
-"Miss Lille," said Mrs. Kildair's undeviating voice of command, while
-Beecher placed his hand firmly over his companion's, which had begun to
-open and shut in nervous tension.
-
-The journalist, more composed than the rest, had watched the proceedings
-from that shadowy calm which had made her presence almost unnoticed.
-Now, as though forewarned by professional instinct that something
-sensational was hanging on the moment, she rose quietly with almost a
-stealthy motion.
-
-"Put the candelabrum on this table--here," said Mrs. Kildair, after a
-long moment's confrontation. She indicated the large round table on
-which the punch-bowl was set. "No, wait. Mr. Bloodgood, first clear
-off the table, cover and all; I want nothing on it."
-
-As Bloodgood started to remove the punch-bowl, Majendie rose quickly and
-took the heavy candelabrum from the hands of Maud Lille, saying:
-
-"Permit me; that's rather heavy for you."
-
-"But, Mrs. Kildair--" began Mrs. Cheever's voice, in shrill crescendo.
-
-Mrs. Kildair, as though satisfied by her examination of the journalist,
-nodded to Majendie, and, perceiving the mahogany table clear, said
-without notice of Mrs. Cheever:
-
-"Good! Now put the candelabrum down on it."
-
-In a moment, as Cheever proceeded lumberingly on his errand, the
-brilliant cross-fire of lights dropped away in the studio, only a few
-smoldering wicks winking on the walls, while the high ceiling seemed to
-recede as it came under the sole dominion of the three candles bracketed
-in silver at the head of the bare mahogany table.
-
-"Now listen!" said Mrs. Kildair, and her voice was cold and abrupt. "My
-ring has just been stolen!"
-
-She said it suddenly, hurling the news at them, and waiting ferret-like
-for some indication in the chorus that broke out.
-
-The hand that Beecher still grasped shot out from him as though it had
-been stung. For the first time, Slade, forgetting Majendie, wheeled
-brusquely and concentrated his glance on Mrs. Kildair, who listened
-unmoved to the storm of exclamations:
-
-"Stolen!"
-
-"Oh, my dear Mrs. Kildair, not that!"
-
-"Stolen--by Jove!"
-
-"Rita dear!"
-
-"What! Stolen--here--tonight?"
-
-"The ring has been taken in the last twenty minutes," continued Mrs.
-Kildair, in the same determined, chiseled accents. "I am not going to
-mince words. The ring has been taken, and one of you here is the thief.
-This is exactly the situation."
-
-For a moment nothing was heard but an indescribable gasp, while each,
-turning by an uncontrollable impulse, searched the face of his
-neighbors. Suddenly Slade's deep bass broke out:
-
-"Stolen, Mrs. Kildair?"
-
-"Stolen," she replied quietly, meeting his inquisitorial glance.
-
-"Have you searched very carefully?" said Majendie. "Mistakes are easily
-made. It may have slipped to the floor. Are you certain that it has
-been taken?"
-
-"Exactly. There is not the slightest doubt," said Mrs. Kildair,
-conscious of the almost admiring suspicion in Slade's glance. "Three of
-you were in my bedroom when I took off my rings, placed a hatpin through
-them, and fastened them to the pin-cushion. Am I correct, Mr. Garraboy?"
-she added abruptly.
-
-"Perfectly so," said the broker, staring ahead with a sudden
-consciousness of his dilemma. He added punctiliously; "I was there."
-
-"With the exception of Mr. Slade, each of you has passed through my
-bedroom a dozen times. The ring is gone, and one of you has taken it."
-
-Mrs. Cheever gave a little scream and reached heavily for a glass of
-water. Mrs. Bloodgood said something inarticulate, covering her heart
-with her hand in the muffled outburst of masculine exclamation:
-
-"The devil you say!"
-
-"Incredible!"
-
-"I saw it."
-
-"By Jove! A nasty mess."
-
-Only Maud Lille's calm voice could be heard saying:
-
-"Quite true. I was in the room when you took them off. The ruby was on
-top."
-
-Mrs. Cheever sought to add her testimony, but was incapable of speech.
-In her agitation she spilled half of the glass of water as she put it
-down from her lips.
-
-"Was the ring valuable?" said Slade carefully, with a quiet enjoyment.
-
-Their eyes met a moment--a look incomprehensible to the others.
-
-"It was worth over fifteen thousand dollars," Mrs. Kildair answered, in
-the buzz of astonishment.
-
-"And what are you going to do about it?"
-
-"I have not minced words," she said, turning her eyes to Maud Lille and
-back to Garraboy. "There is a thief, and that thief is here in this
-room. Now, I am not going to stand on ceremony. I am going to have
-that ring back in one way or another--now. Listen to me carefully. I
-intend to have that ring back, and, until I do, not a soul shall leave
-this room."
-
-"A search?" said Slade quietly.
-
-"No," she said instantly, tapping on the table with her nervous
-knuckles. "I don't care to know the thief--all I want is the ring. And
-this is the way I am going to get it." She stopped for another quick,
-searching glance, and continued with cold control:
-
-"I am going to make it possible for whoever took it to restore it to me
-without possibility of detection. The doors are locked and will stay
-locked. I am going to put out the lights, and I am going to count one
-hundred--slowly. You will be in absolute darkness; no one will know or
-see what is done, and I give my word that I will count the full hundred.
-There will be no surprise, no turning up of lights. But if, at the end
-of that time, the ring is not placed here on this table, I shall
-telephone for detectives and have every one in this room searched. Am I
-clear?"
-
-The transfer of the candelabrum to the further table had left those of
-the diners who had remained by the dinner-table in half obscurity.
-Instantly there was a shifting and a dragging of chairs, a confused
-jumble of questions and explanations.
-
-Nan Charters for the second time seized the arm of Teddy Beecher. She
-murmured something which he did not hear. He glanced at her face, and
-for a moment an incredible suspicion crossed his mind. But the next, as
-he glanced down the table at the totally unnerved attitude of Mrs.
-Cheever and Mrs. Bloodgood, he understood better the agitation of his
-companion.
-
-"Do you suspect any one?" he whispered, by an impulse that seemed to
-spring into his mind.
-
-The young actress turned to him with almost an expression of terror in
-her eyes, which at the same time implored him to be silent.
-
-"She knows something," he thought, with a somber feeling. His own face
-was flushed. He felt that to all he must appear guilty. "Every one
-feels the same," he thought, looking again at his companion, who was
-gazing with almost frightened intensity straight ahead of her.
-
-He followed her glance, and saw that the object of her gaze was none
-other than Mrs. Enos Bloodgood, who still held her hand pressed over her
-breast, her lips parted as though suffocating with emotion. But, before
-he had time even to consider the bearing of this discovery, Mrs.
-Kildair's voice, firm and unrelenting, cut short the confusion.
-
-"Every one come to this table, please. Take your places here," she
-said, and to emphasize the command she rapped sharply for order.
-
-In the bustle that took place, Beecher was separated from Miss Charters,
-and when he found himself at the table she was opposite him, her eyes on
-the table.
-
-"Can you make a little room?" he heard Maud Lille's low voice say, and,
-drawing away from Cheever, who was on his right, he allowed the
-journalist to take her place beside him.
-
-Majendie was on the left of Mrs. Kildair, Slade next to him, sweeping
-the table slowly with his direct, lowering glance, his lips slightly
-pursed. Bloodgood, his hands sunk in his pockets, stared bullishly
-ahead, while between Cheever and his wife there passed a covert,
-terrible glance of interrogation. Garraboy, with his hands locked over
-his chin, arms folded, looked straight ahead staring fixedly at his
-hostess.
-
-Mrs. Kildair, having assured herself that all was arranged as she
-desired, blew out two of the three candles, which suddenly caused the
-eyes on the dim faces to stand out in startled relief.
-
-"I shall count one hundred--no more, no less," she said quietly.
-"Either the ring is returned or every one in this room is to be
-searched. Remember."
-
-She motioned to Slade, who, leaning over, blew out the remaining candle,
-while a little hysterical cry was heard from Mrs. Cheever.
-
-The wick shone a moment with a hot, glowing spire, and then everything
-was black. Mrs. Kildair began to count.
-
-"One--two--three--four--five--six--seven--eight--nine--ten--"
-
-She gave each number with the inexorable regularity of a clock's
-reiterated note.
-
-"Eleven--twelve--thirteen--fourteen-- fifteen--sixteen--seventeen--"
-
-In the room every sound was distinct--the rustle of a shifting dress,
-the grinding of a shoe, the deep, slightly asthmatic breathing of a man.
-
-"Twenty-one--twenty-two--twenty-three--
-twenty-four--twenty-five--twenty-six--"
-
-The counting went on, without the slightest variation, with a methodic,
-rasping reiteration that began to produce almost an hypnotic effect on
-the imaginations held in suspense.
-
-"Thirty--thirty-one--thirty-two--thirty-three--"
-
-A slight rasping breath was heard, and then a man nervously clearing his
-throat.
-
-"Thirty-nine--forty--forty-one--forty-two--"
-
-Still nothing had happened. No other sound had broken in on the
-strained attention of every ear. Yet the voice that counted did not vary
-in the slightest measure; only the sound became less human, more
-metallic.
-
-"Forty-seven--forty-eight--forty-nine-- fifty--fifty-one--fifty-two--"
-
-A woman had sighed--Mrs. Bloodgood next to him--the sigh of a woman
-yielding up consciousness to pain.
-
-"Fifty-four--fifty-five--fifty-six--fifty-seven
---fifty-eight--fifty-nine--sixty--sixty-one--"
-
-All at once, clear, ringing, unmistakable, on the sounding plane of the
-table was heard a quick metallic note that echoed and rechoed in the
-empty blackness.
-
-"The ring!"
-
-It was Maud Lille's deep voice that had cried out. Beecher suddenly
-against his shoulder felt the weight of Mrs. Bloodgood's swaying body.
-The voice that counted hesitated a moment, but only a moment.
-
-"Sixty-two--sixty-three--"
-
-Several voices began to protest:
-
-"No, no!"
-
-"Light the candles!"
-
-"It's too much!"
-
-"Don't go on!"
-
-"Seventy-five--seventy-six--seventy-seven--
-seventy-eight--seventy-nine--"
-
-The sound dominated the protest. Some one began to laugh, an
-hysterical, feverish laughter that chilled Beecher to the bones. He put
-out his hand and steadied the body of the woman next to him.
-
-"Eighty-five--eighty-six--"
-
-"Hurry, oh, hurry--please hurry!" cried the voice of Nan Charters, and
-some one else cried:
-
-"Enough--this is terrible!"
-
-"Ninety-five--ninety-six--ninety-seven-- ninety-eight--ninety-nine, and
-one hundred."
-
-At once a match sputtered in the hands of Slade. There was a cry from
-every one, and the table shivered with the weight of those who craned
-forward. Then a second cry of amazement and horror. The table was
-absolutely bare. The ring a second time had been taken.
-
-[Illustration: "In that gay party one person was a thief--but which one?
-... A match sputtered. There was a cry of amazement and horror. The
-table was absolutely bare"]
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER IV*
-
-
-For a full, strained moment not a sound escaped the company; even the
-strongest natures, Slade, Majendie and Rita Kildair seemed powerless to
-grasp what had taken place. Then the realization came, in a flash.
-What the first thief had failed to carry through another had boldly
-dared: a man or a woman, deliberately or hysterically, had seized the
-opportunity that had lain there, in the darkness, between the
-sixty-first second and the hundredth count.
-
-The match in Slade's hands burned his fingers, and went out. In the
-sudden blackness a dozen cries were heard:
-
-"Light the candle!"
-
-"Turn on the electric light!"
-
-"Search the floor!"
-
-"Stolen again!"
-
-"Ghastly!"
-
-"A light! A light!"
-
-Another match sputtered, and one candle caught the flame and flung its
-expanding circles of light around them.
-
-"It must have rolled to the floor," said Majendie's voice, among the
-first.
-
-"Nonsense!" broke in Slade's powerful bass. "There are no carpets; we
-would have heard it. There is a second thief here. Every one must be
-searched. Mrs. Kildair, if you wish I'll call up my detective agency."
-
-"No," said Mrs. Kildair instantly, and her voice had regained its calm.
-"I will attend to that myself."
-
-She went quickly to the door into the bedroom, unlocked it, passed
-through, and locked it again. A moment later the impatient ring of a
-telephone was heard.
-
-In the ill-lit studio the greatest confusion prevailed. Every one
-seemed, by a common impulse, to desire to escape to the farthest ends of
-the room, stumbling and bumping against one another in the obscurity.
-Some instinct impelled Beecher to Nan Charters' side. He took her arm
-with a strong, reassuring grip, expecting to find her still shaken with
-emotion; but, to his amazement, he found her entirely collected.
-
-"Thank you, I am all right," she said, releasing herself, with a little
-smile.
-
-"Are you sure?" he said doubtfully.
-
-At this moment, as he stood staring at her, perplexed, Slade's voice
-rang out peremptorily:
-
-"The electric lights--some one turn on the lights!"
-
-He left her, and, going to the wall toward the antechamber, pressed the
-three buttons embedded there. Instantly the great room was showered with
-a brutal glare. Near the piano, Mrs. Cheever was sunk in an arm-chair,
-in a seemingly hysterical state, while Mr. Cheever, glass in hand, was
-bending over her; Mrs. Bloodgood was seated at the dining-table, her
-head resting in her hands; Garraboy and Bloodgood were turning in the
-middle of the floor. Only Maud Lille, stoic and alert, remained at her
-original place. Slade and Majendie were carefully exploring the floor.
-
-Beecher did not at once return to his companion. Her sudden change
-perplexed him with thoughts that he did not wish to analyze too deeply.
-He expected that she would rejoin Mrs. Bloodgood; but the young actress,
-as though purposely avoiding her, went finally to where Maud Lille was
-standing, and said, with a command that startled Beecher:
-
-"Mr. Majendie, there is always a chance that the ring may have rolled
-off the table and been caught in somebody's dress. Such things have
-happened again and again. I suggest that every woman make a careful
-search."
-
-"Miss Charters is quite right," said Majendie, who, advancing to the
-middle of the studio, repeated the suggestion. "The situation is
-frightful; we must take every precaution to avoid the chances of an
-accident."
-
-The four women immediately began to examine the ruffles and draperies of
-their skirts--without success.
-
-All at once the door at the back of the room opened, and Mrs. Kildair
-reappeared.
-
-"I shall have the detectives here--a man and a woman--within half an
-hour," she said. "There is nothing to do but wait."
-
-She seated herself in a chair near the door, her hands stretched out
-over the arms, her head lowered. Every one sat down, with the exception
-of Maud Lille, who, however, shifted a little so as to have the support
-of the piano. No one spoke; the situation had passed beyond comment.
-
-On the dining-table the little alcohol-lamp under a chafing-dish burnt
-itself out unnoticed. At the end of thirty-five minutes, during which
-every one had been intent on the torturous progress of the clock, a
-sudden buzz was heard.
-
-Mrs. Kildair rose and, passing out by way of the bedroom, was heard
-talking behind the closed doors that led into the hall, a sound followed
-by the indistinguishable jumble of voices.
-
-A nervous five minutes, and she reappeared, with the same
-incomprehensible calm that had marked her during the period in the dark.
-
-"The women will go into the bedroom," she said, without variation of her
-voice. "The men will be searched in the dining-room."
-
-"One moment," said Slade, taking a step in advance.
-
-Mrs. Kildair turned with a start, the first agitation noticeable.
-
-"It is absolutely necessary for me to keep an appointment at ten
-o'clock," he said, glancing at the clock, which stood at the last
-quarter. "As I was not here when the ring was first stolen, I ask the
-privilege of being examined the first."
-
-At this there was a murmur, and Mrs. Kildair hesitated.
-
-Slade, giving a disdainful shoulder to the protest, strode deliberately
-to Mrs. Kildair and spoke with her in a low voice. At the end of a
-moment Mrs. Kildair nodded as though convinced, and, going to the
-folding doors, unlocked them. Outside a man in a dark business suit, as
-grimly correct as an undertaker, was waiting with folded arms.
-
-Slade bowed and passed into the hall, shutting the doors behind him,
-while Mrs. Kildair came back slowly, evidently running over in her mind
-the order of selection.
-
-"Mrs. Bloodgood," she said finally, "will you go first?"
-
-Mrs. Bloodgood, surprised at the formal appellation, rose hastily, and
-started blindly for the vestibule through which Slade had passed.
-
-"In my bedroom, please," said Mrs. Kildair.
-
-The young woman checked herself, faltering a little, and entered the
-bedroom, where, for a moment, could be seen the drab figure of another
-woman, ornamented by a little toque with a red feather.
-
-"Mrs. Kildair," said Majendie, rising, "it is equally important for me
-to leave as soon as possible. While I know that I ask a favor, possibly
-all of you know that my affairs are at a vital stage, and I should
-appreciate it very much if there were no objection to my being examined
-the next."
-
-He turned, with a courteous bow, as he concluded.
-
-"I am perfectly willing," said Beecher at once.
-
-"I am not," said Bloodgood, while Cheever made a gesture of dissent.
-
-"Nor I," said Garraboy. "I have my own appointment, that means a great
-deal to me. I regret that I cannot accede to Mr. Majendie's request."
-
-"These gentlemen are quite within their rights," said Majendie,
-accepting the refusal with the same courtesy. He thanked Beecher with a
-smile, and added: "If you are willing, Mrs. Kildair, shall we draw lots
-for it?"
-
-"Quite so," said Mrs. Kildair, and she arranged four slips in her
-fingers and tendered them.
-
-Majendie drew the longest, and was, therefore, forced to wait until
-Garraboy, Bloodgood, and Cheever had passed ahead. He glanced at the
-clock with a sudden, uneasy look, and returned to his chair: but, for
-the first time, a frown appeared on his face, while his fingers tore
-into bits the slip of paper, which he did not notice he had retained.
-
-Beecher was unpleasantly aware that Garraboy was watching him, and this
-scrutiny, which might have been inspired by a personal jealousy, struck
-him as a deliberate suspicion. He returned the look with a belligerent
-intensity, conscious in his own mind that he had already formed a
-prejudice as to the identity of the second thief.
-
-"A woman might have taken the ring on impulse," he thought uneasily,
-"but only a man could have had the cold daring to take it the second
-time."
-
-He eliminated Majendie by an instinctive rejection; Slade appeared an
-equally impossible solution.
-
-"It's Cheever, Bloodgood, or Garraboy," he thought. "And Cheever hasn't
-the nerve--I don't believe it. It's Bloodgood or Garraboy--and Garraboy
-is the most likely."
-
-Suddenly a hot, panicky feeling came to him. What if the real
-thief--Garraboy, for instance--had slipped the ring into his own pocket?
-He unlocked his hands and hurriedly searched his clothes. Then annoyed
-at seeing this childish action come under the notice of the broker, he
-shifted in his seat and glanced toward Nan Charters. To his surprise,
-he found again the same indications of nervousness in the concentration
-of her eye on the door leading into the bedroom.
-
-At this moment Mrs. Bloodgood emerged, and Mrs. Cheever went in. At
-once the nervous tension of his companion seemed to relax, and she sank
-back in her seat, with an indifferent glance around the room.
-
-"Decidedly, there is something queer between the two," he thought,
-mystified.
-
-In the studio the same stony silence was maintained. Through the open
-doors that led to the antechamber Slade reappeared, hesitated a moment
-as if to reenter the studio, then bowed and went out. Behind him the
-detective was seen waiting. Garraboy rose and immediately passed into
-the back.
-
-Mrs. Bloodgood had taken her seat apart, staring ahead as though by a
-difficult process of mental control, for at times her glance, despite
-the consciousness of her husband's espionage, flashed over to where
-Majendie was impatiently following the movements of the clock.
-
-When Garraboy's search had ended, he followed the precedent of Slade,
-bowed without speaking, and departed; while Bloodgood, guarding the same
-silence, passed into the dining-room. Maud Lille succeeded Mrs.
-Cheever, who returned in the same state of agitation that she had shown
-from the beginning. She started to approach her husband, when Mrs.
-Kildair's controlled voice was heard:
-
-"Not there, please, Mrs. Cheever. Kindly sit at this side of the room
-with Mrs. Bloodgood."
-
-Mrs. Cheever flushed instantly, and sank, or rather collapsed, in the
-chair which had been indicated.
-
-All at once there came another ring, followed by two or three impatient
-taps on the outer door. There was a sudden stir in the room, where all
-nerves were clearly on the edge, and Mrs. Cheever gave a little scream.
-
-"I'll answer," said Cheever, rising.
-
-"Wait," said Mrs. Kildair. She started toward the door, and then,
-changing her mind, as if unwilling to relax her surveillance of events
-in the studio, stopped. "Mr. Beecher, please," she said thoughtfully.
-"See who it is." And she moved slightly toward the half-drawn
-portires, to hear and at the same time to be concealed.
-
-Garraboy was outside, a coat on his arm.
-
-"Excuse me," he said, without emotion. "I took the wrong coat. Stupid
-of me. Just found it out."
-
-"It looks like mine," said Beecher, examining it.
-
-"Probably is," said Garraboy, who extracted another coat of similar
-appearance from the rack, plunged into his pockets and nodded. "Sure
-enough. Sorry. Good night."
-
-So thoroughly disagreeable an impression had the broker produced upon
-Beecher that, in a moment of suspicion, moved by an incredible thought,
-he ran his hands hastily through the pockets.
-
-"I shouldn't have been surprised," he grumbled to himself, and returned
-to the studio, where the conversation had been overheard.
-
-The search continued, ended, and, as all expected, no trace of the ring
-was found.
-
-Mrs. Kildair excused herself, evidently maintaining her calm with
-difficulty. The guests, murmuring inarticulate phrases, took their
-wraps, and young Beecher found himself shortly in a coup beside Nan
-Charters.
-
-For several moments neither spoke, each absorbed in his own
-speculations. Beecher studied the figure at his side with covert
-glances, amazed at the transformation from the childlike charm which had
-first fascinated him. An hour before he had begun to wonder how far
-that feeling might develop in him; now, as he watched her, he was
-conscious of a dispassionate, almost resentful analysis. The fragrance
-of her perfume, a little too overpowering, filled the interior of the
-coup. She herself, bending slightly forward, one elbow against the
-window-pane, pressed her ungloved knuckles against her chin, while her
-glance, set and controlled, was lost in the cloudy shadows and striped
-reflections of the street without.
-
-"What is terrible in such a situation," she said musingly, but without
-turning, "is that any one may be suspected."
-
-The words were spoken with almost an absolute change of personality.
-The very tone brought to him an increased antagonism.
-
-"Quite true," he said. "You may have taken it the first time, and I the
-second."
-
-She turned and tried to distinguish his expression; but, if he had hoped
-to startle, he was disappointed. She said, quite possessed:
-
-"Why do you put it that way?"
-
-"Because I am convinced that the second time was the deliberate action
-of a man, and that the first was the impulse of a woman."
-
-"Why a woman the first time?"
-
-"That is simply my feeling. A woman would not calculate the chances of
-detection, would have kept the ring on her person, and would have
-restored it. What do you think?"
-
-"Possibly," she said, her glance returning to the street.
-
-"But you don't agree with me," he said, leaning a little forward.
-
-"I don't know."
-
-"Miss Charters, will you allow me to ask you a question?"
-
-"What? Yes."
-
-"Don't you know that a woman took it the first time?"
-
-She turned very slowly and looked at him steadily a moment.
-
-"I do not know," she said at last.
-
-"But you suspect," he persisted.
-
-"Do you know, Mr. Beecher, that this is a very strange question?" she
-said. "Exactly what are you implying? Do you, by any chance, suspect
-me?"
-
-She said the last words gently, with a return of the first manner which
-had so held him. And again, without being able to resist, he felt the
-charm on his senses. He knew absolutely nothing about her. At times
-the most direct suspicions had entered his mind; never-the-less all at
-once he heard himself answering:
-
-"I know nothing in the world about you, Miss Charters, but my instinct
-tells me that is absolutely impossible."
-
-"Only?"
-
-"Only I can not forget your agitation at certain moments."
-
-"Naturally; that is my temperament."
-
-"You are perfectly calm now, and you were perfectly calm at certain
-times tonight."
-
-She turned suddenly in her seat and faced him, saying sharply:
-
-"What do you mean?"
-
-"May I speak frankly?"
-
-"I ask you to do so," she said peremptorily.
-
-"I think--in fact, I am convinced--that you suspect who took the ring in
-the first place."
-
-The cab was grinding against the curb. She put out her hand hurriedly,
-as if the impulse were to jump from the carriage. But immediately she
-checked the movement, and turned, saying very simply and directly:
-
-"Do you wish to be my friend?"
-
-"You know I do," he said, surprised.
-
-"Then, if you do, and trust me, never ask that question again--or make
-the slightest reference to it."
-
-She held out her hand. He took it, but without an answer, opened the
-door, saw her to her vestibule, and returned silent and moody, turning
-over again and again in his mind the sudden contradiction in her
-character.
-
-"I wonder if she repels or attracts me most," he said, tramping over the
-quiet pavements, which flung back the riotous thumping of his cane.
-But, as he went aimlessly along, he felt again creeping over him the
-suddenness of her charm and a certain unsatisfied restlessness to see
-her again, which came to him with the faint scent of the perfume that
-had clung to his coat.
-
-All at once he stopped.
-
-"I've got to get to the bottom of all this affair," he said abruptly.
-"I believe she's as straight as they make 'em; I'd wager my soul on
-it--but I've got to know!"
-
-And, boarding a surface car, he returned to Rita Kildair's.
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER V*
-
-
-He had arrived at the studio building and entered the lower vestibule
-before he was aware of the lateness of the hour. He pulled out his
-watch, and found that it was almost midnight.
-
-"Good heavens!" he said, taking a step back. "I quite forgot the time."
-He started to go, then turned to the switchboard. "Could I telephone up
-to Mrs. Kildair's apartment?"
-
-"Go right up, Mr. Beecher," said the hallboy, rising.
-
-"Are you certain?" he said doubtfully.
-
-"Sure. Orders is to send up any one who calls."
-
-A little surprised, he entered the elevator. At that moment a ring
-sounded, and on the indicator the figure 4 dropped.
-
-"That's her floor now," said the boy, starting up the elevator.
-
-At the fourth he came face to face with Garraboy, who saw him with a
-start of surprise and a sudden look of malice. The two nodded, without
-cordiality.
-
-"Hello," said Garraboy, looking at him with a curious fixity which he
-remembered after. "What are you doing here?"
-
-"What are you?" said Beecher abruptly.
-
-"Some valuable information to volunteer?" persisted the other, with a
-deliberate accent of irony.
-
-"Perhaps."
-
-"Indeed? Then you have come to assist in restoring the ring," said
-Garraboy in a low voice; and on his young, wrinkled face was a faint
-glimmer of a smile.
-
-"Perhaps," said Beecher, flushing angrily. "Does that annoy you?"
-
-"Not in the least," said Garraboy drily. "On the contrary, I am
-interested--exceedingly so." He lifted his hat slightly and stepped
-into the elevator.
-
-"Now, what in the devil has he got in his mind?" thought Beecher
-angrily. "And what was his idea in coming back? Nice look he gave me.
-Thought he had such an all-fired important engagement that he had to
-hurry away!"
-
-He tried the door absent-mindedly, and found it locked. A long moment
-after he had pressed a second time upon the bell, the door was opened by
-Rita Kildair herself, who drew back in evident astonishment.
-
-"You?" she said, frowning.
-
-"I was going to telephone," he said, a little embarrassed; "but they
-told me downstairs to come up."
-
-"Quite right."
-
-"Look here, Rita," he said, with a sudden feeling of intuition. "I know
-you probably think I'm a prime representative of the pinhead family, but
-I'm awfully broken up by what happened. Can't I help out some way?"
-
-[Illustration: "'Look here, Rita. Can't I help you out some way?'"]
-
-"Is that why you've come?" she said slowly.
-
-"Of course," he said, meeting her scrutiny with a puzzled glance.
-
-She considered a moment and then said abruptly:
-
-"Go in and sit down. I'm busy at the telephone. I'll be back in a
-moment."
-
-The studio was still blazing with the electric chandeliers, the
-dining-table still crowded with the untouched dinner, with that sense of
-desolation and fatigue which the aftermath of a banquet presents.
-Lighted up as it was, the studio had none of the mystery that
-charmed--rather, something of the cruel garishness of the white sun.
-
-He moved about aimlessly, arms crossed, his imagination repeopling the
-room with the strongly accentuated personalities who had gathered there
-an hour before, saying to himself over and over:
-
-"Now, why the deuce did Garraboy come back?"
-
-He approached the table and abstractedly took an almond and began
-munching it. Then, perceiving the chafing-dish, reached over, with a
-smile, and lifted the cover. But, at the moment his hand was
-outstretched, his eyes, obeying some mysterious instinct, rose to a long
-Venetian mirror opposite. In the clear reflection that showed the
-balcony of the second floor, he distinctly beheld the head of a woman
-protruding a little beyond the curtain.
-
-"What the deuce!" he said, covering the chafing-dish with a bang. "It
-can't be Rita--who then?"
-
-All at once he comprehended. If the ring had not been found in the
-search, it was because it had been concealed in the room, and the woman
-in the balcony was a detective set to watch the trap--if the real thief
-had the daring to return.
-
-At this moment Rita Kildair entered from the bedroom.
-
-"Good heavens, Rita!" he said directly. "You don't mean to say you
-suspect me?"
-
-"What do you mean?" she said, stopping short, her glance instinctively
-seeking the balcony.
-
-"I mean you've stuck a detective up there to see what I do the moment I
-come into the studio. Good heavens! what do you think I came for?"
-
-"My dear Teddy," she said, frowning at the stupidity of her spy, "is
-there any one who can't be suspected? Do you blame me?"
-
-"No, I suppose not," he blurted out. "Only, it gives a fellow a deuced
-creepy feeling to have a couple of eyes looking through him from behind
-the curtain. I say, why don't you search the place? The ring must be
-here!"
-
-"That is possible, of course," she said thoughtfully, her lip between
-her little teeth, an impulsive movement when she was plunged in thought.
-
-"Or are you waiting for the thief to come back here and try to recover
-it? Of course, that's the plan."
-
-"There's one thing," she said, with a quick, imperative gesture, looking
-at him closely, "I want you to remember. There is nothing public to be
-known. Whatever is done must be done quietly."
-
-"Oh, of course," he said hastily. "I say, Rita, let me try to work this
-out with you--give me your confidence! I wish you would."
-
-She considered a moment, as though puzzled by his offer.
-
-"I don't think it will ever be found," she said, shaking her head and
-looking at him.
-
-"But you suspect some one," he persisted.
-
-She hesitated a moment, and then shook her head.
-
-"No."
-
-The second's delay convinced him.
-
-"Man or woman?"
-
-"It is only a speculation," she answered slowly, "but I believe it was a
-woman."
-
-"Both times?"
-
-"Both times."
-
-He took a turn, moodily disturbed, and came back.
-
-"Tell me this, Rita," he said. "Who else came back here tonight?"
-
-"Garraboy," she answered slowly, "and--Mrs. Cheever."
-
-"Mrs. Cheever!" he exclaimed, astonished. "Why, she was on the verge of
-prostration."
-
-Mrs. Kildair smiled a thin, elusive smile, and was about to reply when
-there came a ring at the door.
-
-Instantly her manner changed. Placing her finger on her lips, at the
-same time sending him a glance that commanded the utmost silence, she
-took his hand and led him softly from the studio, through her bedroom
-into the further obscurity of the dining-room, which was lit only by the
-weak reflection which filtered through from the hall.
-
-"Sit here, and not a sound," she said, placing her lips so close to his
-ear that he felt the warm contact of her cheek. She gave him a slight
-pressure of her fingers, and went back into the studio by way of her
-bedroom, closing both doors.
-
-Beecher, left in the darkness, strained every nerve to catch the sound
-that would reveal the identity of the new arrival. It seemed to him
-that he heard the sound of another woman's voice, and then presently, as
-a shadow came to him through the twilight of the hall, he heard Mrs.
-Kildair saying:
-
-"--to telephone. Be back in a moment."
-
-The next instant she was at his side, pressing his hand to prevent the
-whisper that was on his lips. They sat thus side by side for what seemed
-a full five minutes before she rose and silently passed into the hall
-again. Beecher remained in complete bewilderment, unable to detect the
-slightest sound of the conversation that was taking place. That the
-same test was being applied to the new-comer which he himself had
-detected, he understood; but which one of the many guests it might be,
-he could not discover.
-
-At the end of an interminable interval, he heard a few faint sounds, the
-closing of the outer door, and presently the rustle of Mrs. Kildair's
-approach.
-
-"Come now," she said, waiting for him in the hall.
-
-"Who came back then?" he asked eagerly.
-
-She shook her head.
-
-"I can not tell you--at least, not now. There are reasons why it would
-not be quite fair," she said. Then, seeing his irritation, she tapped
-him on the arm and added: "Listen, Teddy. It is too late to talk over
-things. Run away now. Come in tomorrow at five."
-
-"I want to help, you know," he said, taking her hand, guiltily conscious
-of the smile with which she examined him--a smile that seemed to convict
-him of treason. For the moment, however, the memory of the younger
-woman was dimmed. He was conscious only of the indefinite lure of
-mystery which Rita Kildair always exerted over his curiosity the moment
-they were alone.
-
-"Look here, Rita," he said impulsively, "I should think, in a case like
-this, you'd want all the help you can get!"
-
-Her smile disappeared. She looked at him a moment with almost a
-masculine penetration, and then, her smile returning, said quietly:
-
-"It's curious, but each person who came back here tonight came back just
-to--help."
-
-Not only her words, but her manner, struck him with a sense of
-discomfort.
-
-"Come in tomorrow," she said, pushing him gently toward the door. She
-made a quick little motion with her fingers, looked at him with a
-penetrating seriousness, and disappeared, leaving him thoroughly
-confused and irritable.
-
-"Why, she acts as though she suspected me!" he said, remembering her
-continual examination. "Who the deuce came back then? What's Garraboy
-in all this? Does he suspect me, too, and has he been saying anything
-to Rita? What is terrible in such a situation is that any one may be
-suspected." Suddenly he perceived that he had repeated the very words
-that Nan Charters had used in the coup.
-
-"By George, what a rotten mess! I feel like a pickpocket already," he
-said, with a sudden cold horror in his back. "Why shouldn't Rita
-suspect me as well as any one else? This is no pleasure party; this is
-serious--dead serious. I've got to work it out!"
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER VI*
-
-
-Teddy Beecher was a fair representative of the second generation. He
-still retained the rugged democracy of the father who had fought his way
-to a moderate fortune in the troubled regions of the coal-fields. To
-him a man was a man, whatever the quality of his coat. Left an orphan
-at fourteen, he had passed victoriously through boarding-school and
-college without seriously troubling the peace of mind of those who were
-competing for scholarship honors. He was liked because he liked every
-one, not with a politic assumption, but from a veritable enjoyment of
-life and men.
-
-After graduation, he had gone West on a ranch with several of his
-classmates, for the pure love of adventure and the delights of the great
-open spaces. Having thus begun his education, he continued it by
-knocking about the world, with periodic excursions in search of big
-game. He had known a great many types of men without knowing them in
-the least, and he appealed to all women without being deeply
-impressionable to their influence. His philosophy of life was very well
-summed up in a remark he had made on his return to New York--that he
-would probably go to work if he couldn't find anything better to do.
-
-When he awoke the day after Rita Kildair's party, it was with the clear
-and dispassionate vision of the morning. The dramatic occurrences of
-the night before flashed instantly into his consciousness, arousing all
-the energy of his young curiosity. He recalled the promise to solve the
-mystery he had made in a moment of enthusiasm, and with a renewed zest
-began to consider how he should prove himself.
-
-Several things immediately rose up to perplex him in the strange and
-dramatic climaxes at which he had assisted--the twisted undercurrents of
-which he was still completely ignorant. Why had Garraboy, and then Rita
-Kildair, adopted an attitude of suspicion toward him when he had
-returned? For Garraboy's hostility he found a ready answer in the
-mutual antagonism that had risen from the first exchange of glances; but
-the reception he had received at the hands of Mrs. Kildair thoroughly
-mystified him.
-
-"Of course, if the ring wasn't found in the search," he said, getting
-out of bed and ringing for his man, "it's got to be in the studio; of
-course--no way around that. Whoever took it the second time didn't get
-much opportunity to hide it, either--unless it was hidden after the
-candle was lit; there was a chance then--every one was stumbling around.
-By Jove! I believe that's how it was done. But then, why the deuce
-should more than one person return?"
-
-He stopped and suddenly remembered his own return.
-
-"That's so; a man might come back to offer help. But why a woman? And
-who the deuce came back after I did--Miss Lille or Mrs. Bloodgood?"
-
-At this moment the door opened on Charles, whom he had inherited with
-one half of the luxurious apartment from Freddie Duyckerman, who had
-gone to England for the hunting season.
-
-"Your bath is ready, sir," he said, standing with that perfectly vacuous
-expression which had been carefully trained to express neither joy,
-grief, hilarity, nor the natural surprise which he might have
-experienced at beholding his master, brush in hand, standing
-absent-mindedly before a great copper platter that was near the window.
-
-"Telephone up to the stables; I'll take Judy to-day," said Beecher,
-passing into the bathroom.
-
-A touch of the cold shower set his nerves to tingling and sent his mind
-to recalling pleasantly the pretty faces of the evening before, after
-the manner of young gentlemen of leisure with a proper share of vanity.
-Two figures rose immediately--Rita Kildair and Nan Charters. He
-remembered them both without excitement, but with different emotions.
-
-"By George, Rita's a thoroughbred," he said. "She has them all
-beat--mysterious as a sphinx. Prettiest sight in the world, seeing her
-manipulate a crowd. Jove, but she has nerve!" Then he reflected a
-little guiltily that he had rather deserted her for other shrines, and
-he resolved enthusiastically to make amends by throwing himself, heart
-and soul, into the recovery of the ring.
-
-"By George, it's something to have the confidence of a woman like that!"
-he exclaimed, sublimely fatuous. "That old mammoth of a Slade would
-give ten years of his life, I'll bet, to stand where I do with her."
-
-Then he remembered Nan Charters, with a little movement of impatience at
-the thought of his sentimentality.
-
-"What the deuce got into me last night?" he said, displeased with
-himself. "I acted like a school-boy. I suppose she thinks she's got me
-on her scalp-belt--easy as a stage-door Johnny. What the deuce got me
-wabbling so? These actresses are full of tricky stuff."
-
-He resolved that he would show her his complete indifference by not
-calling for at least a week, maybe two, and concluded, with profound
-penetration:
-
-"Good game. She'll remember how I started in, and wonder what changed
-me. That's it--keep 'em guessing."
-
-He went into the dining-room, where the coffee was boiling in the
-percolator, and sat down, after assuring himself by a trip to the
-opposite bedroom that Bo Lynch was still sleeping the profound sleep of
-the unjust..
-
-But hardly had he begun on the iced grape-fruit when a lank figure in
-peppermint pajamas appeared at the doorway, brushing from his
-sleep-laden eyes the long wisps of hair which, carefully treasured to
-conceal the bare upper regions, now hung about his sharp, supercilious
-nose.
-
-"Why the devil don't you breakfast with a chap?" he said, emerging.
-
-"Hello, Bo," said Beecher pleasantly. "Up till four or five, training
-for your polo match this afternoon?"
-
-"Well, Fontaine was there; we call it pairing off."
-
-"Auction?"
-
-"Yes, damn it. I cut that little wild ass of a Plunket six times
-running. He'd gamble away his grandmother on a couple of aces. I say,
-Teddy," he continued, with a little more animation, emptying a bottle of
-mineral water which Charles, knowing what might be termed the regularity
-of his habits, had set out for him, "do you ever try a flier in the
-market?"
-
-"I have been such a fool."
-
-"Look here; I've got a sure thing. Eddie Fontaine gave it to us last
-night--in dead secrecy, of course. Worried it from the old man, and you
-know old man Fontaine is the real thing. The whole Atlantic Trust
-business was patched up at a conference yesterday afternoon. Majendie's
-to get all the backing he needs."
-
-"Well, what of that?"
-
-"Why, you ignoramus, that means the banks have let up on the trust
-companies and are coming to the support of the market. Everything's
-'way down below where it ought to be. Stocks'll go up twenty points in
-two weeks. I've taken another thousand of Northern Pacific myself.
-Better get in on it."
-
-"Thanks; I'll circulate my money on a horse-race--something I know
-about. By the way, Majendie was there last night."
-
-"He was, was he?" said Lynch, with more animation. "How did he seem?"
-
-"Cool as a cucumber," said Beecher, who, however, was surprised to find
-how little he remembered of any one else's conduct. "I was in at one of
-Mrs. Kildair's affairs. By the way, Nan Charters was there."
-
-"Oh, was she?" said Lynch sleepily, hesitating between the call of his
-bedroom and the cooling aspect of the waiting grape-fruit.
-
-"Know anything about her?" asked Beecher, perceiving he would gain
-nothing by indirection.
-
-"Never met her," said Lynch. "Charlie Lorraine was crazy about her a
-couple of years ago. We thought he was going to marry her. I believe
-they were engaged, or had an understanding."
-
-"No scandal?"
-
-"Oh, she's perfectly straight. Charlie's a good proposition, but that
-didn't seem to hurry her any. She has a lot of 'em buzzing after her."
-
-"I say, Bo," said Beecher suddenly, "did you ever run up against a
-fellow called Garraboy?"
-
-"What's he do?"
-
-"He's a broker."
-
-Lynch reflected, yawning behind his hand. His occupation in life was
-supposed to be stocks and bonds, according to the city register.
-
-"Nope, never heard of the fellow."
-
-"Who'd know at the club?"
-
-"Ask Jack Lindabury or Tom Bovee. Well, ta-ta; I'm going to sleep out a
-bit for the match. Tell Charles to default me to the manicure and the
-scalpist," said Lynch, who termed thus the prim, middle-aged person who
-had guaranteed to preserve his numbered hairs. "By the way, how about a
-little bet on the match? I'll give you six to five."
-
-"Done for fifty," said Beecher obligingly.
-
-"See you at luncheon," said Lynch, who was soon heard plunging heavily
-into bed.
-
-Beecher belonged, without yet being one of them, to that set who live
-what in England is called a gentleman's life--racing, hunting, playing
-polo, seeking the sensations of big game or big fish, rather courting
-danger, drinking hard as a matter of pride, on the theory of the
-survival of the fittest, consuming the night in battles of cunning and
-physical endurance at the card-table. Beecher had returned to this
-society partly because most of his friends "belonged," partly because,
-being an idler himself, he liked their busy days dedicated to sensation,
-and their curious standards of what was and what was not permitted to be
-done. He had not as yet plunged into the whirl, being more curiously
-interested in the various sides of New York life that opened before him.
-He preserved, in the midst of the nervous American excess of his
-companion, a certain old-world moderation. He entered their card games
-in a desultory way for an hour or two at a time, but without that
-engulfing, brutal passion for mastery which kept Bo Lynch at the
-card-tables until dawn. When he joined a group at the bar, he drank
-with them as long as he wished and no longer--a difficult matter where a
-withdrawal usually was greeted with taunts; but there was about Beecher,
-young as he was, an atmosphere of authority which came from having
-proved himself among men the world over.
-
-He was rising from the table when the telephone rang, and, mindful of
-his afternoon engagement with Rita Kildair, he refused an invitation to
-join a party to the polo match. A call from Bruce Gunther urged him to
-be one of a gay party of six, bent on a lark for the evening.
-
-He enjoyed a furious gallop in the park, dressed, and swung alertly up
-the Avenue to his club for luncheon.
-
-There, all the talk was of the stock market which had gone up several
-points on the morning's tradings. Bo Lynch and Eddie Fontaine
-buttonholed him and besought him to avail himself of the opportunity: it
-was the chance of a lifetime, the crisis was over, stocks simply had to
-go up. The friends of Majendie, who was one of the directors of the
-club, were relieved and jubilant. He had weathered the crisis; there
-was nothing more to fear. The story which was told from lip to lip as
-being direct from headquarters was, that at the meeting on the afternoon
-before, Fontaine had declared, with his fist on the table, that he would
-never be a party to any movement that would jeopardize the future of his
-lifelong friend, Bernard Majendie. Some who still clung to the short
-interest even added, with an air of knowing more than they could tell,
-that the attack would now be concentrated on the Associated Trust with
-the intention of making an example of John Slade, a Western intruder who
-was protected by no ties of association and friendship.
-
-Beecher, true to his habits of caution, laughingly refused all offers to
-double his fortune. Bruce Gunther drew him aside, outlining his program
-for the evening.
-
-The thought of Nan Charters came into Beecher's mind, and he wondered
-curiously if she would be there.
-
-"I say, Bruce, what's all this hip-hurrah?" he asked as Gunther led him
-to the dining-room and they took seats at the long mahogany table. "Has
-Majendie really pulled through? Is the story true about Fontaine?
-Would you go into the market?"
-
-"They tell it on Fontaine now, do they?" said Gunther, with a short
-laugh. "It started with my old man, but I guess he was too tough a
-weight to carry. Ted, I don't know any more than you, but I know
-this--keep out."
-
-"My opinion," said Beecher, nodding to a new arrival.
-
-Bruce Gunther was his closest friend--a chum from boarding-school days.
-He was a stocky, rather ugly type, direct to the point of rudeness, with
-more than a trace of his father's power. Gunther Senior had, from a
-long and merciless examination of men, come to regard youth as a natural
-malady, an ebullition of heated blood to be lived down before a man was
-fit for great opportunities and the vision of great affairs. When young
-Gunther was graduated, he called him to his desk, wrote him out a check,
-and told him to take five years, sow his oats, and be through with
-it--at the end of which time his career would begin at the bottom of the
-great banking offices of Gunther & Company, New York, London, and Paris.
-Young Gunther was now completing the last year of his contract with a
-compressed savageness that would have wrecked any but the strongest
-constitution. At heart he awaited the end of his holiday with a feeling
-of relief and enthusiasm. He was quite unspoiled, and a terror to
-sycophants and boot-lickers. It was these sturdy, passionate qualities
-of energy and directness in him that had attracted Beecher.
-
-"Bruce, I'm on a very curious chase," he said, pushing back from the
-table, "and I want your help. It's too long and too confidential to tell
-you now. But two things I wish you would do for me: find out all you can
-quietly about two men--Enos Bloodgood and a fellow called Garraboy, a
-broker."
-
-"Garraboy--the brother-in-law?" said Gunther instantly. They left the
-table and went for cigars and coffee to the first room, to a window that
-gave on the Avenue. "I know him. He was blackballed here a couple of
-years ago. There were some ugly stories about him; I'll look 'em up.
-Bloodgood's another matter. I have heard rumors he was hard hit by the
-market. It's easy enough; I know several men I can call up. Can't you
-tell me the whole thing now?"
-
-When Beecher had finished, Gunther remained a long moment immersed in
-reflection.
-
-"By the Lord Harry, that is a problem," he said, suddenly waking up.
-"The dickens of a tangle! What the deuce was Slade doing there?" He
-relapsed into silence again, and as suddenly said decisively: "You're
-wrong on one point, Ted. It's not Garraboy or Bloodgood we ought to
-suspect first; it's Cheever--the Cheevers."
-
-"How the deuce are we going about it?" said Beecher.
-
-"I suppose Mrs. Kildair wants the whole thing kept quiet," said Gunther,
-rapping absent-mindedly on the arm of his chair.
-
-"Naturally; besides, I promised."
-
-"Of course. Well, we'll begin in a practical fashion. You don't mind
-spending a little money, do you?"
-
-"I expect to."
-
-Gunther rose and went to the telephone booths, where he remained for
-some time.
-
-"Half-past six in my rooms, Ted," he said, returning. "I'll put you up
-against the most interesting character in the United States--a real
-detective. Dress and come over."
-
-"But the girls," objected Beecher, remembering their engagement.
-
-"The girls can go hang," said Gunther, shrugging his shoulders. "They
-can always wait half an hour. This is something real."
-
-At five o'clock Beecher called on Mrs. Kildair, and found her out, to
-his considerable vexation. The bell-boy gave him a little note, which
-he opened and read:
-
-
-DEAR TEDDY:
-
-Forgive my breaking my engagement. All sorts of sudden and exciting
-things have crowded in on me to-day. Come to-morrow for luncheon.
-
-RITA.
-
-P.S. Remember--nothing public about last night!
-
-
-The prospect of a tte--tte with Mrs. Kildair appeased him somewhat,
-but his anticipations for the afternoon were sorely disappointed, and he
-started aimlessly back, with a feeling that a great hole had been made
-in the day. As he reached the corner, a red automobile cut in close to
-the curb, causing him to step hastily back. Inside he recognized Slade.
-He watched the red machine come to a stop before Mrs. Kildair's and then
-whirl away, after depositing the massive figure of its owner. Beecher,
-with a little wounded vanity, lingered a moment, hoping to see him
-reappear; but, as the sidewalk continued empty, he was forced to
-conclude that he had come by appointment.
-
-"She might at least have seen me," he said angrily. "What the deuce has
-she got to see Slade for?"
-
-All at once he perceived that his steps had led him in the general
-direction of the quarter in which Nan Charters resided, and, as he had
-come to make an impression on one woman, he soon began to consider
-transferring his attack on another. Only, he remembered that he had
-determined to treat Miss Charters with indifference, to correct any
-erroneous ideas that she might have formed from his previous impulsive
-conduct.
-
-"That's so," he said, angry now at himself, at her, and at a condition
-of affairs that left him with an hour of idleness on his hands. "If I
-call now, she'll think I'm hot on the trail. I could stop, though, and
-inquire about her health," he thought, hesitating; "that would seem
-natural, after last night."
-
-But he rejected this as a subterfuge, and continued his slow, uneven
-progress down Seventh Avenue, which he had selected at random in search
-of a little oddity and interest; and gradually he recognized that the
-vexation he felt was, in reality, not at being unable to find an excuse
-for calling on Miss Charters, but the keen sense of disappointment he
-had in missing an intimate hour with Rita.
-
-It was essentially the woman of the world in her that fascinated him,
-the woman of mysterious experience, of sure knowledge and complete
-command of situations. He wished to increase the intimacy of his
-position, because to be favored by her meant something--something that
-awoke his masculine sense of supremacy and fed his vanity. Determined
-on a long bachelorhood that would open to him all sorts and conditions
-of society and adventurous experiences, he had determined likewise to
-avoid the dangerous field of young girls of his own set and to exercise
-his curiosity with women of the world--older women, professional women,
-with whom an impulsive infatuation brought no risks, but something to be
-taken at value, a mood that was charming because it would pass.
-
-All at once an idea came to him that reconciled his easily satisfied
-conscience and appeared sublimely politic. He would drop in on Nan
-Charters, just to show his indifference.
-
-"I'll stay fifteen minutes--be quite formal and a little bored," he
-said, chuckling.
-
-And he went without too much enthusiasm toward his destination, thinking
-of Rita Kildair and planning in his imaginative mind a series of
-confidential conversations for the tte--tte on the morrow.
-
-"To see Miss Charters," he said, giving his card to the boy in the
-elevator, who turned it over doubtfully, hesitated, and disappeared like
-a float in an opera, mounting heavenward.
-
-Beecher ceased to think of Rita Kildair, and prepared himself, smiling
-astutely, for his approaching scene with the young actress whom he
-intended properly to discipline for her effrontery in imagining that
-he--Edward T. Beecher--had entertained for a moment any other than a
-polite social interest. Miss Charters excused herself--she was lying
-down and dining out.
-
-He cast a furious look at the telephone-booth, by means of which she
-might personally have assured him of her great regret, and stalked out
-in a worse temper than ever--Rita Kildair, Nan Charters, all the women
-in the world consigned to perdition.
-
-"Confound them all!" he said, brandishing his cane. "What a lot of time
-a man wastes over them. She might have telephoned me. They only exist
-in this world to distract us from what we ought to do. I wonder if she
-did it on purpose--just to give me an appetite. Well, if she did--she's
-succeeded," he said ruefully.
-
-He went to his rooms, resolved to meet her at every opportunity, to
-revenge himself by showing her he could play the game more cleverly than
-she could; and in his angry resolve there was very little trace of the
-indifference of which he had been so confident.
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER VII*
-
-
-Gunther had a suite in one of the newer hotels that tower over the
-eastern entrance to the park. When Beecher arrived, a quiet, powerfully
-built man was standing in front of the fireplace, smoking with
-enjoyment. Beecher recognized immediately Cyrus McKenna, formerly of
-the United States Secret Service, founder of the great detective agency
-that bore his name.
-
-"Ted, shake hands with my good friend Mr. McKenna," said Gunther,
-appearing in the doorway with a refractory collar in his grasp.
-"McKenna, shake hands with Mr. Beecher. Fire away, Ted. I'll be out in
-a second."
-
-"Glad to know you," said McKenna, grasping his hand.
-
-Beecher was aware of the quick, estimating scrutiny and a sense of
-unusual physical vitality. But he was disappointed in his first glance
-at this man whose investigations had been the terror of corrupt
-politicians and unscrupulous agitators. McKenna was physically the ideal
-detective, in that not a feature possessed a trace of oddity which could
-betray him to the public, in which he thus mingled without fear of
-recognition. He was neither short nor tall, neither thin nor unusually
-heavy. His head was round, well-spaced, and evenly formed, without
-affectation of mystery or astuteness, lit up by a jovial good humor when
-animated, and quite blank and indecipherable when in repose. The eyes
-alone, like the eyes of a painter or a sculptor seeking tones or
-modelings that escape the common glance, were noticeable for a certain
-quality of penetration, expressed in the countenance by innumerable fine
-lines that gathered in the eye-pits.
-
-"Mr. McKenna," said Beecher, who had an instinctive desire to impress
-the detective with the lucidity of his observations, "I will give you
-quickly the details that are important. First, here is the plan of the
-apartment, which may or may not be of use."
-
-He went to the low table-desk at the side, and drew out paper and
-pencil. McKenna brought up a chair at his side, and Gunther, coming in,
-sat down opposite.
-
-"It concerns the theft of a ruby ring worth over fifteen thousand
-dollars," said Beecher, busy with his pencil, "taken last night, between
-eight and eleven, at the apartment of Mrs. Rita Kildair. The
-circumstances are so extraordinary that you will be interested in the
-problem itself."
-
-The detective smiled in a slightly amused way and asked:
-
-"Am I retained in her interest or in yours?"
-
-"In mine," said Beecher quickly. "The theft took place at a social
-gathering, you understand, and in the party were persons well known in
-New York society. Mrs. Kildair, as is natural, particularly desires
-that nothing shall become public."
-
-"Does she know that you intend to consult me?"
-
-"No--and I am not sure I wish her to know."
-
-"Is she employing detectives?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Whom did the ring belong to?"
-
-"To Mrs. Kildair," said Beecher, annoyed that he had forgotten this
-rather important detail.
-
-"Let me see the plan," said McKenna, who glanced at it a moment and
-nodded. "Now go on."
-
-"There were eleven persons present, including Mrs. Kildair," said
-Beecher, after a moment's pause. McKenna took the pencil and prepared to
-inscribe the list. "Myself, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Cheever--"
-
-"I can give you a pointer on them," said Gunther, speaking for the first
-time.
-
-"Unnecessary," said McKenna. "I know the card episode."
-
-"Mr. and Mrs. Bloodgood."
-
-"Mrs. Bloodgood--yes."
-
-"Mr. Garraboy."
-
-"Joseph L. or Edward C., the broker?"
-
-"The broker. Miss Nan Charters."
-
-"The actress--yes."
-
-"Miss Maud Lille."
-
-"Know anything about her?"
-
-"She's a journalist; writes books too, I believe."
-
-"Well?"
-
-"Bernard L. Majendie and John Slade."
-
-The detective raised his eyebrows in surprise.
-
-"They were there--together?"
-
-"They came separately. Slade joined the party at the last moment; he
-was not expected."
-
-"A very interesting crowd," said the detective slowly, studying the
-list. "What servants?"
-
-"None."
-
-"You are sure?"
-
-"Mrs. Kildair has only two, a Japanese butler and a lady's maid, both of
-whom were out."
-
-"You are positive?"
-
-"Absolutely. The occasion was an informal supper. Mrs. Kildair, while
-preparing the dishes, placed her three rings on the pin-cushion of her
-dressing-table--at this point here on the plans--fastening them with a
-hatpin. The table, as you see, can be easily seen both from the studio
-and the dining-room."
-
-"What were the circumstances of her placing the rings on the
-pin-cushion? First, when did it occur? After all the guests had
-arrived?"
-
-"Yes," said Beecher, who immediately corrected himself. "No, I'm wrong;
-Slade arrived later. But, as I say, he was a surprise. Majendie was the
-last of the invited party to come. Immediately afterward Mrs. Kildair
-went into her bedroom to put on an apron and take off her rings."
-
-"Who was in the room?"
-
-"Mrs. Cheever, Miss Lille, and Garraboy," said Beecher slowly.
-
-"They saw her take off the ring?"
-
-"Yes; they even announced it later."
-
-"Was there much passing to and fro?"
-
-"All the time. I am quite sure every one was in the room several
-times."
-
-"Did any one use the hall?" said the detective, indicating it on the
-plan. "I see it opens into the dining-room also."
-
-"Quite a number," said Beecher. "I remember using it myself. We were
-all going and coming, carrying dishes, glasses, bottles, provisions."
-
-"One question: did you notice the ring on the pin-cushion yourself?"
-
-"Yes; I distinctly remember seeing two or three rings, I don't remember
-which."
-
-"Go on."
-
-"After about three quarters of an hour of preparation, we took our
-places at the table, with the exception of Mrs. Kildair, who was still
-moving about us. It was then that Slade came in, was introduced, and
-took his place."
-
-"He did not pass into the bedroom, then?"
-
-"No. Mrs. Kildair went in immediately, took off her apron, and
-discovered the loss of the ruby ring."
-
-Beecher, without further interruptions from McKenna, recounted in detail
-the return of Mrs. Kildair, the locking of the doors, the extinguishing
-of the lights, the announcement of the theft, the beginning of the
-counting, the sound of the ring on the table, and the discovery of its
-second disappearance. Then he stopped, awaiting the questioning of the
-detective.
-
-"No; go right on," said McKenna, with a little gesture of his pencil
-that dotted an imaginary _i_.
-
-Beecher continued, describing the lighting of the lights, the confusion
-in the room, the sending for the detectives, the discussion as to the
-order of search, and the failure to recover the ring. Omitting his
-personal observations of Miss Charters and their conversation in the
-cab, he recounted his return to Mrs. Kildair's, his meeting with
-Garraboy, the discovery of the detective, the strangeness of Mrs.
-Kildair's attitude, and her concealment of the identity of the next
-visitor. He concluded, and both young men looked at the detective as if
-they expected him to solve the problem on the instant--an attitude that
-was not lost on McKenna.
-
-"I suppose you young men believe every word that has been written on
-deduction," he said, grinning and biting off the end of another cigar.
-"Presume you've already determined that a woman took the ring, and
-lacked the nerve to face the risk--that the strong, daring nature of a
-man seized the opportunity the second time, and, because Slade and
-Majendie are millionaires and Bloodgood the respectable owner of a
-newspaper, the thief is either Garraboy, a gambler in stocks, or
-Cheever, with an ugly reputation."
-
-The two young men smiled guiltily.
-
-"But I say, McKenna, you don't reject deduction entirely," said Gunther.
-
-"Oh, no, I believe in 'deduction forward,'" said McKenna, laughing. "If
-I know there's a thief in the company, I deduce he'll steal if he gets
-the chance. Now, before I put a few more questions to you, let me tell
-you this. My business isn't in deducing how the theft was done (I get
-my man and sweat him out; he'll tell me that), but who did it; and for
-that it don't take any deduction, either. Give me time, money, and no
-strings on me, there isn't any crime can't be worked out."
-
-"But how the deuce are you going to locate a ring," said Beecher, "if
-you don't know whom to follow?"
-
-"The ring's the easiest part," said the detective. "You may not know it,
-but every stone of great value is what's called a named stone; every
-jeweler knows of it. Now, there aren't many rubies worth over fifteen
-thousand floating around. If you don't believe it, I'll show you how
-easy it's done. Inside a week I'll give you the history of the stone
-and just how it came into the hands of Mrs. Kildair."
-
-"You mean no one can dispose of it to a jeweler without its being
-recognized?"
-
-"Unless he's done it within these twenty-four hours, which is quite
-probable if a certain suspicion of mine isn't far wrong."
-
-"Deduction," said Gunther, laughing.
-
-"Not entirely; and, besides, that's not quite fair. It just happens that
-I may be interested in a couple of persons in your party from another
-tack. No, gentlemen; deduction's all right, if it's honest deduction
-and if you use it in its place; but the great thing's motive.
-Ninety-nine times out of a hundred, get down to your motives and you get
-your criminals. Show me the person who needed to steal that ring, or who
-just simply had to steal it, and you've got your man."
-
-"But suppose that applies to two persons there, or even three," said
-Gunther, who perceived that the detective did not intend to commit
-himself.
-
-"Possibly."
-
-"Or it may be the hysterical act of a woman who will never attempt to
-sell the ring."
-
-"Possible--more than possible."
-
-"And then it will never be found."
-
-"That's right."
-
-"But you don't think that's the case," said Gunther. "And you have an
-opinion."
-
-McKenna gave him a quick look of appreciation.
-
-"That's right; but it's not who took it, but why it was taken. In
-forty-eight hours I'll know a little bit more about the habits of the
-ladies and gentlemen we're dealing with, and then I'll be more
-communicative." He paused, with a little pardonable pleasure in the
-mystification he was preparing, and added: "In forty-eight hours I'll
-give you a little story about each of the persons who were at that party
-which'll beat anything in the story-telling line you ever came up
-against. Now, Mr. Beecher, before we get down to questions, here's one
-thing I want you to do. Find out from Mrs. Kildair what's her detective
-agency. Say you've a friend who's trying to track a valet for stealing
-and want a good address--see?"
-
-"You are not going to shadow the detectives?" said Gunther curiously.
-
-"You bet I am, till I know more about them," said McKenna. "Young man,
-I can tell you more than twenty cases I've been on where the detective
-who was called in to make a search went cahoots with the thief."
-
-"Detectives!" said Beecher, amazed.
-
-"You bet. I don't trust my own, when I've got anything that's got to be
-done right. I don't trust any one man; I put two on it. My dear
-fellow, the crooks that pick your pocket or break into your house are
-only amateurs. The real criminal, the criminal of brains, joins a
-police force, becomes a detective, a clerk, goes slowly, gets to be a
-cashier or president of a bank. You think I'm joking. Not at all. Look
-here; just stop and think it over, and you won't laugh. For every bank
-president who takes the funds of his bank, speculates, and _loses_, how
-many do you think win out and never get caught?"
-
-"That's so," said Gunther thoughtfully.
-
-"It's too big a subject," said McKenna, smiling. "I shake hands every
-day with gentlemen who ought to be breaking rocks. Now, let's get back
-to business. Mr. Beecher, what did you notice of any kind last night
-that would make you suspect any one? I don't mean opinions, but eyes."
-
-Beecher hesitated an interval that did not escape the notice of the
-detective.
-
-"Nothing," he said at last, unwilling to mention the name of Nan
-Charters. He added, to cover the hesitation: "I suspected Garraboy, but
-I admit there's no proof--personal dislike."
-
-"Why do you dislike him?"
-
-Beecher shrugged his shoulder and his glance went to one side.
-
-"Mr. Gunther, will you get me my office?" said McKenna, suddenly looking
-at his watch. "You know the number."
-
-Gunther disappeared in the hall in search of the telephone.
-
-"Now, Mr. Beecher," said McKenna, smiling, "I'm like a doctor, you know.
-There's no use calling me in unless you give me all the facts. What's
-the name of the lady who excited your suspicion, whom Mr. Garraboy was
-so attentive to, and on account of whom, I rather guess, you got
-interested in this case?"
-
-The startled look Beecher gave him amply gratified McKenna, who
-continued:
-
-"What's Miss Charters' position in this business?"
-
-Beecher admitted the correctness of the surmise with a laugh, and,
-Gunther being absent, quickly recounted the different moments of Nan
-Charters' agitation and the conversation in the cab.
-
-At this moment Gunther returned. "I say, McKenna," he said, "some one's
-trying to get you on the wire."
-
-McKenna passed to the telephone, and almost immediately returned.
-
-"Look here, gentlemen," he said, "if you want to try your hand at
-deduction, here's something to work on. The Clearing-house has just
-refused to clear for the Atlantic Trust, Majendie's resignation has been
-accepted, and tomorrow there'll be a run on every bank in the city--and
-God help those who're caught in the stock market!"
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER VIII*
-
-
-The two young men and McKenna descended by the elevator into the lobby
-of the hotel. The news of the Clearing-house's drastic action against
-the Atlantic Trust was already in the scare-heads of the evening papers,
-though Majendie's resignation was still unknown. The halls were crowded
-with a fleet of newspapers, spread out, fluttering feverishly.
-Everywhere was a suppressed murmur and nervous tension, which
-occasionally exploded in exclamations when acquaintances met. The news
-was indeed staggering to the little man of the Street; the great
-Atlantic Trust with its hundreds of millions of deposits was on the
-verge of collapse and this at the end of a period of depression and
-alarm!
-
-As they proceeded toward the carriage entrance, Gunther stopped to speak
-to one of the clerks at the desk, who, with a frightened face, came out
-to seek his advice. McKenna profited by the moment to say to Beecher:
-
-"By the way, if you're a friend of Miss Charters', find out if she has
-any money invested in Wall Street, and who she's dealing through."
-
-"Does it mean a panic?" said Beecher, surprised. "Do you mean she ought
-to get out?"
-
-"Too late," said McKenna. "Find out what I asked you. I'm in a hurry.
-Say good-night to Mr. Gunther for me. And, say, if you're so interested
-in this case, get him to put you wise to Majendie and Mrs. Bloodgood."
-
-He gave a quick nod, and mingled in the crowd about the north entrance.
-Beecher watched him with a feeling of disillusionment. The detective
-had expressed no opinion, had brought to bear on the problem none of the
-instantaneous analysis which he had expected; in fact, had deliberately
-avoided even a discussion of the natural probabilities. Had this
-complete reticence been associated with an individuality of impressive
-oddity, he would have perhaps regarded it with respect. As it was, he
-was conscious only of being defrauded as though some one were tearing
-away a precious illusion.
-
-"There's a poor devil; got all his money tied up in the Atlantic Trust,"
-said Gunther, joining him and passing out to the waiting automobile.
-
-"The Atlantic Trust can't fail," said Beecher, amazed. "Things aren't
-as bad as that."
-
-"Don't know. Lots of queer things have been worked lately. Anyhow,
-what's bound to happen is--I should say--a receivership and closed doors
-to-morrow."
-
-"But that means panic."
-
-"Sure."
-
-Beecher was silent a while. He thought of Majendie of the night before,
-correct, restrained, prodigal of small courtesies.
-
-"By Jove, how game he was!" he said aloud. "I should hate to think there
-was anything crooked in him."
-
-They had reached Forty-second Street in their smooth and rapid flight.
-There, newsboys were shrieking the latest extra, dodging under the heads
-of horses, swinging on the steps of surface-cars, bumping their shrill
-way through the crowd, with their hysterical instinct for heightening
-the effect of a sensation.
-
-Gunther stopped the automobile and bought a handful of papers which a
-dozen urchins fought to press into his hands. On every sheet, front
-page, accompanied by sudden scare-heads, was the photograph of Bernard
-L. Majendie, whose resignation had been demanded and accepted.
-
-The two scanned the pages for additional details. Some papers hinted at
-criminal actions--the district attorney had been suddenly summoned to
-town. Scattered through the sheets were photographs entitled,
-"Majendie's Palace on Fifth Avenue." "$100,000 Yacht of Deposed
-President." "Newport Estate of Millionaire."
-
-"Is he a crook after all?" said Beecher, flinging down the extra.
-
-"No, he is not a crook," said Gunther quietly, repeating the words with
-slow emphasis. "He is a speculator, a great speculator, and he has been
-made the victim of greater speculators who covet his territory. Then,
-there is this to be said: I doubt if at the present moment any great
-public corporation would face an investigation without alarm."
-
-"What do you mean?" said Beecher, with his thoughts still wandering back
-to the handsome, stoic features of the Majendie of the night before.
-
-Gunther began to speak, and, as he became serious and animated, Beecher
-followed him with surprise, noting the vigor and vitality that
-transformed the young idler.
-
-"The present era we are passing through," said Gunther, "is probably
-America at its worst. We see only the gorgeous faades of things: the
-skyscraper, the industries that have developed into little kingdoms. We
-only try to comprehend statistics, and we are satisfied that we have
-bounded into greatness. As a matter of fact, the true test of the
-industrial greatness of a country is honesty. Dishonesty and graft are
-economic weakness--waste. A railroad that is spending a million a year
-to fight off hold-up state laws is by so much handicapped in its
-function of promoting commerce by low freight rates. A corporation that
-secures its franchise by bribing aldermen has taught them to blackmail
-in the future. It is difficult to say where the responsibility
-began--whether capital corrupted politics, or whether, in our
-unscientific political system, corruption was not inevitable."
-
-"What do you mean by that?"
-
-"At this time, when our political history is one of business
-development, we are over-burdened with useless offices. Aldermen and
-legislators who receive on an average less than a thousand a year--often
-less than it costs to be elected--are suddenly intrusted with the
-responsibilities of laws and franchises involving millions. When you
-ask yourself how a man is to continue a political career, support a
-family, and fight a costly fight for reelection on a thousand a year,
-the wonder is that any remain honest. We have not the slightest
-conception of values in America; the worst paid professions are those
-the vigor of the nation depends on most--the minister, the teacher, and
-the legislator. There are ministers living on five hundred a year,
-teachers on six hundred, legislators on less, while the carpenter or
-plumber who doesn't make at least $5 a day is unorganized." Then,
-perceiving that he had wandered from his subject, he added: "You see,
-Ted, this state of affairs results: politics becomes the business of
-business. Industry is at the mercy of the legislator, and the
-legislator knows it. He may restrict the field of business of insurance
-companies, prohibit others from operating in his state, add or detract
-from the wealth of individuals by tariffs, force the adoption of certain
-building material on contractors, regulate rates of railroads and force
-them to adopt certain life-preserving devices; can create rival
-franchises or tax out of existence corporations that refuse to pay its
-blackmail.
-
-"That is why there are, back in the secret life of every great business,
-ledgers it is not good the public should see. That is one reason why
-business goes into politics, nominates its men, and assists them--in
-order to protect itself against strikes and blackmail. The great
-political alliance of business is almost always expressed by the
-railroad which is the natural agent. All this is known; every newspaper
-that will shriek out horrified editorials next week knows this; but when
-the Atlantic Trust is caught in a business depression, and is unable to
-get ready money from influences it has antagonized, the public will
-learn only that one institution has secretly contributed to a political
-party, maintained a huge fund for lobbying purposes, made loans on
-securities that were speculative, and transgressed the letter of the
-law. The public will be indignant, and Majendie will be disgraced."
-
-"But, Bruce," said Beecher, who was thinking of the analysis that had
-been made, "if we are so riddled with corruption, where is it all going
-to end?"
-
-"The end will come in the opening of another phase of national life. We
-will become honest through the purifying process of another generation.
-Honesty, you see, has this one great advantage over corruption--it is
-the goal of corruption. Those who acquire, wish to retain, to resist
-those who in turn wish to graft from them. Stealing was an attribute of
-distinction, until men came to live together. The next generation will
-purify and reorganize."
-
-"I didn't know you'd gone into things so deeply," said Beecher,
-impressed.
-
-"I've worked like a pup since I started to amuse myself," said Gunther,
-with a laugh.
-
-The automobile drew up before the glittering doors of Lazare's, and a
-gilded footman, recognizing it, flashed obsequiously to their door.
-
-"Say, let's cut this out," said Gunther, frowning. "I'm out of the mood
-now. Let's run off for a chop and a baked potato somewhere. I'm tired
-of this."
-
-"Too late," said Beecher, laughing and pointing to an upper window where
-a feminine arm was waving frantically. "We're caught." Then, suddenly
-he remembered the hint of McKenna's, and added: "I say, what's the story
-about Majendie and Mrs. Bloodgood? I'm not up on the gossip, you know."
-
-Gunther signaled impatiently to the flunky to close the door, and
-related, what every one knew, the attachment of the financier and the
-wife of the owner of the New York _Star_.
-
-"Of course, every one believes what he chooses in such matters," he
-said. "Personally, knowing Majendie, I believe it's purely
-platonic--such things do happen. He has a sort of old-fashioned
-chivalry, you know. Bloodgood is a hard old nut, leads his own
-life--chorus girls' friend and all that--thirty years older than his
-wife--parents got her into it--and I shouldn't be surprised if he took
-advantage of the situation to touch up Majendie through the Atlantic
-Trust for a good-sized loan. The rumor was that Mrs. Bloodgood was to
-get a divorce. If so, it may have been held up by this rotten business.
-One thing's clear: she's crazy about Majendie, and doesn't care who sees
-it--poor devil. Well, let's get out."
-
-They entered Lazare's, saluted by a sudden storm of clatter, music, and
-shrill laughter. Lazare himself, seeing Gunther, came up hurriedly,
-anxiety in his olive face, while several employees hovered near, with
-eager ears. Gunther exchanged again a few words on the financial
-situation, and led the way into the elevator.
-
-"McKenna's a great one," he said. "Rather puzzled you, didn't he?
-There's no show about him--he's direct. You'll see the way he works.
-It'll be a revelation."
-
-Beecher did not answer.
-
-The disclosure of the relations of Majendie and Mrs. Bloodgood had
-suddenly recalled the suspicion that had come to him the night before,
-while following the agitation of Nan Charters; and he was asking
-himself, in a bewildered manner, if Mrs. Bloodgood, desperate, perhaps
-on the verge of a separation, had not in an uncontrollable moment taken
-the ring. Gunther continued in praise of McKenna:
-
-"It's the organization that's wonderful. It's like a spider-web, and
-McKenna sits in the center and pulls the threads. What the public never
-gets is this--that half of the work's done before McKenna's on the case.
-He knows to-day where every forger is living, every cracksman. He's got
-his informers in every saloon, in every cheap hotel, where thugs
-congregate. If a bank's robbed, nine times out of ten he can tell in a
-day who's done the job, because he knows who's disappeared from his
-regular haunts. A detective agency is a great news bureau that never
-prints its news."
-
-"I guess the case is more complicated than I thought," said Beecher,
-struck by the new lead. "It begins to look as though a whole lot of
-persons might have taken the ring."
-
-"Thinking of Mrs. B?" said Gunther quickly.
-
-"Yes," said Beecher meditatively. They were in the corridor leading to
-the private dining-rooms. He put his hand out and checked his companion.
-
-"I say, who's Madame Fornez?"
-
-"Opera squealer," said Gunther irreverently; "Carmen and all that sort
-of thing. Bob Holliday's daffy about her. Come on; let's face the
-music."
-
-He nodded to the attendant waiting with extended ears, who now sprang
-forward to open the door on the flaring room and the dazzling white of
-the richly covered table set for five.
-
-Holliday and two women in dcollet instantly burst into exclamations of
-reproach.
-
-"Sorry; couldn't be helped--business," said Gunther, without taking the
-pains for a more elaborate apology. Then, sure of his explanation, he
-added: "You probably missed it. Poor old Majendie's up the spout.
-Forced resignation. There'll be the devil to pay to-morrow."
-
-The reproaches ceased, succeeded by a rush of excited questions.
-Holliday, a tall, scoured blond, who had been drumming at the piano, was
-so disturbed by the news that he forgot his duties as a host.
-
-"_Allons_, Bobbie," said Mme. Fornez, turning her great Spanish eyes on
-Beecher with an expression of approval, "introduce your nice-looking
-friend."
-
-Beecher, amid laughter, was presented. Mme. Fornez, who, from pride
-perhaps, chose to retain the freedom of the peasant, tapped him
-familiarly on the arm and said: "I like you. You don't look so clean
-and stupid as most of your dollar men. You will sit by my side. I
-select you. Monsieur Gunthre, Bobbie--enough of your old panics and
-your stocks; you have two charming ladies present, that's all you need
-to know. Bobbie, obey me at once!"
-
-Beecher was giving his hand to Mrs. Craig Fontaine, a young widow,
-slight, with quick eyes, and almost masculine vitality, and an
-extraordinary elegance of dress and carriage, whom Gunther called
-Louise. She was scarcely twenty-six, possessed of a large fortune from
-her husband, who had been killed in a steeplechase three years before.
-Her position in society was unquestioned, and, being of a singular
-temperament, she did as she pleased. She was seen everywhere with young
-Gunther, and gossip had already arranged their marriage--an eventuality
-which she alone, who ambitiously desired it, knew to be impossible.
-
-Beecher, who was particularly sensitive to the air of distinction that
-always surrounded her, even when most unbending, took her hand with a
-little extra gallantry, saying:
-
-"I changed my mind on your account only, Louise, and I expect you to
-reward me."
-
-Between the two, from his college days, had been a sort of confidential
-intimacy which Beecher had the knack of cultivating.
-
-Holliday having ordered the dinner, Mme. Fornez took special delight in
-countermanding everything that could be countermanded, substituting
-other wines and abolishing the soup, scolding her escort all the while
-with a calculated tyranny which Mrs. Fontaine admired with a slight
-smiling tribute of her lips, as the clever advertisement of a
-professional woman that Mr. Holliday's fetch and carry attentions were
-entirely on her own sufferance.
-
-"How have you escaped being married?" said Mrs. Fontaine in a bantering
-tone to Beecher, after Mme. Fornez had relinquished him for a moment.
-
-"Because I fly like a coward," he said, pleased at the compliment
-implied.
-
-"Seriously, Teddy, you've been back in civilization two months and you
-are not yet caught?"
-
-"I am not the marrying kind," he said, with conviction.
-
-"What's he say--your Teddy?" said Mme. Fornez, turning, with a laugh.
-
-Beecher repeated his statement.
-
-"_Allons donc_, you!" She broke into a ripple of laughter. "What do
-you say, Madame Fontaine?"
-
-Mrs. Fontaine's reply was a tolerant, amused smile, and, leaning over,
-she pinched his ear.
-
-Beecher furiously defended himself.
-
-"Yes, that's what all you women say. You think you can catch any man.
-It irritates you to think any man can resist you."
-
-"Ah, no, no," said Mme. Fornez energetically. "There are lots of men who
-can't be married. I don't say that, but what I say is this: a woman
-knows, the moment she meets one of you, if he is the kind that marries.
-A clever woman knows if she can marry him, but all women know if he is
-the marrying kind the moment they look in his eye. Is it not so, Madame
-Fontaine?"
-
-"Of course," said Mrs. Fontaine calmly, with a glance around the table.
-
-"Nonsense," said Beecher valiantly; "women are as easily fooled as men."
-
-Mme. Fornez, drawing back her head, surveyed him critically.
-
-"Teddy, you will marry the first pretty woman who makes up her mind to
-marry you," she said, tapping the table, amid laughter. "I see it; I
-know it."
-
-"I say, how do you see it?" said Holliday, who was what might be called
-"_un faux Anglais_."
-
-"It is in the eye; it responds or it does not respond," said Mme.
-Fornez, who shrugged her shoulders in Holliday's direction, and said:
-"You, you will never marry unless--unless there is one _big_ panic.
-Teddy, here, has the responsive eye. I saw it at once when I said he
-was a nice boy. Oh, you needn't be furious and blush," she added,
-pulling his other ear. "It is quite right. I like you. You shall play
-with me. You are much nicer than Bobbie, who is all collar and cuffs."
-
-"And Mr. Gunther?" said Beecher, to cover his confusion.
-
-Mme. Fornez looked at him with the same critical estimation.
-
-"Ah, Monsieur Gunthre is very interesting," she said. "What do you
-think, Madame Fontaine?"
-
-She asked the question with a little of that malice which women can not
-help showing toward one another. But Mrs. Fontaine, with the perfect
-control that never left her, answered at once:
-
-"Bruce will marry, but he is not the marrying kind. He will marry when
-he pleases and how he pleases, not the least sentimentally, a woman, a
-young girl, who will raise up a family of children--a son to succeed
-him, as he will succeed his father."
-
-"Yes, yes, that's it," said Mme. Fornez excitedly. "He can not be
-caught; any woman would know that."
-
-Gunther smiled without embarrassment.
-
-"Perhaps," he said.
-
-"Yes, any woman would know it," repeated Mrs. Fontaine, looking at him
-with a little smile. "The reason is, as Madame Fornez says, in the
-eyes--they don't respond. It's more than that, they make no
-distinction. They look at a woman as they do at a man. He is quite to
-be congratulated."
-
-"Ah, _la pauvre femme_," said Mme. Fornez--who was very romantic--in a
-whisper, pressing Beecher's arm. Then aloud, taking pity, "_Allons, mes
-enfants_, we are getting too serious. Bobbie, jump up and play us
-something lively."
-
-The dinner continued gaily. They reached the theater in the middle of
-the second act of the operetta, and deranged the whole orchestra in the
-five minutes necessary for Mme. Fornez to be sure that she was properly
-recognized. Then, having carried off Elsie Ware, a dainty prima donna
-with the wiles and figure of a child, they proceeded to the party at
-Lindabury's studio, Mme. Fornez complimenting Elsie Ware on the quality
-of her voice, which was insignificant, and saying nothing of her acting,
-which was distinguished for its charm and natural gaiety.
-
-Beecher, squeezed in between Louise Fontaine and Mme. Fornez, slightly
-bewildered by the fragrance of soft, filmy wraps, immensely flattered by
-the favor he had won, nevertheless was wondering to himself whether
-among the gay party he was approaching would be the laughing eyes and
-rebellious ashen hair of Nan Charters, whom he intended to treat _en
-ennemi_, and whom he particularly wished to witness his triumphant entry
-at the side of the celebrated Emma Fornez.
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER IX*
-
-
-The party was in full progress when they arrived. Jack and Tom
-Lindabury resided, as far as they could be said to reside anywhere, in a
-great green stone house of the 1860 period, with a deep garden in the
-back on which originally stood a stable, access to which was had, in the
-Parisian style, by a long, vaulted passage at one side. The Lindaburys,
-having discovered, as many other young men of fortune did at this
-period, the social adaptability of the artist's atelier, had transformed
-the stable into a great studio, with a kitchen and two or three
-dressing-rooms, which served when the place was given over to amateur
-theatricals or to the not always restrained ftes of the brothers'
-invention.
-
-Gunther's party emerged from the hollow passage into the sudden cool of
-the short garden, where masked stone seats and arbors were faintly
-disclosed by the great stable lantern which swung at the entrance of the
-studio. Several couples, profiting by the obscurity, could be seen
-moving in the sudden shadows of the garden, laughing with a nervous,
-stifled laughter, as groups crossed or joined one another.
-
-Holliday and Beecher, recognizing acquaintances, saluted them with the
-light banter, which was the note of the evening. Mme. Fornez, inside,
-called her companions with exclamations of surprise which drew the
-whispered curiosity of every one to her entrance.
-
-"Oh, how funny it is! Look, Teddy, what do you call it? It is
-your--cowboy life, is it not?"
-
-The great room had been transformed into a mining saloon of the type
-made popular by a certain play of the day. A bar ran across one end,
-presided over by an impossibly wicked bartender. A roulette-wheel was
-crowded at one side, while a negro orchestra, in 1850 costume, was
-busily sawing away, led by a cotton-head darky on a soap-box, who droned
-out his directions. Three-fourths of the room were in costume, Indian,
-Spanish, cowboy or frontier At the appearance of the new arrivals in
-evening dress, a shout went up:
-
-"Tenderfeet, tenderfeet!"
-
-"Fine them!"
-
-"Shoot 'em up!"
-
-But, in deference to Mrs. Fontaine and Emma Fornez, the protest was not
-so boisterous or accompanied by such rushing tactics as had greeted
-others. Nevertheless they were fined and escorted to one of the
-dressing-rooms. The men were forced to don dusters and white top-hats,
-and the women were given sombreros and mantillas.
-
-Mme. Fornez, despite the frowns of Holliday, clung to Beecher's arm,
-insisting on being personally conducted, plying him with innumerable
-questions.
-
-"Oh what a terrible man! What an awful knife. I like the black
-men--_sont ils rigolots_--with their red and white collars. I want to
-see the bar-man toss drinks--so, in the air, Teddy. Come this way."
-
-All at once she stopped, and, facing about, took him by the lapels of
-the coat.
-
-"It does not annoy you that I adopt you--that I call you Teddy?" she
-said, with a simulation of timidity and a sudden concentration of her
-swimming black eyes.
-
-"Emma," he said, laughing, "if you stop there I shall die of
-disappointment."
-
-She frowned a little at the "Emma," but yielded the point.
-
-"You are not very responsive, Monsieur Beecher," she said, with a flash,
-"when I am so nice to you."
-
-"My dear Emma," said Beecher, who, not being in love, could see clearly,
-"if I don't fall at your feet, it's because I know very well that the
-moment I did you would bulldoze me like Bob Holliday."
-
-Emma Fornez looked at him with a sudden gay approval.
-
-"Teddy, you are very nice," she said decidedly. "You understand how to
-play. I forbid you to fall in love, to get caught by any other woman,
-you understand. You are to be mine for the whole season--_hein_?"
-
-"Nothing promised," said Beecher, laughing.
-
-Holliday came with two or three friends, clamoring to be introduced.
-Beecher profited by the confusion to make the turn of the room, which
-was crowded with laughing groups striving to penetrate the disguises of
-others while maintaining their own. At the faro table, a group from his
-club called to him to join them, but he kept on, saluting the dealer,
-costumed according to Bret Harte, with an approving wave of the hand.
-
-The assembly was one of those curious social demarcations which prevail
-when formal society essays to be Bohemian, and which is probably evolved
-by the women in their always curious desire to study at close range
-those whose lives they are generally condemning. As is usually the
-case, the guests were made up of those who remained wrapped up in a
-mantel of inquisitive respectability, and would go early; a large body
-who waited impatiently for this first secession; and a certain element,
-not all professionals, at present exceedingly punctilious, who would
-inherit the right to put out the lanterns and close up the doors.
-
-Young Beecher, pacing restlessly, nodding and smiling, searched in the
-crowd without quite admitting to himself what it was he sought. In the
-short period of his return, he had gone into many different sets, always
-retaining the prerogatives of his own. The women, besides those of the
-younger married women whom he knew, were of the opera, the stage, one or
-two, even, whose names were electrically displayed in vaudeville. He
-was caught up, greeted enthusiastically, and extricated himself with
-deftness, seeking in a general way to reach the great fireplace near
-which he had detected the figure of Mrs. Kildair.
-
-The men, without exception, were of his own kind--of that second
-generation which is the peculiar problem of America. They were strong,
-well put together, with heads chiseled somewhat on the vigorous lines of
-the father spirits, condemned by the accident of wealth to the most
-un-American of professions, the idler. Without the mental languor of
-the foreign dilettante, consumed in reality by their own imprisoned
-energy, they were a restless, dissatisfied testimony of the error of
-their own civilization, the inability of the great, barbaric,
-money-acquiring American to comprehend the uses of wealth. Tonight,
-threatened with tomorrow's disaster, stirred by the restlessness of the
-multitude, this excess of baffled energy was felt everywhere: at the
-bar, in the Anglo-Saxon intensity; at the faro table where the play had
-a certain desperate counterpart of the spirit that had assembled the
-future; in the momentary sudden accesses of gaiety that began to spread
-through the hesitant crowd, as an overturned bottle spreads its fluid
-over the cloth.
-
-Beecher, too, without comprehending it, felt the stimulus, awakening all
-the nervous unemployed funds of energy within him and the intoxication
-of movement and laughter that brought him a sudden feverish hilarity,
-brought also a sense of unrest and dissatisfaction. Underneath all the
-over-excited spirits of frivolity was a current of grave apprehension
-which he felt in the occasional groupings of men and the low snatches of
-conversation which reached him.
-
-"Bo Lynch's cleaned out."
-
-"--not the only one."
-
-"--and thousands thrown on the market."
-
-"Eddie Fontaine's crowd."
-
-"Copper'll blow up higher than a kite!"
-
-"--if Slade goes too."
-
-"They say there's a line formed in front of the Atlantic."
-
-In his progress he encountered Jack Lindabury, lank and
-broad-shouldered, with the magnificent shell of a head that might have
-been set on the shoulders of a Gladstone. They shook hands with
-cordiality.
-
-"Devil of a mess about Majendie," said Lindabury.
-
-"Are you hit?"
-
-"Of course; Eddie Fontaine's had us all in on his tip. Some of the
-crowd are liable to be wiped out. They tell me Bo Lynch had plunged
-every cent in the world."
-
-"Shouldn't wonder," said Beecher, reflecting. "Is he here?"
-
-"Sure; he's the bartender," said Lindabury.
-
-Beecher, surprised, nodded and made his way toward the end that had been
-converted into a frontier saloon, where, behind enormous mustaches, he
-recognized the long features of his fellow lodger.
-
-"What'll y'have?" said Lynch, in hoarse accents. Then, perceiving that
-he was recognized, he drew Beecher aside and said anxiously:
-
-"You owe me fifty, Ted; we pulled it out. Go over and stake it at the
-table for me, if you've got it."
-
-"Sorry," said Beecher, eying him critically and resolving to lie.
-
-"Oh, well," said Lynch philosophically, "it'll look big as a house
-to-morrow."
-
-"Are you cleaned out, Bo?" said Beecher anxiously.
-
-"Oh, no; I'm worth thousands," said Lynch, with a grin, "until the
-market opens to-morrow."
-
-"Tough luck."
-
-"Steve Plunkett's worse--he's got to negotiate his gold fillings, they
-say."
-
-A party came up, clamoring for attention, and Lynch hastened to the
-rescue. Beecher continued curiously toward the faro table, admiring
-with an admiration tinged with compassion the _sang froid_ of the
-losers, who in a desperate attempt to recover the imminent loss of the
-morrow, were staking sums that made the spectators raise their eyebrows
-in amazement.
-
-"Supposing that Jap came back and sneaked the ring the second time,"
-said Gunther, taking his arm.
-
-Beecher started in surprise.
-
-"I wasn't thinking of that," he said.
-
-"But I was. That puzzle of yours has been running in my head ever
-since. I've got six people now absolutely logically worked out for the
-thief--perfect deduction. Take me over to Mrs. Kildair; I want to meet
-that woman."
-
-"I say, Bruce," said Beecher as they started to cross the room, "it's
-going to be an awful smash. All the boys are caught. There'll be the
-deuce to pay here later on."
-
-"Shouldn't wonder--they started in pretty fierce."
-
-"Eat, drink, and be merry--eh?"
-
-"Sure."
-
-By the hazards of the crowd they found themselves opposite Nan Charters,
-who was on the arm of Charlie Lorraine, a clean-cut, pleasant type of
-the racing set, decidedly handsome in a dark way.
-
-"Hello, fellows, any old clothes to give away?" said Lorraine, who had
-the topic of the evening in jest. "I speak first. How the deuce did
-Eddie Fontaine miss you two? Heard what we are doing? We are organizing
-the Eddie Club. Every one who's taken his tip is going up to live on
-Eddie's farm for the winter--great idea, eh?"
-
-While Gunther and Lorraine were laughing over this plan, a creation of
-Bo Lynch's, Beecher was listening to Nan Charters, with a difficult
-attempt at calming the sudden emotion which her appearance with Lorraine
-had fired within him.
-
-"What a dreadful time you chose to call!" she said directly. "Don't you
-know that it takes a modern woman hours to mix her war-paint?"
-
-She looked at him with a little tantalizing malice in her eyes.
-
-"Coquette," he thought furiously. "She is delighted because I was ass
-enough to call and give her the opportunity to refuse to see me."
-
-"Oh, not a call," he said aloud, committing the stupidity of lying. "I
-was just rushing downtown, and stopped to inquire how you were after
-last night."
-
-This answer brought a natural pause. Each looked at the other, he with
-defiance, she with laughter in her eyes.
-
-"You're staying late," he said at last, because her listening attitude
-forced him to say something.
-
-"Yes, indeed."
-
-"It'll be more amusing when it thins out," he said in a purposely
-languid tone.
-
-"When the sight-seers have left--yes," she said, smiling.
-
-Wishing to show what slight importance he attached to the encounter, he
-contrived to nudge Gunther as a signal that he was ready; but, his
-friend proving insensible, he was forced to proceed.
-
-"Did you come with Mrs. Kildair?" he said perfunctorily.
-
-"No."
-
-"With whom?" he asked, regretting the question as soon as it was
-uttered.
-
-"With Mr. Lorraine--of course," she said, looking down modestly, but
-beneath her eyelids he divined again the cunning malice.
-
-At this moment, to his delight, Emma Fornez perceived him, and, being
-profoundly bored by her chance cavalier, a purely passive listener
-thoroughly bewildered by her sallies, gave a cry of joy:
-
-"Teddy, traitor, where have you been?"
-
-Dismissing her companion with a bob of her head, she seized Beecher's
-arm, exclaiming:
-
-"Heavens--save me! I have been shrieking at a deaf-mute."
-
-In the crowd, the head of her late companion could be seen, rolling his
-uncomprehending eyes. Beecher, overjoyed at the arrival, which gave him
-an advantage he was quick to perceive, nodded to Miss Charters and
-departed, exaggerating, for her benefit, the confidential intimacy which
-Mme. Fornez's attitude permitted.
-
-"Who is that woman?" said Emma Fornez immediately. "She is watching us.
-She doesn't seem pleased. _Tant pis_!"
-
-"Nan Charters--one of our younger actresses."
-
-"Ah! Good?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"She is pretty--in a way," said Mme. Fornez, using her lorgnette,
-without caring in the least that Miss Charters perceived it. "_Pas
-mal--pas mal_. Not much temperament--afraid to uncover her shoulders.
-It is not an actress; it is a woman. You are interested, Teddy?"
-
-"No."
-
-"Oh, _avec a_. You are in love?"
-
-"I met her last night for the first time."
-
-"That's not an answer. Yes, you have a guilty look. You are a little
-taken--she provokes you--these little dolls always do. I will give you
-good advice; I will help you."
-
-"How?" said Beecher, a bit confused.
-
-"I will be very, very nice with you," said his companion gaily, her feet
-dancing to the music. "A woman always wants what another woman wants,
-particularly when she is a little actress and I am Emma Fornez. It's
-very simple, but it never fails; only, I will not help you if you are
-really in love, you understand?"
-
-Beecher solemnly assured her that she need have no fear.
-
-"Very well, then. Be sure to pay attention to Madame Fontaine too; she
-likes you. We are the two women most distinguished here tonight--both
-high, high above your little Charters. It will double the effect. Do
-as I say; it'll be amusing."
-
-Gunther joined them, protesting.
-
-"I say, Madame Fornez, it's not fair. We'll have to get up a Whitecaps
-party and kidnap Ted, if you don't stop."
-
-"Oh, we understand each other perfectly," said Beecher, delighted to
-perceive that Nan Charters was still following his progress. "Whenever
-Emma wants to escape from some one, she remembers that she's crazy about
-me. It is all arranged."
-
-Emma Fornez burst out laughing and gave him a little pat on his shoulder
-with the lorgnon.
-
-"We are--chums, you say--_hein_, Teddy? Monsieur Gunthre is different.
-I like to talk with him--seriously."
-
-But at this moment, in response to a clamor, one of the negroes began
-dancing a shuffle in a quickly formed circle. Emma Fornez rushed off,
-with a cry of delight, deserting both young men.
-
-"You've made a killing, Ted," said Gunther, laughing.
-
-"Pooh! she'll forget my name tomorrow," said Beecher, who, however,
-believed nothing of the sort. "Come on."
-
-Mrs. Kildair was standing by the great Italian fireplace, her glance
-playing incessantly through the crowd, nodding from time to time, but
-without hearing the remarks of two or three older men who surrounded
-her. So different was the magnetic animation of her whole attitude from
-the ordinary feline languor of her pose, that Beecher noticed it at
-once, an impression heightened by the flash of the eyes and the almost
-electric warmth of her hand as she greeted him. Mrs. Kildair, who had
-followed his entrance with Mrs. Craig Fontaine and Emma Fornez and
-moreover was particularly pleased at his presenting young Gunther, was
-unusually gracious.
-
-Gunther, with his direct, almost obtrusive stare, studied her with
-unusual curiosity, conversed a little, and departed, after receiving a
-cordial invitation from her to call.
-
-"What is the matter with you, Rita?" said Beecher immediately.
-
-"Matter--how do you mean?"
-
-"I have never seen you so excited."
-
-"Really, do I seem so?" she said, waving to some one on the floor.
-
-"Extraordinarily so."
-
-"I am generally--dormant," she said, laughing. "Yes, I am excited
-tonight."
-
-"You are on the track of the ring--you have found it," he said
-instantly, with a pang of disappointment.
-
-"No, not that," she said, with a frown.
-
-An idea came to him. He imagined that she too, like the good gambler he
-felt her to be, was laughing before the irretrievable disaster of the
-morrow.
-
-"Look here, Rita," he said sympathetically, "you're not caught in the
-stock market, are you?
-
-"No, no, of course not." She saw the look on his face, and was touched
-by it. "Ruined and dying game? No, no; I am excited, very much
-excited, that's all. Will you ask me to dance, sir?"
-
-"Are they dancing?"
-
-"Of course. Hurry up!"
-
-Some of the more ardent spirits, impatient for the crowd to thin out,
-were whirling about, clearing an expanding circle by force of their
-revolving attacks. In a moment they were moving among the dancers.
-
-Mrs. Kildair danced remarkably well. In this lithe body, so pliant and
-yet so inspired with the vertigo of the waltz, Beecher was again aware
-of the strange excitement that seemed to animate her whole being, and
-continued to ask himself the cause of such an unusual emotion. From
-time to time, the light fingers on his arms contracted imperiously,
-urging him to a wilder measure. He had a strange sensation of mystery
-and flight, as though he were no longer dancing, but whirling around
-with her in his arms, each striving, in the frantic flight, to conquer
-the other.
-
-The dance ended. The spectators burst into applause. Mrs. Kildair, half
-opening her eyes, thanked him with a grateful smile. He walked away
-with her on his arm, agitated and troubled. What all the brilliance of
-Emma Fornez had not been able to accomplish, one touch of Rita Kildair
-had effected.
-
-"I've lots of things to ask you," he said hurriedly, remembering
-McKenna's suggestions.
-
-"No, no; not now--tomorrow," she said breathlessly, with the same
-caressing, half-veiled look. She gave him her hand in dismissal.
-
-He understood. The sensation which had come in the few moments of their
-vertigo had been too extraordinary to be dimmed by a descent to
-conversation.
-
-He left her, as always, aware of the artist in her, that never failed in
-the conception of a situation.
-
-"If I fall in love, it won't be with Nan Charters," he said, following
-Mrs. Kildair with his eyes.
-
-Then, mindful of Emma Fornez's advice, he joined Mrs. Fontaine, staying
-with her until she gave the signal to leave for those who had come to
-watch.
-
-With this departure, in which Mrs. Kildair joined, a certain element of
-restraint disappeared. The unmistakable rising note of loosened tongues
-freed from Anglo-Saxon restraint by the scientifically contrived punch,
-began to mount above the rhythmic beat of the music, which itself seemed
-suddenly possessed of a wilder abandon. At the roulette table the
-players, coldly concentrated, continued in strained attitudes, oblivious
-of all but the blinding green nap before them.
-
-Toward two o'clock the thirty or forty who still remained formed a
-circle, camping on the floor, Indian fashion, clamoring for songs and
-vaudeville turns. Jack Lindabury and Bo Lynch gave their celebrated
-take-off on grand opera. Elsie Ware, riotously acclaimed, accompanied
-by an hilarious chorus, sang her famous successes, turning to and fro
-coquetting with first one man and then another.
-
-Emma Fornez, excited as a child, without waiting to be urged, ran to the
-piano and struck the first riotous chords of the "Habanera" of _Carmen_.
-Instantly there was a scramble for the sides of the long piano, and when
-she looked up again it was into a score of comically adoring faces, each
-striving to attract her attention. But Beecher, first to a position of
-vantage, received the full concentration of the diva's glances. Flushed
-with the peculiar fleeting intoxication of exuberant youth--the
-knowledge of the evening's success with women others coveted--he leaned
-far over the piano, resting his chin in his hands, gazing with a
-provoking malice into the eyes of the singer, exaggerating the intensity
-of his look, maliciously obvious of Nan Charters, whom he felt at his
-side. Emma Fornez, lending herself to the maneuver, opened her wide,
-languorous eyes, singing to him alone, with a little forward leaning of
-her body:
-
- "_L'amour est enfant de la Bohme,_
- _Il n'a jamais connu de loi_
- _Si tu m'aimes._"
-
-
-The song ended in a furore. Mme. Fornez was overwhelmed with
-spontaneous adulation, and Beecher, laughing and struggling, was choked
-and carried away by the indignant suitors. Escaping, he came back,
-happy and resolved on more mischief. He had always had a passion for
-what is called fancy dancing, and in Europe had learned the dances of
-the country. He proposed to Emma Fornez a Spanish dance, and the idea
-was received with shouts of enthusiasm. Every one camped on the floor
-again, while three or four of the men, converting their sombreros into
-imaginary tambourines, shook them frantically in the air, led by Bo
-Lynch, who had somehow procured a great tin tray.
-
-"You dance--are you sure?" asked Emma Fornez, looking at his flushed
-face with an anxious look; for some of the men, notably Lorraine and
-Lynch, were in a visibly excited state.
-
-"Very well," he said confidently.
-
-"_Allons_, then!"
-
-The dance he had chosen was one somewhat akin to the tarantella, a slow
-movement gradually and irresistibly singing up into a barbaric frenzy at
-the climax--one of those dances that are the epitome of primal coquetry,
-of the savage fascinating allurements of the feline, provoking to the
-dancer, doubly provoking to the spectator, bewildered by the sudden
-antagonisms of the poses and the brusque yieldings. At the end,
-according to Spanish custom, the dance ended in an embrace. Emma
-Fornez, surprised to find so inspired a partner, transported by the
-mood, ended laughingly with a kiss, her warm arms remaining languidly a
-moment about the shoulders of the young man, whom she complimented with
-expressions of surprise. Besieged at every side with cries for an
-encore, they repeated the dance, freer in their revolving movements from
-the intimacy of the first passage.
-
-From time to time Beecher had managed to steal a glance in the direction
-of Nan Charters. She was sitting straight and unrelaxing, her eyes
-never leaving him, the lines of her mouth drawn a little tightly. When
-Emma Fornez had embraced him for the second time, Beecher, relaxing,
-perceived that Nan Charters turned her back and was conversing volubly,
-her shoulders rising and falling with little rapid movements, while her
-fan had the same nervous lashing that one sees in the uneasy panther.
-
-He was delighted at his success, at the revenge he had inflicted, at the
-superiority he had regained. The dances began again, but he did not
-dance. He held himself near the entrance, surveying the scene
-triumphantly. The experience was new to him; in the few years he had
-passed since college, he had been really out of the world. This
-game--the most fascinating of all the games of chance that can fascinate
-the gambler in each human being--the game between man and woman, came to
-him as a revelation, with a zest that was almost a discovery of his
-youth.
-
-All at once a feminine hand was laid on his arm and the voice of Nan
-Charters said:
-
-"Come outside--in the garden. I want to speak to you. Come quietly."
-
-[Illustration: "'Come outside--in the garden. I want to speak to you.
-Come quietly'"]
-
-Elated by a strange, almost cruel feeling of conquest, he followed her,
-with a last look back at the studio, at the littered bar, where Bo Lynch
-was still calling raucously for customers, at the silent intensity of
-the gamblers, whom he occasionally perceived between the flitting
-dresses of the dancers. In the middle of the floor Lorraine and
-Plunkett, stumbling and unsteady, were solemnly waltzing in each other's
-arms--the specter of the morning forgotten.
-
-He closed the door softly and joined the young actress, who was waiting
-for him at some distance.
-
-"Can you take me home?" she asked directly. "Mr. Lorraine is in such a
-condition that I do not wish to go with him."
-
-"Certainly," he said, a feeling of protection replacing the first
-victorious perception of the fire of jealousy he had awakened in her.
-
-Gunther's automobile was waiting, and they entered it. She did not say
-a word to him, and he, determined to force her to begin the
-conversation, waited with a pleased enjoyment until three-quarters of
-the journey had been accomplished. All at once she turned, and, taking
-him by the lapels of the coat, brought him toward her as one scolds a
-child.
-
-"Are you so angry because I didn't see you this afternoon?" she said,
-smiling.
-
-The feminine defensive instinct of avoiding the issue by ambushing it
-with subterfuges, is equaled only by that instinct for attack which
-brushes aside all preliminaries and strikes directly. Beecher, taken
-off his guard, was a prey to two contrary impulses. Two replies,
-absolutely opposed and illogically joined, came to his lips. One
-brutal, still charged with the savageness of the evening, to say:
-
-"Angry? Not at all. Aren't you claiming a little too much?"
-
-And the other, a warm, yielding desire to blurt out frankly:
-
-"Yes, I was angry. I wanted to see you."
-
-She waited. Her large eyes, seeming larger in the dim light of the
-carriage, continued steadily on him. The first impulse dominated the
-second, but was modified by it.
-
-"Angry? What a curious idea!" he began, with a half laugh. "You were
-so upset--"
-
-She interrupted him, shaking her head.
-
-"Why did you act the way you did tonight? Don't do things that are not
-like you. That is not the way we began."
-
-He was silent, not knowing what to answer. Presently she withdrew into
-her corner, glanced out of the window, as if to assure herself that they
-were near their destination, and, placing her hand over his, said
-gently:
-
-"You are very sympathetic to me. Keep it so."
-
-For all that he said to himself that it was his favor with other women
-that made him precious to her, he felt a certain yielding of the spirit.
-He wondered if he could take her in his arms; but he restrained himself,
-and closed his two hands over hers.
-
-"Yes, we are very sympathetic," he said; but he did not say all he
-meant.
-
-"What a foolish boy you are," she said finally, looking up at him.
-"Don't you know that if I say one word you will go wherever I want you
-to?"
-
-He was so taken by surprise at the audacity and confidence of her
-remark, that he could not collect himself for an answer, outgeneraled by
-the woman who had so calculated to a nicety her last words that the
-arrival of the automobile left him without response.
-
-He went home, repeating to himself what she had asserted, resisting a
-wild desire to return to the Lindaburys' and forget there the disorder
-in his soul; and, though he rebelled scornfully against her confident
-assertion, the incessant repetition of it did leave an impression.
-
-As he passed the great marble faade of the Atlantic Trust, an unusual
-sight made him bend out of the window. In the chill gray of the coming
-dawn, a thin line of depositors was waiting, some standing, others
-huddled on campstools. At the sight the seriousness of life smote him,
-and he returned home, the tremulous turns of the human gamble he had
-played feverishly blended and confused with the dark realities of the
-rising tragedy of speculation.
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER X*
-
-
-When, the next morning, Beecher struggled out of a profound stupor, it
-was to be awakened by the sounds of Bo Lynch at the telephone. He
-rolled out of bed after a startled gaze at his watch, recalling in a
-flash the incidents of the night before. As he emerged he heard the
-final phrase, and the click of the released receiver:
-
-"Sell at once--throw them over."
-
-Bo Lynch, a pad of paper in one hand, a tumbler of cracked ice in the
-other, already dressed for the day, greeted him nonchalantly:
-
-"Morning."
-
-"How late did you stay?" asked Beecher.
-
-"Oh, we breakfasted together," said Lynch, with a wry smile; "charming
-little repast. But I picked up enough to pay for my winter's stabling."
-
-Beecher glanced at the clock, which was approaching the hour.
-
-"Waiting for the opening?"
-
-"Yes." His glance followed Beecher's with a sudden concentration, and,
-taking up a matchbox, he struck a match and threw it away. "Waiting to
-see if I can escape working another year."
-
-Beecher, comprehending that sympathy would be distasteful, picked up the
-morning papers. The scareheads were alive with the note of panic: a
-dozen banks were threatened with runs; a rumor was abroad that the
-Atlantic Trust and two other great institutions might close their doors
-within the next twenty-four hours; an interview with Majendie protested
-against the action of the Clearing-house, asserting the recklessness of
-the move and the solvency of the Trust Company; a riot was feared on the
-East Side, where the small Jewish depositors, always prey to alarms,
-were in a state of frenzy; vague, guarded hints of further actions to be
-expected by the Clearing-house against another prominent chain of banks,
-and a report that John G. Slade was to tender his resignation, were
-joined with rumors from the office of the State Examiner of Banks that
-there might be grounds for the criminal prosecution of certain
-officials.
-
-The telephone rang. Lynch went to the receiver, arranging his pad
-methodically on the table. Beecher stopped reading, listening to the
-broken threads.
-
-"All right, go ahead." ...
-
-"How much?" ...
-
-"Whew! Give me the Northern Pacific figures now." ...
-
-"Yes--yes--I see." ...
-
-"Something of a break, isn't it?" ...
-
-"All right." ...
-
-"No--that's all in the game. Thank you. I'll send my check to-day.
-Thanks."
-
-He put up the receiver, glanced curiously at the clock, which marked
-twelve minutes after ten, and studied the pad.
-
-Beecher had never been intimate with Lynch, but he liked him and his
-standards of Britannic phlegm. He belonged to that curious freemasonry
-of men, an indefinable, invisible standard of association, but one that
-cannot be counterfeited.
-
-"How did you come out?" he said carelessly.
-
-"About as I expected. The market has gone wild."
-
-Bo Lynch poured out a morning peg, adjusted his cravat critically in the
-mirror, and took up his hat.
-
-"Lunching at the club?"
-
-"Not to-day."
-
-"It'll be a cheerful funeral. So long."
-
-After his departure Beecher studied the jotted figures on the pad. In
-the twelve minutes of the opening, Lynch had lost a clear thirty-two
-thousand dollars.
-
-By the time he had dressed and breakfasted, he had answered the
-telephone a dozen times, messages from men he knew, anxious to learn if
-his intimacy with young Gunther had brought him any valuable
-information; inquiries as to the effect on his personal fortunes, and
-rumors of individual losses.
-
-He himself remained undisturbed by the frenzy. His own fortune, thanks
-to the wise provision of a hard-headed father, was safely invested in
-solid properties, and the world of speculation had not entered his ken.
-He returned to his newspapers, read everything bearing on the personal
-fate of John G. Slade, which interested him extraordinarily since his
-encounter with that abrupt and forceful personality, and, rising, asked
-himself how he could kill the time until the hour of his luncheon with
-Rita Kildair.
-
-The irritation he had felt at the end of his ride with Nan Charters had
-disappeared. Studying the evening calmly, he analyzed her words with a
-clearer perception. He comprehended that, beyond all the cleverness of
-her attitude, she had been veritably piqued by his indifference and his
-absorption by Emma Fornez, who treated her as a little actress.
-Considering the encounter thus, he smiled occasionally, congratulating
-himself that the conversation had ended so abruptly--when a continuance
-would have led him perhaps to say some of those sudden, illogical
-remarks which are irresistibly drawn from a man by the provoking contact
-of certain feminine personalities.
-
-"She may say what she wants," he said, selecting a cigarette. "She was
-caught by her own tricks." He took several steps, and grinned to
-himself. "It's an amusing game, and a game that will be amusing to
-play."
-
-Despite this feeling of confidence and elation, he had an irresistible
-desire to telephone her, to indulge himself in the pleasure of hearing
-her voice again. He had resisted the impulse several times, convincing
-himself of the tactical error; and yet, the more he argued against it,
-the more the desire haunted him.
-
-Ordinarily he spent an agreeable half-hour after breakfast, calling up
-on the telephone those of the opposite sex with whom he was in the
-relation of a good comrade. He enjoyed these morning snatches of
-intimacy, with an enjoyment untouched with any seriousness. This
-morning, as he took the telephone in hand, he thought first of Emma
-Fornez, but as he had neglected to make his adieu to her on leaving with
-Nan Charters, he considered a moment while he formulated an acceptable
-apology.
-
-The prima donna answered him from the languid idleness of her bed, where
-she was resting in a state of complete exhaustion.
-
-"I am ab-so-lutely _fini_," she said in an anguished tone. "It is
-fright-ful. I shall never be able to sing--never!" Then she
-remembered. "I am very angry with you--yes, yes,--very angry."
-
-Beecher explained, with crocodile tears, how he had been forced to come
-to the aid of a distressed and helpless female.
-
-"Ta-ta-ta! Stuff and nonsense! You could have boxed her up in a
-carriage and sent her home--yes, yes, you could. But you are in
-love--you are weak--you wanted an excuse--she made a fool of you--she
-twisted you around her finger!"
-
-Beecher denied the charge with indignation.
-
-"If you wanted to, you could have come back to me--yes, you could."
-
-"But you had deserted me--I was furious."
-
-The conversation continued ten minutes on these purely conventional
-lines and ended with a promise to drop in that afternoon for tea.
-
-He had hardly ended when Mrs. Fontaine called up with an invitation to
-her box, for Mme. Fornez's dbut in Carmen the following week.
-
-Then he called up Miss Rivers, not because he particularly wished to
-talk with her, for he had determined on her decapitation, so to speak,
-but in order to appease somewhat the desire he had to telephone some one
-else. In conversing over the telephone, he felt a revival of interest
-and promised to try to drop in for a call that afternoon.
-
-He rose, looking down at the telephone in a dissatisfied way, and,
-turning his back, went in search of his hat.
-
-"She'll expect me to telephone, of course," he thought; "besides, what
-excuse could I give? I'm not going to play into her game--not by a long
-shot. I know the kind--entirely too much brain-work to suit me. Oh,
-yes, she'd like to annex me--because I've been attentive to Emma
-Fornez--sure; but when it comes down to business. Mr. Charles Lorraine
-has a hundred thousand a year and I have thirty. She knows that." He
-laughed disdainfully and repeated, "You bet she knows that--well, so do
-I."
-
-He returned to the sitting-room and selected a cane, glancing out of the
-corner of his eye at the accursed telephone.
-
-"I won't," he said, taking three steps toward it and then turning
-abruptly away.
-
-At the moment when he stood wavering, it began to ring. He went to it
-hastily. Miss Charters was calling him...
-
-"How lucky!" he said purposely. "I was just going out. I heard you
-from the hall."
-
-"You know, I never realized until this morning what I had done," said
-the voice at the other end. "I was so upset by Mr. Lorraine's condition
-that I forgot you were there with Madame Fornez."
-
-"Clever girl," he said to himself, smiling. Then aloud: "Oh, I
-explained matters."
-
-"I was afraid I'd got you into trouble."
-
-"No, indeed. Madame Fornez is a good sort; she understood at once."
-
-"I'm so glad. You've 'phoned her already then?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-He remembered McKenna's suggestion, but he did not wish to make the
-demand direct.
-
-"Something of a smash in Wall Street to-day," he said carelessly.
-
-"You weren't caught, were you?" she said, with a note of quick sympathy
-which he admired.
-
-"No; I don't speculate."
-
-"I was afraid you might have."
-
-"By Jove," he said, "I hope you didn't lose anything."
-
-"No, I don't think so," she said doubtfully. "I had some money
-invested, but I suppose if I hold on that'll come up again."
-
-"Not on margins?"
-
-"No, indeed."
-
-"Who's your broker?"
-
-"Mr. Garraboy."
-
-"Who?"
-
-"Mr. Garraboy."
-
-The news produced on him a strangely ominous effect. He forgot all the
-parleying and the tactical planning of his campaign, overshadowed by a
-sudden sense of sympathy.
-
-"I want to talk to you about that," he said anxiously. "Have you much
-in his hands?"
-
-"Much for me--about twenty thousand."
-
-"Are you going to be in this afternoon? Can I see you?"
-
-"I wish you would."
-
-Something in her voice struck him by its weakness.
-
-"You are not worried, are you?" he said.
-
-"A little."
-
-"Why don't you call him up?"
-
-"I've been trying to."
-
-He was going to offer to telephone for her, when he remembered the
-antagonism he had felt for the broker, and refrained until a fuller
-knowledge. He reassured her, making light of her doubts, though feeling
-an instinctive anxiety for himself. Then he called up McKenna; but the
-detective was out, and, leaving word that he would try later, he went
-for his morning ride.
-
-A little before one o'clock he was in the softly lighted studio of Mrs.
-Kildair, waiting for his hostess with the pleasurable anticipation of a
-confidential tte--tte. On one thing he was thoroughly resolved--to
-convince her of the seriousness of his purpose in offering his
-assistance. As he paced slowly and irregularly about the room, his
-mind, perplexed by the mystery of the disappearance of the ring,
-instinctively considering the possibilities for concealment, he was
-surprised to hear, behind the closed doors of the bedroom, the sound of
-voices in agitated discussion. He stopped, perplexed, for in his walk
-about the room he had arrived at a point in such close proximity that
-the tones were easily distinguishable.
-
-"But I have already made up my mind," cried a voice which he recognized
-at once as Mrs. Bloodgood's.
-
-Mrs. Kildair answered her, but in a lower tone--a note of warning and
-remonstrance.
-
-"Oh, what do I care for the world!" repeated the voice, on a higher
-note. "The world is all against me. I have only one life--I want to
-live some of it."
-
-Beecher, ill at ease, realizing that he had stumbled on a situation
-which he had no right to surprise, tip-toed away. Hardly had he seated
-himself when the door opened brusquely, and Mrs. Bloodgood appeared,
-saying:
-
-"No, no; it is decided. I'm going. My only regret is that we waited so
-long."
-
-Two spots of red showed on her dark cheeks, while her head was carried
-defiant, alive with sudden energy. Beecher was struck with the unwonted
-brilliancy and youth which the emotion that possessed her had
-communicated to her whole body. Mrs. Kildair followed her, with the
-frown of one who disapproves, but who knows the futility of any
-contradiction.
-
-Beecher rose hastily, emerging from the shadow. The two women stopped,
-surprised at his presence, considering him nervously. The few snatches
-of conversation he had heard, coupled with what Gunther had revealed to
-him of the infatuation of Mrs. Bloodgood and Majendie, made him divine
-the intention of elopement they had been discussing. His sympathy was
-touched by the distress of the young woman, and, advancing quickly, he
-said, with a pretense of shame:
-
-"By Jove, I must have been nodding! A thousand pardons."
-
-"How long have you been here?" said Mrs. Kildair.
-
-"About ten minutes," he said, rubbing his eyes and laughing. "Confound
-that chair--it's infernally comfortable, after being up all night. You
-made me jump."
-
-Mrs. Bloodgood had regained her calm. She embraced Mrs. Kildair and
-held out her hand to Beecher.
-
-"Won't you let me see you to your carriage?" he said eagerly, with a
-smile of such good will that she perceived that whatever he had
-overheard, she had no need to fear.
-
-"It's not necessary--but thank you," she said, giving him a grateful
-smile.
-
-He went to the door, opening it with a little exaggerated courtesy, and
-returned thoughtfully to Mrs. Kildair, who was watching him fixedly.
-
-"You overheard?" she said directly.
-
-"A little."
-
-"And what did you understand from it?"
-
-"Why, frankly, knowing what I do, I should believe that Mrs. Bloodgood
-had decided to run away," he answered slowly; "which means, of course,
-one man. I am sorry. I could not help hearing."
-
-Mrs. Kildair had seated herself on the Rcamier sofa and was studying
-him, undecided as to what she should say.
-
-"You have heard too much, Teddy, not to know all," she said, reassured
-by the directness of his glance. "Besides, in twenty-four hours it will
-be in every paper in the country. I do not need to ask your promise to
-keep secret what you have heard. She is leaving her home and going
-openly away with Mr. Majendie--this very afternoon."
-
-"Majendie running off?" said Beecher, astounded.
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Now--at such a time as this--when he is under fire? I don't believe
-it!"
-
-"I should not have believed it either," said Mrs. Kildair thoughtfully.
-
-"I know his kind," declared Beecher warmly; "he would never commit such
-a folly--never!"
-
-"And yet, that is what is going to happen."
-
-"That is terrible. Doesn't she realize that he lays himself open to
-every charge? He'll be called a defaulter and an absconder--it is worse
-than death!"
-
-"She realizes nothing," said Mrs. Kildair in a solemn voice, "except
-that she has hated one man and lived with him ten years, and that now,
-when everything is against the man she adores, she will sacrifice
-anything to be at his side."
-
-"But the sacrifice he is making--"
-
-"Her sacrifice is too great--she doesn't realize that," said Mrs.
-Kildair, rising. "Poor Elise! Her life has been terrible. She is wild
-with anxiety, with the thought of what Majendie may do. When one has
-suffered as much as she has, one more sorrow will not stop her."
-
-Beecher was silent, overcome by the vision of an emptiness which he
-could divine only in a general way, having as yet little knowledge of
-the silent tragedies that pass at our elbows. When Mrs. Kildair turned
-again, it was with all her accustomed poise.
-
-"We can do nothing," she said calmly. "Let us forget it. Luncheon is a
-little late. We shall be three; I asked Mr. Slade to join us. By the
-way, you were kind enough to offer me your help in the matter of my
-ring. I shan't need it now, but thanks all the same."
-
-"What do you mean?" he asked, surprised.
-
-"My detectives assure me they are on the right track," she said
-carelessly. "All I ask of you, as I have of every one, is to keep this
-unfortunate occurrence to yourself."
-
-Beecher had been on the point of informing her of his retaining McKenna,
-confident of her approval. Ignorant as he was of Mrs. Kildair's dread
-that Slade's ownership of the ring might come to light, with all the
-consequent public misunderstanding, he was disagreeably impressed by her
-announcement. He did not for one moment believe her statement that the
-right clue had been found. All he understood was that, for some reason,
-she desired to keep him out of the case, and this understanding
-irritated him. And the introduction of Slade at what he had considered
-his privileged hour annoyed him even more. His curiosity increased
-twofold as he was forced to retain his information. Then he remembered
-McKenna's hint, and said carelessly:
-
-"By Jove, that reminds me--I want the address of your detective agency."
-
-She raised her eyes very slowly, and her glance rested on his for a full
-moment.
-
-"Why do you ask that?" she said.
-
-He repeated the story he had prepared of a friend's demand, mentioning
-Gunther's name.
-
-Mrs. Kildair rose as though reluctantly, motioning him to wait, and,
-going to her room, returned after a long moment with an address on a
-slip of paper.
-
-"There, Teddy," she said, giving it to him. Her manner had completely
-changed. She was again the Rita Kildair who treated him _en camarade_.
-"You are disappointed in not working out an exciting mystery," she said,
-laughing. "Do you know, Teddy, I am quite surprised at you."
-
-"How so?" he said warily.
-
-"I should have thought by this time you would have engaged half the
-detectives in New York," she said, turning from him to arrange the
-cushions at her back. "And here you have done nothing."
-
-Beecher was not deceived by the innocence of the interrogation.
-
-In the last days his wits had been trained by contact with different
-feminine personalities. He understood that she wished to find out what
-he had done and assumed at once an attitude of boyish candor.
-
-"It's not my fault, Rita," he said contritely. "You put me off--you
-remember."
-
-"That's so," she said. She motioned to him with a little gesture of her
-fingers and indicated a chair at her side. "Come here, you great boy,"
-she said, smiling. "You are furious at me, aren't you?"
-
-"Why?" he said, sitting near her, with a resolve to resist all her
-curiosity.
-
-"You like to be the confidant of pretty women, Teddy," she said,
-laughing as he blushed. "To be on the inside--to know what others
-can't. Well, you shan't be deprived."
-
-He looked at her in surprise.
-
-"What I told you is not true," she said candidly. "I have no clue, as
-yet, and am quite in the dark. I give you permission to do all you can.
-You see," she continued, holding out her hand with a charming smile, "I
-give you my full confidence--confidence for confidence--_n'est ce pas_?"
-
-Beecher made a rapid mental reservation and repeated her phrase,
-expecting a direct examination, but her manner became thoughtful again
-and she said pensively:
-
-"Besides, you have stumbled on a confidence yourself, and if you are to
-be trusted with that you should be trusted entirely." She looked at him
-quietly for a moment, and then added: "As a proof of my trust, Teddy, I
-am going to ask you to be my ally now. Mr. Slade will be here shortly.
-I do not wish to be alone with him. Do not go until he is gone."
-
-This request, implying as it did his own superior intimacy, delighted
-Beecher. He felt half of his suspicions vanish as he answered wisely:
-
-"I understand. He is quite daffy about you, isn't he?"
-
-"Quite. But he has to be kept in place."
-
-"Oh, of course."
-
-"And now you are happy again," she said, tapping his arm with a little
-friendly gesture and smiling inwardly at the satisfaction which began to
-radiate from his face. "Teddy, you are a nice boy. I will teach you
-what the world is; you shall be my confidant, and we will laugh
-together; only, you must not be sentimental, you understand."
-
-"Never," he said with vigorous assertion. Then his conscience began to
-reprove him, and he blurted out: "I say, Rita, I haven't been quite
-honest, but you rubbed me the wrong way. I really have been on the
-job."
-
-"Besides Gunther, whom else have you talked with?" she asked.
-
-"McKenna, the detective; and he's dead keen on the case," he said
-enthusiastically, not noticing what she had implied.
-
-"Oh, McKenna!" she said, nodding appreciatively. "You have done well."
-
-She sat up, suddenly serious, and, extending her hand, took from him the
-address she had given him.
-
-"Did McKenna tell you to find out my detective?" she said slowly.
-
-Beecher comprehended all at once how he had played into her game, but,
-with her glance on his, it was impossible to deny.
-
-"Yes," he said; "he told me that he'd been on a dozen cases where the
-detectives who had come in to make a search had gone partners with the
-thief. He wanted to be certain there had been a real search."
-
-This seemed to reassure her, for she nodded with a return of her
-careless manner, as though comprehending the situation. Then, crumpling
-in her hands the paper with the address, she allowed her body to regain
-its former languid position and said:
-
-"I should like to meet McKenna; you must bring him around. How is he
-starting on the case?"
-
-Before Beecher could answer, the bell rang and Slade's bulky figure
-crowded the frame of the doorway. He entered, and the portires, at his
-passing, rolled back like two storm clouds.
-
-Whether or not Mrs. Kildair had calculated the effect of the intimacy of
-Beecher's position, Slade saw it at once as he noted savagely the
-involuntary separating movement which each unconsciously performed, and,
-perceiving it, exaggerated its importance. The look he gave the younger
-man revealed to the amused woman how much he would have liked in
-barbaric freedom to have seized him and crushed him in his powerful
-arms.
-
-"Sorry to be late," he said abruptly, glancing at the clock. "I've
-taken the liberty to leave your telephone number, Mrs. Kildair, in case
-something important turns up."
-
-They passed immediately into the dining-room, Mrs. Kildair enjoying this
-clash of opposite personalities. Slade was not a man of small talk,
-disdaining the easy and ingratiating phrases with which other men
-establish a congenial intimacy. For the first quarter of an hour he
-withdrew from the conversation, and, being hungry, ate with relish.
-Beecher, abetted by his hostess, taking a malicious pleasure in the
-superiority he enjoyed, chatted of a hundred and one things which he
-shared with his listener, incidents of the party at Lindabury's, gossip
-of the world they knew, Emma Fornez and Holliday, Mrs. Fontaine and
-Gunther. Then, naturally drawn to the one topic that charged the air
-with the electricity of its drama, he related the uproar in the city,
-the long lines of depositors before the banks, the incident of Bo Lynch
-in the morning, and the effect on the men they knew. In this both he
-and Mrs. Kildair had an ulterior motive--to make Slade talk: Mrs.
-Kildair, for reasons of her own, Beecher alive to his dramatic closeness
-to the one man about whose success or ruin all the storm of rumor and
-gossip was raging.
-
-"Stocks are still dropping," said Mrs. Kildair, glancing at Slade, who
-appeared quite unconscious. "An enormous quantity of holdings have been
-thrown on the market."
-
-"How long do you think it will keep up?"
-
-"That depends; a day, a week--Mr. Slade knows better than any one."
-
-Slade looked up suddenly.
-
-"What do they say about me?" he asked grimly.
-
-"Every one expects the Associated Trust to be the next," said Beecher
-frankly.
-
-"Probably. I'll tell you one bit of news," he added quietly. "The
-Clearing-house will refuse to clear for us this afternoon."
-
-"But that means failure," said Mrs. Kildair, with a quick glance at him.
-
-"We shall see."
-
-"But the run has already started."
-
-"Oh, yes; we have paid off five depositors already," he said, with a
-smile that was almost imperceptible.
-
-"Only five?"
-
-"It takes a long time to verify some accounts. Then the law allows
-discretion in payment--takes quite a while to count out five thousand in
-half dollars." All at once he leaned forward heavily and began to
-speak, contemplatively interested. "The real truth is the thing that is
-never known. The newspapers never print the news. Sometimes it is
-given to them in confidence, to make certain that they won't print it.
-How much do you suppose will ever be known of the real causes of the
-present crisis? Nothing. They may let the market go to the dogs for
-three days, six days, a month, ruin thousands of victims, and the public
-will never know that the whole thing can be stopped now, in twenty-four
-hours, by ten men. And, when they get ready, ten men _will_ stop it.
-Then there'll be columns of adulation--patriotic services, unselfish
-devotion, and all that; and what will have happened--ten men will be in
-pocket a few millions as the result of their sacrificing devotion. The
-public must have a victim in order to be calmed, to be satisfied that
-everything has been changed. Then a weak man, some unlucky lieutenant,
-will be served up, and things will go on again, until one group of
-millions is ready to attack another. How the public will howl! Majendie
-has taken the gambler's risk; Majendie has failed. There's the
-crime--failure; and yet, ninety per cent. of the fortunes today have
-turned on the scale--up or down--win or lose. For every promoter that
-wins, twenty fail with a little different turn of the luck.
-
-"We're all criminals--only we don't steal directly. We get it done for
-us. We want franchises for a great railroad system. We shut our
-eyes--hire an agent--go out and get this, no strings, no
-directions--show us only your results! Everything is in
-irresponsibility. A million dollars can commit no crime. After all,
-it's in the motive--a man who steals because he's hungry is a thief; a
-corporation that bribes a legislature and steals franchises, to create a
-great system of transportation, is performing a public service. It's
-all in what you're after. There're two ways to look at every big man;
-see the two periods--first, when he is trying to get together
-money--power; and second, what he creates when he has it. Same in
-politics--a man's better in office than running for it. Every man of
-power wants to arrive, anything to arrive, but when he gets
-there--then's the second period. The way to judge us is whether we want
-money only, or money to create something big."
-
-"And you?"
-
-"I want sixty millions," said Slade abruptly. "Will I get it?" He
-shrugged his shoulders, and taking a knife balanced it in seesaw on his
-finger, letting it finally drop with an exclamation of impatience.
-"That's the danger--the getting of it. I may have it in two years more
-and then again--" He opened his hand as though flinging sand in the
-air, and added: "In a week it may be over. _Rouge et noir_--one bad
-turn at the beginning and Napoleon Bonaparte would have been shot as a
-conspirator. Up to the present, I've been living the first
-period--afterward I'll justify it; I'll build."
-
-"In what way?" said Mrs. Kildair, who, while following his brutal
-exposition with the tribute instinctive to force, was nevertheless aware
-that this unusual revelation of himself had likewise a trifling
-object--the over-awing of the younger rival.
-
-"Railroads--a great system--an empire in itself," said Slade; and there
-came in his eyes a flash of the enthusiast which surprised her. But,
-unwilling to enlarge on this topic, he continued: "What I've said sounds
-raw, doesn't it? So it is. If I do what I want, I justify myself.
-There are only two classes of human beings--those like you two here, who
-get through life with the most pleasure you can, who get through--pass
-through; and then a few, a handful, who create something--an empire,
-like Rhodes, invent a locomotive or a system of electric production, add
-something to human history. What if they steal, or grind out the lives
-of others? They're the only ones who count. And the public knows it--it
-forgives everything to greatness; it's only petty crime it hates. Look
-at the sympathy a murderer gets on trial--look at the respect a great
-manipulator gets. Why? Because to murder and steal are natural human
-instincts. A couple of thousand years ago, it was a praiseworthy act
-for one ancestor, who coveted a hide or a cave that another ancestor
-had, to go out and kill him. All animals steal by instinct. We are
-only badly educated animals, and we admire in others what we don't dare
-do ourselves. Only succeed--succeed! Ah, there is the whole of it!"
-
-At this moment the telephone rang, and Slade rose and went to it with a
-little more emotion than he usually showed.
-
-"Is this the cause of his outburst?" thought Mrs. Kildair, while she and
-Beecher instinctively remained silent.
-
-At the end of a short moment, Slade returned. The two observers, who
-glanced at him quickly, could not find the slightest clue of what had
-transpired. Only he seemed more composed.
-
-"Speaking of stealing, take the case of the ring," he said, relaxing in
-a chair. "We know this--incredible as it may seem--that there were at
-least two thieves in the company; as a matter of fact, there were many
-more. My own opinion is that the crime was not an ordinary one--that
-whoever took it the second time took it out of an uncontrollable spirit
-of bravado, an overpowering impulse to do an almost impossible thing."
-
-"By the way--" Beecher began, and then suddenly looked at Mrs. Kildair
-interrogatively. Then, receiving permission, he continued: "You know
-who returned that night?"
-
-Slade nodded.
-
-"Yourself, Mrs. Cheever, Garraboy, and Miss Charters."
-
-"Miss Charters?" said Beecher, turning in amazement to Mrs. Kildair.
-
-She nodded, with a little frown.
-
-"As I told Mrs. Kildair," said Slade, not noticing that Beecher,
-overwhelmed by this discovery, did not hear him, "I do not believe for a
-moment that the thief would return. Any one who had the daring to seize
-the ring the second time had the daring to carry off the ring; in fact,
-had some such plan in mind. Whoever came back may have come back out of
-sympathy, or with the idea that the ring was still in the studio--in
-which case, we have a third manifestation of instinct."
-
-They had passed into the studio again. Slade spoke with all his old
-decision, the energy of action replacing the bitterness of his former
-meditative mood. He glanced at the clock, and took his leave in a
-quick, impersonal manner. Beecher, ignoring the looks Mrs. Kildair sent
-him, departed with Slade, refusing an invitation to join him in the
-automobile, and continuing on foot.
-
-He was absolutely at a loss to account for Miss Charters' returning to
-the studio after having gone to her apartment. If she had any
-suggestion to offer, why had she not waited, or even requested him to
-return with her? Why, in fact, could she not have waited until the
-following day--instead of risking the journey at such an hour?
-
-Full of disturbing surmises, he continued his walk until he reached the
-great thoroughfare of Forty-second Street, where he turned eastward
-toward the station, oblivious to the excitement in the street, the
-break-neck arrival of the newspaper wagons and the sudden, shrill
-scattering of urchins, extras in hand.
-
-All at once, at the western corner of the station, he raised his eyes
-instinctively. A coup with trunks behind it disengaged itself from the
-confusion of traffic and, turning, slowly passed him. Inside, he
-recognized the dark, defiant eyes of Mrs. Enos Bloodgood.
-
-In a moment he guessed the full significance of her presence: she had
-come to meet Majendie, to burn all bridges behind her, in the supreme
-sacrifice of everything for the possession of a happiness she had never
-known.
-
-The next instant he was gazing horror-stricken at the head-lines of an
-extra that a newsboy flung in his face:
-
-
- SUICIDE OF BERNARD L. MAJENDIE
-
-
-He became perfectly collected, clear in mind and instinctive in action,
-with the decision he had felt in the last charges of a wounded elephant.
-If Mrs. Bloodgood were here, it was because she expected to meet
-Majendie; because she was ignorant of the tragedy that had taken place.
-
-Retracing his steps, he arrived at the carriage the moment Mrs.
-Bloodgood's hand had thrown open the door.
-
-"Excuse me," he said, with an authority which instantly impressed the
-woman by its ominous seriousness. "Something terrible has happened. I
-must speak to you." Then, turning to the coachman, without being
-overheard, he gave him Mrs. Kildair's address, saying: "Drive there
-quickly. Five dollars to you if you get me there in ten minutes."
-
-Then he opened the door and joined the woman who, drawn back in the
-corner like an animal at bay, already trembling with what she did not
-know, awaited him.
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER XI*
-
-
-For an interval, while the coachman, spurred on by the prospect of
-reward, tore through the short streets, Beecher continued looking into
-Mrs. Bloodgood's eyes--eyes that were aghast with mute, terrified
-interrogations which she did not dare to phrase.
-
-Suddenly she perceived the extra which he had bought. She extended her
-hand, looking at it fearfully.
-
-"Give it to me," she said.
-
-He hesitated, and in the moment of irresolution she seized it. A cry of
-pain, a low cry torn from the soul, made him stiffen in his seat,
-steeling himself against the expected. But no further sound came. When
-he turned, she was sitting transfixed, staring wide-eyed at the
-newspaper which seemed glued to her fingers. Alarmed at the rigidity of
-her emotion, he leaned over and disengaged the paper from her
-unresisting fingers. The action seemed abruptly to revive her. She
-gave another cry, and tore the newspaper from him with such energy that
-a great, ill-shaped fragment remained in her clutch.
-
-"No, no, not that--no, no!" she cried, frantically seeking to decipher
-the bare six lines that recorded the tragedy. All at once she flung the
-sheet from her, turning to read the truth in his face.
-
-"Ah, it is true!" she cried, and her hand, as though holding him guilty
-of the fact, violently pushed him from her.
-
-"Mrs. Bloodgood--" Beecher began hesitatingly, frightened at the
-paroxysm that shook her body.
-
-But the emotion was still of horror, without as yet the realization of
-the finality that had come. She felt that Majendie was in danger--in
-terrible danger; that she must get to him, somehow, some way, and fling
-herself in front of that awful something that threatened him, ward off,
-in some way prevent, the thing that was coming. She seized the arm of
-the terrified young man, imploring him, still dry-eyed:
-
-"Take me to him--at once--no--I must--take me--Bernard--oh!"
-
-She fell back exhausted, faint.
-
-"Be calm; please be calm," he repeated, helpless before the utter
-disorder of her suffering.
-
-All at once the annihilation of self into which she had fallen was
-succeeded by a quick paroxysm of energy. She bounded upright on the
-seat, seizing his arm so that the nails hurt him.
-
-"I will go to him!" she cried. "You shall not stop me. He may be only
-wounded. The report is false--must be false. I will go to him!"
-
-"The very thing that you must not do--that you can not do," he said
-firmly; and then, seized with an inspiration, he added: "Listen--listen
-to me, Mrs. Bloodgood, I am taking you to Rita's; if you must go to him,
-go with her. Two women can go; one would cause a great scandal. You
-can not put that on him--you must think of him now. We are going to
-Rita's--Rita's!" he added, putting his lips to her ears to make her hear
-him.
-
-He put his hand on her shoulder and forced her gently back. She held
-her clasped hands rigidly strained between her knees, staring out beyond
-the confines of the carriage.
-
-"He is not dead," she said in a whisper; "he is wounded."
-
-"As soon as we get to Rita's," he continued reassuringly, "I will
-telephone. I'll find out everything."
-
-"Wounded," she repeated, nodding--without hearing him.
-
-"If he is, we three can go--it will seem quite natural," he said
-hastily, eying nervously her dry, uncomprehending grief, fearing the
-coming outburst of realization.
-
-"Almost there," he said, looking out of the window. "Hold on to
-yourself. Be game. There are always a few persons below."
-
-She did not answer, but her lips curled slightly in contempt, and she
-put her hand spasmodically to her throat.
-
-"You're right, the whole thing may be false--a wild rumor," he said
-quickly, talking to her as to a child. "A fake story--who knows? See,
-there are no details. Here we are. A little courage! Go right into the
-elevator."
-
-He signaled the driver to wait, and followed her hastily into the
-elevator, standing between her bowed figure and the boy.
-
-Mrs. Kildair was in the studio, pacing the floor; and at the first
-glance each saw that she knew the report, and that it was true. Mrs.
-Bloodgood crumpled on the floor, without consciousness.
-
-"My smelling-salts are on my bureau," said Mrs. Kildair quickly. "Lift
-her on the sofa first, and then get them."
-
-"Is it true?" he said, raising the slender, lifeless body.
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Dead?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"When did it happen?"
-
-"At two o'clock."
-
-"She wishes to go to him," he said warningly. "The carriage is below.
-She has her trunks. She was to have met him at the station. What shall
-I do?"
-
-"She must be gotten back to her house as soon as possible," said Mrs.
-Kildair with energy. "The trunks must return at once. Everything hangs
-on a hair; I know Bloodgood." She cast a glance at the still inanimate
-body and added: "Wait. Spirits of ammonia will be better. I'll get
-it."
-
-Mrs. Bloodgood returned to consciousness slowly, looking from one to the
-other with a dazed, pleading look.
-
-"Then it is so," she said at last.
-
-The two looked at her without being able to answer. Suddenly she
-bounded up erect, her fists striking her forehead.
-
-"It is I who have done it!" she cried, and for the second time fell back
-lifeless on the floor.
-
-"Go down now; send the trunks back," said Mrs. Kildair to Beecher.
-"Tell him to do it as quickly as possible--no, tell him nothing. Go
-quickly."
-
-When Beecher returned, Mrs. Bloodgood was on her feet again, passing
-from spot to spot ceaselessly, one hand clutching a handkerchief to
-press back the sobs that shook her from time to time, the other
-stretched out in front of her, beating a mechanical time to the one
-phrase which she repeated again and again:
-
-"I've done it--I've done it--I've done it!"
-
-Mrs. Kildair, leaning by the piano, knowing that each period must have
-its expression, awaited the right moment. Beecher, at a sign from her,
-slipped quietly into a chair.
-
-"Yes, it's I--it's I--I!" said the indistinguishable voice.
-
-"You have done nothing," said Mrs. Kildair solemnly. "It is fate."
-
-"No, no. Only I am to blame," she answered, stopping short, each word
-coming slowly through the torrents of tears.
-
-Mrs. Kildair passed quietly to her side.
-
-"You are not to blame, dear," she said; "don't think that."
-
-"Oh, you don't know," she said, suddenly acquiring a terrible calm that
-froze the young man. "At what time did he--did it happen?"
-
-"At two."
-
-"I knew it! Ten minutes before, he telephoned me; he said--oh, what do
-I know?--said a thousand things but the one in his mind. Asked me if I
-still was resolved to go."
-
-"But then, Elise--"
-
-"You don't understand! It was I who insisted on his going--I--I! I
-told him, if he would not go, I would come openly to his house--I would
-not be separated from him. Oh, my God! I didn't know--I didn't!"
-
-She abandoned herself to her transports once more, flinging herself on
-her knees and praying, as an uncomprehending child prays:
-
-"O God, don't let it be true--please don't let it be so!"
-
-Beecher covered his eyes suddenly with his hands. Mrs. Kildair allowed
-her for a moment to tire herself in supplication and anguish. Then she
-went to her, grasping her shoulder.
-
-"Elise."
-
-Mrs. Bloodgood stopped, rose, and went to the window, where she stood
-swaying.
-
-"I'm going to him," she said, pressing her knuckles against her temples.
-
-"Get hold of yourself," said Mrs. Kildair, avoiding the error of
-opposition.
-
-For a long moment neither spoke, while Mrs. Bloodgood, passing to and
-fro, struggled to fight down the sobs that were choking her. At last
-she stopped, facing Mrs. Kildair.
-
-"I am going to him," she said.
-
-The other woman, with a look of great compassion, shook her head in a
-slow negation, looking full at her.
-
-"But he said I could!" she cried, stretching out her hands toward
-Beecher.
-
-"You can't."
-
-"But he said so--he promised."
-
-"No; it is impossible."
-
-"I _will_ go!"
-
-"There are twenty reporters waiting for just that," Said Mrs. Kildair.
-Then, raising her voice, she said impressively: "Elise, there is
-something you must do--something ten times more terrible."
-
-"What?"
-
-"Return home--and at once."
-
-"Never!" The cry burst from her as her whole body was shaken with
-indignation. "Never in the world--never again!"
-
-"Listen," said Mrs. Kildair, seizing her arm, and Beecher was struck
-with the savageness of her energy. "Things are no longer the same. You
-are alone--absolutely alone. Do you understand what that means--without
-a cent--alone?"
-
-"What do I care?"
-
-"Not now; but in a week, in a month-- You think you know the greatest
-suffering in the world; you don't--the greatest is poverty. Whatever
-has happened, you are Mrs. Enos Bloodgood. Only yourself can destroy
-that. One life is ended in you. You have loved. That will never come
-again--not the same. Life is long and terrible."
-
-"What, you can suggest such a thing?" said Mrs. Bloodgood, raising her
-head indignantly. "Such an infamy?"
-
-"Yes--because I know. The world is not an equal one. A woman can not
-fight as a man can. A year from now, when you can suffer no further, do
-you want to wake up in a dingy boarding-house, cut off from all you have
-lived in? For a great love--perhaps--but to be alone? No, no! Elise,
-you will do as I say because I can see better than you. You are Mrs.
-Enos Bloodgood--you have everything that a million women covet. It is
-your life; you will go back."
-
-"Ah, how can you say that to me now?" said Mrs. Bloodgood, pressing her
-handkerchief to her eyes.
-
-"Because the world is different from the world of this morning--because
-everything is different, Elise. There are no longer the reasons that
-existed. You are alone against the world. You know your husband--one
-public word or action, and he will cast you off like an old shoe."
-
-"How can I go back?" she said, sitting down, half subdued. "How can I
-get the strength? I don't know yet what has happened. I can't realize
-it--oh, if I had only had my way! If he had only let me leave a
-month--two months ago. If I'd only been firm; if we had gone that
-night--that night we were here--when I begged him to. If he had only
-loved me more than his honor, as I loved him. If only I--"
-
-"Elise," said the quiet voice of Mrs. Kildair.
-
-The young woman checked herself, breaking off and moving again; but
-almost immediately broke out again:
-
-"And now you want me to go back to _him_. Oh, if you knew how I hate
-him, how I loathe him--what that life means--how cruel he can be, how he
-can make me suffer by a word or a look--how he enjoys--"
-
-"Elise, Elise!"
-
-"I can't go, Rita, I can't! Don't ask me to go now. Let me stay a
-while here, just tonight, where I can weep," she cried.
-
-"No, no. It must be now--soon. You have left your home with your
-trunks--he knows it. If you return--you return because you are
-worried--the panic--on his account."
-
-"Ah, what a lie!"
-
-"Elise," said Mrs. Kildair, coming forward again and arresting the
-other's arm, "listen. You are not what I am. You are not strong--you
-are weak. You are a woman of the world, worldly, loving worldly things,
-who for a moment has been transformed by a great passion. The whole
-earth has no such passion any longer. Do you understand? Something is
-gone--your youth is ended. Keep tight hold of the little that is left.
-Come, be strong. Dissimulate as you have before. Come."
-
-"Not now," said Mrs. Bloodgood, terrified.
-
-"Yes, now. If possible, you must be back before he returns."
-
-And Beecher, from his chair where he had watched, forgotten by both
-women, saw Mrs. Kildair, who not for a moment had deviated from the
-vital issue, draw the unresisting woman by the very force of her energy
-into the bedroom, from which shortly they emerged again.
-
-"I am ready," said Mrs. Bloodgood in a voice that was scarcely
-distinguishable. She had thrown over her head a thick veil, behind
-which her features were only dimly visible.
-
-"Telephone for a carriage," said Mrs. Kildair.
-
-"I have done so," said Beecher, who had availed himself of the interval.
-
-"But the trunks?" said Mrs. Bloodgood, turning helplessly.
-
-"They went back long ago."
-
-"Ah!" She took a few weak steps and turned. "But I shall see him?"
-
-"I give you my word."
-
-"Tonight?"
-
-"Tonight."
-
-Mrs. Bloodgood made a little sign of acquiescence, and passed out of the
-door. The carriage was waiting. Beecher silently handed her into it,
-feeling the sudden heaviness on his arm. They rolled away. She did not
-lift her veil, and he could not guess what look was on her face. Twice
-she made him change their course, in order to put off the final dreaded
-moment.
-
-"You have been kind," she said at last. "I owe you much. Thank you.
-Now I will go back."
-
-"Don't speak of thanks at such a time," he said hastily. "If I can help
-you in any way, any time--"
-
-"I know." All at once, forgetting his presence, she burst out: "Oh, how
-I loved him! I would have done anything for him--anything! I can't
-believe it. It doesn't seem possible!"
-
-"Be careful, Mrs. Bloodgood," he said, alarmed. "Be careful--please."
-
-"You need have no fear," she said slowly. "All that is over." But,
-still obsessed, she seized his arm. "Only I want you to know that I
-loved him so that nothing made any difference. Any one can know it. I
-would have gone--"
-
-"I know it," he said quickly, taking her hand to quiet her.
-
-"Oh, yes, I loved him--the only real thing in my life!" she repeated,
-sinking back.
-
-Ahead he saw the great Italian faade of the Bloodgood residence, where
-twenty servants awaited the call of this shadow at his side, whose
-invitation could make a social reputation. Then his quick eye, as they
-neared the steps, perceived the squat, stolid figure of Mr. Enos
-Bloodgood at the door.
-
-"He is just come out--your husband," he said hurriedly, with a sudden
-new sensation of dread. And he repeated, a little excitement in his
-voice, fearing she did not understand the danger: "Be careful; he is
-there--your husband."
-
-"Yes, I saw him."
-
-She took the veil from her hat, and, folding it, handed it to him, her
-face set in hardness and contempt.
-
-"You might say Mrs. Kildair had invited--"
-
-"I know what to say," she said, checking him, and a smile incongruous at
-the moment gave the last touch of tragedy to the imagination of her
-companion. "Open the door."
-
-He gazed at her, struck with the strange, dual personality in the frail,
-proud body--the abandon of the woman who loved and the calm of the woman
-who hated. She who a moment before had cared nothing for what she
-revealed to him in the unrestraint of her sorrow, did not hesitate now a
-moment, face to face with the peril of such a confrontation.
-
-"Open the door," she repeated sharply.
-
-Recalled to his senses, he sprang out and gave her his hand,
-accompanying her to the chiseled marble steps, where he left her, with a
-lift of his hat to the husband above who awaited her with a quiet,
-cynical enjoyment.
-
-"I thought, my dear, you had gone off for a jolly little jaunt," said
-Mr. Bloodgood, without variation in the provoking evenness of his voice.
-
-She came up the steps to his level, and acknowledged his presence with
-an inclination of her head.
-
-"I intended to," she said, in the same ceremonious tone. "But I was so
-alarmed at the news from Wall Street that I did not wish to leave you at
-such a time."
-
-"Indeed? I am quite touched," he answered, with perfect solemnity.
-"You are always so thoughtful, my dear."
-
-She entered. He followed her as though shutting off all retreat, and
-the gorgeous flunky who had run out disappeared, too. To Beecher, with
-all the anguish of the scene at Rita Kildair's still vivid in his mind,
-it was as though he had seen a living woman enter her appointed tomb.
-
-"Where shall I drive, sir?" said the driver.
-
-"Anywhere!" he cried furiously.
-
-But at the end of five minutes he emerged from the stupor into which he
-had been plunged, the somber horror rolling away like scudding
-storm-clouds. A new emotion--the inevitable personal application--broke
-over him like a ray of light.
-
-"To be loved like that--" he thought suddenly, with a feeling of envy.
-"Terrible, terrible--and yet how marvelous!"
-
-He gave directions to drive to Nan Charters' with a new curiosity in his
-soul--the inevitable personal emotion that, strangely enough, even
-against his will, dominated all the somber melancholy which this reverse
-of a glittering medal had brought him.
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER XII*
-
-
-He had completely forgotten, in the press of dramatic events, the
-disturbing fact of Nan Charters' return the night of the theft. He
-remembered it suddenly, as one remembers sorrow after a profound sleep.
-But the recalling of it affected him differently. The revelation of
-Mrs. Bloodgood's hidden life had left him in a dangerous and vulnerable
-mood--a mood of quickened compassion and outgoing sympathy. He was
-still determined to force a direct answer from Miss Charters, but
-already he had formed that answer in his heart, as he for the hour felt
-no longer the selfish combat of vanity, but the need of charity and
-gentleness.
-
-In one of the profound moods which color the visible world, he stood at
-the window of the little sitting-room, awaiting her arrival, looking out
-on the serried flight of unutterably commonplace roofs, gray and drab
-with the gray of the turning day. And it seemed to him that this
-twilight was different from other twilights, heavily weighted down with
-more of the sadness of inexplicable lives. One tragedy seemed to invoke
-a thousand tragedies, in the cramped immobility of these inscrutable
-windows which had not yet begun to warm with the flicker of human cheer.
-He saw only the brutal struggle to live, and felt only the mystery of
-suffering, which was still a thing apart from his life. Standing
-reverently thus, he asked himself two questions which, sooner or later,
-each man of heart and sensibility puts to himself in the awakening to
-conscious existence:
-
-"Why do they go on?"
-
-"What is my justification?"
-
-And in his heart, still young and stirred to sympathy, he felt the
-beginning of a revolt at what he had been, at his inability to find a
-satisfying answer to that second question. He no longer awaited the
-interview in the spirit of strife, but with a sudden feeling of
-impulsive friendliness which, had he been an older man, might have
-alarmed him with its dangers. The profound melancholy of youth, violent
-because unconquered and strange, had him still in its grip when, all at
-once, he felt an emotion of well-being and returning comfort.
-
-She came into the room and without formal greeting gave him her hand
-with a welcome in her eyes, as though their friendship were of such
-strong duration that formalities were out of place.
-
-"Draw the curtains," she said, going to the electric lamp on the table,
-which woke like a golden sun from the shadows. "It's cozier. Shall we
-light the fire? Yes, it's more cheery."
-
-"Let me," he said hastily.
-
-"Quite unnecessary."
-
-He watched her sudden stooping movement, that brought the loose,
-intricate tea-gown about her agile body, outlining the limbs, which had
-the quick animal grace that is peculiar to the unconquered maiden. Her
-pose, strong and alive with power and self-reliance, recalled to him
-sharply the sense of opposition. He was annoyed that she should have
-done so naturally what he should have done, feeling in her too much
-self-reliance.
-
-She rose, looking down with a childish delight at the sudden burst and
-roar of the flame. Then she turned, studying his face. The artist in
-her made her quickly aware of the remnants of the emotion which had
-stirred him.
-
-"What is it?" she said, with the gentleness that was tantalizing to him.
-"You have a strange look."
-
-"Yes," he answered; "I have been behind the scenes."
-
-"What do you mean?"
-
-"I have been with Mrs. Bloodgood all the afternoon--found her at the
-station as she was leaving."
-
-"Mrs. Bloodgood was running away," she said, puzzled, but with a fear in
-her eyes that did not escape him.
-
-"What--you did not know!" he exclaimed. "Majendie killed himself this
-afternoon at two o'clock."
-
-"Majendie--Mrs. Bloodgood!"
-
-She looked at him a moment with a face struck with horror, and then fell
-back into a chair, seized with the suddenness of the climax.
-
-"I beg your pardon; I thought you knew," he blurted out.
-
-"No, no--nothing. Tell me--tell me all," she said; and he saw that back
-of her alarm was a significance to her that heightened the effect of the
-tragedy.
-
-He told her first the bare details of the suicide as he knew them; and
-then, in response to her hurried questions, began to retell the
-afternoon. He spoke impulsively, almost as an echo of the drama he had
-witnessed. Occasionally she stopped him with a more detailed question.
-Moved out of his self-consciousness, he described, more eloquently than
-he knew, the conflict between the two women at Mrs. Kildair's, and the
-emotions which had suddenly brought him wide-eyed to the spectacle of
-the black, turbulent river of despair.
-
-"I can't forget it--it haunts me now," he said, when he had ended with
-Mrs. Bloodgood's return into the home of her husband. "It makes me see
-something in life I didn't understand--that I am just beginning to see."
-
-He looked at her. Her face was wet with tears. All at once, astonished,
-he recalled what he had told.
-
-"What have I done?" he cried, aghast. "I had no right to repeat it. I
-didn't realize what I was saying!"
-
-"Don't fear," she said, shuddering, and she extended her hands to the
-fire, as though the recital had frozen her body. "Poor woman--poor,
-lonely woman!"
-
-He sat down near her, close to the fire, and, stretching out his hand,
-touched her arm.
-
-"Listen, Nan," he said, so profoundly that she could not mistake the
-emotion. "It has made a great difference in me. It may be a mood--it
-may pass; but I hope it won't. It makes me dissatisfied. Look here--I
-don't want to go on as we have, thrusting and parrying. I don't want it
-to be just a game. The real feeling in me toward a woman is
-different--it's one of chivalry, I know. Let's drop all artifices.
-Let's be honest with each other--good friends, or something else, as it
-may come."
-
-She considered the depths of the fire a moment, and turned, looking at
-him dreamily, feeling how much older she was in the knowledge of the
-doubts of the world than the young, impulsive nature that looked out at
-her from such honest eyes.
-
-"Will you?" he asked, as she looked away again.
-
-She shook her head, in doubt as to an answer; but the good in her
-stirred by the good in him expressed itself in the quick pressure of
-thanks which her hand conveyed to him.
-
-"I am not the least in love," he said quickly. "What I say I say
-because--oh, I don't know! I'm dissatisfied with myself. This thing has
-gotten below my skin. Life's too rotten. I want you to believe in
-me--in my strength. You are sympathetic--_multa sympatica_. I don't
-know; I hate to think of your fighting alone such a rotten hard fight."
-
-She nodded slowly, understanding perhaps better than he his thought, yet
-half won to his appeal already.
-
-She took his hand in both of hers, pressing it in emphasis from time to
-time, not looking at him, staring at something that formed before her
-eyes.
-
-"No one has ever spoken to me just like this," she said gently. "One
-thing I would never want to happen, Teddy--I would never want to hurt
-you! That is why I hesitate--why I am afraid. You are only a great big
-boy. You won't understand me. I am very selfish--very worldly."
-
-"You are nothing of the sort," he said furiously, withdrawing his hand.
-"You may think so, but I know you better."
-
-She turned, amused; but her smile left her as she looked into his eyes.
-To her surprise, a feeling of unease came to her; she felt a new
-longing--to be for a moment quite childlike and helpless.
-
-"Don't blunder into anything, Teddy," she answered, shaking her head,
-herself a little disturbed. "With some men I would not care. With
-you--yes, it would make me feel like a criminal to hurt you."
-
-He understood that she was warning him of the futility of expecting to
-find in her a woman. But if she had calculated, which she had not, on
-any move surer to arouse him, she could have found no better expedient.
-The impossibility implied, coupled with the impulsive generosity in her
-voice, made her a thousand times more desirable. He rose brusquely,
-and, standing with his back to the fire, looked down at the dramatic
-face, which the flames lighted with the flare of footlights.
-
-"There are certain things that we must understand together," he said
-with authority, obeying the instinct which told him that to succeed he
-must take the upper hand.
-
-Her eyebrows came together in a straight flight.
-
-"I have not hesitated to trust in you--you must in me. Tell me. You
-have reason to suspect that Mrs. Bloodgood took the ring--at least, the
-first time?"
-
-[Illustration: "'I have not hesitated to trust in you--you must in me'"]
-
-She shook her head, but without anger.
-
-"Don't you understand," he said quickly, "that I must know why you acted
-as you did?"
-
-Still her only answer was a deep-taken breath.
-
-"I swear to you, if Mrs. Bloodgood did take it," he said, "I would not
-condemn her. On the contrary, I would pity her."
-
-"Why should Mrs. Bloodgood, who has millions, do such a thing?" she said
-quietly.
-
-"Because, from what I know, Mrs. Bloodgood, who has millions, as the
-wife of Enos Bloodgood, has not as much money in her pocket as you or
-I." He stopped. "She took it to have some means of escape, didn't
-she?"
-
-"No, she did not take it," she answered, but in a tone that brought no
-conviction.
-
-"You see, I know that you returned to Mrs. Kildair's that night," he
-said, irritated.
-
-"How did you know?" she said quickly.
-
-"Mrs. Kildair told me--no, that's not true; some one else did."
-
-"Mrs. Kildair herself called me on the telephone and asked me to come,"
-she said slowly.
-
-"And questioned you?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"As to what you had seen?" he said, with a great feeling of relief that
-should have warned him of his true interest.
-
-"Yes."
-
-"What did you answer?"
-
-She rose and approached him, looking at him with only friendliness.
-
-"If the ring is not restored in two weeks," she said, "then I will tell
-you what you wish to know."
-
-"You think that, if Mrs. Bloodgood took it, she will now have no use for
-it," he persisted, seizing the idea.
-
-"I know nothing at all," she answered, emphasizing the "know." "This
-promise must satisfy you. I only have a suspicion, and I don't want to
-do an injustice to another--remember that. I have never said it was
-Mrs. Bloodgood I suspected. Now I want to talk to you about my own
-affairs."
-
-He was covered with contrition that he should have forgotten her
-difficulties.
-
-"Good heavens!" he said hastily. "What have I been thinking of? Please
-don't think I don't care; I've been in such a whirl--"
-
-She checked him with a gesture and a smile, motioning him to sit down
-again.
-
-"Have you had any word?"
-
-She shook her head.
-
-"Of course, it's a terrible day on the Street," he hastened to reply.
-"Everything's up in the air--they're like a lot of lunatics. Garraboy
-hasn't had time to think. That oughtn't to alarm you."
-
-"But I left word at his office for him to telephone me, and it is now,"
-she said, glancing at the clock, "an hour and a half since the close."
-
-"There are probably a hundred inquiries of the same sort awaiting him,"
-he said to reassure her. "What are you afraid of?"
-
-"I don't know--and yet I am a little anxious. Suppose he has used my
-stocks? Such things happen every day."
-
-"The best thing is to find out at once how Garraboy stands--if he's been
-caught in the drop or not. Then we can take our measures."
-
-"How'll you do that?"
-
-"Call up Bruce Gunther and get him on the trail. May I telephone?"
-
-"Do so."
-
-"He's probably at the club now," he said, taking up the receiver and
-giving a number. "Yes, he's in. That's lucky. I'll get him in a
-moment." Then he added irritably: "How the deuce did you ever come to
-deal with Garraboy?"
-
-"Why, I've known him ever since I came to New York. I wanted to invest
-some money--I didn't know any one else; and then, he was very--friendly;
-wanted to make some money for me. That's how it was."
-
-"Hello," said Beecher. "Is that you, Bruce? It's I--Ted."
-
-"Where the deuce have you been?" said the voice at the other end. "I've
-been trying to get you all over town."
-
-"You have?"
-
-"You bet I have; McKenna's turned up a real clue--wants to see you at
-once. Pick me up here at the club, will you?"
-
-"All right. But say, Bruce, I want you to do something for me. Find
-out all you can about Garraboy--you know, the fellow we spoke about. Has
-he been on the wrong side of the market or not? Understand? It's
-important."
-
-"I'll do it. Anything else?"
-
-"Yes. A friend of mine has some stocks with him, about twenty thousand
-worth--you see the situation--and she's a little bit worried. Can't get
-any satisfaction."
-
-"Wants 'em back?"
-
-"Yes. What's the best way to do?"
-
-"Um! Get a transfer to you and call for them tomorrow."
-
-"Of course; see you later."
-
-He put down the telephone and turned gaily to his companion, who was
-waiting with anxiety.
-
-"That's all right. Bruce will get the information and I'll telephone
-you this evening. Now, the best way to operate is this." He took out
-his check-book and wrote a check for twenty thousand dollars to her
-name. "I'll buy those stocks. Here's my check; give me an
-acknowledgment for the shares, with an order on Garraboy to deliver."
-
-She looked at him doubtfully, holding the check gingerly in her fingers.
-
-"What's the matter?" he said. "If there's any little difference one way
-or the other, we can arrange that later."
-
-"Supposing Garraboy has failed and sold my stocks?"
-
-"He hasn't."
-
-"But if he has?"
-
-"That's my risk," he started to say, but checked himself. "Why, of
-course, then it's off. This is just to give me the power to get them
-away at once. A man can do what a woman can't."
-
-She was grateful to him for his perception of delicacy.
-
-"On that basis, yes," she said. Then she stopped and looked at him with
-a whimsical but favoring smile. "As it is, Teddy, what do you know of
-me to take even this chance?"
-
-The opening was too direct. She saw it at once, and, to forestall his
-answer, said more lightly:
-
-"It is a great service. Tell me what to write."
-
-As she was drawing up the paper under his directions, a placid,
-emotionless woman of forty entered from the rear.
-
-"That Mr. Hargrave is here, Nan dear," she said. "You gave him an
-appointment, you know."
-
-"Mrs. Tilbury, my companion," said Miss Charters. "Very well; in a
-moment."
-
-Mrs. Tilbury passed patiently out to deliver the message. Beecher was
-delighted with the correctness and cold respectability of such a
-chaperon.
-
-"Mr. Hargrave is a young dramatist," said Miss Charters, finishing the
-document. "He's coming to read some masterpiece to me. He wrote a
-one-act piece three years ago that was very clever, and now, of course,
-I can't risk refusing to hear him--he might have a work of genius at
-last. This is my fourth trial." She put the paper from her
-impatiently. "I'm sorry."
-
-He was displeased also at this sudden recall of the other life in her,
-the world of the theater, which crowded the walls with its signed
-photographs.
-
-"I'll telephone as soon as I know," he said, dissembling his irritation.
-
-She went to the door with him, annoyed also at the interruption.
-
-"I'm coming tomorrow," he said, and he held out his hand with a little
-defiance.
-
-She did not resent the assumption of right, still introspectively
-puzzled at the new moods into which she had fallen. And, still pensive,
-she said:
-
-"Come."
-
-Below, in the anteroom, he sent a look of antagonism and scorn at a
-young man, a little extravagantly dressed, who carried a portfolio under
-his arm with a sense, too, of irritation and pride.
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER XIII*
-
-
-When he had gone into the brisk air of the street, his mental vision
-returned with the crispness of the night. He was astonished at what he
-had said and done.
-
-"But I am not in love--not in the least," he repeated. "Then what was
-it?"
-
-He was quite perplexed at perceiving the astonishing difference her
-presence and her absence made in his attitude. He repeated to himself
-quite seriously with a little wonder that, if he were in danger of
-falling in love, he would be a prey to that disturbing emotion now,
-absent as well as present.
-
-"I am perfectly calm," he said, flourishing his cane. "Not in the least
-excited. It's very queer."
-
-All the same, he returned to the interview, and recalled the incidents
-without illusion. He comprehended now what he had not comprehended
-then, the full significance of his offer of friendship--in fact, that it
-was not an approach to friendship but to something very different, and
-the relations which had now been established between them were those of
-confidence and intimacy that lay on the borderline of great emotions.
-
-"It's very odd," he said, "I wish to be honest and open with her, and
-yet I said what I don't feel--suggested what I have not the least
-thought of. I'll be hanged if I understand it, unless she has the power
-to make me believe in emotions that don't exist,--Emma Fornez was right,
-she is the type that provokes you. I must be very careful."
-
-But one thing he did not perceive--that the city no longer oppressed him
-with its bleak struggle and serried poverty, that he swung lightly over
-the crisp pavements, breathing the alert and joyous air, that in him the
-joy of living awakened, as the myriad lights awoke the city of the
-night, the city rising from the fatigue of labor with its avid zest for
-pleasure and excitement.
-
-"What is the clue McKenna's got hold of?" he thought eagerly, as the
-massive, cheery windows of the club came into view across the stirring,
-care-fleeing homeward rush of the Avenue.
-
-The moment he entered the crowded anteroom, the tragic day returned with
-redoubled gloom. The death of Majendie oppressed every voice--nothing
-else was discussed. He found himself caught up in the crowd at the bar,
-listening with a strange sense of irony to those who touched in
-haphazard the event which he knew so profoundly. The wildest rumors
-were current. Majendie had shot himself after the discovery of an
-enormous shortage in the funds of the Atlantic Trust. The Atlantic
-Trust had been looted, the effect on Wall Street had been to confirm the
-wildest rumors, the market would plunge down to-morrow, the awful loss
-of the day would be surpassed; it was the panic of '93 over again. The
-inevitable mysterious informant in the crowd arrived with a new rumor:
-Majendie had tried to escape, had been prevented by detectives, who had
-been shadowing him for days, and had then gone in and shot himself just
-as the warrant for his arrest arrived. Another gave this version;
-Majendie had not shot himself, he had been murdered.
-
-Every one exclaimed at this.
-
-"That's the story in the Associated Press offices," continued the
-informant obstinately. "A man whose whole fortune was locked up in the
-Atlantic--a small depositor--got into the house on some pretext, and
-shot him--crazy, of course. It's not been verified, but that's the
-story."
-
-"Tell you what I heard," said another, in a low voice, to a group that
-eddied about him. "It's true he was shot, but he wasn't shot in his own
-home. He was shot last night in his box at the opera by a man who is as
-well known as old Fontaine. The old story, of course, trespassing in
-married quarters. The whole thing was kept dark--got him out of the box
-after the crowd went out, and took him home, where he died at midnight.
-Heard the names in the case, but pledged not to repeat them."
-
-Each rumor received a momentary credence, in the excitement of the
-moment. Some one defending the personal friend, insisted on melancholia
-and despondency, citing the example of an uncle who had taken his life
-after the disgrace of his son. No one spoke the name of Mrs. Bloodgood,
-waiting the moment of confidences _ trois_. In the stupefaction of the
-moment, even the personal losses, which had been tremendous, were
-momentarily forgotten. Gradually inquiries began to be made as to the
-extent of the panic. Then at once a division was apparent. There was
-already the party of the shorts, eager and vociferous, staking their
-last chance of recouping on a still wider spread of the devastating
-drop, which they now as ardently desired as though a thousand homes
-would not suffer for every point acquired.
-
-Beecher separated himself from these enthusiasts of failure, and passed
-into the front room, where he was signaled by Gunther, who was in one of
-the numerous small groups. He found a chair and joined the party, in
-which were Fontaine, Lynch, and Steve Plunkett. The conversation, which
-was controversial, continued without interruption.
-
-"Don't be an ass, Ed," said Lynch, with irritation; "nothing can stop
-the market."
-
-"The Atlantic Trust is as solvent as Gunther & Co.," insisted Fontaine,
-with a nervous, emphatic gesture. "Every depositor will be paid in
-full."
-
-"It'll be in the hands of a receiver before the week's over--bet you
-five to three."
-
-"Possibly; but then--"
-
-"Moreover, what of the public? What's the public going to do when it
-hears Majendie's committed suicide? What'll it think? It'll think the
-whole blamed institution is rotten to the core--looted!"
-
-"Sure," said Plunkett, and he added savagely, his glance lost in the
-distance: "Damn it, if I'd known the news an hour earlier, I could have
-made fifty thousand."
-
-"Why, look at the situation," continued Bo Lynch, excited by his own
-images. "The Clearing-house closed against the Associated Trust and all
-its allies; runs on banks all over the country; Slade forced to the
-wall, out of it in a couple of days, perhaps--God knows, another
-suicide, maybe; two failures up into the hundreds of
-millions--everything in the country thrown on the market! Look at the
-sales to-day; they'll be doubled to-morrow. Nothing can hold out against
-it. The country'll go crazy! I tell you, '93 was nothing to it."
-
-Gunther rose.
-
-"What do you think, Bruce?" said Plunkett anxiously.
-
-"Don't know a thing about it," said Gunther brusquely. "Neither does
-Eddie or Bo. If you want to gamble, gamble."
-
-He nodded to Beecher, and they moved out together.
-
-"Let's cut out of this den of lunatics," he said. "My machine's here;
-supposing we run down to McKenna's and get him off for a quiet chop.
-I've already telephoned."
-
-"He's got some news?"
-
-"Yes, but I don't know what it is. Jump in."
-
-"What about Garraboy?"
-
-"Rumor is, he's in heavy. McKenna's looking that up, too."
-
-"I say, Bruce, what do you really think about the situation?" said
-Beecher, forced to contain his curiosity. "Are we going to the
-bow-wows?"
-
-"If you ask what I _think_," said Gunther meditatively, "I think it's
-the devil to pay. Far as I can see, a lot depends on John G. Slade.
-There's no doubt there's a crowd after his scalp."
-
-"Will they get it?"
-
-"Looks so; but he's got nine lives, they say."
-
-"Where the deuce are we going?" said Beecher, suddenly aware of the
-swift flight through the now deserted regions of the lower city.
-
-"Down to McKenna's offices."
-
-"As late as this?"
-
-"Guess these days keep him pretty busy."
-
-"Didn't he say anything about his clue?"
-
-"Said he'd traced the history of the stone."
-
-They soon came to a stop in one of the blocks on Broadway within a
-stone's throw of old Trinity, and, descending, entered a dingy
-four-story building pinched in among the skyscrapers. At the second
-flight of worm-eaten stairs, Gunther pushed open a smoky glass door and
-entered a short antechamber inclosed in sanded glass with sliding
-pigeon-holes for observation. Their arrival being expected, they were
-immediately shown down a contracted hallway studded with doors, to an
-open room, comfortably furnished, with a fire burning in the grate.
-
-"Join you in a moment, gentlemen," said McKenna, nodding around the door
-of the adjoining room.
-
-Gunther unceremoniously helped himself at the open box of cigars.
-
-"Ted," he said enthusiastically, "why the deuce do the novelists concoct
-their absurdly stalking detectives, who deduce everything at a glance,
-with their impossible logical processes? Don't they see the real thing
-is so much bigger? It's not the fake individual mind that's wonderful;
-it's the system--this system. A great agency like this is simply an
-expression of society itself--organized order against unorganized
-disorder. It's an unending struggle, and the odds are all on one side.
-By George, what impresses me is the completeness with which society has
-organized itself--made use of all inventions, telephone, telegraph, the
-photograph, the press, everything turned on the criminal to run him
-down. For a hundred detectives employed here, there are a thousand
-allies, in every trade, in every depot, in every port, along every line
-of travel. When you think of the agencies that McKenna can stir up by a
-word, then you begin to realize the significance of the detective in the
-structure of society."
-
-McKenna, who had heard the last words, entered, vitally alert and
-physically excited by the joy of unusual labor.
-
-"Now I'm with you," he said, appropriating an easy-chair. "Let's see
-where we'll begin. Oh, Mr. Beecher, you wanted certain information
-about that broker Garraboy, didn't you?"
-
-"What have you found out?" said Beecher, with a conscious eagerness that
-struck both hearers.
-
-"It just so happened I had a line on your man from another direction,"
-said McKenna. "Well, he's hit the market right. What would have
-happened if this panic hadn't come just right, is another question--a
-rather interesting question. However, Garraboy's known to have been
-heavy on the short side, and, from all reports, stands to make a
-killing."
-
-"Then Miss Charters' stocks are all right?"
-
-"They're all right--yes--now," said McKenna carefully; "but my advice is
-to get hold of them--P.D.Q. Mr. Garraboy is somewhat of a gambler. Now,
-here's a bit of history about a certain ruby that will interest you," he
-continued, drawing out a memorandum. In his manner was a little amused
-self-satisfaction, as one who relished the mystification of the
-outsiders. "In the first place, your ruby ring is not worth fifteen
-thousand."
-
-"No?" said Beecher in amazement.
-
-"It's worth considerably more," said the detective, with a grin. "Its
-last sale was at the price of thirty-two thousand dollars."
-
-"What!" said both young men in chorus.
-
-"Just that."
-
-"But then, why should Mrs. Kildair value it at fifteen?" exclaimed
-Beecher.
-
-"That's rather an interesting point," said McKenna, "and we'll touch on
-that later. The stone is as well known in the trade as John L. Sullivan
-to you and me. It was first sold in New Amsterdam in the year 1852 to a
-firm of Parisian jewelers. From them it was bought for a well-known,
-rather frisky lady called La Panthre by a Count d'Ussac, who ruined
-himself. La Panthre was killed later by a South American lover and her
-effects sold at auction. The ruby was bought by the firm of Gaspard
-Frres, and set in a necklace which was sold to the Princess de
-Grandliev. At the fall of the Second Empire, the necklace was broken up
-and this particular stone went over to England, where it was set in a
-ring and sold to a young dandy, the Earl of Westmorley, who was killed
-steeplechasing. A woman named Clara Hauk, an adventuress, had the ring
-in her possession, and successfully defeated the efforts of the family
-to regain it. She got into bad water in the '80's and sold it to a
-South African, who carried it off to the Transvaal with him. It
-reappeared in the offices of Gaspard Frres in 1891 on the finger of a
-young Austrian woman who sold it for twenty-two thousand dollars and
-disappeared without giving her name. An Italian, the Marchese di
-Rubino, bought it for a wedding present to his daughter, who kept it
-until 1900, when she pledged it to pay the gambling debts of her
-husband. It was then brought to this country by the wife of a Western
-rancher, who sold it five years later to Sontag & Co. The last sale
-known was just two months ago."
-
-"Two months?" said Beecher, craning forward.
-
-"The price, as I said, was thirty-two thousand, and the purchaser was a
-certain gentleman very much before the public now--John G. Slade."
-
-This announcement was so entirely unexpected that it left the two young
-men staring at each other, absolutely incapable of speech.
-
-"But then," said Gunther, the first to recover, "the ring was given her
-by Slade!"
-
-"At a cost of thirty-two thousand," said the detective in a quick,
-businesslike tone.
-
-"You are sure?"
-
-"As positive as any one can be. There are only three other rings--"
-
-"That's why she wanted to keep it quiet!" exclaimed Beecher, rousing
-himself from his stupor. The whole machination of Mrs. Kildair became
-comprehensible to him on the instant. "Now I see!"
-
-"Precisely," said McKenna. "Of course there is a chance that Slade did
-not give her the ring; that I'll know tomorrow."
-
-"How?"
-
-"Make an inquiry--for a supposed purchaser, of course; find out if the
-ring is still at Slade's."
-
-"It's useless," said Beecher firmly. "I know that McKenna's right.
-This explains everything," he continued, turning to the detective.
-"That's why she acted so strangely "--he checked himself. "I saw Mrs.
-Kildair--took lunch with her--to-day--"
-
-"Did you find out whom she employed?" said McKenna quietly.
-
-Beecher opened his lips to answer in the affirmative, and stopped
-abruptly. For the first time, he realized that Mrs. Kildair had taken
-back the address. He rose nervously, frowning at the stupidity he would
-be forced to disclose.
-
-"By Jove, I am an ass!" he said, dropping his glance; and he related the
-scene in which Mrs. Kildair had first given him the address and then
-taken it away.
-
-"It's not important, Mr. Beecher," said the detective pensively, his
-mind working behind the recital. "She didn't give you the right
-address."
-
-"How do you know?" said Beecher, turning.
-
-"Because she recovered the paper as soon as she found out you were
-employing me," he answered; but his mind was still out of the room. He
-took out a pencil and began tapping his memorandum with quick, nervous
-jots. "Her mind worked pretty quick," he said.
-
-"Why do you want to know her detectives?" asked Gunther.
-
-"You see, the case is complicated," said McKenna, rousing himself. "I
-won't go into her relations with Slade just now, but it's quite evident
-to any one they were such that Mrs. Kildair prefers to lose the ring
-rather than to have it discovered how it came to her. See?"
-
-"I see," said Gunther.
-
-Beecher, silent, was turning over in his mind all the incidents of
-Slade's and Mrs. Kildair's conduct, striving to reach some explanation
-but the natural one that forced itself on him.
-
-"That's why," continued McKenna, "I'd like to know, first, if the
-detectives are straight--can be depended upon; second, if they were told
-to make a search; and, third, if they were told not to find the ring."
-
-"But why not?"
-
-"Because, Mr. Gunther, whoever took that ring the second time didn't
-take it on impulse or without a plan; whoever took it probably--I don't
-say certainly--knew enough of its history to know that Slade gave it to
-Mrs. Kildair, and reckoned on the fact that she would not dare to make
-it public. See?"
-
-The corners of his eyes contracted suddenly, as though through the
-movement of propelling forward the quick, decisive glance.
-
-"Then you think," said Beecher slowly, "that she is--"
-
-"Look here, Mr. Beecher," said the detective quickly, "there is one
-thing no human being can ever say offhand; what says the Bible--the way
-of a man with a maid--well, make that woman in general. You don't know,
-and I don't know, what the situation is right there, and we may never
-know. All the same, we're now started on solid ground; it may lead to
-something, and it may not, but what I want to know before we get much
-further is who and how many there that night knew or guessed Slade gave
-her the ring."
-
-"Of course," said Gunther. "But how--"
-
-"By patience and by running down every alley till we find it is an
-alley," said McKenna. "That's one thing to keep in mind, and let's put
-it this way. Was there any one there that night who had to have money
-quick, and who knew that the fact of Slade's giving the ring would tie
-Mrs. Kildair's hands? Now, if that condition existed, we're on a strong
-motive."
-
-"You don't consider that the only lead," said Beecher, convinced as he
-was of the probability of Mr. Majendie's participation.
-
-"Lord, no. Here's one other point to work on, Mr. Beecher. What's the
-situation today between Slade and Mrs. Kildair? Has there been any
-quarrel--say within the last ten days?"
-
-"I don't think so; and yet--" Beecher stopped, remembering Mrs.
-Kildair's curious request for him to outstay the promoter. "What if
-there was?"
-
-"Slade's a remarkable character," said McKenna, smiling. "Just how
-remarkable a few people will learn shortly. If he had quarreled or
-she's been trying to trick him--just like him to take the ring the
-second time."
-
-"By George!" said Gunther. "Why not?"
-
-"That's only something to be kept in the background," said McKenna,
-rising.
-
-He turned to Beecher, considering him profoundly.
-
-"Sorry you told Mrs. Kildair I was on the case," he said.
-
-Beecher blushed at the memory of the way in which he had been brought to
-disclose the information, and the confusion all at once revealed to the
-detective the probable means she had taken.
-
-At this moment the door opened and a voice called him.
-
-"Telephone, sir--personal."
-
-When the detective had left, Beecher and Gunther looked at each other in
-amazement in which a curious doubt was beginning to form.
-
-"Why the deuce should Slade give her the ring, Ted?" said Gunther
-abruptly.
-
-"I don't know," Beecher answered, perplexed. "I know what you
-think--that's natural; but I don't believe it. She's deeper than
-that--that is, I think so."
-
-But he ended perplexed, contracting his eyebrows, nervously jerking at a
-button on his coat.
-
-McKenna reentered, and on his face was a smile of anticipation and
-mischief.
-
-"Some one called me up just then," he said shortly; "some one I've been
-expecting to call me up. Guess who?"
-
-"Slade," said Gunther, startled.
-
-"Mrs. Kildair," said Beecher.
-
-"Mrs. Kildair is right," said McKenna. "I'm going up to see her
-tonight." And he added meditatively, "It ought to be quite an
-interesting little chat."
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER XIV*
-
-
-At eight o'clock promptly McKenna presented himself at the door of Mrs.
-Kildair's apartment. Kiki, with his velvet glide, ushered him into the
-studio. The electric chandeliers were dull; only the great standing
-lamp was lit, throwing a foggy luster about the room, massing enormous
-dark silhouettes and spaces in the corners.
-
-"Is it a precaution?" he thought grimly, considering this serviceable
-obscurity.
-
-He felt a sudden heightened sense of curiosity and defiance, a feeling
-that had been growing within him ever since the discovery of Slade's
-connection with the ring, and the brief, disjointed details of Beecher's
-interview. Every profession develops, back of its elaborate technique,
-a sudden quality of instinct which exists as the almost mechanical and
-unguided operation of the disciplined mind. McKenna had no sooner
-entered the room than he perceived the woman with a quick defensive "on
-guard" of all his faculties.
-
-He stopped in the center of the room, like a pointer flushing his game,
-and in the second's rapid inhalation he completely changed his scheme of
-attack. He felt at once that he had to do not alone with--what he
-expected--a woman of unusual physical attraction, clever, with the
-defensive intuition of one who has evaded the scrutiny of society; but
-with a woman of mental grasp and decision. He felt it everywhere: in
-the remarkable adjustment of the square room which broke it up into half
-a dozen separate groups, distinctive and sure as though so many separate
-selves; in the harmony of color and proportion, which he felt without
-analysis; in the seduction of the Rcamier couch with its eastern
-drapery of blue and gold; in the friendly comfort of the grouped chairs
-by the baronial fireplace; in the correct intimacy of the reading-table
-at one end and the formality of the grouped chairs by the piano. All
-these notes were to him notes of the hand that had arranged them, as he
-felt in the struggling muscles of the bared marble torsos, wrestling on
-the mantel, and the lithe, virile body of the discus-thrower on the
-table, the virility and aggressiveness of the woman. This perception
-awoke his defiance as though one personality had been substituted for
-another.
-
-"What does she want with me?" he thought. "Is she daring enough to tell
-me all, or is she worried at what I may know?"
-
-While he was still in the midst of his reflections, Mrs. Kildair
-entered. She was in street costume: a tailor-made dress of dark blue,
-edged with black braid, the stiffness and sobriety relieved by a full
-fichu at her throat. The red flight of a feather crossed the
-Gainsborough hat.
-
-"How do you do?" she said, nodding to him, a crisp, businesslike
-abruptness in her voice. "A little more light would be better. Thanks.
-The button is by the door."
-
-Prepared as he had been to be surprised, he had not expected this
-businesslike manifestation. He went to the wall, following her
-directions, and threw on the lights.
-
-"Only the side lights," she said. "That's it. Shall we sit here?"
-
-She took her position by the reading-table in a great high-backed
-upholstered arm-chair. Obeying her gesture, he drew up his chair to a
-position opposite. In the varied experiences of thirty years, he had
-come into contact with women of all walks of life. Without the
-psychological analysis of subtleties of the lawyer and the novelist, he
-had an unerring instinct for the crux of character. "Is she good or is
-she bad?" was the question that, in ninety cases out of a hundred, he
-put to himself at the turning-point of his campaigns. For the first
-time, despite his previous prejudice, he was in doubt for an answer, but
-he recognized in her at once the stamp of that superior brood which
-raises some men to fame and fortune where others by one trait of
-conscience or weakness end in a disgraceful failure.
-
-"I have wanted to meet you for a long time, Mr. McKenna," she said
-directly, but without the accompanying smile of feminine flattery. "Mr.
-Slade has told me much about you."
-
-"Slade?" he said, with a quick simulation of surprise, while admiring
-the abruptness, amazing in a woman, with which she had launched her
-attack.
-
-"You realize, of course, Mr. McKenna," she continued quietly, without
-giving him time to deny her first implication, "that Mr. Beecher, in
-engaging you, has, quite without his knowledge, brought on a situation
-that is very embarrassing to me."
-
-"Good!" thought the detective. "She has made up her mind to tell the
-whole story." Aloud he said, without change of expression: "In what
-way, Mrs. Kildair?"
-
-"A situation exists which makes it extremely difficult for me to recover
-my ring without disclosing to the public matters in my own private life
-that at present are liable to great misconstruction."
-
-She spoke professionally, without variation in her voice, as a doctor
-speaking with dispassionate directness. McKenna did not answer,
-resolving by his silence to force her to talk.
-
-"A week," she continued without pause, though her eyes remained without
-wavering on his, "--ten days at the most--may completely change this
-position. I won't conceal from you that I am extremely sorry that you
-have been brought into the case." McKenna could not control an
-expression of surprise. "But, now that you are in it, I shall be forced
-to give you a confidence against my inclination."
-
-"But--" began the detective.
-
-"One moment," she said, interrupting him. "Before I give you this
-confidence I wish to ask one question."
-
-"Mrs. Kildair, I must remind you," said McKenna warily, "that I am
-engaged in the interests of Mr. Beecher, and can do nothing without his
-permission."
-
-"Are you representing any one besides Mr. Beecher?" she said, ignoring
-his objection.
-
-"What do you mean?" he said carefully, to gain time.
-
-"Are you, in this particular case, representing Mr. Slade?" she said
-directly.
-
-"I have never said that I was employed by him, Mrs. Kildair," he said
-slowly, comprehending now the full purpose of her opening question.
-
-"Mr. Slade has told me himself of your work in connection with the Gray
-Fox Mines, the Farmers' and Travelers' Bank, and the more personal
-affair of your recovery of his letters from a Miss Minna Weston. You
-see, I am informed."
-
-"I have worked for Mr. Slade," said McKenna.
-
-"And are you doing so now?" she asked sharply.
-
-"I never refer to my clients, Mrs. Kildair," he said stiffly.
-
-"I desire to put this matter entirely in your hands--without reserve,"
-she said quickly. "All I ask from you is a promise that,
-notwithstanding your relations with him past or present, nothing I say
-to you shall be repeated to Mr. Slade, or to any one else."
-
-"Mrs. Kildair," said McKenna, every faculty joyfully grateful for the
-contest of wits he felt impending, "I must remind you that my employer
-is Mr. Beecher, and that I can promise nothing that will keep him from
-doing anything he desires.
-
-"Mr. Beecher is acting for me," she said calmly. "Very well; your
-position is correct. I will put it this way. Subject to Mr. Beecher's
-approval, will you give me your word that you will repeat nothing of
-what I may tell you?"
-
-"If Mr. Beecher is willing, I am," said McKenna obstinately. "That's my
-word."
-
-"Now I can speak to you freely," said Mrs. Kildair.
-
-"I have not promised yet," broke in McKenna.
-
-"I will take the risk," she said, brushing aside the obstacle with an
-impatient gesture.
-
-"I remain entirely free to communicate anything to Mr. Beecher,"
-interposed the detective instantly.
-
-"You do not understand," she said, without irritation. "Mr. Beecher, in
-retaining you, did so to assist me, and only after he had secured my
-permission. Now I desire, in order to arrive at quicker results and to
-be free to give you my full confidence, to transfer that authority
-direct to me. In other words, Mr. McKenna, I wish to retain you myself
-and for myself only."
-
-"That, Mrs. Kildair, depends entirely on Mr. Beecher," repeated the
-detective.
-
-"But if he acquiesces, will you act in my interests only?"
-
-McKenna was about to interpose another evasion, when he reflected that
-he would have time to acquaint Beecher with what had happened and to
-advise him either to accept or to refuse.
-
-"Very well," he replied cautiously, feeling instinctively that some trap
-was being prepared without yet perceiving what it could be. "I will
-leave it that way."
-
-"Good," she said, with a little nod of her head. "Now, what have you
-done?"
-
-"I can not answer that, Mrs. Kildair," he said, smiling; "not under my
-present arrangement."
-
-"You have, of course, discovered that the ring belongs to Mr. Slade?"
-
-Quite unconsciously, she had adopted his own tactics, the tactics of the
-inquisitor, who hurls the vital question at the suspect, and then seeks
-the answer in the almost imperceptible response in the eyes.
-
-"Yes, I know that," said McKenna, who felt that the surprise he had
-experienced at having the tables thus turned on him had revealed the
-truth to the questioner. "That is, I know the ring did belong to Mr.
-Slade."
-
-"Have you informed Mr. Beecher of the fact?"
-
-"It has just come to my knowledge," said McKenna; "I shall, naturally,
-inform him."
-
-Mrs. Kildair looked at him a moment with an appearance of reflection.
-
-"The question was quite unnecessary," she said. "Of course, you have
-told him, and you have every right to deny it." Then she continued with
-more decision: "This is exactly my danger--you see, I won't mince words.
-It is a situation which constantly occurs, and which is inexplicable
-except by one construction in the eyes of society. Now--"
-
-"I warn you," again objected the detective.
-
-"I do not propose to explain my relations with Mr. Slade," continued
-Mrs. Kildair coldly. "They are such that a great deal depends on the
-events of the next few days. At present it is enough that I can not
-explain my possession of the ring in any way that can satisfy
-publicity."
-
-"Mr. Slade did not give you the ring?" said McKenna, in slow
-progression.
-
-She carefully considered the question.
-
-"Mr. Slade sent me the ring with an offer of marriage," said Mrs.
-Kildair evenly, with an appearance of great frankness. "The ring
-arrived on the night of the party, and I committed the imprudence of
-wearing it. If its source now becomes known, I must appear before the
-world either as Mr. Slade's mistress or as his fiance; and at present I
-have not made up my mind whether I shall marry him."
-
-The directness of this avowal left McKenna immersed in thought. He
-looked at her, unaware of the fixity of his stare; and, inclined as
-always to skepticism, he asked himself if back of all the outer gilt of
-this proud, determined woman, there were not a stalking shadow of
-insistent poverty, whether the game she was playing with Slade were not
-a greater drama than that in which he was engaged; whether, in fact, it
-lay not on a turn of the balance whether the world should know her as
-the wife or that very alternative which she had dreaded in the exposure
-of the ownership of the ring?
-
-"What does she really want of Slade?" he said to himself, staring so
-profoundly beyond the set gaze of the woman that, for the first time,
-she moved with a little annoyance.
-
-"Mr. McKenna!" she said sharply.
-
-"I beg your pardon," he said, stiffening abruptly.
-
-"You perceive now the delicacy of my position," she said; "and why I
-desire to have you completely in my interests."
-
-"I do," he answered, but still clinging to the saving rope of defiance.
-"I only regret that you told me this before Mr. Beecher's--"
-
-"Now ask me any questions you wish," she said, interrupting him
-impatiently.
-
-"I don't feel at liberty to do so, Mrs. Kildair," he said warily,
-convinced that her whole motive was to find out the extent of his
-knowledge. "I prefer to know first where I stand."
-
-"Very well," she said. "Let us talk of other things, then." Her manner
-changed to one of a lighter, inconsequential curiosity. "There is one
-point in the frightful happenings of the day I should like to know."
-
-"What, madam?" said McKenna, whose instinct warned him to adopt a tone
-of artless attention.
-
-"Majendie was followed by detectives, was he not?"
-
-"That is the report."
-
-"And he was on the point of leaving when he perceived that he would be
-followed?"
-
-"That is what I have been told."
-
-"And, believing that he was about to be arrested, he returned to the
-house and shot himself."
-
-"That's the story."
-
-"As a matter of fact, wasn't he mistaken?"
-
-"In what way?" said McKenna, steeling himself under an appearance of
-surprise.
-
-"Were not the detectives your own men--placed by you at Mr. Slade's
-orders to acquaint him with every move of Mr. Majendie?" persisted Mrs.
-Kildair.
-
-"That would make a good Sunday thriller," said McKenna, laughing
-boisterously.
-
-"That is my guess," she said, drawing back as though satisfied. "I am
-certain that Majendie committed suicide through the blunder of believing
-he was threatened with arrest."
-
-"My dear Mrs. Kildair," said the detective, rising, "I see that what you
-want to know is, am I for or against Mr. Slade. If I'm not in his
-employ you think I'm retained by his enemies. Well, I don't intend to
-give you any information."
-
-She made no answer, but, rising in turn, glanced at the clock.
-
-"Since you are here," she said carelessly, "you may as well look over
-the ground." And, without waiting, she went to the door. "This is my
-bedroom. The ring was placed here."
-
-He had hardly made his quick professional scrutiny when there came a
-ring at the door, and at a sign from Mrs. Kildair they returned to the
-studio.
-
-"What now?" thought McKenna, who remembered her glance at the clock.
-"Slade or who?"
-
-To his surprise, it was Beecher who entered. Mrs. Kildair went directly
-to him, a smile of confidence and welcome on her face, holding out an
-eager hand, and by the elation of her movements, the detective
-comprehended how she had played him.
-
-"Teddy," she said directly, "I have a favor to ask you, and I trust you
-so completely that I know I need not explain it further. Mr. McKenna
-and I have had a very complete understanding. I wish him to represent
-me entirely. I do not mean that you should not continue to work on the
-case," she added quickly, as she felt instinctively the gesture of
-warning McKenna made behind her back. "All I wish you to tell him is
-that anything I may have told him or will tell him shall be considered
-confidential until the time I am able to tell you myself. I must throw
-myself on your chivalry and protection as the fine gentleman I have seen
-you to be," she added, looking at him with a moistening of the eyes in
-which there was respect and a more tender emotion.
-
-McKenna, though perceiving how completely she had prepared the isolation
-of the confidence he had just heard, did not again signal his objection,
-perhaps divining the futility of opposing such an appeal.
-
-Beecher bowed in assent.
-
-"Certainly, Rita," he said, with a pride that brought a smile of
-amusement to McKenna's lips. "I wish McKenna to do everything he can for
-you and in exactly the way you wish."
-
-"Thank you," she said, with a little pressure of his hand. Then
-turning, she added: "This I will say to you both. I have my reasons for
-believing that the ring will be returned within ten days; if it isn't
-then I shall have more to disclose."
-
-"Returned?" said Beecher, struck by the similarity of her prophecy and
-that of Nan Charters.
-
-"Exactly. Until then, I believe all that is necessary is to wait for
-developments." She turned toward the detective, who waited like a
-statue. "Mr. McKenna, I know you are a busy man. I won't keep you. Mr.
-Beecher has come to assist me on a very painful errand, one on which I
-would trust no other man that I know in New York." She held out her
-hand. "I do not often make mistakes in men, or I should not have told
-you what I did. Good-night; I shall call you soon."
-
-McKenna bowed, experiencing, despite his resentment at her mastery of
-the evening, a feeling of respect and deference.
-
-"Beecher is a kitten in her hands," he said to himself as he entered the
-street. "She played me as she wanted to. One thing's certain. She
-wants to employ me to keep me from doing anything. Evidently her own
-game is more important than the ring--or is there blackmail mixed up in
-this? I have it! Mrs. Kildair knows the thief, but is afraid to act
-until--until certain things straighten out between her and Mr. John G.
-Slade."
-
-
-"And now, Teddy," said Mrs. Kildair, as soon as the door had closed
-behind the detective, "you know what I want of you. I have arranged
-everything. My carriage is waiting."
-
-Half an hour later, Mrs. Bloodgood joined them, heavily veiled. They
-drove to the house next to that of Majendie, and, at a word from Mrs.
-Kildair, Beecher remained below on guard in the flickering obscurity of
-the street. The two women went hurriedly up the steps of Majendie's
-home, where the door was opened for them by some one who had been
-awaiting their arrival.
-
-For a full half-hour Beecher, prey to a profound melancholy, continued
-his aimless, mechanical pacing, his head raised, glancing past the
-jagged black silhouettes of the house-tops at the reddened clouds of the
-unreal night, which brought him not a clear vision of immense and
-purifying spaces but the heavy reflection of the illuminated, surging
-streets.
-
-"What will my life be?" he thought, conjuring up the future. "Calm and
-commonplace? Or shall I ever be linked to some such tragedy--torn to
-pieces, all in a day--wrecked!"
-
-The door opened and two shadows passed down the steps. He returned
-hastily, saw them into the carriage, and stood with uncovered head, a
-lump in his throat, as they drove on. Then he went directly to his
-rooms, and, exhausted by the emotions of the day, fell heavily into a
-sleep that was almost a stupor.
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER XV*
-
-
-The next morning he was awakened by Gunther's abrupt hand.
-
-"Up, up, you sluggard!"
-
-He jumped out hastily and found it was almost half-past eight.
-
-"Nice time to sleep," said Gunther sarcastically. "Have you forgotten a
-little visit we're to make to that sweet person, Mr. Garraboy? You've
-got just twenty-two minutes to beautify yourself and fill the inner
-being."
-
-"If we're to see your charming friend, Mr. Garraboy," said Gunther half
-an hour later, as they were speeding for the congested, stirring, lower
-city, "we've got to nip our man before the opening of the Stock
-Exchange. Now let's hear what happened at Mrs. Kildair's last night."
-
-The events in which Mrs. Bloodgood was concerned were sealed in
-confidence; but Beecher felt at liberty to recount to his friend the
-bare details of McKenna's visit as he had known them.
-
-"What the deuce is behind it all?" said Gunther, puzzled. "I got
-McKenna on the wire and that's all he would tell me. What's the reason
-she wants to bottle up everything? What's her mix-up with Slade?
-Depend upon it, Ted, that woman knows more than we do--or why should she
-expect the ring to be returned? She's got a reason for that."
-
-"If it's returned," said Beecher, "it's Mrs. Bloodgood who took it."
-
-"Never! No woman ever got that ring out of the apartment--not alone;
-not a Mrs. Bloodgood, or a Nan Charters, or a Mrs. Cheever, or--"
-Suddenly he reflected. "Ted, there's one person I'd like to meet."
-
-"Miss Lille?"
-
-"Yes. Supposing we look her up a little more."
-
-"I've thought quite a lot about her," said Beecher musingly; and,
-remembering all at once her self-possession on the night of the theft,
-he added: "There's nothing weak about her certainly; still, I can't see
-the motive."
-
-They had left behind them the free, unbounded sky, boring their way
-through the towering sides of the sky-scraping district, where buildings
-rose in regular, comb-like structures, with their thousands of human
-cells tenanted by human bees. Entering a street where the obstructed
-sun never shone, they were swept on by the feverish rush of
-fellow-beings and shot up sixteen stories to their destination. The
-office-boy in the antechamber took their cards with the condescension
-which only an office-boy between the ages of twelve and sixteen can
-feel, and disappeared within.
-
-"The old screw'll keep us waiting half an hour, said Gunther, who
-disliked all delays.
-
-"Bet he's trying to figure out what we're here for?" said Beecher, who
-admitted to himself a delicious satisfaction at the prospective
-humiliation of the man he cordially disliked.
-
-The next moment Garraboy himself appeared at the rail, dapper, dried up,
-and severe.
-
-"How do you do?" he said sharply, but without inviting them in. "What
-can I do for you? It's a very busy day for me."
-
-"I assure you I don't intend to take any more time than I am compelled
-to," said Beecher stiffly, with an accent that gave another meaning to
-the phrase. He plunged his hand into his pocket. "I have an order for
-you."
-
-"Oh, yes, I remember now," said Garraboy, with a malicious drawing up of
-his lips. "You can save yourself the trouble."
-
-"What do you mean?" asked Beecher, greatly surprised.
-
-"You have an order on me to deliver certain stocks I hold for Miss
-Charters?"
-
-"I have."
-
-"Well, Miss Charters has changed her mind," said Garraboy, letting his
-glance rest on Beecher with the vacant, impudent stare of which he was
-master.
-
-"You have seen Miss Charters?" said Beecher, growing very angry.
-
-"I have; and when I explained to her that she had been unduly excited by
-some one who evidently is not aware that there are laws in civilized
-countries adequate to deal with those who attack the reputations or
-interests--"
-
-"Sir!" exclaimed Beecher, moving so quickly toward the rail that
-Garraboy hastily retreated.
-
-"When Miss Charters learned that, and likewise that she had parted with
-stocks worth considerably over twenty thousand dollars, she changed her
-mind very quickly."
-
-"Mr. Garraboy," said Gunther abruptly, "all this is not to the point.
-We have a formal order on you for certain stocks. Ted, present it."
-
-"True, I forgot," said Garraboy, and produced from his coat a letter,
-which he looked over with nonchalant delay and finally handed to
-Beecher. "I presume you are acting from altruistic motives and are not
-standing on technicalities. Here is a little note which Miss Charters
-requested me to give you."
-
-"That has nothing to do with it," said Gunther at once, for the
-personality of the broker aroused the pugnacious side of him. "Your
-transaction has been closed. Get your stocks."
-
-Beecher, frowning, unable to conceal the vexation that this unexpected
-check brought him, opened the letter. The address by its formality
-completed his irritation:
-
-
-DEAR MR. BEECHER:
-
-Mr. Garraboy has called and explained everything satisfactorily. I am
-afraid I was needlessly alarmed last night and did him an injustice. As
-he has shown me how advantageous it will be for me to transfer my
-holdings to other stocks, now far below their market value, I have
-decided not to lose the opportunity. Thank you just the same for your
-interest in this matter. I shall be in at five this afternoon and will
-explain to you more fully.
-
-Cordially yours,
- NAN CHARTERS.
-
-
-The two watched him read to the end, fold the letter carefully, and put
-it in his pocket.
-
-"Well?" said Garraboy.
-
-"Insist on the delivery, Ted," said Gunther militantly. "If Miss
-Charters wants to return them again, that's her affair. The stocks are
-yours."
-
-He looked at his friend with a glance of warning which sought to convey
-to him the distrust he could not openly phrase.
-
-"If Mr. Beecher wishes to stand on technicalities," said Garraboy, in
-his even, oily voice, "he can do so. He can make a very nice profit.
-Which is it? I repeat, I can not give you much time."
-
-"Miss Charters' letter is sufficient," said Beecher suddenly.
-"Good-day."
-
-The feeling of mortification and chagrin which her action had brought on
-him dominated all other feelings. He went out in a rage, tearing the
-letter into minute fragments. Without a word they reached the street
-and entered the automobile.
-
-"Last time I ever try to help a woman!" he said, between his teeth.
-
-"What the deuce did you play into his game for?" said Gunther. "He's
-bamboozled her. I believe the fellow is an out-and-out crook--he's got
-a rotten bad eye. Why the deuce didn't you get the stocks?"
-
-"She can take her own risks," said Beecher furiously. "It's her own
-affair if she's going to blow hot and cold. By Jove, Bruce, I never met
-any one who could make me so mad clear through and through."
-
-He stopped, biting his lips, and Gunther with a shy glance stored away
-for future comment the impression he received.
-
-"What's the use of taking them seriously?" he said, with a shrug of the
-shoulders. "Amuse yourself, but don't let them absorb you. Suppose we
-take a turn at the Curb and see what's doing."
-
-With the opening of the market, all the giant sides of Wall Street
-seemed suddenly animated with the fury of a disturbed ant-hill. Every
-one was rushing in and out, carrying with them the pollution of disaster
-and alarm. Eddie Fontaine and Steve Plunkett hurried past them with
-quick nods. At the curb market the brokers were shrieking and flinging
-their frantic signals in the air. They entered the Stock Exchange,
-nodding to the doorkeeper, who knew Gunther, and reached the balcony,
-their ears suddenly smitten with the confused uproar from below. They
-stood there a few minutes, marveling at that Inferno of speculation and
-embattled greed flung before them in all the nakedness of man's terror;
-and then left, oppressed by the too frank exhibition of their mortal
-counterparts.
-
-"What's doing?" asked Gunther as they returned.
-
-The doorkeeper, with a shrug of his shoulders, flung down his thumb--the
-gesture of the Roman circus.
-
-"You like that?" said Beecher, when once more they were in the
-automobile and the din and oppression of cell-like monstrosities had
-receded.
-
-"I do," Gunther replied, locking and unlocking his broad hands.
-
-"Horrible!"
-
-"That's only one side of it--speculation," said Gunther warmly; "but
-even that is impressive. Look beyond those little mobs we saw, get the
-feeling of the whole country, the vast nation, rising in anger--flinging
-over hundreds of thousands of holdings--sweeping down the little
-gamblers with the tremendous waves of its alarm. Beyond that the whole
-vibrating industry of the nation is here, within a quarter of a
-mile--the great projects of development, the wars of millions, the
-future of immense territories to the West and the South. There's a big
-side to it--a real side--that gets me. I've a mind to walk down now and
-face the old governor and tell him I'm ready."
-
-"Why don't you?" said Beecher. He himself had felt the restlessness of
-indecision and enforced idleness. He gave a laugh. "You know, Bruce,
-I'm beginning to feel the same way. Either I've got to get into the
-current somewhere, or I'm going to pack off for Africa some fine day."
-
-"By the way, Tilton's up at the club. He's here for a few days, getting
-ready for a lion hunt or something."
-
-"Tilton?" exclaimed Beecher joyfully. "By Jove, I must get hold of him.
-I'd go in a minute!"
-
-He believed what he said. The whirl of emotions into which he had
-lately been plunged--revealing to him as it had all the mercenary,
-clutching side of the city--had left him disturbed, rebellious, longing
-to be away from the mass of men in general, and of women in particular,
-the brilliant, keen, and calculating women of the city with whom he had
-been thrown. Impatient and disillusionized, without realizing the true
-cause, he repeated:
-
-"By Jove, I'd go in a minute!"
-
-In the afternoon he went to call on Miss Charters. After having declared
-twenty times that he would not go near her, he suddenly remembered, at
-the end of a wearied discussion between his conscience and his
-inclination, that his check for twenty thousand dollars was to be
-reclaimed and, at once seizing such a satisfactory reason, he abandoned
-the attitude of embattled dignity which he had logically built up.
-
-"That's true; I must get the check," he said, and he set out.
-
-But as he neared his destination and began to rehearse all the grave
-causes for offense that he held against her, he was surprised at the
-slender stock of ammunition he held.
-
-"Why, it was perfectly natural," he thought, struck by the idea--having
-considered her reasons for the first time. "If Garraboy called and
-explained everything to her satisfaction, why shouldn't she change her
-mind? Besides, there is nothing against Garraboy--nothing definite.
-After all, I may have been unjust to him."
-
-Very sheepish, he felt his irritation slipping away as he yielded to the
-eager desire of once more entering her presence.
-
-"What the deuce was I so wild about?" he asked himself, amazed, as he
-entered the elevator.
-
-But all at once he remembered that she had allowed him to receive the
-news at the hands of a person intensely disagreeable to him.
-
-"Why didn't she telephone me? That's the whole point."
-
-And, all his irritation restored by this one outstanding fact, he
-entered the apartment with the dignity of a justly offended person.
-
-She was seated by the fire in an easy-chair, and she did not rise as he
-entered. She was bending eagerly forward, an open manuscript in her
-hand, and, without turning, she made a little sign to him to be seated
-until she should have finished.
-
-"Wonderful!" she cried at last, dropping the play in her lap. "It is
-wonderful!" she repeated, her whole body vibrating with the enthusiasm
-of her mood. "Wonderful--astonishing--what a scene!" And, tapping the
-manuscript with a gesture of decision, she exclaimed: "I will play that
-part--it will be an enormous sensation!"
-
-Her mind still obsessed by the thought of the newly discovered
-masterpiece, she turned toward Beecher, who was seated like a ramrod on
-the edge of his chair.
-
-"A marvelous play! Really, that Mr. Hargrave is a coming man."
-Forgetting her previous estimate, she rushed on: "Isn't it strange--I
-always knew he would do it, from the very first! What is extraordinary
-is the subtlety of it--how he twines two or three emotions together in
-the same scene. What a glorious chance for an actress! I must telephone
-the office."
-
-As she rose, a slip of paper which she had been using as a marker
-fluttered to the floor. She picked it up, recognized it, and handed it
-to him.
-
-"Oh, yes, here's your check!" she said. "I put it there so as not to
-forget it. Thanks very much. I'll explain in a minute. I must
-telephone Stigler; I'm all excited!"
-
-Beecher, more annoyed by this revelation of her professional life than
-by the rub to his vanity, took the check and pocketed it--not having
-pronounced a word since his arrival.
-
-She considered him carefully from the corner of her eye as she took up
-the telephone; but her personal emotion was too buoyant for trivial
-interruptions.
-
-Stigler, her manager, was out, and she put down the receiver with a jar
-of impatience. She looked at Beecher again, and, perceiving that there
-was an explanation due, sought at once to shift the responsibility.
-
-"Do you know, really, you were ridiculously alarmed last night," she
-said, a spirit of opposition in her voice. "I don't know what made you
-so panicky."
-
-"Of course," he said sarcastically, "I realize now that I should never
-have stirred you up, when everything was so calm. It's strange that I
-did not explain to you the natural reasons for Mr. Garraboy's not
-calling you up--but then, I usually lose my head at such times."
-
-"You are angry!" she said.
-
-"What a strange idea! On the contrary, it was a charming experience to
-enter Mr. Garraboy's office and be so delightfully reassured that
-everything was so prosperous with him."
-
-She did not like irony, or know how to combat it, so she frowned and
-said:
-
-"I telephoned you."
-
-"Why should you do that? You might have deprived me of the pleasure of
-meeting your charming friend, Mr. Garraboy."
-
-"I telephoned. You were not in."
-
-"When?"
-
-"Last night. Four times."
-
-He was mollified by this, but tried not to show it.
-
-"And this morning?"
-
-"But I never get up before ten," she cried, aghast.
-
-"Your explanations are crushingly convincing," he said, with a bow and a
-smile.
-
-She watched him with an uneasy look, totally unconscious of any sense of
-obligation, accustomed as she was to have her requests for service
-regarded as favors. The reaction from their last interview had left her
-in a coldly antagonistic state, determined to pluck in the bud this
-progress toward intimacy which had so threatened her scheme of life.
-Now, seeing him collected and ironical, she was instinctively alarmed at
-the distance which he, not she, had placed between them.
-
-"My dear Teddy," she began, in a more confidential tone.
-
-"Teddy?" he said, smiling.
-
-He was perfectly good-natured, and as she felt that he was not
-irritated, but amusing himself at her tricks which he had divined, she
-was uneasy under this ironical examination. She felt that he had
-escaped her; and, disturbed by this thought, she looked at him, seeing
-all at once his quality. As he had made not the slightest reference to
-the very apparent obligation which he had been willing to undergo for
-her, she felt his social superiority and his reticence of good breeding.
-Besides, other women--brilliant women--had been attracted by him: Mrs.
-Craig Fontaine, Mrs. Kildair, and, above all, Emma Fornez. But another
-mood had possession of her, the mood of the artist transformed by the
-joy of personal sensation. She wished to keep him, but at the moment
-she was irritated that such a little thing should come to interfere with
-the joy of the imagined future triumph.
-
-"Don't be horrid, Teddy," she said impatiently, and, wishing to appease
-him quickly, that she might talk to him of the play, she continued: "The
-fact is, Mr. Garraboy has done everything he could for me. He sold my
-stocks a week ago, foreseeing this panic, and saved me several thousand
-dollars. He offered to give me his check for twenty-two thousand five
-hundred dollars, or to reinvest it for me when the time came in the
-enormous bargains that can be picked up now. What was I to do?"
-
-"You're quite right, and I made a great mistake to mislead you so," he
-answered, with great seriousness.
-
-"It wasn't your fault," she said abruptly.
-
-"Wasn't it?" he said, opening his eyes with a show of surprise.
-
-She comprehended that she would have to surrender, and, changing her
-tone to one of gentleness, she said:
-
-"It was a great thing for you to do what you did, Teddy--I shall never
-forget it."
-
-"Nonsense," he said, persisting in misunderstanding her. "I often get
-up early--that was nothing at all."
-
-"You are not at all the way you were last time," she said reproachfully,
-forgetting that that was just what she wished to avoid.
-
-But at this moment the telephone rang. Stigler, her manager, was
-calling. Immediately she forgot their misunderstanding, carried away by
-the enthusiasm of the moment. Beecher, with a clear vision, followed
-her, noticing in her voice, as she sought to cajole the manager, the
-same caressing pleading which she had employed a moment before with him.
-
-"Now I really see her," he thought, with a liberation of his spirit.
-"Emma was entirely wrong. She's not a woman--she always an actress."
-
-"I'll send you the play right away," she was saying. "Mr. Hargrave is
-coming. I'll have him take it to the hotel. But you must read it
-tonight. Promise! Oh, yes, lots of comedy--delicious! Heart interest
-and big scenes--yes, sensational. Just the part for Fannestock. I must
-have him for the part! You'll see him in every line! Now, Mr. Stigler,
-please read it tonight!"
-
-"Ah, there's Fannestock too," said Beecher grimly to himself.
-
-She rose from telephoning, joyous and excited.
-
-"Oh, if Stigler will only see it! It's a great part--a great part!
-There's a wonderful scene at the close of the third act, between the two
-women and the father, that will bring down the house."
-
-Miss Tilbury came in to announce that Mr. Hargrave was calling. An
-expression of delight lit up the features of the actress. But all at
-once she turned anxiously to Beecher, who had risen stiffly.
-
-"By Jove, I've overstayed my time," he said readily, glancing at the
-clock.
-
-She was grateful, and yet dissatisfied that he had suggested what she
-wished, and, recalling his new spirit of independence, she said
-anxiously, with a compensating smile:
-
-"Teddy, call me up in the morning--this is so important."
-
-In the hallway he stepped aside while Hargrave, a frail, oldish-young
-man, entered, with his famished, doubting glance.
-
-"Oh, it is wonderful--wonderful!" cried the actress, seizing both his
-hands. "I am still thrilled. Wonderful---wonderful!"
-
-"You liked it?" said Hargrave timidly. At her words, he saw heaven open
-before his eyes in a confused vision of frantic audiences, applauding
-critics, checks for thousands for royalty, all confused by rolling
-automobiles, magnificent bouquets and languishing feminine eyes.
-
-"Like it!" continued Nan Charters, retaining hold of one hand to draw
-him into the salon. "It is marvelous! How could you know all this so
-young!"
-
-Beecher, in the excitement, quietly made his escape. In the elevator,
-to the surprise of the wondering bell-boy, he was seized with a mad
-laughter, which continued to convulse him as he rolled into the street.
-
-"Heaven be praised!" he exclaimed. "Cured--cured, by Jove! I wouldn't
-have missed it for worlds!"
-
-On turning the corner of his club, he ran into Becker, a club
-acquaintance whom he tolerantly disliked.
-
-"Becker, old boy," he said, seizing his arm and flourishing his cane in
-the direction of the club, "what can I buy you? Come on--_en avant_!"
-
-"What the deuce has got in you?" said that correct youth.
-
-"Joy, laughter, everything! I'm happy as a Croton water-bug on a hot
-marble slab!"
-
-At the bar, he gathered every one in sight, slapping them on their
-shoulders. His comrades looked at him with envy and awe, believing that
-he had profited by a tip to make a killing in the market. Their own
-enjoyment was little enough. The market, outdoing the day before, had
-plunged like a wild steer into the maelstrom of panic. A billion
-dollars had receded, scattered, evaporated in the mad day. The disaster
-had reached the whole country; every bank was threatened. The United
-States Treasury had been implored to come to the assistance of the
-country. Gunther, Fontaine, Marx, Haggerty, were in hourly conference;
-while before the swelling hurricane of fright, every paper was imploring
-its readers to stand firm.
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER XVI*
-
-
-The next day Beecher did not consider for a moment telephoning to Nan
-Charters, despite her last request. He felt that it was a chapter
-closed in his life--one of those innumerable false paths down which one
-plunges, only the quicker to return. His own serenity did not even
-surprise him. He went off for the morning to play rackets with Bruce
-Gunther, and lunched at the club with Tilton, who urged him to join his
-hunt, an invitation which he discussed with enthusiasm.
-
-The news from the stock market was the same--ten point losses in the
-early trading. Banks all over the country had suspended payments for a
-week in order to weather the storm. The panic had ceased to be one of
-speculative concern only. Every one was anxiously asking if a permanent
-blow had not been dealt to the industries of the country. Many freely
-prophesied that, if the downward rush were not checked within three
-days, it would take the country ten years to restore its shattered
-prosperity. There was a rumor that the big men of the Street had made up
-a fund, reaching to many millions, which would be brought on the morrow
-to the support of the market. The run on the Associated Trust still
-continued, checked though it was by delay and technicalities. Yet the
-fall of Slade was hourly predicted.
-
-Beecher lingered after luncheon, played a hundred points at billiards
-and won, an hour's bridge and won again. Then he went off in high
-spirits to call on Emma Fornez, an appointment arranged over the
-telephone.
-
-"So, you bad boy, you and your little Charters have quarreled," said the
-prima donna, greeting him with an accusing smile, though in her voice
-was the pitch of the nervous excitement which her coming dbut that
-night had communicated.
-
-"Not in the least," he said, a little surprised at the insinuation.
-
-"Ta-ta-ta! Enough of your stuff and nonsense," she said, with a shrug
-of her shoulders. "You are too big a simpleton--a little woman like
-that will always get the best of you."
-
-"But there is no quarrel, and I am not in the least interested."
-
-"Oh, _avec a_--keep away--better keep away! You will burn your fingers.
-Just the kind of a little doll that is dangerous. Women like that are
-like half colors between one thing and the other--very dangerous! A
-young girl--_jeune fille_--would bore you now, and an old campaigner
-like Emma Fornez would amuse you; but a little thing like that is too
-puzzling for you. I see just how it is," she continued, placing her
-hands on her hips and bobbing her head energetically, while Beecher,
-very much pleased to be so lectured, listened with a mocking look.
-"Yes, yes, I know very well! She gets you--how do you say?--going and
-coming. When she is an actress you say she is different from the
-rest--what a child! And when she is playing the child, you say what a
-difference--she is such an artist! You laugh--see!"
-
-Beecher broke out laughing at this characterization which came so near
-the truth.
-
-"What I have said is very good--very good," repeated Emma Fornez,
-pleased. "It's all studied, very carefully studied out, but it takes
-with young simpletons, big geese, good-looking boys--don't I know?
-_Est-ce-que j'en ai jou de ces tours l_? Come, now, what did you fight
-about?"
-
-Beecher had an inclination to take her into his confidence; but he
-resisted the impulse, and to turn the conversation said artfully:
-
-"By Jove, you look stunning! You won't have to sing a note."
-
-She was in a filmy peignoir, and, as his glance showed an amused
-admiration, she said, with a look of apology which she did not feel at
-all, gathering the peignoir closer with a perfectly simulated modesty:
-
-"It's very bad--my receiving you like this. I am going through my
-costumes. They are dreams. Wait, you shall see--you wish to see them?
-Good!" All at once she stopped and, seizing his arm, cried: "Teddy, I
-am in a cold fright--I shiver all over whenever I think of it. New York
-audiences are terrible. It will be a big, big failure, won't it?"
-
-"There, I'll give you my lucky piece," he said, patting her shoulder as
-he would a child's.
-
-"Will you!" she cried, delighted; and; running into the bedroom, she
-called back: "I will show you the costume for the second act first. You
-will fall down and adore me. Keep me talking, Teddy--I shall go into
-hysterics. Oh, I am so frightened!"
-
-She tried her voice, singing a scale, inquiring anxiously, her head
-peering around the door: "That sounds bad, _hein_?"
-
-"Marvelous!" said Beecher, who did not know one note from another.
-
-Reassured, she entered radiantly, took two or three steps forward, and,
-lifting the castanets on her fingers, flung herself into the pose of
-Carmen exulting in the return of her lover.
-
-"Carmen, Teddy," she cried, with a toss of her head. "Carmen is
-different from all other rles. To succeed in Carmen, one must be a
-Carmen one's self--_enfant de la Bohme_. You like this? Wait--wait a
-moment."
-
-Back in her bedroom, she continued, pausing from time to time to shriek
-at her maid: "Teddy, you do me so much good--you take my mind off....
-Victorine, _tu m'assassine_! ... Teddy, they will think me beautiful,
-_hein_? You will stay--you will talk to me until I go?"
-
-"Wish I could," said Beecher, to whom this peep behind the scenes was
-novel. "The deuce is, I'm dining with Mrs. Fontaine--going in her box."
-
-"And Chartrs--she is going too?"
-
-"I don't know."
-
-"What--you don't know?" she said, emerging, a shawl of shaded luminous
-greens flung over the shoulder of a russet taffeta. She seized him by
-the chin with the savage gesture of the Bohemian. "You lie to me! You
-love her--and you know!" Then, slipping on the sofa beside him, half
-playful, half feline, she pleaded: "Tell me, Teddy--tell me just to
-distract me. Be a nice boy--you see how nervous I am--please!"
-
-Beecher did not resist. He recounted lightly, making little of the few
-passages at arms between him and Nan Charters, ending with a droll
-reproduction of his laughing exit, cured and disillusionized.
-
-"Ah, my poor Teddy!" said Emma Fornez, shaking her head. "Everything
-you say proves what I feared."
-
-"What?"
-
-"You are in love; you are beyond hope!
-
-"What, after I've told you this?"
-
-"Exactly. She asked you to telephone, you didn't. Why? Because you
-are in love--you are afraid."
-
-"Emma, I will tell you the truth," he said, with an excusing shrug.
-
-"Aha!"
-
-"I was attracted--"
-
-"Good!"
-
-"But I saw what an idiot I would be."
-
-"Very good!"
-
-"I am completely cured, and if I didn't telephone, it is--"
-
-"Because you are in love," said Emma promptly.
-
-"Nonsense!"
-
-"You will see her tomorrow; if not, day after tomorrow. And the longer
-you stay away, the worse for you."
-
-The arrival of Spinetti, the conductor, to run over a last few points,
-broke in upon this interesting discussion. Beecher departed, after a
-promise to come behind after the second act with a budget of news. He
-returned to his rooms, undisturbed by the charges of Emma Fornez.
-
-"I haven't thought of her the whole day," he said contentedly. "If I
-didn't telephone, it's because--well, because--what's the use? I have
-other things more interesting to do."
-
-In his apartment he found McKenna waiting for him, in company with
-Gunther, who was already dressed for dinner at Mrs. Fontaine's.
-
-"Hello, McKenna," he said, surprised. "What's up?"
-
-The two had been discussing energetically, and the little difficult
-hesitation told him that he himself had been the subject of
-conversation.
-
-"I'm called off on an important case," said McKenna. "Thought I'd
-better have an understanding with you first."
-
-"What understanding?" he said. His eye was attracted by the heaped-up
-mail on a side table, and he moved over to examine it, with a curiosity,
-utterly illogical, to see if Miss Charters had written him.
-
-"Mr. Beecher, I have a request to make of you," said McKenna quickly.
-
-"What's that?"
-
-"Don't open any letters or answer the telephone until I am gone."
-
-"Why, yes; but--" He cut off with a look of interrogation.
-
-"Pump it into him, Mac," said Gunther, throwing himself back and puffing
-forth great volumes of smoke.
-
-"The truth is, Mr. Beecher," said McKenna, smiling, "Mrs. Kildair played
-us both to the queen's fashion."
-
-"What was I to do?" said Beecher warmly. "Whom does the ring belong to,
-anyway? Is there any reason I should do what she doesn't want me to?"
-
-"No--no," said McKenna slowly.
-
-"Could I have refused a direct demand from her like that? And what
-reason could I give if I had?"
-
-"You couldn't," said McKenna, eying the end of his cigar. "She did the
-job neatly. I admire that woman--don't know when I've met one of that
-sex who's caught my fancy so."
-
-"I suppose you're sick of the case and want to get out," said Beecher,
-believing he had divined the errand. "Don't know as I blame you."
-
-"No, I don't want to quit," said McKenna slowly, while Gunther smiled to
-himself. "I should say, rather, there are things in this case that make
-me particularly interested--interested for my own curiosity to go a
-little deeper. Only, I want to be sure we understand things the same
-way. You don't understand from anything Mrs. Kildair said, do you, that
-I am prevented from going on working on my own hook?"
-
-"Why, no; of course not," said Beecher, reflecting. "I understand two
-things: one, that Mrs. Kildair wishes to keep in confidence what she
-said to you, which I should say was the explanation of certain facts
-connected with her having the ring."
-
-"Second?" said McKenna.
-
-"Second, that she believes the ring will be returned, and until she is
-sure it is she doesn't wish to give us certain suspicions or knowledge
-that she has."
-
-"First rate--just right," said McKenna, rising quickly, showing
-satisfaction in the instant alertness of his movements. "That's what I
-understand; we understand each other." As he spoke, the telephone rang.
-He made a quick gesture of opposition as Beecher started, saying: "Not
-now, sir; I'd rather you wouldn't answer--not just now."
-
-Beecher looked at Gunther, who nodded and said:
-
-"McKenna's got a good reason. You'll understand later."
-
-"Now, Mr. Beecher, I've just one thing to say before I go," said
-McKenna, while the insistent bell continued its querulous summons. "I'd
-prefer you wouldn't mention to any one that you saw me. At any rate, as
-Mrs. Kildair evidently isn't anxious for quick results, there's nothing
-to be done now. Perhaps by tomorrow there may be a different turn to the
-case."
-
-"What do you mean?" said Beecher. "Why don't you tell me what you
-know?"
-
-"You forget, Mr. Beecher; you yourself have stopped me there," said
-McKenna, with a slightly malicious smile. "However, there's going to be
-a little meeting tonight that may have a whole lot to do with the
-fortunes of a good many people; and when it's over it may, or may not,
-throw a new light on this case."
-
-"They're going to put Slade through the same initiation they gave
-Majendie," said Gunther, at a look from Beecher. "There's a meeting of
-the big fellows at the governor's tonight--a sort of
-sheep-shearing--though Slade's not much of a lamb."
-
-"And his wool grows close to the hide," said McKenna, with one of his
-rare laughs. "However, I can tell you this much: whatever happens I
-don't believe there'll be any exit by the bullet route--not if I know
-John G. Slade. Now, sir, I've got to disappear for a while on my own
-troubles."
-
-"Where can I get you?" asked Beecher.
-
-"You can't get me," said McKenna, with one of his sudden contractions of
-the eyelids. "That's the whole point--not till I get you. I'm off, and
-you don't know where," he added, offering his hand. "Maybe two days;
-maybe a week."
-
-"I don't understand," said Beecher, with a puzzled expression.
-
-"I do," said Gunther, pulling his sleeve.
-
-"Now, there are two little points may interest you gentlemen as expert
-deducers," said McKenna, with his hat on his head. "One is, I've found
-out who those detectives were that night--they're crooks. Second--and
-don't forget this--I share Mrs. Kildair's opinion that the ring is going
-to be returned."
-
-"Then you know who took it!" exclaimed Beecher, while Gunther looked up
-suddenly.
-
-"I don't know a single thing," said McKenna, "but I'm getting to the
-suspicious stage. So long."
-
-The telephone had stopped. Beecher, left open-mouthed by the exit of
-McKenna, turned to Gunther, who had resumed his easy lounge.
-
-"What the deuce is going on, Bruce? What's all this mystery?"
-
-"Look over your mail," said Gunther irrelevantly.
-
-Beecher obeyed the suggestion. At the end of a moment he exclaimed:
-
-"Hello! Why, here's a note from Mrs. Kildair--sent by messenger,
-evidently."
-
-"Read it."
-
-Beecher glanced at it hurriedly.
-
-
-DEAR TEDDY:
-
-Have been trying all day to get hold of McKenna, but they tell me at his
-office he's out of town. I want to see him very much. If you know
-where he is, please have him call me up. Shall see you at Mrs.
-Fontaine's tonight.
-
-RITA.
-
-P.S. Please find McKenna if you possibly can.
-
-
-"By Jove--McKenna!" he exclaimed, and hastened toward the door, only to
-be stopped by Gunther.
-
-"Ted, you blockhead, what are you doing?"
-
-"Going after McKenna."
-
-"Just what he doesn't want."
-
-Beecher stopped short, suddenly comprehending.
-
-"That's it, is it?" he said, returning. "He wants to keep clear of Mrs.
-Kildair's, then?"
-
-"You see," said Gunther, "it is not often that McKenna gets
-double-crossed. When he does, he doesn't particularly relish it. Mrs.
-Kildair may be perfectly right in bottling up the whole affair; but,
-after what happened yesterday, Mac isn't going to stop until he gets to
-the bottom."
-
-"But why disappear?"
-
-"Because, you little white fluffy toy donkey, the last thing in the
-world Mrs. Kildair wants is to have him do anything at all, and, as you
-are putty in the hands of any pretty woman, he doesn't intend to have
-you call him off."
-
-"I'll see Mrs. Kildair at Louise's. What am I to say?"
-
-Gunther shrugged his shoulders.
-
-"Wonder if she's really playing to be Mrs. Slade," he said grimly. "If
-she is, she'll give that up after tonight."
-
-"What's going to happen to him, Bruce?"
-
-"He'll come out with so little left that a Committee on Virtue will
-arrest him for indecent exposure--and the country will be saved."
-
-Beecher stopped before the telephone.
-
-"Wonder if Mrs. Kildair really was on the 'phone?" he said meditatively.
-The thought recalled Miss Charters, but without disturbing his
-equanimity.
-
-"Bruce," he said joyfully, rushing to dress, "Tilton's crazy to have me
-go to Africa with him. By Jove, I've half made up my mind! Give me a
-man's life; a life with men, out in the open--dogs and horses, and
-nothing but a few lions and fat elephants to bother you!"
-
-When they arrived at Mrs. Fontaine's, they found, to their surprise,
-that Mrs. Kildair had been delayed by an automobile breaking down, and
-would only join them later at the opera.
-
-Not one of them had the faintest suspicion, when later Mrs. Kildair
-calmly entered the box, that she had passed through two hours of supreme
-agitation that had left her torn between hope and dread--her whole
-future staked on one turn. Slade, face to face with the crisis that
-would determine whether he would survive as one of the figures of the
-financial world, or return staggering into the oblivion of the
-commonplace, had gone to see her in the afternoon.
-
-Confronted, too, by the imminent outcome of a gamble that had absorbed
-all her ambitions and her hopes, she had recklessly thrown aside all the
-restraints which she had interposed between them; and by an impulse of
-daring which makes such women irresistible to men, having invented an
-excuse for Mrs. Fontaine, had kept him to dinner, trusting to his
-protection, insisting on his confidence.
-
-Afterward she had driven him to the gray, prison-like structure which
-Gunther called a home, and seen him, defiant with a defiance she had
-breathed into him, with the scorn of the gambler who comes at length to
-the ultimate stake walk up the steps past the group of newspaper men,
-who, suddenly ceasing their chatter, huddled together and watched him
-with a unanimous craning of their heads.
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER XVII*
-
-
-Mrs. Craig Fontaine's box was in the lower grand tier in that favored
-circle which, in the present struggle for social supremacy, is the
-ultimate battlefield. Her entrance was one of the six important
-arrivals of the night which affected the immense audience with a
-curiosity only less intense than the entrance of the prima donna. Mrs.
-Fontaine, approaching the curtain that shut out the swimming vision of
-faces, took a preparatory glance, and as the row of boxes still showed a
-profusion of gaps, she delayed their entrance on the pretext of waiting
-for Mrs. Kildair. Besides Gunther and Beecher, there were in the party
-Lady Fitzhugh Mowbray, a young woman of the striking English blonde
-type, and the Duke de Taleza-Corti, of the royal house of Italy, a
-cosmopolite, dry, frail in body, affecting the English monocle, with a
-perpetual introspective smile on his keen lips.
-
-The absence of Mrs. Kildair had left Mrs. Fontaine in very bad humor.
-Not only did she consider an invitation to her box as a sort of royal
-command that should take precedence over all calamities, and render
-accidents impossible, but she felt that she would miss the effect which
-her well-balanced party had promised. Fortunately, at that moment the
-door opened and Mrs. Kildair entered.
-
-"My dear Mrs. Fontaine," she said immediately, in a voice that could not
-be heard by the rest, "the explanation I sent you is not true. It was
-not a question of a break-down. There are crises in our lives that
-cannot be put off. I can tell you no more than this, but I know you
-will understand that nothing except a matter of supreme importance would
-ever make me miss an invitation of yours."
-
-Mrs. Fontaine looked at her and, seeing beyond the surface calm the
-fires of a profound agitation, was pleased that Mrs. Kildair had not
-sought an easy excuse, but had thrown herself on her woman's generosity.
-Also she perceived that she was strikingly dressed in a robe of that
-luminous, elusive green that breaks forth in the flickering driftwood,
-subdued and given distance by a network of black lace. It was exactly
-the contrast that she would have chosen as a foil to her own costume.
-She smiled, pressed her guest's hand sympathetically and signaled to
-Gunther, who removed her wrap.
-
-Mrs. Kildair murmured an involuntary tribute while the Duke de
-Taleza-Corti, with the over-frank admiration which the Latin permits,
-said point blank:
-
-"If I am to sit behind you, Madame, you must bandage my eyes."
-
-Mrs. Fontaine had chosen the one color which, above all others, seemed
-to have been created to frame her dark imperious beauty--a warm purple,
-the tone of autumn itself, which gave to her shoulders and throat the
-softness of ivory. About her neck was a double string of pearls which
-were worth ten times the receipts of the house.
-
-"Let's go in," she said, glancing at Gunther with a hope that she might
-find his eyes a little troubled. She signed to him to take the seat
-behind hers, placing Beecher back of Mrs. Kildair, and while the rest of
-her party immediately swept the house with their opera-glasses, she
-remained quiet, conscious of the sudden focus, unwilling to show herself
-curious of other women.
-
-"Look," said Mrs. Kildair to Beecher in a low aside; "Mrs. Bloodgood is
-in her box. What daring!" she added after a moment's examination. "She
-has dressed herself in black."
-
-Beecher, following her directions, beheld Mrs. Bloodgood, without a
-single jewel or a relieving touch of color, sitting proudly, looking
-fixedly at the stage, disdainful of the stir and gossip which her
-dramatic appearance occasioned. Behind in the crowded box Mr. Bloodgood
-was standing, smiling and contented, showing himself with a malicious
-enjoyment.
-
-"How can she do it?" he said.
-
-"After the first act," said Mrs. Kildair, with a sudden impulse of
-generosity, "go and see her. Take Mr. Gunther. It will give her
-strength."
-
-"It is decidedly brilliant," said Lady Mowbray. "The parterre is much
-more effective than Covent Garden."
-
-"There should be a guide to tell us all the histories of these boxes,"
-said Taleza-Corti, with his keen perception of values. "The opera is
-the record of society. The history of America for the next twenty years
-will be written here by those who descend from the galleries into the
-orchestra, and those who force their way from the orchestra into the
-boxes. I like to think of your millionaires who might have begun up
-there under the roof. Fonda, our great novelist, says that the opera is
-the city reduced to the terms of the village. It always impresses me.
-Magnificent!"
-
-No one listened to him. The women nodded from time to time as their
-glasses encountered those of acquaintances; Beecher, troubled at a
-figure which he had half perceived in the orchestra and which he sought
-to distinguish, fancied a resemblance to Nan Charters; Gunther, bored by
-a spectacle which had no novelty for him, watched Mrs. Kildair, noting
-the nervous hands and the occasional quickly taken breaths, asking
-himself what had been the real cause of her absence, half divining in a
-confused way the truth.
-
-Mrs. Fontaine was languidly curious of those who had a right to her
-interest. She was in her element--jealous of this multitude as an
-actress, pleased at the fine effect she had produced. And in her
-triumph she was recalled to the one thing she desired to complete her
-ambition, to give her that command of this assemblage which she was
-forced to acknowledge to another. Her glance went to the box in the
-middle of the horseshoe, as it did covetously each night.
-
-"Your father isn't here tonight," she said to Bruce Gunther with a
-little surprise.
-
-"No. There is some big pow-wow on," he answered.
-
-Mrs. Kildair took up her glasses suddenly, turning them haphazard. The
-remark revived in her all the agitation of the afternoon.
-
-"I shall never be able to sit through this," she said to herself,
-leaning forward. "If I only knew--"
-
-Mrs. Fontaine, could she have known the thoughts that were galloping
-through the brain of her guest, would have been astounded at their
-similarity. Mrs. Kildair, too, had her ambitions, ambitions as
-passionately held and nourished on one hope. The interview that
-afternoon with Slade, an interview in which for the first time she had
-made him feel the need of her, had all at once brought the prize within
-her grasp. If he could but emerge from this one supreme danger, she
-said to herself that she had at last the opportunity to rate herself
-here among the leaders of this society which she coveted, had always
-coveted and would never cease to covet.
-
-"Give me Slade and twenty millions even," she said to herself with a
-great intaking of breath, "and I can do anything. I will dominate this
-in five years." But the more violently burned the fire of her desire,
-the more weak and faltering was her hope. "Ah, will he win out--can
-he--how is it possible?" she said bitterly. "Oh, what a gamble it all
-is--and I must sit here--continue to sit here like a stone--while in an
-hour it may all be decided!"
-
-"You've seen Fornez in _Carmen_?" said Taleza-Corti to Gunther. "Very
-fine."
-
-"First appearance here," said Gunther briefly. He touched Beecher on the
-arm. "Friends of yours over there, Ted."
-
-"Who?"
-
-"The Cheevers--little to your right--row above. Hello," he added
-suddenly. "See who's with them?"
-
-"Who?" said Beecher, who did not recognize the rest of the party.
-
-Gunther placed his finger on his lips, with a warning glance at Mrs.
-Kildair, and then, bending forward, said:
-
-"I say, Mrs. Kildair, who is that tall, rather black chap in the box
-with the Stanley Cheevers? He's looking this way now."
-
-Mrs. Kildair raised her glasses.
-
-"Mr. Mapleson," she said directly.
-
-"He's the head of Sontag & Company, the jewelers, isn't he?"
-
-"Yes, I believe so."
-
-"Queer looking chap--ever know him?"
-
-"Yes. Why?"
-
-She turned, looking at the questioner with a fixity that told him she
-was not entirely ignorant of his real interest.
-
-"He must have been in Paris when you were," he said quickly. "I hear he
-had quite a career there."
-
-She turned away with indifference, gazed once more through her glasses
-and said:
-
-"Yes, there were quite a number of stories about his rise. He is a man
-with a genius for friendships."
-
-"Rather attentive to Mrs. Cheever, isn't he?" persisted Gunther.
-
-"I didn't know it."
-
-Beecher did not then seize the drift of the inquiry, still absorbed as
-he was in the attempt to gain a clearer view of the profile in the
-orchestra which reminded him of Nan Charters. Lady Mowbray continued
-silent, busy as a true Briton in the search for the ridiculous in this
-assemblage which at first glance had impressed her.
-
-All at once the lights went out and the first act was on. The entrance
-of Emma Fornez was eagerly awaited as a new sensation to an audience
-which yearly must be served with the novel and startling. It had been
-rumored that her impersonation was even a bit shocking, and the house,
-stirred by the expectation, waited hopefully. At the end of the act
-opinions were divided: the galleries applauded frantically, moved by the
-sure magnetism of a great artist, but the boxes and most of the
-orchestra waited undecided, each afraid to be the leader.
-
-"But I don't see anything shocking at all," said the voice of a young
-woman in the next box, a note of complaint in her voice.
-
-"Wait--it's in the second act," answered the sarcastic note of a man.
-
-"Ah, the love scene," said the woman mollified.
-
-The two young men rose, giving their places to arriving visitors, and
-went into the corridors on their rounds. Beecher was thoughtful. He
-had at last assured himself that he had not been mistaken--Miss Charters
-was present. He had detected her with her glasses on his box, but he
-had not succeeded in seeing who was her companion.
-
-"I'd give a good deal to know how well Mrs. Cheever knows Mapleson,"
-said Gunther eagerly.
-
-"I say, what do you mean by poking me?" asked Beecher suddenly.
-
-"Didn't you get on? Mapleson is the head of Sontag & Company; Sontag &
-Company sold the ring to Slade. Now if Mapleson and Mrs. Cheever are
-intimate it's possible--just a chance--Mrs. Cheever may have known the
-facts. See?"
-
-Beecher shrugged his shoulders.
-
-"It's a long shot."
-
-"But a chance. I'll pick up some one here in five minutes who can tell
-me."
-
-Beecher entered the Bloodgood box and, making his way to the front, gave
-his hand to Mrs. Bloodgood. Four or five men, impelled by curiosity,
-were before him, mentally registering their reports to add to the fund
-of gossip. Mrs. Bloodgood, glad to avail herself of the opportunity,
-had turned her back on the audience and was holding her head against
-these social scouts, who discussed Slade, which was a manner of
-discussing Majendie.
-
-She welcomed Beecher's arrival as that of an ally and made him the
-pretext of withdrawing from the general conversation. The moment he
-looked at her, he had the tact to perceive that any display of sympathy
-would be an offense. There was no trace left of the weak and desperate
-woman. Instead, he was aware of an immense change in her, a
-transformation that was moral, and looking into her eyes he could not
-realize that he had ever seen them weep.
-
-"They'll force out Slade," said a voice.
-
-"Where are you tonight?" she asked quietly.
-
-"In Mrs. Craig Fontaine's box," he said.
-
-"Mrs. Kildair is there, isn't she?"
-
-"Yes." He hesitated, but did not deliver her message. The woman before
-him asked compassion from no one. In the commotion at his side he
-caught a phrase: "Wonder if Slade will kill himself too?"
-
-"Do you like Fornez?" he said hastily, and despite himself he looked
-into her eyes to see what effect the remark had made.
-
-"Very much," she said coldly, a little staccato. And then calmly, to end
-a subject that was disagreeable to her, she turned to the other.
-"Fornez has made a success, don't you think?"
-
-Beecher left presently, oppressed by the hardness that he felt in her.
-
-"There's a woman who will never have any pity," he thought as he left.
-Mr. Bloodgood, who remembered him with a malicious smile, shook his hand
-with extra cordiality.
-
-"Did you give my message?" asked Mrs. Kildair as he took his place.
-
-"It was wiser not," he said. Then all at once, struck by the fatigue in
-her face, he asked anxiously: "Are you very tired?"
-
-"Yes, very," she said.
-
-In this box, too, nothing had been spoken of except the drama, which at
-that moment was centered about John G. Slade. As nothing could possibly
-be known, every one arrived with a fresh rumor, and the burden of all
-was the annihilation of the Westerner. The sudden darkness came to her
-as a relief. She relaxed wearily in her chair and forced her mind to
-forget itself in the sudden access of gaiety from the stage.
-
-This second act was a veritable triumph for Emma Fornez. In the scene
-of Don Jose's return she acted with such fine and natural primitive
-passion that all the constricted little feminine natures in the audience
-were stirred by the pulsing exhibition of an emotion they had carefully
-choked or reduced to mathematics, and, really moved, trembling in their
-imprisoned bodies, they applauded for the first time. Then suddenly
-they ceased--a little ashamed.
-
-In descending the stairway to go behind the stage, Beecher perceived
-Miss Charters in the distance of the shifting crowd. He stopped, by a
-movement he did not analyze, to speak to a purely chance acquaintance,
-hoping that she would perceive him. Then he continued to the
-dressing-room of the prima donna.
-
-Emma Fornez was in a state of frenzied delight.
-
-"I have them, Teddy--I have them! Is it not so?" she cried, clapping
-her hands together as a child. She flung her arms about him, embracing
-him. In fact, she embraced every one--even Victorine, her maid.
-
-"The house is wild with enthusiasm," he said, laughing.
-
-"Aha! I made them sit up, didn't I--your cold women! It's the second
-act, Teddy--the second--you get them there. Bah! They don't even know
-what I did to them." All at once she stopped, seriously assuming a
-countenance of terror. "Oh, but the critics--what will the monsters
-say! They never like it when the audience is too enthusiastic."
-
-[Illustration: "'Aha! I made them sit up, didn't I--your cold women!'"]
-
-"I saw Macklin applauding, Madame," said Spinetti, putting his head into
-the room.
-
-"Angel!" cried Emma Fornez, and she embraced Spinetti. Then, knowing in
-herself that the day was won, she began to amuse her audience. "Do you
-know what the critics will write? I'll tell you. The audience was
-carried off its feet in the second act. They will praise the first.
-They will say the second was obvious, and they will praise the third
-act, because there I shall do a little trick to them--in the card scene.
-I shall be very noble--very tragic. I will make a little picture of
-death before my eyes--with all his bones rattling and his great big
-hollow eyes, and they shall see it on my face--so! And I'll look very
-steady--noble--profound--like a queen. See?--a thing which Carmen would
-nevre, nevre do, for she's a little wretch of an animal that would be
-frightened to death. But you will see they will all like it--it's their
-moral that you have to serve up to them."
-
-"Third act--third act," came the running call from the flies. "All on
-the stage for the third act."
-
-When Beecher entered the corridor, Miss Charters was only a short
-distance away. He was prepared for Lorraine as a companion, but he felt
-a sudden anger at the sight of Garraboy, who in turn, suddenly
-comprehending the aim of his partner's maneuvers, looked anything but
-pleased.
-
-She nodded to him, holding out her hand.
-
-"She is wonderful, Teddy, wonderful. Have you seen her? Is she
-pleased?"
-
-"She is a great, great artist," he said with extra warmth. "She is
-pleased as a child."
-
-The two men had nodded with that impertinent jerk of the head which in
-society conveys the effect of a bucket of water.
-
-"Come and see me after the next act," she said, looking at him closely.
-
-"If I can," he said hastily.
-
-He went up the steps and from the tail of his eye saw her linger,
-watching him as he went. A little contrition, a sudden sympathy came to
-him, but he repressed it angrily, saying to himself between his teeth:
-
-"Garraboy--how can she stand for that!"
-
-When he returned to the box, Mrs. Kildair and Mrs. Fontaine were in the
-anteroom in low converse. He was suddenly struck with the look of age
-in Mrs. Kildair's face.
-
-"But I assure you--I can go alone," she was saying.
-
-"I would not allow it," said Mrs. Fontaine firmly. Then turning to
-Beecher she said, so as not to reach the others: "Teddy, as soon as the
-curtain is up, step out. Mrs. Kildair is not well. You will take her
-home. I have ordered the automobile. You can get back for the last
-act."
-
-Mrs. Kildair made no further remonstrance--she was at the end of her
-tether.
-
-"Sit here," she said to Beecher, sitting down on the couch. "I don't
-want to be noticed."
-
-"You're ill!" he said alarmed.
-
-"Yes, ill," she said mechanically.
-
-At this moment the house became still. She rose with a return of energy
-and signaled him that she was ready. Five minutes later they were in
-the automobile fleeing uptown.
-
-A moment of weakness was rare in her life, yet she comprehended it
-without seeking to delude herself.
-
-"At twenty I should not even have trembled," she said to herself,
-sinking back into the cushioned seat and watching the lights of the
-streets flash past the window with a comforting emotion of speed. "Now
-it is different. Every life has one supreme opportunity--this is mine.
-I know it."
-
-Had a woman been at her side instead of Beecher, she would have given
-her confidence in the terrible necessity for sharing the emotion that
-was too vital to her. As it was, she restrained herself, remaining
-silent by a last effort of her will, but her hand on the window-frame
-began a nervous syncopated beating, imitating the click of the fleeing
-rails which one hears on a railroad train.
-
-"You are feeling better?" said the young man in a troubled voice.
-
-"Open the window--just for a moment," she answered.
-
-The sudden blast of cold air, damp as though laden with the tears of the
-city, terrified her with its suggestion of despair and defeat.
-
-"No, no, shut it!" she said hurriedly.
-
-He obeyed and then to distract her, began:
-
-"I received your note, Rita, just before coming, McKenna--"
-
-"No, no," she said, interrupting him, "that is nothing. Just let me be
-quiet a moment--get hold of myself."
-
-But in a few moments she was forced to seek the stimulus of the air
-again, and she cried hurriedly, not concealing her agitation:
-
-"Open, open quick!"
-
-The crisis which she felt approaching with every block which fell behind
-was so immense, the stake so ardently coveted, so weakly feared, that
-she had in the last eternal waiting moments a sensation of vertigo, that
-swept down and seized her even as on the football field before the
-blowing of the whistle the stanchest player feels his heart lying before
-him on the ground. She opened her lips, drinking in the chill,
-revivifying draught, unaware of the strange impression her disordered
-countenance in the embrasure of the window made on the occasional
-passers-by.
-
-"Better first in a village than second in Rome."
-
-She found herself repeating the saying mechanically, without quite
-understanding how it had so suddenly leaped into her mind. Then, as the
-automobile turned into her street, and she felt that he was there
-waiting as he had promised, successful or ruined; that now in ten
-minutes all would be over, she would know; all at once, without that
-sense of humor which deserts us in great stress, she began to pray
-confusedly to some one immense, whom she had never understood, but one
-who seemed to hold all fates in the balancing of his fingers.
-
-"Are you better? What shall I do? Shall I come up with you?" asked
-Beecher, totally in the dark.
-
-"No, no--wait," she said hurriedly, as the machine ground to a stop.
-She did not rise at once, stiffening in her seat, grasping the arm of
-the young man until he winced under the contraction of her fingers.
-
-"Good!" she said suddenly; and before he could prevent her she was out
-on the sidewalk. "No, no; stay in. Thanks, thanks a thousand times.
-I'll send you back."
-
-Before he could protest, she shut the door firmly and nodded to the
-chauffeur.
-
-The elevator boy was already at the swinging glass doors, holding them
-open for her entrance.
-
-"Mr. Slade here, Jo?" she said instantly.
-
-"Yes, ma'am; upstairs."
-
-"How long?"
-
-"About half an hour."
-
-She entered the elevator and descended at the landing, waiting until it
-had disappeared.
-
-"Now for it!" she said, pressing the bell. And by a last display of her
-will, she sent through her body a wave of cold resolution that left her
-outwardly impassive with a little touch of scorn on her lips.
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER XVIII*
-
-
-It is only in the supreme crisis of a colossal disaster that a nation,
-which fondly believes it elects its governing bodies, perceives its real
-masters, and then in the alarm and confusion of its apprehension, it
-does not recognize what it is shown. The group of ten men who were
-assembled at Gunther's, awaiting the arrival of Slade, either in
-themselves or through the influences they represented, could bring to
-their support over ten billions of capital. If it were possible to
-conceive of a master spirit who could unite these ten men, forgetting
-mutual jealousy and distrust, into one unanimous body with but a single
-object, in five years these ten men, without the impediment of law,
-could own every necessary newspaper and magazine in the country, operate
-every railroad, and, by the simple process of reinvesting their earnings
-annually, control every important industry, every necessary chain of
-banks, the entire food supply of the nation, and, at the cost of twenty
-million dollars every four years and by remaining unknown, control the
-necessary number of candidates in both political parties in matters
-essential to their financial interests. That such a coalition will
-remain a fantasy, is due to two factors: the human nature of such
-individuals and the human nature of multitudes which, were they
-successful, would find the corrective in massacre. When such a monetary
-alliance does take place, it is usually from the necessity, as they see
-it, of saving the country by the simple process of enriching themselves.
-
-When Slade arrived, he entered by the separate entrance to Gunther's
-personal apartments, which were situated in a lower wing of the
-monstrous turreted granite structure which might have served for a
-miniature Bastile. One of the secretaries was at the door carefully
-scrutinizing all arrivals. The moment he entered, he was aware that his
-fate was not the only one that was under discussion.
-
-The wing of the house was laid out in the form of a Maltese cross, with
-a square anteroom in the center, heavily spread with silk Persian rugs,
-and furnished with easy divans and upholstered chairs. Above was a
-skylight, now transformed into a vast reflector for the burst of
-electric lights.
-
-Four entrances of equal height in heavy Florentine relief gave on this
-anteroom; from Gunther's private office, from the library, from the
-rooms of the private secretaries, and from the outer entrance by which
-Slade advanced. In the middle of the anteroom Gunther was seated at a
-small card-table, studiously engrossed in a game of solitaire. He was a
-medium-seized man who, without an effect of bulk, conveyed an instant
-impression of solidity, while the head, remarkable in the changed
-physiognomy of the present day, had the falcon-like, eerie quality,
-characteristic of the spreading eyebrows and deep-set glance of the
-American before the Civil War. Slow in movement, slow in speech, he was
-likewise slow in the deliberation with which his scrutiny left the face
-he was considering.
-
-At the vigorous shock of Slade's coming, he completed a row of carefully
-laid cards and lifted his head.
-
-"How do you do, Mr. Gunther?" said Slade, whose eye was instantly set on
-the half-opened doors leading into the library, from which sounds of
-altercation were issuing.
-
-Slade's arrival seemed to surprise Gunther, who looked at his watch and
-said, without rising:
-
-"You're ahead of time, Mr. Slade."
-
-"Always like to look over the ground when there's a battle," said Slade,
-who in fact had intentionally effected a surprise.
-
-"Sit down."
-
-He motioned to the secretary, who, moving on springs, brought cigars and
-a light.
-
-"I'll have to keep you waiting, Mr. Slade. There is a conference taking
-place."
-
-Slade glanced from the library to the closed doors of the secretaries'
-room.
-
-"How many conferences have you?"
-
-Gunther turned over a card, studied it and carefully laid it down. It
-was his manner of settling a question he did not wish to answer.
-
-Slade was not offended by the rebuff. Holding most men in antagonism,
-he had conceived a violent admiration for Gunther and as he was the man
-above all others whom he wished to impress, he imitated his taciturnity,
-turning his imagination on the probable groups behind the three double
-doors, which once had closed on a famous conspiracy in a palace of
-turbulent medieval Florence.
-
-Gunther at this moment was probably the most powerful personal force in
-the United States, and, what was more extraordinary, in an era of public
-antipathy to its newly created magnates, enjoyed universal respect. As
-he showed himself rarely, never gave interviews, and surrounded himself
-by choice with that inciting element of seclusion which Napoleon by
-calculation adopted on his return from Italy, the public had magnified
-what it could not perceive. Even as royal personages of distinctly
-bourgeois caliber have been impressed on history by the exigencies of
-the kingly tradition as models of tact and statesmanship, so events and
-the necessities of the public imagination had combined to throw about
-the personality of Gunther an atmosphere of grandiose mystery. Just as
-it is true that what is a virtue in one man is a defect in another, the
-imagination he possessed was much less than he was credited with and his
-power lay in his ability to control it. For imagination, which is the
-genius of progress, in a banker approaches a crime.
-
-His strength lay in being that inevitable man who results as the balance
-wheel of conflicting interests. For beyond the Stock Exchange, which is
-a purely artificial organization, the financial powers will always
-create what amounts to a saving check, around one inevitable
-personality, whom they can trust and about whom, in times of common
-danger, they can rally as to a standard. At this moment, the invested
-wealth of the country, frightened at the cataclysm which threatened it,
-had thrown its resources implicitly into the hands of this one man, who
-came forward at the psychological time to stop the panic, issuing his
-orders, and marshaling his forces with a response of instant obedience.
-
-"What's going on here?" said Slade to himself. "And what's the
-proposition they're reckoning on squeezing out of me? I'd like to know
-what's going on behind those doors."
-
-As though in response to his wish the doors of the secretaries' room
-swung, and a round, rolling little man of fifty, in evening dress, came
-hurriedly out, holding in his hand a slip of paper. He approached the
-stolid player with precipitation, and yet, obeying a certain instinct of
-deference, which showed itself despite his disorder, he waited until
-Gunther had completed a play he had in hand before blurting out:
-
-"Mr. Gunther, this is the best we can do."
-
-Gunther took the slip which was offered to him, glanced at it and
-returned it abruptly.
-
-"Not sufficient," he said and took up his pack of cards.
-
-The emissary, crestfallen and desperate, returned to the conference and
-at the opening of the door the sound of violent discussion momentarily
-filled the anteroom as a sudden blast of storm.
-
-"I have it," said Slade, who had recognized Delancy Gilbert, of the firm
-of Gilbert, Drake & Bauerman, brokers and promoters of mining interests
-in Mexico, whose failure had been circulated from lip to lip in the last
-forty-eight hours. "I see that game. Gilbert's to be mulcted of his
-Osaba interests--for whom though? The United Mining, undoubtedly."
-
-Five minutes later the doors of the library opened in turn and a
-military figure, gray, bent, with tears in his eyes, came slowly out,
-the type of convenient figureheads which stronger men place in the
-presidencies of subsidiary corporations. He likewise placed a sheet of
-paper before the financier, watching him from the corner of his eye, his
-white finger working nervously in the grizzled mustache.
-
-"We've agreed on this, Mr. Gunther," he said desperately, in a voice
-shaken by suppressed emotion. "That's as far as we can go--and that
-means ruin!"
-
-Gunther examined the sheet with slow attention, nodding favorably twice;
-but at a third column he shook his head and, seizing a pencil, jotted
-down a figure, carefully drawing a circle around it.
-
-"That's what I must have," he said and returned to his solitaire.
-
-The emissary hesitated, seemed about to argue, and then, with a hopeless
-heave of his shoulders, retired. Gunther frowned but the frown was
-called forth by an unfavorable conjunction of the cards. Not once had he
-seemed to notice the presence of Slade. In the same position the
-promoter could not have helped stealing a glance to witness the effect.
-Slade registered the observation, mentally admitting the difference.
-
-"What does he keep me here for?" he thought, but almost immediately
-answered the question: "Effect on the others, of course. Well, let them
-pull their own chestnuts out of the fire."
-
-In the last emissary he had recognized General Arthur Roe Paxton,
-President of the Mohican Trust, exploiter of certain Southern oil
-fields, equally involved in the Osaba speculation. The knowledge of the
-operations which were being discussed--which he readily divined were the
-surrender of important holdings--prepared him for the demands he must
-expect to meet.
-
-At this moment Gunther swept the cards together, glanced at his watch,
-and pressed an electric button.
-
-"Mr. Slade," he said, fixing his lantern-like stare upon the promoter,
-"I need not tell you that we are in a desperate situation, that it is
-time for action--decisive and immediate action."
-
-Slade answered by an impatient jerking of his thumb, and, rising as he
-beheld the secretary returning from the private office where he had been
-sent by a look of Gunther's, said:
-
-"I understand perfectly. If the gentlemen whom I am to meet understand
-the situation as well as I do, we shall have no trouble."
-
-Gunther continued to study him thoughtfully, struck by the confidence of
-his attitude where desperation might have been expected. He seemed for
-a moment about to say something, but presently, giving a sign to his
-secretary, began thoughtfully to shuffle the cards.
-
-In the private office a group of men were assembled about the long
-table. The disposition of Slade had been but an incident in the
-discussion which had been called to decide upon the methods to be
-pursued in coming to the support of the market, and the deliberation had
-left its marks of dissension. Slade, on entering, rapidly surveyed the
-group, perceived its discord, and divided it into its component
-interests.
-
-"The United Mining is the key," he said, on recognizing Haggerty and
-Forscheim.
-
-The group was like a trans-section of that conflicting America which
-seems to hold the destiny of types. Fontaine, one of the landed
-proprietors of the city, French of descent and aristocratic by the
-purifying experience of two generations, was next to Haggerty, a
-cross-grained, roughly hewn type of the indomitable Irish immigrant of
-the seventies, who had risen to power out of the silver mines of the
-eighties. Leo Marx, olive in tint, whispering in manner, thin-veined
-and handsome, represented the Jewish aristocracy that had ingrained
-itself in the great banking houses of New York; while Forscheim, leading
-spirit of five brothers, abrupt, too aggressive or too compliant,
-cunning and unsatisfied, was the Hebrew of speculation, the creator of
-the great corporation known as the United Mining.
-
-Judge Seton B. Barton, representative of the great oil interests, was
-the grim Yankee, unrelieved by his modifying humor, implacable in small
-things as well as great, knowing no other interest in life except the
-passion of acquiring.
-
-Kraus, an ungainly, bulky German-American, had not moved from the
-half-retreating position he had taken on seating himself. He answered
-with a short movement of his head, watching every one with covetous,
-suspicious eyes that glimmered weakly over the spectacles which had
-slipped to the bridge of his nose, never suggested a move, and gave his
-assent the last. He was the owner of a fortune estimated at three
-hundred millions, acquired in lumber holdings over a territory in the
-West which would have made another Belgium.
-
-McBane, one of the strongest figures which the rise of the great steel
-industry had propelled into the public light, was a short, fussy, brisk
-little man, tenacious, agile, obstinate in opinion, while outwardly
-smiling with a general air of delighted surprise at his own success. He
-was the present active force in the group of steel magnates whose
-personal fortunes alone amounted to over three quarters of a billion.
-
-Marcus Stone, president of the greatest banking force of the country,
-the Columbus National, was a middle-westerner, sprung from the hardy
-soil of Ohio, virile, deep-lunged, direct and domineering, agent of
-colossal enterprises, rooted in conservatism and regarding his vocation
-as an almost sacred call. He accounted himself a poor man; he was worth
-only three millions.
-
-Rupert V. Steele, head of the legal firm of Steele, Forshay & Benton,
-corporation lawyers, was the type of the brilliant Southerner,
-adventuring into the Eldorado of New York as the Gascon seeks Paris or
-the Irishman the lure of London. He might almost be said to have
-created a new profession--the lawyer-promoter--and in his capacious,
-fertile head had been evolved the schemes of law-avoiding combinations
-that others received the credit for. In public he was one of the
-stanchest defenders of the Constitution and an eloquent exponent of the
-sanctity of the judiciary.
-
-With the exception of Fontaine and Marx, in this varied group of
-master-adventurers, all had begun life with little better than the coats
-on their backs, and the colossal fortunes which roughly totaled two
-billions had been amassed in virtually twenty years. This is a point
-which future economists may ponder over with profit.
-
-At Slade's entrance the conversation abruptly ceased and each in his own
-manner studied the new arrival; some with languid, confident curiosity;
-Forscheim, who had old scores to settle, with a glance of unrestrained
-satisfaction; Steele, leaning a little forward, eager in his
-inquisitorial mind to divine the attack, already convinced that such a
-personality as Slade would not come without an aggressive defense.
-
-The second glance reassured Slade, for he distinguished in the group the
-conflicting rivalries and perceived by what slender checks the
-irrepressible jealousies and antagonisms had been stilled.
-
-"If they've got together," he said to himself with a sudden delight in a
-favorable hazard, "it's because they're scared to the ground and they
-want to shut off the panic first and trim me second. Good! That's what
-I wanted to be sure of."
-
-He advanced to the head of the table, swinging into place a heavy chair
-which he swept through the air as though it had been paper, and,
-resolved to acquire the advantage of initiative, said:
-
-"Well, gentlemen, let's get right down to business. I've come to get
-five millions."
-
-In their astonishment several pushed back their chairs with a harsh,
-grating sound. Forscheim laughed aloud insolently, but Steele,
-sensitive to small things, instantly determined to employ caution, to be
-the last to crush him if he failed, and the first to support him if he
-had indeed the power to survive.
-
-"Mr. Slade," said Stone in his blasting manner, "your remark is in bad
-taste. The situation you are facing is an exceedingly serious one and
-only a prompt compliance on your part with the measures we have
-determined upon to avert a national calamity, will save you from
-bankruptcy"--he stopped, but not from hesitation, adding with a sudden
-flush of anger--"and worse."
-
-"We are here," said McBane, in tones of conviction which produced a
-nodding of assenting heads, "in the performance of a public duty. In
-carrying that out we do not intend to allow the fate of one man or a
-dozen to interfere with the steps we intend to take to restore public
-confidence."
-
-"And I repeat," said Slade, with a disdainful smile, "that I am here to
-get five millions; and you are going to give it to me."
-
-An outburst of exclamations followed this assertion, half angry, half
-contemptuous, above which was heard Forscheim's shrill nasal voice
-saying:
-
-"Dere is a shtate examiner, Mr. Shlade, don't forget dat."
-
-"My books are kept as carefully as yours, Forscheim," said Slade, with a
-sudden angry concentration of his glance. He had once in a committee
-meeting taken Forscheim by the throat and flung him out of doors--a fear
-which the other could never forget. Then he struck the table a
-resounding blow with his fist, stilling the clamor.
-
-"Wait!" he exclaimed, rising until his bulky figure towered over the
-table. "Don't let's waste time. Come to the point. You think I've
-come here to receive your terms. You are mistaken. I've come here to
-deliver an ultimatum--my ultimatum."
-
-"Do you realize, sir," said Judge Barton sternly, "what the object of
-this meeting is? We are here to preserve the prosperity of this country
-for the next ten years, the homes and savings of millions of persons."
-
-"No, that is not why you are here," said Slade contemptuously. "I'll
-tell you why you are here. You are here to protect your own
-interests--first, last, and always! Because a panic to you means
-hundreds of millions, the end of development, the closing of markets;
-because at the end of a stock market panic is an industrial panic, and
-the end of any protracted individual depression means the colossal
-flattening out of your billion dollar trusts. That's why there'll never
-be another '93--that's the one good thing in the present situation the
-public doesn't know. There isn't going to be a '93 now, and you know it
-and I know it."
-
-"Suppose, Mr. Slade, you listen to our stipulations first," said McBane,
-but in a more conciliatory tone.
-
-Beyond his exposition which had struck all with its piercing verity,
-Slade had effected over them an almost physical mastery, which men
-grudgingly are forced to yield to masculine strength.
-
-"I know your demands," said Slade instantly. "Oh, there is no informer
-present. Nothing difficult. I know you and the way your minds work.
-You have three conditions: first, I am to resign the presidency of the
-Associated Trust; second, sell my stock control to a syndicate you have
-organized, which will stand as a guarantee to the public; third, the
-taking over of all my holdings in the Osaba territory by the United
-Mining Company. Am I right?"
-
-He did not need to wait for a reply; the answer was plain upon their
-countenances.
-
-"Now, gentlemen, I'm going to finish up," he said, pursuing his
-advantage. "Remember one thing: I'm not a Majendie. I fight to the
-last breath and when I'm downed I carry everything I get my hands on
-down with me.
-
-"Now, let's be perfectly plain. I know where I stand. If Majendie and
-the Atlantic Trust hadn't gone to smash, there wouldn't be a ghost of a
-show for me; you'd squeeze every last cent I had. I know it. I knew it
-then when I knew it was Majendie or me. But you see Majendie's dead and
-the Atlantic Trust--three hundred and eighty millions--has closed its
-doors. That makes all the difference in the world. You don't want to
-trim me--not primarily. Forscheim and the United Mining do--that's
-their private affair. What you men who count want, I repeat, is to stop
-this panic--to get me out of the way and stop the panic if you can; if
-you can't get me out of the way, to stop the panic at once--now--within
-twenty-four hours! Now, gentlemen, I defy you to let the Associated
-Trust close its doors tomorrow and prevent, with all your money, the
-wreck of every industry in the country."
-
-"You overestimate the importance of such a failure," said Fontaine
-slowly, but without aggressiveness.
-
-Slade's attack had made a profound impression.
-
-"I have taken particular care that if the Associated fails, it'll be the
-biggest smash on record," said Slade, ready now to play his trump card.
-
-"What do you mean?" demanded Haggerty, startled, while the others waited
-expectantly.
-
-"Just that," said Slade, not unwilling that they should know the depth
-of his game. "If the Associated fails, sixty-seven institutions fail
-from here to San Francisco. I have taken care of that in the last two
-months."
-
-"You haf ingreased your oplications at sooch a time!" fairly shrieked
-Forscheim, who saw his victory eluding him.
-
-"You bet I did," said Slade. "I made sure that I couldn't be _allowed_
-to fail."
-
-He took from his pocket a folded sheet and handed it to Steele, who had
-a moment before finally determined to come to his support.
-
-"That's what failure means. Pass it around," he said.
-
-The lawyer elevated his eyebrows in astonishment. The disclosure of how
-Slade by negotiating loans with a number of subsidiary institutions
-throughout the country had made them united in his general fate,
-completed the dawning recognition of a master which had been forming in
-his mind.
-
-"He will beat them," he thought, passing on the paper. "He will go far.
-I must be his friend." Aloud he said carefully: "Of course, Mr. Slade,
-at the bottom the affairs of the Associated Trust are absolutely
-solvent."
-
-"Solvent under any system of banking in the world which does not
-withhold ready money on proper guarantees," said Slade, looking at him
-with a glance that showed the lawyer he had received his alliance;
-"solvent as the Atlantic Trust was, is, and will be proved to be. You
-gentlemen know that as well as I do."
-
-"Of course, Mr. Slade," said Steele, with an appearance of
-aggressiveness which the other understood perfectly, "one thing must be
-understood--the present speculative operations of the Trust Companies
-can not go on."
-
-"Now, gentlemen, to finish up," said Slade, who seized the hint.
-"Here's my answer: I will agree to any legislation, in fact will urge
-it, that will place the Trust Companies on the basis of the National
-Banks; that is, on the same conservative basis of loans and
-transactions. That is right. I am now convinced that it is for the
-best." He allowed a slight smile to show and continued: "I will resign
-as President of the Associated Trust three months from to-day. That I
-had already determined on. For what I wish to do, that would only be an
-embarrassment. You will lend me the five millions I wish and, better
-still, tomorrow morning make a simple announcement to the effect that,
-having consulted on the affairs of the Associated Trust, you have found
-no reasons for apprehension, and announce that you will come to its
-support. Sign it Fontaine, Gunther, McBane, Marx and Stone, and the run
-on the banks will end in twenty-four hours. Tomorrow morning I will
-personally assure Mr. Steele, by an examination of my books, that
-affairs are as I have described. After this examination you can place
-five millions to my disposal--if necessary. Believe me, this is a much
-better way to end the panic. You reassure public confidence by your
-guarantee. The other way, by forcing my resignation, you create an
-impression that everything is rotten. Besides, the first way has this
-advantage--it is the only way. That's my word, gentlemen; if you intend
-to stop the panic you've got to float me!"
-
-An hour later, having yielded not a jot of his position, turning a deaf
-ear to threats, expostulations and arguments, he rose victorious.
-
-In the anteroom he went up to Gunther, who was still bowed over his
-solitaire, waiting grimly until his word had been carried out.
-
-"Mr. Gunther," said Slade, stopping at the table, "we have come to an
-understanding. The gentlemen in the other room were agreeably surprised
-at my exposition of the affairs of the Associated Trust. They are going
-to lend me five millions."
-
-"Indeed!" said Gunther in a sort of grunt but with a countenance so
-impassive that Slade was moved to admiration.
-
-"Gunther," he said, suddenly carried away by a feeling of prophetic
-elation, "up to now you've known me only as a speculator. Now I'm going
-to become a conservative force. In a month I'm coming to you with a
-proposition. You're the only man I would ever trust. Good-night."
-
-His automobile was waiting. He threw himself riotously into it, giving
-the address of Mrs. Kildair's apartment; and as he felt the pleasant,
-exhilarating sensation which the speed of his machine conveyed to him,
-he repeated, feeling suddenly how at last he had emerged from the perils
-of the first phase which he had once so frankly defined:
-
-"Now, I'll be conservative!"
-
-Unlike Gunther, who had behind him the traditions of generations of
-authority, Slade had that typical quality so perplexing in the American
-millionaire of sudden fortune--the childlike eagerness for admiration.
-When he arrived at Mrs. Kildair's and found that she was still absent,
-he was consumed with a nervous impatience. He seated himself at the
-piano, playing over clumsily refrains of the crude ranch songs which
-came to him as an echo of his earlier struggling days. But these echoes
-of a past conflict seemed only to whet his impatience. He ended with a
-crashing discord and rose, lighting another cigar, pacing the broad
-space of the studio with rapid, restless strides, surprised at the
-annoyance which her absence brought him.
-
-When Mrs. Kildair entered, let in by Henriette, her maid, Slade flung
-aside his cigar and strode impatiently forward.
-
-One glance at his triumphant face told her what she wanted to know. She
-made a quick sign to him with her hand and turned her back, disengaging
-her opera cloak with exaggerated slowness, drawing a deep breath. Then
-she sent Henriette upstairs to her room to wait until she called.
-
-"Congratulations," she said calmly, entering the studio and extending
-her hand. "You have won!"
-
-"How do you know?" he said, taken back by her composure.
-
-"It is there--in your eyes," she said, passing her fingers so close to
-them that he seemed to feel their soft contact. "Tell me all about it."
-
-"Yes, I've beaten them--Fontaine, Barton, Forscheim, Haggerty, the whole
-lot of them," he cried with a gleeful laugh. "More, I've forced myself
-into their hidebound circle. You'll see--in a month I'll be one of
-them."
-
-At times roguishly delighted as a boy, at others with flashes of
-primitive power, he related to the eager woman all the details of the
-night and the desperate stake he had played to make a failure so
-colossal that they themselves would recoil before it.
-
-"And if Majendie had not killed himself?" she said breathlessly,
-womanlike perceiving the hazards of fate.
-
-"But he did!" he cried impatiently, unwilling to admit the element of
-chance in the destiny he had hewn for himself. But the thought sobered
-him. He looked down from the height to which his ambition had flung him.
-"It's true. It was either Majendie or me," he said quietly. "Shall I
-tell you something? That night we were here I knew he was lost--that he
-would do it. Don't ask me how I knew!" Then, shaking off the memory as
-an evil dream, he continued, extending his arm in crude magnetic
-gestures: "Well, that's over. I am where I want to be; the rest is
-easy. In a month--two months--they will see, Forscheim and Haggerty,
-how the trap they laid for me has sprung against them. Tonight will be
-worth twenty millions to me."
-
-"How do you mean?" she said eagerly, but she did not look at him.
-Slade, triumphant in his brute power, inspired her with an emotion she
-did not dare to show him yet.
-
-"Forscheim and Haggerty, the United Mining," he said, forgetting his
-habitual caution in the now present desire to dazzle and overcome this
-woman who had so resisted him, who had become so suddenly necessary to
-him, "have laid their trap to get hold of the Osaba territory. They've
-stripped Gilbert and old General Paxton of their holdings, and they were
-sure they'd strip me. The Osaba gold fields will be one day worth
-hundreds of millions--another Eldorado. Well, they'll get a third
-interest tonight. I've got a third, and Striker and Benz. Mexican
-United, who've fought them tooth and nail, have another third. Each now
-has got to have what I've got or get out. I've got the control and when
-I sell--" He ended with a laugh. "I've licked Forscheim before but it
-will be nothing to this. They thought they had me down and they played
-into my hands!"
-
-Suddenly he changed his tone as the memory came to him of Gunther
-impassively waiting in his anteroom.
-
-"Now they'll see what I can do," he said savagely. "Gunther's the only
-real man among them. I must have Gunther. With him I can do what I
-want--construct, construct!"
-
-She rose, stopping him as he most wanted to continue.
-
-"You must go now," she said quietly; "I've already done what I
-shouldn't."
-
-He stopped, infuriated at this check to his inclinations, for, beyond
-his victory over the men he had fought, she still eluded him.
-
-"Did you care what happened to me--much?" he asked savagely.
-
-"Yes; I was surprised how much I cared," she said slowly, keeping her
-eyes on his.
-
-There are certain strong, direct characters who are most vulnerable in
-the moment of their greatest exaltation as the generality of men are
-weakest in their defeats. She saw in his eyes how much she lacked to
-his complete triumph and suddenly seized the opportunity by the
-forelock.
-
-"Why are you afraid to marry?" she said vigorously. "You are a child;
-you don't understand life. You don't know how to draw from it the
-incitements it can give you. You wish to be a great figure and you
-think you can remain an outcast."
-
-"What do you mean?" he said roughly, and advancing he took her by the
-shoulders without her recoiling.
-
-"You want to be another Gunther," she said, meeting his glance with an
-intensity of ambition greater than his, "and you wish to fight like a
-guerrilla. You think you need no one, and you need admiration,
-confidence, to be spurred on, flattered, cajoled, made to feel your
-greatness, to have it dinned into your ears day and night, to be
-surrounded by it. You have the vanity of a god and you don't know how
-to feed it."
-
-"Well, what would you do?" he said, still holding her from him.
-
-"I would make you what you should be: a personage--not a wanderer," she
-said with extraordinary energy. "I'd make your home a court; I'd show
-you what it meant to step into your box at the opera and have the
-feeling that every eye in the house turned to you. You want to do great
-things--but you want to feel that you have done great things, that
-others are impressed by them, envy and look up to you. You want that
-stimulus and there is only one way to get it. Take your place in
-society, where you belong among the great figures."
-
-"I find my own stimulus," he said, looking at her.
-
-"Listen, John Slade," she said furiously. "You think because you have
-always done what you want with women that that will continue. It won't.
-You are at a dangerous age. You have depended upon women; you cannot
-shake it off. The day will come when you'll be caught as every man is
-who plays beyond his youth and strength. Women will either hinder you
-or push you on. Make up your mind now. Which do you want?"
-
-"I want you!" he said, suddenly caught by her words that came as an
-answer to his new view of himself; and violently, characteristically, he
-added, enfolding her: "And when I want a thing, I want it now! Get your
-wraps on. We're going over to Jersey now and get married."
-
-"No, no," she said firmly though her heart was beating so that she
-thought he must hear it.
-
-"You've got me. I never expected it, but I've got to have you," he said
-and brutally, without thinking whether he hurt her or not, he forced her
-head up to his. She did not resist, intoxicated, carried away by her
-absolute helplessness in his arms. Then, confident, he renewed his
-demand that they should be married that night, at once.
-
-"No, no," she said, disengaging herself, and though all her natural
-being responded to his demand, her intellectual self conquered, knowing
-full well that beyond winning him, she must always maintain over him a
-certain moral superiority. "No. To do what I want to do, we must not
-give any one the slightest occasion to talk. Such an act as this would
-be suicidal."
-
-"When then?" he said furiously.
-
-"Announce our engagement tomorrow," she said, "and in a week we can be
-married very quietly."
-
-"A week!" he cried indignantly.
-
-"Or less," she said, smiling; "and now you must go."
-
-"You haven't said, 'I love you,'" he said with a last flash of
-antagonistic suspicion.
-
-"When I say it you will be satisfied," she said, with a look that
-revealed to him a new, undiscovered world.
-
-"Rita," he persisted doggedly, seizing her wrist, "I know what you can
-do, what you'll make of us, but that's not all. I don't want any
-cold-blooded reason-and-logic marriage. Look here. You've got to love
-me--like hell--do you understand?"
-
-She turned on him swiftly, opening her lips until her white teeth showed
-in their tense grip. Then, suddenly veiling her emotion in a relaxing
-smile, she said, as she rang for Henriette:
-
-"No woman could find it hard to love you, John Slade."
-
-When he had left she remained standing a long while very thoughtfully.
-Then she went quietly upstairs and fell almost immediately into a quiet,
-profound sleep. Her own self-possession surprised her; but unusual
-natures have this over common-place ones that they are continually
-surprising themselves.
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER XIX*
-
-
-When the next day Beecher reached his club he found all discussions
-centered upon John G. Slade and the astonishing and incomprehensible
-outcome of the conference at Gunther's of which naturally only the usual
-misinformation was known. The morning papers had contained a reassuring
-statement, backed by powerful names, of the condition of the Associated
-Trust, with promises of support. Gunther had publicly announced that he
-would bring twenty millions of ready money to relieve the financial
-stringency and, if that were not sufficient, twenty millions more. When
-the man in the Street comprehended that the great fortunes of the
-country had authorized this step, the effect was instantaneous. The
-stock market opened with loss of two to three points and immediately
-recovered this decline and, for the first time during the week,
-registered distinct advances. The runs on the banks still continued,
-but the lines of depositors were apparently less. At eleven o'clock
-Rupert V. Steele visibly entered the offices of the Associated Trust
-and, advancing to the deserted window of the cashier, made the first
-deposit. In a minute it was publicly announced that five millions of
-dollars had just been deposited to the credit of the great Columbus
-National. Half of the waiting line, wavered, turned and went home.
-
-"Well, Slade's turned the trick," said Gunther, joining his friend.
-"But how he managed to wriggle through is a mystery."
-
-"Haven't seen the papers," said Beecher. "What do they say about Emma
-Fornez?"
-
-"Couldn't be better. The third act bowled 'em over," said Gunther,
-laughing. Beecher had told him of the diva's prophecy. "By the way,
-Ted, my long shot may not prove such a wild one. Mapleson is a close
-friend of the Cheevers--rather attentive to the lady, who from all
-accounts is a rather frisky one. I telephoned McKenna about it and he
-seemed distinctly interested."
-
-"McKenna?" said Beecher, opening his eyes.
-
-"Well, yes," said Gunther, laughing; "but forget I told you. Besides, I
-have a feeling that things will open up now."
-
-"Is McKenna on the trail of any one?"
-
-"Well, yes," said Gunther slowly; "and I don't think it'll be long now
-before we hear of him. How about lunch?"
-
-At this moment a boy arrived with summons for Beecher to the telephone.
-He did not recognize the voice immediately.
-
-"You don't know who it is?" said a woman.
-
-He thought he recognized the tones of Miss Rivers, whom he had
-shamefully neglected in the excitement of the last days; but, warily, he
-did not commit himself.
-
-"You're disguising your voice," he said cautiously.
-
-"Not at all. You are not very flattering--but when one listens so much
-to the voice of Emma Fornez--"
-
-"Miss Charters," he said instantly.
-
-"At last."
-
-He was suddenly troubled at the discovery, for he had sincerely
-persuaded himself that he did not intend to see her again.
-
-"She is going to reproach me," he thought uneasily, "for not returning
-to see her last night. The devil! Well, I shall tell her the truth--I
-didn't like her companion."
-
-But instead of reproaches she said in very good humor:
-
-"Look out, I can be very jealous. What are you doing tonight?"
-
-"I am dining out," he said, fibbing promptly, determined to remain firm.
-
-"Oh--I'm sorry," she said, with a quick dropping of her tone. "I wanted
-you to take me to a dress rehearsal that will be very amusing."
-
-"I'm sorry too."
-
-"What are you doing this afternoon, around tea time?"
-
-"I have an engagement," he said truthfully.
-
-"With Emma Fornez?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"I am not very lucky, am I?" she said.
-
-The wounded tone in her voice made him feel a bit ashamed. He saw that
-she would not ask him again and relented a little.
-
-"Will you be in at four? I can drop in for a little chat then," he
-said, amazed at his own yielding even as he spoke the words.
-
-"Come then. I want very much to see you," she answered but without
-lightness.
-
-"Now I'm in it again!" he said ruefully as he left the telephone. "What
-the deuce made me say I'd go. Just because I didn't want to hurt her--O
-Lord! Steady, old boy, steady!"
-
-Outside the booth he found Gunther, an afternoon's paper in his hand,
-scanning it with excitement on every feature.
-
-"I say, Ted, here's news indeed," he cried. "What do you think of that?"
-
-He pointed to the headline on the front page where the engagement of
-John G. Slade to Mrs. Rita Kildair was announced in large type. The two
-young men looked at each other in profound astonishment.
-
-"By Jove!" said Beecher, suddenly enlightened. "That's what was at the
-bottom last night! Now I understand." In a moment he comprehended the
-full measure of the agony of uncertainty she must have suffered at his
-side in the returning automobile. "So that was her game after all!"
-
-"Now things'll begin to move," said Gunther eagerly. "If she really
-knows who's the thief, as McKenna believes, the ring ought to be
-returned in forty-eight hours."
-
-"Why?"
-
-"Because now that she is publicly engaged to Slade, any one who has been
-trading on the knowledge of how she got the ring won't have a shred to
-blackmail her with. You see it now becomes the engagement ring that
-Slade gave her and she can move openly; and from what I've seen of her,
-she'll lose no time. Ted, I'll prophesy in forty-eight hours we'll hear
-something about that ring."
-
-"I believe you're right," said Beecher as they went into luncheon; and,
-thinking of the curious conjunction of Mrs. Kildair's and Miss Charters'
-prophecy as to the return of the ring, he said to himself unwillingly:
-"If the ring is returned, does that mean that Mrs. Bloodgood took it?"
-
-A little after four he went to pay his call on Miss Charters and as he
-had become accustomed to her perplexing change of moods, he wondered in
-what temper she would receive him. She was in a Russian blouse of gray
-corduroy relieved by a broad lace collar and fitted loosely to her
-straight, lithe body by a belt at the waist, an effect of girlish
-simplicity, very yielding and artless.
-
-She did not wait for him in the sitting-room but came out into the hall,
-taking his hat and stick herself and leading the way. Once in the cosy
-sitting-room she stopped, turning to face him and suddenly taking his
-hands in hers.
-
-"Let me look at you," she said, drawing off and raising her eyes to his
-thoughtfully, while her lips twisted a little into a most serious
-sternness.
-
-"Little imp!" he thought grimly, prepared against her wiles and yet a
-little startled at this figure of a young girl which so tantalizingly
-confronted him.
-
-She saw at once, in the amused composure of his face, that she had been
-mistaken in ascribing his absence to the pique of jealousy. What she
-had on her lips she did not say, and suddenly alert at the realization
-that her presence no longer troubled him she drew him toward the
-fireplace, leading him to a great armchair.
-
-"There," she said, laughing, "you will see how we treat the prodigal
-son. Sit down." She brought a cushion and insisted upon placing it
-behind his back. "Don't get up. A scotch and soda? Sit still--I like
-to mix it."
-
-She went to a table and presently came back with the tumbler, offering
-it to him with a well simulated attitude of submission. When he took
-it, she dropped a curtsey and going to the library table, returned with
-a box of cigars and the matches. Continuing always the same game,
-determined to force a laugh, she lit the match, holding it to him
-between her rosy palms.
-
-"Is your lordship satisfied?"
-
-"I am."
-
-She lit a cigarette in turn and camping down on the bear rug, Eastern
-fashion, puffed a ring of smoke in the direction of the fire. For a
-moment neither spoke, she studying the embers, he enjoying this new side
-to her and awaiting the next development.
-
-"I'm very unhappy," she said at last, without looking at him.
-
-"I'm sorry," he answered sympathetically.
-
-"I have had a great disappointment. I read that play of Hargrave's
-again--there's nothing to it."
-
-"You surprise me."
-
-The fact was that Brockway, Stigler's stage director had torn it to
-pieces. She continued, repeating what Brockway had said:
-
-"The trouble is, it's not actable. It's like all plays that read
-well--I should have known it. There's no dramatic action. Then, it has
-one great fault--all young writers have it--you see, every scene should
-be a unit in itself, express one dramatic emotion, develop it, and
-increase it; and Hargrave puts three or four emotions in the same
-page--five or six," she continued indignantly. "It's all mixed
-up--topsy-turvy--no actress could make an effect." (This had been its
-chief merit two days before.) "It's very sad; I shall never find a
-play."
-
-"You were very enthusiastic a few days ago," he said.
-
-"Was I?" she said resentfully. "You see, the trouble is, in reading you
-imagine things that aren't there."
-
-"So Hargrave isn't a genius after all?" he asked.
-
-"He is very conceited--insufferably so," she said abruptly. "But you
-don't understand--it's the disappointment to me--I shall never find a
-play. Sometimes I feel like giving it all up. It's terrible--breaking
-your heart day after day. Yes, sometimes I feel like never acting
-again."
-
-"You are in a blue mood," he said cheerfully.
-
-"Everything has gone wrong," she said, pouting. "Even you have changed!"
-
-She looked at him with a look of a tired child, longing to climb into
-his lap to be consoled.
-
-"How so?" he said, opening his eyes.
-
-"Teddy, have I offended you?" she asked gently, seeing that she could
-not unbend him by playing upon his sympathy.
-
-"Not the least."
-
-She would have preferred any answer but this.
-
-"Why wouldn't you go with me tonight?" she said quickly.
-
-"Because I have another engagement," he said, instinctively glancing at
-the clock.
-
-She saw the look, sprang up from the rug furiously, and leaping toward
-the mantelpiece seized the offending clock and flung it across the room
-in a tantrum.
-
-"Go to your Emma Fornez!" she said, stamping her foot. "If you are
-going to sit here and measure the minutes, you can go!"
-
-He rose, startled at the passion of jealousy he had aroused.
-
-"I told you I had an engagement," he began.
-
-"Nonsense!" she burst out, still the prey of her anger. "You know very
-well you can keep her waiting half an hour if you wish, and you know
-very well that you can put off your engagement to-night--or is it with
-her, always with her?"
-
-"I don't care to discuss my engagements," he said coldly, an emotion
-which he was far from feeling, for the sudden wild-eyed fury into which
-he had plunged her awoke in him something that thrilled him, as he had
-been thrilled the day he had returned Mrs. Bloodgood to her home, at the
-thought of what a consuming passion might be.
-
-"Why do you tag around with her?" she continued heedlessly. "I should
-think you'd have more regard for your dignity--for what people
-think--Emma Fornez--ah!"
-
-She stopped, pressing her handkerchief to her eyes and then, feeling he
-had perceived it, she exclaimed: "If I cry it's because I am
-disappointed--disillusionized--angry!"
-
-She turned her back and went quickly to the window where the little
-Dresden clock lay shattered in a corner. She picked it up and looked at
-it, swallowing her anger. Then, as he continued to keep the silence,
-she came back, without looking at him, placed the clock on the
-mantelpiece again and said coldly:
-
-"Well, it is time for you to go--not to keep her waiting."
-
-"Good-afternoon," he said with a bow, and left the apartment.
-
-When he reached the street, he was overcome with surprise.
-
-"By Jove!" he said, swinging joyfully along. "Is it possible after all
-that she does care about me? How her eyes blazed--the little fury.
-That at least wasn't acting!"
-
-And though he remained until late, amused at Emma Fornez, he felt the
-flame of the other presence about him, obtruding itself at every moment;
-and he who had seen the play of strong emotions in Mrs. Bloodgood and
-Mrs. Kildair, avidly began to feel what it would mean to be loved with
-such intensity.
-
-Emma Fornez questioned him about Miss Charters but for the first time he
-resolutely concealed from her what had taken place.
-
-That night on his return to his rooms, he found a short note from Bruce
-Gunther:
-
-
-DEAR TED,
-
-Be at McKenna's offices to-morrow--ten sharp. Something doing.
-
-B.
-
-P.S. Keep this to yourself--_savez_?
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER XX*
-
-
-DEAR TEDDY,
-
-I am very much ashamed at what happened yesterday. Please forgive my
-ill-humor and some day, when you have a spare hour, do come to see me.
-
-Very cordially your friend,
- NAN CHARTERS.
-
-
-This note was the first which Beecher read on awakening the next
-morning. He had slept by fits and starts, troubled by the memory of his
-last interview with the young actress. The sudden unchecked tempest of
-jealousy and anger which had revealed to him the dramatic intensity of
-the woman had made a more haunting impression on his imagination than
-all her premeditated appeals.
-
-"If after all she does love me? How tremendous it would be," he had
-said to himself a dozen times, turning restlessly, in the half stupor of
-waking sleep.
-
-He lived over again the scene--only this time it seemed to him that when
-she had flung the clock from her in a passion, he had laughed joyfully
-and caught her struggling in his arms, exulting in this rage which
-burned so close to him. His first impulse on reading her note was to
-telephone her immediately, but he resisted this movement, saying to
-himself that that would be surrendering all his advantage.
-
-"I'll call up later," he thought with a smile; "that will be much
-better."
-
-He went eagerly down to McKenna's office, wondering what surprise was in
-store. Gunther and McKenna were already in the latter's private office,
-as he entered, and with the first look he took at the detective's
-smiling countenance, he perceived that he must be on the track of
-something significant.
-
-"We were discussing Mrs. Kildair's engagement," said Gunther. "McKenna
-agrees with me that it will expedite matters wonderfully."
-
-"How did Slade manage it?" said Beecher at once.
-
-The detective, without answering, went to his desk and picked up a
-square of cardboard on which he had pasted two clippings from the
-newspapers, one the announcement signed by Gunther, Sr., Marx and
-Fontaine, giving notice of their support of the Associated Trust, and
-the other the bare announcement of the prospective marriage of John G.
-Slade and Mrs. Rita Kildair.
-
-"I am going to preserve this and hang it up over my mantelpiece," he
-said, looking at it thoughtfully, "and when I have an idle hour, I'll
-stretch out, smoke up and study it. A couple of million people must
-have seen that--and that's all they'll ever know."
-
-"And you?"
-
-"I can only--deduce," he said, a twinkle in his eye. He glanced at the
-clock and said hurriedly: "Now we must get down to business. I am
-expecting some one in half an hour who ought to particularly interest
-you."
-
-"You know who took the ring!" said Beecher instantly.
-
-"I know several things," said McKenna briskly; "but everything in place.
-I promised you gentlemen, as you are interested in those things, a
-little history of the party that was at Mrs. Kildair's that night. It's
-nothing as literary style goes--just facts. Here it is. I'll skip the
-personal descriptions."
-
-He took up a bundle of notes, seated himself on the corner of the flat
-desk, and began to read:
-
-"Cheever, Stanley: Age 48; married; old New York family; left a fortune
-estimated at $425,000, at the death of his father, Ganet Cheever, when
-he was twenty-eight. Lived ten years abroad, principally London;
-inveterate gambler; lost heavily at Monte Carlo--sum estimated at
-$125,000; later became involved in a gambling scandal in England, but it
-was hushed up by his payment of a large sum to cover notes given.
-Continued to lose heavily at St. Petersburg, Baden and Paris; began
-borrowing large sums, meeting obligations with difficulty. Declared
-bankruptcy in Colorado, where he had gone to promote a mine; his
-statements contested by creditors who brought suit; contest settled out
-of court by payment by his relatives to avoid a family scandal. Returned
-to New York and engaged himself as an exploiter of well-known wine
-merchants. Married three years ago Lydia Borgen, daughter of a large
-importing grocer, who brought him $100,000. Lives at rate of $20,000 a
-year. Only known occupation gambling; said to have won fifty-five
-thousand dollars in three nights' play from Kane Wentworth and Thomas
-Haggerty, Jr.,--protested but paid. Method of play has occasioned
-numerous reports to his discredit. Accused operating a system of
-private signals with his wife, by Mrs. Elmer Jardine after scene at
-card-table; brought suit for libel against her and received $12,000
-damages out of court to compromise it. Is not received in home of
-father-in-law. Cut off by mother's will. Frequently quarrels with his
-wife over the attentions of other men. Known to have applied
-unsuccessfully at several banks within the last month to raise loans.
-Heavily speculated on long side of recent market, purchasing large block
-of stocks, margined, on morning after theft of ring, and said to be
-heavily involved. Sought aid of wife's relatives day before yesterday;
-refused.
-
-"Cheever, Mrs. Lydia: Born Lydia Borgen, daughter Harris Borgen, German
-immigrant, who married Lydia Foley, waitress in Pearl Street restaurant.
-Father made fortune in grocery business, establishing with brother in
-South America a large importing office dealing in cocoa, coffee, and
-fruit. At death of uncle, Lydia became heir to $100,000. Father said
-to be worth three quarters of a million, but estranged from daughter,
-whose marriage he opposed. As a young girl Lydia, rebellious and wild,
-constantly involved in escapades, notably with an actor, James Rocker,
-with whom she attempted to elope and go on the stage. Kept under strict
-surveillance, but at age of seventeen ran off with Charles Bourgoyne,
-young English groom at Waltby's riding academy. Pursued and arrested
-just as about to be married in New Jersey. Bourgoyne arrested for
-abduction but later paid to leave country. Married at nineteen to
-Stanley Cheever, through mediation of mother and a Mrs. Dorgan,
-notorious marriage broker. Has become tool of husband in schemes of
-raising money while leading a separate existence. Keeps private bank
-account unknown to husband. Very extravagant in personal expenses which
-cannot be accounted for on known income. From beginning of married life
-has been conspicuous for her relations with other men, generally wealthy
-bachelors, who have subsequently lost money at cards: names best known,
-Edward Fontaine, Reginald Forrest, Thomas Haggerty, Jr. At present seen
-frequently with R. G. Mapleson of firm of Sontag & Co.--"
-
-"Mapleson!" said the two young men in a breath.
-
-"I know what you mean," said McKenna, raising his hand. "Wait till I
-get through"; and he continued to read in his matter-of-fact,
-unemotional voice these pages of hard, glaring facts that left his
-hearers straining forward to catch every word:
-
-"At present deeply involved in affair with E. V. Garraboy. Seems to
-have been introduced to the broker at desire of husband, to obtain
-through this channel information which his sister, Mrs. Enos Bloodgood,
-may have acquired from B. L. Majendie of financial affairs in general
-and particularly Atlantic Trust. Acquaintance developed into violent
-passion for Garraboy by Mrs. Cheever; has met him frequently of late,
-twice having been followed to his apartments. Of late, scenes with
-husband have been increasing in violence, coupled with mutual
-threats--believe rupture possible.
-
-"_Item_: Bills against Mrs. Cheever known to be outstanding include
-$13,800 to Sontag & Co., for jewels; $1,200 to Madame Cortin for hats,
-etc.; $8,300 to Friegel Bros., robes.
-
-"_Item_: The $100,000 she inherited, stands in her own name, but is
-believed to be now reduced to $75,000. Morning after theft of ring,
-sold short through Garraboy, her broker, 5,000 shares Union Pacific.
-For further details, see Garraboy.
-
-"Charming little domestic circle, eh?" said McKenna, laying down the
-sheet. "Now for another:
-
-"Bloodgood, Enos R.: Owner New York _Daily Star_; large holder of real
-estate in lower New York; director Metropolitan Opera; brought up, at
-death of his parents, by his grandfather, Joseph Bloodgood, president of
-the Northwestern Railroad, as his prospective heir. At age of 20,
-despite threats of his guardian, left college and married Charlotte
-Granby, daughter of his tutor. Promptly disinherited. Went to work as a
-clerk in Brooklyn drygoods store, living on twenty-five dollars a week,
-refusing all overtures from grandfather, who offered to forgive him on
-condition of separation from his wife, allowing her $20,000. Refused
-and lived in that condition for five years until her death, brought on
-by privations. Reconciled with grandfather and sent abroad for a
-journey through Europe. Two years later became violently infatuated
-with a Spanish singer of the Caf Chantants and went with her on a trip
-to South America, again defying his guardian. At the end of a year,
-affair ended by a secret payment made by his grandfather to the woman to
-procure her desertion. Followed her and engaged in duel with her
-companion, from whom he received serious wounds. After recovery,
-returned to Paris, where he again became entangled in violent
-infatuations. On point of marrying an Austrian countess of doubtful
-history, fell ill with pneumonia and almost died. Returned to New York
-and became reconciled with grandfather. Seemed to turn over new leaf;
-entered journalism and made good record for steadiness and conservatism,
-leading exemplary life. Grandfather, in his will, however, contrary to
-expectations, cut him off with $20,000. Two months later, married Mrs.
-Georgiana Wakeman, fifteen years his senior, fortune estimated at ten
-millions, widow of former owner of N. Y. _Star_, which then passed under
-his control. Next ten years remarkable for his strict application to
-business and the dissoluteness of his private life. Mixed up in several
-promoting schemes with various success. At death of second wife,
-received bulk of fortune. Remained widower three years, greatly
-increasing fortune at period of Trust consolidations. Married third
-wife, Elise Garraboy, noted Southern beauty, no fortune. Union unhappy
-after first months; returned to his old habits. Three months ago forced
-to pay $15,000 to prevent blackmailing suit on part of a Miss Edna Rusk,
-chorus girl. Plunged heavily on short side of late market in a pool
-formed to bear market; reputed to have made immense gains.
-
-"_Item_: Has been in confidential relations with Miss Maud Lille for
-some time. Visited her early morning, after theft of ring."
-
-"That's queer," said Gunther, startled at this final detail. "Did
-Bloodgood do anything in the market that day?"
-
-"Sold right and left," said McKenna, exchanging papers.
-
-Beecher, more impressionable than his companion, said nothing, overcome
-by the bare recital of this brutal, materialistic life that once had
-been young and stirred to unbelievable sacrifice.
-
-"Bloodgood, Mrs. Enos: Born Elise Garraboy; sister of Edward Garraboy;
-old Southern family, New Orleans; father Colonel Marston Garraboy; died
-when children were little. Mother married Boyd Hallowel, Englishman,
-third son Lord Carmody, came to live in New York. Hallowel died ten
-years later, leaving her with small income but social connections.
-Elise educated at convent; made dbut in society at age of eighteen;
-great beauty; numerous suitors; engaged in second season to Enos
-Bloodgood; engagement broken; married a year later. Story current,
-forced into it to save mother from bankruptcy. Left husband twice in
-first two years, but persuaded to return by mother. Met Bernard L.
-Majendie eight months ago at Palm Beach. Infatuation no secret;
-understood that two weeks before panic had placed her interests in hands
-of lawyers, who procured evidence for divorce; action halted
-temporarily. Night of party at Mrs. Kildair's, trunks packed for
-journey, tickets purchased at Grand Central to Montreal. Day after,
-made no investments in Wall Street. Following day, left home with
-trunks and returned shortly after suicide. Violent scenes with husband.
-Shut herself up in room for hours. That night went to home of Majendie,
-company with--"
-
-Suddenly McKenna stopped at a violent movement of surprise from Beecher,
-and said quickly, "--a woman and a young man. Said to be totally
-without funds; husband reputed to allow her only $120 a month
-pocket-money. That's all."
-
-Gunther had been quick to see the agitation of his companion but, since
-he comprehended that whatever the part he had played Beecher wished to
-keep it in confidence, he pretended to have understood nothing.
-
-"Then there is no trace of Mrs. Bloodgood's having gone into the
-market?" he said.
-
-"None," replied McKenna. "There are other details, but they come better
-under head of the brother."
-
-He shuffled the remaining sheets and then, as though divining the unease
-of Beecher, he said in a matter-of-fact tone:
-
-"Here's the history of Miss Nan Charters; but as it gives us nothing
-important we don't know, I'll leave it out. Particularly as we're short
-of time. However, I'll say this--there is no record of any stock
-transactions except that which we know of already. The next is Miss
-Maud Lille, a curious character, too."
-
-Beecher drew a long breath and relaxed in his chair, grateful to McKenna
-for his consideration.
-
-"Lille, Maud," said the detective, reading. "Real name Margaret Case;
-daughter Rev. Hiram Case and Fanny Saunders, Zanesville, Ohio; left home
-at age of sixteen; studied one year to be trained nurse; left hospital
-and studied stenography; later joined traveling circus, business
-department; became press agent. Stranded in northern Arizona; earned
-living by writing for local newspapers under name Jane Anderson; went to
-San Francisco and from there to Honolulu, supporting herself by her
-writings, occasionally taking regular position as stenographer. In
-Hawaii met and married an eastern adventurer known under name of Edward
-Bracken; returned with him to San Francisco, where couple engaged in
-mining speculations. Husband pursued for fraud and fled; wife arrested
-but released. Went to Chicago after securing divorce and changed name
-to Maud Lille. Sent to Cripple Creek by Chicago _World_ and made a hit
-by her graphic accounts of labor conditions. Married Patrick O'Fallon,
-wealthy mine owner. Went with him for trip in Europe but apparently
-dissatisfied with life left him and returned to newspaper work,
-establishing herself in New York. Not divorced. Under own name author
-of several successful novels; prefers Bohemian existence of journalist
-evidently, reporting prize-fights, political conventions, murder trials,
-etc. Attached to staff of New York _Star_ and apparently much in
-confidence of owner. Lately much interested in stock market. On morning
-after theft met E. V. Garraboy at Levere's restaurant, near home, before
-breakfast; returned to her apartment and saw Enos Bloodgood two hours
-later. Reported sold short 500 shares Union Pacific."
-
-"By Jove," exclaimed Beecher as Gunther rose excitedly to his feet,
-"you've got it!"
-
-"Maud Lille took it first and transferred it to Garraboy," said Gunther,
-then he stopped, puzzled; "but Bloodgood--that's incredible!"
-
-"Hold in your horses," said McKenna, shaking his head with silent
-laughter, delighted, in fact, that they had fallen into his trap.
-"There's one more little history to read." He hesitated and then said:
-"Now, I don't want to play up to a little tin god on wheels, though
-that's easy enough. I'll say this, that a good deal of the information
-I am reading you I have had in hand. The gentleman whose bright little
-history I am going to read you, I have had my eyes on for some time.
-That'll develop.
-
-"Garraboy, Edward V.: Sent to military training school; expelled; went
-up north, boarding-school; expelled; tutored for college and went to
-Harvard; ran up debts to extent of over a thousand dollars in two
-months, signing promissory notes. Paid by stepfather, who withdrew him
-at the request of college authorities; cut off by family and sent to
-Chicago with four hundred dollars to enter business house. Instead,
-speculated in wheat market and said to have made a little money. Went
-to Denver with small capital and posed as son of wealthy parents. Made
-acquaintance of a family called Sanderson and shortly became engaged to
-daughter, heiress to considerable fortune. Engagement broken as result
-of investigations. Left Denver, leaving behind a number of debts and
-bad checks. Next, heard of in southern California, working in mine; got
-in shooting affray over daughter of Mexican and went into British
-Columbia. Used many names. Spent a year in small stock companies
-playing little rles; made a lucky gamble in silver mine and went to San
-Francisco, living high. Went to Seattle; became engaged to a widow of
-large real estate manipulator; persuaded her to invest her money in land
-exploitation scheme in southern California which proved failure. Ran
-away from Seattle and went to Hawaii to sell imitation jewelry under
-name of Edward--"
-
-"Bracken!" exclaimed the two young men in one breath.
-
-"Exactly."
-
-"Married to Maud Lille!" cried Gunther, the first to recover his
-astonishment. "Why, the little toad! How the deuce did these women
-fall for him?"
-
-"Oh, that's a question by itself, Mr. Gunther," said McKenna, smiling.
-"It's a good deal in studying what you're dealing with, and Garraboy
-watched them pretty close. Let me finish.
-
-"Came to San Francisco, as you know; fled to escape pursuit; changing
-name, shipped as clerk on a merchantman from New Orleans. Next known of
-him, returned from the Far East under own name with apparently a certain
-amount of money. On hearing marriage of his sister, came to New York
-and established himself in Wall Street, largely through the aid of
-Bloodgood, over whose head evidently has held some threat. Met Maud
-Lille and probably came to some understanding with her; has paid her
-money from time to time. Encouraged sister's infatuation for Majendie,
-whom sought to enlist in scheme for rice production in South; failed.
-Made money rapidly until three months ago, when several ventures failed
-and became involved. Secured personal loan of $10,000 from Majendie
-without knowledge of sister. Has lived at rate of $40,000 a year,
-running several establishments; said to have given $15,000 worth of
-jewelry to Mlle. Clo. D'Aresco, the dancer, on her last visit here.
-Made immense short sales in recent market and was on verge of failure
-when panic saved him. Has profited by infatuation of Mrs. Cheever to
-borrow large sums in last week. On day after theft sold steadily all
-day; under suspicions by his own clients and on verge of arrest, when
-drop in stocks turned tide in his favor. Reputed to have covered his
-losses and made $100,000 in last three days."
-
-"You were on his track then!" exclaimed Beecher, suddenly enlightened.
-
-"I was and I am," said McKenna; "and in less than twenty-four hours I'll
-shake down that frisky gentleman for about forty-five thousand dollars
-that he has been speculating with. Four days ago I couldn't have
-collected forty-five cents. That's why I held off."
-
-"Good Lord!" said Beecher, suddenly remembering. "I say, McKenna, Miss
-Charters' money is tied up with him. You don't suppose--by Jove, I hope
-nothing's wrong!"
-
-"You give me the amount," said McKenna with a click of his teeth. "I'll
-get it. He knows, I guess, by this time what a pretty little story it
-would make in the morning papers. He won't resist--not he!"
-
-"Look here," said Beecher excitedly, putting his hand to his pocketbook.
-"By Jove, that's lucky. I've still got that order. I can telephone her
-now--"
-
-"Telephone nothing," said McKenna, reaching out his hand. "I don't need
-that order, except as a reference. Just keep it quiet. The young lady
-won't thank you less for your saving her without her knowledge, will
-she?"
-
-"No," said Beecher, flurried. "Here's the order. When'll you get at
-Garraboy?"
-
-"In about ten minutes," said McKenna, reaching over for a fresh cigar.
-
-"Here?"
-
-"Right here."
-
-"And the ring?" asked Gunther quickly.
-
-"What do you think?" said McKenna, his little eyes snapping through the
-blaze of the match as he lighted his cigar.
-
-"I think it lies between Mrs. Cheever, Miss Lille and Garraboy," said
-Gunther; "either woman took it and either passed it to Garraboy at the
-table--"
-
-"Well?" said McKenna, as Gunther hesitated.
-
-"Or Garraboy took it first and passed it to one of them."
-
-"Why?"
-
-"For fear that he or she had been seen taking it the first time--to
-cover up the tracks. Whoever may have seen the ring taken would believe
-the original thief had restored it and kept quiet."
-
-"That's ingenious, and I must say it may prove to have some bearing,"
-said McKenna. "It's likewise possible. But you gentlemen have missed
-the whole point of what I've been reading you."
-
-"In what way?"
-
-"There's not one bit of evidence who took the ring," said McKenna, with
-a gesture at the recording sheets. "It shows who might have taken
-it--that's true. Now, what it shows is this--what was working in every
-one's mind the night of that party. You remember that it was on the
-night before Majendie's failure, and that the whole question of the
-panic hung on whether he was going to pull through or not. Now, of
-every one who was there, with the exception of Miss Charters, Mrs.
-Bloodgood and Mr. Beecher here, every one was in Wall Street up to their
-necks, and if they knew what had happened to Majendie they could call
-the turn. Now, what happened? Bloodgood was getting his information
-from Maud Lille, who got it from Garraboy, who easy enough could get it
-from his sister, not out of treachery, but unconsciously, you may be
-sure. Well, all these three got the straight tip. That's what the
-meeting next morning was about. Bloodgood never took the ring; that
-would be ridiculous; and Maud Lille, whatever her record for drifting,
-is not a crook. So those meetings were on the question of speculation,
-pure and simple.
-
-"Now, Mrs. Cheever got the news straight and Mr. Cheever didn't, though
-he depended on his wife working Garraboy. Cheever bought stocks and was
-caught. That likewise shows there may be some interesting developments
-in that charming little family, particularly when he finds out that Mrs.
-Cheever sold and won. Now, what have we to go on? Cheever's a
-crook--but if he took it, he did it alone.
-
-"Garraboy's a crook and, following Mr. Gunther's theory, he could have
-taken it alone or working with Mrs. Cheever. If there was any
-collusion, it was there. Gentlemen, I am only discussing
-possibilities."
-
-"If the ring was taken to raise money to gamble in Wall Street, then it
-lies between Cheever and Garraboy," said Gunther.
-
-"Say it this way: if Mrs. Cheever or Miss Lille took it, Garraboy would
-probably know--"
-
-"And Slade?" said Beecher.
-
-"If Slade took it, we're losing our time. Aren't we?" said McKenna.
-
-"McKenna, do you know?" said Gunther suddenly.
-
-"Unless I am very much mistaken, I'll know in twenty-four hours," said
-McKenna, "I know this--who has the ring and when he had it, and this
-evening, about 5:30 in the afternoon, I ought to know from the gentleman
-in question, who pawned it--unless I learn sooner."
-
-"Unless Garraboy confesses," said Beecher.
-
-"Gentlemen," said McKenna, answering with a nod an assistant who opened
-the door at this moment, "I'm not given to boasting, but I'll risk
-this." He went to the desk, wrote a name on a card, sealed it in an
-envelope and handed it to Beecher. "That's the name of the person who
-took the ring. Keep it until it is found. That sounds like Sherlock
-Holmes, but there's one reason why I feel like being a little stagey;
-and I don't mind admitting to you that I got to it by deduction--honest
-deduction, though!"
-
-"Why've you Garraboy here, then?" said Beecher, while the letter in his
-pocket seemed to radiate heat like an ember.
-
-"Do you want to know?--you'll be surprised," said McKenna, going to the
-desk again. "Well, it's to convince myself that Garraboy had nothing to
-do with it."
-
-"What!" exclaimed the two.
-
-McKenna made them a signal to be silent and, taking up the loose sheets
-of the different records, started to place them in the drawer; but all
-at once he stopped, selected one, the record of the broker himself, and
-laid it face up on the table. The next moment the door opened and
-Garraboy came warily into the room.
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER XXI*
-
-
-At the sight of Beecher and Gunther, Garraboy stopped short, evidently
-nonplused.
-
-"I was told to come in," he said, lifting his eyebrows.
-
-"Quite right," said McKenna briskly, raising his voice a trifle. From
-the moment of the broker's entrance his eyes fastened on Garraboy, never
-leaving him. "Come right in."
-
-"I'm interrupting--" said Garraboy carefully, conscious of this set
-gaze.
-
-"Not in the least."
-
-"I thought our business was confidential, McKenna," he said, without
-having moved from the position he had taken on entering. "I fail to
-see--" he stopped and looked again at the two young men.
-
-"Oh, Mr. Beecher and Gunther," said McKenna affably; "suppose we call
-them attorneys for one of your clients."
-
-"Miss Charters?"
-
-"You're a good guesser, Mr. Garraboy."
-
-The broker drew in his upper lip and, coming slowly forward, said:
-
-"The presence of these gentlemen is exceedingly distasteful to me."
-
-"You're not in a position to object, Mr. Garraboy."
-
-Garraboy turned his back and walked slowly back and forth, evidently in
-distressed conjecture, occasionally raising his head to shoot a glance
-at the three, half in rage, half in fear.
-
-All at once he stopped by the desk as though his mind had come to a
-certain decision, and, bearing heavily on it, said:
-
-"I do not know that I care, under the circumstances, to enter into any
-discussion. You, Mr. McKenna, represent my client, Mrs. Alva White;
-your claim against me is for forty-five thousand eight hundred and
-forty-six dollars." He drew out his pocketbook. "I have here a check
-made to your order." A second time he plunged his hand into his pocket
-and brought out a check-book. "I was not notified that Miss Charters'
-was also under discussion. However, I will settle that at once. To
-whose order, please?"
-
-McKenna, without answering, indicated himself with a jerk of his finger.
-
-Garraboy, seating himself at the desk, took up a pen and carefully
-filled in the check, blotted it and handed the two drafts to McKenna,
-who took them, endorsed them and, ringing, handed them to an assistant:
-
-"Present these at once. Telephone me as soon as they are honored."
-
-Garraboy carefully blotted the check-book in turn, replaced it in his
-pocket, and was thrusting back his chair from the desk when McKenna,
-turning on him sharply, said:
-
-"Garraboy, you stole that ring of Mrs. Kildair's."
-
-The broker, startled, jerked up his head.
-
-"So that's the meaning of all this!" he said angrily.
-
-"Answer my question!"
-
-But this time Garraboy, without wincing, rose suddenly to his feet.
-
-"McKenna, I have nothing more to say to you," he said, scowling, "on
-this or any other question. Your claims are satisfied. I recognize no
-further right of you to insult me."
-
-"Don't move, Mr. Garraboy," said McKenna softly; "we've a lot of
-business still to talk over."
-
-"Are you trying to blackmail me?" said Garraboy furiously, folding his
-arms.
-
-"Garraboy, I've got the goods on you and there may be a paper or two in
-my pocket you wouldn't care to have served," said McKenna, the pupils of
-his eyes seeming to dwindle to a point as the whites showed under a
-well-simulated show of anger. "First place, you're going to sit here
-until I get a telephone those checks are cashed. Second, and this may
-surprise you, you're going to stick right by me--today and tonight,
-until you make up your mind whether you'll answer me or answer a court
-of justice. Third, before we get through here, I want your name at the
-bottom of a little document I've drawn up for you."
-
-"What do you mean?" said Garraboy, but with a note of apprehension in
-his voice.
-
-"A plain, honest recital of what you've been doing with other folks'
-property these last two months--"
-
-"You said--" fairly screamed the broker.
-
-"I said if you settled my claims I wouldn't prosecute--true, and I
-won't. But just the same you're getting out of business here in New
-York, and I'm going to hold a paper that'll keep you out."
-
-"Never!" exclaimed Garraboy in desperation. "Every cent I owe will be
-settled in twenty-four hours. I'll close up every account--I'll agree
-to that--but I'll not be blackmailed into this. You haven't a charge
-against me that'll stand in any court in this country--"
-
-"What about that ring?" said McKenna. "You were trying all over town to
-raise fifteen thousand dollars that day. Garraboy, you stole that ring,
-pawned it, and raised the money to hold off your loans."
-
-"That's a lie!" he said, clenching his fists. "I got it--"
-
-"Where?"
-
-"None of your business."
-
-"Where did you get the money to pay your interest and to put up the new
-margins you did?"
-
-"I was acting for others."
-
-"What others?"
-
-Garraboy opened his mouth to reply and then suddenly stopped.
-
-McKenna said immediately:
-
-"No, you won't say what others, because if you do claim you sold for
-others, here before witnesses, you know you'll restore a good deal more
-money than you figured out to disgorge. Oh, you're clever all right.
-Answer me--did you steal that ring?"
-
-"I did not," said Garraboy suddenly; "and I don't know anything more
-about it than Beecher here--in fact, considerably less." He looked over
-with a sneer on his lips and then quickly and firmly exclaimed:
-"McKenna, my mind's made up. I'm going out that door--now. If you
-attempt to prevent me, I'll hold Mr. Beecher and Mr. Gunther here as
-witnesses that you kept me here by force. And I'll have you up on--"
-
-All at once he seemed to choke on a word as his eyes, following the
-movement of the fist that struck the table, came suddenly in contact
-with the upturned sheet entitled:
-
- "GARRABOY, EDWARD V."
-
-
-The sight seemed to paralyze every muscle of his body. He sat down
-abruptly, drawing the document under his eye.
-
-"Take your time, Bracken, read it over carefully," said McKenna in a
-soothing voice. He retired to the fireplace and relaxed into the easy
-chair awaiting the moment.
-
-Garraboy read hastily, fairly galloping through the pages. Then he
-stiffened in his chair, frowned and read carefully through it all again,
-considering each phrase.
-
-At the last, the three who watched him saw him push the paper from him,
-lock his hands in front of him and stare at McKenna. The correct,
-insolent man of the world had faded; instead, before them, bare to the
-bone, was the rascal, the desperate, clever adventurer. Suddenly making
-a quick resolve, he said in a tone that surprised them for its absence
-of emotion:
-
-"Give me the paper I'm to sign."
-
-McKenna jumped up and going to a shelf took down an affidavit.
-
-"It is always a pleasure to deal with profession," he said genially,
-placing the document on the table. "Oh, read it first."
-
-Garraboy skimmed through it hastily, nodding. He took up his pen and
-paused.
-
-"It's understood that the contents will never be made public, directly
-or indirectly, so long as I keep out of the United States?"
-
-"Understood."
-
-"Your word of honor on it as a gentleman, McKenna?"
-
-"My word."
-
-"And yours, too, Mr. Beecher, Mr. Gunther?"
-
-Each repeated the promise in turn.
-
-Garraboy signed the confession and handed it to McKenna.
-
-"What now?"
-
-"You will, of course, wind up your business immediately."
-
-"I will telephone for my clerk to bring my books here at once for your
-inspection. I will draw the necessary checks and have them deposited to
-the credit of my clients this afternoon. One of your men can personally
-assure himself that everything is right. Will that satisfy you?"
-
-"Couldn't have proposed anything more practical," said McKenna, nodding.
-
-"What next?"
-
-"Clean up that matter of the ring."
-
-Garraboy rose impatiently,
-
-"I haven't got the ring."
-
-"I don't believe you."
-
-"Are you going to keep me under surveillance?"
-
-"I am."
-
-"Until when?"
-
-"Until the ring is returned."
-
-"McKenna," said Garraboy desperately, "I think I've satisfied you. I'm
-not standing on technicalities. You've got me cold. I know it. Now,
-I'll tell you just how I stand. When everything is paid up, I stand
-pretty nearly $200,000 to the good. I'm going to get out--go abroad and
-stay there, and I want to catch the first boat out. If I had that ring,
-I'd throw it over, quick. That's straight goods."
-
-"Garraboy, did you steal that ring?" said McKenna again.
-
-"I did not." He took a handkerchief from his pocket and wiped away the
-perspiration which stood on his forehead.
-
-"Did you ever see before the detective, John Ryan, whom Mrs. Kildair
-called in?"
-
-Garraboy hesitated.
-
-"Did you?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Employed him?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Many times?"
-
-"Several."
-
-"And you recommended him to Mrs. Kildair?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"So you knew whom she would call in?"
-
-"No, I didn't think of that."
-
-"Garraboy, didn't you take the ring knowing that Ryan would be called in
-and that he would never make a search of you?"
-
-"I did not."
-
-"Do you know who took it?"
-
-"No."
-
-"That's sufficient," said McKenna, apparently satisfied.
-
-"What are you going to do?" asked Garraboy nervously.
-
-"Keep you on a rope until the ring turns up.
-
-"I want to get away," said Garraboy weakly.
-
-"I know that."
-
-The broker remained quiet a moment, turning a pencil with his moist
-fingers.
-
-"Will you answer one question?" he said at last.
-
-"What?"
-
-"Does Mrs. Kildair know--are you acting for her?"
-
-"Mrs. Kildair does not know what I'm doing," said McKenna quietly.
-
-Garraboy rose with what seemed a little relief, a movement that McKenna
-was quick to note.
-
-"Well, I've made up my mind to tell you what I know," he said, after a
-few nervous steps.
-
-"Good."
-
-"I haven't got the ring," he said carefully.
-
-"Did you take it?"
-
-"I did not take it," said Garraboy, looking steadily in McKenna's eyes.
-
-"But you know?"
-
-"Yes, in a way I know," he said firmly. "A woman took it."
-
-"How do you know?"
-
-Garraboy did not answer immediately. He seemed reluctant to continue,
-frowning and moving restlessly from foot to foot. Finally he blurted
-out:
-
-"I don't know who took it first, but this is what happened--the God's
-truth. When Mrs. Kildair put out the lights and counted sixty-one, I
-heard the ring on the table." He hesitated a moment and said hurriedly:
-"I made up my mind to give them all a shock. I did not intend to keep
-the ring; I swear it. I put out my hand to take it--and I touched
-another hand--the hand of a woman."
-
-"Who took it?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Was that woman Mrs. Cheever, or Miss Lille?" said McKenna quickly.
-
-"I don't know."
-
-"You don't know."
-
-"No."
-
-"You have no idea?"
-
-"No."
-
-"No suspicion?"
-
-"No."
-
-"You were told nothing afterward?"
-
-"Nothing."
-
-"Garraboy, it's just possible you're not lying," said McKenna with a
-frown; "though I'm not sure by a long shot. However, I'll know the
-truth before the sun goes down."
-
-"How?" said Garraboy, looking up.
-
-"I neglected to tell you," said McKenna, watching him, "that I know whom
-the ring was pawned with, and this evening the gentleman himself will
-tell me who pawned it. The time I keep you depends a good deal on what
-he says."
-
-"Then, this evening I will be free," said Garraboy joyfully, with such
-evident confidence that both young men were struck by it and McKenna, a
-little disturbed in his theory, continued staring at the face of
-Garraboy, which was illumined with a slight, malicious smile.
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER XXII*
-
-
-Half an hour later Gunther and Beecher, leaving McKenna's office with a
-promise to return that evening, went up town. In Beecher's pocket was a
-check on McKenna representing the amount of Miss Charters' account.
-Garraboy remained in the custody of the detective.
-
-"Well, what do you think of it?" said Gunther.
-
-"I think Garraboy lied," said Beecher.
-
-"Oh, about the reason he tried to take the ring--yes, naturally. He
-could make a plausible reason for that--you'd hardly expect him to say
-in so many words that he was a thief, if he really didn't get the ring,
-as he says."
-
-"I think he cooked up the lie right there," said Beecher obstinately.
-"I don't believe a word of it."
-
-"I don't know--I sort of think he told the truth."
-
-"Do you think any woman would have the nerve to go on after she had felt
-a hand on hers and knew that some one had a clue, not absolutely
-definite but almost so?"
-
-"But, Ted, if any one denounced her, wouldn't he have to acknowledge the
-fact of his own motive? That would be enough to shut any one up."
-
-"I think Garraboy lied," persisted Beecher. "I think he had a part in
-the theft and at least I am sure he knows all about it."
-
-"Listen to reason," said Gunther warmly. "If Garraboy signed a
-confession like McKenna handed him, he wouldn't stop at returning a
-ring--particularly when he knows that McKenna will keep hold of him till
-the affair is closed up. No, no; Garraboy says he's cleared
-$200,000--you may be sure he's got considerably more. He's satisfied.
-He wants to get away from here quick. McKenna's not the only one on his
-track, you may be sure of that. No, it doesn't stand to reason he'd
-balk at a little matter like the ring."
-
-Beecher was silent, digesting the argument.
-
-"There may be one explanation," he said at length. "You noticed that the
-fellow was particularly anxious to know if Mrs. Kildair was behind us?"
-
-"Yes, I noticed all that."
-
-"Now McKenna thinks, and I do too, that Mrs. Kildair all along has known
-who took the ring and has only been held up before this from prosecuting
-on account of a possible scandal."
-
-"But, that's over now--nothing can be said--it was an engagement ring,
-of course."
-
-"Exactly; and that's the reason why I'm going to make this guess--that
-Garraboy, knowing the game was up, returned the ring this morning."
-
-"By George!"
-
-"And that's the reason he told the lie he did--knowing that everything
-will blow over in twenty-four hours."
-
-"Ted, by the Lord Harry, I believe you've hit it!" said Gunther
-excitedly. "I say--"
-
-"What?"
-
-"Let's go up to your rooms--there may be a letter from Mrs. Kildair."
-
-Full of eagerness they went to Beecher's rooms--only to return
-empty-handed and disappointed. Then they hurried to the club and
-searched the letter-boxes without success.
-
-Disappointed and impatient they went in to a late lunch.
-
-"What are you going to do about that check of Miss Charters'?" said
-Gunther in an aggressive tone.
-
-"Take it round to her," said Beecher, looking at him out of the corner
-of his eye.
-
-"Mail it."
-
-"Why?"
-
-"Gratitude and a pretty woman are a dangerous combination," said Gunther
-gruffly; "especially for something soft like you."
-
-"You damned, impertinent cuss," said Beecher acridly.
-
-"Fact. Better let me call a messenger boy and send it around."
-
-But in the pleased state of mind in which he was, Beecher had not the
-slightest intention of surrendering the delightful opportunity which the
-visit promised. Likewise, he was indignant at hearing from Gunther the
-same implications which amused him from the lips of a fascinating woman
-like Emma Fornez.
-
-"You've got a fine idea of me," he answered hotly.
-
-"I have."
-
-"According to you, I oughtn't to be allowed to roam the streets without
-a keeper."
-
-"Exactly expressed."
-
-"Don't alarm yourself," said Beecher in a lofty, superior tone, and,
-believing every word, he added, "I'm quite able to take care of myself.
-I know how to amuse myself--and I know it is amusing myself, thank you.
-You think I don't know anything about women--well, I know better than
-some people how to keep my head straight."
-
-"So you're going around?" said Gunther with a grin.
-
-"I am."
-
-"I thought you said you had never met any one who could make you so
-angry?"
-
-"Come and get me at five o'clock," said Beecher, with a trifling wave of
-his hand.
-
-"I begin to have my doubts," said Gunther slowly, with the air of one
-steeling himself against a great calamity.
-
-Beecher had no such anticipation as he went lightly out of the club and
-took his way up the Avenue. For the last day he had thought much more of
-the possible feelings of Nan Charters toward his own receptive person
-than of analyzing the impregnability of his own position. He had not
-telephoned, desiring to effect a little surprise. But as he neared his
-destination he remembered that she might possibly be out.
-
-"In that case I'll leave a little note--just a line with the check--as
-though it were a casual affair," he said to himself.
-
-But Miss Charters was in. An automobile was at the curb which he
-thought he recognized.
-
-Miss Charters herself answered the door, detaining him a moment in the
-anteroom.
-
-"I am so glad you came," she said in a low voice, but one in which it
-was impossible to mistake the pleasure. "I wanted you to know that. A
-friend of yours is here--but he won't stay long," she added softly, with
-that gentle appeal in her voice against which he knew no defense.
-"You'll stay--I want you to."
-
-"Who is it?" he asked.
-
-"Mr. Lorraine." And as she saw the instant stiffening that went through
-him, she said quickly, with that subtle, merciless flattery of which
-only women have the command, "Shall I send him away--if you wish?"
-
-"No."
-
-The two men greeted each other boisterously, but underneath their
-heartiness was a sudden sense of invaded territory.
-
-"Is he interested?" thought Lorraine, with an uneasy glance. "And why
-did she go out into the hall?"
-
-"What's his right here? Was he here to lunch, I wonder?" thought
-Beecher, and for the first time he felt something hot surging inside of
-himself.
-
-Each with an extra show of cordiality began to talk, addressing their
-remarks to the other. Only Lorraine, whose tenancy was thus threatened,
-continued to prolong his stay, anxiously watching the effect on the
-woman. At the end of half an hour, he no longer doubted, she was only
-waiting for him to go, uneasy and resentful at his delay.
-
-He rose, heavy of heart, and shook hands with Beecher, whom he would
-have liked to throttle, and nodding to Miss Charters, went toward the
-hall, hoping that she would follow him. But women in love match the
-wordless surrender and tenderness they show to the man to whom they
-yield with an equal cruelty toward those whose misfortune is to have
-loved them. She did not move, waiting impatiently until she heard the
-tardy click of the door. Then she went to him directly, standing quite
-close, looking up at him like a penitent schoolgirl.
-
-"I thought he'd never go," she said impatiently, and then with an
-uneasy, searching look in her eyes, she said contritely: "Do you think I
-am very terrible?"
-
-He smiled and shook his head, but without profiting by the opportunity
-her attitude invited.
-
-"You were engaged to Charlie once, weren't you?" he said, trying to give
-the question an accent of natural curiosity.
-
-"No, never."
-
-"Almost?"
-
-She shook her head impatiently at the introduction of this topic.
-
-"People said so."
-
-She shrugged her shoulders.
-
-"But he is in love with you," he said positively.
-
-What she did not like was the quiet, inconsequential way he spoke, for
-in her own mood she did not detect the jealousy underneath.
-
-"Please don't let us talk of Mr. Lorraine," she said quickly. "I have
-never been engaged to Mr. Lorraine and never could; first, because I
-don't intend to marry, and, second, because if I did, Mr. Lorraine could
-never appeal to me."
-
-She broke off and going to the telephone said to him over her shoulder:
-
-"You're not in a hurry?"
-
-"No."
-
-"Good--then we need not be interrupted."
-
-She called the office and left word that she would not be at home.
-Then, rising, she came slowly back, very subdued, still alarmed at the
-undisturbed friendship in his look.
-
-"I was afraid you wouldn't come to see such a little virago," she said
-softly.
-
-"I came to see you on a matter of business," he said, without thinking
-of his words.
-
-Her face fell.
-
-"Oh, indeed."
-
-He drew out his pocketbook and took out the check.
-
-"Mr. Garraboy is leaving very suddenly for Europe," he said, turning
-over the bit of paper. "He has decided to wind up his affairs. He
-wished me to give you this check in settlement of your account," with
-him.
-
-She stood quite still, her arms behind her back, but her eyes
-dangerously brilliant.
-
-"If it's only on business you came," she said, breathing deep, "you can
-keep your check."
-
-"But--"
-
-"Is it only on business you go to see other women?"
-
-He extended the check, and the jealousy Lorraine's presence had brought
-him made him seek to hurt her a little more.
-
-"Don't be unreasonable," he said.
-
-"If you don't answer," she said, stamping her foot, "I will tear it into
-pieces!"
-
-A quick, impulsive joy went through him at this revealing anger.
-
-"I came because I wanted to see you," he said with a provoking delight
-in his eyes. "This is of no importance."
-
-She took the check, still looking at him, became calmer, smiled, and
-then with a determined bob of her head, went to place it on her
-writing-desk. All at once she turned quickly:
-
-"But this is signed McKenna!"
-
-"That's a detail."
-
-"Your friend McKenna, the detective? Then you forced this out of him?"
-
-"It wasn't very hard."
-
-She let the check flutter from her fingers to the desk, thoughtfully
-considering it, divining slowly what it meant.
-
-"I am unreasonable," she said quietly, returning and holding out her
-hand. "Thank you. Why did you bother--after the way I acted?"
-
-"Well, just because," he answered, looking down into her eyes.
-
-"So, Garraboy is a defaulter," she said slowly.
-
-"I cannot tell you any more."
-
-All at once a thought came to her and an anxious frown passed over her
-forehead.
-
-"None of this is your money?" she said quickly.
-
-"No."
-
-"On your honor?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"It is a great thing you have done for me," she said solemnly. "I am
-very grateful."
-
-"Nonsense," he said lightly. "It was no trouble. I would have done it
-for any one."
-
-They were near the great dormer-windows, high above the threaded smoke
-and gray roofs of the city, now blending into fuzzy masses with the
-closing of the day.
-
-"Well, now that your business is over," she said, but with a new
-lightness, "I suppose you must be going?"
-
-"What do you want me to say?" he said, smiling with a growing feeling of
-well-being.
-
-"Why did you come?" she repeated maliciously, and, half-laughing,
-half-determined, she took the lapel of his coat in a gesture which, in
-her fingers, was almost a caress. She stood looking up at him, so
-happy, so brimming with the satisfaction of having him back, of
-regaining what she had feared to lose, that he could not resist the
-desire in her eyes.
-
-"Because I like you," he said.
-
-"Despite my tantrums and my moods?"
-
-"On account of them."
-
-"And would you have done what you did--for any one?"
-
-"Come to think of it--no."
-
-She was not content. She would rather that he had answered more
-sentimentally. She felt that he was stronger than she was, more
-controlled.
-
-"Are you interested in Emma Fornez?" she said, looking away from him.
-
-"Oh,--interested."
-
-"You like her?"
-
-"Yes, very much."
-
-"I shouldn't like to have you talked about."
-
-He did not answer.
-
-"What have I done that displeases you, Teddy?" she said all at once.
-
-But before he could answer, the room behind them dropped suddenly back
-into darkness.
-
-"The light's gone out," she said, startled, her hand on his arm.
-
-"The current's cut--that's all," he answered.
-
-"I'll light a lamp."
-
-"No. It's good here. Wait. It'll only be a moment."
-
-They remained in the dark, turning their glances out of the window,
-suddenly conscious of the panorama of the evening, the stir of departing
-multitudes, the end of labor and the evening of rest.
-
-"How plainly you can see," he said. "That's Brooklyn Bridge, isn't it?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-At the east three giant spans stood out across the unreal gray view that
-had neither banks nor green approaches, that cut its way like an
-invading flood through the cities. Innumerable, cottony puffs of steam,
-busy, hurrying, restless, rose from unseen hulls across the fading
-silhouettes of tangled spans. High to the south from a cyclopean tower a
-single ball of fire was shining. Below, in the long, straight avenues,
-the city was putting on its necklaces of brilliants; and from the black
-dotted masses that must be there somewhere in the growing obscurity,
-rushing home over the backs of the waters, high above housetops or deep
-through the bowels of the city, a great sigh seemed to rise with the
-sudden freshening of the twilight breeze, and the two human beings who
-looked down, as God looks down on this spectacle of a moving world,
-found nothing to express the sudden melancholy that troubled them,
-awakening vague desires, stirring them with the feeling of their own
-littleness.
-
-"Come," she said, turning away the first, and, lingering, looking back,
-placed a hand on his arm, repeating, "Come."
-
-He did not reply, looking beyond, deeply penetrated by all this humanity
-that each moment receded farther from them, isolating them, lifting them
-above the world into the loneliness of the skies. Her hand remained on
-his arm unconsciously, but this weight so soft but yet so imperious
-recalled him to himself. He thought no longer of what lay without. He
-looked at her. She was trembling. He too felt the subtle, disturbing
-restlessness of this dark that closed in about them, shutting out the
-peopled world--this mood of the day that exerts over human beings such a
-compelling desire.
-
-She turned and looked at him. He could not see her face distinctly,
-only the eyes--that seemed incapable of seeing all but this. Then
-abruptly, brusquely, by the same mutual impulse, they were in each
-other's arms, straining to each other, their lips irresistibly closed
-over each other, feeling themselves more and more wrapped around by this
-soft darkness that had cast them up, enfolding their loneliness in the
-great protective instinct of human love.
-
-The room flared up brilliantly. She recovered herself the first,
-drawing herself out of his arms, covering her face with fingers that
-still throbbed with the agony of their embrace.
-
-They could not look at each other, bewildered by the suddenness of what
-had happened. She went past him hurriedly to the fireplace, sitting
-down. He followed irresolutely, feeling his feet unsteady beneath him,
-all the intellectual forces within him submerged, drunk, overthrown by
-the sudden, delirious awakening of his senses, suddenly aroused by this
-revelation of woman.
-
-"What have we done? What was it?" she said breathlessly, without facing
-him. "We are crazy, Teddy,--crazy!"
-
-He came heavily to the other end of the fireplace, leaning on the
-mantel, looking down at the woman who was no longer an indefinite
-mystery of silks and colors, but a moving, living body that had stirred
-in his arms.
-
-"Teddy, we are crazy," she repeated. "What possessed us?"
-
-"It is you who are crazy now," he said abruptly. "What is the use of
-arguing? Those things are beyond us. It is over--it is settled. We
-had nothing to do with it."
-
-"No, no," she cried vigorously, jumping up. "It is not right. It isn't
-fair to you. We were swept off our feet."
-
-"Thank Heaven, yes."
-
-"But it's impossible, it's crazy--it's senseless. I don't want to
-marry, I don't want to fall in love. I want to be free--I must be
-free--I know that--you know that. So what then?"
-
-"What's the use of arguing? It's been settled for us."
-
-"But it isn't settled. I lost my head--you lost your head. We didn't
-know what we were doing. Marriage is impossible, absurd. I'm not a
-woman to marry--you would be unhappy--don't you see how ridiculous it
-is? I think only of myself--my career--"
-
-"What's all that amount to--you love me and I love you. It's always
-been so--we've been fools and I didn't know it."
-
-"But I don't know it," she cried; but at the same breath she knew that
-it was so. But this knowledge only roused in her the spirit to combat,
-to remit, to put away from her the threatening obstacle.
-
-"Nonsense. Why didn't you let me go? You wouldn't; you brought me
-back; you couldn't help it--and I came. I would have come if you had
-called me. I've said all that you say myself--what good did it do me?
-Here I am!"
-
-"Well, then--yes, we may love each other," she said desperately. "I
-don't know. I cannot reason it out--it may be so, perhaps--but even
-then? Teddy, it can't go on. Don't you see how wicked it would be--how
-wrong? Your wife can't be on the stage, and I can't give it up. It's
-everything--it's been my whole life. We must be strong--we must stop
-it. It's absurd--it's wrong."
-
-She came to him, seized with the two contrary impulses: an instinctive
-revolt, a desire to force him from her life, and something just as
-instinctive and irresistible that drew her back to him; and at the
-moment she said the most firmly, "No, no, it's absurd, it's wrong," she
-put out her hand and caught her fingers in his coat collar, just behind
-his ear, under the masses of his hair.
-
-He caught her to him, wrapping his arms around her; she continued to
-protest but, without resisting, her head dropped on his shoulder, her
-eyes closed, her lips breathlessly open.
-
-All at once from the hall came the sound of a key in the latch. They
-disengaged themselves hurriedly, arranging their disordered hair,
-standing ridiculously apart.
-
-From the antechamber came the voice of Miss Tilbury, the chaperon,
-discreetly remaining without:
-
-"Nan, dear, Mr. Hargrave is below. He has come for his manuscript."
-
-"But I'm not at home," she said in a muffled voice.
-
-"You ought to send it down to him, really."
-
-"Mr. Beecher is here--aren't you coming in?"
-
-"In a moment."
-
-The steps died out going to the back. Beecher, who had looked at the
-clock, uttered an exclamation. She came to him quickly, with the motions
-of the alert feline, and seizing his wrist said quickly:
-
-"Listen, Teddy, I will not hold you to what has happened. We are out of
-our senses, you and I. We are crazy--crazy. You must not see me for a
-while--two days at least--until we know what we are doing. Go, now,
-please--"
-
-Then, suddenly remembering that the same Hargrave had been the innocent
-cause of a little pain to him, she went quickly to the table and took up
-the offending play, and with that fine instinct of a woman to give even
-the smallest revenge to the man she loves, said:
-
-"Take this. Give it to Hargrave yourself. Say I cannot see him."
-
-"I shall see you tomorrow."
-
-"No, no; but telephone tonight."
-
-She listened a moment, her ear toward the hall like a child, and then
-sprang into his arms, and this time it seemed to him that it was she,
-not he, who dominated the embrace.
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER XXIII*
-
-
-At half-past five, Beecher, his brain in a whirl, arrived breathlessly
-at the office of McKenna. As luck would have it, only Gunther and the
-detective were there.
-
-"My friend is a little late," said McKenna, with a quick, jerky glance
-at the clock.
-
-"Where's Garraboy?"
-
-"Twirling his thumbs in another room," said Gunther, laughing. "In a
-cussing bad humor, too."
-
-For the second time, McKenna glanced nervously at the clock. Beecher
-was struck with the mood of restlessness that obsessed him. He passed
-aimlessly from desk to window and back again, apparently oblivious to
-their presence, immersed in some calculation that left its outward mark
-in a deep furrow between the eyebrows, while the cigar between his lips
-had gone out unperceived.
-
-"Mr. Beecher," he said suddenly, stopping short, "I'm not sure but what
-I've gone off on a ridiculous tangent--it may be--it may be. Have you
-still got that envelope I gave you?"
-
-"Yes, in my pocket--here," said Beecher, surprised, laying his hand on
-his coat.
-
-"It was a ridiculous thing for me to do," said McKenna quickly. He made
-a movement of his hand as though to take it, but repressed it, saying:
-"All I ask is, don't open it until I ask you." Then, still ruffled, he
-turned away, saying to himself: "Guessing--humph! I'd fire a man for
-doing that."
-
-The telephone rang with a message from the outer office and a moment
-later, to the amazement of both young men, Mapleson, of the firm of
-Sontag & Company, came in smiling and businesslike.
-
-"How are you, McKenna?" he said affably, shaking hands. "Sorry to keep
-you waiting. What can I do for you?"
-
-He was a slender, dark young man of forty-two or three, very graceful,
-pleasant in voice and fluent in manner, with a sure instinct for
-ingratiating himself where it best could serve.
-
-"How do you do, Mr. Beecher," he said on being introduced. "I am very
-glad to know you, Mr. Gunther. I have the pleasure of knowing your
-father slightly. The country owes him a great debt for what he's done
-in this panic. Well, is there any mystery I can clear up for you?"
-
-He accepted a chair, crossed his legs easily, brought out a gold
-cigarette-case, offered it with a wave and smiled at their declinations.
-
-"Why, yes, Mr. Mapleson, you can give us a little information," said
-McKenna.
-
-"Anything I can do for you, McKenna, glad to do it," said Mapleson.
-
-"You may remember a ring that was sold by your firm a few months ago to
-Mr. John G. Slade," said McKenna directly; "a single ruby, valued, I
-believe, around thirty thousand dollars."
-
-Mapleson did not avert his eyes from the glance of the detective, yet
-without a movement of his body an instant change came in his manner. He
-drew in a puff of smoke, let it out, nodded carefully and said:
-
-"Yes, known as the Bogota ruby. I remember perfectly."
-
-"I understand that that ring was brought back within the last ten days
-and pledged for a considerable amount."
-
-"Indeed?" said Mapleson. He flung away the half smoked cigarette, and
-busied himself with selecting another. "Well, what do you want to
-know?"
-
-"I want to know the name of the person--man or woman--who pledged it."
-
-Mapleson changed his mind, shut the cigarette-case with a snap, clasped
-his hands in front of him, thumbs up and pressed against his teeth.
-
-"Can you tell me a little more?" he said at last.
-
-"No, I cannot," McKenna said frankly.
-
-The eyes of the jeweler wandered from the detective and settled on the
-face of Beecher. The look made the young man flush. It was as though
-the smiling, affable confidant of feminine mysteries and intrigues was
-asking himself what part in all this he were playing.
-
-"Can you tell me for whom you are acting, Mr. Beecher?" he said
-suddenly.
-
-McKenna made a gesture of warning, interrupting:
-
-"I'm sorry--we cannot."
-
-"Have you a warrant?" continued Mapleson seriously. "In other words, is
-this a friendly meeting, or a legal procedure?"
-
-"There is no warrant as yet. It is a case we particularly desire to
-keep out of court," said McKenna.
-
-"It is very embarrassing," said Mapleson frankly, "very. I don't know
-quite how to act. Of course, McKenna, considering your relations with
-our firm, I should always be glad to assist you in any way--you
-understand that. The present case is different. The ring was not
-pledged with Sontag & Company, but with me personally. It is a personal
-matter and a very delicate one."
-
-"I understand that," said McKenna, frowning. "And yet I must inform you
-that I shall probably have to proceed in the usual manner."
-
-"Of course, if I'm brought into court on a summons," said Mapleson
-thoughtfully, "that is different. If I am faced by the fact that a theft
-has taken place, I can do nothing else but aid the law."
-
-"But now--"
-
-"At present? No, McKenna, I cannot give you the name of the person that
-pledged the ring with me. The case seems very complex to me--much more
-than you may believe; and as nothing is legally charged I prefer to keep
-my relations confidential."
-
-"Mr. Mapleson, can you answer this?"
-
-"What?"
-
-"Is your refusal because you believe the intention of the person who
-pledged it is to restore it to its owner?"
-
-Mapleson turned the question over a long time, whistling softly to
-himself. Finally he said:
-
-"I don't know. I know nothing."
-
-"Can you tell me the amount you advanced on the ring?"
-
-"Yes; I think I can tell you that," he said, after a moment's thought.
-"I advanced twenty-eight thousand dollars."
-
-"Twenty-eight?" said McKenna, lifting his eyebrows. "Twenty-eight on a
-ring worth only thirty thousand?"
-
-"It was not a business transaction--entirely," said Mapleson stiffly.
-
-"Then Sontag & Company knew nothing about it?"
-
-"No."
-
-"Was the ring pledged the day before Majendie committed suicide?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"In the morning?"
-
-"Early in the morning."
-
-"One final question. The ring is still in your possession?"
-
-"No."
-
-"It is not in your possession?" said McKenna, with a sudden clearing of
-his forehead. "Mr. Mapleson, you are answering this because you feel
-bound--"
-
-"Not at all," said Mapleson quickly. "The ring was redeemed this
-morning. I know nothing more about it."
-
-The speculations which were occasioned by this disclosure were suddenly
-interrupted by a knock on the door.
-
-"Come!" said McKenna sharply.
-
-An assistant entered the room with two letters. McKenna looked at the
-first and nodded, and then seeing the address on the second looked up
-quickly, saying:
-
-"How did this come--this letter for Mr. Beecher?"
-
-"It was sent down from his apartment, I believe, sir. Mr. Beecher's man
-brought it, I think."
-
-"Very well."
-
-McKenna dismissed him with a gesture, but instead of opening his letter
-thrust both of them into his pocket.
-
-"That's all, Mr. Mapleson," he said with incisiveness. "I'm sorry to
-have troubled you. It's quite possible, as you perhaps believe, this
-case will be settled out of court."
-
-"Let's hope so," said Mapleson non-committally. "I'm always at your
-service, you know. It's I who should apologize. Mr. Gunther, remember
-me to your father. Mr. Beecher, I hope to meet you soon again."
-
-He shook hands warmly with Beecher, as though the young man had acquired
-a new value in his eyes, and went out.
-
-The moment the door had shut, McKenna had the two letters out of his
-pocket.
-
-"Two letters from the same lady," he said, tossing one to Beecher.
-"Both messages the same, too, I'll bet. Of course!"
-
-He laughed and extended the letter to Gunther, who read:
-
-
-DEAR MR. MCKENNA:
-
-The ring has just been returned. Can I see you at once? Take no further
-measures.
-
-RITA KILDAIR.
-
-
-McKenna was a changed man. All the indecision had left him. His eyes
-were sparkling with pleasure and he was laughing to himself, as he took
-up the telephone.
-
-"Here, give me Clancy," he cried impatiently. "Hello. What's the matter
-with Brady; hasn't he come back with that information yet? He has?
-Well, why the devil--send in the figures! Quick!"
-
-A moment later a slip was in his hand and he was gazing at it eagerly.
-
-"Mr. Beecher, give me half an hour's start--no, better, three quarters
-of an hour. Wait--have you got a car? Good. Drive me up to Mrs.
-Kildair's as fast as you can get me there."
-
-"What about Garraboy?" said Gunther. "Is he to go free?"
-
-"Not by a damn sight!" said McKenna joyfully rushing them down the hall.
-In the office he stopped to say hurriedly: "Clancy, stick by
-Garraboy--feed him--but keep him close until I telephone you!"
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER XXIV*
-
-
-McKenna was not without that penetrating imagination that has in it the
-quality of vision, the power to invoke the figures of the past and to
-follow an idea into the recesses of the future. All that he had learned
-and all that he had tentatively surmised of the mysterious purposes of
-Rita Kildair, returned to him with renewed vividness as he entered the
-elevator saying briefly to a question:
-
-"I'm expected."
-
-In his long and profound pursuit of human lawlessness, the detective had
-formed a crude philosophy, built on the perception of the inequalities
-of justice. The beginning of all crime, if he could thus have phrased it
-to himself, was failure. For each man that he had sent to jail for
-embezzlement, in the capacious corridor of his memory he knew another
-who ethically was the greater rogue, and, as he had said to Beecher,
-each day he met one such, looked into his eyes, shook his hands and took
-his orders. For each woman upon whom public scorn had set the brand of
-adventuress, he knew another woman who stood enthroned by that same
-society. Confusedly in his mind he had shaped a crude analysis of life.
-For him only two classes existed, the strong and the weak. The strong
-was that brutal race which could not be held down by the restraints of
-society, who must rise, acquire power, dominate, obeying the natural
-instinct within them; the weak those who aided them in their upward
-progress, who served them when they had arrived, and who committed
-crimes in their names. It was not a moral view of life so much as it
-was a perception of the persisting law of all animal nature.
-
-The engagement to Slade, following so dramatically his triumphant rise
-from threatened disaster, had made him realize that whatever methods she
-had dared to employ, Mrs. Kildair was one of those whom society would
-never scorn for her failure. Intrigued as he was over the details of the
-theft of the ring, what absorbed him most was the woman. And determined
-at all hazards to force the defenses of her reserve, he rang the bell.
-
-Mrs. Kildair was at the piano, the riotous movements of an Hungarian
-Czardas filling the apartment. She broke off suddenly, rising as
-McKenna entered the studio. The mood of whirling ecstasy, suddenly cut
-off, was still in her flushed cheeks and excited eyes, as she glided
-rapidly toward him.
-
-She was in evening gown, of some flame-colored, filmy material, with
-sudden trembling flashes of gold bewildering to the eye, provoking to
-the imagination. The bodice, extreme in its daring, was not one of those
-stiff cuirasses, in which women encase themselves; rather the effect was
-of a billowy scarf that had caught and wrapped itself languidly about
-her. The low throat, the graceful arms, the brilliant row of pointed
-teeth over the full under lip, all had an extraordinary quality of
-vibrant, awake, impatient vitality.
-
-In seeing her thus, McKenna comprehended at once that she had prepared
-herself for Slade; but so daring was the effect of the seduction which
-she had barbarically planned to tantalize the financier, that McKenna
-himself felt the effect with a little nervous, conscious dropping of his
-eyes. The movement did not escape her, and not disdaining the tribute
-she smiled to herself a quick, feline little smile.
-
-"You, McKenna?" she said. "You are prompt."
-
-"I came immediately."
-
-"I was waiting for you."
-
-They stood a few feet apart in the middle of the studio studying each
-other, as two fencers take their measure before joining their swords.
-
-"You were at your office then?" she said the first.
-
-"Yes, I came up in Mr. Beecher's car."
-
-"Mr. Beecher was with you?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"I sent him--"
-
-"A letter, yes. He received it at my office."
-
-"But why didn't he come up with you?"
-
-"I asked him to give me half an hour here with you."
-
-"That was better," she said firmly.
-
-All the undisciplined impulses that had been stirring, gradually seemed
-to subside as she watched him, warily drawing about her an invisible
-defense.
-
-"Here is the ring," she said suddenly, extending her arm with a gesture
-that was no longer languid and feminine, but forceful and controlled.
-
-"I'd like to see it," he said.
-
-She drew it from her finger and held it out to him. He laid it in his
-palm and studied it profoundly.
-
-"What is it worth?" he asked.
-
-"Over thirty thousand dollars."
-
-"Ah," he said quickly. "Beecher told me you said fifteen thousand."
-
-She looked at him from under her eyelids.
-
-"I have just learned its value."
-
-"Remarkable--a splendid stone. It has had quite a history," he said,
-handing it back to her and watching it return to her finger. "Let's
-hope it will stay there quietly for some time."
-
-"You know its story?"
-
-"From the beginning. It will interest you. I'll send it to you."
-
-"Do."
-
-The last replies she had given were mechanical, her whole mind focused
-on him, alert for any sudden turn to her advantage, seeking to penetrate
-the tactics he would employ.
-
-"You kept away--on purpose," she said abruptly.
-
-"That's so."
-
-"Why?"
-
-"Well, call it a matter of vanity," he said.
-
-"In what way?"
-
-"You excited my curiosity--you were a little too clever in our last
-interview."
-
-"So you kept on with your investigations?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Successful?" she said lightly.
-
-"Very."
-
-"Indeed? Do you know who took the ring?"
-
-"The first time? No."
-
-She stopped, looked at him intently, and said:
-
-"The second time then?"
-
-"Yes, I know who took it the second time."
-
-"Who?"
-
-"You."
-
-She laughed without confusion and, turning from him, went toward the
-fireplace, resting one bare arm on the mantel, the red splash of the
-ruby showing like a flare of anger against her cheek. She looked back
-at McKenna, who had not moved, saying with an admonishing shake of her
-head:
-
-"McKenna, you are guessing."
-
-"It's a good guess."
-
-"Let me hear your theory."
-
-"It is not a theory today."
-
-"Indeed?"
-
-"Yesterday it was a guess; today, I know."
-
-"How do you know?"
-
-"Because today I saw Mapleson," he said, watching her.
-
-"Yes? Mapleson, of Sontag & Company? I know him very well," she
-replied with still no expression but amusement. "What then?"
-
-"The ring was pawned with him, a personal matter, the morning after the
-theft, for the sum of twenty-eight thousand dollars. It was redeemed
-today."
-
-"By whom?"
-
-"By you, naturally," said McKenna, yet despite his absolute conviction,
-her composure was such that he was almost shaken in his theory.
-
-"Mapleson never told you that."
-
-"No; he refused to answer. It lay in my mind between you and Mrs.
-Cheever. The fact that he would not answer, gave me my strongest clue."
-
-"In what way?"
-
-"If it had been Mrs. Cheever, he would not have concealed it, because it
-would have been a theft. But as it was you who came to him, he refused
-to divulge the name, because he knew that no crime had been committed
-and that we had either no right to be investigating, or were doing so to
-be blinded by you."
-
-"McKenna, you are guessing," said Mrs. Kildair again. "You are
-supposing that only Mrs. Cheever and I are on such terms with him that
-we could make such a personal transaction. As a matter of fact, not
-only Mrs. Bloodgood, but her husband and Miss Lille could have done the
-same thing."
-
-"True," said McKenna, but he added obstinately: "No, the only reason
-Mapleson withheld the name was because no crime had been committed."
-
-"Before we go on," she said with the same mocking smile, "would you mind
-telling me how you worked out this theory? Sit down. I really am
-interested."
-
-If McKenna had not in his possession one bit of information which he had
-withheld, he would have felt the nervousness of a possible and
-ridiculous failure. At it was, a doubt flashed across his mind; but he
-allowed her to see none of this hesitation.
-
-"I'm perfectly willing to let you know how it came about," he said,
-sitting down and speaking frankly. "I'm not laying claim to anything
-startling. I'll admit now that as to the details of how it was done, and
-why it was done, I don't know. I can guess; but I don't know. But as
-to tracing the ring and working back from that--that's A.B.C." Then,
-with a flash of intuition, he said abruptly: "Of course, Mapleson has
-just 'phoned you."
-
-"Well, go on," she said without reply, drawn back a little, listening
-intently.
-
-"The first thing I did was to locate the ring," he began. "You yourself
-know how easy it is to follow a stone worth thirty thousand. You know
-that, because the moment you found out I was on the case, you knew I
-would learn that Slade gave it to you. That's why you had me come
-here--to block it."
-
-"That's true."
-
-"Now, for a while, I admit I was in the dark, following several clues,
-and I don't mind saying here that until your engagement I was not at all
-sure it wasn't Mr. Slade himself who had taken that way of recovering
-it."
-
-"That's strange," she said, startled. "Yes, I can see that was
-possible, too."
-
-"Now, what I was working on," said McKenna, "was the strongest
-motive--that whoever took it up, took it because he had to take it to
-raise money, to pay a debt or to gamble on the market. So I
-investigated two ways--first, the back histories and the present
-standing of every one at your party; second, in the great jewelry shops,
-to find out if the ring had been sold or pawned."
-
-"Of course."
-
-"I didn't believe it had been done openly--that would have been too
-risky--but through some channel like Mapleson. But I wasn't thinking of
-Mapleson then. I couldn't locate the ring. I found out that Bloodgood,
-Cheever, Mrs. Cheever, Miss Lille and Garraboy had all speculated
-heavily on the market next day. That didn't help much. Now I come to
-my interview with you."
-
-Mrs. Kildair nodded and leaned forward slightly.
-
-"That worried me. After that, I did one thing and thought another.
-Down at the bottom, there was something that kept me thinking about you,
-something that bothered me. That's where the guess-work comes in, but I
-don't know as I'd call it guess-work. It's an instinct you get when you
-come in contact with a person--it's put me on the right track many a
-time. I saw you didn't want anything done, but what fooled me was, I
-thought it was--" He hesitated, and then said boldly: "Mrs. Kildair, no
-use talking unless we say what we mean, is there?"
-
-"Quite right, be professional," she said with a quick nod. "You thought
-I wished to conceal what my true relations were with Slade? That's it,
-isn't it?"
-
-"Yes, that was it," he said slowly. "And being wrong myself, I figured
-out a possible motive. I was dead sure you knew who had taken the ring.
-Don't ask how--that's instinct--but I knew. So I figured out it was
-blackmail you were afraid of, and I began looking around for the lady or
-gentleman who would know that the ring had belonged to Slade. Do you
-see?"
-
-"Yes, go on. It's very plausible."
-
-"It looked like Garraboy, and it looked like the Cheevers at times," he
-said. "Then Mr. Beecher told me of seeing Mapleson in Mrs. Cheever's
-box at the opera, and that you said you knew him. That's what started me
-on Mapleson. Likewise, I began thinking more and more about that
-interview with you. Then came your engagement and I flung over all my
-theories, and got down to work. I began to look you up, and when I
-found out the situation from Mapleson, I made up my mind then and there,
-for one reason or another, you yourself took the ring the second time."
-
-"Is that all?"
-
-"No, this evening I got the last link I'd been waiting for."
-
-"What's that?"
-
-"Your account with your broker, and the record of sales," he said,
-bringing out a slip from his pocket.
-
-"Do you get convictions on such evidence as this?" she said steadily.
-
-"No," he said frankly; "but I get confessions."
-
-"Why should I take my own ring?"
-
-"The situation was unusual. You probably learned of Majendie's failure
-and you plunged on the short side."
-
-"But why not do so openly?" she said calmly.
-
-He hesitated.
-
-"Do you really want me to answer that?" he said finally.
-
-"We are not mincing words."
-
-"You were not engaged to Mr. Slade at that moment," he began.
-
-"How do you know?"
-
-"I do know. The one thing in your interview with me I particularly
-remember was your anxiety that Mr. Slade should know nothing."
-
-She remained thoughtful, bracing her fingers against each other,
-carefully considering what he had shown he knew.
-
-"And your theory is that I took the ring the second time," she said,
-"when whoever first took it had thrown it on the table, that I called in
-detectives to make Slade believe it had been stolen, so that I could
-gamble in Wall Street without being suspected."
-
-"Exactly," he said. "I have no means of knowing who took it first, but
-I would gamble my soul you took it the second time. For another reason:
-any one who took it knew he faced a search--that it was almost
-impossible to get it out of the room. The only person who could take it
-without being suspected was yourself."
-
-"McKenna," she said at last, but without the amusement that had formerly
-been in her eyes, "you are still guessing."
-
-He rose impatiently and went across the room, his hands behind his back.
-
-"Then, Mrs. Kildair," he said, turning, "do you wish me to report what I
-have just told you to my client, Mr. Beecher--as a guess?"
-
-She stood up at once, fully alert.
-
-"Mrs. Kildair, I am not an enemy," he continued, with a sudden change of
-manner. "I may not know all--but I know too much. Now, I'll tell you
-right out why I want your confidence. You marry John G. Slade. Slade
-is going to be one of the biggest figures in the country; I know that.
-I've had his business; I want to keep it. It's going to be ten times
-what it was before. More, I want his backing. I want several big jobs
-other agencies have got--The Bankers' Association, for one. Now, from
-what I've seen of you, the force back of Slade will be Mrs. Slade. Tell
-me yourself what I already know and I know I've got you as a friend.
-Keep it from me, and I know you'll supplant me with your husband. There
-may come a time when I can serve you--you never can tell. It's worth
-trying. I repeat I know too much. The only way to guard against it is
-by full confidence."
-
-"You are right. I will tell you," she said suddenly, and she added
-seriously, "I was prepared to tell you. But it is understood this
-remains our secret."
-
-"My word."
-
-"And that Mr. Beecher is not to have the slightest clue. Can you
-promise me that?"
-
-"I have another story ready."
-
-"Good. Then it is an alliance," she said, and she offered her hand
-abruptly, with a movement full of authority.
-
-McKenna shook hands, surprised at the masculine directness of her grip,
-surprised too at the utter disappearance from her face and attitude of
-all the impulsive fire and fascination that had first struck him.
-
-"You are right, and you are wrong," she said directly. "I took the
-ring, but in an entirely different way from what you believe. I did not
-take it at the table, as you think--do you know where I found it?"
-
-"Where?"
-
-"In the pocket of Mr. Beecher's overcoat."
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER XXV*
-
-
-McKenna was so startled at this announcement that the expression on his
-face brought a smile to the face of the woman.
-
-"Let me begin at the beginning," she said.
-
-While he seated himself, she continued moving about, her head down, her
-lip closed over her under lip, carefully considering the situation. She
-had no fear to give her confidence. She understood the man with whom
-she was dealing, the more so for his open avowal of his reasons for
-seeking her friendship. Also she was fully alive as to the strength of
-such an alliance. What she considered was how much she should reveal.
-To-morrow she would be Mrs. John G. Slade, at the goal of her ambitions,
-over what perilous paths only she herself knew. The knowledge of what
-she had won suffocated her, for the nature of dramatic and adventurous
-spirits is such that they must seek relief in confidence. More, they
-crave the admiration that only another can bring to complete their
-moments of self-intoxication. At this moment, when her rle had been
-played, she craved applause. McKenna was not a friend--he was a
-machine, a rock that would give back an echo. Beside, what had he not
-divined?
-
-"McKenna," she began quietly, though weighing her words, "to any one
-else I might tell my story differently. With you it is otherwise. You
-are no fool. I shall speak openly. On the night of my party I was
-virtually ruined."
-
-"Ruined!" exclaimed McKenna, with an involuntary glance at the luxury
-which surrounded them.
-
-"When I say ruined, I mean for me," she said, nodding. She became
-thoughtful, looking beyond him, seeing a distant self. "When I came
-here I had fifteen thousand a year. I was not satisfied. I wanted
-forty. I gambled. I have always gambled. I lost heavily. That night I
-had only five thousand a year left. That was ruin for me. I speculated
-on the tips of a man who deliberately and for a purpose misinformed me.
-Can you guess who that man was?"
-
-"Slade," said McKenna instantly.
-
-"Yes, Slade," she said. "It has been a desperate struggle between us.
-Tomorrow I shall become his wife. That is what I want more than I have
-ever wanted anything else. It is my right--you will see what I will do.
-Understand me, if Slade had failed I should not have married him, and
-yet I tell you frankly he is the only man I have known that appeals to
-me in every way. However," she added, with a little abrupt movement of
-her closed hand, "that's over. I have won."
-
-"Did he know that you had lost?" asked McKenna slowly.
-
-"No," she said with a smile, "he never knew. Not that he would not have
-made it up--in his way. It is a game he must have played many times."
-She went to a writing-desk and, unlocking a drawer, brought out a note.
-"When I told you he gave me this ring with an offer of marriage," she
-said, returning, "that was not true. He had no thought of marriage
-then--far from it. He offered me the ring and I refused it, knowing
-that he did so only to try my weakness. Also, he wanted to find out
-what I knew of Majendie and the Atlantic Trust. When he left he sent it
-back with this note. Read it."
-
-McKenna took the sheet, smoothing out the wrinkles, and held it up.
-
-
-DEAR LADY:
-
-Apologies for my rudeness. If you won't accept a gift, at least wear
-the ring for a week. I should like to know what effect it could have on
-your cold little soul. Oblige my curiosity. It's only a little
-reparation for the disappointment I gave you.
-
-J.G.S.
-
-
-Mrs. Kildair took the note again and returning to the desk locked it in
-the drawer.
-
-"This, then, was my situation the night of the party. I had lost two
-thirds of what I had. I was absolutely resolved to play everything I
-possessed on one last gamble. I need not remind you of the financial
-situation at that time. I knew Majendie and I knew Slade. Furthermore,
-I knew Mrs. Bloodgood. The problem was this--if Majendie was to be
-supported and the Atlantic Trust to be upheld, there would probably be
-no panic. If Majendie failed, I knew there would be a tremendous break
-in stocks--a killing for those who knew what was coming. That night
-everything depended on my solving Majendie's fate. I did and I won. It
-was a guess, but a guess such as you understand. I have known too many
-men not to know how a true man acts under such circumstances. He came
-from the meeting that had condemned him, and the first moment he greeted
-Mrs. Bloodgood, I was sure that he was lost. Later, as he bowed
-ironically to something I had said, I saw in the gaping of his pocket
-something that gave me another clue--a slight thing, but which had a lot
-to do with what followed--just an edge of a green folder."
-
-"A folder?" said McKenna, perplexed.
-
-"Yes, a folder that I thought might be a railroad time-table," she said,
-nodding. "I knew, of course, of Mrs. Bloodgood's infatuation. I had
-her confidence. I knew that she had started to procure a divorce. I
-likewise knew how often she had begged Majendie to elope with her.
-Furthermore, almost every one there that night was watching Majendie for
-the same purpose--all who were speculating; Mr. and Mrs. Cheever,
-Bloodgood, Garraboy, Maud Lille, Slade--who came in late, quite
-unexpected--were there on the same errand."
-
-"Yes, that I understood," said McKenna.
-
-"Now, I come to the actual theft of the ring. The moment I found it had
-been taken, I realized all the difficulties of my position, how
-dangerous any inquiry would be to my reputation, which would necessarily
-establish the fact of its being a gift of Slade's. I resolved on
-desperate measures. That is why I came back, had the doors locked,
-extinguished the lights, and announced that I would call in detectives
-to have every one searched, unless the ring was restored during the
-period in the dark, while I counted one hundred."
-
-"Did you suspect who had taken it?" asked McKenna.
-
-"There were several I could suspect--that was the trouble," she said.
-"As you know, when I had counted sixty-one, there was a sound on the
-table. Every one exclaimed! The ring had been restored! When the lights
-were lit the table was bare. Evidently a second thief had taken what the
-first had restored. That's what I thought--every one thought. I was
-wrong. There were not two thieves, there was only one."
-
-"The same person had put it down as a blind and taken it again," said
-McKenna slowly, as she waited for his comment.
-
-"No," she replied, smiling. "It was all cleverly planned, and only an
-accident prevented its being successful. My ring was never on the
-table."
-
-"The ring that was thrown down, then," said McKenna, suddenly
-enlightened, "was another ring--a blind--to cover what any one might
-have seen? I see!"
-
-"And also to make it appear that the ring was in the studio."
-
-"Yes, I understand it now," said McKenna, nodding, with a sudden snap of
-his fingers.
-
-"I immediately went out, locking the door, and telephoned for my
-detectives. To this point this was my only thought. When I had done
-that, I began to think over what had happened. It seemed incredible to
-me that any one should have dared take such a risk--particularly as a
-search was inevitable. When I returned to the studio and awaited the
-arrival of my detectives, this was my only thought. I studied each and
-I became convinced that the ring would not be found on any one. If that
-were true, where was it? In the studio, hidden somewhere--but even
-there it would be sure to be found--so why should any one have even
-risked that?" She stopped a moment and then said quietly, with again
-that same far-seeing look beyond him: "McKenna, in my life I have seen
-many strange scenes. I have known of many more. One such came back to
-me and I guessed this much--that the real ring had not been heard. But
-that was all. When the detectives arrived, I went quietly into the
-hall, still trying to work it out. Quite by accident, I brushed against
-one of the coats that was hanging over the railing and knocked it down.
-Absolutely mechanically, without knowing why I did it, when I picked it
-up I ran my hands in the pockets. In the second was the ring."
-
-"And the coat, you say, was Beecher's?" said McKenna, amazed.
-
-"Wait. I replaced it hurriedly, noticing how similar it was to another
-that still lay on the rail. Then I opened the door and ushered the
-detectives into the dining-room. I had the ring, but I did not know the
-thief. Then all at once it came over me to what use I might put what
-had occurred. I had the ring which had been offered me, but which I
-could not accept openly. I could now use it to raise money for the
-speculation I had resolved upon, without Slade's knowing of the
-obligation. Second, I wanted to make sure that I had really seen a
-time-table in the pocket of Majendie. I gave my order to that effect to
-the detectives and started the search."
-
-"Was it a time-table?"
-
-"Nothing was found. Majendie, profiting either by the first period of
-darkness, or the second, had thrown it away. I found it in the
-waste-basket a little later. It was a time-table and his very action
-made my guess a certainty."
-
-"But the thief?"
-
-"When the turn of Garraboy arrived," said Mrs. Kildair, "he left, as all
-did, without returning to the studio. I was watching him particularly.
-Five minutes after he left, he returned. He had taken Mr. Beecher's
-coat by mistake."
-
-An exclamation of annoyance escaped McKenna. He sprang up angrily.
-
-"Mrs. Kildair," he said, not attempting to restrain his annoyance, "that
-is the one thing Mr. Beecher neglected to tell me--see how we are
-handicapped--"
-
-"I'm not blaming you, McKenna," said Mrs. Kildair with a smile. "On the
-contrary, you discovered entirely too much."
-
-"It was cleverly worked out," said McKenna grimly, "and no risk. He had
-his wits about him. Sounding another ring on the table to limit the
-search to the studio was quick thinking. Planting it in Beecher's coat
-was better. Even if he were caught with it on, he could pretend
-amazement, a natural mistake. And if not, it was a clean getaway," he
-added ruefully. "All the same, I wish I'd known that detail."
-
-"For the rest you were right. Mapleson loaned me the money. He is an
-old acquaintance, and I have once or twice," she said carelessly,
-"rendered him important services. He did telephone me ten minutes
-before you came. I staked everything I had in the market. I doubled my
-losses. Is there any other point?"
-
-"Your having the detectives stay was, of course, a blind?"
-
-"Of course. I called Miss Charters and Garraboy on purpose. To this
-day I wonder who he thinks got the ring from him."
-
-"He suspects," said McKenna.
-
-"Probably," she said carelessly. Then she turned on him. "Now,
-McKenna, answer me a question."
-
-"Which one?"
-
-"It's a thing I want to know," she said, with a sudden shade of dread
-creeping over her face. "It is one of those fatalities in life that are
-so terrible. Majendie killed himself because he thought the detectives
-on his track had a warrant for his arrest. Weren't they, in fact, your
-men, simply placed there to record his movements for Slade?"
-
-"Mrs. Slade," said McKenna, not noticing the slip, "you have just given
-me a profound confidence. Would you trust in my power to keep it, if,
-supposing I knew anything, I should tell you? Ask your husband himself
-and tell me yourself. I am curious also."
-
-Mrs. Kildair, who saw in the politic evasion a feminine answer, nodded
-and drew back with a shudder.
-
-At this moment Kiki entering announced that Mr. Beecher was below.
-
-"Tell him the truth," said McKenna quickly. "That is, three quarters of
-the truth. Leave it to me."
-
-When Beecher entered, expectation and long-restrained curiosity on his
-face, McKenna, with a look of crestfallen defeat which completely
-deceived him, said immediately:
-
-"Mr. Beecher, have you that envelope I gave you?"
-
-"Am I to open it?" said Beecher eagerly, bringing it out.
-
-"On the contrary," said McKenna, taking it quickly. He took it and
-could not resist examining the edges to see if it had been tampered
-with. "This is one of my failures, Mr. Beecher," he said, tearing it
-into small pieces. "I've got too much vanity to let you see what an ass
-I've been."
-
-"What does this mean?" said Beecher, standing open-mouthed.
-
-"It means, Teddy," said Mrs. Kildair severely, "that it is entirely your
-fault."
-
-"My fault!"
-
-"Yes, your fault. You neglected to tell Mr. McKenna the one thing that
-was important."
-
-"What thing--what do you mean?"
-
-"That Mr. Garraboy went off with your coat by mistake."
-
-"Yes, Mr. Beecher," said McKenna, shaking his head, "by not telling me
-that one detail, you've made a fool out of me."
-
-"Then, Garraboy took it!" said Beecher, his face lighting up with a
-smile of triumph.
-
-"Garraboy took it, planted it in your pocket and then faked the ring at
-the table. The ring was returned through a woman who guessed it and had
-it restored. Her name is a secret, but you are at liberty to guess."
-
-"Miss Lille," said Beecher to himself. This dnouement, which coincided
-so closely with his own divination, completely convinced him.
-
-"If you've no further use for me," said McKenna, with the same hang-dog
-look, "I'll be going. Another time I hope to serve you better."
-
-"Thank you," said Mrs. Kildair, who contrived to add to the words a
-little smile, comprehensible only to the detective.
-
-"Permit me to give you my profound congratulations," said McKenna,
-taking her hand with a bow that made Beecher open his eyes in wonder.
-"I wish you every success."
-
-"_Au revoir_, McKenna," said Mrs. Kildair, still smiling.
-
-"Good-night, McKenna," said Beecher in turn.
-
-"Oh, you," said the detective, going off grumbling; "I have a bone to
-pick with you."
-
-Beecher laughed guiltily when the door had closed.
-
-"By Jove," he said, "McKenna certainly is in bad humor. I'm sorry. But
-he was off on a tangent, wasn't he?"
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER XXVI*
-
-
-"Just one thing I would like to know," said Beecher when Mrs. Kildair,
-following McKenna's lead, had left off with Garraboy's departure.
-
-"What?" she said, noticing his sudden embarrassment.
-
-He could not keep from his face a new consciousness, but he went on
-lamely:
-
-"Why did Miss Charters come back?"
-
-She laughed at what his manner revealed, and said:
-
-"So that's it! I told you she came when I telephoned her."
-
-"Yes, but why did you do that?"
-
-"Because I noticed her agitation and the way she watched one person in
-particular."
-
-"Mrs. Bloodgood?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"What did she tell you?"
-
-"She had seen Mrs. Bloodgood pick up the ring and try it on," said Mrs.
-Kildair. "The circumstances did seem suspicious, for Mrs. Bloodgood
-looked up in the mirror and saw her watching her. Miss Charters did not
-know whether she had returned it, I suppose. That was all. It did look
-bad--considering what happened afterward."
-
-"That was it, then," said Beecher, satisfied. He raised his head and
-saw Mrs. Kildair's eyes on him intently.
-
-"Well?" he said with an innocent expression.
-
-"How far has it gone?" said Mrs. Kildair.
-
-"What?"
-
-"Are you in love with Miss Charters?"
-
-"I wonder," he said evasively.
-
-"Are you serious?" she asked quickly.
-
-"And if I said yes--"
-
-"You are thinking of marriage?"
-
-"And if I were?"
-
-"You'd be a big fool," she said decisively.
-
-He raised his eyebrows, astonished and wounded.
-
-"You say this--the day before your own?"
-
-"Come here," she said, taking him by the wrist and leading him to the
-sofa. "Sit down there. Are you really seriously thinking of marriage?"
-
-"Yes, I am."
-
-She drew back in her chair, looking at him in doubt.
-
-"Teddy," she said at last, "you are too worth while to be spoiled like
-that. You have been too loyal a friend for me not to keep you from this
-blunder."
-
-"But, good heavens, am I not a responsible being?"
-
-"Listen," she said, cutting him off. She glanced at the clock. "I
-haven't much time, so don't interrupt me. I am very fond of you and
-what I say is in kindness. Yes, I am going to marry, and yet I say to
-you that you should not. I understand what it means. I have nothing to
-learn. There are two kinds of marriages, Teddy. The marriage that
-ninety-nine persons out of a hundred make--the marriage that is a
-joining of forces to fight the battle of life--has a definite object.
-The wife is the helpmate. The serious thing is to live, to pay the
-bills and to save a little money. You have nothing to do with that kind
-of marriage. The other kind of marriage is the marriage our sort makes,
-most of the time--no responsibilities, no object, and no struggle. You
-take a wife to help you enjoy yourself, and your enjoyment depends on
-piling up new sensations--in never being bored. Happiness in such
-conditions is a miracle. As a matter of fact, it is not a marriage at
-all, it is simply a liaison."
-
-"Even then?"
-
-"Yes, certain liaisons have lasted and been happy," she admitted; "we
-know that, but only on the same terms that will make permanent happiness
-in such a marriage. You are not a worker--you are simply curious about
-life, and curiosity is not a thing that is satisfied by one experience.
-The marriage you would make now would simply be an experience in
-curiosity, with inevitable results. To have any chance of success, do
-you know what ought to be?"
-
-"What?"
-
-"There should be on each side an equal experience in curiosity. When
-you have known two hundred women, you will find that there is always one
-above the rest who is necessary to you. Miss Charters may be that one
-now, but without the experience I speak of, you will never recognize it
-until too late. Therefore," she said, standing up, "don't marry for ten
-years. Not with such eyes and such lips," she said, passing her hand
-over the flushed face of the young man. "I know what I'm speaking of.
-Life's a very big world when you're alone, and a very small patch when
-you're married. Wait. Think over what I've said, Teddy."
-
-He did think over what she had told him as he walked out into the
-street.
-
-"She sees very clearly," he said solemnly, "and there's a great deal in
-what she says--a great deal," he repeated firmly, and stopping at the
-first hotel he telephoned Nan Charters.
-
-The next morning he received another note from her.
-
-
-Just to repeat, Teddy dear, that I think too much of you to hold you to
-what happened yesterday. We must both think _seriously--very
-seriously_.
-
-NAN.
-
-
-"That's right: we must think seriously," he repeated solemnly, and
-reached for the papers, after eying the telephone for a long time.
-
-Gunther called up later in the morning to give him an astonishing bit of
-news--Garraboy had sailed for Europe at nine that morning, and on the
-same ship had gone Mrs. Cheever. But this news did not excite him in
-the least. He spent the morning very heavily, keeping to his promise
-not to telephone with great difficulty. He did not go to his club for
-luncheon, but took his meal alone at a chance restaurant.
-
-Then he went to call on Emma Fornez.
-
-"Aha, you have called to talk to me about your little Chartrs," said
-the prima donna at once.
-
-"How do you know?" he said bluntly.
-
-"It's very simple; when a man's in love he never talks it over with a
-man--no, he always goes to another woman."
-
-"Well, would you be surprised if I married Miss Charters?" he said, glad
-to have arrived at the only topic which interested him.
-
-"If you what!" exclaimed Mme. Fornez, catapulting from the sofa.
-
-"If I marry," he repeated firmly.
-
-"Marry? Oh, no, no, no!" she cried, with her hands on her hips and
-bobbing her head to each negation. "Amuse yourself--love--flirt--break
-her heart or break yours--_est-ce que je sais_--but marry? What! You
-are mad!"
-
-"I mean it."
-
-"No, impossible! Marry one of us--an actress--you--a nice boy? _Allons
-donc_. You ought to be shut up. Marry Chartrs. You might just as
-well marry Emma Fornez, and when I say that--oh, la, la! My poor boy, I
-pity you!"
-
-"But you all marry."
-
-"True. But what difference does it make to us?" she threw out her chin,
-the gesture of the peasant. "You are serious?"
-
-"Very."
-
-"Let me talk to you. I have only a minute. My masseuse is coming and
-in America one doesn't receive with a masseuse--_enfin_. Listen to me
-well. You want to marry seriously--for good, then? Children and all the
-rest? Well, my boy, you might just as well marry Emma Fornez and expect
-her to spend her days over a ragout as to marry Chartrs. Will she give
-up her career?"
-
-"We haven't thought of that."
-
-"It makes no difference. On the stage, off the stage, it's the same
-thing. She won't change. Do you want to play the part of a valet, a
-little dancing dog, _hein_? For that's just what you'll be; and one of
-twenty. For she's used to crowds of men. She won't change. Love, my
-dear boy, is madness, hallucination, you are drunk; but everything
-returns as it was before--believe me. If I were a man I'd never fall in
-love with a woman until I married her--it's easy enough then. You would
-know what you're getting!"
-
-The masseuse came in, sliding on tiptoe from one door to another.
-
-"Victorine--_ma masseuse_! In a minute, in a minute, Madame Tenier.
-I'll be with you in a minute. Where was I? Teddy, you do not know us
-professional women--we are wrestlers, we are always struggling with you
-men--I warn you. No two ways. She will never be happy, my dear
-boy--because she never is happy. We are never happy, or we would not be
-what we are. And what of moods, day in and day out. _Tiens_--I'll tell
-you what you'll be--another Victorine. Victorine, _o diable es-tu_?
-No, no, Teddy; don't be a big fool; don't be an idiot. You are so nice.
-You can amuse yourself so well. Don't put your head in a noose. If she
-loves you now, she won't to-morrow; she can't help it. Then where'll
-you be--in the soup, _hein_. And she? No, no, believe me, Teddy, never
-marry, in the first place, and then never marry one of us."
-
-"There's something in what she says," thought Beecher, as he moodily
-descended in the elevator. "She knows her own kind better than I do."
-
-He looked undecidedly at the clock and went to pay a dinner call on Mrs.
-Craig Fontaine. In ten minutes they were on the same subject.
-
-"I am terribly upset," said the young widow. "I don't want any trouble
-to come to you, and I can't help thinking that what you are considering
-is a very risky step. In the first place, Teddy, you are too young."
-
-He made a movement of impatience at this repetition, which had begun to
-offend his sense of dignity.
-
-"You don't know what is ahead," she said warmly. "You do not realize
-that points of view change. What you seek now, romance, adventure, is
-not what you'll seek at thirty-five, and life is mostly after
-thirty-five, Ted. Today you are willing to sacrifice every friend in
-the world for one love; tomorrow you will realize that friends are our
-life, their ways, their companionship, their interests. Today you hold
-yourself very cheaply; tomorrow you will wake up, look round you, see
-what other women have brought to their husbands, and you will say, 'What
-am I worth?'"
-
-"You believe in mercenary marriages, then?" he said irritably.
-
-"No, but I believe in staying in the same society in which you belong.
-I don't want to be cruel, but Miss Charters is of another world. I know
-there is nothing against her. She may be able to enter your world, and
-then again she may not want to--may prefer the freedom of her own, and
-you will follow her. Have you thought of that? Your friends must be
-your wife's friends, or you will give them up. Marriage, Teddy, which
-can be the most decisive act in a man's life, is the one he throws away
-the most lightly. I'm only afraid you may wake up to what you might
-have done, Teddy. You are young, eager, you are not yet bored. You may
-feel the desire to be something, to do something that counts in your
-life. I don't want you then to wake up and realize that another
-marriage might have given you the connections you wanted, the added
-opportunity. At this moment marriage appears to you the only thing that
-counts; you will realize some day that it is the least thing in it."
-She smiled, as he looked amazed, and added: "No amount of discussion can
-make you understand these things--they must be lived. But, Teddy,
-before you leap, ask yourself seriously what you are worth."
-
-When he left Mrs. Fontaine's presence, he did so with lagging steps.
-The advice of these three women, so various and viewing life from such
-divergent points of view, profoundly impressed him. He tried to argue
-against what had been told him, and as this process irritated him beyond
-measure, he broke off, acknowledging their superior insight. But all at
-once he stopped short, enlightened by a sudden reflection.
-
-"If what they say is true ... why did they all marry?"
-
-This answer, which might seem no answer at all, appeared to the mind of
-the lover, which is to say to the mind seeking to be convinced, so
-complete and startling a refutation, that he swung on his heel, and went
-directly to offer himself to Miss Charters.
-
-
-
-
- *EPILOGUE*
-
-
-Three years after the close of these events there were gathered in a box
-of the Metropolitan Opera, Mr. and Mrs. Gunther, senior, the Teddy
-Beechers, Bruce Gunther and a Miss Clarice Fanning, of the Virginia
-Fannings, a young girl demure, direct, with already in the youthful
-instincts of her pose more than a suggestion of the dignity and elegance
-which would come to grace the woman. From time to time, by a little
-movement of her fan, she brought to her shoulder for a whispered comment
-Bruce Gunther, who, though he had seated himself behind Mrs. Beecher,
-was compensated by the advantage of thus exchanging glances. All these
-little messages, which the young girl flattered herself were so cleverly
-executed as to remain invisible, were seen by every one in the box with
-discreet enjoyment.
-
-At the end of the act the two young men excused themselves and departed
-to make a round of visits.
-
-"Nan's charming, Ted," said Gunther, who saw them both for the first
-time since their long stay in Europe. He added with the extra
-enthusiasm with which a man of the world conveys his surprise at an
-unexpected development: "By George! she has the manners of a duchess!
-The governor, crabby old critic, too, is quite won over by her."
-
-"She has developed beautifully," said Beecher, with a certain
-proprietary responsibility which young husbands feel deeply. "She is a
-remarkable woman! ... remarkable!"
-
-"Well, you fooled all the prophets," said Gunther in his blunt way.
-
-"How so?"
-
-"We gave you a year, at the most," said Gunther, who stopped short and
-looked at his friend as though to ask the explanation of such a miracle.
-
-"My wife adores me," said Beecher, with a smile.
-
-Gunther smiled to himself and thought that if the wife had developed as
-though by right into the sure and brilliant woman of the world, the
-husband at heart had retained the same boyish irreverence of the
-mysterious depths of life.
-
-"You ought to get into something, Ted," he said abruptly. "You can't
-loaf in America! ... I'll give you an opening."
-
-"That's why the Missus brought me back," said Beecher. "Look out, I may
-take up that offer!"
-
-This reply, unconsciously delivered, gave Gunther the first glimpse of
-light into the perplexing success of his friend's marriage.
-
-"Well, where's the first call?" he said, registering in his mind this
-last perception.
-
-"I want to drop in on Mrs. Fontaine, Mrs. Slade," ... he considered a
-moment and added, "Mrs. Bloodgood, too, I am anxious to see..."
-
-"Don't forget Emma Fornez ... you ought to go behind," said Gunther, for
-the opera was _Carmen_.
-
-"Yes," said Beecher, with a little hesitation.
-
-"Next act ... Let's drop in on Louise Fontaine, first..."
-
-"There are reasons ... just at present..." said Gunther with a slight
-frown. "Anyhow, here's Slade's box--let's begin here."
-
-Mrs. Slade at their entrance rose directly, and came to meet them in the
-antechamber.
-
-"How nice of you to come here first," she said with genuine pleasure,
-extending both her hands. "Mr. Gunther, go into the box ... I want a few
-minutes alone with Teddy!" She turned to Beecher, motioning him to a
-seat on the cushioned settee in the little pink and white room that was
-like a jewel box. "I saw you at once ... Your wife has made a
-sensation!"
-
-"It is you, Rita, who are astonishing!" he said abruptly.
-
-"How so?" she said, already comprehending the frank wonder in his eyes.
-
-"You always did fascinate us, you know," he said, reclining a bit, the
-better to take in the elegant sinuosities of her pose. "But that was
-nothing to you now ... You are the opera itself!"
-
-"Not quite yet," she said, with a confident little bob of the head. She
-added, "I am happy!"
-
-In truth, just as men of conscious greatness who, in the period of their
-struggles, have a certain brusque and impatient unease, suddenly in the
-day of their success acquire a dignity and a radiating charm that
-astonishes, so in her a similar transformation had operated. The old
-feline restlessness, the swift and nervous changes from Slavic
-somnolence to sparkling energy, has been subdued in a clear serenity,
-and as she received the flattering tribute of the young man who had been
-associated with her period of uncertainty, there was in her smile a new
-graciousness that was not without its authority.
-
-"You too are happy!--it shows!" she said after the moment which she
-allowed Beecher to study her.
-
-"Very!"
-
-"You have children?"
-
-"Two." Then recalling with a little pardonable malice the intention of
-his visit, he said: "You were a bad prophet, Rita! ... You remember?"
-
-"I do."
-
-"Well?..."
-
-"Well, I underestimated your intelligence, my dear Teddy," she said,
-with a fugitive smile. "You are settling in America?"
-
-"Yes, the Missus has planned to make me a captain of finance," he said
-with a laugh. "However, I am ready for something active."
-
-"Tell your wife," she said irrelevantly, "that I will come to see her
-after the next act. My husband returns tomorrow ... save the night
-after for us ... I want to be as good a friend to her as you have been
-to me! ... Give my message exactly!"
-
-"I promise!"
-
-All at once his eyes, which had been searching, rested on her left hand.
-On the fourth finger, guarded by the gold band of her marriage, was the
-ruby ring.
-
-"It's the same, isn't it?" he asked.
-
-"I always wear it," she said, raising it to her eyes. "It is a fetish."
-
-"We ran across Garraboy a couple of times ... He married her, you know."
-
-"She married him, you mean..."
-
-"Yes, that would be more correct ... watches the beggar like a hound ...
-a pleasant life he has of it! ... By the way, did the story about the
-ring ever leak out?"
-
-"Never!" She rose, as though feeling the end of the intermission.
-"Tell me one thing, Teddy...."
-
-"A dozen!"
-
-"Did you tell your wife I advised you not to marry?"
-
-"Never!"
-
-"Don't! ... There are things a woman doesn't forgive, and I want to be
-good friends!"
-
-Beecher nodded.
-
-Gunther came out, and she gave them her fingers, remaining tall and
-stately, her head inclined a little pensively, until they had left.
-
-"Most remarkable woman here!" said Gunther briefly. "In a year or so
-more she'll be the undisputed leader."
-
-"What about John G.?"
-
-"The coming man. You know we're in close relations with him. The
-Governor has a great admiration for him, and you know it isn't often the
-Governor is taken that way!"
-
-"What's he doing?"
-
-"Railroad unification, territorial development ... only man in this
-country who can appreciate what the Canadian Pacific is doing!"
-
-"I thought he was considered rather a freebooter?"
-
-"So he was. Big men change when they get what they want. He had an
-interview with the old man, and laid his cards on the table. Governor
-said it was the frankest confidence he'd ever heard. When he went into
-the railroad field, it was at the mercy of a lot of clever little
-stock-jobbers, who were playing it like a game of roulette. Slade's
-driven 'em out, broken their backs, bankrupted them ... Oh! he strikes
-hard! ... Now there's a real railroad policy, with a national object."
-
-"You seem quite enthusiastic over him yourself," said Beecher, glancing
-at the plates on the boxes.
-
-"I am. He's a constructive ... that's what we want!"
-
-"When did all this happen?"
-
-"A couple of months after that affair of the Atlantic Trust."
-
-Beecher stopped, and with a gesture showed his companion a plate on
-which was inscribed:
-
- ENOS BLOODGOOD.
-
-
-"I never can forget Majendie that night," he said, sobered by the
-recollection of the events in which he had been such an agitated
-spectator. "By Jove, he was true blue!"
-
-"If he'd had the nerve to face the music he'd be a rich man to-day,"
-said Gunther, meditatively.
-
-"The Atlantic Trust is stronger than ever. Of course, technically,
-Majendie did things he had no right to do, but do you know, every
-investment he made has turned out enormously profitable! Queer how one
-man drops out and another pops up."
-
-"I wonder how much of it was business, and how much was..." Beecher
-broke off and a second time gestured in the direction of the box.
-
-"Who knows?" said Gunther, with a shrug of his shoulders.
-
-Beecher glanced down the corridor to assure himself there was yet time,
-and opened the door.
-
-In the front row of the box Mrs. Bloodgood was laughing gaily with three
-or four young men who were bending flatteringly over her. In the back
-Bloodgood was seated, dozing in a corner. Beecher hardly recognized
-him. Of the once rugged physique nothing remained but a senile
-fluttering. Some mysterious disease had struck him down and marked his
-hours. At this moment Mrs. Bloodgood, aware of a shadow in the doorway,
-turned and met the profound and memory-troubled gaze of the young man.
-She recognized him and in the same moment divined his thoughts. By a
-movement which she could not control, she brought her fan, which had
-been extended in a tantalizing gesture under the eyes of one of her
-satellites, into a protective barrier, as though to shield herself from
-the too frank melancholy of this disturbing gaze. Their eyes met.
-Beecher inclined his head. It was at the same time a salutation and an
-adieu.
-
-He found Gunther outside their box.
-
-"The old fellow's in a pretty bad way," said his friend, noticing his
-disturbed look.
-
-"It wasn't that!..."
-
-"Yes,--she's taking her revenge!" said Gunther with a laugh.
-
-To shake off this impression Beecher touched his friend on the arm, and
-forcing a smile, said, with a nod towards the box where Miss Fanning was
-waiting:
-
-"So it's serious, Bruce?"
-
-"But not for publication..." said Gunther with a nod.
-
-Beecher would have liked to put a further question, one which had
-presented itself already at the thought of Louise Fontaine; but he
-refrained, for he was aware in his friend of a certain new grimness and
-implacability of purpose which, as in his father, had the effect of
-withdrawing him from the ordinary club familiarity.
-
-After the second act he went behind the scenes to greet Emma Fornez, who
-had just received an ovation.
-
-The diva, with the same cry of delight in which she recognized him,
-asked him what he thought of her success.
-
-"You have reached the top.... Every new _Carmen_ must now be advertised
-as greater than Emma Fornez!" he answered with a bow.
-
-"Ah, you have learned how to make compliments! ... Bravo!" she
-exclaimed. She advanced her head, pointing to a little spot under her
-jeweled ear. "There! ... your recompense! ... You look as big a boy as
-ever! ... Tell me everything--all at once! ... Victorine, close the
-door. I see no one--_tu m'entends_? ... I am too red tonight, _hein_?"
-
-"Not from the boxes!"
-
-"_Si, si_! ... I must be more pale ... Sit down, sit down!" She
-enveloped her shoulders in a shawl, and studied her face in the flashing
-mirror, pulling her make-up box towards her. "You have come back ...
-for good, Teddy?"
-
-"Yes!"
-
-"You are always married?"
-
-"Yes!"
-
-"That's a pity--_enfin_! ... Happy?"
-
-"Very!"
-
-"Too bad! ... And you have come _pour tirer la langue Emma Fornez_ ...
-who tried to frighten you!"
-
-"Exactly!" said Beecher, laughing.
-
-"Oh, you needn't be so conceited about it! If you are still living
-together--it is because ..." she stopped a moment to correct the beady
-fringe of the eyes, "because your wife is a very, very clever woman!"
-
-"What?"
-
-"Oh, just that! ... and because she finds she can lead you around
-conveniently by the nose ... just so!" She leaned over and illustrated
-her meaning with a little tweak before he could defend himself.
-
-"I see, you are quite furious that we are not divorced!"
-
-She shrugged her shoulders.
-
-"How many months is it?..."
-
-"Three years ... Three and a half!"
-
-"Bah! there is still hope!"
-
-To tease her for this, he drew back, grinning with elation.
-
-"Oh, you are having a beautiful time of it!" she said, watching him in
-the mirror. "It amuses you very much! ... But just you wait!" She
-raised her hand, counting the fingers. "Three, four, five--five years!
-That is the worst bridge of all! ... Even my old Jacquot--poor
-soul--stood me for five years! ... Just wait!" Then, struck by a sudden
-reflection, she proceeded to revenge herself. "If you are happy, I was
-right, after all! You remember ... first time I saw Chartrs ... I said
-'it is not an actress, it is a woman!' ..." She emphasized the point
-with a satisfied shrug. "I was right, and there you are!"
-
-"Well, Emma, don't let's fight," he said, hugely amused. "I'm glad to
-see you again!"
-
-"I, too," she said, tapping his arm, and turning her darkened face
-towards him for better inspection. "Better so, _hein_? ... So you are
-rich now, Teddy ... An uncle was good enough to die?"
-
-"Two!..."
-
-"Ah! ... what a pity! ... And now you are spoiled!" She began to soften
-the shadows of the eyes. "Tell me one thing..."
-
-"Yes?..."
-
-"You ... you did not tell her--the wife--about our little
-conspiracy?--the night of the cowboy party, _hein_?..." As he hesitated
-she caught the accusatory look in his eyes, and she wheeled about.
-"_Comment_! ... You were so stupid! ... _Dieu! que les hommes sont
-sts_!"
-
-"Nonsense! ... she laughed over it!" he said, recovering himself.
-"Besides, she had guessed it already!"
-
-"My dear Teddy," she said, in very bad humor, "I take back all I said
-... You were born a husband--typical! ideal!--You would be content with
-any one! ... with Victorine, even!"
-
-She flung the rabbit's foot furiously among the pigments.
-
-"_Allons_, we might just as well say adieu!"
-
-"Why?"
-
-"She does not know you have come?"
-
-"No, but..."
-
-"Well, well ... don't be fool enough to tell her! ... Go right back now.
-Make a call in some box where she can see you, and escape a good..."
-She stopped, shaking her hand in the direction of his ear.
-
-"You are mistaken!" he began, flushing. "You don't know her..."
-
-"Mistaken ... tra-la-la! ... and I know her! ... All I have to do is to
-see you, my poor Teddy, to understand ... absolutely ... in every little
-detail ... the woman who makes you so ... So--adieu!"
-
-"It is not as tragic as all that," he said, laughing, but giving his
-hand.
-
-"Adieu! ... adieu!"
-
-"I may come back ... when I am divorced?"
-
-"That will never happen!" she persisted, vindictively. "She has tamed
-you ... you are a domestic animal ... a house pet ... like the cat and
-the poodle dog!"
-
-"_Au revoir_, Emma," he said, refusing to be irritated.
-
-"Not good-by!" She took up a thread, broke it with a vicious jerk, and
-let the ends float away. "Victorine, _depche-toi donc_!"
-
-Beecher, who had started with the intention of extracting a legitimate
-revenge, had received little satisfaction from his two interviews.
-Nevertheless, he was not so nave as to reject Emma Fornez's advice. He
-went directly to Mrs. Craig Fontaine's box. Louise, as though she had
-waited impatiently his coming, started at once from her chair, meeting
-him in the privacy of the antechamber. He was struck at once by the
-constrained tensity of her glance.
-
-"You are in the Gunthers' box," she said, directly the first greetings
-were over. "Where is Bruce? Why didn't he come with you?"
-
-"We separated. I went behind to see Madame Fornez..." he said lamely.
-
-She was not deceived by his answer, made a rapid calculation and said
-abruptly:
-
-"Teddy, tell me the truth. Don't refuse me! ... You may be doing me a
-favor ... the greatest! ... Is Bruce engaged? That little girl in the
-box?"
-
-Between them there had been the fullest loyalty, and a confidence since
-school days. He was not ignorant, therefore, of her infatuation for his
-friend, though what dramatic turn it might have taken in the years of
-his absence, he could only speculate.
-
-"Yes, it is true," he said. "It is not to be known ... With you,
-Louise, it is different: you ought to know!"
-
-She sat down, and he was frightened by the swift, ashen pallor that
-rushed into her face. Alarmed, he made a movement towards her.
-
-"Wait!" she said, faintly. "There are two questions I must ask ... Did
-he, Bruce, send you to tell me this?"
-
-"No...." He hesitated, surprised at the question, adding: "That is, I
-think not...."
-
-"Is it to be public--immediately?"
-
-"No, not at once ... I am sure of that!"
-
-She nodded her head with a little relief, and, incapable of speech,
-raised her hand weakly as though to excuse herself, then laid it over
-her heart. He rose, turning his back, steadying himself. At the end of
-a long moment she touched him on the shoulder.
-
-"I will come ... tomorrow ... and call on your wife," she said, quietly.
-"Give her my very best wishes, will you? ... And ... thank you! ... You
-have done me a great service!..."
-
-When he reached his box Bruce was waiting for him.
-
-"You saw Louise?" he said directly.
-
-"Yes!"
-
-"You told her?"
-
-"Yes, I told her."
-
-"That was right!"
-
-They hesitated a moment, one whether to question, the other whether to
-explain.
-
-"I admire her as much as any woman," said Gunther, at last. "She made
-only one blunder ... At that, Fate was against her."
-
-This answer, and the way it was delivered, was all that Beecher was
-permitted to understand of an episode which deserves a novel to itself.
-Nevertheless, he felt that there must have been something far out of the
-ordinary to have brought forth from Gunther this eulogy, which sounded
-at the moment like an epitaph.
-
-When Beecher entered the lights were up on the act. During the time in
-which he had been absent, his wife, too, had been a prey to dramatic
-moods. The stage and the world had been before her eyes as the choices
-of her own life. She comprehended what Beecher did not, all the
-advantages of her first appearance in New York under the patronage of
-the Gunthers, that was in itself a social cachet. Mrs. Slade's
-flattering visit, as well as the accented cordiality of acquaintances
-who had bowed to her from their boxes, made her feel how easy would be
-her way in this world, so easy of access by one entrance and so hostile
-by a thousand others. She was satisfied. Her doubts, if she had
-yielded to them a moment, were gone. She had talked to Gunther of what
-she wanted for her husband, and made of him a friend, not insensible to
-the reason of the charm which she had exerted. But in the moment in
-which the social world presented itself to her as the endless stretching
-Pacific flashed upon the dazzled eyes of Balboa, she felt a sudden sense
-of loneliness and the need of support. She rested her hand on the
-strong-muscled arm of her husband, and designating with a smile the
-young girl who was so artlessly and artfully conveying her impatient
-delight at Bruce's return, she sent her husband one of those looks which
-only a perfectly happy woman has the power to retain ... that first
-fugitive, timid offering in the eyes of lovers.
-
-
-The next day Mrs. Craig Fontaine's engagement was announced in all the
-papers. It was a romance of long standing ... the engagement now made
-public for the first time was supposed to have lasted several months,
-etc.
-
-
-Mrs. Slade had more than fulfilled her promise towards McKenna. Through
-her active friendship not only had he secured the entire patronage of
-her husband, but had finally acquired the coveted field of the Bankers'
-Association of America. His agency had tripled in its ramifications and
-its power. This man, who perceived clearly all the relative, often
-confusing, shades of morality, was at the bottom an idealist. He
-undertook two great campaigns: one which resulted in the exposing of the
-mysterious suzerainty over corrupt politics of a group of outwardly
-respectable capitalists; and the other in the purification of a great
-labor union from a band of terrorists, who were betraying their ideals
-and selling their sympathies. He had still one ambition, which he had
-confided alone to Mrs. Slade, to whom he was able to render in this
-period two invaluable services--he wished one day to become Police
-Commissioner of New York City, and create, in that cemetery of
-reputations, a great police system that would vie with the systems of
-Paris and London.
-
-Often Bruce Gunther would run into his office at the close of the
-afternoon. He appreciated the integrity of the detective, and he used
-him as he was learning to use many men ... as so many windows through
-which to look out on life. Gunther had not been entirely the dupe of
-Rita Kildair's explanation as to the theft of the ring. Above the
-mantelpiece in the inner office of McKenna, framed in simple
-passe-partout, hung the two clippings of the same date: one the bare
-statement of the bank's support of the Associated Trust, and underneath
-the engagement of Rita Kildair and John G. Slade.
-
-These dramatically aligned scraps of information for the public, never
-ceased to intrigue him. Many a time he considered a direct question,
-but refrained from respect. One day, however, pushed to the verge by
-his curiosity, he said abruptly:
-
-"McKenna, are you going to write your memoirs, some day?"
-
-"Perhaps--some day!"
-
-"You ought to--Publication fifty years from now."
-
-"May be ... may be!"
-
-"And that affair of the ring," said Gunther, pointing to the notices.
-"Will you tell the truth about that?"
-
-"What! Write down my mistakes?"
-
-"Was it a mistake?"
-
-McKenna nodded, gazing at the mantelpiece meditatively, with an
-expression that was indecipherable.
-
-"Bad mistake!"
-
-"But I should say one of those failures that are sometimes rather
-fortunate?" persisted Gunther.
-
-"Well, it's a good thing to know how to turn a failure to account.
-That's why a few of us get ahead," said McKenna in a matter-of-fact way,
-but for a moment Gunther seemed to perceive the faintest trace of a
-smile, lurking maliciously in the corners of his eyes.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SIXTY-FIRST SECOND ***
-
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<meta name="generator" content="Ebookmaker 0.4.0a5 by Marcello Perathoner &lt;webmaster@gutenberg.org&gt;" />
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+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 37113 ***</div>
<div class="document" id="the-sixty-first-second">
<h1 class="center document-title level-1 pfirst title"><span class="x-large">THE SIXTY-FIRST SECOND</span></h1>
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-<p class="noindent pfirst"><span>Title: The Sixty-First Second
-<br />
-<br />Author: Owen Johnson
-<br />
-<br />Release Date: March 12, 2015 [EBook #37113]
-<br />Reposted: May 06, 2016 [text corrections applied]
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<p class="noindent pfirst" id="pg-produced-by"><span>Produced by Al Haines.</span></p>
@@ -12382,349 +12349,6 @@ corners of his eyes.</span></p>
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+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 37113 ***</div>
</body>
</html>
diff --git a/37113-rst.zip b/37113-rst.zip
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--- a/37113-rst.zip
+++ /dev/null
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@@ -1,15448 +0,0 @@
-.. -*- encoding: utf-8 -*-
-
-.. meta::
- :PG.Id: 37113
- :PG.Title: The Sixty-first Second
- :PG.Released: 2015-03-12
- :PG.Reposted: 2016-05-06 text corrections applied
- :PG.Rights: Public Domain
- :PG.Producer: Al Haines
- :DC.Creator: Owen Johnson
- :MARCREL.ill: \A. \B. Wenzell
- :DC.Title: The Sixty-First Second
- :DC.Language: en
- :DC.Created: 1913
- :coverpage: images/img-cover.jpg
-
-======================
-THE SIXTY-FIRST SECOND
-======================
-
-.. clearpage::
-
-.. pgheader::
-
-.. container:: frontispiece
-
- .. vspace:: 4
-
- .. _`"'I shall have the detectives here—a man and a woman—within half an hour. There's nothing to do but wait'"`:
-
- .. figure:: images/img-front.jpg
- :figclass: white-space-pre-line
- :align: center
- :alt: "'I shall have the detectives here—a man and a woman—within half an hour. There is nothing to do but wait'"—Page 61
-
- "'I shall have the detectives here—a man and a woman—within half an hour. There is nothing to do but wait'"—Page `61`_
-
- .. vspace:: 4
-
-.. container:: titlepage center white-space-pre-line
-
- .. class:: xx-large bold
-
- THE
- SIXTY-FIRST
- SECOND
-
- .. vspace:: 2
-
- .. class:: medium
-
- BY
-
- .. class:: large
-
- OWEN JOHNSON
-
- .. class:: small
-
- AUTHOR OF "STOVER AT YALE," ETC.
-
- .. vspace:: 3
-
- .. class:: medium
-
- *ILLUSTRATED BY A. B. WENZELL*
-
- .. vspace:: 3
-
- .. class:: medium
-
- NEW YORK
- FREDERICK A. STOKES COMPANY
- PUBLISHERS
-
- .. vspace:: 4
-
-.. container:: verso center white-space-pre-line
-
- .. class:: small
-
- *Copyright, 1912, 1913, by*
- THE MCCLURE PUBLICATIONS, INC.
-
- .. class:: small
-
- *Copyright, 1913, by*
- FREDERICK A. STOKES COMPANY
-
- .. class:: small
-
- *All rights reserved, including that of translation into foreign
- languages, including the Scandinavian*
-
- .. class:: small
-
- *March, 1913*
-
- .. vspace:: 4
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-`"'I shall have the detectives here—a man and a
-woman—within half an hour. There's
-nothing to do but wait'"`_ . . . . . . *Frontispiece*
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-`"In that gay party one person was a thief—but
-which one? ... A match sputtered. There was
-a cry of amazement and horror. The table
-was absolutely bare"`_
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-`"'Look here, Rita. Can't I help out some way?'"`_
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-`"'Come outside—in the garden. I want to speak
-to you. Come quietly'"`_
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-`"'I have not hesitated to trust in you—you must in me'"`_
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-`"'Aha! I made them sit up, didn't I—your cold
-women!'"`_
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`CHAPTER I`:
-
-.. class:: center x-large bold
-
- The Sixty-First Second
-
-.. vspace:: 3
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- CHAPTER I
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-In the year 19—, toward the end of the month of
-October, the country was on the eve of a stupendous
-panic. A period of swollen prosperity had just
-ended in which Titans had striven in a frenzy for the
-millions that opportunity had spilled before them.
-
-For months the stock market had steadily lowered,
-owing to the flight of the small investor, affrighted
-by the succession of investigations, the fear of
-readjustments, and the distrust of the great manipulators.
-The public, which understands nothing of the secret
-wars and hidden alliances of finance, had begun
-tremulously to be aware of the threatening approach of a
-stupendous catastrophe. So in the ominous,
-grumbling days of October, when the air was full of
-confusing rumors and violent alarms, the public, with
-its necessity for humanizing all sensations, perceived
-distinctly only two figures, each dramatically in peril,
-about whose safety or ruin the whole comprehensible
-drama of the financial cataclysm seemed to center.
-
-These two figures, both presidents of great trust
-companies, giants in their own sphere, represented
-two opposite elements of that great mass of society
-which seeks its level in Wall Street. Bernard L. Majendie,
-president of the Atlantic Trust Company,
-member of every exclusive club, patron of the arts,
-representative of one of the oldest American families,
-accustomed to leadership and wealth from colonial
-times, was linked in a common danger with John
-G. Slade, president of the Associated Trust Company,
-promoter, manipulator, owner of a chain of Western
-newspapers, a man who had hauled himself out of
-the lowest depths of society. Many believed that
-both, in the relentless readjustment which the banks
-were forcing on the trust companies, were destined
-to be blotted out in the general catastrophe. Many
-others, perceiving the strange oppositeness of the two
-individuals, speculated on which would survive the
-other, if indeed either were to persist.
-
-About three o'clock of a certain afternoon, when
-each extra brought a new alarm, John G. Slade came
-abruptly from the great library, down the sounding
-marble descent that was a replica of the famous rampe
-of the Château of Gerny, into the tapestry-hung
-vestibule of his palace on upper Fifth Avenue.
-
-He stood a moment in blank meditation, while the
-third man held his overcoat open and ready, watching
-anxiously the frown on the face of the master,
-who stood before him, a massive six-foot-four.
-Already in the great marble home itself was that feeling
-of alarm from the outer world which had communicated
-itself to the servants. Suddenly Slade,
-returning to himself, detected the furtive scrutiny of
-the footman and the butler, who had so far departed
-from their correctly petrified attitudes as to exchange
-wondering glances. He frowned, pointed to his
-loose black felt hat and his favorite cane, and tore
-so rapidly through the heavily ironed doors and down
-the steps to the waiting automobile that the second
-footman stumbled twice in his haste to be before him.
-Two or three reporters, who had been lurking behind
-the great marble bastions, sprang forward as Slade,
-disappearing in the motor, was whirled away.
-
-"Up river," he said briefly, and sank back in his
-seat.
-
-He was in the middle forties, a man noticeable
-anywhere for the overmastering vitality of his
-carriage and the defiant poise of his head. Nature had
-admirably designed him for what he was intended to
-be—a being always at war with men and surrounding
-circumstances. His face was devoid of any fine
-indications of sensibility, of reflection, or humorous
-perception of life. The upper and lower maxillary
-bones were in such gaunt relief they seemed rather
-steel girders hung to support a granite will. The
-head was square, sunk rather than placed upon his
-shoulders, and the line of the head at the back was
-straight and full of crude power. He had, at the
-same time, a suggestion in the shoulders of the
-obstinacy of the buffalo, the most distinctive of
-American beasts, and in the eye-pits of the fatalism of the
-Indian, which as a type often seems not so much the
-physical tenacity of an unexplained race as it does
-the peculiar impress of a continent and an atmosphere
-surcharged with vitality.
-
-The eyes were a clear blue, the eyes of a boy in
-mischief who is still sublimely defiant of the tripping
-obstacles of an ethical code. This quality of the
-boy, characteristic too of the American, was the
-secret of all his seeming inconstancy of unrelenting
-cruelty and sudden sentimental impulsiveness. Life
-was to him a huge dare, and all the perils of finance
-the hazards of a monstrous gamble, which alone
-were able to supply him with that overwhelming
-quality of sensation that such men covet in life.
-
-A waif at six; a wharf rat at twelve, endowed
-with the strength of a man; leader of a gang at
-sixteen, hated, feared, always fighting; gaining his first
-start in politics, and then, by making a lucky strike
-in the silver mines of Colorado, educating himself
-with primitive necessary knowledge, always acquiring,
-never relaxing what his fingers touched, a terrible
-antagonist, risking his all a dozen times in the
-hunger for a greater stake—he had emerged at last
-from the churning vortex of a brutal struggle,
-possessor of a fortune that fifty times had hung on the
-events of a day. For five years he had been involved
-in countless lawsuits, accused of chicanery, extortion,
-conspiracy, and even murder. At the end of which
-period he came forth victorious, without losing a
-single suit, surrounded, it is true, by every calumny that
-could be invented, accused of manipulating legislatures,
-corrupting judges, and removing witnesses.
-
-Through it all he had remained unshattered, boyishly
-delighted, his body unyielding to the strain of
-sleepless nights and months of unrelenting vigilance.
-He had lived hard, ready to gamble for a thousand
-or a hundred thousand, cynically announcing his
-motto:
-
-"No friends. So long as every man is my enemy,
-I am safe."
-
-And this theory of life he had carried out to the
-minutest detail. Men represented to him simply the
-male of the species, to be met head on, to strive with
-and overthrow. So completely did this obsess him
-that no one, not even his secretaries (whom he
-changed constantly), had the slightest inkling of his
-plans. Two of his subordinates, hoping to profit by
-their intimacy, had foolishly invested on his
-deliberately given tips—and had been ruined.
-Afterward he cited their cases as a warning to other
-applicants.
-
-From the start, always counting on the year ahead,
-he had outrun his income. When he had ten
-thousand, he was spending fifteen; at fifty thousand,
-seventy-five. Every one who came in contact with him
-was paid twice over, and robbed him in the bargain—a
-fact on which he counted and to which he was
-quite indifferent.
-
-Coming to Wall Street in that period of fevered
-speculation, he had been among the first to perceive
-the enormous instruments at hand in the development
-of a chain of trust companies which would supply a
-conveniently masked agency for the enormous capital
-that he needed to compete on equal terms with the
-leaders of the Street.
-
-That now, for the first time, he was confronted
-with a situation of absolute and impending ruin,
-brought him not the slightest depression, but rather
-that exhilaration and sudden clearness of mind which
-is characteristic of the gambler face to face with the
-supreme hour which means absolute bankruptcy or a
-fortune.
-
-At every block some one on the crowded sidewalk,
-or a group in a passing carriage, turned with a hasty
-exclamation at the sight of his bulky figure under the
-black sombrero, fleeing in the red automobile that
-was itself at this period a rarity. At one point where
-a blockade compelled him to halt, a newsboy, jumping
-on the sideboard, thrust a newspaper in his face.
-He flung a dime and glanced at the headlines:
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-.. class:: center large
-
- MARKET STILL GOING DOWN
-
-.. class:: center medium
-
- RUMORED SUSPENSIONS
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-Then he tossed it aside and returned to his own
-calculations. All at once he roused himself and
-addressed the chauffeur:
-
-"Harkness, Mrs. Braddon's. Take the park."
-
-But as the automobile, turning from the river,
-descended by way of green woods, he began restlessly
-to repent of his choice. His hatred of men had
-made him strangely dependent on women. It was
-not that they were able to establish any empire over
-his senses, but that they supplied a curious outlet to
-his vanity. At times, especially as in the present,
-when he felt the necessity of assembling every
-resource to meet a crisis, it became absolutely necessary
-for him to find, in the tribute he exacted from them,
-that self-confidence which he needed to override other
-obstacles. Often he would take in his automobile
-three or four women of that class which is half
-professional, half of the world, and, running slowly
-through the pleasant country, recount stories of his
-early struggles, of how he had railroaded an enemy
-to prison, or caught an adversary in a turn of the
-market and broken him. And when these tales of
-unrelenting enmity made his audience shudder, he
-keenly perceived it, and enjoyed almost a physical
-delight.
-
-But this afternoon, as the car came to a stop before
-one of the great apartment-houses that front the
-park, he remained seated, unsatisfied and defrauded.
-It was not a woman of the superficial wit of
-Mrs. Braddon who could occupy and stimulate his mind in
-this crisis.
-
-"Drive on," he said sharply. "Turn the corner
-and stop at the hotel."
-
-There he descended, and entering went to the telephone.
-
-"Mrs. Kildair?" he said eagerly, a moment later.
-
-"Who is it, please?"
-
-"This is Slade—John Slade. I'm coming over."
-
-"I can't see you now," said a voice with a curious
-musical quality of self-possession. "I told you five
-o'clock."
-
-"What difference does half an hour make?" he
-said impatiently.
-
-"I have other company. You will have to be
-patient. At five."
-
-The connection was shut off. He rose angrily,
-unaccustomed to any check to his immediate impulses.
-At the steps a boy came skipping down for the toll
-he had forgotten. He paid the exact amount,
-contrary to his custom, and drove his body back into the
-cushioned seat.
-
-"Where to, sir?" said Harkness, turning.
-
-"Anywhere," he answered gruffly, and, thwarted
-in his desire, he said to himself furiously: "That
-woman always opposes me! I must teach her a
-lesson. I won't go at all."
-
-But at the end of a moment he pulled out his
-watch impatiently and calculated the time.
-
-"Home," he said suddenly.
-
-At the house, he ran rapidly through the opening
-doors and up the stairs to his bedroom, where he
-unlocked a little safe fixed in the wall behind a tapestry
-that hid it, and took out a tray of rings. Sorting
-them quickly, with a low, cynical chuckle, he selected
-a magnificent ruby, slipped it into his pocket, closed
-the safe, and passed out of the house with the same
-rapidity with which he had entered.
-
-"Mrs. Kildair's, Harkness," he said. "Drive so
-as to get me there at five-fifteen."
-
-"Now we shall see," he said to himself, with a
-smile, gazing at the ring in the palm of his hand with
-a man's contemptuous contemplation of the stone
-which could hold such fascination over a woman's
-soul. For him it was absolutely necessary, as a first
-step toward his conquest of all his enemies, to feel
-his power over this one present resistance.
-
-The idea that had come into his head restored his
-good humor and aroused in him a certain joy of
-energy. He had forgot momentarily his errand,
-absorbed in his own battle for existence.
-
-"Today is Thursday," he said, with renewed
-energy. "Next Wednesday will be the crisis. I must
-find out what Majendie is going to do. Snelling's
-the man to know—or Garraboy."
-
-The car stopped. He sprang out and, without
-giving his name, entered the elevator. At the
-apartment a Japanese servant took his things and ushered
-him into the low-lit greens of the studio, which ran
-the height of the two floors that formed the duplex
-apartment.
-
-Mrs. Rita Kildair was stretched on a low Récamier
-sofa, watching him with amused eyes as he entered
-with that atmosphere of strife and fury that seemed
-always to play about him. She waited until he had
-come to her side before she raised her hand to his,
-in a gesture that had no animation, saying:
-
-"How do you do?"
-
-Something in the tranquil, amused self-possession
-of her pose made him stupidly repeat the question.
-Then, forgetting his resolve to show no impatience,
-he said impetuously:
-
-"Why did you keep me waiting?"
-
-"Because I did not wish to see your highness then."
-
-"Not dressed?"
-
-"No, I was simply amusing myself with a very
-nice boy."
-
-"Who?"
-
-She smiled, and, without heed to his question,
-motioned him to a chair with a little gesture, not of her
-arm, but of her fingers, on which she wore several
-rings of unusual luster. She had, as a woman, that
-same magnetic self-consciousness that distinguishes
-the great actress, aware that every eye is focused on
-her and that the slightest change of her hand or shift
-of her head has an instantaneous importance.
-
-Slade obeyed her with a sudden sense of warm content.
-
-"Smoke?" he said, taking out a cigar. "Permission?"
-
-He helped himself to a match, sunk himself in the
-great chair, crossed his legs, and looked at her.
-
-Rita Kildair gave that complex appearance of a
-woman much younger than she seemed, or of a
-woman much older. She was at that mental phase
-in her life when she exhaled to the fullest that
-perfume of mystery which is the most feminine and
-irresistible of all the powers that a woman exerts over
-the masculine imagination, if indeed it is not the sum
-of all seductions. The inexplicable in her own life
-and individuality was heightened in every way by the
-subservience of outward things, whether by calculation
-or by an instinctive sense of interpretation.
-
-The great studio, to the neglect of the electric
-chandelier, was lit by half a dozen candles, which
-flung about conflicting eddies of wavering lights and
-shadows. In farther corners were a divan, a piano,
-a portrait on an easel, lounges, waiting like so many
-shadows to be called forth. A standing lamp, not
-too near, bathed the couch on which she lay with a
-softened luster. Her tea-gown of liberty silk, with
-tones that changed and mingled with each other, was
-of the purple of the grape, an effect produced, too,
-by the superimposition of one filmy garment on the
-other. A slippered foot and ankle came forth from
-the fragrant disorder of the skirt, either by studied
-arrangement or by the impulse of a woman who is
-confident of all her poses. Her nose, quite the most
-individual feature, was aquiline, yet not such as is
-associated with a masculine character. Rather, it
-was vitally sensitive, and gave, in conjunction with
-the intent and instantaneous aspect of her grayish
-eyes, the instinctive, almost savage appetite for
-possession and sensation that is characteristic of her sex.
-No one looked at her without asking himself a
-question. Those who believed her under thirty
-wondered at the experiences that must have crowded in
-upon her. Those who believed her nearer forty still
-marveled at her mastery over youth. Those of an
-analytical mind left her always with a feeling of
-speculation framed in two questions—whence had
-she come and where would she end?
-
-It was this latter speculation more than any other
-that absorbed Slade, irresistibly intrigued by the
-elusiveness of a fascination which he could not analyze.
-She endured his fixed glance without annoyance,
-absorbed, too, in the thoughts which his entrance had
-brought her. Finally, adapting her manner to his,
-she said with his own abruptness:
-
-"Well, what do you want to say to me?"
-
-"I'm wondering what you are after in this life,
-pretty lady?" he said directly.
-
-"What do you want?"
-
-"Power."
-
-"Not to be bored."
-
-They smiled by common consent.
-
-"And now we know no more than we did before,"
-he said.
-
-She stretched out her slender hand against the
-purple folds of her gown, and her eyes lingered on
-the jewels that she held caressingly before them—a
-look that did not escape the man.
-
-"By thunder, you're the strangest thing I've run
-into," he said, shifting his legs.
-
-"On each of the eight times we have been alone,"
-she said, smiling, "you have made precisely that same
-discovery. Did you forget?"
-
-"I'd like to know something about you," he said.
-
-"How old I am—about my husband—what I
-am doing here—am I rich—what's my past—and
-so on. Consider all these questions asked and
-refused—for the ninth time. And now, what—why
-did you come here?"
-
-He put aside his cigar impatiently, propelled
-himself to his feet, and came forward until his knee
-touched the couch. She looked up, pleasantly aware
-of so much brute strength held in leash above her.
-
-"Sit down."
-
-And, as he remained standing, she took a little
-electric button attached to a coil that was on the
-couch, and pressed it. In the hall outside a buzz was
-heard, and then the soft, sliding step of Kiki.
-
-"Tea?" she said, turning to him with an amused
-look, the little button pressed against her thin, sharp
-row of teeth, that were clear and tiny as a child's.
-
-"No, of course not," he said furiously.
-
-"No tea, Kiki," she said, in that same round,
-musical tone from which she seldom varied. She held
-the button in her long fingers, caressing her cheek
-with it, and, looking at him with half-closed eyes,
-repeated:
-
-"Sit down."
-
-Though the forward movement of Slade had been
-unconscious and quite devoid of any personal object,
-he was angrily aware that she had availed herself of
-his action to introduce a tantalizing defiance which
-awakened all the savage in him, as he realized the
-helplessness of his crude strength before the raillery
-that shone from her eyes.
-
-He drew his chair closer to her, sat down on its
-edge, one knee forward, his chin in his hand half
-concealing his face, looking at her with the shrewd
-cruelty of a prosecuting attorney.
-
-"What's your game?" he said.
-
-"The game itself," she answered, with a little
-animation in her eyes and a scarcely perceptible, gradual
-turning of her whole body toward him.
-
-"What's your game?" he repeated.
-
-She looked at him a moment as she might have
-looked at a child, and then, imitating the gesture with
-which he had sunk his chin in his palm, said:
-
-"What a convenient formula! And is that the
-way you always begin?"
-
-"Perhaps."
-
-"Do you know," she continued, "it is extraordinary
-how simple you big men—you trust kings—are.
-You have the vision of an eagle on one side,
-and the groping glance of a baby when you deal
-with us. Sometimes I think that it's all instinct, that
-all you understand is to throw down what resists
-you—that you haven't great minds at all, and that
-that is all that interests you in business and in us.
-That is why a big man will always end up by meeting
-some little woman who will lead him around by
-the nose. Any little fool of a woman who knows
-enough never to cease resisting you can do it."
-
-"Do you like me?" he said brutally.
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Much?"
-
-"Quite a good deal."
-
-"Are you planning to marry me?"
-
-She smiled her languid, amused smile without
-shifting her glance from his.
-
-"Why don't you come to the point?" she said.
-
-"What do you mean?"
-
-"I don't have to ask your game; I know it."
-
-"What do you know?"
-
-"Shall I tell you why you came here at a moment
-when you are at bay, attacked everywhere?"
-
-"Why?"
-
-"To find out what I know about Majendie."
-
-"Do you know anything?"
-
-"He is coming here tonight," she said.
-
-"No, that is not it," he said scornfully, rising and
-again approaching her. "You know better. You
-exhilarate me—you wake me up; and I need to be
-stimulated. So you've got it back in your little brain
-to marry me," he said, looking down with amused
-contemplation at the reclining figure, that was not
-so much human as a perfumed bed of flowers;
-"that is, if I pull through and keep my head above
-water."
-
-He hesitated a moment, and then said:
-
-"Why did you keep me waiting? Just to annoy me?"
-
-"I wonder," she said, looking up from under her
-eyelashes at his towering figure. "Perhaps it was
-to teach you some things are difficult."
-
-"That's it, eh?"
-
-"Perhaps—and I'm afraid I shall irritate you
-many more times."
-
-He took a step nearer and said abruptly:
-
-"Look out! I don't play fair."
-
-"Neither do I," she said.
-
-She took the button up again, frowning in a
-nonchalant way, and held it a moment while she waited
-for his decision. He shrugged his shoulders and
-stood back, taking several steps toward the center of
-the room.
-
-"Listen, John G. Slade," she said, her tone changing
-from the felinely feminine to the matter-of-fact,
-"don't let's continue as children. You are no match
-for me at this game. I warn you. Come. Be
-direct. Will you have me as an ally?"
-
-He turned and looked at her, considering.
-
-"In what way?"
-
-"Is it of importance to you to know the probable
-fate of Majendie and the Atlantic Trust?"
-
-"Yes—in a way."
-
-"I may have means of learning just that
-information tonight."
-
-"What do you want in return?"
-
-"Full confidence. I want two questions answered."
-
-"What?"
-
-She had raised herself to a sitting position out of
-the languor which was not the indolence of the
-Oriental, but rather the volcanic slumbering of the Slav,
-always ready to break forth into sudden tremendous
-exertion.
-
-"Can the Associated Trust meet its Wednesday
-obligations without assistance?"
-
-"And second?" he said, amazed at the detailed
-knowledge that her question implied.
-
-"Second, if it can't, will the Clearing-house help
-it through?"
-
-"What difference to you would it make to know?"
-
-"It would."
-
-"How long have you known Bernard Majendie?"
-he said slowly.
-
-She accepted the question as a rebuff.
-
-"There are my terms," she said, sinking back on
-the couch. "You don't wish an ally, then?"
-
-"No."
-
-"You don't trust me?"
-
-"No."
-
-"I knew you wouldn't," she said indolently; "and
-yet, I could help you more than you think."
-
-"I trusted a man once," he said scornfully. "I
-have never made that mistake with a woman."
-
-"As you wish."
-
-"Are you trying a flyer?" he said, smiling.
-"That's the game, is it—a tip?"
-
-"I have told you," she said coldly and in a tone
-that carried conviction, "that what interests me is
-to win the game itself, the excitement and the perils.
-And I have been behind the scenes many times."
-
-"I believe it," he said abruptly. "I should like
-to hear—"
-
-"I am a woman who keeps the secrets of others
-and her own," she answered, interrupting his question.
-
-"And if you marry?" he said curiously.
-
-"Even then." She dismissed the return to the
-personal with the first quick movement of her hand
-and continued: "I should say, you are the best hated
-man in Wall Street."
-
-"That's not exactly inside information."
-
-"No one is going to come to your help out of
-friendship."
-
-"True."
-
-"If Majendie and the Atlantic Trust Company
-fail, nothing in this world can pull you through," she
-said, seeking in some uncontrolled movement of his
-an answer to the statement that was in reality a
-question.
-
-From the moment she had begun to question him,
-he experienced a sudden change. He was no longer
-dealing with a woman, but with an element he had
-outguessed a hundred times.
-
-All at once an odd idea came to him which struck
-him as stupendously ridiculous, and yet made him
-glower in covert admiration at the woman who
-watched him while seemingly engaged with the
-rearrangement of her draperies.
-
-"Is it possible, after all," he thought, "that that
-ambitious little head is playing with both Majendie
-and me, and that she is setting her cap for the
-survivor?"
-
-He came back, reseated himself, and said, with an
-appearance of candor which would have deceived
-most people:
-
-"You say Majendie is coming here tonight?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Do you know where he is this afternoon?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"And the object of his visit?"
-
-"The object is easy to guess," she said indifferently.
-"You know perfectly well that he is in conference
-with Fontaine, Marx, and Gunther, and what
-you wish to know is whether they are going to stand
-aside and let him sink. Are you ready to answer my
-two questions?"
-
-"And when will you know if he has failed or succeeded?"
-
-"Tonight."
-
-"He will tell you?"
-
-"I shall know tonight," she said, with an evasive
-smile.
-
-"What's your private opinion?"
-
-"They will come to his assistance," she said carefully.
-
-"Because they are his personal friends," he said,
-with an accent of raillery.
-
-"Naturally."
-
-"You believe Majendie will pull through?"
-
-"I do." She looked at him a moment, and asked
-the question, not so much to receive an answer as to
-judge from his manner: "Can the Associated Trust
-meet its obligations on Wednesday without assistance?"
-
-"I can," he said quietly, and to himself he added:
-"There—if Majendie has set her to pump me, little
-good that'll do him."
-
-"But if the Atlantic Trust Company shuts its
-doors," she persisted, "you are caught?"
-
-"That is the general opinion."
-
-"Will you fail?"
-
-"No."
-
-She was quiet a moment, dissatisfied, looked away
-from him and then said:
-
-"So you don't care to know what I shall learn to-night?"
-
-"My dear lady, I won't tell you a thing," he said,
-with a laugh, "so stop trying. Leave us to fight our
-own battles. Plot all you want in your cunning head
-your little feminine plans, but don't get beyond your
-depth."
-
-"I see you believe I'm interested in Majendie," she
-said, with a shrug of her shoulders. "You are not
-very well informed."
-
-"No," he said bluntly; "you are interested in no
-one but Rita Kildair. I know that much." He rose,
-took several strides back and forth, and, returning,
-stood by her. "I hate allies," he said; "I prefer to
-consider you as a woman."
-
-His remark brought a sharp gleam of curiosity to
-her eyes, a spark of instinctive sex antagonism that
-flashed and disappeared.
-
-"Remember, I have warned you," she said, retiring
-as abruptly into the feline languor of her pose.
-
-He stood, swayed by two emotions, the purely
-gentle, almost caressing effect her indolence brought
-him, and the desire to establish some sudden empire
-over her—to feel his strength above hers.
-
-"What's the weak point in your armor?" he said
-savagely.
-
-"I wouldn't tell you."
-
-"I think I know one."
-
-"Really?"
-
-He drew his chair still closer, and, leaning over,
-touched with his stubby forefinger the rings on her
-outstretched hand.
-
-"Jewels?" she said, smiling.
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Any woman is the same."
-
-"Why?"
-
-"I don't know—it is so," she said, and, raising
-the deep lusters, she allowed her glance to rest on
-them as in a dream of opium.
-
-He drew from his pocket the ring with the ruby,
-and held it out.
-
-"Try this on."
-
-She took it between her finger-tips slowly, looking
-at him with a glance that was a puzzled frown, and
-slipped it on her finger. Then she extended her hand
-gradually to the full length of her white arm against
-the purple, and half closed her eyes. There was no
-outward sign; only a deep breath went through her,
-as though an immense change had taken place in the
-inner woman.
-
-"Now I know what I want to know," he said,
-watching her closely with almost an animal joy in
-this sudden revelation of an appetite in her.
-
-"It's a wonderful stone," she said in a whisper;
-then she drew it off slowly, as though the flesh
-rebelled, and held it out to him, turning away her
-eyes.
-
-"Keep it."
-
-She raised her eyes and looked at him steadily.
-
-"You are cleverer than I thought," she said.
-
-"Keep it."
-
-"Is this for information about Majendie?" she
-said slowly.
-
-"Not for that."
-
-"For what, then?" she said steadily.
-
-"For a whim."
-
-"Thanks; I don't trust your whims."
-
-For all reply, he took her hand and again placed
-the ring on it.
-
-"Wear it," he said.
-
-She turned the stone quickly inside her palm as
-though unable to endure its lure, and looked at him
-profoundly.
-
-"*Are* you going to pull through?" she said angrily.
-
-"Will it make a difference?" he asked, rising,
-with a quick glance at his watch.
-
-She rose in her turn, facing him with a sudden
-energy.
-
-"Do you know the one great mistake you have made?"
-
-"What?"
-
-"You have condemned yourself to success."
-
-"What do you mean by that?" he said.
-
-"You must always succeed, and that is terrible!
-At the first defeat every one will be up in arms against
-you—because every one wants to see you ruined."
-
-"Every one?" he said, looking in her eyes.
-
-A second time she took off the ring and gave it to
-him, and as he protested she said coldly:
-
-"Don't make me angry. The comedy has been
-amusing. Enough. Also, don't trouble yourself
-about my motives. I haven't the slightest intention
-of marrying you or any one else."
-
-And she accompanied the words with a gesture
-so imperative that, amazed at the change, he no longer
-insisted. As he put out his hand, she said suddenly,
-as if obeying an intuition:
-
-"I will tell you what you want to know. Gunther
-is almost sure to come to Majendie's aid. I
-know it by a woman. Take care of yourself."
-
-"And I will tell you exactly the opposite," he said,
-bluffing. "Gunther will not lend a cent; Majendie
-will go under, and I'll pull through."
-
-"You'll pull through even if the Atlantic Trust
-closes?"
-
-"Exactly."
-
-"Good-by," she said, with a shrug.
-
-"Remember what I said," he repeated, and went out.
-
-Five minutes later the bell rang, and Kiki brought
-her a little box and an envelope. She recognized
-Slade's writing, and read:
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-DEAR LADY,
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-Apologies for my rudeness. If you won't accept a gift,
-at least wear the ring for a week. I should like to know
-what effect it could have on your cold little soul. Oblige
-my curiosity. It's only a little reparation for the
-disappointment I gave you. J.G.S.
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-"Decidedly, he is cleverer than I thought," she
-said musingly. In the box was the great ruby ring.
-She took it up, examined it carefully, made a
-motion as though to replace it in the box, and then
-suddenly slipped it on her finger.
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`CHAPTER II`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- CHAPTER II
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-Mrs. Kildair knew pretty nearly every one
-in that indescribable society in New York
-which is drawn from all levels, without classification,
-and imposes but one condition for membership—to
-be amusing. Her home, in fact, supplied that need
-of all limited and contending superimposed sets, a
-central meeting-ground where one entered under the
-protection of a flag of truce and departed without
-obligation. She knew every one, and no one knew
-her. No one knew beyond the vaguest rumors her
-history or her resources. No one had ever met a
-Mr. Kildair. There was always about her a certain
-defensive reserve the moment the limit of acquaintanceship
-had been touched. Mrs. Enos Bloodgood,
-who saw her most and gave her the fullest confidence,
-knew no more than that she had arrived from Paris
-five years before, with letters of introduction from
-the best quarters. Her invitations were eagerly
-sought by leaders of fashionable society, prima
-donnas, artists, visiting European aristocrats, and men
-of the moment. Her dinners were spontaneous, and
-the discussions, though gay and usually daring, were
-invariably under the control of wit and good taste.
-
-As soon as Slade's present had been received she
-passed into the dining-room to assure herself that
-everything was in readiness for the informal chafing-dish
-supper to which she had invited some of her
-most congenial friends, all of whom, as much as
-could be said of any one, were habitués of the studio.
-Then, entering her Louis Quinze bedroom, which
-exhaled a pleasant stirring atmosphere of perfume, she
-slipped off her filmy purple tea-gown and chose an
-evening robe of absolute black, of warm velvet,
-unrelieved by any color, but which gave to her
-shoulders and arms that softness and brilliancy which no
-color can impart.
-
-Several times she halted, and, seating herself at
-her dressing-table, fell into a fascinated contemplation
-of the great ruby that trembled luminously on
-her finger like a bubble of scarlet blood. When, in
-the act of deftly ordering the masses of her dark
-ruddy hair, her white fingers lost themselves among
-the tresses, she stopped more than once, entranced at
-the brilliancy of the stone against the white flesh and
-the sudden depths of her hair.
-
-She rose and began to move about the room; but
-her hand from time to time continued its coquetries
-above her forehead, as though the ring had suddenly
-added to her feminine treasury a new instinctive
-gesture.
-
-At half-past seven, having finished dressing, she
-opened the doors which made a thoroughfare between
-the studio and the small dining-room, and passed
-into the larger room, where, at one end, Kiki had
-brought forth three Sheraton tables, joined them, and
-set them with crystal and silver.
-
-"Put in order my bedroom," she said, with an
-approving nod, "and then you can go."
-
-She moved about the studio, studying the arrangements
-of the furniture, seeing always from the tail
-of her eye the scarlet spot on her finger.
-
-"I wonder what it's worth," she said softly.
-"Ten, fifteen thousand at the least." She held
-the ring from her, gazed at it dreamily. "I wonder
-what woman's eye has looked upon you, you wonderful
-gem," she whispered; and, as though transported
-with the vision of the past, she drew it slowly toward
-her and pressed her lips against it.
-
-At this moment a buzz sounded from the hall, and
-she recovered herself hastily and, a little ashamed,
-said with a feeling of alarm as she went to the door:
-
-"Slade is entirely too clever; I must send it back
-tomorrow morning."
-
-Before she could reach the door it had opened,
-and there entered, with the informality of assured
-acquaintance, a young man of twenty-five or -six,
-smiling, boyish, delighted at having stolen a march
-on the other guests.
-
-"You are early," said Mrs. Kildair, smiling with
-instinctive reflection of the roguish enjoyment that
-shone on his handsome, confident face.
-
-"Heavens, haven't I been beating the pavements
-for fourteen minutes by the watch!" he said,
-laughing. "Regular kid trick." He took her hand,
-carrying it to his lips. "The way they do in France,
-you know."
-
-"You're a nice boy, Teddy," she said, patting his
-hand. "Now, hang up your coat, and help me with
-the candles."
-
-She watched him as he slipped his overcoat from
-the trim wide shoulders, revealing all at once the
-clean-cut, well-tailored figure, full of elasticity and
-youth. Teddy Beecher always gave her a sense of
-well-being and pleasant content, with his
-harum-scarum ways and inviting impudence. As he roused
-no intellectual resistance in her, she was all the more
-sensitive to the purely physical charm in him, which
-she appreciated as she might appreciate the finely
-strung body and well-modulated limbs of a Perseus
-by Benvenuto Cellini.
-
-"Will I help you? Command me," he said, coming
-in eagerly. "Don't you know, there's a little
-silver collar about my neck, and the inscription is,
-'This dog belongs to Rita Kildair.' Jove, Rita, but
-you're stunning tonight!"
-
-He stood stock-still in frank amazement. He had
-known her but a short while, and yet he called her
-by her first name—a liberty seldom accorded; but
-the charm he unconsciously exerted over women,
-and which impatiently mystified other men, was in
-the very audacity of his enjoyment of life, which
-imparted to women the precious sense of their own
-youth.
-
-"Really?" she said, raising her hand to her hair,
-that he might notice the glorious ruby.
-
-"Look here—I've only got a miserable thirty
-thousand a year, but I've got a couple of uncles with
-liver trouble and a bum heart. Say the word—I'm
-yours."
-
-While he said it with a mock-heroic air, there was
-in his eyes a flash of excited admiration that she
-understood and was well pleased with.
-
-"Come, Teddy," she said, a little disappointed
-that he did not perceive the ring. "To work. Take
-this taper."
-
-He took the wax, contriving to touch her fingers
-with feigned artlessness.
-
-"I say, Rita, who's the mob here tonight? Do
-I know any one? I get the place next to you, of
-course?"
-
-"Begin over there," she directed. "The Enos
-Bloodgoods are coming; you've met her here."
-
-"I thought they were separated, or something."
-
-"Not yet."
-
-"By George, Rita, there's no one like you—serving
-us up a couple on the verge."
-
-"That is not all—I like situations," she said, with
-her slow smile.
-
-"I like Elise; but as for the old boy, he can slip
-on a banana peel and break his neck, for all I care.
-
-"Then there's a broker, Garraboy, Elise's brother."
-
-"Don't know him."
-
-"Maud Lille, who's written clever books—a journalist."
-
-"Don't know her—hate clever women."
-
-"Nan Charters—"
-
-"Who?" said Beecher, with upraised wick.
-
-"Nan Charters, who played in 'Monsieur Beaucaire.'"
-
-"Bully!"
-
-She smiled at his impetuousness, and continued:
-
-"Mr. Majendie and the Stanley Cheevers."
-
-"Oh, I say—not those—"
-
-"Well?" she said as he stopped.
-
-"You know the gambling story," he said reluctantly.
-
-"Club gossip."
-
-"Of course," he said, correcting himself. "One
-of my friends was present. The Cheevers play a
-good game, a well-united game, and have an unusual
-system of makes. They are very successful—let
-it go at that. You don't mean to say that
-Majendie'll be here?"
-
-"I expect him."
-
-"He was a friend of the dad's—a corker, too.
-I don't know much about those things, but isn't he
-supposed to be up against it?"
-
-Three knocks in close succession sounded on the
-outer door, and Garraboy entered with an air of
-familiarity that was displeasing to the younger man.
-The two saluted impertinently, with polite
-antagonism, detesting each other from the first look.
-
-"Go on with the candles, Teddy," said Mrs. Kildair,
-signaling to the newcomer, a young man of
-forty who seemed to have been born bald, wrinkled,
-and heavy-eyed. The long, bald head on the
-thin, straight little body, and the elongated white
-collar, gave him somewhat the look of an
-interrogation-mark. He was heavily perfumed.
-
-"What's the news of the market?" she asked.
-
-"Another odd turn—went up a couple of points,"
-he said, looking at her hand. Unlike Beecher, he
-had instantly noted the new acquisition with a
-malicious smile. His thumb gave a little jerk and he
-added softly: "Something new?"
-
-"Yes. Why should the market go up?" she said,
-seeming to be intent only on the effect of the
-bracketed candles, that now licked the tapestried walls
-with their restless tongues.
-
-"There's a general belief that a group of the big
-fellows will stand behind the trust companies in
-return for certain concessions. I say," he continued,
-watching the ruby ring, which instinctively she tried
-to conceal from him, "I hope Elise isn't going to
-make a fool of herself about Majendie."
-
-"Teddy, Teddy, you've forgotten the two over
-the plaque!" she said aloud—and, a little lower:
-"She won't; don't fear."
-
-"I know her better," he said, without, however,
-betraying the slightest brotherly agitation. "She is
-apt to do something crazy if anything went wrong
-with Majendie. Bloodgood's a hard-skinned old
-brute, but if there was anything public he'd cut up
-ugly."
-
-"I hear he's in the market."
-
-"Yes—on the short side, too—in deep."
-
-"And you?"
-
-He shrugged his shoulders.
-
-"I thought we never told secrets, Mrs. Kildair.
-Who else is coming? Am I representing the
-element of respectability again tonight?"
-
-"The what?" She looked at him steadily until
-he turned away nervously, with the unease of an
-animal. "Don't be an ass with me, my dear
-Garraboy."
-
-"By George," he said irritably, "if this were
-Europe I'd wager you were in the Secret Service,
-Mrs. Kildair."
-
-"Thank you," she said, smiling appreciatively, and
-returned toward young Beecher, who was waiting
-by the piano with ill-concealed resentment.
-
-The Stanley Cheevers entered—a short, chubby
-man with a bleached, vacant face tufted with
-mustache and imperial, devoid of eyebrows, with watery
-eyes that moved slowly with the motion of his
-gourd-like head; Mrs. Cheever, voluble, nervous,
-over-dressed, young with the youth of a child and pretty
-with the prettiness of a doll.
-
-Beecher, who knew them, bowed with a sense of
-curiosity to Mrs. Cheever, who held him a little with
-a certain trick she had of opening wide her dark,
-Oriental eyes; and dropped, with a sense of physical
-discomfort, the hand that Cheever flabbily pressed
-into his.
-
-"Decidedly, I am going to have a grand little time
-by myself," he said moodily. "Where the deuce
-does Rita pick up this bunch?"
-
-The Enos Bloodgoods were still agitated as they
-entered. His lips had not quite banished the scowl,
-nor her eyes the scorn.
-
-"Permit me, my dear," he said, taking off her
-wrap, and the words struck those who heard them
-with a sudden chill.
-
-He was of the unrelenting type that never loses
-its temper, but causes others to lose theirs, immovable
-in his opinions, with a prowling walk, a studied
-antagonism in his manner, while in his bulgy eyes
-was an impudent stare which fastened itself like a
-leech on the person addressed, to draw out his weakness.
-
-Elise Bloodgood, who seemed tied to her husband
-by an invisible leash, had a hunted, resisting quality
-back of a certain desperate dash which she assumed,
-rather than felt, in her attitude toward society—just
-as she touched with red, cheeks that were meant
-to be simply the background of eyes that were
-extraordinary, with a lurking sense of tragedy.
-
-"Rita, dear, I am almost frantic tonight," she
-said hastily, in one of those intimate moments of
-which women avail themselves in the midst of their
-enemies.
-
-"The last rumors are good," said Mrs. Kildair,
-bending over her ostensibly to arrange her scarf.
-
-"Who told you?"
-
-"Your brother. Every one downtown believes
-the panic is stopped. The market has gone up.
-Gunther and Snelling are Bernard's personal friends."
-
-"Friends?" she said bitterly. "Yes, that's just
-the trouble."
-
-"Besides, he is coming tonight—you knew?"
-
-"Yes, I knew," said Mrs. Bloodgood, with a
-glance at her husband, who, at the other side of the
-studio, seemed intent only on examining a reliquary
-in carved stone.
-
-"Then he will tell you himself," said Mrs. Kildair,
-rearranging a little ornament that made a splash of
-gold on the black hair of her companion. "Be
-careful—-don't talk too much now."
-
-"What do I care?" she said rebelliously. "It
-has got to end sometime."
-
-She passed her husband, her dark shoulder flinching
-unconsciously at his near presence, and gave her
-hand to Stanley Cheever and young Beecher, who,
-though utterly unconscious of the entanglements of
-the evening, was struck by the moody sadness in
-her eyes that so strangely contradicted the laugh that
-was on her lips. But as he was wondering, a little
-constrained, how best to open the conversation, the
-door opened once more and two women entered—Nan
-Charters, who arrived like a little white cloud,
-vibrantly alert and pleased at the stir her arrival
-occasioned, and Maud Lille, who appeared behind her
-as a shadow, very straight, very dark, Indian in her
-gliding movements, with masses of somber hair held
-in a little too loosely for neatness.
-
-"Oh, dear, am I dreadfully late?" said Nan Charters,
-who swept into the studio the better to display
-her opera-cloak, a gorgeous combination of white
-and gold Japanese embroideries, which, mounting
-above her throat in conjunction with a scarf of
-mingling pinks, revealed only the tip of her vivacious
-nose and sparkling eyes.
-
-"You are strangely early," said Mrs. Kildair, who
-presented Beecher with a gesture which at the same
-time directed him to attend to the wraps.
-
-"Thank you," said Miss Charters, with a quick
-smile, and by an imperceptible motion she allowed
-the cloak to slip from her shoulders and glide into
-the waiting hands, revealing herself in a white satin
-shot with pigeon red, which caused the eyes of all
-the women present to focus suddenly. Garraboy,
-Cheever, and Bloodgood, who knew her, came up
-eagerly.
-
-Teddy Beecher, his arms crowded with the elusive
-garment, which gave him almost the feeling of a
-human body, bore it to the hall and arranged it with
-care, pleasantly aware of the perfume it exhaled. He
-returned eagerly, conscious of the instantaneous
-impression her smile had made on him as she turned
-to thank him, a look that had challenged and aroused
-him. She was still chatting gaily, surrounded by
-the three men, and he was forced to occupy himself
-with Mrs. Bloodgood. His eyes, however, remained
-on the young girl, who was listening with unaffected
-pleasure to the compliments of her male audience.
-Something in the chivalry of the younger man revolted
-at the spectacle of the sophisticated Garraboy
-and the worldly appetites in the eyes of Cheever and
-Bloodgood. He felt almost an uneasy sense of her
-peril, which was in effect an instinctive emotion of
-jealousy, and, profiting by the moment in which
-Mrs. Bloodgood turned to Miss Lille, he slipped to Miss
-Charters' side and contrived to isolate her.
-
-The studio was now filled with chatter. Mrs. Kildair
-passed from group to group, animating it with
-a word or two. With the exception of Teddy
-Beecher and Nan Charters, in the several groups
-there was but one question—the events of the day
-in the financial world and the probable outcome of
-the secret conference at Gunther's.
-
-Every one watched the clock, awaiting the last
-arrival with an impatience that was too truly founded
-on the safety of their personal fortunes to be
-concealed.
-
-"The conference ended at six-thirty," said Maud
-Lille to Bloodgood and Cheever; "Majendie left for
-his house immediately after. I had it from the city
-editor on the telephone."
-
-"Was any statement given out?" said Cheever,
-who put one finger to his lip, as he did when a little
-nervous.
-
-"None."
-
-"If he goes under, it means the bottom out of the
-market," said Cheever, fixing his owlish stare on
-Bloodgood's smug face.
-
-"Are you long?" asked Bloodgood, turning on
-him with curiosity.
-
-"A thousand shares," answered Cheever, but in
-a tone that carried no conviction.
-
-"He won't come," said Maud Lille obstinately.
-
-"If he does," said Cheever slowly, "he's pulled
-through and the market ought to go up." And a
-second time his finger jerked up to his lips, with the
-gesture of the stutterer.
-
-"He won't come," repeated Maud Lille.
-
-Bloodgood gave her a short look, trying to fathom
-the reason of her belief, a question he did not care
-to put before Cheever.
-
-At this moment Majendie appeared at the entrance
-of the studio. The conversation, which had
-been mounting in nervous staccatos, fell with the
-hollowness that one sometimes feels in the air before
-the first crash of a storm. By an uncontrollable
-impulse, each turned, eager to read in the first
-indication some clue to his personal fate.
-
-The last arrival had opened the outer door unheard,
-and, profiting by the commotion, had removed
-his overcoat and hat in the anteroom.
-
-When the rest of the party perceived him,
-Majendie was standing erect and smiling under the
-Turkish lamp that, hanging from the balcony, cast
-a mellow light on his genial, aristocratic forehead.
-In every detail, from the ruddy, delicately veined
-cheeks and white mustache to the slight, finely shaped
-figure at ease in the evening coat that fitted him as
-a woman's ball gown, he radiated the patrician, but
-the patrician of urbanity, tact, and generous impulses.
-
-"My dear hostess," he said at once, bending over
-Mrs. Kildair's hand with a little extra formality, "a
-thousand excuses for keeping you and your guests
-waiting. But just at present there are quite a
-number of persons who seem to be determined to keep
-me from my engagements. Am I forgiven?"
-
-"Yes," she answered, with a sudden feeling of
-admiration for the air of absolute good humor with
-which he pronounced these words, mystifying though
-they were to her sense of divination.
-
-"I think I know every one," he said, glancing
-around without a trace of emotion at Bloodgood and
-Cheever, whose presence could not have failed to
-be distasteful. "You are very good to be so
-lenient, and I will accept whatever penance you impose.
-Are we going to have one of those delightful chafing-dish
-suppers that only you know how to provide?"
-
-"What pride!" she murmured to herself, as he
-passed over to Miss Charters with a compliment that
-made her and Beecher break out laughing.
-
-Up to the moment, the group had found not the
-slightest indication of the probable outcome of the
-afternoon's conference. If anything, there was in
-his carriage a quiet exhilaration. But the moment
-was approaching when he must come face to face
-with Mrs. Bloodgood, who, either in order to gain
-time for the self-control that seemed almost beyond
-her, or that she might draw him into more immediate
-converse, had withdrawn so as to be the last he
-should greet. Majendie perceived instantly the
-imprudence of the maneuver, and by a word addressed
-to Mrs. Kildair, who followed at his side, contrived
-to bring himself to the farther side of the group,
-of which little Mrs. Cheever and Garraboy were the
-other two.
-
-"I make my excuses to the ladies first," he said,
-with a nod to Garraboy, whom he thus was enabled
-to pass. He offered his hand to Mrs. Bloodgood,
-saying: "Grant me absolution, and I promise to do
-everything I can to make you as gay as I feel now."
-
-Elise Bloodgood took his hand, glancing into his
-face with a startled glance, and immediately
-withdrew, murmuring something inaudible.
-
-Mrs. Kildair, who with everyone had been
-listening to his words for the double meaning that
-seemed to be conveyed, stepped in front of
-Mrs. Bloodgood to cover her too evident agitation.
-
-"Elise," she said sharply, pressing her hand, "get
-hold of yourself. You must! Everything is all
-right. Didn't you understand him?"
-
-"Ah, if he were going to die tomorrow he would
-never tell me," said Mrs. Bloodgood, pressing her
-handkerchief against her lips. "Nothing will ever
-break through his pride."
-
-"But he told you in so many words," said
-Mrs. Kildair—who, however, didn't believe what she
-said.
-
-"He told me nothing—nothing!"
-
-"You must control yourself," said Mrs. Kildair,
-alarmed at her emotion.
-
-"What do I care?"
-
-"But you must! Listen. When I go into the
-dining-room don't follow me. I will contrive to take
-your husband with me. Profit by the chance.
-Besides, you are in no state to judge. Does Bernard
-look like a man who has just been told he is ruined?
-Come, a little courage."
-
-She left her and, stepping into her bedroom,
-donned a Watteau-like cooking-apron, and, slipping
-her rings from her fingers, fixed the three on her
-pin-cushion with a hatpin. From the mirror in
-which she surveyed herself she could see the interior
-of the studio—Nan Charters' laughing face above
-the piano, where she was running off a succession of
-topical songs, surrounded by a chorus of men, while
-Beecher, at her side, solicitously turned the pages.
-
-"Teddy seems quite taken," she thought. But
-the tensity of the drama drove from her all other
-considerations. Completely mystified by Majendie's
-manner, she was studying the moment when she
-could throw him together with Elise Bloodgood,
-convinced that from the woman she would learn what
-the man concealed.
-
-"Your rings are beautiful, dear, beautiful," said
-the deep voice of Maud Lille, who, with Garraboy
-and Mrs. Cheever, was in the room.
-
-"I never saw the ruby before," said Mrs. Cheever
-in a nervous voice. "My dear, you are the most
-mysterious woman in the world. Think of having a
-ring like that, and never wearing it!"
-
-"It is a wonderful stone," said Mrs. Kildair,
-touching with her thin fingers the ring that lay
-uppermost.
-
-"It is beautiful—very beautiful," said the journalist,
-her eyes fastened on it with an uncontrollable
-fascination.
-
-Mrs. Cheever, her lips parted, her black eyes wide
-with eagerness, leaned over. She put out her
-fingers and let them rest caressingly on the ruby,
-withdrawing them as though the contact had burned
-them, while on either cheek little spots of red
-excitement showed.
-
-"It must be very valuable," she said, her breath
-catching slightly.
-
-Garraboy, moving forward, suddenly looked at the
-ring.
-
-"Yes, it is valuable—very much so," said Mrs. Kildair,
-glancing down. Then she went to the door
-that led into the studio, and clapped her hands:
-
-"Attention, everybody! Beecher and Garraboy
-are the chefs. Each one must choose his scullery-maid.
-Mr. Majendie is to make the punch. Everyone
-else is butler and waitress. Mrs. Cheever, did
-you ever peel onions?"
-
-"Good heavens, no!" said Mrs. Cheever, delicately
-recoiling.
-
-"Well, there are no onions to peel," said
-Mrs. Kildair, laughing. "All you have to do is to
-carry dishes or make the toast—on to the kitchen!"
-
-"Miss Charters, you are engaged at any salary
-you may name," said Beecher, forestalling
-Garraboy, who was coming forward.
-
-"But I shall drop every dish," said Nan Charters,
-rising from the piano. "I don't know anything
-about cooking."
-
-"Splendid! Then you'll make no mistakes."
-
-He installed her at one end of the table, and went
-off for the chafing-dish. When he returned, gingerly
-balancing it on a silver platter, Garraboy, profiting
-by his absence, was seated beside Nan Charters,
-speaking in a purposely low voice. She was listening,
-perfectly composed, looking straight before her
-with a tolerant, uninterested smile.
-
-If women often can conceal their true natures from
-women, men seldom deceive one another. There was
-a fixity in Garraboy's glance which Beecher
-understood and hotly resented. But at the moment when,
-setting the tray on the table, he was meditating some
-ill-advised remark, Mrs. Cheever, passing by, said
-with ill-concealed impatience in her thin, hurried
-voice:
-
-"Mr. Garraboy, I am sorry for you, but I have
-been assigned as your assistant, and I should like to
-know what I am to do."
-
-Garraboy rose immediately, bowed with perfect
-suavity, and rejoined Mrs. Cheever, who said to him
-something that the others did not hear, but at which
-they saw him shrug his shoulders.
-
-"Well, what are we going to make?" said Nan
-Charters, with the enjoyment that this exhibition
-of feminine jealousy had brought still in her eyes.
-
-"I don't like Garraboy," said Beecher directly.
-
-"Why not?" she said, smiling a little, and raising
-her eyebrows as though interrogating a child.
-
-"Because I like you," he answered abruptly.
-
-Accustomed to contend with men, she was surprised
-by the genuineness of his remark, which was
-inspired by a sentiment deeper than jealousy. She
-looked at him again with that sudden second estimate
-which is vital.
-
-"He is not difficult to handle," she said carelessly,
-unaware of the touch of intimacy which her reply
-permitted.
-
-"I don't like him," he said obstinately, "and I
-don't like his crowd—the crowd that is here
-to-night. They're like a pack of wolves. What the
-deuce does Rita see in them?"
-
-"Mrs. Kildair has generally, I should say, a very
-good reason for whom she invites," she said carelessly.
-
-"But these Cheevers—they're impossible. How
-the deuce do they live?"
-
-"I thought Mr. Majendie very charming."
-
-"Oh, Majendie—yes, I except him," he said
-enthusiastically. "He's a gentleman."
-
-"That counts a good deal with you?" she said,
-with a touch of raillery.
-
-"It does. I think a gentleman is almost the rarest
-thing you meet with today," he said, holding his
-ground, "a gentleman in the heart. I know only
-four or five."
-
-"Yes, you are right," she said, changing her tone.
-She looked at him a third time, at the honest, boyish
-loyalty so plainly written on his face, and said: "You
-haven't gone out much here?"
-
-"No; I'm just back from knocking around the
-world, hunting in Africa and all that sort of
-uselessness."
-
-"Come and tell me about it sometime.
-
-"May I?"
-
-She laughed at his impetuousness, and pointed to
-the contents of the chafing-dish, which had been
-simmering neglected; but more than once during the
-operation her glance returned to the eager, earnest
-face.
-
-Meanwhile, Garraboy, at the other end of the
-table, assisted by Mrs. Cheever and Maud Lille, was
-busy with a lobster à la Newburg. Mrs. Kildair,
-having finished in the kitchen, had entered the
-dining-room, where she established a sort of provisional
-serving-table. She called to her side Cheever and
-Bloodgood, and, under the pretext of arranging the
-dishes from the china-closet, kept them isolated. At
-this moment Elise Bloodgood approached Majendie,
-who, at the rear end of the studio, was occupied with
-the brewing of a punch. Natural as was the movement,
-it was instantly perceived by the four or five
-persons vitally interested. A moment afterward
-Mrs. Bloodgood passed into the bedroom; but there
-was in her carriage a triumph that she did not care
-to conceal.
-
-"He's won out," thought Bloodgood.
-
-"The shorts will be caught," thought Cheever.
-"The devil! I must cover."
-
-"Has he lied to her?" said Mrs. Kildair to
-herself. "If everything is all right, why should he
-conceal it from any one?"
-
-She went across the room, stopping at the punch-table.
-
-"Have you everything you need?" she asked.
-
-"Everything, thank you," Majendie answered
-gently; but there was in his voice a tired note, as if
-some effort had suddenly exhausted him.
-
-"I understood what you meant," she said, looking
-at him not without a little pity—an emotion which
-was rare with her. "Let me congratulate you on
-the result of this afternoon."
-
-"Thank you very much for your congratulations,"
-he said quietly, taking her hand. "If you knew,
-you will understand why I was kept so late."
-
-As he bowed, the front of his jacket opening a
-little, she saw or fancied she saw in the inner pocket
-a strip of green, slightly protruding. She left him,
-still unconvinced, and turned to the company.
-
-"Everything ready, Teddy? All right. Every
-one sit down. Mrs. Cheever and Mrs. Bloodgood
-are appointed butlers—because real work will do
-them good. Sit down, sit down. I'll be back in a
-minute."
-
-As she turned to her bedroom, there came a strong
-ring, twice repeated. She paused, astonished.
-
-"Who can that be?" she thought, frowning, and
-directing her steps toward the antechamber. "No
-one is allowed to come up. It must be a telegram."
-
-She opened the door, and Slade entered.
-
-"I came right up," he said directly, "because I
-had no success on the telephone. You rather excited
-my curiosity this afternoon. Please invite me to your
-party."
-
-The first moment of irritation was succeeded, on
-her part, by the feeling of elation. The impulse that
-had brought Slade so unexpectedly there was a feeling
-of jealousy, in which Beecher and Majendie were
-confusedly mixed.
-
-"He wishes to watch me with his own eyes," she
-said triumphantly. "Very well; he shall be well
-punished."
-
-Slade's arrival produced a moment of profound
-astonishment. Bloodgood and Maud Lille exchanged
-quick glances, believing the meeting between
-Majendie and Slade had been premeditated. Garraboy
-plucked Cheever nervously by the sleeve, while
-Majendie, as if realizing that he was dealing with
-an antagonist of a different caliber, rose with a little
-nervous inflation of the chest. Rapid as had been
-the interim in the antechamber, Mrs. Kildair had
-had time to say:
-
-"Majendie is here. Do you know what happened
-this afternoon?"
-
-"I do," said Slade, with malicious enjoyment, and
-he added: "Do you?"
-
-"Yes," she replied, convinced, likewise, of the
-falsity of his statement. Then aloud she added:
-"Ladies and gentlemen, Mr. Slade, an impromptu
-guest."
-
-She passed with him about the table, introducing
-him where it was necessary. Slade and Majendie
-did not offer hands; each bowed with a quiet,
-measured politeness. On the contrary, when Beecher was
-reached, the older man grasped the hand of the
-younger, and held it a moment with a grip that,
-despite Beecher's own strength, made him wince.
-
-"Teddy, be a good boy and place Mr. Slade somewhere,"
-she said, resting her hand purposely on the
-young man's shoulder. "I'll take off my apron and
-be back immediately."
-
-She stopped near Majendie, who had returned to
-the punch-table for an extra glass, and, seeing that
-her movements were followed by Slade, said:
-
-"Bernard, believe me, I did not plan it. I had
-no idea he was coming."
-
-"It makes not the slightest difference," he said
-instantly. "Mr. Slade and I have no quarrel.
-Please don't worry about me."
-
-"You're an awfully good sort," she said abruptly.
-
-"That is high praise from you," he said, with a
-little critical smile which showed he was not entirely
-the dupe of her maneuvers.
-
-She went into her bedroom, and, divesting herself
-of her apron, hung it in the closet. Then, going to
-her dressing-table, she drew the hatpin from the
-pin-cushion and carelessly slipped the rings on her
-fingers. All at once she frowned and looked quickly
-at her hand. Only two rings were there. The third
-one—the ring with the ruby—was gone!
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`CHAPTER III`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- CHAPTER III
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-Her first emotion was of irritation.
-
-"How stupid!" she said to herself, and, returning
-to her dressing-table, began to search among
-the silver and ivory boxes. All at once she stopped.
-She remembered with a vivid flash putting the pin
-through the three rings.
-
-She made no further search, but remained without
-moving, her fingers slowly tapping the table, her head
-inclined, her lips drawn in a little between her teeth,
-watching in the glass the crowded table reflected from
-the outer studio.
-
-In that gay party, one person was the thief—but
-which one? Each guest had had a dozen opportunities
-in the course of the time she had been in the
-kitchen.
-
-"Too much prinking, pretty lady," called out
-Garraboy, who, from where he was seated, could see
-her.
-
-"Not he," she said quickly. Then she reconsidered:
-"Why not? He's shifty—who knows? Let
-me think."
-
-To gain time, she went slowly back to the kitchen,
-her head bowed, her thumb between her teeth.
-
-"Who has taken it?"
-
-She ran over the characters of her guests and their
-situations as she knew them. Strangely enough, with
-the exception of Beecher and Majendie, at each her
-mind stopped upon some reason that might explain
-a sudden temptation.
-
-"And even Majendie—if he is bankrupt or
-running away," she thought. "No, I shall find out
-nothing this way. That is not the important thing
-just now. The important thing is to get the ring
-back. But how?"
-
-All at once she realized the full disaster of the
-situation. Slade would never believe her; and yet,
-how was it possible to admit before others who had
-lent her the ring?
-
-"What could I say to him?" she thought desperately.
-"No, no; I must have the ring back, whatever
-happens. I won't give him that hold. I must
-get it back—some way—somehow."
-
-And mechanically, deliberately, she continued to
-pace back and forth, her clenched hand beating the
-deliberate, rhythmic measure of her journey.
-
-In the studio, meanwhile, under the gay leadership
-of Majendie and Nan Charters, the spirits of the
-company began to rise. The rival chefs were
-surrounded by anxious admirers, who shouted laughing
-instructions or protested with mock agony against
-the shower of red pepper.
-
-The ceremony had served to bring Beecher and
-Nan Charters on terms of sympathetic familiarity.
-The young actress had the secret of what is meant
-by that much abused word—charm. Her vivacious
-movements were all charming. The eagerness with
-which her eyes seized the excitement of the moment,
-the soft and yet animated tones of her voice, the most
-casual gesture she made, or the most evident reply,
-all seemed invested with a peculiar charm which was
-at the same time a delight in pleasure and a happiness
-in the consciousness of pleasing.
-
-Beecher did not or could not conceal the empire
-she had so suddenly acquired over his imagination,
-while Nan Charters, quite aware of what was
-happening, laughingly provoked him further, a little
-excited beyond the emotions of an ordinary flirtation.
-
-During the progress of this personal duel, which,
-however, every one perceived with different emotions,
-Slade, placed at the middle of the table, followed
-only the expressions of Bernard Majendie, his
-scrutiny at times becoming so insistently profound that
-the banker several times noticed it with a swift
-glance of annoyed interrogation, which, however,
-did not alter in the least the fixity of the other's gaze.
-
-Meanwhile, two or three conversations, expressed
-in snatched phrases, took place between those whose
-interests in the stock market were put in jeopardy
-by the mystery as to Majendie's fate.
-
-"There'll be a rush of the shorts to cover tomorrow,
-if this is true," said Cheever in a low whisper
-to his wife. "Pump Mrs. Bloodgood all you can."
-
-"How quick do you suppose they'll give the news
-out?" said Bloodgood to Garraboy. "It means a
-buying movement as soon as they do."
-
-"Any paper may have the news tomorrow," said
-the broker, and the glass that he took from the
-punch-table shook as he raised it.
-
-"Do you think Slade knows?"
-
-"I'm not sure—but I think he does," said Garraboy
-carefully. "Better meet me at the Waldorf
-at eleven. I'll get another line on it by then."
-
-"Why the deuce should he pull through?" said
-Bloodgood, with a quick, dull fury.
-
-Garraboy, with his malicious smile, perceiving that
-Bloodgood's hatred was purely financial, chuckled
-to himself, took a couple of glasses in rapid
-succession, and returned to the table under perfect
-control, not without a scowl at the other end of the
-table, where Nan Charters and young Beecher were
-laughingly disputing the possession of the
-pepper-shaker.
-
-A moment later, as Mrs. Cheever was exclaiming
-at their hostess' prolonged delay to Garraboy, who
-was dipping into the lobster à la Newburg, which
-he was preparing to serve, Mrs. Kildair slipped into
-the room like a lengthening shadow. Her entrance
-had been made with scarcely a perceptible sound, and
-yet each guest was aware of it, at the same moment,
-with the same uncontrollable nervous start.
-
-"Heavens, dear lady," exclaimed Garraboy, with
-a twitch of his arms. "You come in on us like a
-Greek tragedy. What is the surprise?"
-
-As he spoke, Beecher, looking up, saw her turn
-suddenly on him, drawing her forehead together
-until the eyebrows ran in a straight line.
-
-"I have something to say to you all," she said in
-a quiet, discordant voice, while her eyes ran
-restlessly through the company with a predatory
-sharpness.
-
-There was no mistaking the gravity in her voice.
-Garraboy extinguished the oil-lamp, covering the
-chafing-dish clumsily with a disagreeable tinny
-sound; Mrs. Cheever and Mrs. Bloodgood swung
-about abruptly; Maud Lille rose a little from her
-seat; Nan Charters, dramatically sensitive, seized
-unconsciously the arm of young Beecher; while the
-men, with the exception of Slade, who still watched
-Majendie like a terrier, imitated their movements
-of expectancy with a clumsy shuffling of the feet.
-
-"Mr. Bloodgood."
-
-"Yes, Mrs. Kildair?"
-
-"Kindly do as I ask."
-
-"Certainly."
-
-She had spoken his name with a peremptory
-positiveness that was almost an accusation. He rose,
-placing his napkin carefully at the side of his plate,
-raising his short eyebrows a little in surprise.
-
-"Go to the vestibule," she continued, immediately
-shifting her glance from him to the others. "Are
-you there? Shut the sliding doors that lead into the
-studio. Lock them. Bring me the key."
-
-He executed the order without bungling, while the
-company, in growing amazement, fascinated, watched
-his squat figure returning with the key.
-
-"You've locked it?" she said, making the
-question an excuse to bury her glance in his.
-
-"As you wished me to."
-
-"Thanks."
-
-She took from him the key, and, shifting slightly,
-likewise locked the door into her bedroom through
-which she had come.
-
-Then, transferring the keys to her left hand,
-seemingly unaware of Bloodgood, who still composedly
-awaited her further instructions, her eyes studied a
-moment the possibilities of the apartment and then
-returned to her guests.
-
-"Mr. Cheever," she said abruptly.
-
-"Yes, Mrs. Kildair."
-
-"Put out all the candles except the candelabrum
-on the table."
-
-"Put out the lights?" he said, rising, with his
-peculiar nervous movement of the fingers to the lips.
-
-"At once."
-
-Mr. Cheever, in rising, met the glance of his wife,
-and the look of questioning and wonder that passed
-did not escape the others.
-
-"But, my dear Mrs. Kildair," cried Nan Charters,
-with a little nervous catch of her breath, "what
-is it? I'm getting terribly worked up."
-
-"Miss Lille," said Mrs. Kildair's undeviating
-voice of command, while Beecher placed his hand
-firmly over his companion's, which had begun to
-open and shut in nervous tension.
-
-The journalist, more composed than the rest, had
-watched the proceedings from that shadowy calm
-which had made her presence almost unnoticed.
-Now, as though forewarned by professional instinct
-that something sensational was hanging on the
-moment, she rose quietly with almost a stealthy motion.
-
-"Put the candelabrum on this table—here," said
-Mrs. Kildair, after a long moment's confrontation.
-She indicated the large round table on which the
-punch-bowl was set. "No, wait. Mr. Bloodgood,
-first clear off the table, cover and all; I want nothing
-on it."
-
-As Bloodgood started to remove the punch-bowl,
-Majendie rose quickly and took the heavy
-candelabrum from the hands of Maud Lille, saying:
-
-"Permit me; that's rather heavy for you."
-
-"But, Mrs. Kildair—" began Mrs. Cheever's
-voice, in shrill crescendo.
-
-Mrs. Kildair, as though satisfied by her examination
-of the journalist, nodded to Majendie, and,
-perceiving the mahogany table clear, said without
-notice of Mrs. Cheever:
-
-"Good! Now put the candelabrum down on it."
-
-In a moment, as Cheever proceeded lumberingly
-on his errand, the brilliant cross-fire of lights
-dropped away in the studio, only a few smoldering
-wicks winking on the walls, while the high ceiling
-seemed to recede as it came under the sole dominion
-of the three candles bracketed in silver at the head
-of the bare mahogany table.
-
-"Now listen!" said Mrs. Kildair, and her voice
-was cold and abrupt. "My ring has just been
-stolen!"
-
-She said it suddenly, hurling the news at them,
-and waiting ferret-like for some indication in the
-chorus that broke out.
-
-The hand that Beecher still grasped shot out from
-him as though it had been stung. For the first time,
-Slade, forgetting Majendie, wheeled brusquely and
-concentrated his glance on Mrs. Kildair, who listened
-unmoved to the storm of exclamations:
-
-"Stolen!"
-
-"Oh, my dear Mrs. Kildair, not that!"
-
-"Stolen—by Jove!"
-
-"Rita dear!"
-
-"What! Stolen—here—tonight?"
-
-"The ring has been taken in the last twenty
-minutes," continued Mrs. Kildair, in the same
-determined, chiseled accents. "I am not going to mince
-words. The ring has been taken, and one of you
-here is the thief. This is exactly the situation."
-
-For a moment nothing was heard but an indescribable
-gasp, while each, turning by an uncontrollable
-impulse, searched the face of his neighbors.
-Suddenly Slade's deep bass broke out:
-
-"Stolen, Mrs. Kildair?"
-
-"Stolen," she replied quietly, meeting his
-inquisitorial glance.
-
-"Have you searched very carefully?" said
-Majendie. "Mistakes are easily made. It may have
-slipped to the floor. Are you certain that it has
-been taken?"
-
-"Exactly. There is not the slightest doubt," said
-Mrs. Kildair, conscious of the almost admiring
-suspicion in Slade's glance. "Three of you were in my
-bedroom when I took off my rings, placed a hatpin
-through them, and fastened them to the pin-cushion.
-Am I correct, Mr. Garraboy?" she added abruptly.
-
-"Perfectly so," said the broker, staring ahead with
-a sudden consciousness of his dilemma. He added
-punctiliously; "I was there."
-
-"With the exception of Mr. Slade, each of you
-has passed through my bedroom a dozen times. The
-ring is gone, and one of you has taken it."
-
-Mrs. Cheever gave a little scream and reached
-heavily for a glass of water. Mrs. Bloodgood said
-something inarticulate, covering her heart with her hand
-in the muffled outburst of masculine exclamation:
-
-"The devil you say!"
-
-"Incredible!"
-
-"I saw it."
-
-"By Jove! A nasty mess."
-
-Only Maud Lille's calm voice could be heard saying:
-
-"Quite true. I was in the room when you took
-them off. The ruby was on top."
-
-Mrs. Cheever sought to add her testimony, but
-was incapable of speech. In her agitation she spilled
-half of the glass of water as she put it down from
-her lips.
-
-"Was the ring valuable?" said Slade carefully,
-with a quiet enjoyment.
-
-Their eyes met a moment—a look incomprehensible
-to the others.
-
-"It was worth over fifteen thousand dollars,"
-Mrs. Kildair answered, in the buzz of astonishment.
-
-"And what are you going to do about it?"
-
-"I have not minced words," she said, turning her
-eyes to Maud Lille and back to Garraboy. "There
-is a thief, and that thief is here in this room. Now,
-I am not going to stand on ceremony. I am
-going to have that ring back in one way or
-another—now. Listen to me carefully. I intend to have
-that ring back, and, until I do, not a soul shall leave
-this room."
-
-"A search?" said Slade quietly.
-
-"No," she said instantly, tapping on the table with
-her nervous knuckles. "I don't care to know the
-thief—all I want is the ring. And this is the way
-I am going to get it." She stopped for another
-quick, searching glance, and continued with cold
-control:
-
-"I am going to make it possible for whoever took
-it to restore it to me without possibility of detection.
-The doors are locked and will stay locked. I am
-going to put out the lights, and I am going to count
-one hundred—slowly. You will be in absolute
-darkness; no one will know or see what is done, and
-I give my word that I will count the full hundred.
-There will be no surprise, no turning up of lights.
-But if, at the end of that time, the ring is not placed
-here on this table, I shall telephone for detectives
-and have every one in this room searched. Am I
-clear?"
-
-The transfer of the candelabrum to the further
-table had left those of the diners who had remained
-by the dinner-table in half obscurity. Instantly there
-was a shifting and a dragging of chairs, a confused
-jumble of questions and explanations.
-
-Nan Charters for the second time seized the arm
-of Teddy Beecher. She murmured something which
-he did not hear. He glanced at her face, and for
-a moment an incredible suspicion crossed his mind.
-But the next, as he glanced down the table at the
-totally unnerved attitude of Mrs. Cheever and
-Mrs. Bloodgood, he understood better the agitation of his
-companion.
-
-"Do you suspect any one?" he whispered, by an
-impulse that seemed to spring into his mind.
-
-The young actress turned to him with almost an
-expression of terror in her eyes, which at the same
-time implored him to be silent.
-
-"She knows something," he thought, with a
-somber feeling. His own face was flushed. He felt
-that to all he must appear guilty. "Every one feels
-the same," he thought, looking again at his companion,
-who was gazing with almost frightened intensity
-straight ahead of her.
-
-He followed her glance, and saw that the object
-of her gaze was none other than Mrs. Enos Bloodgood,
-who still held her hand pressed over her breast,
-her lips parted as though suffocating with emotion.
-But, before he had time even to consider the bearing
-of this discovery, Mrs. Kildair's voice, firm and
-unrelenting, cut short the confusion.
-
-"Every one come to this table, please. Take your
-places here," she said, and to emphasize the
-command she rapped sharply for order.
-
-In the bustle that took place, Beecher was
-separated from Miss Charters, and when he found
-himself at the table she was opposite him, her eyes on
-the table.
-
-"Can you make a little room?" he heard Maud
-Lille's low voice say, and, drawing away from
-Cheever, who was on his right, he allowed the
-journalist to take her place beside him.
-
-Majendie was on the left of Mrs. Kildair, Slade
-next to him, sweeping the table slowly with his
-direct, lowering glance, his lips slightly pursed.
-Bloodgood, his hands sunk in his pockets, stared bullishly
-ahead, while between Cheever and his wife there
-passed a covert, terrible glance of interrogation.
-Garraboy, with his hands locked over his chin, arms
-folded, looked straight ahead staring fixedly at his
-hostess.
-
-Mrs. Kildair, having assured herself that all was
-arranged as she desired, blew out two of the three
-candles, which suddenly caused the eyes on the dim
-faces to stand out in startled relief.
-
-"I shall count one hundred—no more, no less,"
-she said quietly. "Either the ring is returned or
-every one in this room is to be searched. Remember."
-
-She motioned to Slade, who, leaning over, blew
-out the remaining candle, while a little hysterical cry
-was heard from Mrs. Cheever.
-
-The wick shone a moment with a hot, glowing
-spire, and then everything was black. Mrs. Kildair
-began to count.
-
-"One—two—three—four—five—six—seven—eight—nine—ten—"
-
-She gave each number with the inexorable
-regularity of a clock's reiterated note.
-
-"Eleven—twelve—thirteen—fourteen—
-fifteen—sixteen—seventeen—"
-
-In the room every sound was distinct—the rustle
-of a shifting dress, the grinding of a shoe, the deep,
-slightly asthmatic breathing of a man.
-
-"Twenty-one—twenty-two—twenty-three—
-twenty-four—twenty-five—twenty-six—"
-
-The counting went on, without the slightest variation,
-with a methodic, rasping reiteration that began
-to produce almost an hypnotic effect on the
-imaginations held in suspense.
-
-"Thirty—thirty-one—thirty-two—thirty-three—"
-
-A slight rasping breath was heard, and then a man
-nervously clearing his throat.
-
-"Thirty-nine—forty—forty-one—forty-two—"
-
-Still nothing had happened. No other sound had
-broken in on the strained attention of every ear.
-Yet the voice that counted did not vary in the
-slightest measure; only the sound became less human, more
-metallic.
-
-"Forty-seven—forty-eight—forty-nine—
-fifty—fifty-one—fifty-two—"
-
-A woman had sighed—Mrs. Bloodgood next to
-him—the sigh of a woman yielding up
-consciousness to pain.
-
-"Fifty-four—fifty-five—fifty-six—fifty-seven
-—fifty-eight—fifty-nine—sixty—sixty-one—"
-
-All at once, clear, ringing, unmistakable, on the
-sounding plane of the table was heard a quick metallic
-note that echoed and reëchoed in the empty blackness.
-
-"The ring!"
-
-It was Maud Lille's deep voice that had cried out.
-Beecher suddenly against his shoulder felt the weight
-of Mrs. Bloodgood's swaying body. The voice that
-counted hesitated a moment, but only a moment.
-
-"Sixty-two—sixty-three—"
-
-Several voices began to protest:
-
-"No, no!"
-
-"Light the candles!"
-
-"It's too much!"
-
-"Don't go on!"
-
-"Seventy-five—seventy-six—seventy-seven—
-seventy-eight—seventy-nine—"
-
-The sound dominated the protest. Some one
-began to laugh, an hysterical, feverish laughter that
-chilled Beecher to the bones. He put out his hand
-and steadied the body of the woman next to him.
-
-"Eighty-five—eighty-six—"
-
-"Hurry, oh, hurry—please hurry!" cried the
-voice of Nan Charters, and some one else cried:
-
-"Enough—this is terrible!"
-
-"Ninety-five—ninety-six—ninety-seven—
-ninety-eight—ninety-nine, and one hundred."
-
-At once a match sputtered in the hands of Slade.
-There was a cry from every one, and the table
-shivered with the weight of those who craned forward.
-Then a second cry of amazement and horror. The
-table was absolutely bare. The ring a second time
-had been taken.
-
-.. _`"In that gay party one person was a thief—but which one? ... A match sputtered. There was a cry of amazement and horror. The table was absolutely bare"`:
-
-.. figure:: images/img-058.jpg
- :figclass: white-space-pre-line
- :align: center
- :alt: "In that gay party one person was a thief—but which one? ... A match sputtered. There was a cry of amazement and horror. The table was absolutely bare"
-
- "In that gay party one person was a thief—but which one? ... A match sputtered. There was a cry of amazement and horror. The table was absolutely bare"
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`CHAPTER IV`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- CHAPTER IV
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-For a full, strained moment not a sound escaped
-the company; even the strongest natures, Slade,
-Majendie and Rita Kildair seemed powerless to grasp
-what had taken place. Then the realization came,
-in a flash. What the first thief had failed to carry
-through another had boldly dared: a man or a woman,
-deliberately or hysterically, had seized the opportunity
-that had lain there, in the darkness, between the
-sixty-first second and the hundredth count.
-
-The match in Slade's hands burned his fingers,
-and went out. In the sudden blackness a dozen cries
-were heard:
-
-"Light the candle!"
-
-"Turn on the electric light!"
-
-"Search the floor!"
-
-"Stolen again!"
-
-"Ghastly!"
-
-"A light! A light!"
-
-Another match sputtered, and one candle caught
-the flame and flung its expanding circles of light
-around them.
-
-"It must have rolled to the floor," said Majendie's
-voice, among the first.
-
-"Nonsense!" broke in Slade's powerful bass.
-"There are no carpets; we would have heard it.
-There is a second thief here. Every one must be
-searched. Mrs. Kildair, if you wish I'll call up my
-detective agency."
-
-"No," said Mrs. Kildair instantly, and her voice
-had regained its calm. "I will attend to that myself."
-
-She went quickly to the door into the bedroom,
-unlocked it, passed through, and locked it again. A
-moment later the impatient ring of a telephone was
-heard.
-
-In the ill-lit studio the greatest confusion prevailed.
-Every one seemed, by a common impulse, to desire
-to escape to the farthest ends of the room, stumbling
-and bumping against one another in the obscurity.
-Some instinct impelled Beecher to Nan Charters'
-side. He took her arm with a strong, reassuring
-grip, expecting to find her still shaken with emotion;
-but, to his amazement, he found her entirely collected.
-
-"Thank you, I am all right," she said, releasing
-herself, with a little smile.
-
-"Are you sure?" he said doubtfully.
-
-At this moment, as he stood staring at her,
-perplexed, Slade's voice rang out peremptorily:
-
-"The electric lights—some one turn on the
-lights!"
-
-He left her, and, going to the wall toward the
-antechamber, pressed the three buttons embedded there.
-Instantly the great room was showered with a brutal
-glare. Near the piano, Mrs. Cheever was sunk in an
-arm-chair, in a seemingly hysterical state, while
-Mr. Cheever, glass in hand, was bending over her;
-Mrs. Bloodgood was seated at the dining-table, her head
-resting in her hands; Garraboy and Bloodgood were
-turning in the middle of the floor. Only Maud Lille,
-stoic and alert, remained at her original place. Slade
-and Majendie were carefully exploring the floor.
-
-Beecher did not at once return to his companion.
-Her sudden change perplexed him with thoughts
-that he did not wish to analyze too deeply. He
-expected that she would rejoin Mrs. Bloodgood; but
-the young actress, as though purposely avoiding her,
-went finally to where Maud Lille was standing, and
-said, with a command that startled Beecher:
-
-"Mr. Majendie, there is always a chance that the
-ring may have rolled off the table and been caught in
-somebody's dress. Such things have happened again
-and again. I suggest that every woman make a
-careful search."
-
-"Miss Charters is quite right," said Majendie,
-who, advancing to the middle of the studio, repeated
-the suggestion. "The situation is frightful; we
-must take every precaution to avoid the chances of
-an accident."
-
-The four women immediately began to examine
-the ruffles and draperies of their skirts—without
-success.
-
-All at once the door at the back of the room opened,
-and Mrs. Kildair reappeared.
-
-.. _`61`:
-
-"I shall have the detectives here—a man and a
-woman—within half an hour," she said. "There
-is nothing to do but wait."
-
-She seated herself in a chair near the door, her
-hands stretched out over the arms, her head lowered.
-Every one sat down, with the exception of Maud
-Lille, who, however, shifted a little so as to have the
-support of the piano. No one spoke; the situation
-had passed beyond comment.
-
-On the dining-table the little alcohol-lamp under a
-chafing-dish burnt itself out unnoticed. At the end
-of thirty-five minutes, during which every one had
-been intent on the torturous progress of the clock,
-a sudden buzz was heard.
-
-Mrs. Kildair rose and, passing out by way of the
-bedroom, was heard talking behind the closed doors
-that led into the hall, a sound followed by the
-indistinguishable jumble of voices.
-
-A nervous five minutes, and she reappeared, with
-the same incomprehensible calm that had marked her
-during the period in the dark.
-
-"The women will go into the bedroom," she said,
-without variation of her voice. "The men will be
-searched in the dining-room."
-
-"One moment," said Slade, taking a step in advance.
-
-Mrs. Kildair turned with a start, the first agitation
-noticeable.
-
-"It is absolutely necessary for me to keep an
-appointment at ten o'clock," he said, glancing at the
-clock, which stood at the last quarter. "As I was
-not here when the ring was first stolen, I ask the
-privilege of being examined the first."
-
-At this there was a murmur, and Mrs. Kildair
-hesitated.
-
-Slade, giving a disdainful shoulder to the protest,
-strode deliberately to Mrs. Kildair and spoke with
-her in a low voice. At the end of a moment
-Mrs. Kildair nodded as though convinced, and, going to
-the folding doors, unlocked them. Outside a man
-in a dark business suit, as grimly correct as an
-undertaker, was waiting with folded arms.
-
-Slade bowed and passed into the hall, shutting the
-doors behind him, while Mrs. Kildair came back
-slowly, evidently running over in her mind the order
-of selection.
-
-"Mrs. Bloodgood," she said finally, "will you go
-first?"
-
-Mrs. Bloodgood, surprised at the formal appellation,
-rose hastily, and started blindly for the vestibule
-through which Slade had passed.
-
-"In my bedroom, please," said Mrs. Kildair.
-
-The young woman checked herself, faltering a
-little, and entered the bedroom, where, for a moment,
-could be seen the drab figure of another woman,
-ornamented by a little toque with a red feather.
-
-"Mrs. Kildair," said Majendie, rising, "it is
-equally important for me to leave as soon as possible.
-While I know that I ask a favor, possibly all of you
-know that my affairs are at a vital stage, and I should
-appreciate it very much if there were no objection to
-my being examined the next."
-
-He turned, with a courteous bow, as he concluded.
-
-"I am perfectly willing," said Beecher at once.
-
-"I am not," said Bloodgood, while Cheever made
-a gesture of dissent.
-
-"Nor I," said Garraboy. "I have my own appointment,
-that means a great deal to me. I regret
-that I cannot accede to Mr. Majendie's request."
-
-"These gentlemen are quite within their rights,"
-said Majendie, accepting the refusal with the same
-courtesy. He thanked Beecher with a smile, and
-added: "If you are willing, Mrs. Kildair, shall we
-draw lots for it?"
-
-"Quite so," said Mrs. Kildair, and she arranged
-four slips in her fingers and tendered them.
-
-Majendie drew the longest, and was, therefore,
-forced to wait until Garraboy, Bloodgood, and
-Cheever had passed ahead. He glanced at the clock with
-a sudden, uneasy look, and returned to his chair:
-but, for the first time, a frown appeared on his face,
-while his fingers tore into bits the slip of paper, which
-he did not notice he had retained.
-
-Beecher was unpleasantly aware that Garraboy was
-watching him, and this scrutiny, which might have
-been inspired by a personal jealousy, struck him as a
-deliberate suspicion. He returned the look with a
-belligerent intensity, conscious in his own mind that
-he had already formed a prejudice as to the identity
-of the second thief.
-
-"A woman might have taken the ring on impulse,"
-he thought uneasily, "but only a man could have had
-the cold daring to take it the second time."
-
-He eliminated Majendie by an instinctive
-rejection; Slade appeared an equally impossible
-solution.
-
-"It's Cheever, Bloodgood, or Garraboy," he
-thought. "And Cheever hasn't the nerve—I don't
-believe it. It's Bloodgood or Garraboy—and
-Garraboy is the most likely."
-
-Suddenly a hot, panicky feeling came to him.
-What if the real thief—Garraboy, for instance—had
-slipped the ring into his own pocket? He unlocked
-his hands and hurriedly searched his clothes.
-Then annoyed at seeing this childish action come
-under the notice of the broker, he shifted in his seat
-and glanced toward Nan Charters. To his surprise,
-he found again the same indications of nervousness
-in the concentration of her eye on the door leading
-into the bedroom.
-
-At this moment Mrs. Bloodgood emerged, and
-Mrs. Cheever went in. At once the nervous tension of his
-companion seemed to relax, and she sank back in her
-seat, with an indifferent glance around the room.
-
-"Decidedly, there is something queer between the
-two," he thought, mystified.
-
-In the studio the same stony silence was maintained.
-Through the open doors that led to the antechamber
-Slade reappeared, hesitated a moment as if
-to reenter the studio, then bowed and went out.
-Behind him the detective was seen waiting.
-Garraboy rose and immediately passed into the back.
-
-Mrs. Bloodgood had taken her seat apart, staring
-ahead as though by a difficult process of mental
-control, for at times her glance, despite the
-consciousness of her husband's espionage, flashed over to
-where Majendie was impatiently following the
-movements of the clock.
-
-When Garraboy's search had ended, he followed
-the precedent of Slade, bowed without speaking, and
-departed; while Bloodgood, guarding the same
-silence, passed into the dining-room. Maud Lille
-succeeded Mrs. Cheever, who returned in the same state
-of agitation that she had shown from the beginning.
-She started to approach her husband, when Mrs. Kildair's
-controlled voice was heard:
-
-"Not there, please, Mrs. Cheever. Kindly sit at
-this side of the room with Mrs. Bloodgood."
-
-Mrs. Cheever flushed instantly, and sank, or rather
-collapsed, in the chair which had been indicated.
-
-All at once there came another ring, followed by
-two or three impatient taps on the outer door. There
-was a sudden stir in the room, where all nerves were
-clearly on the edge, and Mrs. Cheever gave a little
-scream.
-
-"I'll answer," said Cheever, rising.
-
-"Wait," said Mrs. Kildair. She started toward
-the door, and then, changing her mind, as if unwilling
-to relax her surveillance of events in the studio,
-stopped. "Mr. Beecher, please," she said
-thoughtfully. "See who it is." And she moved slightly
-toward the half-drawn portières, to hear and at the
-same time to be concealed.
-
-Garraboy was outside, a coat on his arm.
-
-"Excuse me," he said, without emotion. "I took
-the wrong coat. Stupid of me. Just found it out."
-
-"It looks like mine," said Beecher, examining it.
-
-"Probably is," said Garraboy, who extracted
-another coat of similar appearance from the rack,
-plunged into his pockets and nodded. "Sure enough.
-Sorry. Good night."
-
-So thoroughly disagreeable an impression had the
-broker produced upon Beecher that, in a moment of
-suspicion, moved by an incredible thought, he ran
-his hands hastily through the pockets.
-
-"I shouldn't have been surprised," he grumbled
-to himself, and returned to the studio, where the
-conversation had been overheard.
-
-The search continued, ended, and, as all expected,
-no trace of the ring was found.
-
-Mrs. Kildair excused herself, evidently maintaining
-her calm with difficulty. The guests, murmuring
-inarticulate phrases, took their wraps, and young
-Beecher found himself shortly in a coupé beside Nan
-Charters.
-
-For several moments neither spoke, each absorbed
-in his own speculations. Beecher studied the figure
-at his side with covert glances, amazed at the
-transformation from the childlike charm which had first
-fascinated him. An hour before he had begun to
-wonder how far that feeling might develop in him;
-now, as he watched her, he was conscious of a
-dispassionate, almost resentful analysis. The fragrance
-of her perfume, a little too overpowering, filled the
-interior of the coupé. She herself, bending slightly
-forward, one elbow against the window-pane, pressed
-her ungloved knuckles against her chin, while her
-glance, set and controlled, was lost in the cloudy
-shadows and striped reflections of the street without.
-
-"What is terrible in such a situation," she said
-musingly, but without turning, "is that any one may
-be suspected."
-
-The words were spoken with almost an absolute
-change of personality. The very tone brought to
-him an increased antagonism.
-
-"Quite true," he said. "You may have taken it
-the first time, and I the second."
-
-She turned and tried to distinguish his expression;
-but, if he had hoped to startle, he was disappointed.
-She said, quite possessed:
-
-"Why do you put it that way?"
-
-"Because I am convinced that the second time was
-the deliberate action of a man, and that the first was
-the impulse of a woman."
-
-"Why a woman the first time?"
-
-"That is simply my feeling. A woman would not
-calculate the chances of detection, would have kept
-the ring on her person, and would have restored it.
-What do you think?"
-
-"Possibly," she said, her glance returning to the
-street.
-
-"But you don't agree with me," he said, leaning
-a little forward.
-
-"I don't know."
-
-"Miss Charters, will you allow me to ask you a
-question?"
-
-"What? Yes."
-
-"Don't you know that a woman took it the first time?"
-
-She turned very slowly and looked at him steadily
-a moment.
-
-"I do not know," she said at last.
-
-"But you suspect," he persisted.
-
-"Do you know, Mr. Beecher, that this is a very
-strange question?" she said. "Exactly what are
-you implying? Do you, by any chance, suspect me?"
-
-She said the last words gently, with a return of
-the first manner which had so held him. And again,
-without being able to resist, he felt the charm on his
-senses. He knew absolutely nothing about her. At
-times the most direct suspicions had entered his mind;
-never-the-less all at once he heard himself answering:
-
-"I know nothing in the world about you, Miss
-Charters, but my instinct tells me that is absolutely
-impossible."
-
-"Only?"
-
-"Only I can not forget your agitation at certain
-moments."
-
-"Naturally; that is my temperament."
-
-"You are perfectly calm now, and you were
-perfectly calm at certain times tonight."
-
-She turned suddenly in her seat and faced him,
-saying sharply:
-
-"What do you mean?"
-
-"May I speak frankly?"
-
-"I ask you to do so," she said peremptorily.
-
-"I think—in fact, I am convinced—that you
-suspect who took the ring in the first place."
-
-The cab was grinding against the curb. She put
-out her hand hurriedly, as if the impulse were to jump
-from the carriage. But immediately she checked the
-movement, and turned, saying very simply and directly:
-
-"Do you wish to be my friend?"
-
-"You know I do," he said, surprised.
-
-"Then, if you do, and trust me, never ask that
-question again—or make the slightest reference to it."
-
-She held out her hand. He took it, but without
-an answer, opened the door, saw her to her vestibule,
-and returned silent and moody, turning over again
-and again in his mind the sudden contradiction in her
-character.
-
-"I wonder if she repels or attracts me most," he
-said, tramping over the quiet pavements, which flung
-back the riotous thumping of his cane. But, as he
-went aimlessly along, he felt again creeping over him
-the suddenness of her charm and a certain unsatisfied
-restlessness to see her again, which came to him with
-the faint scent of the perfume that had clung to his
-coat.
-
-All at once he stopped.
-
-"I've got to get to the bottom of all this affair,"
-he said abruptly. "I believe she's as straight as they
-make 'em; I'd wager my soul on it—but I've got to
-know!"
-
-And, boarding a surface car, he returned to Rita
-Kildair's.
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`CHAPTER V`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- CHAPTER V
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-He had arrived at the studio building and entered
-the lower vestibule before he was aware of the
-lateness of the hour. He pulled out his watch, and
-found that it was almost midnight.
-
-"Good heavens!" he said, taking a step back.
-"I quite forgot the time." He started to go, then
-turned to the switchboard. "Could I telephone up
-to Mrs. Kildair's apartment?"
-
-"Go right up, Mr. Beecher," said the hallboy, rising.
-
-"Are you certain?" he said doubtfully.
-
-"Sure. Orders is to send up any one who calls."
-
-A little surprised, he entered the elevator. At that
-moment a ring sounded, and on the indicator the
-figure 4 dropped.
-
-"That's her floor now," said the boy, starting up
-the elevator.
-
-At the fourth he came face to face with Garraboy,
-who saw him with a start of surprise and a sudden
-look of malice. The two nodded, without cordiality.
-
-"Hello," said Garraboy, looking at him with a
-curious fixity which he remembered after. "What are
-you doing here?"
-
-"What are you?" said Beecher abruptly.
-
-"Some valuable information to volunteer?" persisted
-the other, with a deliberate accent of irony.
-
-"Perhaps."
-
-"Indeed? Then you have come to assist in restoring
-the ring," said Garraboy in a low voice; and
-on his young, wrinkled face was a faint glimmer of a
-smile.
-
-"Perhaps," said Beecher, flushing angrily. "Does
-that annoy you?"
-
-"Not in the least," said Garraboy drily. "On the
-contrary, I am interested—exceedingly so." He
-lifted his hat slightly and stepped into the elevator.
-
-"Now, what in the devil has he got in his mind?"
-thought Beecher angrily. "And what was his idea
-in coming back? Nice look he gave me. Thought
-he had such an all-fired important engagement that
-he had to hurry away!"
-
-He tried the door absent-mindedly, and found it
-locked. A long moment after he had pressed a
-second time upon the bell, the door was opened by Rita
-Kildair herself, who drew back in evident astonishment.
-
-"You?" she said, frowning.
-
-"I was going to telephone," he said, a little
-embarrassed; "but they told me downstairs to come up."
-
-"Quite right."
-
-"Look here, Rita," he said, with a sudden feeling
-of intuition. "I know you probably think I'm a
-prime representative of the pinhead family, but I'm
-awfully broken up by what happened. Can't I help
-out some way?"
-
-.. _`"'Look here, Rita. Can't I help out some way?'"`:
-
-.. figure:: images/img-072.jpg
- :figclass: white-space-pre-line
- :align: center
- :alt: "'Look here, Rita. Can't I help you out some way?'"
-
- "'Look here, Rita. Can't I help you out some way?'"
-
-"Is that why you've come?" she said slowly.
-
-"Of course," he said, meeting her scrutiny with
-a puzzled glance.
-
-She considered a moment and then said abruptly:
-
-"Go in and sit down. I'm busy at the telephone.
-I'll be back in a moment."
-
-The studio was still blazing with the electric
-chandeliers, the dining-table still crowded with the
-untouched dinner, with that sense of desolation and
-fatigue which the aftermath of a banquet presents.
-Lighted up as it was, the studio had none of the
-mystery that charmed—rather, something of the cruel
-garishness of the white sun.
-
-He moved about aimlessly, arms crossed, his
-imagination repeopling the room with the strongly
-accentuated personalities who had gathered there an
-hour before, saying to himself over and over:
-
-"Now, why the deuce did Garraboy come back?"
-
-He approached the table and abstractedly took an
-almond and began munching it. Then, perceiving
-the chafing-dish, reached over, with a smile, and lifted
-the cover. But, at the moment his hand was outstretched,
-his eyes, obeying some mysterious instinct,
-rose to a long Venetian mirror opposite. In the
-clear reflection that showed the balcony of the
-second floor, he distinctly beheld the head of a woman
-protruding a little beyond the curtain.
-
-"What the deuce!" he said, covering the chafing-dish
-with a bang. "It can't be Rita—who then?"
-
-All at once he comprehended. If the ring had not
-been found in the search, it was because it had been
-concealed in the room, and the woman in the balcony
-was a detective set to watch the trap—if the real
-thief had the daring to return.
-
-At this moment Rita Kildair entered from the bedroom.
-
-"Good heavens, Rita!" he said directly. "You
-don't mean to say you suspect me?"
-
-"What do you mean?" she said, stopping short,
-her glance instinctively seeking the balcony.
-
-"I mean you've stuck a detective up there to see
-what I do the moment I come into the studio. Good
-heavens! what do you think I came for?"
-
-"My dear Teddy," she said, frowning at the
-stupidity of her spy, "is there any one who can't be
-suspected? Do you blame me?"
-
-"No, I suppose not," he blurted out. "Only, it
-gives a fellow a deuced creepy feeling to have a
-couple of eyes looking through him from behind the
-curtain. I say, why don't you search the place?
-The ring must be here!"
-
-"That is possible, of course," she said thoughtfully,
-her lip between her little teeth, an impulsive
-movement when she was plunged in thought.
-
-"Or are you waiting for the thief to come back
-here and try to recover it? Of course, that's the
-plan."
-
-"There's one thing," she said, with a quick,
-imperative gesture, looking at him closely, "I want
-you to remember. There is nothing public to be
-known. Whatever is done must be done quietly."
-
-"Oh, of course," he said hastily. "I say, Rita,
-let me try to work this out with you—give me your
-confidence! I wish you would."
-
-She considered a moment, as though puzzled by his
-offer.
-
-"I don't think it will ever be found," she said,
-shaking her head and looking at him.
-
-"But you suspect some one," he persisted.
-
-She hesitated a moment, and then shook her head.
-
-"No."
-
-The second's delay convinced him.
-
-"Man or woman?"
-
-"It is only a speculation," she answered slowly,
-"but I believe it was a woman."
-
-"Both times?"
-
-"Both times."
-
-He took a turn, moodily disturbed, and came back.
-
-"Tell me this, Rita," he said. "Who else came
-back here tonight?"
-
-"Garraboy," she answered slowly, "and—Mrs. Cheever."
-
-"Mrs. Cheever!" he exclaimed, astonished.
-"Why, she was on the verge of prostration."
-
-Mrs. Kildair smiled a thin, elusive smile, and was
-about to reply when there came a ring at the door.
-
-Instantly her manner changed. Placing her finger
-on her lips, at the same time sending him a glance
-that commanded the utmost silence, she took his hand
-and led him softly from the studio, through her
-bedroom into the further obscurity of the dining-room,
-which was lit only by the weak reflection which
-filtered through from the hall.
-
-"Sit here, and not a sound," she said, placing her
-lips so close to his ear that he felt the warm contact of
-her cheek. She gave him a slight pressure of her
-fingers, and went back into the studio by way of her
-bedroom, closing both doors.
-
-Beecher, left in the darkness, strained every nerve
-to catch the sound that would reveal the identity of
-the new arrival. It seemed to him that he heard the
-sound of another woman's voice, and then presently,
-as a shadow came to him through the twilight of the
-hall, he heard Mrs. Kildair saying:
-
-"—to telephone. Be back in a moment."
-
-The next instant she was at his side, pressing his
-hand to prevent the whisper that was on his lips.
-They sat thus side by side for what seemed a full five
-minutes before she rose and silently passed into the
-hall again. Beecher remained in complete bewilderment,
-unable to detect the slightest sound of the
-conversation that was taking place. That the same test
-was being applied to the new-comer which he himself
-had detected, he understood; but which one of the
-many guests it might be, he could not discover.
-
-At the end of an interminable interval, he heard a
-few faint sounds, the closing of the outer door, and
-presently the rustle of Mrs. Kildair's approach.
-
-"Come now," she said, waiting for him in the hall.
-
-"Who came back then?" he asked eagerly.
-
-She shook her head.
-
-"I can not tell you—at least, not now. There
-are reasons why it would not be quite fair," she said.
-Then, seeing his irritation, she tapped him on the arm
-and added: "Listen, Teddy. It is too late to talk
-over things. Run away now. Come in tomorrow
-at five."
-
-"I want to help, you know," he said, taking
-her hand, guiltily conscious of the smile with which
-she examined him—a smile that seemed to convict
-him of treason. For the moment, however, the
-memory of the younger woman was dimmed. He was
-conscious only of the indefinite lure of mystery which
-Rita Kildair always exerted over his curiosity the
-moment they were alone.
-
-"Look here, Rita," he said impulsively, "I should
-think, in a case like this, you'd want all the help you
-can get!"
-
-Her smile disappeared. She looked at him a moment
-with almost a masculine penetration, and then,
-her smile returning, said quietly:
-
-"It's curious, but each person who came back here
-tonight came back just to—help."
-
-Not only her words, but her manner, struck him
-with a sense of discomfort.
-
-"Come in tomorrow," she said, pushing him
-gently toward the door. She made a quick little
-motion with her fingers, looked at him with a
-penetrating seriousness, and disappeared, leaving him
-thoroughly confused and irritable.
-
-"Why, she acts as though she suspected me!" he
-said, remembering her continual examination. "Who
-the deuce came back then? What's Garraboy in all
-this? Does he suspect me, too, and has he been
-saying anything to Rita? What is terrible in such a
-situation is that any one may be suspected." Suddenly
-he perceived that he had repeated the very
-words that Nan Charters had used in the coupé.
-
-"By George, what a rotten mess! I feel like a
-pickpocket already," he said, with a sudden cold
-horror in his back. "Why shouldn't Rita suspect me as
-well as any one else? This is no pleasure party; this
-is serious—dead serious. I've got to work it out!"
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`CHAPTER VI`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- CHAPTER VI
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-Teddy Beecher was a fair representative of
-the second generation. He still retained the
-rugged democracy of the father who had fought his
-way to a moderate fortune in the troubled regions of
-the coal-fields. To him a man was a man, whatever
-the quality of his coat. Left an orphan at fourteen,
-he had passed victoriously through boarding-school
-and college without seriously troubling the peace of
-mind of those who were competing for scholarship
-honors. He was liked because he liked every one,
-not with a politic assumption, but from a veritable
-enjoyment of life and men.
-
-After graduation, he had gone West on a ranch
-with several of his classmates, for the pure love of
-adventure and the delights of the great open spaces.
-Having thus begun his education, he continued it by
-knocking about the world, with periodic excursions
-in search of big game. He had known a great many
-types of men without knowing them in the least, and
-he appealed to all women without being deeply
-impressionable to their influence. His philosophy of life
-was very well summed up in a remark he had made
-on his return to New York—that he would probably
-go to work if he couldn't find anything better to do.
-
-When he awoke the day after Rita Kildair's party,
-it was with the clear and dispassionate vision of the
-morning. The dramatic occurrences of the night
-before flashed instantly into his consciousness,
-arousing all the energy of his young curiosity. He
-recalled the promise to solve the mystery he had made
-in a moment of enthusiasm, and with a renewed zest
-began to consider how he should prove himself.
-
-Several things immediately rose up to perplex him
-in the strange and dramatic climaxes at which he had
-assisted—the twisted undercurrents of which he was
-still completely ignorant. Why had Garraboy, and
-then Rita Kildair, adopted an attitude of suspicion
-toward him when he had returned? For Garraboy's
-hostility he found a ready answer in the mutual
-antagonism that had risen from the first exchange of
-glances; but the reception he had received at the
-hands of Mrs. Kildair thoroughly mystified him.
-
-"Of course, if the ring wasn't found in the search,"
-he said, getting out of bed and ringing for his man,
-"it's got to be in the studio; of course—no way
-around that. Whoever took it the second time didn't
-get much opportunity to hide it, either—unless it
-was hidden after the candle was lit; there was a
-chance then—every one was stumbling around.
-By Jove! I believe that's how it was done. But
-then, why the deuce should more than one person
-return?"
-
-He stopped and suddenly remembered his own return.
-
-"That's so; a man might come back to offer help.
-But why a woman? And who the deuce came back
-after I did—Miss Lille or Mrs. Bloodgood?"
-
-At this moment the door opened on Charles, whom
-he had inherited with one half of the luxurious
-apartment from Freddie Duyckerman, who had gone to
-England for the hunting season.
-
-"Your bath is ready, sir," he said, standing with
-that perfectly vacuous expression which had been
-carefully trained to express neither joy, grief,
-hilarity, nor the natural surprise which he might have
-experienced at beholding his master, brush in hand,
-standing absent-mindedly before a great copper
-platter that was near the window.
-
-"Telephone up to the stables; I'll take Judy
-to-day," said Beecher, passing into the bathroom.
-
-A touch of the cold shower set his nerves to
-tingling and sent his mind to recalling pleasantly the
-pretty faces of the evening before, after the manner
-of young gentlemen of leisure with a proper share
-of vanity. Two figures rose immediately—Rita
-Kildair and Nan Charters. He remembered them
-both without excitement, but with different emotions.
-
-"By George, Rita's a thoroughbred," he said.
-"She has them all beat—mysterious as a sphinx.
-Prettiest sight in the world, seeing her manipulate a
-crowd. Jove, but she has nerve!" Then he reflected
-a little guiltily that he had rather deserted her
-for other shrines, and he resolved enthusiastically to
-make amends by throwing himself, heart and soul,
-into the recovery of the ring.
-
-"By George, it's something to have the confidence
-of a woman like that!" he exclaimed, sublimely
-fatuous. "That old mammoth of a Slade would give ten
-years of his life, I'll bet, to stand where I do with
-her."
-
-Then he remembered Nan Charters, with a little
-movement of impatience at the thought of his
-sentimentality.
-
-"What the deuce got into me last night?" he said,
-displeased with himself. "I acted like a school-boy.
-I suppose she thinks she's got me on her scalp-belt—easy
-as a stage-door Johnny. What the deuce got
-me wabbling so? These actresses are full of tricky
-stuff."
-
-He resolved that he would show her his complete
-indifference by not calling for at least a week, maybe
-two, and concluded, with profound penetration:
-
-"Good game. She'll remember how I started in,
-and wonder what changed me. That's it—keep 'em
-guessing."
-
-He went into the dining-room, where the coffee
-was boiling in the percolator, and sat down, after
-assuring himself by a trip to the opposite bedroom that
-Bo Lynch was still sleeping the profound sleep of the
-unjust..
-
-But hardly had he begun on the iced grape-fruit
-when a lank figure in peppermint pajamas appeared at
-the doorway, brushing from his sleep-laden eyes the
-long wisps of hair which, carefully treasured to
-conceal the bare upper regions, now hung about his
-sharp, supercilious nose.
-
-"Why the devil don't you breakfast with a chap?"
-he said, emerging.
-
-"Hello, Bo," said Beecher pleasantly. "Up till
-four or five, training for your polo match this
-afternoon?"
-
-"Well, Fontaine was there; we call it pairing off."
-
-"Auction?"
-
-"Yes, damn it. I cut that little wild ass of a
-Plunket six times running. He'd gamble away his
-grandmother on a couple of aces. I say, Teddy,"
-he continued, with a little more animation, emptying
-a bottle of mineral water which Charles, knowing
-what might be termed the regularity of his habits,
-had set out for him, "do you ever try a flier in the
-market?"
-
-"I have been such a fool."
-
-"Look here; I've got a sure thing. Eddie Fontaine
-gave it to us last night—in dead secrecy, of
-course. Worried it from the old man, and you know
-old man Fontaine is the real thing. The whole
-Atlantic Trust business was patched up at a conference
-yesterday afternoon. Majendie's to get all the
-backing he needs."
-
-"Well, what of that?"
-
-"Why, you ignoramus, that means the banks have
-let up on the trust companies and are coming to the
-support of the market. Everything's 'way down
-below where it ought to be. Stocks'll go up twenty
-points in two weeks. I've taken another thousand
-of Northern Pacific myself. Better get in on it."
-
-"Thanks; I'll circulate my money on a
-horse-race—something I know about. By the way, Majendie
-was there last night."
-
-"He was, was he?" said Lynch, with more animation.
-"How did he seem?"
-
-"Cool as a cucumber," said Beecher, who, however,
-was surprised to find how little he remembered
-of any one else's conduct. "I was in at one of
-Mrs. Kildair's affairs. By the way, Nan Charters was
-there."
-
-"Oh, was she?" said Lynch sleepily, hesitating
-between the call of his bedroom and the cooling
-aspect of the waiting grape-fruit.
-
-"Know anything about her?" asked Beecher,
-perceiving he would gain nothing by indirection.
-
-"Never met her," said Lynch. "Charlie Lorraine
-was crazy about her a couple of years ago. We
-thought he was going to marry her. I believe they
-were engaged, or had an understanding."
-
-"No scandal?"
-
-"Oh, she's perfectly straight. Charlie's a good
-proposition, but that didn't seem to hurry her any.
-She has a lot of 'em buzzing after her."
-
-"I say, Bo," said Beecher suddenly, "did you
-ever run up against a fellow called Garraboy?"
-
-"What's he do?"
-
-"He's a broker."
-
-Lynch reflected, yawning behind his hand. His
-occupation in life was supposed to be stocks and
-bonds, according to the city register.
-
-"Nope, never heard of the fellow."
-
-"Who'd know at the club?"
-
-"Ask Jack Lindabury or Tom Bovee. Well, ta-ta;
-I'm going to sleep out a bit for the match. Tell
-Charles to default me to the manicure and the
-scalpist," said Lynch, who termed thus the prim,
-middle-aged person who had guaranteed to preserve his
-numbered hairs. "By the way, how about a little bet on
-the match? I'll give you six to five."
-
-"Done for fifty," said Beecher obligingly.
-
-"See you at luncheon," said Lynch, who was soon
-heard plunging heavily into bed.
-
-Beecher belonged, without yet being one of them,
-to that set who live what in England is called a
-gentleman's life—racing, hunting, playing polo,
-seeking the sensations of big game or big fish, rather
-courting danger, drinking hard as a matter of pride,
-on the theory of the survival of the fittest, consuming
-the night in battles of cunning and physical endurance
-at the card-table. Beecher had returned to this
-society partly because most of his friends "belonged,"
-partly because, being an idler himself, he liked their
-busy days dedicated to sensation, and their curious
-standards of what was and what was not permitted to
-be done. He had not as yet plunged into the whirl,
-being more curiously interested in the various sides
-of New York life that opened before him. He
-preserved, in the midst of the nervous American excess
-of his companion, a certain old-world moderation.
-He entered their card games in a desultory way for
-an hour or two at a time, but without that engulfing,
-brutal passion for mastery which kept Bo Lynch at
-the card-tables until dawn. When he joined a group
-at the bar, he drank with them as long as he wished
-and no longer—a difficult matter where a
-withdrawal usually was greeted with taunts; but there
-was about Beecher, young as he was, an atmosphere
-of authority which came from having proved himself
-among men the world over.
-
-He was rising from the table when the telephone
-rang, and, mindful of his afternoon engagement with
-Rita Kildair, he refused an invitation to join a party
-to the polo match. A call from Bruce Gunther
-urged him to be one of a gay party of six, bent on a
-lark for the evening.
-
-He enjoyed a furious gallop in the park, dressed,
-and swung alertly up the Avenue to his club for
-luncheon.
-
-There, all the talk was of the stock market which
-had gone up several points on the morning's
-tradings. Bo Lynch and Eddie Fontaine buttonholed
-him and besought him to avail himself of the opportunity:
-it was the chance of a lifetime, the crisis was
-over, stocks simply had to go up. The friends of
-Majendie, who was one of the directors of the club,
-were relieved and jubilant. He had weathered the
-crisis; there was nothing more to fear. The story
-which was told from lip to lip as being direct from
-headquarters was, that at the meeting on the
-afternoon before, Fontaine had declared, with his fist on
-the table, that he would never be a party to any
-movement that would jeopardize the future of his lifelong
-friend, Bernard Majendie. Some who still clung to
-the short interest even added, with an air of
-knowing more than they could tell, that the attack would
-now be concentrated on the Associated Trust with
-the intention of making an example of John Slade,
-a Western intruder who was protected by no ties of
-association and friendship.
-
-Beecher, true to his habits of caution, laughingly
-refused all offers to double his fortune. Bruce
-Gunther drew him aside, outlining his program for the
-evening.
-
-The thought of Nan Charters came into Beecher's
-mind, and he wondered curiously if she would be
-there.
-
-"I say, Bruce, what's all this hip-hurrah?" he
-asked as Gunther led him to the dining-room and
-they took seats at the long mahogany table. "Has
-Majendie really pulled through? Is the story true
-about Fontaine? Would you go into the market?"
-
-"They tell it on Fontaine now, do they?" said
-Gunther, with a short laugh. "It started with my
-old man, but I guess he was too tough a weight to
-carry. Ted, I don't know any more than you, but
-I know this—keep out."
-
-"My opinion," said Beecher, nodding to a new
-arrival.
-
-Bruce Gunther was his closest friend—a chum
-from boarding-school days. He was a stocky, rather
-ugly type, direct to the point of rudeness, with more
-than a trace of his father's power. Gunther Senior
-had, from a long and merciless examination of men,
-come to regard youth as a natural malady, an
-ebullition of heated blood to be lived down before a man
-was fit for great opportunities and the vision of great
-affairs. When young Gunther was graduated, he
-called him to his desk, wrote him out a check, and
-told him to take five years, sow his oats, and be
-through with it—at the end of which time his
-career would begin at the bottom of the great
-banking offices of Gunther & Company, New York,
-London, and Paris. Young Gunther was now completing
-the last year of his contract with a compressed
-savageness that would have wrecked any but the
-strongest constitution. At heart he awaited the end
-of his holiday with a feeling of relief and enthusiasm.
-He was quite unspoiled, and a terror to sycophants
-and boot-lickers. It was these sturdy, passionate
-qualities of energy and directness in him that had
-attracted Beecher.
-
-"Bruce, I'm on a very curious chase," he said,
-pushing back from the table, "and I want your help.
-It's too long and too confidential to tell you now.
-But two things I wish you would do for me: find
-out all you can quietly about two men—Enos
-Bloodgood and a fellow called Garraboy, a broker."
-
-"Garraboy—the brother-in-law?" said Gunther
-instantly. They left the table and went for cigars
-and coffee to the first room, to a window that gave
-on the Avenue. "I know him. He was blackballed
-here a couple of years ago. There were some
-ugly stories about him; I'll look 'em up. Bloodgood's
-another matter. I have heard rumors he was
-hard hit by the market. It's easy enough; I know
-several men I can call up. Can't you tell me the
-whole thing now?"
-
-When Beecher had finished, Gunther remained a
-long moment immersed in reflection.
-
-"By the Lord Harry, that is a problem," he said,
-suddenly waking up. "The dickens of a tangle!
-What the deuce was Slade doing there?" He
-relapsed into silence again, and as suddenly said
-decisively: "You're wrong on one point, Ted. It's
-not Garraboy or Bloodgood we ought to suspect first;
-it's Cheever—the Cheevers."
-
-"How the deuce are we going about it?" said Beecher.
-
-"I suppose Mrs. Kildair wants the whole thing
-kept quiet," said Gunther, rapping absent-mindedly
-on the arm of his chair.
-
-"Naturally; besides, I promised."
-
-"Of course. Well, we'll begin in a practical
-fashion. You don't mind spending a little money, do
-you?"
-
-"I expect to."
-
-Gunther rose and went to the telephone booths,
-where he remained for some time.
-
-"Half-past six in my rooms, Ted," he said,
-returning. "I'll put you up against the most
-interesting character in the United States—a real
-detective. Dress and come over."
-
-"But the girls," objected Beecher, remembering
-their engagement.
-
-"The girls can go hang," said Gunther, shrugging
-his shoulders. "They can always wait half an hour.
-This is something real."
-
-At five o'clock Beecher called on Mrs. Kildair, and
-found her out, to his considerable vexation. The
-bell-boy gave him a little note, which he opened and
-read:
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-DEAR TEDDY:
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-Forgive my breaking my engagement. All sorts of
-sudden and exciting things have crowded in on me to-day.
-Come to-morrow for luncheon.
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-RITA.
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-P.S. Remember—nothing public about last night!
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-The prospect of a tête-à-tête with Mrs. Kildair
-appeased him somewhat, but his anticipations for the
-afternoon were sorely disappointed, and he started
-aimlessly back, with a feeling that a great hole had
-been made in the day. As he reached the corner,
-a red automobile cut in close to the curb, causing him
-to step hastily back. Inside he recognized Slade.
-He watched the red machine come to a stop before
-Mrs. Kildair's and then whirl away, after depositing
-the massive figure of its owner. Beecher, with a
-little wounded vanity, lingered a moment, hoping to
-see him reappear; but, as the sidewalk continued
-empty, he was forced to conclude that he had come
-by appointment.
-
-"She might at least have seen me," he said
-angrily. "What the deuce has she got to see Slade for?"
-
-All at once he perceived that his steps had led him
-in the general direction of the quarter in which Nan
-Charters resided, and, as he had come to make an
-impression on one woman, he soon began to
-consider transferring his attack on another. Only, he
-remembered that he had determined to treat Miss
-Charters with indifference, to correct any erroneous
-ideas that she might have formed from his previous
-impulsive conduct.
-
-"That's so," he said, angry now at himself, at
-her, and at a condition of affairs that left him with
-an hour of idleness on his hands. "If I call now,
-she'll think I'm hot on the trail. I could stop,
-though, and inquire about her health," he thought,
-hesitating; "that would seem natural, after last night."
-
-But he rejected this as a subterfuge, and continued
-his slow, uneven progress down Seventh Avenue,
-which he had selected at random in search of a little
-oddity and interest; and gradually he recognized that
-the vexation he felt was, in reality, not at being
-unable to find an excuse for calling on Miss Charters,
-but the keen sense of disappointment he had in
-missing an intimate hour with Rita.
-
-It was essentially the woman of the world in her
-that fascinated him, the woman of mysterious
-experience, of sure knowledge and complete command
-of situations. He wished to increase the intimacy of
-his position, because to be favored by her meant
-something—something that awoke his masculine
-sense of supremacy and fed his vanity. Determined
-on a long bachelorhood that would open to him all
-sorts and conditions of society and adventurous
-experiences, he had determined likewise to avoid the
-dangerous field of young girls of his own set and to
-exercise his curiosity with women of the world—older
-women, professional women, with whom an impulsive
-infatuation brought no risks, but something
-to be taken at value, a mood that was charming
-because it would pass.
-
-All at once an idea came to him that reconciled
-his easily satisfied conscience and appeared sublimely
-politic. He would drop in on Nan Charters, just to
-show his indifference.
-
-"I'll stay fifteen minutes—be quite formal and
-a little bored," he said, chuckling.
-
-And he went without too much enthusiasm toward
-his destination, thinking of Rita Kildair and
-planning in his imaginative mind a series of
-confidential conversations for the tête-à-tête on the
-morrow.
-
-"To see Miss Charters," he said, giving his card
-to the boy in the elevator, who turned it over
-doubtfully, hesitated, and disappeared like a float in an
-opera, mounting heavenward.
-
-Beecher ceased to think of Rita Kildair, and
-prepared himself, smiling astutely, for his approaching
-scene with the young actress whom he intended properly
-to discipline for her effrontery in imagining that
-he—Edward T. Beecher—had entertained for a
-moment any other than a polite social interest. Miss
-Charters excused herself—she was lying down and
-dining out.
-
-He cast a furious look at the telephone-booth, by
-means of which she might personally have assured
-him of her great regret, and stalked out in a worse
-temper than ever—Rita Kildair, Nan Charters, all
-the women in the world consigned to perdition.
-
-"Confound them all!" he said, brandishing his
-cane. "What a lot of time a man wastes over them.
-She might have telephoned me. They only exist in
-this world to distract us from what we ought to do.
-I wonder if she did it on purpose—just to give me
-an appetite. Well, if she did—she's succeeded,"
-he said ruefully.
-
-He went to his rooms, resolved to meet her at
-every opportunity, to revenge himself by showing
-her he could play the game more cleverly than she
-could; and in his angry resolve there was very little
-trace of the indifference of which he had been so
-confident.
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`CHAPTER VII`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- CHAPTER VII
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-Gunther had a suite in one of the newer
-hotels that tower over the eastern entrance to
-the park. When Beecher arrived, a quiet, powerfully
-built man was standing in front of the fireplace,
-smoking with enjoyment. Beecher recognized
-immediately Cyrus McKenna, formerly of the United
-States Secret Service, founder of the great detective
-agency that bore his name.
-
-"Ted, shake hands with my good friend Mr. McKenna,"
-said Gunther, appearing in the doorway
-with a refractory collar in his grasp. "McKenna,
-shake hands with Mr. Beecher. Fire away, Ted.
-I'll be out in a second."
-
-"Glad to know you," said McKenna, grasping his
-hand.
-
-Beecher was aware of the quick, estimating
-scrutiny and a sense of unusual physical vitality.
-But he was disappointed in his first glance at this
-man whose investigations had been the terror of
-corrupt politicians and unscrupulous agitators.
-McKenna was physically the ideal detective, in that not
-a feature possessed a trace of oddity which could
-betray him to the public, in which he thus mingled
-without fear of recognition. He was neither short
-nor tall, neither thin nor unusually heavy. His head
-was round, well-spaced, and evenly formed, without
-affectation of mystery or astuteness, lit up by a jovial
-good humor when animated, and quite blank and
-indecipherable when in repose. The eyes alone, like
-the eyes of a painter or a sculptor seeking tones or
-modelings that escape the common glance, were
-noticeable for a certain quality of penetration,
-expressed in the countenance by innumerable fine lines
-that gathered in the eye-pits.
-
-"Mr. McKenna," said Beecher, who had an
-instinctive desire to impress the detective with the
-lucidity of his observations, "I will give you quickly
-the details that are important. First, here is the plan
-of the apartment, which may or may not be of use."
-
-He went to the low table-desk at the side, and
-drew out paper and pencil. McKenna brought up
-a chair at his side, and Gunther, coming in, sat down
-opposite.
-
-"It concerns the theft of a ruby ring worth over
-fifteen thousand dollars," said Beecher, busy with his
-pencil, "taken last night, between eight and eleven,
-at the apartment of Mrs. Rita Kildair. The
-circumstances are so extraordinary that you will be
-interested in the problem itself."
-
-The detective smiled in a slightly amused way and
-asked:
-
-"Am I retained in her interest or in yours?"
-
-"In mine," said Beecher quickly. "The theft took
-place at a social gathering, you understand, and in
-the party were persons well known in New York
-society. Mrs. Kildair, as is natural, particularly
-desires that nothing shall become public."
-
-"Does she know that you intend to consult me?"
-
-"No—and I am not sure I wish her to know."
-
-"Is she employing detectives?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Whom did the ring belong to?"
-
-"To Mrs. Kildair," said Beecher, annoyed that
-he had forgotten this rather important detail.
-
-"Let me see the plan," said McKenna, who
-glanced at it a moment and nodded. "Now go on."
-
-"There were eleven persons present, including
-Mrs. Kildair," said Beecher, after a moment's pause.
-McKenna took the pencil and prepared to inscribe
-the list. "Myself, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Cheever—"
-
-"I can give you a pointer on them," said Gunther,
-speaking for the first time.
-
-"Unnecessary," said McKenna. "I know the
-card episode."
-
-"Mr. and Mrs. Bloodgood."
-
-"Mrs. Bloodgood—yes."
-
-"Mr. Garraboy."
-
-"Joseph L. or Edward C., the broker?"
-
-"The broker. Miss Nan Charters."
-
-"The actress—yes."
-
-"Miss Maud Lille."
-
-"Know anything about her?"
-
-"She's a journalist; writes books too, I believe."
-
-"Well?"
-
-"Bernard L. Majendie and John Slade."
-
-The detective raised his eyebrows in surprise.
-
-"They were there—together?"
-
-"They came separately. Slade joined the party
-at the last moment; he was not expected."
-
-"A very interesting crowd," said the detective
-slowly, studying the list. "What servants?"
-
-"None."
-
-"You are sure?"
-
-"Mrs. Kildair has only two, a Japanese butler and
-a lady's maid, both of whom were out."
-
-"You are positive?"
-
-"Absolutely. The occasion was an informal supper.
-Mrs. Kildair, while preparing the dishes, placed
-her three rings on the pin-cushion of her
-dressing-table—at this point here on the plans—fastening
-them with a hatpin. The table, as you see, can be
-easily seen both from the studio and the dining-room."
-
-"What were the circumstances of her placing the
-rings on the pin-cushion? First, when did it occur?
-After all the guests had arrived?"
-
-"Yes," said Beecher, who immediately corrected
-himself. "No, I'm wrong; Slade arrived later.
-But, as I say, he was a surprise. Majendie was the
-last of the invited party to come. Immediately
-afterward Mrs. Kildair went into her bedroom to
-put on an apron and take off her rings."
-
-"Who was in the room?"
-
-"Mrs. Cheever, Miss Lille, and Garraboy," said
-Beecher slowly.
-
-"They saw her take off the ring?"
-
-"Yes; they even announced it later."
-
-"Was there much passing to and fro?"
-
-"All the time. I am quite sure every one was in
-the room several times."
-
-"Did any one use the hall?" said the detective,
-indicating it on the plan. "I see it opens into the
-dining-room also."
-
-"Quite a number," said Beecher. "I remember
-using it myself. We were all going and coming,
-carrying dishes, glasses, bottles, provisions."
-
-"One question: did you notice the ring on the
-pin-cushion yourself?"
-
-"Yes; I distinctly remember seeing two or three
-rings, I don't remember which."
-
-"Go on."
-
-"After about three quarters of an hour of preparation,
-we took our places at the table, with the
-exception of Mrs. Kildair, who was still moving
-about us. It was then that Slade came in, was
-introduced, and took his place."
-
-"He did not pass into the bedroom, then?"
-
-"No. Mrs. Kildair went in immediately, took
-off her apron, and discovered the loss of the ruby
-ring."
-
-Beecher, without further interruptions from McKenna,
-recounted in detail the return of Mrs. Kildair,
-the locking of the doors, the extinguishing of the
-lights, the announcement of the theft, the beginning
-of the counting, the sound of the ring on the table,
-and the discovery of its second disappearance.
-Then he stopped, awaiting the questioning of the
-detective.
-
-"No; go right on," said McKenna, with a little
-gesture of his pencil that dotted an imaginary *i*.
-
-Beecher continued, describing the lighting of the
-lights, the confusion in the room, the sending for
-the detectives, the discussion as to the order of
-search, and the failure to recover the ring. Omitting
-his personal observations of Miss Charters and
-their conversation in the cab, he recounted his return
-to Mrs. Kildair's, his meeting with Garraboy, the
-discovery of the detective, the strangeness of
-Mrs. Kildair's attitude, and her concealment of the identity
-of the next visitor. He concluded, and both young
-men looked at the detective as if they expected him
-to solve the problem on the instant—an attitude that
-was not lost on McKenna.
-
-"I suppose you young men believe every word
-that has been written on deduction," he said,
-grinning and biting off the end of another cigar.
-"Presume you've already determined that a woman took
-the ring, and lacked the nerve to face the risk—that
-the strong, daring nature of a man seized the
-opportunity the second time, and, because Slade and
-Majendie are millionaires and Bloodgood the
-respectable owner of a newspaper, the thief is either
-Garraboy, a gambler in stocks, or Cheever, with an
-ugly reputation."
-
-The two young men smiled guiltily.
-
-"But I say, McKenna, you don't reject deduction
-entirely," said Gunther.
-
-"Oh, no, I believe in 'deduction forward,'" said
-McKenna, laughing. "If I know there's a thief in
-the company, I deduce he'll steal if he gets the chance.
-Now, before I put a few more questions to you, let
-me tell you this. My business isn't in deducing how
-the theft was done (I get my man and sweat him
-out; he'll tell me that), but who did it; and for that
-it don't take any deduction, either. Give me time,
-money, and no strings on me, there isn't any crime
-can't be worked out."
-
-"But how the deuce are you going to locate a
-ring," said Beecher, "if you don't know whom to
-follow?"
-
-"The ring's the easiest part," said the detective.
-"You may not know it, but every stone of great
-value is what's called a named stone; every jeweler
-knows of it. Now, there aren't many rubies worth
-over fifteen thousand floating around. If you don't
-believe it, I'll show you how easy it's done. Inside
-a week I'll give you the history of the stone and just
-how it came into the hands of Mrs. Kildair."
-
-"You mean no one can dispose of it to a jeweler
-without its being recognized?"
-
-"Unless he's done it within these twenty-four
-hours, which is quite probable if a certain suspicion
-of mine isn't far wrong."
-
-"Deduction," said Gunther, laughing.
-
-"Not entirely; and, besides, that's not quite fair.
-It just happens that I may be interested in a couple
-of persons in your party from another tack. No,
-gentlemen; deduction's all right, if it's honest
-deduction and if you use it in its place; but the great
-thing's motive. Ninety-nine times out of a hundred,
-get down to your motives and you get your criminals.
-Show me the person who needed to steal that ring,
-or who just simply had to steal it, and you've got
-your man."
-
-"But suppose that applies to two persons there,
-or even three," said Gunther, who perceived that the
-detective did not intend to commit himself.
-
-"Possibly."
-
-"Or it may be the hysterical act of a woman who
-will never attempt to sell the ring."
-
-"Possible—more than possible."
-
-"And then it will never be found."
-
-"That's right."
-
-"But you don't think that's the case," said
-Gunther. "And you have an opinion."
-
-McKenna gave him a quick look of appreciation.
-
-"That's right; but it's not who took it, but why
-it was taken. In forty-eight hours I'll know a little
-bit more about the habits of the ladies and gentlemen
-we're dealing with, and then I'll be more
-communicative." He paused, with a little pardonable
-pleasure in the mystification he was preparing, and
-added: "In forty-eight hours I'll give you a little
-story about each of the persons who were at that
-party which'll beat anything in the story-telling line
-you ever came up against. Now, Mr. Beecher,
-before we get down to questions, here's one thing I
-want you to do. Find out from Mrs. Kildair what's
-her detective agency. Say you've a friend who's
-trying to track a valet for stealing and want a good
-address—see?"
-
-"You are not going to shadow the detectives?"
-said Gunther curiously.
-
-"You bet I am, till I know more about them," said
-McKenna. "Young man, I can tell you more than
-twenty cases I've been on where the detective who
-was called in to make a search went cahoots with the
-thief."
-
-"Detectives!" said Beecher, amazed.
-
-"You bet. I don't trust my own, when I've got
-anything that's got to be done right. I don't trust
-any one man; I put two on it. My dear fellow, the
-crooks that pick your pocket or break into your
-house are only amateurs. The real criminal, the
-criminal of brains, joins a police force, becomes a
-detective, a clerk, goes slowly, gets to be a cashier
-or president of a bank. You think I'm joking.
-Not at all. Look here; just stop and think it over,
-and you won't laugh. For every bank president who
-takes the funds of his bank, speculates, and *loses*,
-how many do you think win out and never get caught?"
-
-"That's so," said Gunther thoughtfully.
-
-"It's too big a subject," said McKenna, smiling.
-"I shake hands every day with gentlemen who ought
-to be breaking rocks. Now, let's get back to
-business. Mr. Beecher, what did you notice of any
-kind last night that would make you suspect any
-one? I don't mean opinions, but eyes."
-
-Beecher hesitated an interval that did not escape
-the notice of the detective.
-
-"Nothing," he said at last, unwilling to mention
-the name of Nan Charters. He added, to cover the
-hesitation: "I suspected Garraboy, but I admit
-there's no proof—personal dislike."
-
-"Why do you dislike him?"
-
-Beecher shrugged his shoulder and his glance went
-to one side.
-
-"Mr. Gunther, will you get me my office?" said
-McKenna, suddenly looking at his watch. "You
-know the number."
-
-Gunther disappeared in the hall in search of the
-telephone.
-
-"Now, Mr. Beecher," said McKenna, smiling,
-"I'm like a doctor, you know. There's no use calling
-me in unless you give me all the facts. What's
-the name of the lady who excited your suspicion,
-whom Mr. Garraboy was so attentive to, and on
-account of whom, I rather guess, you got interested
-in this case?"
-
-The startled look Beecher gave him amply gratified
-McKenna, who continued:
-
-"What's Miss Charters' position in this business?"
-
-Beecher admitted the correctness of the surmise
-with a laugh, and, Gunther being absent, quickly
-recounted the different moments of Nan Charters'
-agitation and the conversation in the cab.
-
-At this moment Gunther returned. "I say,
-McKenna," he said, "some one's trying to get you on
-the wire."
-
-McKenna passed to the telephone, and almost
-immediately returned.
-
-"Look here, gentlemen," he said, "if you want to
-try your hand at deduction, here's something to work
-on. The Clearing-house has just refused to clear
-for the Atlantic Trust, Majendie's resignation has
-been accepted, and tomorrow there'll be a run on
-every bank in the city—and God help those who're
-caught in the stock market!"
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`CHAPTER VIII`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- CHAPTER VIII
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-The two young men and McKenna descended
-by the elevator into the lobby of the hotel. The
-news of the Clearing-house's drastic action against
-the Atlantic Trust was already in the scare-heads of
-the evening papers, though Majendie's resignation
-was still unknown. The halls were crowded with a
-fleet of newspapers, spread out, fluttering feverishly.
-Everywhere was a suppressed murmur and nervous
-tension, which occasionally exploded in exclamations
-when acquaintances met. The news was indeed
-staggering to the little man of the Street; the great
-Atlantic Trust with its hundreds of millions of
-deposits was on the verge of collapse and this at the
-end of a period of depression and alarm!
-
-As they proceeded toward the carriage entrance,
-Gunther stopped to speak to one of the clerks at
-the desk, who, with a frightened face, came out to
-seek his advice. McKenna profited by the moment
-to say to Beecher:
-
-"By the way, if you're a friend of Miss Charters',
-find out if she has any money invested in Wall Street,
-and who she's dealing through."
-
-"Does it mean a panic?" said Beecher, surprised.
-"Do you mean she ought to get out?"
-
-"Too late," said McKenna. "Find out what I
-asked you. I'm in a hurry. Say good-night to
-Mr. Gunther for me. And, say, if you're so interested
-in this case, get him to put you wise to Majendie
-and Mrs. Bloodgood."
-
-He gave a quick nod, and mingled in the crowd
-about the north entrance. Beecher watched him
-with a feeling of disillusionment. The detective had
-expressed no opinion, had brought to bear on the
-problem none of the instantaneous analysis which he
-had expected; in fact, had deliberately avoided even
-a discussion of the natural probabilities. Had this
-complete reticence been associated with an individuality
-of impressive oddity, he would have perhaps regarded
-it with respect. As it was, he was conscious
-only of being defrauded as though some one were
-tearing away a precious illusion.
-
-"There's a poor devil; got all his money tied up
-in the Atlantic Trust," said Gunther, joining him
-and passing out to the waiting automobile.
-
-"The Atlantic Trust can't fail," said Beecher,
-amazed. "Things aren't as bad as that."
-
-"Don't know. Lots of queer things have been
-worked lately. Anyhow, what's bound to happen
-is—I should say—a receivership and closed doors
-to-morrow."
-
-"But that means panic."
-
-"Sure."
-
-Beecher was silent a while. He thought of
-Majendie of the night before, correct, restrained,
-prodigal of small courtesies.
-
-"By Jove, how game he was!" he said aloud.
-"I should hate to think there was anything crooked
-in him."
-
-They had reached Forty-second Street in their
-smooth and rapid flight. There, newsboys were
-shrieking the latest extra, dodging under the heads
-of horses, swinging on the steps of surface-cars,
-bumping their shrill way through the crowd, with
-their hysterical instinct for heightening the effect of
-a sensation.
-
-Gunther stopped the automobile and bought a
-handful of papers which a dozen urchins fought to
-press into his hands. On every sheet, front page,
-accompanied by sudden scare-heads, was the
-photograph of Bernard L. Majendie, whose resignation
-had been demanded and accepted.
-
-The two scanned the pages for additional details.
-Some papers hinted at criminal actions—the
-district attorney had been suddenly summoned to town.
-Scattered through the sheets were photographs
-entitled, "Majendie's Palace on Fifth Avenue."
-"$100,000 Yacht of Deposed President." "Newport
-Estate of Millionaire."
-
-"Is he a crook after all?" said Beecher, flinging
-down the extra.
-
-"No, he is not a crook," said Gunther quietly,
-repeating the words with slow emphasis. "He is a
-speculator, a great speculator, and he has been made
-the victim of greater speculators who covet his
-territory. Then, there is this to be said: I doubt if at
-the present moment any great public corporation
-would face an investigation without alarm."
-
-"What do you mean?" said Beecher, with his
-thoughts still wandering back to the handsome, stoic
-features of the Majendie of the night before.
-
-Gunther began to speak, and, as he became serious
-and animated, Beecher followed him with surprise,
-noting the vigor and vitality that transformed the
-young idler.
-
-"The present era we are passing through," said
-Gunther, "is probably America at its worst. We
-see only the gorgeous façades of things: the
-skyscraper, the industries that have developed into little
-kingdoms. We only try to comprehend statistics,
-and we are satisfied that we have bounded into
-greatness. As a matter of fact, the true test of the
-industrial greatness of a country is honesty.
-Dishonesty and graft are economic weakness—waste.
-A railroad that is spending a million a year to fight
-off hold-up state laws is by so much handicapped
-in its function of promoting commerce by low freight
-rates. A corporation that secures its franchise by
-bribing aldermen has taught them to blackmail in
-the future. It is difficult to say where the
-responsibility began—whether capital corrupted politics,
-or whether, in our unscientific political system,
-corruption was not inevitable."
-
-"What do you mean by that?"
-
-"At this time, when our political history is one of
-business development, we are over-burdened with
-useless offices. Aldermen and legislators who
-receive on an average less than a thousand a year—often
-less than it costs to be elected—are suddenly
-intrusted with the responsibilities of laws and
-franchises involving millions. When you ask yourself
-how a man is to continue a political career, support
-a family, and fight a costly fight for reelection on a
-thousand a year, the wonder is that any remain
-honest. We have not the slightest conception of values
-in America; the worst paid professions are those the
-vigor of the nation depends on most—the minister,
-the teacher, and the legislator. There are ministers
-living on five hundred a year, teachers on six hundred,
-legislators on less, while the carpenter or plumber
-who doesn't make at least $5 a day is unorganized." Then,
-perceiving that he had wandered from
-his subject, he added: "You see, Ted, this state of
-affairs results: politics becomes the business of
-business. Industry is at the mercy of the legislator, and
-the legislator knows it. He may restrict the field of
-business of insurance companies, prohibit others
-from operating in his state, add or detract from the
-wealth of individuals by tariffs, force the adoption
-of certain building material on contractors, regulate
-rates of railroads and force them to adopt certain
-life-preserving devices; can create rival franchises or
-tax out of existence corporations that refuse to pay
-its blackmail.
-
-"That is why there are, back in the secret life of
-every great business, ledgers it is not good the
-public should see. That is one reason why business goes
-into politics, nominates its men, and assists them—in
-order to protect itself against strikes and blackmail.
-The great political alliance of business is almost
-always expressed by the railroad which is the
-natural agent. All this is known; every newspaper
-that will shriek out horrified editorials next week
-knows this; but when the Atlantic Trust is caught
-in a business depression, and is unable to get ready
-money from influences it has antagonized, the
-public will learn only that one institution has secretly
-contributed to a political party, maintained a huge
-fund for lobbying purposes, made loans on securities
-that were speculative, and transgressed the letter of
-the law. The public will be indignant, and Majendie
-will be disgraced."
-
-"But, Bruce," said Beecher, who was thinking of
-the analysis that had been made, "if we are so
-riddled with corruption, where is it all going to end?"
-
-"The end will come in the opening of another
-phase of national life. We will become honest
-through the purifying process of another generation.
-Honesty, you see, has this one great advantage over
-corruption—it is the goal of corruption. Those
-who acquire, wish to retain, to resist those who in
-turn wish to graft from them. Stealing was an
-attribute of distinction, until men came to live together.
-The next generation will purify and reorganize."
-
-"I didn't know you'd gone into things so deeply,"
-said Beecher, impressed.
-
-"I've worked like a pup since I started to amuse
-myself," said Gunther, with a laugh.
-
-The automobile drew up before the glittering
-doors of Lazare's, and a gilded footman, recognizing
-it, flashed obsequiously to their door.
-
-"Say, let's cut this out," said Gunther, frowning.
-"I'm out of the mood now. Let's run off for a
-chop and a baked potato somewhere. I'm tired of this."
-
-"Too late," said Beecher, laughing and pointing
-to an upper window where a feminine arm was
-waving frantically. "We're caught." Then, suddenly
-he remembered the hint of McKenna's, and added:
-"I say, what's the story about Majendie and
-Mrs. Bloodgood? I'm not up on the gossip, you know."
-
-Gunther signaled impatiently to the flunky to close
-the door, and related, what every one knew, the
-attachment of the financier and the wife of the owner
-of the New York *Star*.
-
-"Of course, every one believes what he chooses
-in such matters," he said. "Personally, knowing
-Majendie, I believe it's purely platonic—such things
-do happen. He has a sort of old-fashioned chivalry,
-you know. Bloodgood is a hard old nut, leads his
-own life—chorus girls' friend and all that—thirty
-years older than his wife—parents got her into
-it—and I shouldn't be surprised if he took
-advantage of the situation to touch up Majendie through
-the Atlantic Trust for a good-sized loan. The
-rumor was that Mrs. Bloodgood was to get a divorce.
-If so, it may have been held up by this rotten
-business. One thing's clear: she's crazy about Majendie,
-and doesn't care who sees it—poor devil. Well,
-let's get out."
-
-They entered Lazare's, saluted by a sudden storm
-of clatter, music, and shrill laughter. Lazare
-himself, seeing Gunther, came up hurriedly, anxiety in
-his olive face, while several employees hovered near,
-with eager ears. Gunther exchanged again a few
-words on the financial situation, and led the way into
-the elevator.
-
-"McKenna's a great one," he said. "Rather
-puzzled you, didn't he? There's no show about
-him—he's direct. You'll see the way he works. It'll
-be a revelation."
-
-Beecher did not answer.
-
-The disclosure of the relations of Majendie and
-Mrs. Bloodgood had suddenly recalled the suspicion
-that had come to him the night before, while
-following the agitation of Nan Charters; and he was
-asking himself, in a bewildered manner, if
-Mrs. Bloodgood, desperate, perhaps on the verge of a
-separation, had not in an uncontrollable moment
-taken the ring. Gunther continued in praise of
-McKenna:
-
-"It's the organization that's wonderful. It's like
-a spider-web, and McKenna sits in the center and
-pulls the threads. What the public never gets is
-this—that half of the work's done before McKenna's
-on the case. He knows to-day where every
-forger is living, every cracksman. He's got his
-informers in every saloon, in every cheap hotel, where
-thugs congregate. If a bank's robbed, nine times out
-of ten he can tell in a day who's done the job,
-because he knows who's disappeared from his regular
-haunts. A detective agency is a great news bureau
-that never prints its news."
-
-"I guess the case is more complicated than I
-thought," said Beecher, struck by the new lead. "It
-begins to look as though a whole lot of persons might
-have taken the ring."
-
-"Thinking of Mrs. B?" said Gunther quickly.
-
-"Yes," said Beecher meditatively. They were in
-the corridor leading to the private dining-rooms.
-He put his hand out and checked his companion.
-
-"I say, who's Madame Fornez?"
-
-"Opera squealer," said Gunther irreverently;
-"Carmen and all that sort of thing. Bob Holliday's
-daffy about her. Come on; let's face the music."
-
-He nodded to the attendant waiting with extended
-ears, who now sprang forward to open the door on
-the flaring room and the dazzling white of the richly
-covered table set for five.
-
-Holliday and two women in décolleté instantly
-burst into exclamations of reproach.
-
-"Sorry; couldn't be helped—business," said
-Gunther, without taking the pains for a more
-elaborate apology. Then, sure of his explanation, he
-added: "You probably missed it. Poor old Majendie's
-up the spout. Forced resignation. There'll be
-the devil to pay to-morrow."
-
-The reproaches ceased, succeeded by a rush of
-excited questions. Holliday, a tall, scoured blond,
-who had been drumming at the piano, was so disturbed
-by the news that he forgot his duties as a host.
-
-"*Allons*, Bobbie," said Mme. Fornez, turning her
-great Spanish eyes on Beecher with an expression
-of approval, "introduce your nice-looking friend."
-
-Beecher, amid laughter, was presented. Mme. Fornez,
-who, from pride perhaps, chose to retain
-the freedom of the peasant, tapped him familiarly on
-the arm and said: "I like you. You don't look so
-clean and stupid as most of your dollar men. You
-will sit by my side. I select you. Monsieur
-Gunthère, Bobbie—enough of your old panics and your
-stocks; you have two charming ladies present, that's
-all you need to know. Bobbie, obey me at once!"
-
-Beecher was giving his hand to Mrs. Craig
-Fontaine, a young widow, slight, with quick eyes, and
-almost masculine vitality, and an extraordinary
-elegance of dress and carriage, whom Gunther called
-Louise. She was scarcely twenty-six, possessed of
-a large fortune from her husband, who had been
-killed in a steeplechase three years before. Her
-position in society was unquestioned, and, being of a
-singular temperament, she did as she pleased. She
-was seen everywhere with young Gunther, and
-gossip had already arranged their marriage—an
-eventuality which she alone, who ambitiously desired it,
-knew to be impossible.
-
-Beecher, who was particularly sensitive to the air
-of distinction that always surrounded her, even when
-most unbending, took her hand with a little extra
-gallantry, saying:
-
-"I changed my mind on your account only,
-Louise, and I expect you to reward me."
-
-Between the two, from his college days, had been
-a sort of confidential intimacy which Beecher had
-the knack of cultivating.
-
-Holliday having ordered the dinner, Mme. Fornez
-took special delight in countermanding everything
-that could be countermanded, substituting other
-wines and abolishing the soup, scolding her escort
-all the while with a calculated tyranny which
-Mrs. Fontaine admired with a slight smiling tribute of
-her lips, as the clever advertisement of a professional
-woman that Mr. Holliday's fetch and carry attentions
-were entirely on her own sufferance.
-
-"How have you escaped being married?" said
-Mrs. Fontaine in a bantering tone to Beecher, after
-Mme. Fornez had relinquished him for a moment.
-
-"Because I fly like a coward," he said, pleased at
-the compliment implied.
-
-"Seriously, Teddy, you've been back in civilization
-two months and you are not yet caught?"
-
-"I am not the marrying kind," he said, with
-conviction.
-
-"What's he say—your Teddy?" said Mme. Fornez,
-turning, with a laugh.
-
-Beecher repeated his statement.
-
-"*Allons donc*, you!" She broke into a ripple of
-laughter. "What do you say, Madame Fontaine?"
-
-Mrs. Fontaine's reply was a tolerant, amused
-smile, and, leaning over, she pinched his ear.
-
-Beecher furiously defended himself.
-
-"Yes, that's what all you women say. You think
-you can catch any man. It irritates you to think any
-man can resist you."
-
-"Ah, no, no," said Mme. Fornez energetically.
-"There are lots of men who can't be married. I
-don't say that, but what I say is this: a woman
-knows, the moment she meets one of you, if he is
-the kind that marries. A clever woman knows if
-she can marry him, but all women know if he is the
-marrying kind the moment they look in his eye. Is
-it not so, Madame Fontaine?"
-
-"Of course," said Mrs. Fontaine calmly, with a
-glance around the table.
-
-"Nonsense," said Beecher valiantly; "women are
-as easily fooled as men."
-
-Mme. Fornez, drawing back her head, surveyed
-him critically.
-
-"Teddy, you will marry the first pretty woman
-who makes up her mind to marry you," she said,
-tapping the table, amid laughter. "I see it; I know it."
-
-"I say, how do you see it?" said Holliday, who
-was what might be called "*un faux Anglais*."
-
-"It is in the eye; it responds or it does not
-respond," said Mme. Fornez, who shrugged her
-shoulders in Holliday's direction, and said: "You,
-you will never marry unless—unless there is one
-*big* panic. Teddy, here, has the responsive eye. I
-saw it at once when I said he was a nice boy. Oh,
-you needn't be furious and blush," she added, pulling
-his other ear. "It is quite right. I like you. You
-shall play with me. You are much nicer than
-Bobbie, who is all collar and cuffs."
-
-"And Mr. Gunther?" said Beecher, to cover his
-confusion.
-
-Mme. Fornez looked at him with the same critical
-estimation.
-
-"Ah, Monsieur Gunthère is very interesting," she
-said. "What do you think, Madame Fontaine?"
-
-She asked the question with a little of that malice
-which women can not help showing toward one another.
-But Mrs. Fontaine, with the perfect control
-that never left her, answered at once:
-
-"Bruce will marry, but he is not the marrying
-kind. He will marry when he pleases and how
-he pleases, not the least sentimentally, a woman, a
-young girl, who will raise up a family of
-children—a son to succeed him, as he will succeed his father."
-
-"Yes, yes, that's it," said Mme. Fornez excitedly.
-"He can not be caught; any woman would know that."
-
-Gunther smiled without embarrassment.
-
-"Perhaps," he said.
-
-"Yes, any woman would know it," repeated Mrs. Fontaine,
-looking at him with a little smile. "The
-reason is, as Madame Fornez says, in the eyes—they
-don't respond. It's more than that, they make
-no distinction. They look at a woman as they do
-at a man. He is quite to be congratulated."
-
-"Ah, *la pauvre femme*," said Mme. Fornez—who
-was very romantic—in a whisper, pressing
-Beecher's arm. Then aloud, taking pity, "*Allons,
-mes enfants*, we are getting too serious. Bobbie,
-jump up and play us something lively."
-
-The dinner continued gaily. They reached the
-theater in the middle of the second act of the operetta,
-and deranged the whole orchestra in the five minutes
-necessary for Mme. Fornez to be sure that she was
-properly recognized. Then, having carried off Elsie
-Ware, a dainty prima donna with the wiles and figure
-of a child, they proceeded to the party at Lindabury's
-studio, Mme. Fornez complimenting Elsie Ware on
-the quality of her voice, which was insignificant, and
-saying nothing of her acting, which was distinguished
-for its charm and natural gaiety.
-
-Beecher, squeezed in between Louise Fontaine and
-Mme. Fornez, slightly bewildered by the fragrance
-of soft, filmy wraps, immensely flattered by the favor
-he had won, nevertheless was wondering to himself
-whether among the gay party he was approaching
-would be the laughing eyes and rebellious ashen hair
-of Nan Charters, whom he intended to treat *en
-ennemi*, and whom he particularly wished to witness
-his triumphant entry at the side of the celebrated
-Emma Fornez.
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`CHAPTER IX`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- CHAPTER IX
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-The party was in full progress when they
-arrived. Jack and Tom Lindabury resided, as
-far as they could be said to reside anywhere, in a
-great green stone house of the 1860 period, with a
-deep garden in the back on which originally stood a
-stable, access to which was had, in the Parisian style,
-by a long, vaulted passage at one side. The
-Lindaburys, having discovered, as many other young men
-of fortune did at this period, the social adaptability
-of the artist's atelier, had transformed the stable
-into a great studio, with a kitchen and two or three
-dressing-rooms, which served when the place was
-given over to amateur theatricals or to the not
-always restrained fêtes of the brothers' invention.
-
-Gunther's party emerged from the hollow passage
-into the sudden cool of the short garden, where
-masked stone seats and arbors were faintly disclosed
-by the great stable lantern which swung at the
-entrance of the studio. Several couples, profiting by
-the obscurity, could be seen moving in the sudden
-shadows of the garden, laughing with a nervous,
-stifled laughter, as groups crossed or joined one
-another.
-
-Holliday and Beecher, recognizing acquaintances,
-saluted them with the light banter, which was the
-note of the evening. Mme. Fornez, inside, called
-her companions with exclamations of surprise which
-drew the whispered curiosity of every one to her
-entrance.
-
-"Oh, how funny it is! Look, Teddy, what do
-you call it? It is your—cowboy life, is it not?"
-
-The great room had been transformed into a
-mining saloon of the type made popular by a certain
-play of the day. A bar ran across one end, presided
-over by an impossibly wicked bartender. A roulette-wheel
-was crowded at one side, while a negro orchestra,
-in 1850 costume, was busily sawing away, led
-by a cotton-head darky on a soap-box, who droned
-out his directions. Three-fourths of the room were
-in costume, Indian, Spanish, cowboy or frontier
-At the appearance of the new arrivals in evening
-dress, a shout went up:
-
-"Tenderfeet, tenderfeet!"
-
-"Fine them!"
-
-"Shoot 'em up!"
-
-But, in deference to Mrs. Fontaine and Emma
-Fornez, the protest was not so boisterous or accompanied
-by such rushing tactics as had greeted others.
-Nevertheless they were fined and escorted to one of
-the dressing-rooms. The men were forced to don
-dusters and white top-hats, and the women were given
-sombreros and mantillas.
-
-Mme. Fornez, despite the frowns of Holliday,
-clung to Beecher's arm, insisting on being personally
-conducted, plying him with innumerable questions.
-
-"Oh what a terrible man! What an awful knife.
-I like the black men—*sont ils rigolots*—with their
-red and white collars. I want to see the bar-man
-toss drinks—so, in the air, Teddy. Come this way."
-
-All at once she stopped, and, facing about, took
-him by the lapels of the coat.
-
-"It does not annoy you that I adopt you—that
-I call you Teddy?" she said, with a simulation of
-timidity and a sudden concentration of her
-swimming black eyes.
-
-"Emma," he said, laughing, "if you stop there
-I shall die of disappointment."
-
-She frowned a little at the "Emma," but yielded
-the point.
-
-"You are not very responsive, Monsieur Beecher,"
-she said, with a flash, "when I am so nice to you."
-
-"My dear Emma," said Beecher, who, not being
-in love, could see clearly, "if I don't fall at your
-feet, it's because I know very well that the
-moment I did you would bulldoze me like Bob Holliday."
-
-Emma Fornez looked at him with a sudden gay
-approval.
-
-"Teddy, you are very nice," she said decidedly.
-"You understand how to play. I forbid you to
-fall in love, to get caught by any other woman, you
-understand. You are to be mine for the whole
-season—*hein*?"
-
-"Nothing promised," said Beecher, laughing.
-
-Holliday came with two or three friends, clamoring
-to be introduced. Beecher profited by the
-confusion to make the turn of the room, which was
-crowded with laughing groups striving to penetrate
-the disguises of others while maintaining their own.
-At the faro table, a group from his club called to
-him to join them, but he kept on, saluting the dealer,
-costumed according to Bret Harte, with an approving
-wave of the hand.
-
-The assembly was one of those curious social
-demarcations which prevail when formal society essays
-to be Bohemian, and which is probably evolved by
-the women in their always curious desire to study
-at close range those whose lives they are generally
-condemning. As is usually the case, the guests were
-made up of those who remained wrapped up in a
-mantel of inquisitive respectability, and would go
-early; a large body who waited impatiently for this
-first secession; and a certain element, not all
-professionals, at present exceedingly punctilious, who
-would inherit the right to put out the lanterns and
-close up the doors.
-
-Young Beecher, pacing restlessly, nodding and
-smiling, searched in the crowd without quite admitting
-to himself what it was he sought. In the short
-period of his return, he had gone into many different
-sets, always retaining the prerogatives of his own.
-The women, besides those of the younger married
-women whom he knew, were of the opera, the stage,
-one or two, even, whose names were electrically
-displayed in vaudeville. He was caught up, greeted
-enthusiastically, and extricated himself with deftness,
-seeking in a general way to reach the great fireplace
-near which he had detected the figure of Mrs. Kildair.
-
-The men, without exception, were of his own kind—of
-that second generation which is the peculiar
-problem of America. They were strong, well put
-together, with heads chiseled somewhat on the
-vigorous lines of the father spirits, condemned by the
-accident of wealth to the most un-American of
-professions, the idler. Without the mental languor of
-the foreign dilettante, consumed in reality by their
-own imprisoned energy, they were a restless,
-dissatisfied testimony of the error of their own
-civilization, the inability of the great, barbaric,
-money-acquiring American to comprehend the uses of
-wealth. Tonight, threatened with tomorrow's disaster,
-stirred by the restlessness of the multitude, this
-excess of baffled energy was felt everywhere: at the
-bar, in the Anglo-Saxon intensity; at the faro table
-where the play had a certain desperate counterpart
-of the spirit that had assembled the future; in the
-momentary sudden accesses of gaiety that began to
-spread through the hesitant crowd, as an overturned
-bottle spreads its fluid over the cloth.
-
-Beecher, too, without comprehending it, felt the
-stimulus, awakening all the nervous unemployed
-funds of energy within him and the intoxication
-of movement and laughter that brought him a sudden
-feverish hilarity, brought also a sense of unrest
-and dissatisfaction. Underneath all the over-excited
-spirits of frivolity was a current of grave apprehension
-which he felt in the occasional groupings of
-men and the low snatches of conversation which
-reached him.
-
-"Bo Lynch's cleaned out."
-
-"—not the only one."
-
-"—and thousands thrown on the market."
-
-"Eddie Fontaine's crowd."
-
-"Copper'll blow up higher than a kite!"
-
-"—if Slade goes too."
-
-"They say there's a line formed in front of the
-Atlantic."
-
-In his progress he encountered Jack Lindabury,
-lank and broad-shouldered, with the magnificent shell
-of a head that might have been set on the shoulders
-of a Gladstone. They shook hands with cordiality.
-
-"Devil of a mess about Majendie," said Lindabury.
-
-"Are you hit?"
-
-"Of course; Eddie Fontaine's had us all in on
-his tip. Some of the crowd are liable to be wiped
-out. They tell me Bo Lynch had plunged every cent
-in the world."
-
-"Shouldn't wonder," said Beecher, reflecting.
-"Is he here?"
-
-"Sure; he's the bartender," said Lindabury.
-
-Beecher, surprised, nodded and made his way
-toward the end that had been converted into a
-frontier saloon, where, behind enormous mustaches, he
-recognized the long features of his fellow lodger.
-
-"What'll y'have?" said Lynch, in hoarse accents.
-Then, perceiving that he was recognized, he drew
-Beecher aside and said anxiously:
-
-"You owe me fifty, Ted; we pulled it out. Go
-over and stake it at the table for me, if you've got it."
-
-"Sorry," said Beecher, eying him critically and
-resolving to lie.
-
-"Oh, well," said Lynch philosophically, "it'll look
-big as a house to-morrow."
-
-"Are you cleaned out, Bo?" said Beecher anxiously.
-
-"Oh, no; I'm worth thousands," said Lynch, with
-a grin, "until the market opens to-morrow."
-
-"Tough luck."
-
-"Steve Plunkett's worse—he's got to negotiate
-his gold fillings, they say."
-
-A party came up, clamoring for attention, and
-Lynch hastened to the rescue. Beecher continued
-curiously toward the faro table, admiring with an
-admiration tinged with compassion the *sang froid*
-of the losers, who in a desperate attempt to recover
-the imminent loss of the morrow, were staking sums
-that made the spectators raise their eyebrows in
-amazement.
-
-"Supposing that Jap came back and sneaked the
-ring the second time," said Gunther, taking his arm.
-
-Beecher started in surprise.
-
-"I wasn't thinking of that," he said.
-
-"But I was. That puzzle of yours has been running
-in my head ever since. I've got six people now
-absolutely logically worked out for the thief—perfect
-deduction. Take me over to Mrs. Kildair; I
-want to meet that woman."
-
-"I say, Bruce," said Beecher as they started to
-cross the room, "it's going to be an awful smash.
-All the boys are caught. There'll be the deuce to
-pay here later on."
-
-"Shouldn't wonder—they started in pretty fierce."
-
-"Eat, drink, and be merry—eh?"
-
-"Sure."
-
-By the hazards of the crowd they found themselves
-opposite Nan Charters, who was on the arm
-of Charlie Lorraine, a clean-cut, pleasant type of
-the racing set, decidedly handsome in a dark way.
-
-"Hello, fellows, any old clothes to give away?"
-said Lorraine, who had the topic of the evening in
-jest. "I speak first. How the deuce did Eddie
-Fontaine miss you two? Heard what we are doing?
-We are organizing the Eddie Club. Every one who's
-taken his tip is going up to live on Eddie's farm
-for the winter—great idea, eh?"
-
-While Gunther and Lorraine were laughing over
-this plan, a creation of Bo Lynch's, Beecher was
-listening to Nan Charters, with a difficult attempt
-at calming the sudden emotion which her appearance
-with Lorraine had fired within him.
-
-"What a dreadful time you chose to call!" she
-said directly. "Don't you know that it takes a
-modern woman hours to mix her war-paint?"
-
-She looked at him with a little tantalizing malice
-in her eyes.
-
-"Coquette," he thought furiously. "She is
-delighted because I was ass enough to call and give
-her the opportunity to refuse to see me."
-
-"Oh, not a call," he said aloud, committing the
-stupidity of lying. "I was just rushing downtown,
-and stopped to inquire how you were after last
-night."
-
-This answer brought a natural pause. Each
-looked at the other, he with defiance, she with
-laughter in her eyes.
-
-"You're staying late," he said at last, because her
-listening attitude forced him to say something.
-
-"Yes, indeed."
-
-"It'll be more amusing when it thins out," he said
-in a purposely languid tone.
-
-"When the sight-seers have left—yes," she said,
-smiling.
-
-Wishing to show what slight importance he
-attached to the encounter, he contrived to nudge
-Gunther as a signal that he was ready; but, his friend
-proving insensible, he was forced to proceed.
-
-"Did you come with Mrs. Kildair?" he said perfunctorily.
-
-"No."
-
-"With whom?" he asked, regretting the question
-as soon as it was uttered.
-
-"With Mr. Lorraine—of course," she said,
-looking down modestly, but beneath her eyelids he
-divined again the cunning malice.
-
-At this moment, to his delight, Emma Fornez
-perceived him, and, being profoundly bored by her
-chance cavalier, a purely passive listener thoroughly
-bewildered by her sallies, gave a cry of joy:
-
-"Teddy, traitor, where have you been?"
-
-Dismissing her companion with a bob of her head,
-she seized Beecher's arm, exclaiming:
-
-"Heavens—save me! I have been shrieking at
-a deaf-mute."
-
-In the crowd, the head of her late companion
-could be seen, rolling his uncomprehending eyes.
-Beecher, overjoyed at the arrival, which gave him
-an advantage he was quick to perceive, nodded to
-Miss Charters and departed, exaggerating, for her
-benefit, the confidential intimacy which Mme. Fornez's
-attitude permitted.
-
-"Who is that woman?" said Emma Fornez immediately.
-"She is watching us. She doesn't seem
-pleased. *Tant pis*!"
-
-"Nan Charters—one of our younger actresses."
-
-"Ah! Good?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"She is pretty—in a way," said Mme. Fornez,
-using her lorgnette, without caring in the least that
-Miss Charters perceived it. "*Pas mal—pas mal*.
-Not much temperament—afraid to uncover her
-shoulders. It is not an actress; it is a woman. You
-are interested, Teddy?"
-
-"No."
-
-"Oh, *avec ça*. You are in love?"
-
-"I met her last night for the first time."
-
-"That's not an answer. Yes, you have a guilty
-look. You are a little taken—she provokes you—these
-little dolls always do. I will give you good
-advice; I will help you."
-
-"How?" said Beecher, a bit confused.
-
-"I will be very, very nice with you," said his
-companion gaily, her feet dancing to the music. "A
-woman always wants what another woman wants,
-particularly when she is a little actress and I am
-Emma Fornez. It's very simple, but it never fails;
-only, I will not help you if you are really in love,
-you understand?"
-
-Beecher solemnly assured her that she need have
-no fear.
-
-"Very well, then. Be sure to pay attention to
-Madame Fontaine too; she likes you. We are the
-two women most distinguished here tonight—both
-high, high above your little Charters. It will double
-the effect. Do as I say; it'll be amusing."
-
-Gunther joined them, protesting.
-
-"I say, Madame Fornez, it's not fair. We'll have
-to get up a Whitecaps party and kidnap Ted, if you
-don't stop."
-
-"Oh, we understand each other perfectly," said
-Beecher, delighted to perceive that Nan Charters was
-still following his progress. "Whenever Emma
-wants to escape from some one, she remembers that
-she's crazy about me. It is all arranged."
-
-Emma Fornez burst out laughing and gave him
-a little pat on his shoulder with the lorgnon.
-
-"We are—chums, you say—*hein*, Teddy?
-Monsieur Gunthère is different. I like to talk with
-him—seriously."
-
-But at this moment, in response to a clamor, one
-of the negroes began dancing a shuffle in a quickly
-formed circle. Emma Fornez rushed off, with a cry
-of delight, deserting both young men.
-
-"You've made a killing, Ted," said Gunther,
-laughing.
-
-"Pooh! she'll forget my name tomorrow," said
-Beecher, who, however, believed nothing of the sort.
-"Come on."
-
-Mrs. Kildair was standing by the great Italian
-fireplace, her glance playing incessantly through the
-crowd, nodding from time to time, but without
-hearing the remarks of two or three older men who
-surrounded her. So different was the magnetic
-animation of her whole attitude from the ordinary feline
-languor of her pose, that Beecher noticed it at once,
-an impression heightened by the flash of the eyes
-and the almost electric warmth of her hand as she
-greeted him. Mrs. Kildair, who had followed his
-entrance with Mrs. Craig Fontaine and Emma
-Fornez and moreover was particularly pleased at his
-presenting young Gunther, was unusually gracious.
-
-Gunther, with his direct, almost obtrusive stare,
-studied her with unusual curiosity, conversed a little,
-and departed, after receiving a cordial invitation
-from her to call.
-
-"What is the matter with you, Rita?" said
-Beecher immediately.
-
-"Matter—how do you mean?"
-
-"I have never seen you so excited."
-
-"Really, do I seem so?" she said, waving to some
-one on the floor.
-
-"Extraordinarily so."
-
-"I am generally—dormant," she said, laughing.
-"Yes, I am excited tonight."
-
-"You are on the track of the ring—you have
-found it," he said instantly, with a pang of
-disappointment.
-
-"No, not that," she said, with a frown.
-
-An idea came to him. He imagined that she too,
-like the good gambler he felt her to be, was laughing
-before the irretrievable disaster of the morrow.
-
-"Look here, Rita," he said sympathetically,
-"you're not caught in the stock market, are you?
-
-"No, no, of course not." She saw the look on
-his face, and was touched by it. "Ruined and dying
-game? No, no; I am excited, very much excited,
-that's all. Will you ask me to dance, sir?"
-
-"Are they dancing?"
-
-"Of course. Hurry up!"
-
-Some of the more ardent spirits, impatient for
-the crowd to thin out, were whirling about, clearing
-an expanding circle by force of their revolving
-attacks. In a moment they were moving among the
-dancers.
-
-Mrs. Kildair danced remarkably well. In this
-lithe body, so pliant and yet so inspired with the
-vertigo of the waltz, Beecher was again aware of
-the strange excitement that seemed to animate her
-whole being, and continued to ask himself the cause
-of such an unusual emotion. From time to time,
-the light fingers on his arms contracted imperiously,
-urging him to a wilder measure. He had a strange
-sensation of mystery and flight, as though he were
-no longer dancing, but whirling around with her in
-his arms, each striving, in the frantic flight, to
-conquer the other.
-
-The dance ended. The spectators burst into applause.
-Mrs. Kildair, half opening her eyes, thanked
-him with a grateful smile. He walked away with
-her on his arm, agitated and troubled. What all the
-brilliance of Emma Fornez had not been able to
-accomplish, one touch of Rita Kildair had effected.
-
-"I've lots of things to ask you," he said hurriedly,
-remembering McKenna's suggestions.
-
-"No, no; not now—tomorrow," she said breathlessly,
-with the same caressing, half-veiled look. She
-gave him her hand in dismissal.
-
-He understood. The sensation which had come
-in the few moments of their vertigo had been too
-extraordinary to be dimmed by a descent to conversation.
-
-He left her, as always, aware of the artist in her,
-that never failed in the conception of a situation.
-
-"If I fall in love, it won't be with Nan Charters,"
-he said, following Mrs. Kildair with his eyes.
-
-Then, mindful of Emma Fornez's advice, he joined
-Mrs. Fontaine, staying with her until she gave the
-signal to leave for those who had come to watch.
-
-With this departure, in which Mrs. Kildair joined,
-a certain element of restraint disappeared. The
-unmistakable rising note of loosened tongues freed
-from Anglo-Saxon restraint by the scientifically
-contrived punch, began to mount above the rhythmic beat
-of the music, which itself seemed suddenly possessed
-of a wilder abandon. At the roulette table the
-players, coldly concentrated, continued in strained
-attitudes, oblivious of all but the blinding green nap
-before them.
-
-Toward two o'clock the thirty or forty who still
-remained formed a circle, camping on the floor,
-Indian fashion, clamoring for songs and vaudeville
-turns. Jack Lindabury and Bo Lynch gave their
-celebrated take-off on grand opera. Elsie Ware,
-riotously acclaimed, accompanied by an hilarious
-chorus, sang her famous successes, turning to and
-fro coquetting with first one man and then another.
-
-Emma Fornez, excited as a child, without waiting
-to be urged, ran to the piano and struck the first
-riotous chords of the "Habanera" of *Carmen*. Instantly
-there was a scramble for the sides of the long
-piano, and when she looked up again it was into a
-score of comically adoring faces, each striving to
-attract her attention. But Beecher, first to a position of
-vantage, received the full concentration of the diva's
-glances. Flushed with the peculiar fleeting
-intoxication of exuberant youth—the knowledge of the
-evening's success with women others coveted—he
-leaned far over the piano, resting his chin in his
-hands, gazing with a provoking malice into the eyes
-of the singer, exaggerating the intensity of his look,
-maliciously obvious of Nan Charters, whom he felt
-at his side. Emma Fornez, lending herself to the
-maneuver, opened her wide, languorous eyes, singing
-to him alone, with a little forward leaning of her
-body:
-
- | "*L'amour est enfant de la Bohême,*
- | *Il n'a jamais connu de loi*
- | *Si tu m'aimes.*"
- |
-
-The song ended in a furore. Mme. Fornez
-was overwhelmed with spontaneous adulation, and
-Beecher, laughing and struggling, was choked and
-carried away by the indignant suitors. Escaping, he
-came back, happy and resolved on more mischief.
-He had always had a passion for what is called fancy
-dancing, and in Europe had learned the dances of the
-country. He proposed to Emma Fornez a Spanish
-dance, and the idea was received with shouts of
-enthusiasm. Every one camped on the floor again,
-while three or four of the men, converting their
-sombreros into imaginary tambourines, shook them
-frantically in the air, led by Bo Lynch, who had somehow
-procured a great tin tray.
-
-"You dance—are you sure?" asked Emma Fornez,
-looking at his flushed face with an anxious look;
-for some of the men, notably Lorraine and Lynch,
-were in a visibly excited state.
-
-"Very well," he said confidently.
-
-"*Allons*, then!"
-
-The dance he had chosen was one somewhat akin
-to the tarantella, a slow movement gradually and
-irresistibly singing up into a barbaric frenzy at the
-climax—one of those dances that are the epitome
-of primal coquetry, of the savage fascinating allurements
-of the feline, provoking to the dancer, doubly
-provoking to the spectator, bewildered by the sudden
-antagonisms of the poses and the brusque yieldings.
-At the end, according to Spanish custom, the dance
-ended in an embrace. Emma Fornez, surprised to
-find so inspired a partner, transported by the mood,
-ended laughingly with a kiss, her warm arms
-remaining languidly a moment about the shoulders of the
-young man, whom she complimented with expressions
-of surprise. Besieged at every side with cries
-for an encore, they repeated the dance, freer in their
-revolving movements from the intimacy of the first
-passage.
-
-From time to time Beecher had managed to steal
-a glance in the direction of Nan Charters. She was
-sitting straight and unrelaxing, her eyes never leaving
-him, the lines of her mouth drawn a little tightly.
-When Emma Fornez had embraced him for the second
-time, Beecher, relaxing, perceived that Nan Charters
-turned her back and was conversing volubly,
-her shoulders rising and falling with little rapid
-movements, while her fan had the same nervous
-lashing that one sees in the uneasy panther.
-
-He was delighted at his success, at the revenge he
-had inflicted, at the superiority he had regained.
-The dances began again, but he did not dance. He
-held himself near the entrance, surveying the scene
-triumphantly. The experience was new to him; in
-the few years he had passed since college, he had
-been really out of the world. This game—the most
-fascinating of all the games of chance that can
-fascinate the gambler in each human being—the game
-between man and woman, came to him as a revelation,
-with a zest that was almost a discovery of his youth.
-
-All at once a feminine hand was laid on his arm
-and the voice of Nan Charters said:
-
-"Come outside—in the garden. I want to speak
-to you. Come quietly."
-
-.. _`"'Come outside—in the garden. I want to speak to you. Come quietly'"`:
-
-.. figure:: images/img-132.jpg
- :figclass: white-space-pre-line
- :align: center
- :alt: "'Come outside—in the garden. I want to speak to you. Come quietly'"
-
- "'Come outside—in the garden. I want to speak to you. Come quietly'"
-
-Elated by a strange, almost cruel feeling of
-conquest, he followed her, with a last look back at the
-studio, at the littered bar, where Bo Lynch was still
-calling raucously for customers, at the silent
-intensity of the gamblers, whom he occasionally perceived
-between the flitting dresses of the dancers. In the
-middle of the floor Lorraine and Plunkett, stumbling
-and unsteady, were solemnly waltzing in each other's
-arms—the specter of the morning forgotten.
-
-He closed the door softly and joined the young
-actress, who was waiting for him at some distance.
-
-"Can you take me home?" she asked directly.
-"Mr. Lorraine is in such a condition that I do not
-wish to go with him."
-
-"Certainly," he said, a feeling of protection
-replacing the first victorious perception of the fire of
-jealousy he had awakened in her.
-
-Gunther's automobile was waiting, and they
-entered it. She did not say a word to him, and he,
-determined to force her to begin the conversation,
-waited with a pleased enjoyment until three-quarters
-of the journey had been accomplished. All at once
-she turned, and, taking him by the lapels of the coat,
-brought him toward her as one scolds a child.
-
-"Are you so angry because I didn't see you this
-afternoon?" she said, smiling.
-
-The feminine defensive instinct of avoiding the
-issue by ambushing it with subterfuges, is equaled
-only by that instinct for attack which brushes aside
-all preliminaries and strikes directly. Beecher, taken
-off his guard, was a prey to two contrary impulses.
-Two replies, absolutely opposed and illogically joined,
-came to his lips. One brutal, still charged with the
-savageness of the evening, to say:
-
-"Angry? Not at all. Aren't you claiming a
-little too much?"
-
-And the other, a warm, yielding desire to blurt out
-frankly:
-
-"Yes, I was angry. I wanted to see you."
-
-She waited. Her large eyes, seeming larger in
-the dim light of the carriage, continued steadily on
-him. The first impulse dominated the second, but
-was modified by it.
-
-"Angry? What a curious idea!" he began, with
-a half laugh. "You were so upset—"
-
-She interrupted him, shaking her head.
-
-"Why did you act the way you did tonight?
-Don't do things that are not like you. That is not
-the way we began."
-
-He was silent, not knowing what to answer. Presently
-she withdrew into her corner, glanced out of
-the window, as if to assure herself that they were
-near their destination, and, placing her hand over his,
-said gently:
-
-"You are very sympathetic to me. Keep it so."
-
-For all that he said to himself that it was his favor
-with other women that made him precious to her,
-he felt a certain yielding of the spirit. He wondered
-if he could take her in his arms; but he restrained
-himself, and closed his two hands over hers.
-
-"Yes, we are very sympathetic," he said; but he
-did not say all he meant.
-
-"What a foolish boy you are," she said finally,
-looking up at him. "Don't you know that if I say
-one word you will go wherever I want you to?"
-
-He was so taken by surprise at the audacity and
-confidence of her remark, that he could not collect
-himself for an answer, outgeneraled by the woman
-who had so calculated to a nicety her last words that
-the arrival of the automobile left him without
-response.
-
-He went home, repeating to himself what she had
-asserted, resisting a wild desire to return to the
-Lindaburys' and forget there the disorder in his soul;
-and, though he rebelled scornfully against her confident
-assertion, the incessant repetition of it did leave
-an impression.
-
-As he passed the great marble façade of the Atlantic
-Trust, an unusual sight made him bend out of the
-window. In the chill gray of the coming dawn, a
-thin line of depositors was waiting, some standing,
-others huddled on campstools. At the sight the
-seriousness of life smote him, and he returned home,
-the tremulous turns of the human gamble he had
-played feverishly blended and confused with the dark
-realities of the rising tragedy of speculation.
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`CHAPTER X`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- CHAPTER X
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-When, the next morning, Beecher struggled out
-of a profound stupor, it was to be awakened
-by the sounds of Bo Lynch at the telephone. He
-rolled out of bed after a startled gaze at his watch,
-recalling in a flash the incidents of the night before.
-As he emerged he heard the final phrase, and the
-click of the released receiver:
-
-"Sell at once—throw them over."
-
-Bo Lynch, a pad of paper in one hand, a tumbler
-of cracked ice in the other, already dressed for the
-day, greeted him nonchalantly:
-
-"Morning."
-
-"How late did you stay?" asked Beecher.
-
-"Oh, we breakfasted together," said Lynch, with
-a wry smile; "charming little repast. But I picked
-up enough to pay for my winter's stabling."
-
-Beecher glanced at the clock, which was approaching
-the hour.
-
-"Waiting for the opening?"
-
-"Yes." His glance followed Beecher's with a
-sudden concentration, and, taking up a matchbox,
-he struck a match and threw it away. "Waiting
-to see if I can escape working another year."
-
-Beecher, comprehending that sympathy would be
-distasteful, picked up the morning papers. The
-scareheads were alive with the note of panic: a dozen
-banks were threatened with runs; a rumor was abroad
-that the Atlantic Trust and two other great institutions
-might close their doors within the next twenty-four
-hours; an interview with Majendie protested
-against the action of the Clearing-house, asserting
-the recklessness of the move and the solvency of the
-Trust Company; a riot was feared on the East Side,
-where the small Jewish depositors, always prey to
-alarms, were in a state of frenzy; vague, guarded
-hints of further actions to be expected by the
-Clearing-house against another prominent chain of banks,
-and a report that John G. Slade was to tender his
-resignation, were joined with rumors from the office
-of the State Examiner of Banks that there might be
-grounds for the criminal prosecution of certain
-officials.
-
-The telephone rang. Lynch went to the receiver,
-arranging his pad methodically on the table. Beecher
-stopped reading, listening to the broken threads.
-
-"All right, go ahead." ...
-
-"How much?" ...
-
-"Whew! Give me the Northern Pacific figures now." ...
-
-"Yes—yes—I see." ...
-
-"Something of a break, isn't it?" ...
-
-"All right." ...
-
-"No—that's all in the game. Thank you. I'll
-send my check to-day. Thanks."
-
-He put up the receiver, glanced curiously at the
-clock, which marked twelve minutes after ten, and
-studied the pad.
-
-Beecher had never been intimate with Lynch, but
-he liked him and his standards of Britannic phlegm.
-He belonged to that curious freemasonry of men, an
-indefinable, invisible standard of association, but one
-that cannot be counterfeited.
-
-"How did you come out?" he said carelessly.
-
-"About as I expected. The market has gone wild."
-
-Bo Lynch poured out a morning peg, adjusted his
-cravat critically in the mirror, and took up his hat.
-
-"Lunching at the club?"
-
-"Not to-day."
-
-"It'll be a cheerful funeral. So long."
-
-After his departure Beecher studied the jotted
-figures on the pad. In the twelve minutes of the
-opening, Lynch had lost a clear thirty-two thousand
-dollars.
-
-By the time he had dressed and breakfasted, he had
-answered the telephone a dozen times, messages from
-men he knew, anxious to learn if his intimacy with
-young Gunther had brought him any valuable information;
-inquiries as to the effect on his personal
-fortunes, and rumors of individual losses.
-
-He himself remained undisturbed by the frenzy.
-His own fortune, thanks to the wise provision of a
-hard-headed father, was safely invested in solid
-properties, and the world of speculation had not
-entered his ken. He returned to his newspapers, read
-everything bearing on the personal fate of John
-G. Slade, which interested him extraordinarily since his
-encounter with that abrupt and forceful personality,
-and, rising, asked himself how he could kill the time
-until the hour of his luncheon with Rita Kildair.
-
-The irritation he had felt at the end of his ride
-with Nan Charters had disappeared. Studying the
-evening calmly, he analyzed her words with a clearer
-perception. He comprehended that, beyond all the
-cleverness of her attitude, she had been veritably
-piqued by his indifference and his absorption by
-Emma Fornez, who treated her as a little actress.
-Considering the encounter thus, he smiled occasionally,
-congratulating himself that the conversation
-had ended so abruptly—when a continuance would
-have led him perhaps to say some of those sudden,
-illogical remarks which are irresistibly drawn from a
-man by the provoking contact of certain feminine
-personalities.
-
-"She may say what she wants," he said, selecting
-a cigarette. "She was caught by her own tricks." He
-took several steps, and grinned to himself. "It's
-an amusing game, and a game that will be amusing
-to play."
-
-Despite this feeling of confidence and elation, he
-had an irresistible desire to telephone her, to indulge
-himself in the pleasure of hearing her voice again.
-He had resisted the impulse several times, convincing
-himself of the tactical error; and yet, the more he
-argued against it, the more the desire haunted him.
-
-Ordinarily he spent an agreeable half-hour after
-breakfast, calling up on the telephone those of the
-opposite sex with whom he was in the relation of a
-good comrade. He enjoyed these morning snatches
-of intimacy, with an enjoyment untouched with any
-seriousness. This morning, as he took the telephone
-in hand, he thought first of Emma Fornez, but as he
-had neglected to make his adieu to her on leaving
-with Nan Charters, he considered a moment while
-he formulated an acceptable apology.
-
-The prima donna answered him from the languid
-idleness of her bed, where she was resting in a state
-of complete exhaustion.
-
-"I am ab-so-lutely *fini*," she said in an anguished
-tone. "It is fright-ful. I shall never be able to
-sing—never!" Then she remembered. "I am
-very angry with you—yes, yes,—very angry."
-
-Beecher explained, with crocodile tears, how he
-had been forced to come to the aid of a distressed
-and helpless female.
-
-"Ta-ta-ta! Stuff and nonsense! You could have
-boxed her up in a carriage and sent her home—yes,
-yes, you could. But you are in love—you are
-weak—you wanted an excuse—she made a fool of
-you—she twisted you around her finger!"
-
-Beecher denied the charge with indignation.
-
-"If you wanted to, you could have come back to
-me—yes, you could."
-
-"But you had deserted me—I was furious."
-
-The conversation continued ten minutes on these
-purely conventional lines and ended with a promise
-to drop in that afternoon for tea.
-
-He had hardly ended when Mrs. Fontaine called
-up with an invitation to her box, for Mme. Fornez's
-début in Carmen the following week.
-
-Then he called up Miss Rivers, not because he
-particularly wished to talk with her, for he had
-determined on her decapitation, so to speak, but in order
-to appease somewhat the desire he had to telephone
-some one else. In conversing over the telephone, he
-felt a revival of interest and promised to try to drop
-in for a call that afternoon.
-
-He rose, looking down at the telephone in a
-dissatisfied way, and, turning his back, went in search
-of his hat.
-
-"She'll expect me to telephone, of course," he
-thought; "besides, what excuse could I give? I'm
-not going to play into her game—not by a long
-shot. I know the kind—entirely too much brain-work
-to suit me. Oh, yes, she'd like to annex
-me—because I've been attentive to Emma Fornez—sure;
-but when it comes down to business. Mr. Charles
-Lorraine has a hundred thousand a year and I have
-thirty. She knows that." He laughed disdainfully
-and repeated, "You bet she knows that—well, so
-do I."
-
-He returned to the sitting-room and selected a
-cane, glancing out of the corner of his eye at the
-accursed telephone.
-
-"I won't," he said, taking three steps toward it
-and then turning abruptly away.
-
-At the moment when he stood wavering, it began
-to ring. He went to it hastily. Miss Charters was
-calling him...
-
-"How lucky!" he said purposely. "I was just
-going out. I heard you from the hall."
-
-"You know, I never realized until this morning
-what I had done," said the voice at the other end.
-"I was so upset by Mr. Lorraine's condition that I
-forgot you were there with Madame Fornez."
-
-"Clever girl," he said to himself, smiling. Then
-aloud: "Oh, I explained matters."
-
-"I was afraid I'd got you into trouble."
-
-"No, indeed. Madame Fornez is a good sort;
-she understood at once."
-
-"I'm so glad. You've 'phoned her already then?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-He remembered McKenna's suggestion, but he did
-not wish to make the demand direct.
-
-"Something of a smash in Wall Street to-day,"
-he said carelessly.
-
-"You weren't caught, were you?" she said, with
-a note of quick sympathy which he admired.
-
-"No; I don't speculate."
-
-"I was afraid you might have."
-
-"By Jove," he said, "I hope you didn't lose anything."
-
-"No, I don't think so," she said doubtfully. "I
-had some money invested, but I suppose if I hold
-on that'll come up again."
-
-"Not on margins?"
-
-"No, indeed."
-
-"Who's your broker?"
-
-"Mr. Garraboy."
-
-"Who?"
-
-"Mr. Garraboy."
-
-The news produced on him a strangely ominous
-effect. He forgot all the parleying and the tactical
-planning of his campaign, overshadowed by a sudden
-sense of sympathy.
-
-"I want to talk to you about that," he said
-anxiously. "Have you much in his hands?"
-
-"Much for me—about twenty thousand."
-
-"Are you going to be in this afternoon? Can I
-see you?"
-
-"I wish you would."
-
-Something in her voice struck him by its weakness.
-
-"You are not worried, are you?" he said.
-
-"A little."
-
-"Why don't you call him up?"
-
-"I've been trying to."
-
-He was going to offer to telephone for her, when
-he remembered the antagonism he had felt for the
-broker, and refrained until a fuller knowledge. He
-reassured her, making light of her doubts, though
-feeling an instinctive anxiety for himself. Then he
-called up McKenna; but the detective was out, and,
-leaving word that he would try later, he went for his
-morning ride.
-
-A little before one o'clock he was in the softly
-lighted studio of Mrs. Kildair, waiting for his hostess
-with the pleasurable anticipation of a confidential
-tête-à-tête. On one thing he was thoroughly
-resolved—to convince her of the seriousness of his
-purpose in offering his assistance. As he paced
-slowly and irregularly about the room, his mind,
-perplexed by the mystery of the disappearance of the
-ring, instinctively considering the possibilities for
-concealment, he was surprised to hear, behind the
-closed doors of the bedroom, the sound of voices in
-agitated discussion. He stopped, perplexed, for in
-his walk about the room he had arrived at a point
-in such close proximity that the tones were easily
-distinguishable.
-
-"But I have already made up my mind," cried
-a voice which he recognized at once as Mrs. Bloodgood's.
-
-Mrs. Kildair answered her, but in a lower tone—a
-note of warning and remonstrance.
-
-"Oh, what do I care for the world!" repeated the
-voice, on a higher note. "The world is all against
-me. I have only one life—I want to live some of it."
-
-Beecher, ill at ease, realizing that he had stumbled
-on a situation which he had no right to surprise,
-tip-toed away. Hardly had he seated himself when
-the door opened brusquely, and Mrs. Bloodgood
-appeared, saying:
-
-"No, no; it is decided. I'm going. My only regret
-is that we waited so long."
-
-Two spots of red showed on her dark cheeks, while
-her head was carried defiant, alive with sudden
-energy. Beecher was struck with the unwonted
-brilliancy and youth which the emotion that possessed
-her had communicated to her whole body. Mrs. Kildair
-followed her, with the frown of one who disapproves,
-but who knows the futility of any contradiction.
-
-Beecher rose hastily, emerging from the shadow.
-The two women stopped, surprised at his presence,
-considering him nervously. The few snatches of
-conversation he had heard, coupled with what
-Gunther had revealed to him of the infatuation of
-Mrs. Bloodgood and Majendie, made him divine the
-intention of elopement they had been discussing. His
-sympathy was touched by the distress of the young
-woman, and, advancing quickly, he said, with a
-pretense of shame:
-
-"By Jove, I must have been nodding! A thousand pardons."
-
-"How long have you been here?" said Mrs. Kildair.
-
-"About ten minutes," he said, rubbing his eyes
-and laughing. "Confound that chair—it's infernally
-comfortable, after being up all night. You
-made me jump."
-
-Mrs. Bloodgood had regained her calm. She
-embraced Mrs. Kildair and held out her hand to Beecher.
-
-"Won't you let me see you to your carriage?" he
-said eagerly, with a smile of such good will that she
-perceived that whatever he had overheard, she had
-no need to fear.
-
-"It's not necessary—but thank you," she said,
-giving him a grateful smile.
-
-He went to the door, opening it with a little
-exaggerated courtesy, and returned thoughtfully to
-Mrs. Kildair, who was watching him fixedly.
-
-"You overheard?" she said directly.
-
-"A little."
-
-"And what did you understand from it?"
-
-"Why, frankly, knowing what I do, I should believe
-that Mrs. Bloodgood had decided to run away,"
-he answered slowly; "which means, of course, one
-man. I am sorry. I could not help hearing."
-
-Mrs. Kildair had seated herself on the Récamier
-sofa and was studying him, undecided as to what
-she should say.
-
-"You have heard too much, Teddy, not to know
-all," she said, reassured by the directness of his
-glance. "Besides, in twenty-four hours it will be in
-every paper in the country. I do not need to ask your
-promise to keep secret what you have heard. She is
-leaving her home and going openly away with
-Mr. Majendie—this very afternoon."
-
-"Majendie running off?" said Beecher, astounded.
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Now—at such a time as this—when he is
-under fire? I don't believe it!"
-
-"I should not have believed it either," said
-Mrs. Kildair thoughtfully.
-
-"I know his kind," declared Beecher warmly;
-"he would never commit such a folly—never!"
-
-"And yet, that is what is going to happen."
-
-"That is terrible. Doesn't she realize that he lays
-himself open to every charge? He'll be called a
-defaulter and an absconder—it is worse than death!"
-
-"She realizes nothing," said Mrs. Kildair in a
-solemn voice, "except that she has hated one man
-and lived with him ten years, and that now, when
-everything is against the man she adores, she will
-sacrifice anything to be at his side."
-
-"But the sacrifice he is making—"
-
-"Her sacrifice is too great—she doesn't realize
-that," said Mrs. Kildair, rising. "Poor Elise! Her
-life has been terrible. She is wild with anxiety,
-with the thought of what Majendie may do. When
-one has suffered as much as she has, one more
-sorrow will not stop her."
-
-Beecher was silent, overcome by the vision of an
-emptiness which he could divine only in a general
-way, having as yet little knowledge of the silent
-tragedies that pass at our elbows. When Mrs. Kildair
-turned again, it was with all her accustomed
-poise.
-
-"We can do nothing," she said calmly. "Let us
-forget it. Luncheon is a little late. We shall be
-three; I asked Mr. Slade to join us. By the way,
-you were kind enough to offer me your help in the
-matter of my ring. I shan't need it now, but thanks
-all the same."
-
-"What do you mean?" he asked, surprised.
-
-"My detectives assure me they are on the right
-track," she said carelessly. "All I ask of you, as I
-have of every one, is to keep this unfortunate
-occurrence to yourself."
-
-Beecher had been on the point of informing her
-of his retaining McKenna, confident of her approval.
-Ignorant as he was of Mrs. Kildair's dread that
-Slade's ownership of the ring might come to light,
-with all the consequent public misunderstanding, he
-was disagreeably impressed by her announcement.
-He did not for one moment believe her statement
-that the right clue had been found. All he understood
-was that, for some reason, she desired to keep
-him out of the case, and this understanding irritated
-him. And the introduction of Slade at what he had
-considered his privileged hour annoyed him even
-more. His curiosity increased twofold as he was
-forced to retain his information. Then he
-remembered McKenna's hint, and said carelessly:
-
-"By Jove, that reminds me—I want the address
-of your detective agency."
-
-She raised her eyes very slowly, and her glance
-rested on his for a full moment.
-
-"Why do you ask that?" she said.
-
-He repeated the story he had prepared of a friend's
-demand, mentioning Gunther's name.
-
-Mrs. Kildair rose as though reluctantly, motioning
-him to wait, and, going to her room, returned
-after a long moment with an address on a slip of paper.
-
-"There, Teddy," she said, giving it to him. Her
-manner had completely changed. She was again the
-Rita Kildair who treated him *en camarade*. "You
-are disappointed in not working out an exciting
-mystery," she said, laughing. "Do you know, Teddy,
-I am quite surprised at you."
-
-"How so?" he said warily.
-
-"I should have thought by this time you would
-have engaged half the detectives in New York," she
-said, turning from him to arrange the cushions at
-her back. "And here you have done nothing."
-
-Beecher was not deceived by the innocence of the
-interrogation.
-
-In the last days his wits had been trained by
-contact with different feminine personalities. He
-understood that she wished to find out what he had
-done and assumed at once an attitude of boyish candor.
-
-"It's not my fault, Rita," he said contritely.
-"You put me off—you remember."
-
-"That's so," she said. She motioned to him with
-a little gesture of her fingers and indicated a chair at
-her side. "Come here, you great boy," she said,
-smiling. "You are furious at me, aren't you?"
-
-"Why?" he said, sitting near her, with a resolve
-to resist all her curiosity.
-
-"You like to be the confidant of pretty women,
-Teddy," she said, laughing as he blushed. "To be
-on the inside—to know what others can't. Well,
-you shan't be deprived."
-
-He looked at her in surprise.
-
-"What I told you is not true," she said candidly.
-"I have no clue, as yet, and am quite in the dark. I
-give you permission to do all you can. You see,"
-she continued, holding out her hand with a charming
-smile, "I give you my full confidence—confidence
-for confidence—*n'est ce pas*?"
-
-Beecher made a rapid mental reservation and
-repeated her phrase, expecting a direct examination,
-but her manner became thoughtful again and she said
-pensively:
-
-"Besides, you have stumbled on a confidence
-yourself, and if you are to be trusted with that you
-should be trusted entirely." She looked at him
-quietly for a moment, and then added: "As a proof
-of my trust, Teddy, I am going to ask you to be my
-ally now. Mr. Slade will be here shortly. I do not
-wish to be alone with him. Do not go until he is gone."
-
-This request, implying as it did his own superior
-intimacy, delighted Beecher. He felt half of his
-suspicions vanish as he answered wisely:
-
-"I understand. He is quite daffy about you, isn't he?"
-
-"Quite. But he has to be kept in place."
-
-"Oh, of course."
-
-"And now you are happy again," she said, tapping
-his arm with a little friendly gesture and smiling
-inwardly at the satisfaction which began to radiate
-from his face. "Teddy, you are a nice boy. I will
-teach you what the world is; you shall be my
-confidant, and we will laugh together; only, you must
-not be sentimental, you understand."
-
-"Never," he said with vigorous assertion. Then
-his conscience began to reprove him, and he blurted
-out: "I say, Rita, I haven't been quite honest, but
-you rubbed me the wrong way. I really have been
-on the job."
-
-"Besides Gunther, whom else have you talked
-with?" she asked.
-
-"McKenna, the detective; and he's dead keen on
-the case," he said enthusiastically, not noticing what
-she had implied.
-
-"Oh, McKenna!" she said, nodding appreciatively.
-"You have done well."
-
-She sat up, suddenly serious, and, extending her
-hand, took from him the address she had given him.
-
-"Did McKenna tell you to find out my detective?"
-she said slowly.
-
-Beecher comprehended all at once how he had
-played into her game, but, with her glance on his, it
-was impossible to deny.
-
-"Yes," he said; "he told me that he'd been on a
-dozen cases where the detectives who had come in
-to make a search had gone partners with the thief.
-He wanted to be certain there had been a real search."
-
-This seemed to reassure her, for she nodded with
-a return of her careless manner, as though comprehending
-the situation. Then, crumpling in her hands
-the paper with the address, she allowed her body to
-regain its former languid position and said:
-
-"I should like to meet McKenna; you must bring
-him around. How is he starting on the case?"
-
-Before Beecher could answer, the bell rang and
-Slade's bulky figure crowded the frame of the doorway.
-He entered, and the portières, at his passing,
-rolled back like two storm clouds.
-
-Whether or not Mrs. Kildair had calculated the
-effect of the intimacy of Beecher's position, Slade
-saw it at once as he noted savagely the involuntary
-separating movement which each unconsciously
-performed, and, perceiving it, exaggerated its
-importance. The look he gave the younger man revealed
-to the amused woman how much he would have liked
-in barbaric freedom to have seized him and crushed
-him in his powerful arms.
-
-"Sorry to be late," he said abruptly, glancing at
-the clock. "I've taken the liberty to leave your
-telephone number, Mrs. Kildair, in case something
-important turns up."
-
-They passed immediately into the dining-room,
-Mrs. Kildair enjoying this clash of opposite
-personalities. Slade was not a man of small talk,
-disdaining the easy and ingratiating phrases with which
-other men establish a congenial intimacy. For the
-first quarter of an hour he withdrew from the
-conversation, and, being hungry, ate with relish.
-Beecher, abetted by his hostess, taking a malicious
-pleasure in the superiority he enjoyed, chatted of a
-hundred and one things which he shared with his
-listener, incidents of the party at Lindabury's, gossip
-of the world they knew, Emma Fornez and Holliday,
-Mrs. Fontaine and Gunther. Then, naturally
-drawn to the one topic that charged the air with the
-electricity of its drama, he related the uproar in the
-city, the long lines of depositors before the banks,
-the incident of Bo Lynch in the morning, and the
-effect on the men they knew. In this both he and
-Mrs. Kildair had an ulterior motive—to make Slade
-talk: Mrs. Kildair, for reasons of her own, Beecher
-alive to his dramatic closeness to the one man about
-whose success or ruin all the storm of rumor and
-gossip was raging.
-
-"Stocks are still dropping," said Mrs. Kildair,
-glancing at Slade, who appeared quite unconscious.
-"An enormous quantity of holdings have been thrown
-on the market."
-
-"How long do you think it will keep up?"
-
-"That depends; a day, a week—Mr. Slade knows
-better than any one."
-
-Slade looked up suddenly.
-
-"What do they say about me?" he asked grimly.
-
-"Every one expects the Associated Trust to be
-the next," said Beecher frankly.
-
-"Probably. I'll tell you one bit of news," he
-added quietly. "The Clearing-house will refuse to
-clear for us this afternoon."
-
-"But that means failure," said Mrs. Kildair, with
-a quick glance at him.
-
-"We shall see."
-
-"But the run has already started."
-
-"Oh, yes; we have paid off five depositors already,"
-he said, with a smile that was almost imperceptible.
-
-"Only five?"
-
-"It takes a long time to verify some accounts.
-Then the law allows discretion in payment—takes
-quite a while to count out five thousand in half
-dollars." All at once he leaned forward heavily and
-began to speak, contemplatively interested. "The
-real truth is the thing that is never known. The
-newspapers never print the news. Sometimes it is
-given to them in confidence, to make certain that they
-won't print it. How much do you suppose will ever
-be known of the real causes of the present crisis?
-Nothing. They may let the market go to the dogs
-for three days, six days, a month, ruin thousands of
-victims, and the public will never know that the
-whole thing can be stopped now, in twenty-four
-hours, by ten men. And, when they get ready, ten
-men *will* stop it. Then there'll be columns of
-adulation—patriotic services, unselfish devotion, and all
-that; and what will have happened—ten men will
-be in pocket a few millions as the result of their
-sacrificing devotion. The public must have a
-victim in order to be calmed, to be satisfied that
-everything has been changed. Then a weak man, some
-unlucky lieutenant, will be served up, and things will
-go on again, until one group of millions is ready
-to attack another. How the public will howl!
-Majendie has taken the gambler's risk; Majendie has
-failed. There's the crime—failure; and yet, ninety
-per cent. of the fortunes today have turned on the
-scale—up or down—win or lose. For every promoter
-that wins, twenty fail with a little different
-turn of the luck.
-
-"We're all criminals—only we don't steal
-directly. We get it done for us. We want
-franchises for a great railroad system. We shut our
-eyes—hire an agent—go out and get this,
-no strings, no directions—show us only your
-results! Everything is in irresponsibility. A million
-dollars can commit no crime. After all, it's in the
-motive—a man who steals because he's hungry is
-a thief; a corporation that bribes a legislature and
-steals franchises, to create a great system of
-transportation, is performing a public service. It's all
-in what you're after. There're two ways to look
-at every big man; see the two periods—first, when
-he is trying to get together money—power; and
-second, what he creates when he has it. Same in
-politics—a man's better in office than running for
-it. Every man of power wants to arrive, anything
-to arrive, but when he gets there—then's the second
-period. The way to judge us is whether we want
-money only, or money to create something big."
-
-"And you?"
-
-"I want sixty millions," said Slade abruptly.
-"Will I get it?" He shrugged his shoulders, and
-taking a knife balanced it in seesaw on his finger,
-letting it finally drop with an exclamation of
-impatience. "That's the danger—the getting of it.
-I may have it in two years more and then again—" He
-opened his hand as though flinging sand in the
-air, and added: "In a week it may be over. *Rouge
-et noir*—one bad turn at the beginning and Napoleon
-Bonaparte would have been shot as a conspirator.
-Up to the present, I've been living the first
-period—afterward I'll justify it; I'll build."
-
-"In what way?" said Mrs. Kildair, who, while
-following his brutal exposition with the tribute
-instinctive to force, was nevertheless aware that this
-unusual revelation of himself had likewise a trifling
-object—the over-awing of the younger rival.
-
-"Railroads—a great system—an empire in itself,"
-said Slade; and there came in his eyes a flash
-of the enthusiast which surprised her. But,
-unwilling to enlarge on this topic, he continued: "What
-I've said sounds raw, doesn't it? So it is. If I do
-what I want, I justify myself. There are only two
-classes of human beings—those like you two here,
-who get through life with the most pleasure you can,
-who get through—pass through; and then a few,
-a handful, who create something—an empire, like
-Rhodes, invent a locomotive or a system of electric
-production, add something to human history. What
-if they steal, or grind out the lives of others?
-They're the only ones who count. And the public
-knows it—it forgives everything to greatness; it's
-only petty crime it hates. Look at the sympathy a
-murderer gets on trial—look at the respect a great
-manipulator gets. Why? Because to murder and
-steal are natural human instincts. A couple of
-thousand years ago, it was a praiseworthy act for one
-ancestor, who coveted a hide or a cave that another
-ancestor had, to go out and kill him. All animals steal
-by instinct. We are only badly educated animals,
-and we admire in others what we don't dare do
-ourselves. Only succeed—succeed! Ah, there is the
-whole of it!"
-
-At this moment the telephone rang, and Slade rose
-and went to it with a little more emotion than he
-usually showed.
-
-"Is this the cause of his outburst?" thought Mrs. Kildair,
-while she and Beecher instinctively remained
-silent.
-
-At the end of a short moment, Slade returned.
-The two observers, who glanced at him quickly,
-could not find the slightest clue of what had
-transpired. Only he seemed more composed.
-
-"Speaking of stealing, take the case of the ring,"
-he said, relaxing in a chair. "We know this—incredible
-as it may seem—that there were at least
-two thieves in the company; as a matter of fact,
-there were many more. My own opinion is that the
-crime was not an ordinary one—that whoever took
-it the second time took it out of an uncontrollable
-spirit of bravado, an overpowering impulse to do an
-almost impossible thing."
-
-"By the way—" Beecher began, and then suddenly
-looked at Mrs. Kildair interrogatively. Then,
-receiving permission, he continued: "You know
-who returned that night?"
-
-Slade nodded.
-
-"Yourself, Mrs. Cheever, Garraboy, and Miss
-Charters."
-
-"Miss Charters?" said Beecher, turning in
-amazement to Mrs. Kildair.
-
-She nodded, with a little frown.
-
-"As I told Mrs. Kildair," said Slade, not noticing
-that Beecher, overwhelmed by this discovery, did not
-hear him, "I do not believe for a moment that the
-thief would return. Any one who had the daring to
-seize the ring the second time had the daring to carry
-off the ring; in fact, had some such plan in mind.
-Whoever came back may have come back out of sympathy,
-or with the idea that the ring was still in the
-studio—in which case, we have a third
-manifestation of instinct."
-
-They had passed into the studio again. Slade
-spoke with all his old decision, the energy of action
-replacing the bitterness of his former meditative
-mood. He glanced at the clock, and took his leave
-in a quick, impersonal manner. Beecher, ignoring
-the looks Mrs. Kildair sent him, departed with Slade,
-refusing an invitation to join him in the automobile,
-and continuing on foot.
-
-He was absolutely at a loss to account for Miss
-Charters' returning to the studio after having gone
-to her apartment. If she had any suggestion to
-offer, why had she not waited, or even requested him
-to return with her? Why, in fact, could she not
-have waited until the following day—instead of
-risking the journey at such an hour?
-
-Full of disturbing surmises, he continued his walk
-until he reached the great thoroughfare of Forty-second
-Street, where he turned eastward toward the
-station, oblivious to the excitement in the street, the
-break-neck arrival of the newspaper wagons and the
-sudden, shrill scattering of urchins, extras in hand.
-
-All at once, at the western corner of the station,
-he raised his eyes instinctively. A coupé with trunks
-behind it disengaged itself from the confusion of
-traffic and, turning, slowly passed him. Inside, he
-recognized the dark, defiant eyes of Mrs. Enos Bloodgood.
-
-In a moment he guessed the full significance of
-her presence: she had come to meet Majendie, to
-burn all bridges behind her, in the supreme sacrifice
-of everything for the possession of a happiness she
-had never known.
-
-The next instant he was gazing horror-stricken
-at the head-lines of an extra that a newsboy flung in
-his face:
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-.. class:: center
-
- SUICIDE OF BERNARD L. MAJENDIE
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-He became perfectly collected, clear in mind and
-instinctive in action, with the decision he had felt
-in the last charges of a wounded elephant. If
-Mrs. Bloodgood were here, it was because she expected to
-meet Majendie; because she was ignorant of the
-tragedy that had taken place.
-
-Retracing his steps, he arrived at the carriage the
-moment Mrs. Bloodgood's hand had thrown open
-the door.
-
-"Excuse me," he said, with an authority which
-instantly impressed the woman by its ominous
-seriousness. "Something terrible has happened. I
-must speak to you." Then, turning to the
-coachman, without being overheard, he gave him
-Mrs. Kildair's address, saying: "Drive there quickly.
-Five dollars to you if you get me there in ten minutes."
-
-Then he opened the door and joined the woman
-who, drawn back in the corner like an animal at bay,
-already trembling with what she did not know,
-awaited him.
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`CHAPTER XI`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- CHAPTER XI
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-For an interval, while the coachman, spurred on
-by the prospect of reward, tore through the
-short streets, Beecher continued looking into
-Mrs. Bloodgood's eyes—eyes that were aghast with
-mute, terrified interrogations which she did not dare
-to phrase.
-
-Suddenly she perceived the extra which he had
-bought. She extended her hand, looking at it
-fearfully.
-
-"Give it to me," she said.
-
-He hesitated, and in the moment of irresolution
-she seized it. A cry of pain, a low cry torn from the
-soul, made him stiffen in his seat, steeling himself
-against the expected. But no further sound came.
-When he turned, she was sitting transfixed, staring
-wide-eyed at the newspaper which seemed glued to
-her fingers. Alarmed at the rigidity of her emotion,
-he leaned over and disengaged the paper from her
-unresisting fingers. The action seemed abruptly to
-revive her. She gave another cry, and tore the
-newspaper from him with such energy that a great,
-ill-shaped fragment remained in her clutch.
-
-"No, no, not that—no, no!" she cried, frantically
-seeking to decipher the bare six lines that
-recorded the tragedy. All at once she flung the sheet
-from her, turning to read the truth in his face.
-
-"Ah, it is true!" she cried, and her hand, as
-though holding him guilty of the fact, violently
-pushed him from her.
-
-"Mrs. Bloodgood—" Beecher began hesitatingly,
-frightened at the paroxysm that shook her body.
-
-But the emotion was still of horror, without as yet
-the realization of the finality that had come. She
-felt that Majendie was in danger—in terrible
-danger; that she must get to him, somehow, some way,
-and fling herself in front of that awful something
-that threatened him, ward off, in some way prevent,
-the thing that was coming. She seized the arm of
-the terrified young man, imploring him, still dry-eyed:
-
-"Take me to him—at once—no—I must—take
-me—Bernard—oh!"
-
-She fell back exhausted, faint.
-
-"Be calm; please be calm," he repeated, helpless
-before the utter disorder of her suffering.
-
-All at once the annihilation of self into which she
-had fallen was succeeded by a quick paroxysm of
-energy. She bounded upright on the seat, seizing his
-arm so that the nails hurt him.
-
-"I will go to him!" she cried. "You shall not
-stop me. He may be only wounded. The report is
-false—must be false. I will go to him!"
-
-"The very thing that you must not do—that you
-can not do," he said firmly; and then, seized with
-an inspiration, he added: "Listen—listen to me,
-Mrs. Bloodgood, I am taking you to Rita's; if you
-must go to him, go with her. Two women can go;
-one would cause a great scandal. You can not put
-that on him—you must think of him now. We
-are going to Rita's—Rita's!" he added, putting his
-lips to her ears to make her hear him.
-
-He put his hand on her shoulder and forced her
-gently back. She held her clasped hands rigidly
-strained between her knees, staring out beyond the
-confines of the carriage.
-
-"He is not dead," she said in a whisper; "he
-is wounded."
-
-"As soon as we get to Rita's," he continued
-reassuringly, "I will telephone. I'll find out
-everything."
-
-"Wounded," she repeated, nodding—without
-hearing him.
-
-"If he is, we three can go—it will seem quite
-natural," he said hastily, eying nervously her dry,
-uncomprehending grief, fearing the coming outburst
-of realization.
-
-"Almost there," he said, looking out of the
-window. "Hold on to yourself. Be game. There
-are always a few persons below."
-
-She did not answer, but her lips curled slightly
-in contempt, and she put her hand spasmodically to
-her throat.
-
-"You're right, the whole thing may be false—a
-wild rumor," he said quickly, talking to her as to
-a child. "A fake story—who knows? See, there
-are no details. Here we are. A little courage!
-Go right into the elevator."
-
-He signaled the driver to wait, and followed her
-hastily into the elevator, standing between her bowed
-figure and the boy.
-
-Mrs. Kildair was in the studio, pacing the floor;
-and at the first glance each saw that she knew the
-report, and that it was true. Mrs. Bloodgood
-crumpled on the floor, without consciousness.
-
-"My smelling-salts are on my bureau," said Mrs. Kildair
-quickly. "Lift her on the sofa first, and
-then get them."
-
-"Is it true?" he said, raising the slender,
-lifeless body.
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Dead?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"When did it happen?"
-
-"At two o'clock."
-
-"She wishes to go to him," he said warningly.
-"The carriage is below. She has her trunks. She
-was to have met him at the station. What shall I do?"
-
-"She must be gotten back to her house as soon
-as possible," said Mrs. Kildair with energy. "The
-trunks must return at once. Everything hangs on
-a hair; I know Bloodgood." She cast a glance at
-the still inanimate body and added: "Wait. Spirits
-of ammonia will be better. I'll get it."
-
-Mrs. Bloodgood returned to consciousness slowly,
-looking from one to the other with a dazed,
-pleading look.
-
-"Then it is so," she said at last.
-
-The two looked at her without being able to
-answer. Suddenly she bounded up erect, her fists
-striking her forehead.
-
-"It is I who have done it!" she cried, and for
-the second time fell back lifeless on the floor.
-
-"Go down now; send the trunks back," said
-Mrs. Kildair to Beecher. "Tell him to do it as
-quickly as possible—no, tell him nothing. Go
-quickly."
-
-When Beecher returned, Mrs. Bloodgood was on
-her feet again, passing from spot to spot ceaselessly,
-one hand clutching a handkerchief to press back the
-sobs that shook her from time to time, the other
-stretched out in front of her, beating a mechanical
-time to the one phrase which she repeated again and
-again:
-
-"I've done it—I've done it—I've done it!"
-
-Mrs. Kildair, leaning by the piano, knowing that
-each period must have its expression, awaited the
-right moment. Beecher, at a sign from her,
-slipped quietly into a chair.
-
-"Yes, it's I—it's I—I!" said the indistinguishable
-voice.
-
-"You have done nothing," said Mrs. Kildair
-solemnly. "It is fate."
-
-"No, no. Only I am to blame," she answered,
-stopping short, each word coming slowly through
-the torrents of tears.
-
-Mrs. Kildair passed quietly to her side.
-
-"You are not to blame, dear," she said; "don't
-think that."
-
-"Oh, you don't know," she said, suddenly acquiring
-a terrible calm that froze the young man.
-"At what time did he—did it happen?"
-
-"At two."
-
-"I knew it! Ten minutes before, he telephoned
-me; he said—oh, what do I know?—said a thousand
-things but the one in his mind. Asked me if
-I still was resolved to go."
-
-"But then, Elise—"
-
-"You don't understand! It was I who insisted
-on his going—I—I! I told him, if he would not
-go, I would come openly to his house—I would not
-be separated from him. Oh, my God! I didn't
-know—I didn't!"
-
-She abandoned herself to her transports once
-more, flinging herself on her knees and praying, as
-an uncomprehending child prays:
-
-"O God, don't let it be true—please don't let it
-be so!"
-
-Beecher covered his eyes suddenly with his hands.
-Mrs. Kildair allowed her for a moment to tire herself
-in supplication and anguish. Then she went to
-her, grasping her shoulder.
-
-"Elise."
-
-Mrs. Bloodgood stopped, rose, and went to the
-window, where she stood swaying.
-
-"I'm going to him," she said, pressing her
-knuckles against her temples.
-
-"Get hold of yourself," said Mrs. Kildair,
-avoiding the error of opposition.
-
-For a long moment neither spoke, while Mrs. Bloodgood,
-passing to and fro, struggled to fight
-down the sobs that were choking her. At last she
-stopped, facing Mrs. Kildair.
-
-"I am going to him," she said.
-
-The other woman, with a look of great compassion,
-shook her head in a slow negation, looking full
-at her.
-
-"But he said I could!" she cried, stretching out
-her hands toward Beecher.
-
-"You can't."
-
-"But he said so—he promised."
-
-"No; it is impossible."
-
-"I *will* go!"
-
-"There are twenty reporters waiting for just
-that," Said Mrs. Kildair. Then, raising her voice,
-she said impressively: "Elise, there is something you
-must do—something ten times more terrible."
-
-"What?"
-
-"Return home—and at once."
-
-"Never!" The cry burst from her as her whole
-body was shaken with indignation. "Never in the
-world—never again!"
-
-"Listen," said Mrs. Kildair, seizing her arm, and
-Beecher was struck with the savageness of her
-energy. "Things are no longer the same. You
-are alone—absolutely alone. Do you understand
-what that means—without a cent—alone?"
-
-"What do I care?"
-
-"Not now; but in a week, in a month— You
-think you know the greatest suffering in the world;
-you don't—the greatest is poverty. Whatever has
-happened, you are Mrs. Enos Bloodgood. Only
-yourself can destroy that. One life is ended in
-you. You have loved. That will never come
-again—not the same. Life is long and terrible."
-
-"What, you can suggest such a thing?" said
-Mrs. Bloodgood, raising her head indignantly. "Such an
-infamy?"
-
-"Yes—because I know. The world is not an
-equal one. A woman can not fight as a man can.
-A year from now, when you can suffer no further,
-do you want to wake up in a dingy boarding-house,
-cut off from all you have lived in? For a great
-love—perhaps—but to be alone? No, no! Elise,
-you will do as I say because I can see better than
-you. You are Mrs. Enos Bloodgood—you have
-everything that a million women covet. It is your
-life; you will go back."
-
-"Ah, how can you say that to me now?" said
-Mrs. Bloodgood, pressing her handkerchief to her eyes.
-
-"Because the world is different from the world
-of this morning—because everything is different,
-Elise. There are no longer the reasons that existed.
-You are alone against the world. You know your
-husband—one public word or action, and he will
-cast you off like an old shoe."
-
-"How can I go back?" she said, sitting down,
-half subdued. "How can I get the strength? I
-don't know yet what has happened. I can't realize
-it—oh, if I had only had my way! If he had only
-let me leave a month—two months ago. If I'd
-only been firm; if we had gone that night—that
-night we were here—when I begged him to. If he
-had only loved me more than his honor, as I loved
-him. If only I—"
-
-"Elise," said the quiet voice of Mrs. Kildair.
-
-The young woman checked herself, breaking off
-and moving again; but almost immediately broke out
-again:
-
-"And now you want me to go back to *him*. Oh,
-if you knew how I hate him, how I loathe him—what
-that life means—how cruel he can be, how
-he can make me suffer by a word or a look—how
-he enjoys—"
-
-"Elise, Elise!"
-
-"I can't go, Rita, I can't! Don't ask me to go
-now. Let me stay a while here, just tonight, where
-I can weep," she cried.
-
-"No, no. It must be now—soon. You have
-left your home with your trunks—he knows it. If
-you return—you return because you are worried—the
-panic—on his account."
-
-"Ah, what a lie!"
-
-"Elise," said Mrs. Kildair, coming forward again
-and arresting the other's arm, "listen. You are
-not what I am. You are not strong—you are
-weak. You are a woman of the world, worldly,
-loving worldly things, who for a moment has been
-transformed by a great passion. The whole earth
-has no such passion any longer. Do you understand?
-Something is gone—your youth is ended.
-Keep tight hold of the little that is left. Come, be
-strong. Dissimulate as you have before. Come."
-
-"Not now," said Mrs. Bloodgood, terrified.
-
-"Yes, now. If possible, you must be back
-before he returns."
-
-And Beecher, from his chair where he had
-watched, forgotten by both women, saw Mrs. Kildair,
-who not for a moment had deviated from the
-vital issue, draw the unresisting woman by the very
-force of her energy into the bedroom, from which
-shortly they emerged again.
-
-"I am ready," said Mrs. Bloodgood in a voice
-that was scarcely distinguishable. She had thrown
-over her head a thick veil, behind which her features
-were only dimly visible.
-
-"Telephone for a carriage," said Mrs. Kildair.
-
-"I have done so," said Beecher, who had availed
-himself of the interval.
-
-"But the trunks?" said Mrs. Bloodgood, turning
-helplessly.
-
-"They went back long ago."
-
-"Ah!" She took a few weak steps and turned.
-"But I shall see him?"
-
-"I give you my word."
-
-"Tonight?"
-
-"Tonight."
-
-Mrs. Bloodgood made a little sign of acquiescence,
-and passed out of the door. The carriage was
-waiting. Beecher silently handed her into it, feeling
-the sudden heaviness on his arm. They rolled away.
-She did not lift her veil, and he could not guess what
-look was on her face. Twice she made him change
-their course, in order to put off the final dreaded
-moment.
-
-"You have been kind," she said at last. "I owe
-you much. Thank you. Now I will go back."
-
-"Don't speak of thanks at such a time," he said
-hastily. "If I can help you in any way, any
-time—"
-
-"I know." All at once, forgetting his presence,
-she burst out: "Oh, how I loved him! I would have
-done anything for him—anything! I can't believe
-it. It doesn't seem possible!"
-
-"Be careful, Mrs. Bloodgood," he said, alarmed.
-"Be careful—please."
-
-"You need have no fear," she said slowly. "All
-that is over." But, still obsessed, she seized his arm.
-"Only I want you to know that I loved him so that
-nothing made any difference. Any one can know
-it. I would have gone—"
-
-"I know it," he said quickly, taking her hand to
-quiet her.
-
-"Oh, yes, I loved him—the only real thing in
-my life!" she repeated, sinking back.
-
-Ahead he saw the great Italian façade of the
-Bloodgood residence, where twenty servants awaited
-the call of this shadow at his side, whose invitation
-could make a social reputation. Then his quick eye,
-as they neared the steps, perceived the squat, stolid
-figure of Mr. Enos Bloodgood at the door.
-
-"He is just come out—your husband," he said
-hurriedly, with a sudden new sensation of dread.
-And he repeated, a little excitement in his voice,
-fearing she did not understand the danger: "Be
-careful; he is there—your husband."
-
-"Yes, I saw him."
-
-She took the veil from her hat, and, folding it,
-handed it to him, her face set in hardness and
-contempt.
-
-"You might say Mrs. Kildair had invited—"
-
-"I know what to say," she said, checking him,
-and a smile incongruous at the moment gave the last
-touch of tragedy to the imagination of her
-companion. "Open the door."
-
-He gazed at her, struck with the strange, dual
-personality in the frail, proud body—the abandon
-of the woman who loved and the calm of the woman
-who hated. She who a moment before had cared
-nothing for what she revealed to him in the
-unrestraint of her sorrow, did not hesitate now a
-moment, face to face with the peril of such a
-confrontation.
-
-"Open the door," she repeated sharply.
-
-Recalled to his senses, he sprang out and gave
-her his hand, accompanying her to the chiseled
-marble steps, where he left her, with a lift of his
-hat to the husband above who awaited her with a
-quiet, cynical enjoyment.
-
-"I thought, my dear, you had gone off for a jolly
-little jaunt," said Mr. Bloodgood, without variation
-in the provoking evenness of his voice.
-
-She came up the steps to his level, and acknowledged
-his presence with an inclination of her head.
-
-"I intended to," she said, in the same ceremonious
-tone. "But I was so alarmed at the news from
-Wall Street that I did not wish to leave you at such
-a time."
-
-"Indeed? I am quite touched," he answered,
-with perfect solemnity. "You are always so
-thoughtful, my dear."
-
-She entered. He followed her as though shutting
-off all retreat, and the gorgeous flunky who had
-run out disappeared, too. To Beecher, with all the
-anguish of the scene at Rita Kildair's still vivid in
-his mind, it was as though he had seen a living
-woman enter her appointed tomb.
-
-"Where shall I drive, sir?" said the driver.
-
-"Anywhere!" he cried furiously.
-
-But at the end of five minutes he emerged from
-the stupor into which he had been plunged, the
-somber horror rolling away like scudding
-storm-clouds. A new emotion—the inevitable personal
-application—broke over him like a ray of light.
-
-"To be loved like that—" he thought suddenly,
-with a feeling of envy. "Terrible, terrible—and
-yet how marvelous!"
-
-He gave directions to drive to Nan Charters' with
-a new curiosity in his soul—the inevitable personal
-emotion that, strangely enough, even against his
-will, dominated all the somber melancholy which
-this reverse of a glittering medal had brought him.
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
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-.. _`CHAPTER XII`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- CHAPTER XII
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-He had completely forgotten, in the press of
-dramatic events, the disturbing fact of Nan
-Charters' return the night of the theft. He remembered
-it suddenly, as one remembers sorrow after a
-profound sleep. But the recalling of it affected him
-differently. The revelation of Mrs. Bloodgood's
-hidden life had left him in a dangerous and
-vulnerable mood—a mood of quickened compassion and
-outgoing sympathy. He was still determined to
-force a direct answer from Miss Charters, but
-already he had formed that answer in his heart, as
-he for the hour felt no longer the selfish combat of
-vanity, but the need of charity and gentleness.
-
-In one of the profound moods which color the
-visible world, he stood at the window of the little
-sitting-room, awaiting her arrival, looking out on
-the serried flight of unutterably commonplace roofs,
-gray and drab with the gray of the turning day.
-And it seemed to him that this twilight was different
-from other twilights, heavily weighted down with
-more of the sadness of inexplicable lives. One
-tragedy seemed to invoke a thousand tragedies, in
-the cramped immobility of these inscrutable
-windows which had not yet begun to warm with the
-flicker of human cheer. He saw only the brutal
-struggle to live, and felt only the mystery of
-suffering, which was still a thing apart from his life.
-Standing reverently thus, he asked himself two
-questions which, sooner or later, each man of heart and
-sensibility puts to himself in the awakening to
-conscious existence:
-
-"Why do they go on?"
-
-"What is my justification?"
-
-And in his heart, still young and stirred to
-sympathy, he felt the beginning of a revolt at what he
-had been, at his inability to find a satisfying answer
-to that second question. He no longer awaited the
-interview in the spirit of strife, but with a sudden
-feeling of impulsive friendliness which, had he been
-an older man, might have alarmed him with its
-dangers. The profound melancholy of youth, violent
-because unconquered and strange, had him still in
-its grip when, all at once, he felt an emotion of
-well-being and returning comfort.
-
-She came into the room and without formal greeting
-gave him her hand with a welcome in her eyes,
-as though their friendship were of such strong
-duration that formalities were out of place.
-
-"Draw the curtains," she said, going to the
-electric lamp on the table, which woke like a golden
-sun from the shadows. "It's cozier. Shall we
-light the fire? Yes, it's more cheery."
-
-"Let me," he said hastily.
-
-"Quite unnecessary."
-
-He watched her sudden stooping movement, that
-brought the loose, intricate tea-gown about her agile
-body, outlining the limbs, which had the quick
-animal grace that is peculiar to the unconquered
-maiden. Her pose, strong and alive with power
-and self-reliance, recalled to him sharply the sense
-of opposition. He was annoyed that she should
-have done so naturally what he should have done,
-feeling in her too much self-reliance.
-
-She rose, looking down with a childish delight
-at the sudden burst and roar of the flame. Then
-she turned, studying his face. The artist in her
-made her quickly aware of the remnants of the
-emotion which had stirred him.
-
-"What is it?" she said, with the gentleness that
-was tantalizing to him. "You have a strange look."
-
-"Yes," he answered; "I have been behind the scenes."
-
-"What do you mean?"
-
-"I have been with Mrs. Bloodgood all the
-afternoon—found her at the station as she was leaving."
-
-"Mrs. Bloodgood was running away," she said,
-puzzled, but with a fear in her eyes that did not
-escape him.
-
-"What—you did not know!" he exclaimed.
-"Majendie killed himself this afternoon at two
-o'clock."
-
-"Majendie—Mrs. Bloodgood!"
-
-She looked at him a moment with a face struck
-with horror, and then fell back into a chair, seized
-with the suddenness of the climax.
-
-"I beg your pardon; I thought you knew," he
-blurted out.
-
-"No, no—nothing. Tell me—tell me all," she
-said; and he saw that back of her alarm was a
-significance to her that heightened the effect of the
-tragedy.
-
-He told her first the bare details of the suicide as
-he knew them; and then, in response to her hurried
-questions, began to retell the afternoon. He spoke
-impulsively, almost as an echo of the drama he had
-witnessed. Occasionally she stopped him with a
-more detailed question. Moved out of his
-self-consciousness, he described, more eloquently than he
-knew, the conflict between the two women at
-Mrs. Kildair's, and the emotions which had suddenly
-brought him wide-eyed to the spectacle of the black,
-turbulent river of despair.
-
-"I can't forget it—it haunts me now," he said,
-when he had ended with Mrs. Bloodgood's return
-into the home of her husband. "It makes me see
-something in life I didn't understand—that I am
-just beginning to see."
-
-He looked at her. Her face was wet with tears.
-All at once, astonished, he recalled what he had told.
-
-"What have I done?" he cried, aghast. "I had
-no right to repeat it. I didn't realize what I was
-saying!"
-
-"Don't fear," she said, shuddering, and she
-extended her hands to the fire, as though the recital
-had frozen her body. "Poor woman—poor,
-lonely woman!"
-
-He sat down near her, close to the fire, and,
-stretching out his hand, touched her arm.
-
-"Listen, Nan," he said, so profoundly that she
-could not mistake the emotion. "It has made a
-great difference in me. It may be a mood—it may
-pass; but I hope it won't. It makes me dissatisfied.
-Look here—I don't want to go on as we have,
-thrusting and parrying. I don't want it to be just
-a game. The real feeling in me toward a woman is
-different—it's one of chivalry, I know. Let's drop
-all artifices. Let's be honest with each other—good
-friends, or something else, as it may come."
-
-She considered the depths of the fire a moment,
-and turned, looking at him dreamily, feeling how
-much older she was in the knowledge of the doubts
-of the world than the young, impulsive nature that
-looked out at her from such honest eyes.
-
-"Will you?" he asked, as she looked away again.
-
-She shook her head, in doubt as to an answer; but
-the good in her stirred by the good in him expressed
-itself in the quick pressure of thanks which her hand
-conveyed to him.
-
-"I am not the least in love," he said quickly.
-"What I say I say because—oh, I don't know!
-I'm dissatisfied with myself. This thing has gotten
-below my skin. Life's too rotten. I want you to
-believe in me—in my strength. You are
-sympathetic—*multa sympatica*. I don't know; I hate
-to think of your fighting alone such a rotten hard
-fight."
-
-She nodded slowly, understanding perhaps better
-than he his thought, yet half won to his appeal
-already.
-
-She took his hand in both of hers, pressing it in
-emphasis from time to time, not looking at him,
-staring at something that formed before her eyes.
-
-"No one has ever spoken to me just like this,"
-she said gently. "One thing I would never want
-to happen, Teddy—I would never want to hurt
-you! That is why I hesitate—why I am afraid.
-You are only a great big boy. You won't
-understand me. I am very selfish—very worldly."
-
-"You are nothing of the sort," he said furiously,
-withdrawing his hand. "You may think so, but I
-know you better."
-
-She turned, amused; but her smile left her as she
-looked into his eyes. To her surprise, a feeling of
-unease came to her; she felt a new longing—to be
-for a moment quite childlike and helpless.
-
-"Don't blunder into anything, Teddy," she answered,
-shaking her head, herself a little disturbed.
-"With some men I would not care. With you—yes,
-it would make me feel like a criminal to hurt you."
-
-He understood that she was warning him of the
-futility of expecting to find in her a woman. But
-if she had calculated, which she had not, on any
-move surer to arouse him, she could have found no
-better expedient. The impossibility implied, coupled
-with the impulsive generosity in her voice, made her
-a thousand times more desirable. He rose brusquely,
-and, standing with his back to the fire, looked
-down at the dramatic face, which the flames lighted
-with the flare of footlights.
-
-"There are certain things that we must understand
-together," he said with authority, obeying the
-instinct which told him that to succeed he must take
-the upper hand.
-
-Her eyebrows came together in a straight flight.
-
-"I have not hesitated to trust in you—you must
-in me. Tell me. You have reason to suspect that
-Mrs. Bloodgood took the ring—at least, the first
-time?"
-
-.. _`"'I have not hesitated to trust in you—you must in me'"`:
-
-.. figure:: images/img-178.jpg
- :figclass: white-space-pre-line
- :align: center
- :alt: "'I have not hesitated to trust in you—you must in me'"
-
- "'I have not hesitated to trust in you—you must in me'"
-
-She shook her head, but without anger.
-
-"Don't you understand," he said quickly, "that
-I must know why you acted as you did?"
-
-Still her only answer was a deep-taken breath.
-
-"I swear to you, if Mrs. Bloodgood did take it,"
-he said, "I would not condemn her. On the
-contrary, I would pity her."
-
-"Why should Mrs. Bloodgood, who has millions,
-do such a thing?" she said quietly.
-
-"Because, from what I know, Mrs. Bloodgood,
-who has millions, as the wife of Enos Bloodgood,
-has not as much money in her pocket as you or I." He
-stopped. "She took it to have some means of
-escape, didn't she?"
-
-"No, she did not take it," she answered, but in a
-tone that brought no conviction.
-
-"You see, I know that you returned to Mrs. Kildair's
-that night," he said, irritated.
-
-"How did you know?" she said quickly.
-
-"Mrs. Kildair told me—no, that's not true; some
-one else did."
-
-"Mrs. Kildair herself called me on the telephone
-and asked me to come," she said slowly.
-
-"And questioned you?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"As to what you had seen?" he said, with a great
-feeling of relief that should have warned him of
-his true interest.
-
-"Yes."
-
-"What did you answer?"
-
-She rose and approached him, looking at him with
-only friendliness.
-
-"If the ring is not restored in two weeks," she
-said, "then I will tell you what you wish to know."
-
-"You think that, if Mrs. Bloodgood took it, she
-will now have no use for it," he persisted, seizing
-the idea.
-
-"I know nothing at all," she answered, emphasizing
-the "know." "This promise must satisfy you.
-I only have a suspicion, and I don't want to do an
-injustice to another—remember that. I have never
-said it was Mrs. Bloodgood I suspected. Now I
-want to talk to you about my own affairs."
-
-He was covered with contrition that he should
-have forgotten her difficulties.
-
-"Good heavens!" he said hastily. "What have
-I been thinking of? Please don't think I don't care;
-I've been in such a whirl—"
-
-She checked him with a gesture and a smile,
-motioning him to sit down again.
-
-"Have you had any word?"
-
-She shook her head.
-
-"Of course, it's a terrible day on the Street,"
-he hastened to reply. "Everything's up in the
-air—they're like a lot of lunatics. Garraboy hasn't
-had time to think. That oughtn't to alarm you."
-
-"But I left word at his office for him to telephone
-me, and it is now," she said, glancing at the clock,
-"an hour and a half since the close."
-
-"There are probably a hundred inquiries of the
-same sort awaiting him," he said to reassure her.
-"What are you afraid of?"
-
-"I don't know—and yet I am a little anxious.
-Suppose he has used my stocks? Such things
-happen every day."
-
-"The best thing is to find out at once how Garraboy
-stands—if he's been caught in the drop or not.
-Then we can take our measures."
-
-"How'll you do that?"
-
-"Call up Bruce Gunther and get him on the trail.
-May I telephone?"
-
-"Do so."
-
-"He's probably at the club now," he said, taking
-up the receiver and giving a number. "Yes, he's
-in. That's lucky. I'll get him in a moment." Then
-he added irritably: "How the deuce did you
-ever come to deal with Garraboy?"
-
-"Why, I've known him ever since I came to New
-York. I wanted to invest some money—I didn't
-know any one else; and then, he was
-very—friendly; wanted to make some money for me.
-That's how it was."
-
-"Hello," said Beecher. "Is that you, Bruce?
-It's I—Ted."
-
-"Where the deuce have you been?" said the voice
-at the other end. "I've been trying to get you all
-over town."
-
-"You have?"
-
-"You bet I have; McKenna's turned up a real
-clue—wants to see you at once. Pick me up here
-at the club, will you?"
-
-"All right. But say, Bruce, I want you to do
-something for me. Find out all you can about
-Garraboy—you know, the fellow we spoke about.
-Has he been on the wrong side of the market or not?
-Understand? It's important."
-
-"I'll do it. Anything else?"
-
-"Yes. A friend of mine has some stocks with
-him, about twenty thousand worth—you see the
-situation—and she's a little bit worried. Can't get
-any satisfaction."
-
-"Wants 'em back?"
-
-"Yes. What's the best way to do?"
-
-"Um! Get a transfer to you and call for them
-tomorrow."
-
-"Of course; see you later."
-
-He put down the telephone and turned gaily to
-his companion, who was waiting with anxiety.
-
-"That's all right. Bruce will get the information
-and I'll telephone you this evening. Now, the
-best way to operate is this." He took out his
-check-book and wrote a check for twenty thousand dollars
-to her name. "I'll buy those stocks. Here's my
-check; give me an acknowledgment for the shares,
-with an order on Garraboy to deliver."
-
-She looked at him doubtfully, holding the check
-gingerly in her fingers.
-
-"What's the matter?" he said. "If there's any
-little difference one way or the other, we can arrange
-that later."
-
-"Supposing Garraboy has failed and sold my stocks?"
-
-"He hasn't."
-
-"But if he has?"
-
-"That's my risk," he started to say, but checked
-himself. "Why, of course, then it's off. This is
-just to give me the power to get them away at once.
-A man can do what a woman can't."
-
-She was grateful to him for his perception of
-delicacy.
-
-"On that basis, yes," she said. Then she stopped
-and looked at him with a whimsical but favoring
-smile. "As it is, Teddy, what do you know of me
-to take even this chance?"
-
-The opening was too direct. She saw it at once,
-and, to forestall his answer, said more lightly:
-
-"It is a great service. Tell me what to write."
-
-As she was drawing up the paper under his directions,
-a placid, emotionless woman of forty entered
-from the rear.
-
-"That Mr. Hargrave is here, Nan dear," she
-said. "You gave him an appointment, you know."
-
-"Mrs. Tilbury, my companion," said Miss Charters.
-"Very well; in a moment."
-
-Mrs. Tilbury passed patiently out to deliver the
-message. Beecher was delighted with the correctness
-and cold respectability of such a chaperon.
-
-"Mr. Hargrave is a young dramatist," said Miss
-Charters, finishing the document. "He's coming to
-read some masterpiece to me. He wrote a one-act
-piece three years ago that was very clever, and now,
-of course, I can't risk refusing to hear him—he
-might have a work of genius at last. This is my
-fourth trial." She put the paper from her
-impatiently. "I'm sorry."
-
-He was displeased also at this sudden recall of
-the other life in her, the world of the theater, which
-crowded the walls with its signed photographs.
-
-"I'll telephone as soon as I know," he said,
-dissembling his irritation.
-
-She went to the door with him, annoyed also at
-the interruption.
-
-"I'm coming tomorrow," he said, and he held
-out his hand with a little defiance.
-
-She did not resent the assumption of right, still
-introspectively puzzled at the new moods into which
-she had fallen. And, still pensive, she said:
-
-"Come."
-
-Below, in the anteroom, he sent a look of
-antagonism and scorn at a young man, a little
-extravagantly dressed, who carried a portfolio under
-his arm with a sense, too, of irritation and pride.
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
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-.. _`CHAPTER XIII`:
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-.. class:: center large bold
-
- CHAPTER XIII
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-When he had gone into the brisk air of the
-street, his mental vision returned with the
-crispness of the night. He was astonished at what
-he had said and done.
-
-"But I am not in love—not in the least," he
-repeated. "Then what was it?"
-
-He was quite perplexed at perceiving the astonishing
-difference her presence and her absence made in
-his attitude. He repeated to himself quite seriously
-with a little wonder that, if he were in danger of
-falling in love, he would be a prey to that
-disturbing emotion now, absent as well as present.
-
-"I am perfectly calm," he said, flourishing his
-cane. "Not in the least excited. It's very queer."
-
-All the same, he returned to the interview, and
-recalled the incidents without illusion. He
-comprehended now what he had not comprehended then,
-the full significance of his offer of friendship—in
-fact, that it was not an approach to friendship but
-to something very different, and the relations which
-had now been established between them were those
-of confidence and intimacy that lay on the
-borderline of great emotions.
-
-"It's very odd," he said, "I wish to be honest
-and open with her, and yet I said what I don't
-feel—suggested what I have not the least thought of.
-I'll be hanged if I understand it, unless she has the
-power to make me believe in emotions that don't
-exist,—Emma Fornez was right, she is the type
-that provokes you. I must be very careful."
-
-But one thing he did not perceive—that the city
-no longer oppressed him with its bleak struggle and
-serried poverty, that he swung lightly over the crisp
-pavements, breathing the alert and joyous air, that
-in him the joy of living awakened, as the myriad
-lights awoke the city of the night, the city rising
-from the fatigue of labor with its avid zest for
-pleasure and excitement.
-
-"What is the clue McKenna's got hold of?" he
-thought eagerly, as the massive, cheery windows of
-the club came into view across the stirring,
-care-fleeing homeward rush of the Avenue.
-
-The moment he entered the crowded anteroom,
-the tragic day returned with redoubled gloom. The
-death of Majendie oppressed every voice—nothing
-else was discussed. He found himself caught up in
-the crowd at the bar, listening with a strange sense
-of irony to those who touched in haphazard the event
-which he knew so profoundly. The wildest rumors
-were current. Majendie had shot himself after the
-discovery of an enormous shortage in the funds of
-the Atlantic Trust. The Atlantic Trust had been
-looted, the effect on Wall Street had been to
-confirm the wildest rumors, the market would plunge
-down to-morrow, the awful loss of the day would
-be surpassed; it was the panic of '93 over again.
-The inevitable mysterious informant in the crowd
-arrived with a new rumor: Majendie had tried to
-escape, had been prevented by detectives, who had
-been shadowing him for days, and had then gone in
-and shot himself just as the warrant for his arrest
-arrived. Another gave this version; Majendie had
-not shot himself, he had been murdered.
-
-Every one exclaimed at this.
-
-"That's the story in the Associated Press offices,"
-continued the informant obstinately. "A man
-whose whole fortune was locked up in the Atlantic—a
-small depositor—got into the house on some
-pretext, and shot him—crazy, of course. It's not
-been verified, but that's the story."
-
-"Tell you what I heard," said another, in a low
-voice, to a group that eddied about him. "It's true
-he was shot, but he wasn't shot in his own home.
-He was shot last night in his box at the opera by
-a man who is as well known as old Fontaine. The
-old story, of course, trespassing in married quarters.
-The whole thing was kept dark—got him out of the
-box after the crowd went out, and took him home,
-where he died at midnight. Heard the names in the
-case, but pledged not to repeat them."
-
-Each rumor received a momentary credence, in
-the excitement of the moment. Some one defending
-the personal friend, insisted on melancholia and
-despondency, citing the example of an uncle who had
-taken his life after the disgrace of his son. No one
-spoke the name of Mrs. Bloodgood, waiting the
-moment of confidences *à trois*. In the stupefaction of
-the moment, even the personal losses, which had been
-tremendous, were momentarily forgotten. Gradually
-inquiries began to be made as to the extent of
-the panic. Then at once a division was apparent.
-There was already the party of the shorts, eager and
-vociferous, staking their last chance of recouping
-on a still wider spread of the devastating drop, which
-they now as ardently desired as though a thousand
-homes would not suffer for every point acquired.
-
-Beecher separated himself from these enthusiasts
-of failure, and passed into the front room, where
-he was signaled by Gunther, who was in one of the
-numerous small groups. He found a chair and
-joined the party, in which were Fontaine, Lynch,
-and Steve Plunkett. The conversation, which was
-controversial, continued without interruption.
-
-"Don't be an ass, Ed," said Lynch, with irritation;
-"nothing can stop the market."
-
-"The Atlantic Trust is as solvent as Gunther &
-Co.," insisted Fontaine, with a nervous, emphatic
-gesture. "Every depositor will be paid in full."
-
-"It'll be in the hands of a receiver before the
-week's over—bet you five to three."
-
-"Possibly; but then—"
-
-"Moreover, what of the public? What's the public
-going to do when it hears Majendie's committed
-suicide? What'll it think? It'll think the whole
-blamed institution is rotten to the core—looted!"
-
-"Sure," said Plunkett, and he added savagely,
-his glance lost in the distance: "Damn it, if I'd
-known the news an hour earlier, I could have made
-fifty thousand."
-
-"Why, look at the situation," continued Bo
-Lynch, excited by his own images. "The Clearing-house
-closed against the Associated Trust and all
-its allies; runs on banks all over the country; Slade
-forced to the wall, out of it in a couple of days,
-perhaps—God knows, another suicide, maybe; two
-failures up into the hundreds of millions—everything
-in the country thrown on the market! Look
-at the sales to-day; they'll be doubled to-morrow.
-Nothing can hold out against it. The country'll go
-crazy! I tell you, '93 was nothing to it."
-
-Gunther rose.
-
-"What do you think, Bruce?" said Plunkett
-anxiously.
-
-"Don't know a thing about it," said Gunther
-brusquely. "Neither does Eddie or Bo. If you
-want to gamble, gamble."
-
-He nodded to Beecher, and they moved out together.
-
-"Let's cut out of this den of lunatics," he said.
-"My machine's here; supposing we run down to
-McKenna's and get him off for a quiet chop. I've
-already telephoned."
-
-"He's got some news?"
-
-"Yes, but I don't know what it is. Jump in."
-
-"What about Garraboy?"
-
-"Rumor is, he's in heavy. McKenna's looking
-that up, too."
-
-"I say, Bruce, what do you really think about
-the situation?" said Beecher, forced to contain his
-curiosity. "Are we going to the bow-wows?"
-
-"If you ask what I *think*," said Gunther meditatively,
-"I think it's the devil to pay. Far as I
-can see, a lot depends on John G. Slade. There's
-no doubt there's a crowd after his scalp."
-
-"Will they get it?"
-
-"Looks so; but he's got nine lives, they say."
-
-"Where the deuce are we going?" said Beecher,
-suddenly aware of the swift flight through the now
-deserted regions of the lower city.
-
-"Down to McKenna's offices."
-
-"As late as this?"
-
-"Guess these days keep him pretty busy."
-
-"Didn't he say anything about his clue?"
-
-"Said he'd traced the history of the stone."
-
-They soon came to a stop in one of the blocks on
-Broadway within a stone's throw of old Trinity,
-and, descending, entered a dingy four-story
-building pinched in among the skyscrapers. At the
-second flight of worm-eaten stairs, Gunther pushed
-open a smoky glass door and entered a short
-antechamber inclosed in sanded glass with sliding
-pigeon-holes for observation. Their arrival being expected,
-they were immediately shown down a contracted
-hallway studded with doors, to an open room,
-comfortably furnished, with a fire burning in the grate.
-
-"Join you in a moment, gentlemen," said McKenna,
-nodding around the door of the adjoining room.
-
-Gunther unceremoniously helped himself at the
-open box of cigars.
-
-"Ted," he said enthusiastically, "why the deuce
-do the novelists concoct their absurdly stalking
-detectives, who deduce everything at a glance, with
-their impossible logical processes? Don't they see
-the real thing is so much bigger? It's not the fake
-individual mind that's wonderful; it's the system—this
-system. A great agency like this is simply
-an expression of society itself—organized order
-against unorganized disorder. It's an unending
-struggle, and the odds are all on one side. By
-George, what impresses me is the completeness with
-which society has organized itself—made use of
-all inventions, telephone, telegraph, the photograph,
-the press, everything turned on the criminal to run
-him down. For a hundred detectives employed here,
-there are a thousand allies, in every trade, in every
-depot, in every port, along every line of travel.
-When you think of the agencies that McKenna can
-stir up by a word, then you begin to realize the
-significance of the detective in the structure of
-society."
-
-McKenna, who had heard the last words, entered,
-vitally alert and physically excited by the joy of
-unusual labor.
-
-"Now I'm with you," he said, appropriating an
-easy-chair. "Let's see where we'll begin. Oh,
-Mr. Beecher, you wanted certain information about that
-broker Garraboy, didn't you?"
-
-"What have you found out?" said Beecher, with
-a conscious eagerness that struck both hearers.
-
-"It just so happened I had a line on your man
-from another direction," said McKenna. "Well,
-he's hit the market right. What would have
-happened if this panic hadn't come just right, is
-another question—a rather interesting question.
-However, Garraboy's known to have been heavy on
-the short side, and, from all reports, stands to make
-a killing."
-
-"Then Miss Charters' stocks are all right?"
-
-"They're all right—yes—now," said McKenna
-carefully; "but my advice is to get hold of
-them—P.D.Q. Mr. Garraboy is somewhat of a gambler.
-Now, here's a bit of history about a certain ruby that
-will interest you," he continued, drawing out a
-memorandum. In his manner was a little amused
-self-satisfaction, as one who relished the mystification of
-the outsiders. "In the first place, your ruby ring
-is not worth fifteen thousand."
-
-"No?" said Beecher in amazement.
-
-"It's worth considerably more," said the detective,
-with a grin. "Its last sale was at the price of
-thirty-two thousand dollars."
-
-"What!" said both young men in chorus.
-
-"Just that."
-
-"But then, why should Mrs. Kildair value it at
-fifteen?" exclaimed Beecher.
-
-"That's rather an interesting point," said
-McKenna, "and we'll touch on that later. The stone
-is as well known in the trade as John L. Sullivan to
-you and me. It was first sold in New Amsterdam in
-the year 1852 to a firm of Parisian jewelers. From
-them it was bought for a well-known, rather frisky
-lady called La Panthère by a Count d'Ussac, who
-ruined himself. La Panthère was killed later by a
-South American lover and her effects sold at auction.
-The ruby was bought by the firm of Gaspard Frères,
-and set in a necklace which was sold to the Princess
-de Grandliev. At the fall of the Second Empire,
-the necklace was broken up and this particular stone
-went over to England, where it was set in a ring
-and sold to a young dandy, the Earl of Westmorley,
-who was killed steeplechasing. A woman named
-Clara Hauk, an adventuress, had the ring in her
-possession, and successfully defeated the efforts of
-the family to regain it. She got into bad water in
-the '80's and sold it to a South African, who
-carried it off to the Transvaal with him. It reappeared
-in the offices of Gaspard Frères in 1891 on the finger
-of a young Austrian woman who sold it for twenty-two
-thousand dollars and disappeared without giving
-her name. An Italian, the Marchese di Rubino,
-bought it for a wedding present to his daughter, who
-kept it until 1900, when she pledged it to pay the
-gambling debts of her husband. It was then brought
-to this country by the wife of a Western rancher,
-who sold it five years later to Sontag & Co. The
-last sale known was just two months ago."
-
-"Two months?" said Beecher, craning forward.
-
-"The price, as I said, was thirty-two thousand,
-and the purchaser was a certain gentleman very
-much before the public now—John G. Slade."
-
-This announcement was so entirely unexpected
-that it left the two young men staring at each other,
-absolutely incapable of speech.
-
-"But then," said Gunther, the first to recover,
-"the ring was given her by Slade!"
-
-"At a cost of thirty-two thousand," said the
-detective in a quick, businesslike tone.
-
-"You are sure?"
-
-"As positive as any one can be. There are only
-three other rings—"
-
-"That's why she wanted to keep it quiet!" exclaimed
-Beecher, rousing himself from his stupor.
-The whole machination of Mrs. Kildair became
-comprehensible to him on the instant. "Now I see!"
-
-"Precisely," said McKenna. "Of course there
-is a chance that Slade did not give her the ring; that
-I'll know tomorrow."
-
-"How?"
-
-"Make an inquiry—for a supposed purchaser,
-of course; find out if the ring is still at Slade's."
-
-"It's useless," said Beecher firmly. "I know
-that McKenna's right. This explains everything,"
-he continued, turning to the detective. "That's
-why she acted so strangely "—he checked himself.
-"I saw Mrs. Kildair—took lunch with her—to-day—"
-
-"Did you find out whom she employed?" said
-McKenna quietly.
-
-Beecher opened his lips to answer in the affirmative,
-and stopped abruptly. For the first time, he
-realized that Mrs. Kildair had taken back the
-address. He rose nervously, frowning at the stupidity
-he would be forced to disclose.
-
-"By Jove, I am an ass!" he said, dropping his
-glance; and he related the scene in which Mrs. Kildair
-had first given him the address and then taken
-it away.
-
-"It's not important, Mr. Beecher," said the
-detective pensively, his mind working behind the
-recital. "She didn't give you the right address."
-
-"How do you know?" said Beecher, turning.
-
-"Because she recovered the paper as soon as she
-found out you were employing me," he answered;
-but his mind was still out of the room. He took out
-a pencil and began tapping his memorandum with
-quick, nervous jots. "Her mind worked pretty
-quick," he said.
-
-"Why do you want to know her detectives?"
-asked Gunther.
-
-"You see, the case is complicated," said McKenna,
-rousing himself. "I won't go into her relations
-with Slade just now, but it's quite evident to any
-one they were such that Mrs. Kildair prefers to lose
-the ring rather than to have it discovered how it
-came to her. See?"
-
-"I see," said Gunther.
-
-Beecher, silent, was turning over in his mind all
-the incidents of Slade's and Mrs. Kildair's conduct,
-striving to reach some explanation but the natural
-one that forced itself on him.
-
-"That's why," continued McKenna, "I'd like to
-know, first, if the detectives are straight—can be
-depended upon; second, if they were told to make
-a search; and, third, if they were told not to find
-the ring."
-
-"But why not?"
-
-"Because, Mr. Gunther, whoever took that ring
-the second time didn't take it on impulse or
-without a plan; whoever took it probably—I don't say
-certainly—knew enough of its history to know that
-Slade gave it to Mrs. Kildair, and reckoned on the
-fact that she would not dare to make it public. See?"
-
-The corners of his eyes contracted suddenly, as
-though through the movement of propelling forward
-the quick, decisive glance.
-
-"Then you think," said Beecher slowly, "that she is—"
-
-"Look here, Mr. Beecher," said the detective
-quickly, "there is one thing no human being can
-ever say offhand; what says the Bible—the way of
-a man with a maid—well, make that woman in
-general. You don't know, and I don't know, what
-the situation is right there, and we may never know.
-All the same, we're now started on solid ground; it
-may lead to something, and it may not, but what I
-want to know before we get much further is who
-and how many there that night knew or guessed
-Slade gave her the ring."
-
-"Of course," said Gunther. "But how—"
-
-"By patience and by running down every alley
-till we find it is an alley," said McKenna. "That's
-one thing to keep in mind, and let's put it this way.
-Was there any one there that night who had to
-have money quick, and who knew that the fact of
-Slade's giving the ring would tie Mrs. Kildair's
-hands? Now, if that condition existed, we're on a
-strong motive."
-
-"You don't consider that the only lead," said
-Beecher, convinced as he was of the probability of
-Mr. Majendie's participation.
-
-"Lord, no. Here's one other point to work on,
-Mr. Beecher. What's the situation today between
-Slade and Mrs. Kildair? Has there been any
-quarrel—say within the last ten days?"
-
-"I don't think so; and yet—" Beecher stopped,
-remembering Mrs. Kildair's curious request for him
-to outstay the promoter. "What if there was?"
-
-"Slade's a remarkable character," said McKenna,
-smiling. "Just how remarkable a few people will
-learn shortly. If he had quarreled or she's been
-trying to trick him—just like him to take the ring
-the second time."
-
-"By George!" said Gunther. "Why not?"
-
-"That's only something to be kept in the
-background," said McKenna, rising.
-
-He turned to Beecher, considering him profoundly.
-
-"Sorry you told Mrs. Kildair I was on the case,"
-he said.
-
-Beecher blushed at the memory of the way in
-which he had been brought to disclose the information,
-and the confusion all at once revealed to the
-detective the probable means she had taken.
-
-At this moment the door opened and a voice called him.
-
-"Telephone, sir—personal."
-
-When the detective had left, Beecher and Gunther
-looked at each other in amazement in which a
-curious doubt was beginning to form.
-
-"Why the deuce should Slade give her the ring,
-Ted?" said Gunther abruptly.
-
-"I don't know," Beecher answered, perplexed.
-"I know what you think—that's natural; but I
-don't believe it. She's deeper than that—that is, I
-think so."
-
-But he ended perplexed, contracting his eyebrows,
-nervously jerking at a button on his coat.
-
-McKenna reentered, and on his face was a smile
-of anticipation and mischief.
-
-"Some one called me up just then," he said
-shortly; "some one I've been expecting to call me
-up. Guess who?"
-
-"Slade," said Gunther, startled.
-
-"Mrs. Kildair," said Beecher.
-
-"Mrs. Kildair is right," said McKenna. "I'm
-going up to see her tonight." And he added meditatively,
-"It ought to be quite an interesting little chat."
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`CHAPTER XIV`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- CHAPTER XIV
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-At eight o'clock promptly McKenna presented
-himself at the door of Mrs. Kildair's apartment.
-Kiki, with his velvet glide, ushered him into
-the studio. The electric chandeliers were dull; only
-the great standing lamp was lit, throwing a foggy
-luster about the room, massing enormous dark
-silhouettes and spaces in the corners.
-
-"Is it a precaution?" he thought grimly, considering
-this serviceable obscurity.
-
-He felt a sudden heightened sense of curiosity
-and defiance, a feeling that had been growing within
-him ever since the discovery of Slade's connection
-with the ring, and the brief, disjointed details of
-Beecher's interview. Every profession develops,
-back of its elaborate technique, a sudden quality of
-instinct which exists as the almost mechanical and
-unguided operation of the disciplined mind.
-McKenna had no sooner entered the room than he
-perceived the woman with a quick defensive "on
-guard" of all his faculties.
-
-He stopped in the center of the room, like a
-pointer flushing his game, and in the second's rapid
-inhalation he completely changed his scheme of
-attack. He felt at once that he had to do not alone
-with—what he expected—a woman of unusual
-physical attraction, clever, with the defensive intuition
-of one who has evaded the scrutiny of society; but
-with a woman of mental grasp and decision. He felt
-it everywhere: in the remarkable adjustment of
-the square room which broke it up into half a
-dozen separate groups, distinctive and sure as though
-so many separate selves; in the harmony of color
-and proportion, which he felt without analysis;
-in the seduction of the Récamier couch with its
-eastern drapery of blue and gold; in the friendly comfort
-of the grouped chairs by the baronial fireplace; in
-the correct intimacy of the reading-table at one end
-and the formality of the grouped chairs by the piano.
-All these notes were to him notes of the hand that
-had arranged them, as he felt in the struggling
-muscles of the bared marble torsos, wrestling on the
-mantel, and the lithe, virile body of the discus-thrower
-on the table, the virility and aggressiveness
-of the woman. This perception awoke his defiance
-as though one personality had been substituted for
-another.
-
-"What does she want with me?" he thought.
-"Is she daring enough to tell me all, or is she
-worried at what I may know?"
-
-While he was still in the midst of his reflections,
-Mrs. Kildair entered. She was in street costume:
-a tailor-made dress of dark blue, edged with black
-braid, the stiffness and sobriety relieved by a full
-fichu at her throat. The red flight of a feather
-crossed the Gainsborough hat.
-
-"How do you do?" she said, nodding to him,
-a crisp, businesslike abruptness in her voice. "A
-little more light would be better. Thanks. The
-button is by the door."
-
-Prepared as he had been to be surprised, he had
-not expected this businesslike manifestation. He
-went to the wall, following her directions, and threw
-on the lights.
-
-"Only the side lights," she said. "That's it.
-Shall we sit here?"
-
-She took her position by the reading-table in a
-great high-backed upholstered arm-chair. Obeying
-her gesture, he drew up his chair to a position
-opposite. In the varied experiences of thirty years, he
-had come into contact with women of all walks of
-life. Without the psychological analysis of
-subtleties of the lawyer and the novelist, he had an
-unerring instinct for the crux of character. "Is she
-good or is she bad?" was the question that, in ninety
-cases out of a hundred, he put to himself at the
-turning-point of his campaigns. For the first time,
-despite his previous prejudice, he was in doubt for an
-answer, but he recognized in her at once the stamp
-of that superior brood which raises some men to
-fame and fortune where others by one trait of
-conscience or weakness end in a disgraceful failure.
-
-"I have wanted to meet you for a long time,
-Mr. McKenna," she said directly, but without the
-accompanying smile of feminine flattery. "Mr. Slade
-has told me much about you."
-
-"Slade?" he said, with a quick simulation of
-surprise, while admiring the abruptness, amazing in
-a woman, with which she had launched her attack.
-
-"You realize, of course, Mr. McKenna," she
-continued quietly, without giving him time to deny her
-first implication, "that Mr. Beecher, in engaging
-you, has, quite without his knowledge, brought on a
-situation that is very embarrassing to me."
-
-"Good!" thought the detective. "She has made
-up her mind to tell the whole story." Aloud he said,
-without change of expression: "In what way, Mrs. Kildair?"
-
-"A situation exists which makes it extremely
-difficult for me to recover my ring without disclosing
-to the public matters in my own private life that at
-present are liable to great misconstruction."
-
-She spoke professionally, without variation in her
-voice, as a doctor speaking with dispassionate
-directness. McKenna did not answer, resolving by his
-silence to force her to talk.
-
-"A week," she continued without pause, though
-her eyes remained without wavering on his, "—ten
-days at the most—may completely change this
-position. I won't conceal from you that I am extremely
-sorry that you have been brought into the case." McKenna
-could not control an expression of surprise.
-"But, now that you are in it, I shall be forced
-to give you a confidence against my inclination."
-
-"But—" began the detective.
-
-"One moment," she said, interrupting him. "Before
-I give you this confidence I wish to ask one
-question."
-
-"Mrs. Kildair, I must remind you," said McKenna
-warily, "that I am engaged in the interests
-of Mr. Beecher, and can do nothing without his
-permission."
-
-"Are you representing any one besides Mr. Beecher?"
-she said, ignoring his objection.
-
-"What do you mean?" he said carefully, to gain time.
-
-"Are you, in this particular case, representing
-Mr. Slade?" she said directly.
-
-"I have never said that I was employed by him,
-Mrs. Kildair," he said slowly, comprehending now
-the full purpose of her opening question.
-
-"Mr. Slade has told me himself of your work in
-connection with the Gray Fox Mines, the Farmers'
-and Travelers' Bank, and the more personal affair
-of your recovery of his letters from a Miss Minna
-Weston. You see, I am informed."
-
-"I have worked for Mr. Slade," said McKenna.
-
-"And are you doing so now?" she asked sharply.
-
-"I never refer to my clients, Mrs. Kildair," he
-said stiffly.
-
-"I desire to put this matter entirely in your
-hands—without reserve," she said quickly. "All I ask
-from you is a promise that, notwithstanding your
-relations with him past or present, nothing I say to
-you shall be repeated to Mr. Slade, or to any one
-else."
-
-"Mrs. Kildair," said McKenna, every faculty joyfully
-grateful for the contest of wits he felt impending,
-"I must remind you that my employer is Mr. Beecher,
-and that I can promise nothing that will
-keep him from doing anything he desires.
-
-"Mr. Beecher is acting for me," she said calmly.
-"Very well; your position is correct. I will put it
-this way. Subject to Mr. Beecher's approval, will
-you give me your word that you will repeat nothing
-of what I may tell you?"
-
-"If Mr. Beecher is willing, I am," said McKenna
-obstinately. "That's my word."
-
-"Now I can speak to you freely," said Mrs. Kildair.
-
-"I have not promised yet," broke in McKenna.
-
-"I will take the risk," she said, brushing aside the
-obstacle with an impatient gesture.
-
-"I remain entirely free to communicate anything
-to Mr. Beecher," interposed the detective instantly.
-
-"You do not understand," she said, without
-irritation. "Mr. Beecher, in retaining you, did so to
-assist me, and only after he had secured my permission.
-Now I desire, in order to arrive at quicker
-results and to be free to give you my full confidence,
-to transfer that authority direct to me. In other
-words, Mr. McKenna, I wish to retain you myself
-and for myself only."
-
-"That, Mrs. Kildair, depends entirely on
-Mr. Beecher," repeated the detective.
-
-"But if he acquiesces, will you act in my interests
-only?"
-
-McKenna was about to interpose another evasion,
-when he reflected that he would have time to
-acquaint Beecher with what had happened and to
-advise him either to accept or to refuse.
-
-"Very well," he replied cautiously, feeling
-instinctively that some trap was being prepared
-without yet perceiving what it could be. "I will leave
-it that way."
-
-"Good," she said, with a little nod of her head.
-"Now, what have you done?"
-
-"I can not answer that, Mrs. Kildair," he said,
-smiling; "not under my present arrangement."
-
-"You have, of course, discovered that the ring
-belongs to Mr. Slade?"
-
-Quite unconsciously, she had adopted his own tactics,
-the tactics of the inquisitor, who hurls the vital
-question at the suspect, and then seeks the answer
-in the almost imperceptible response in the eyes.
-
-"Yes, I know that," said McKenna, who felt that
-the surprise he had experienced at having the tables
-thus turned on him had revealed the truth to the
-questioner. "That is, I know the ring did belong
-to Mr. Slade."
-
-"Have you informed Mr. Beecher of the fact?"
-
-"It has just come to my knowledge," said McKenna;
-"I shall, naturally, inform him."
-
-Mrs. Kildair looked at him a moment with an
-appearance of reflection.
-
-"The question was quite unnecessary," she said.
-"Of course, you have told him, and you have every
-right to deny it." Then she continued with more
-decision: "This is exactly my danger—you see,
-I won't mince words. It is a situation which
-constantly occurs, and which is inexplicable except by
-one construction in the eyes of society. Now—"
-
-"I warn you," again objected the detective.
-
-"I do not propose to explain my relations with
-Mr. Slade," continued Mrs. Kildair coldly. "They
-are such that a great deal depends on the events of the
-next few days. At present it is enough that I can
-not explain my possession of the ring in any way
-that can satisfy publicity."
-
-"Mr. Slade did not give you the ring?" said
-McKenna, in slow progression.
-
-She carefully considered the question.
-
-"Mr. Slade sent me the ring with an offer of
-marriage," said Mrs. Kildair evenly, with an
-appearance of great frankness. "The ring arrived on the
-night of the party, and I committed the imprudence
-of wearing it. If its source now becomes known,
-I must appear before the world either as Mr. Slade's
-mistress or as his fiancée; and at present I have
-not made up my mind whether I shall marry him."
-
-The directness of this avowal left McKenna
-immersed in thought. He looked at her, unaware of
-the fixity of his stare; and, inclined as always to
-skepticism, he asked himself if back of all the outer
-gilt of this proud, determined woman, there were
-not a stalking shadow of insistent poverty, whether
-the game she was playing with Slade were not a
-greater drama than that in which he was engaged;
-whether, in fact, it lay not on a turn of the balance
-whether the world should know her as the wife or
-that very alternative which she had dreaded in the
-exposure of the ownership of the ring?
-
-"What does she really want of Slade?" he said
-to himself, staring so profoundly beyond the set gaze
-of the woman that, for the first time, she moved
-with a little annoyance.
-
-"Mr. McKenna!" she said sharply.
-
-"I beg your pardon," he said, stiffening abruptly.
-
-"You perceive now the delicacy of my position,"
-she said; "and why I desire to have you completely
-in my interests."
-
-"I do," he answered, but still clinging to the
-saving rope of defiance. "I only regret that you told
-me this before Mr. Beecher's—"
-
-"Now ask me any questions you wish," she said,
-interrupting him impatiently.
-
-"I don't feel at liberty to do so, Mrs. Kildair,"
-he said warily, convinced that her whole motive was
-to find out the extent of his knowledge. "I prefer
-to know first where I stand."
-
-"Very well," she said. "Let us talk of other
-things, then." Her manner changed to one of a
-lighter, inconsequential curiosity. "There is one
-point in the frightful happenings of the day I should
-like to know."
-
-"What, madam?" said McKenna, whose instinct
-warned him to adopt a tone of artless attention.
-
-"Majendie was followed by detectives, was he not?"
-
-"That is the report."
-
-"And he was on the point of leaving when he
-perceived that he would be followed?"
-
-"That is what I have been told."
-
-"And, believing that he was about to be arrested,
-he returned to the house and shot himself."
-
-"That's the story."
-
-"As a matter of fact, wasn't he mistaken?"
-
-"In what way?" said McKenna, steeling himself
-under an appearance of surprise.
-
-"Were not the detectives your own men—placed
-by you at Mr. Slade's orders to acquaint him with
-every move of Mr. Majendie?" persisted Mrs. Kildair.
-
-"That would make a good Sunday thriller," said
-McKenna, laughing boisterously.
-
-"That is my guess," she said, drawing back as
-though satisfied. "I am certain that Majendie
-committed suicide through the blunder of believing he
-was threatened with arrest."
-
-"My dear Mrs. Kildair," said the detective,
-rising, "I see that what you want to know is, am I
-for or against Mr. Slade. If I'm not in his employ
-you think I'm retained by his enemies. Well, I don't
-intend to give you any information."
-
-She made no answer, but, rising in turn, glanced
-at the clock.
-
-"Since you are here," she said carelessly, "you
-may as well look over the ground." And, without
-waiting, she went to the door. "This is my
-bedroom. The ring was placed here."
-
-He had hardly made his quick professional scrutiny
-when there came a ring at the door, and at a
-sign from Mrs. Kildair they returned to the studio.
-
-"What now?" thought McKenna, who remembered
-her glance at the clock. "Slade or who?"
-
-To his surprise, it was Beecher who entered.
-Mrs. Kildair went directly to him, a smile of confidence
-and welcome on her face, holding out an eager hand,
-and by the elation of her movements, the detective
-comprehended how she had played him.
-
-"Teddy," she said directly, "I have a favor to
-ask you, and I trust you so completely that I know
-I need not explain it further. Mr. McKenna and
-I have had a very complete understanding. I wish
-him to represent me entirely. I do not mean that
-you should not continue to work on the case," she
-added quickly, as she felt instinctively the gesture of
-warning McKenna made behind her back. "All I
-wish you to tell him is that anything I may have
-told him or will tell him shall be considered
-confidential until the time I am able to tell you myself.
-I must throw myself on your chivalry and protection
-as the fine gentleman I have seen you to be," she
-added, looking at him with a moistening of the eyes
-in which there was respect and a more tender emotion.
-
-McKenna, though perceiving how completely she
-had prepared the isolation of the confidence he had
-just heard, did not again signal his objection,
-perhaps divining the futility of opposing such an appeal.
-
-Beecher bowed in assent.
-
-"Certainly, Rita," he said, with a pride that
-brought a smile of amusement to McKenna's lips.
-"I wish McKenna to do everything he can for you
-and in exactly the way you wish."
-
-"Thank you," she said, with a little pressure of
-his hand. Then turning, she added: "This I will
-say to you both. I have my reasons for believing
-that the ring will be returned within ten days; if it
-isn't then I shall have more to disclose."
-
-"Returned?" said Beecher, struck by the similarity
-of her prophecy and that of Nan Charters.
-
-"Exactly. Until then, I believe all that is
-necessary is to wait for developments." She turned
-toward the detective, who waited like a statue.
-"Mr. McKenna, I know you are a busy man. I
-won't keep you. Mr. Beecher has come to assist
-me on a very painful errand, one on which I would
-trust no other man that I know in New York." She
-held out her hand. "I do not often make mistakes
-in men, or I should not have told you what I did.
-Good-night; I shall call you soon."
-
-McKenna bowed, experiencing, despite his resentment
-at her mastery of the evening, a feeling of
-respect and deference.
-
-"Beecher is a kitten in her hands," he said to
-himself as he entered the street. "She played me as she
-wanted to. One thing's certain. She wants to
-employ me to keep me from doing anything. Evidently
-her own game is more important than the ring—or
-is there blackmail mixed up in this? I have it!
-Mrs. Kildair knows the thief, but is afraid to act
-until—until certain things straighten out between
-her and Mr. John G. Slade."
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-"And now, Teddy," said Mrs. Kildair, as soon
-as the door had closed behind the detective, "you
-know what I want of you. I have arranged
-everything. My carriage is waiting."
-
-Half an hour later, Mrs. Bloodgood joined them,
-heavily veiled. They drove to the house next to
-that of Majendie, and, at a word from Mrs. Kildair,
-Beecher remained below on guard in the flickering
-obscurity of the street. The two women went
-hurriedly up the steps of Majendie's home, where the
-door was opened for them by some one who had been
-awaiting their arrival.
-
-For a full half-hour Beecher, prey to a profound
-melancholy, continued his aimless, mechanical
-pacing, his head raised, glancing past the jagged black
-silhouettes of the house-tops at the reddened clouds
-of the unreal night, which brought him not a clear
-vision of immense and purifying spaces but the heavy
-reflection of the illuminated, surging streets.
-
-"What will my life be?" he thought, conjuring
-up the future. "Calm and commonplace? Or shall
-I ever be linked to some such tragedy—torn to
-pieces, all in a day—wrecked!"
-
-The door opened and two shadows passed down
-the steps. He returned hastily, saw them into the
-carriage, and stood with uncovered head, a lump in
-his throat, as they drove on. Then he went directly
-to his rooms, and, exhausted by the emotions of the
-day, fell heavily into a sleep that was almost a stupor.
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`CHAPTER XV`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- CHAPTER XV
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-The next morning he was awakened by Gunther's abrupt hand.
-
-"Up, up, you sluggard!"
-
-He jumped out hastily and found it was almost
-half-past eight.
-
-"Nice time to sleep," said Gunther sarcastically.
-"Have you forgotten a little visit we're to make to
-that sweet person, Mr. Garraboy? You've got just
-twenty-two minutes to beautify yourself and fill the
-inner being."
-
-"If we're to see your charming friend, Mr. Garraboy,"
-said Gunther half an hour later, as they were
-speeding for the congested, stirring, lower city,
-"we've got to nip our man before the opening of the
-Stock Exchange. Now let's hear what happened at
-Mrs. Kildair's last night."
-
-The events in which Mrs. Bloodgood was concerned
-were sealed in confidence; but Beecher felt
-at liberty to recount to his friend the bare details
-of McKenna's visit as he had known them.
-
-"What the deuce is behind it all?" said Gunther,
-puzzled. "I got McKenna on the wire and that's
-all he would tell me. What's the reason she wants
-to bottle up everything? What's her mix-up with
-Slade? Depend upon it, Ted, that woman knows
-more than we do—or why should she expect the
-ring to be returned? She's got a reason for that."
-
-"If it's returned," said Beecher, "it's Mrs. Bloodgood
-who took it."
-
-"Never! No woman ever got that ring out of the
-apartment—not alone; not a Mrs. Bloodgood, or
-a Nan Charters, or a Mrs. Cheever, or—" Suddenly
-he reflected. "Ted, there's one person I'd
-like to meet."
-
-"Miss Lille?"
-
-"Yes. Supposing we look her up a little more."
-
-"I've thought quite a lot about her," said Beecher
-musingly; and, remembering all at once her self-possession
-on the night of the theft, he added: "There's
-nothing weak about her certainly; still, I can't see the
-motive."
-
-They had left behind them the free, unbounded
-sky, boring their way through the towering sides of
-the sky-scraping district, where buildings rose in
-regular, comb-like structures, with their thousands of
-human cells tenanted by human bees. Entering a
-street where the obstructed sun never shone, they
-were swept on by the feverish rush of fellow-beings
-and shot up sixteen stories to their destination. The
-office-boy in the antechamber took their cards with
-the condescension which only an office-boy between
-the ages of twelve and sixteen can feel, and
-disappeared within.
-
-"The old screw'll keep us waiting half an hour,
-said Gunther, who disliked all delays.
-
-"Bet he's trying to figure out what we're here
-for?" said Beecher, who admitted to himself a
-delicious satisfaction at the prospective humiliation of
-the man he cordially disliked.
-
-The next moment Garraboy himself appeared at
-the rail, dapper, dried up, and severe.
-
-"How do you do?" he said sharply, but without
-inviting them in. "What can I do for you? It's a
-very busy day for me."
-
-"I assure you I don't intend to take any more
-time than I am compelled to," said Beecher stiffly,
-with an accent that gave another meaning to the
-phrase. He plunged his hand into his pocket. "I
-have an order for you."
-
-"Oh, yes, I remember now," said Garraboy, with
-a malicious drawing up of his lips. "You can save
-yourself the trouble."
-
-"What do you mean?" asked Beecher, greatly
-surprised.
-
-"You have an order on me to deliver certain
-stocks I hold for Miss Charters?"
-
-"I have."
-
-"Well, Miss Charters has changed her mind," said
-Garraboy, letting his glance rest on Beecher with the
-vacant, impudent stare of which he was master.
-
-"You have seen Miss Charters?" said Beecher,
-growing very angry.
-
-"I have; and when I explained to her that she had
-been unduly excited by some one who evidently is
-not aware that there are laws in civilized countries
-adequate to deal with those who attack the
-reputations or interests—"
-
-"Sir!" exclaimed Beecher, moving so quickly
-toward the rail that Garraboy hastily retreated.
-
-"When Miss Charters learned that, and likewise
-that she had parted with stocks worth considerably
-over twenty thousand dollars, she changed her mind
-very quickly."
-
-"Mr. Garraboy," said Gunther abruptly, "all this
-is not to the point. We have a formal order on
-you for certain stocks. Ted, present it."
-
-"True, I forgot," said Garraboy, and produced
-from his coat a letter, which he looked over with
-nonchalant delay and finally handed to Beecher. "I
-presume you are acting from altruistic motives and
-are not standing on technicalities. Here is a little
-note which Miss Charters requested me to give you."
-
-"That has nothing to do with it," said Gunther
-at once, for the personality of the broker aroused
-the pugnacious side of him. "Your transaction has
-been closed. Get your stocks."
-
-Beecher, frowning, unable to conceal the vexation
-that this unexpected check brought him, opened the
-letter. The address by its formality completed his
-irritation:
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-DEAR MR. BEECHER:
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-Mr. Garraboy has called and explained everything
-satisfactorily. I am afraid I was needlessly alarmed last night
-and did him an injustice. As he has shown me how
-advantageous it will be for me to transfer my holdings to
-other stocks, now far below their market value, I have
-decided not to lose the opportunity. Thank you just the
-same for your interest in this matter. I shall be in at five
-this afternoon and will explain to you more fully.
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-.. class:: noindent white-space-pre-line
-
- Cordially yours,
- NAN CHARTERS.
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-The two watched him read to the end, fold the
-letter carefully, and put it in his pocket.
-
-"Well?" said Garraboy.
-
-"Insist on the delivery, Ted," said Gunther
-militantly. "If Miss Charters wants to return them
-again, that's her affair. The stocks are yours."
-
-He looked at his friend with a glance of warning
-which sought to convey to him the distrust he could
-not openly phrase.
-
-"If Mr. Beecher wishes to stand on technicalities,"
-said Garraboy, in his even, oily voice, "he can do so.
-He can make a very nice profit. Which is it? I
-repeat, I can not give you much time."
-
-"Miss Charters' letter is sufficient," said Beecher
-suddenly. "Good-day."
-
-The feeling of mortification and chagrin which her
-action had brought on him dominated all other feelings.
-He went out in a rage, tearing the letter into
-minute fragments. Without a word they reached
-the street and entered the automobile.
-
-"Last time I ever try to help a woman!" he said,
-between his teeth.
-
-"What the deuce did you play into his game for?"
-said Gunther. "He's bamboozled her. I believe the
-fellow is an out-and-out crook—he's got a rotten
-bad eye. Why the deuce didn't you get the stocks?"
-
-"She can take her own risks," said Beecher furiously.
-"It's her own affair if she's going to blow
-hot and cold. By Jove, Bruce, I never met any one
-who could make me so mad clear through and
-through."
-
-He stopped, biting his lips, and Gunther with a
-shy glance stored away for future comment the
-impression he received.
-
-"What's the use of taking them seriously?" he
-said, with a shrug of the shoulders. "Amuse
-yourself, but don't let them absorb you. Suppose we
-take a turn at the Curb and see what's doing."
-
-With the opening of the market, all the giant sides
-of Wall Street seemed suddenly animated with the
-fury of a disturbed ant-hill. Every one was
-rushing in and out, carrying with them the pollution of
-disaster and alarm. Eddie Fontaine and Steve
-Plunkett hurried past them with quick nods. At the curb
-market the brokers were shrieking and flinging their
-frantic signals in the air. They entered the Stock
-Exchange, nodding to the doorkeeper, who knew
-Gunther, and reached the balcony, their ears suddenly
-smitten with the confused uproar from below. They
-stood there a few minutes, marveling at that Inferno
-of speculation and embattled greed flung before them
-in all the nakedness of man's terror; and then left,
-oppressed by the too frank exhibition of their mortal
-counterparts.
-
-"What's doing?" asked Gunther as they returned.
-
-The doorkeeper, with a shrug of his shoulders,
-flung down his thumb—the gesture of the Roman
-circus.
-
-"You like that?" said Beecher, when once more
-they were in the automobile and the din and
-oppression of cell-like monstrosities had receded.
-
-"I do," Gunther replied, locking and unlocking
-his broad hands.
-
-"Horrible!"
-
-"That's only one side of it—speculation," said
-Gunther warmly; "but even that is impressive.
-Look beyond those little mobs we saw, get the
-feeling of the whole country, the vast nation, rising in
-anger—flinging over hundreds of thousands of
-holdings—sweeping down the little gamblers with the
-tremendous waves of its alarm. Beyond that the
-whole vibrating industry of the nation is here, within
-a quarter of a mile—the great projects of
-development, the wars of millions, the future of immense
-territories to the West and the South. There's a big
-side to it—a real side—that gets me. I've a mind
-to walk down now and face the old governor and tell
-him I'm ready."
-
-"Why don't you?" said Beecher. He himself
-had felt the restlessness of indecision and enforced
-idleness. He gave a laugh. "You know, Bruce,
-I'm beginning to feel the same way. Either I've got
-to get into the current somewhere, or I'm going to
-pack off for Africa some fine day."
-
-"By the way, Tilton's up at the club. He's here
-for a few days, getting ready for a lion hunt or
-something."
-
-"Tilton?" exclaimed Beecher joyfully. "By
-Jove, I must get hold of him. I'd go in a minute!"
-
-He believed what he said. The whirl of emotions
-into which he had lately been plunged—revealing
-to him as it had all the mercenary, clutching side
-of the city—had left him disturbed, rebellious,
-longing to be away from the mass of men in
-general, and of women in particular, the brilliant,
-keen, and calculating women of the city with
-whom he had been thrown. Impatient and disillusionized,
-without realizing the true cause, he repeated:
-
-"By Jove, I'd go in a minute!"
-
-In the afternoon he went to call on Miss Charters.
-After having declared twenty times that he
-would not go near her, he suddenly remembered, at
-the end of a wearied discussion between his conscience
-and his inclination, that his check for twenty
-thousand dollars was to be reclaimed and, at once
-seizing such a satisfactory reason, he abandoned the
-attitude of embattled dignity which he had logically
-built up.
-
-"That's true; I must get the check," he said, and
-he set out.
-
-But as he neared his destination and began to
-rehearse all the grave causes for offense that he held
-against her, he was surprised at the slender stock of
-ammunition he held.
-
-"Why, it was perfectly natural," he thought,
-struck by the idea—having considered her reasons
-for the first time. "If Garraboy called and
-explained everything to her satisfaction, why shouldn't
-she change her mind? Besides, there is nothing
-against Garraboy—nothing definite. After all, I
-may have been unjust to him."
-
-Very sheepish, he felt his irritation slipping away
-as he yielded to the eager desire of once more
-entering her presence.
-
-"What the deuce was I so wild about?" he asked
-himself, amazed, as he entered the elevator.
-
-But all at once he remembered that she had allowed
-him to receive the news at the hands of a person
-intensely disagreeable to him.
-
-"Why didn't she telephone me? That's the whole
-point."
-
-And, all his irritation restored by this one
-outstanding fact, he entered the apartment with the
-dignity of a justly offended person.
-
-She was seated by the fire in an easy-chair, and
-she did not rise as he entered. She was bending
-eagerly forward, an open manuscript in her hand,
-and, without turning, she made a little sign to him
-to be seated until she should have finished.
-
-"Wonderful!" she cried at last, dropping the play
-in her lap. "It is wonderful!" she repeated, her
-whole body vibrating with the enthusiasm of
-her mood. "Wonderful—astonishing—what a
-scene!" And, tapping the manuscript with a
-gesture of decision, she exclaimed: "I will play that
-part—it will be an enormous sensation!"
-
-Her mind still obsessed by the thought of the
-newly discovered masterpiece, she turned toward
-Beecher, who was seated like a ramrod on the edge
-of his chair.
-
-"A marvelous play! Really, that Mr. Hargrave
-is a coming man." Forgetting her previous
-estimate, she rushed on: "Isn't it strange—I always
-knew he would do it, from the very first! What is
-extraordinary is the subtlety of it—how he twines
-two or three emotions together in the same scene.
-What a glorious chance for an actress! I must
-telephone the office."
-
-As she rose, a slip of paper which she had been
-using as a marker fluttered to the floor. She picked
-it up, recognized it, and handed it to him.
-
-"Oh, yes, here's your check!" she said. "I put
-it there so as not to forget it. Thanks very much.
-I'll explain in a minute. I must telephone Stigler;
-I'm all excited!"
-
-Beecher, more annoyed by this revelation of her
-professional life than by the rub to his vanity, took
-the check and pocketed it—not having pronounced
-a word since his arrival.
-
-She considered him carefully from the corner of
-her eye as she took up the telephone; but her
-personal emotion was too buoyant for trivial
-interruptions.
-
-Stigler, her manager, was out, and she put
-down the receiver with a jar of impatience. She
-looked at Beecher again, and, perceiving that there
-was an explanation due, sought at once to shift the
-responsibility.
-
-"Do you know, really, you were ridiculously
-alarmed last night," she said, a spirit of opposition
-in her voice. "I don't know what made you so
-panicky."
-
-"Of course," he said sarcastically, "I realize now
-that I should never have stirred you up, when
-everything was so calm. It's strange that I did not
-explain to you the natural reasons for Mr. Garraboy's
-not calling you up—but then, I usually lose my
-head at such times."
-
-"You are angry!" she said.
-
-"What a strange idea! On the contrary, it was
-a charming experience to enter Mr. Garraboy's
-office and be so delightfully reassured that everything
-was so prosperous with him."
-
-She did not like irony, or know how to combat it,
-so she frowned and said:
-
-"I telephoned you."
-
-"Why should you do that? You might have deprived
-me of the pleasure of meeting your charming
-friend, Mr. Garraboy."
-
-"I telephoned. You were not in."
-
-"When?"
-
-"Last night. Four times."
-
-He was mollified by this, but tried not to show it.
-
-"And this morning?"
-
-"But I never get up before ten," she cried, aghast.
-
-"Your explanations are crushingly convincing,"
-he said, with a bow and a smile.
-
-She watched him with an uneasy look, totally
-unconscious of any sense of obligation, accustomed as
-she was to have her requests for service regarded as
-favors. The reaction from their last interview had
-left her in a coldly antagonistic state, determined to
-pluck in the bud this progress toward intimacy which
-had so threatened her scheme of life. Now, seeing
-him collected and ironical, she was instinctively
-alarmed at the distance which he, not she, had placed
-between them.
-
-"My dear Teddy," she began, in a more confidential tone.
-
-"Teddy?" he said, smiling.
-
-He was perfectly good-natured, and as she felt
-that he was not irritated, but amusing himself at her
-tricks which he had divined, she was uneasy under
-this ironical examination. She felt that he had
-escaped her; and, disturbed by this thought, she looked
-at him, seeing all at once his quality. As he had
-made not the slightest reference to the very apparent
-obligation which he had been willing to undergo for
-her, she felt his social superiority and his reticence
-of good breeding. Besides, other women—brilliant
-women—had been attracted by him: Mrs. Craig
-Fontaine, Mrs. Kildair, and, above all, Emma
-Fornez. But another mood had possession of her, the
-mood of the artist transformed by the joy of
-personal sensation. She wished to keep him, but at
-the moment she was irritated that such a little thing
-should come to interfere with the joy of the imagined
-future triumph.
-
-"Don't be horrid, Teddy," she said impatiently,
-and, wishing to appease him quickly, that she might
-talk to him of the play, she continued: "The fact
-is, Mr. Garraboy has done everything he could for
-me. He sold my stocks a week ago, foreseeing this
-panic, and saved me several thousand dollars. He
-offered to give me his check for twenty-two
-thousand five hundred dollars, or to reinvest it for me
-when the time came in the enormous bargains that
-can be picked up now. What was I to do?"
-
-"You're quite right, and I made a great mistake
-to mislead you so," he answered, with great seriousness.
-
-"It wasn't your fault," she said abruptly.
-
-"Wasn't it?" he said, opening his eyes with a
-show of surprise.
-
-She comprehended that she would have to surrender,
-and, changing her tone to one of gentleness,
-she said:
-
-"It was a great thing for you to do what you did,
-Teddy—I shall never forget it."
-
-"Nonsense," he said, persisting in misunderstanding
-her. "I often get up early—that was nothing
-at all."
-
-"You are not at all the way you were last time,"
-she said reproachfully, forgetting that that was just
-what she wished to avoid.
-
-But at this moment the telephone rang. Stigler,
-her manager, was calling. Immediately she forgot
-their misunderstanding, carried away by the
-enthusiasm of the moment. Beecher, with a clear vision,
-followed her, noticing in her voice, as she sought to
-cajole the manager, the same caressing pleading
-which she had employed a moment before with him.
-
-"Now I really see her," he thought, with a
-liberation of his spirit. "Emma was entirely wrong.
-She's not a woman—she always an actress."
-
-"I'll send you the play right away," she was
-saying. "Mr. Hargrave is coming. I'll have him take
-it to the hotel. But you must read it tonight.
-Promise! Oh, yes, lots of comedy—delicious!
-Heart interest and big scenes—yes, sensational.
-Just the part for Fannestock. I must have him for
-the part! You'll see him in every line! Now,
-Mr. Stigler, please read it tonight!"
-
-"Ah, there's Fannestock too," said Beecher grimly
-to himself.
-
-She rose from telephoning, joyous and excited.
-
-"Oh, if Stigler will only see it! It's a great
-part—a great part! There's a wonderful scene
-at the close of the third act, between the two
-women and the father, that will bring down the house."
-
-Miss Tilbury came in to announce that Mr. Hargrave
-was calling. An expression of delight lit up
-the features of the actress. But all at once she
-turned anxiously to Beecher, who had risen stiffly.
-
-"By Jove, I've overstayed my time," he said readily,
-glancing at the clock.
-
-She was grateful, and yet dissatisfied that he had
-suggested what she wished, and, recalling his new
-spirit of independence, she said anxiously, with a
-compensating smile:
-
-"Teddy, call me up in the morning—this is so
-important."
-
-In the hallway he stepped aside while Hargrave, a
-frail, oldish-young man, entered, with his famished,
-doubting glance.
-
-"Oh, it is wonderful—wonderful!" cried the
-actress, seizing both his hands. "I am still thrilled.
-Wonderful—-wonderful!"
-
-"You liked it?" said Hargrave timidly. At her
-words, he saw heaven open before his eyes in a
-confused vision of frantic audiences, applauding critics,
-checks for thousands for royalty, all confused by
-rolling automobiles, magnificent bouquets and
-languishing feminine eyes.
-
-"Like it!" continued Nan Charters, retaining
-hold of one hand to draw him into the salon. "It
-is marvelous! How could you know all this so
-young!"
-
-Beecher, in the excitement, quietly made his
-escape. In the elevator, to the surprise of the
-wondering bell-boy, he was seized with a mad laughter,
-which continued to convulse him as he rolled into the
-street.
-
-"Heaven be praised!" he exclaimed. "Cured—cured,
-by Jove! I wouldn't have missed it for worlds!"
-
-On turning the corner of his club, he ran into
-Becker, a club acquaintance whom he tolerantly
-disliked.
-
-"Becker, old boy," he said, seizing his arm and
-flourishing his cane in the direction of the club,
-"what can I buy you? Come on—*en avant*!"
-
-"What the deuce has got in you?" said that
-correct youth.
-
-"Joy, laughter, everything! I'm happy as a
-Croton water-bug on a hot marble slab!"
-
-At the bar, he gathered every one in sight,
-slapping them on their shoulders. His comrades looked
-at him with envy and awe, believing that he had
-profited by a tip to make a killing in the market.
-Their own enjoyment was little enough. The
-market, outdoing the day before, had plunged like a
-wild steer into the maelstrom of panic. A billion
-dollars had receded, scattered, evaporated in the mad
-day. The disaster had reached the whole country;
-every bank was threatened. The United States
-Treasury had been implored to come to the
-assistance of the country. Gunther, Fontaine, Marx,
-Haggerty, were in hourly conference; while before
-the swelling hurricane of fright, every paper was
-imploring its readers to stand firm.
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`CHAPTER XVI`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- CHAPTER XVI
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-The next day Beecher did not consider for a
-moment telephoning to Nan Charters, despite
-her last request. He felt that it was a chapter closed
-in his life—one of those innumerable false paths
-down which one plunges, only the quicker to return.
-His own serenity did not even surprise him. He
-went off for the morning to play rackets with Bruce
-Gunther, and lunched at the club with Tilton, who
-urged him to join his hunt, an invitation which he
-discussed with enthusiasm.
-
-The news from the stock market was the same—ten
-point losses in the early trading. Banks all over
-the country had suspended payments for a week in
-order to weather the storm. The panic had ceased
-to be one of speculative concern only. Every one
-was anxiously asking if a permanent blow had not
-been dealt to the industries of the country. Many
-freely prophesied that, if the downward rush were
-not checked within three days, it would take the
-country ten years to restore its shattered prosperity.
-There was a rumor that the big men of the Street
-had made up a fund, reaching to many millions,
-which would be brought on the morrow to the
-support of the market. The run on the Associated
-Trust still continued, checked though it was by delay
-and technicalities. Yet the fall of Slade was hourly
-predicted.
-
-Beecher lingered after luncheon, played a
-hundred points at billiards and won, an hour's bridge
-and won again. Then he went off in high spirits
-to call on Emma Fornez, an appointment arranged
-over the telephone.
-
-"So, you bad boy, you and your little Charters
-have quarreled," said the prima donna, greeting him
-with an accusing smile, though in her voice was the
-pitch of the nervous excitement which her coming
-début that night had communicated.
-
-"Not in the least," he said, a little surprised at the
-insinuation.
-
-"Ta-ta-ta! Enough of your stuff and nonsense,"
-she said, with a shrug of her shoulders. "You are
-too big a simpleton—a little woman like that will
-always get the best of you."
-
-"But there is no quarrel, and I am not in the least
-interested."
-
-"Oh, *avec ça*—keep away—better keep away!
-You will burn your fingers. Just the kind of a little
-doll that is dangerous. Women like that are like
-half colors between one thing and the other—very
-dangerous! A young girl—*jeune fille*—would
-bore you now, and an old campaigner like Emma
-Fornez would amuse you; but a little thing like that
-is too puzzling for you. I see just how it is," she
-continued, placing her hands on her hips and bobbing
-her head energetically, while Beecher, very much
-pleased to be so lectured, listened with a mocking
-look. "Yes, yes, I know very well! She gets
-you—how do you say?—going and coming. When
-she is an actress you say she is different from the
-rest—what a child! And when she is playing the
-child, you say what a difference—she is such an
-artist! You laugh—see!"
-
-Beecher broke out laughing at this characterization
-which came so near the truth.
-
-"What I have said is very good—very good,"
-repeated Emma Fornez, pleased. "It's all studied,
-very carefully studied out, but it takes with young
-simpletons, big geese, good-looking boys—don't
-I know? *Est-ce-que j'en ai joué de ces tours là*?
-Come, now, what did you fight about?"
-
-Beecher had an inclination to take her into his
-confidence; but he resisted the impulse, and to turn
-the conversation said artfully:
-
-"By Jove, you look stunning! You won't have
-to sing a note."
-
-She was in a filmy peignoir, and, as his glance
-showed an amused admiration, she said, with a look
-of apology which she did not feel at all, gathering
-the peignoir closer with a perfectly simulated modesty:
-
-"It's very bad—my receiving you like this. I
-am going through my costumes. They are dreams.
-Wait, you shall see—you wish to see them?
-Good!" All at once she stopped and, seizing his
-arm, cried: "Teddy, I am in a cold fright—I shiver
-all over whenever I think of it. New York audiences
-are terrible. It will be a big, big failure, won't it?"
-
-"There, I'll give you my lucky piece," he said,
-patting her shoulder as he would a child's.
-
-"Will you!" she cried, delighted; and; running
-into the bedroom, she called back: "I will show you
-the costume for the second act first. You will fall
-down and adore me. Keep me talking, Teddy—I
-shall go into hysterics. Oh, I am so frightened!"
-
-She tried her voice, singing a scale, inquiring
-anxiously, her head peering around the door: "That
-sounds bad, *hein*?"
-
-"Marvelous!" said Beecher, who did not know
-one note from another.
-
-Reassured, she entered radiantly, took two or
-three steps forward, and, lifting the castanets on her
-fingers, flung herself into the pose of Carmen
-exulting in the return of her lover.
-
-"Carmen, Teddy," she cried, with a toss of her
-head. "Carmen is different from all other rôles.
-To succeed in Carmen, one must be a Carmen one's
-self—*enfant de la Bohême*. You like this?
-Wait—wait a moment."
-
-Back in her bedroom, she continued, pausing from
-time to time to shriek at her maid: "Teddy, you do
-me so much good—you take my mind off....
-Victorine, *tu m'assassine*! ... Teddy, they
-will think me beautiful, *hein*? You will stay—you
-will talk to me until I go?"
-
-"Wish I could," said Beecher, to whom this peep
-behind the scenes was novel. "The deuce is, I'm
-dining with Mrs. Fontaine—going in her box."
-
-"And Chartèrs—she is going too?"
-
-"I don't know."
-
-"What—you don't know?" she said, emerging,
-a shawl of shaded luminous greens flung over the
-shoulder of a russet taffeta. She seized him by the
-chin with the savage gesture of the Bohemian. "You
-lie to me! You love her—and you know!" Then,
-slipping on the sofa beside him, half playful, half
-feline, she pleaded: "Tell me, Teddy—tell me just
-to distract me. Be a nice boy—you see how
-nervous I am—please!"
-
-Beecher did not resist. He recounted lightly,
-making little of the few passages at arms between
-him and Nan Charters, ending with a droll reproduction
-of his laughing exit, cured and disillusionized.
-
-"Ah, my poor Teddy!" said Emma Fornez, shaking
-her head. "Everything you say proves what I
-feared."
-
-"What?"
-
-"You are in love; you are beyond hope!
-
-"What, after I've told you this?"
-
-"Exactly. She asked you to telephone, you
-didn't. Why? Because you are in love—you are
-afraid."
-
-"Emma, I will tell you the truth," he said, with
-an excusing shrug.
-
-"Aha!"
-
-"I was attracted—"
-
-"Good!"
-
-"But I saw what an idiot I would be."
-
-"Very good!"
-
-"I am completely cured, and if I didn't telephone,
-it is—"
-
-"Because you are in love," said Emma promptly.
-
-"Nonsense!"
-
-"You will see her tomorrow; if not, day after
-tomorrow. And the longer you stay away, the
-worse for you."
-
-The arrival of Spinetti, the conductor, to run
-over a last few points, broke in upon this interesting
-discussion. Beecher departed, after a promise to
-come behind after the second act with a budget of
-news. He returned to his rooms, undisturbed by the
-charges of Emma Fornez.
-
-"I haven't thought of her the whole day," he said
-contentedly. "If I didn't telephone, it's because—well,
-because—what's the use? I have other things
-more interesting to do."
-
-In his apartment he found McKenna waiting for
-him, in company with Gunther, who was already
-dressed for dinner at Mrs. Fontaine's.
-
-"Hello, McKenna," he said, surprised. "What's up?"
-
-The two had been discussing energetically, and
-the little difficult hesitation told him that he himself
-had been the subject of conversation.
-
-"I'm called off on an important case," said
-McKenna. "Thought I'd better have an understanding
-with you first."
-
-"What understanding?" he said. His eye was
-attracted by the heaped-up mail on a side table, and
-he moved over to examine it, with a curiosity,
-utterly illogical, to see if Miss Charters had written
-him.
-
-"Mr. Beecher, I have a request to make of you,"
-said McKenna quickly.
-
-"What's that?"
-
-"Don't open any letters or answer the telephone
-until I am gone."
-
-"Why, yes; but—" He cut off with a look of
-interrogation.
-
-"Pump it into him, Mac," said Gunther, throwing
-himself back and puffing forth great volumes of
-smoke.
-
-"The truth is, Mr. Beecher," said McKenna, smiling,
-"Mrs. Kildair played us both to the queen's
-fashion."
-
-"What was I to do?" said Beecher warmly.
-"Whom does the ring belong to, anyway? Is there
-any reason I should do what she doesn't want me to?"
-
-"No—no," said McKenna slowly.
-
-"Could I have refused a direct demand from her
-like that? And what reason could I give if I had?"
-
-"You couldn't," said McKenna, eying the end of
-his cigar. "She did the job neatly. I admire that
-woman—don't know when I've met one of that sex
-who's caught my fancy so."
-
-"I suppose you're sick of the case and want to get
-out," said Beecher, believing he had divined the
-errand. "Don't know as I blame you."
-
-"No, I don't want to quit," said McKenna slowly,
-while Gunther smiled to himself. "I should say,
-rather, there are things in this case that make me
-particularly interested—interested for my own
-curiosity to go a little deeper. Only, I want to be sure
-we understand things the same way. You don't
-understand from anything Mrs. Kildair said, do you,
-that I am prevented from going on working on my
-own hook?"
-
-"Why, no; of course not," said Beecher, reflecting.
-"I understand two things: one, that Mrs. Kildair
-wishes to keep in confidence what she said to
-you, which I should say was the explanation of
-certain facts connected with her having the ring."
-
-"Second?" said McKenna.
-
-"Second, that she believes the ring will be returned,
-and until she is sure it is she doesn't wish to
-give us certain suspicions or knowledge that she has."
-
-"First rate—just right," said McKenna, rising
-quickly, showing satisfaction in the instant alertness
-of his movements. "That's what I understand; we
-understand each other." As he spoke, the telephone
-rang. He made a quick gesture of opposition as
-Beecher started, saying: "Not now, sir; I'd rather
-you wouldn't answer—not just now."
-
-Beecher looked at Gunther, who nodded and said:
-
-"McKenna's got a good reason. You'll understand
-later."
-
-"Now, Mr. Beecher, I've just one thing to say
-before I go," said McKenna, while the insistent bell
-continued its querulous summons. "I'd prefer you
-wouldn't mention to any one that you saw me. At
-any rate, as Mrs. Kildair evidently isn't anxious for
-quick results, there's nothing to be done now.
-Perhaps by tomorrow there may be a different turn to
-the case."
-
-"What do you mean?" said Beecher. "Why
-don't you tell me what you know?"
-
-"You forget, Mr. Beecher; you yourself have
-stopped me there," said McKenna, with a slightly
-malicious smile. "However, there's going to be a
-little meeting tonight that may have a whole lot to
-do with the fortunes of a good many people; and
-when it's over it may, or may not, throw a new light
-on this case."
-
-"They're going to put Slade through the same
-initiation they gave Majendie," said Gunther, at a
-look from Beecher. "There's a meeting of the big
-fellows at the governor's tonight—a sort of
-sheep-shearing—though Slade's not much of a lamb."
-
-"And his wool grows close to the hide," said
-McKenna, with one of his rare laughs. "However,
-I can tell you this much: whatever happens I don't
-believe there'll be any exit by the bullet route—not
-if I know John G. Slade. Now, sir, I've got to
-disappear for a while on my own troubles."
-
-"Where can I get you?" asked Beecher.
-
-"You can't get me," said McKenna, with one of
-his sudden contractions of the eyelids. "That's the
-whole point—not till I get you. I'm off, and you
-don't know where," he added, offering his hand.
-"Maybe two days; maybe a week."
-
-"I don't understand," said Beecher, with a
-puzzled expression.
-
-"I do," said Gunther, pulling his sleeve.
-
-"Now, there are two little points may interest
-you gentlemen as expert deducers," said McKenna,
-with his hat on his head. "One is, I've found out
-who those detectives were that night—they're
-crooks. Second—and don't forget this—I share
-Mrs. Kildair's opinion that the ring is going to be
-returned."
-
-"Then you know who took it!" exclaimed
-Beecher, while Gunther looked up suddenly.
-
-"I don't know a single thing," said McKenna,
-"but I'm getting to the suspicious stage. So long."
-
-The telephone had stopped. Beecher, left
-open-mouthed by the exit of McKenna, turned to
-Gunther, who had resumed his easy lounge.
-
-"What the deuce is going on, Bruce? What's
-all this mystery?"
-
-"Look over your mail," said Gunther irrelevantly.
-
-Beecher obeyed the suggestion. At the end of a
-moment he exclaimed:
-
-"Hello! Why, here's a note from Mrs. Kildair—sent
-by messenger, evidently."
-
-"Read it."
-
-Beecher glanced at it hurriedly.
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-DEAR TEDDY:
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-Have been trying all day to get hold of McKenna, but
-they tell me at his office he's out of town. I want to see
-him very much. If you know where he is, please have him
-call me up. Shall see you at Mrs. Fontaine's tonight.
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-RITA.
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-\P.\S. Please find McKenna if you possibly can.
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-"By Jove—McKenna!" he exclaimed, and hastened
-toward the door, only to be stopped by Gunther.
-
-"Ted, you blockhead, what are you doing?"
-
-"Going after McKenna."
-
-"Just what he doesn't want."
-
-Beecher stopped short, suddenly comprehending.
-
-"That's it, is it?" he said, returning. "He wants
-to keep clear of Mrs. Kildair's, then?"
-
-"You see," said Gunther, "it is not often that
-McKenna gets double-crossed. When he does, he
-doesn't particularly relish it. Mrs. Kildair may be
-perfectly right in bottling up the whole affair; but,
-after what happened yesterday, Mac isn't going to
-stop until he gets to the bottom."
-
-"But why disappear?"
-
-"Because, you little white fluffy toy donkey, the
-last thing in the world Mrs. Kildair wants is to have
-him do anything at all, and, as you are putty in the
-hands of any pretty woman, he doesn't intend to
-have you call him off."
-
-"I'll see Mrs. Kildair at Louise's. What am I
-to say?"
-
-Gunther shrugged his shoulders.
-
-"Wonder if she's really playing to be Mrs. Slade,"
-he said grimly. "If she is, she'll give that up after
-tonight."
-
-"What's going to happen to him, Bruce?"
-
-"He'll come out with so little left that a Committee
-on Virtue will arrest him for indecent
-exposure—and the country will be saved."
-
-Beecher stopped before the telephone.
-
-"Wonder if Mrs. Kildair really was on the
-'phone?" he said meditatively. The thought
-recalled Miss Charters, but without disturbing his
-equanimity.
-
-"Bruce," he said joyfully, rushing to dress,
-"Tilton's crazy to have me go to Africa with him. By
-Jove, I've half made up my mind! Give me a man's
-life; a life with men, out in the open—dogs and
-horses, and nothing but a few lions and fat elephants
-to bother you!"
-
-When they arrived at Mrs. Fontaine's, they found,
-to their surprise, that Mrs. Kildair had been delayed
-by an automobile breaking down, and would only
-join them later at the opera.
-
-Not one of them had the faintest suspicion, when
-later Mrs. Kildair calmly entered the box, that she
-had passed through two hours of supreme agitation
-that had left her torn between hope and dread—her
-whole future staked on one turn. Slade, face to
-face with the crisis that would determine whether
-he would survive as one of the figures of the financial
-world, or return staggering into the oblivion of the
-commonplace, had gone to see her in the afternoon.
-
-Confronted, too, by the imminent outcome of a
-gamble that had absorbed all her ambitions and her
-hopes, she had recklessly thrown aside all the
-restraints which she had interposed between them;
-and by an impulse of daring which makes such
-women irresistible to men, having invented an excuse
-for Mrs. Fontaine, had kept him to dinner, trusting
-to his protection, insisting on his confidence.
-
-Afterward she had driven him to the gray, prison-like
-structure which Gunther called a home, and seen
-him, defiant with a defiance she had breathed into him,
-with the scorn of the gambler who comes at length to
-the ultimate stake walk up the steps past the group of
-newspaper men, who, suddenly ceasing their chatter,
-huddled together and watched him with a unanimous
-craning of their heads.
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`CHAPTER XVII`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- CHAPTER XVII
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-Mrs. Craig Fontaine's box was in the
-lower grand tier in that favored circle which,
-in the present struggle for social supremacy, is the
-ultimate battlefield. Her entrance was one of the
-six important arrivals of the night which affected
-the immense audience with a curiosity only less
-intense than the entrance of the prima donna.
-Mrs. Fontaine, approaching the curtain that shut out the
-swimming vision of faces, took a preparatory glance,
-and as the row of boxes still showed a profusion of
-gaps, she delayed their entrance on the pretext of
-waiting for Mrs. Kildair. Besides Gunther and
-Beecher, there were in the party Lady Fitzhugh
-Mowbray, a young woman of the striking English
-blonde type, and the Duke de Taleza-Corti, of the
-royal house of Italy, a cosmopolite, dry, frail in
-body, affecting the English monocle, with a perpetual
-introspective smile on his keen lips.
-
-The absence of Mrs. Kildair had left Mrs. Fontaine
-in very bad humor. Not only did she consider
-an invitation to her box as a sort of royal command
-that should take precedence over all calamities, and
-render accidents impossible, but she felt that she
-would miss the effect which her well-balanced party
-had promised. Fortunately, at that moment the door
-opened and Mrs. Kildair entered.
-
-"My dear Mrs. Fontaine," she said immediately,
-in a voice that could not be heard by the rest, "the
-explanation I sent you is not true. It was not a
-question of a break-down. There are crises in our
-lives that cannot be put off. I can tell you no more
-than this, but I know you will understand that
-nothing except a matter of supreme importance would
-ever make me miss an invitation of yours."
-
-Mrs. Fontaine looked at her and, seeing beyond the
-surface calm the fires of a profound agitation, was
-pleased that Mrs. Kildair had not sought an easy
-excuse, but had thrown herself on her woman's
-generosity. Also she perceived that she was strikingly
-dressed in a robe of that luminous, elusive green that
-breaks forth in the flickering driftwood, subdued
-and given distance by a network of black lace. It
-was exactly the contrast that she would have chosen
-as a foil to her own costume. She smiled, pressed
-her guest's hand sympathetically and signaled to
-Gunther, who removed her wrap.
-
-Mrs. Kildair murmured an involuntary tribute
-while the Duke de Taleza-Corti, with the over-frank
-admiration which the Latin permits, said point
-blank:
-
-"If I am to sit behind you, Madame, you must
-bandage my eyes."
-
-Mrs. Fontaine had chosen the one color which,
-above all others, seemed to have been created to
-frame her dark imperious beauty—a warm purple,
-the tone of autumn itself, which gave to her shoulders
-and throat the softness of ivory. About her neck
-was a double string of pearls which were worth ten
-times the receipts of the house.
-
-"Let's go in," she said, glancing at Gunther
-with a hope that she might find his eyes a little
-troubled. She signed to him to take the seat behind
-hers, placing Beecher back of Mrs. Kildair, and
-while the rest of her party immediately swept the
-house with their opera-glasses, she remained quiet,
-conscious of the sudden focus, unwilling to show
-herself curious of other women.
-
-"Look," said Mrs. Kildair to Beecher in a low
-aside; "Mrs. Bloodgood is in her box. What
-daring!" she added after a moment's examination.
-"She has dressed herself in black."
-
-Beecher, following her directions, beheld Mrs. Bloodgood,
-without a single jewel or a relieving touch
-of color, sitting proudly, looking fixedly at the stage,
-disdainful of the stir and gossip which her dramatic
-appearance occasioned. Behind in the crowded box
-Mr. Bloodgood was standing, smiling and contented,
-showing himself with a malicious enjoyment.
-
-"How can she do it?" he said.
-
-"After the first act," said Mrs. Kildair, with a
-sudden impulse of generosity, "go and see her.
-Take Mr. Gunther. It will give her strength."
-
-"It is decidedly brilliant," said Lady Mowbray.
-"The parterre is much more effective than Covent
-Garden."
-
-"There should be a guide to tell us all the histories
-of these boxes," said Taleza-Corti, with his keen
-perception of values. "The opera is the record of
-society. The history of America for the next twenty
-years will be written here by those who descend from
-the galleries into the orchestra, and those who force
-their way from the orchestra into the boxes. I like
-to think of your millionaires who might have begun
-up there under the roof. Fonda, our great novelist,
-says that the opera is the city reduced to the terms
-of the village. It always impresses me. Magnificent!"
-
-No one listened to him. The women nodded from
-time to time as their glasses encountered those of
-acquaintances; Beecher, troubled at a figure which
-he had half perceived in the orchestra and which he
-sought to distinguish, fancied a resemblance to Nan
-Charters; Gunther, bored by a spectacle which had
-no novelty for him, watched Mrs. Kildair, noting
-the nervous hands and the occasional quickly taken
-breaths, asking himself what had been the real cause
-of her absence, half divining in a confused way the
-truth.
-
-Mrs. Fontaine was languidly curious of those who
-had a right to her interest. She was in her
-element—jealous of this multitude as an actress, pleased
-at the fine effect she had produced. And in her
-triumph she was recalled to the one thing she desired
-to complete her ambition, to give her that command
-of this assemblage which she was forced to
-acknowledge to another. Her glance went to the box
-in the middle of the horseshoe, as it did covetously
-each night.
-
-"Your father isn't here tonight," she said to
-Bruce Gunther with a little surprise.
-
-"No. There is some big pow-wow on," he answered.
-
-Mrs. Kildair took up her glasses suddenly, turning
-them haphazard. The remark revived in her all the
-agitation of the afternoon.
-
-"I shall never be able to sit through this," she said
-to herself, leaning forward. "If I only knew—"
-
-Mrs. Fontaine, could she have known the thoughts
-that were galloping through the brain of her guest,
-would have been astounded at their similarity.
-Mrs. Kildair, too, had her ambitions, ambitions as
-passionately held and nourished on one hope. The
-interview that afternoon with Slade, an interview in
-which for the first time she had made him feel the
-need of her, had all at once brought the prize within
-her grasp. If he could but emerge from this one
-supreme danger, she said to herself that she had at
-last the opportunity to rate herself here among the
-leaders of this society which she coveted, had always
-coveted and would never cease to covet.
-
-"Give me Slade and twenty millions even," she
-said to herself with a great intaking of breath, "and
-I can do anything. I will dominate this in five
-years." But the more violently burned the fire of
-her desire, the more weak and faltering was her
-hope. "Ah, will he win out—can he—how is it
-possible?" she said bitterly. "Oh, what a gamble it
-all is—and I must sit here—continue to sit here
-like a stone—while in an hour it may all be
-decided!"
-
-"You've seen Fornez in *Carmen*?" said Taleza-Corti
-to Gunther. "Very fine."
-
-"First appearance here," said Gunther briefly.
-He touched Beecher on the arm. "Friends of yours
-over there, Ted."
-
-"Who?"
-
-"The Cheevers—little to your right—row
-above. Hello," he added suddenly. "See who's
-with them?"
-
-"Who?" said Beecher, who did not recognize the
-rest of the party.
-
-Gunther placed his finger on his lips, with a
-warning glance at Mrs. Kildair, and then, bending
-forward, said:
-
-"I say, Mrs. Kildair, who is that tall, rather
-black chap in the box with the Stanley Cheevers?
-He's looking this way now."
-
-Mrs. Kildair raised her glasses.
-
-"Mr. Mapleson," she said directly.
-
-"He's the head of Sontag & Company, the
-jewelers, isn't he?"
-
-"Yes, I believe so."
-
-"Queer looking chap—ever know him?"
-
-"Yes. Why?"
-
-She turned, looking at the questioner with a fixity
-that told him she was not entirely ignorant of his
-real interest.
-
-"He must have been in Paris when you were,"
-he said quickly. "I hear he had quite a career
-there."
-
-She turned away with indifference, gazed once
-more through her glasses and said:
-
-"Yes, there were quite a number of stories about
-his rise. He is a man with a genius for friendships."
-
-"Rather attentive to Mrs. Cheever, isn't he?"
-persisted Gunther.
-
-"I didn't know it."
-
-Beecher did not then seize the drift of the inquiry,
-still absorbed as he was in the attempt to gain a
-clearer view of the profile in the orchestra which
-reminded him of Nan Charters. Lady Mowbray
-continued silent, busy as a true Briton in the search
-for the ridiculous in this assemblage which at first
-glance had impressed her.
-
-All at once the lights went out and the first act
-was on. The entrance of Emma Fornez was eagerly
-awaited as a new sensation to an audience which
-yearly must be served with the novel and startling.
-It had been rumored that her impersonation was
-even a bit shocking, and the house, stirred by the
-expectation, waited hopefully. At the end of the act
-opinions were divided: the galleries applauded
-frantically, moved by the sure magnetism of a great
-artist, but the boxes and most of the orchestra waited
-undecided, each afraid to be the leader.
-
-"But I don't see anything shocking at all," said
-the voice of a young woman in the next box, a note
-of complaint in her voice.
-
-"Wait—it's in the second act," answered the
-sarcastic note of a man.
-
-"Ah, the love scene," said the woman mollified.
-
-The two young men rose, giving their places to
-arriving visitors, and went into the corridors on their
-rounds. Beecher was thoughtful. He had at last
-assured himself that he had not been mistaken—Miss
-Charters was present. He had detected her
-with her glasses on his box, but he had not succeeded
-in seeing who was her companion.
-
-"I'd give a good deal to know how well
-Mrs. Cheever knows Mapleson," said Gunther eagerly.
-
-"I say, what do you mean by poking me?" asked
-Beecher suddenly.
-
-"Didn't you get on? Mapleson is the head of
-Sontag & Company; Sontag & Company sold the
-ring to Slade. Now if Mapleson and Mrs. Cheever
-are intimate it's possible—just a
-chance—Mrs. Cheever may have known the facts. See?"
-
-Beecher shrugged his shoulders.
-
-"It's a long shot."
-
-"But a chance. I'll pick up some one here in five
-minutes who can tell me."
-
-Beecher entered the Bloodgood box and, making
-his way to the front, gave his hand to Mrs. Bloodgood.
-Four or five men, impelled by curiosity, were
-before him, mentally registering their reports to add
-to the fund of gossip. Mrs. Bloodgood, glad to avail
-herself of the opportunity, had turned her back on
-the audience and was holding her head against these
-social scouts, who discussed Slade, which was a
-manner of discussing Majendie.
-
-She welcomed Beecher's arrival as that of an ally
-and made him the pretext of withdrawing from the
-general conversation. The moment he looked at her,
-he had the tact to perceive that any display of
-sympathy would be an offense. There was no trace left
-of the weak and desperate woman. Instead, he was
-aware of an immense change in her, a transformation
-that was moral, and looking into her eyes he could not
-realize that he had ever seen them weep.
-
-"They'll force out Slade," said a voice.
-
-"Where are you tonight?" she asked quietly.
-
-"In Mrs. Craig Fontaine's box," he said.
-
-"Mrs. Kildair is there, isn't she?"
-
-"Yes." He hesitated, but did not deliver her
-message. The woman before him asked compassion
-from no one. In the commotion at his side he
-caught a phrase: "Wonder if Slade will kill himself
-too?"
-
-"Do you like Fornez?" he said hastily, and despite
-himself he looked into her eyes to see what
-effect the remark had made.
-
-"Very much," she said coldly, a little staccato.
-And then calmly, to end a subject that was disagreeable
-to her, she turned to the other. "Fornez has
-made a success, don't you think?"
-
-Beecher left presently, oppressed by the hardness
-that he felt in her.
-
-"There's a woman who will never have any pity,"
-he thought as he left. Mr. Bloodgood, who
-remembered him with a malicious smile, shook his hand
-with extra cordiality.
-
-"Did you give my message?" asked Mrs. Kildair
-as he took his place.
-
-"It was wiser not," he said. Then all at once,
-struck by the fatigue in her face, he asked anxiously:
-"Are you very tired?"
-
-"Yes, very," she said.
-
-In this box, too, nothing had been spoken of
-except the drama, which at that moment was centered
-about John G. Slade. As nothing could possibly be
-known, every one arrived with a fresh rumor, and
-the burden of all was the annihilation of the
-Westerner. The sudden darkness came to her as a relief.
-She relaxed wearily in her chair and forced her mind
-to forget itself in the sudden access of gaiety from the
-stage.
-
-This second act was a veritable triumph for Emma
-Fornez. In the scene of Don Jose's return she acted
-with such fine and natural primitive passion that all
-the constricted little feminine natures in the
-audience were stirred by the pulsing exhibition of an
-emotion they had carefully choked or reduced to
-mathematics, and, really moved, trembling in their
-imprisoned bodies, they applauded for the first time. Then
-suddenly they ceased—a little ashamed.
-
-In descending the stairway to go behind the stage,
-Beecher perceived Miss Charters in the distance of
-the shifting crowd. He stopped, by a movement he
-did not analyze, to speak to a purely chance
-acquaintance, hoping that she would perceive him. Then he
-continued to the dressing-room of the prima donna.
-
-Emma Fornez was in a state of frenzied delight.
-
-"I have them, Teddy—I have them! Is it not
-so?" she cried, clapping her hands together as a
-child. She flung her arms about him, embracing
-him. In fact, she embraced every one—even
-Victorine, her maid.
-
-"The house is wild with enthusiasm," he said,
-laughing.
-
-"Aha! I made them sit up, didn't I—your cold
-women! It's the second act, Teddy—the second—you
-get them there. Bah! They don't even know
-what I did to them." All at once she stopped,
-seriously assuming a countenance of terror. "Oh, but
-the critics—what will the monsters say! They
-never like it when the audience is too enthusiastic."
-
-.. _`"'Aha! I made them sit up, didn't I—your cold women!'"`:
-
-.. figure:: images/img-248.jpg
- :figclass: white-space-pre-line
- :align: center
- :alt: "'Aha! I made them sit up, didn't I—your cold women!'"
-
- "'Aha! I made them sit up, didn't I—your cold women!'"
-
-"I saw Macklin applauding, Madame," said
-Spinetti, putting his head into the room.
-
-"Angel!" cried Emma Fornez, and she embraced
-Spinetti. Then, knowing in herself that the day was
-won, she began to amuse her audience. "Do you
-know what the critics will write? I'll tell you. The
-audience was carried off its feet in the second act.
-They will praise the first. They will say the second
-was obvious, and they will praise the third act,
-because there I shall do a little trick to them—in the
-card scene. I shall be very noble—very tragic. I
-will make a little picture of death before my eyes—with
-all his bones rattling and his great big hollow
-eyes, and they shall see it on my face—so! And
-I'll look very steady—noble—profound—like a
-queen. See?—a thing which Carmen would nevère,
-nevère do, for she's a little wretch of an animal that
-would be frightened to death. But you will see they
-will all like it—it's their moral that you have to
-serve up to them."
-
-"Third act—third act," came the running call
-from the flies. "All on the stage for the third
-act."
-
-When Beecher entered the corridor, Miss Charters
-was only a short distance away. He was prepared
-for Lorraine as a companion, but he felt a
-sudden anger at the sight of Garraboy, who in turn,
-suddenly comprehending the aim of his partner's
-maneuvers, looked anything but pleased.
-
-She nodded to him, holding out her hand.
-
-"She is wonderful, Teddy, wonderful. Have
-you seen her? Is she pleased?"
-
-"She is a great, great artist," he said with extra
-warmth. "She is pleased as a child."
-
-The two men had nodded with that impertinent
-jerk of the head which in society conveys the effect
-of a bucket of water.
-
-"Come and see me after the next act," she said,
-looking at him closely.
-
-"If I can," he said hastily.
-
-He went up the steps and from the tail of his eye
-saw her linger, watching him as he went. A little
-contrition, a sudden sympathy came to him, but he
-repressed it angrily, saying to himself between his
-teeth:
-
-"Garraboy—how can she stand for that!"
-
-When he returned to the box, Mrs. Kildair and
-Mrs. Fontaine were in the anteroom in low
-converse. He was suddenly struck with the look of
-age in Mrs. Kildair's face.
-
-"But I assure you—I can go alone," she was
-saying.
-
-"I would not allow it," said Mrs. Fontaine firmly.
-Then turning to Beecher she said, so as not to reach
-the others: "Teddy, as soon as the curtain is up,
-step out. Mrs. Kildair is not well. You will take
-her home. I have ordered the automobile. You
-can get back for the last act."
-
-Mrs. Kildair made no further remonstrance—she
-was at the end of her tether.
-
-"Sit here," she said to Beecher, sitting down on
-the couch. "I don't want to be noticed."
-
-"You're ill!" he said alarmed.
-
-"Yes, ill," she said mechanically.
-
-At this moment the house became still. She rose
-with a return of energy and signaled him that she
-was ready. Five minutes later they were in the
-automobile fleeing uptown.
-
-A moment of weakness was rare in her life, yet
-she comprehended it without seeking to delude herself.
-
-"At twenty I should not even have trembled,"
-she said to herself, sinking back into the cushioned
-seat and watching the lights of the streets flash past
-the window with a comforting emotion of speed.
-"Now it is different. Every life has one supreme
-opportunity—this is mine. I know it."
-
-Had a woman been at her side instead of Beecher,
-she would have given her confidence in the terrible
-necessity for sharing the emotion that was too vital
-to her. As it was, she restrained herself, remaining
-silent by a last effort of her will, but her hand
-on the window-frame began a nervous syncopated
-beating, imitating the click of the fleeing rails which
-one hears on a railroad train.
-
-"You are feeling better?" said the young man
-in a troubled voice.
-
-"Open the window—just for a moment," she answered.
-
-The sudden blast of cold air, damp as though
-laden with the tears of the city, terrified her with
-its suggestion of despair and defeat.
-
-"No, no, shut it!" she said hurriedly.
-
-He obeyed and then to distract her, began:
-
-"I received your note, Rita, just before coming,
-McKenna—"
-
-"No, no," she said, interrupting him, "that is
-nothing. Just let me be quiet a moment—get hold
-of myself."
-
-But in a few moments she was forced to seek the
-stimulus of the air again, and she cried hurriedly,
-not concealing her agitation:
-
-"Open, open quick!"
-
-The crisis which she felt approaching with every
-block which fell behind was so immense, the stake
-so ardently coveted, so weakly feared, that she had
-in the last eternal waiting moments a sensation of
-vertigo, that swept down and seized her even as on
-the football field before the blowing of the whistle
-the stanchest player feels his heart lying before him
-on the ground. She opened her lips, drinking in
-the chill, revivifying draught, unaware of the strange
-impression her disordered countenance in the
-embrasure of the window made on the occasional
-passers-by.
-
-"Better first in a village than second in Rome."
-
-She found herself repeating the saying mechanically,
-without quite understanding how it had so
-suddenly leaped into her mind. Then, as the
-automobile turned into her street, and she felt that he
-was there waiting as he had promised, successful
-or ruined; that now in ten minutes all would be over,
-she would know; all at once, without that sense of
-humor which deserts us in great stress, she began
-to pray confusedly to some one immense, whom she
-had never understood, but one who seemed to hold
-all fates in the balancing of his fingers.
-
-"Are you better? What shall I do? Shall I
-come up with you?" asked Beecher, totally in the
-dark.
-
-"No, no—wait," she said hurriedly, as the
-machine ground to a stop. She did not rise at once,
-stiffening in her seat, grasping the arm of the young
-man until he winced under the contraction of her
-fingers.
-
-"Good!" she said suddenly; and before he could
-prevent her she was out on the sidewalk. "No, no;
-stay in. Thanks, thanks a thousand times. I'll
-send you back."
-
-Before he could protest, she shut the door firmly
-and nodded to the chauffeur.
-
-The elevator boy was already at the swinging
-glass doors, holding them open for her entrance.
-
-"Mr. Slade here, Jo?" she said instantly.
-
-"Yes, ma'am; upstairs."
-
-"How long?"
-
-"About half an hour."
-
-She entered the elevator and descended at the
-landing, waiting until it had disappeared.
-
-"Now for it!" she said, pressing the bell. And
-by a last display of her will, she sent through her
-body a wave of cold resolution that left her outwardly
-impassive with a little touch of scorn on her lips.
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`CHAPTER XVIII`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- CHAPTER XVIII
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-It is only in the supreme crisis of a colossal
-disaster that a nation, which fondly believes it
-elects its governing bodies, perceives its real masters,
-and then in the alarm and confusion of its
-apprehension, it does not recognize what it is shown.
-The group of ten men who were assembled at Gunther's,
-awaiting the arrival of Slade, either in
-themselves or through the influences they represented,
-could bring to their support over ten billions of
-capital. If it were possible to conceive of a master
-spirit who could unite these ten men, forgetting
-mutual jealousy and distrust, into one unanimous
-body with but a single object, in five years these
-ten men, without the impediment of law, could own
-every necessary newspaper and magazine in the
-country, operate every railroad, and, by the simple
-process of reinvesting their earnings annually,
-control every important industry, every necessary chain
-of banks, the entire food supply of the nation, and,
-at the cost of twenty million dollars every four
-years and by remaining unknown, control the necessary
-number of candidates in both political parties
-in matters essential to their financial interests.
-That such a coalition will remain a fantasy, is due
-to two factors: the human nature of such individuals
-and the human nature of multitudes which, were
-they successful, would find the corrective in
-massacre. When such a monetary alliance does take
-place, it is usually from the necessity, as they see
-it, of saving the country by the simple process of
-enriching themselves.
-
-When Slade arrived, he entered by the separate
-entrance to Gunther's personal apartments, which
-were situated in a lower wing of the monstrous
-turreted granite structure which might have served for
-a miniature Bastile. One of the secretaries was at
-the door carefully scrutinizing all arrivals. The
-moment he entered, he was aware that his fate was not
-the only one that was under discussion.
-
-The wing of the house was laid out in the form
-of a Maltese cross, with a square anteroom in the
-center, heavily spread with silk Persian rugs, and
-furnished with easy divans and upholstered chairs.
-Above was a skylight, now transformed into a vast
-reflector for the burst of electric lights.
-
-Four entrances of equal height in heavy Florentine
-relief gave on this anteroom; from Gunther's private
-office, from the library, from the rooms of the
-private secretaries, and from the outer entrance by
-which Slade advanced. In the middle of the
-anteroom Gunther was seated at a small card-table,
-studiously engrossed in a game of solitaire. He
-was a medium-seized man who, without an effect of
-bulk, conveyed an instant impression of solidity,
-while the head, remarkable in the changed physiognomy
-of the present day, had the falcon-like, eerie
-quality, characteristic of the spreading eyebrows and
-deep-set glance of the American before the Civil
-War. Slow in movement, slow in speech, he was
-likewise slow in the deliberation with which his
-scrutiny left the face he was considering.
-
-At the vigorous shock of Slade's coming, he completed
-a row of carefully laid cards and lifted his head.
-
-"How do you do, Mr. Gunther?" said Slade,
-whose eye was instantly set on the half-opened doors
-leading into the library, from which sounds of
-altercation were issuing.
-
-Slade's arrival seemed to surprise Gunther, who
-looked at his watch and said, without rising:
-
-"You're ahead of time, Mr. Slade."
-
-"Always like to look over the ground when there's
-a battle," said Slade, who in fact had intentionally
-effected a surprise.
-
-"Sit down."
-
-He motioned to the secretary, who, moving on
-springs, brought cigars and a light.
-
-"I'll have to keep you waiting, Mr. Slade. There
-is a conference taking place."
-
-Slade glanced from the library to the closed doors
-of the secretaries' room.
-
-"How many conferences have you?"
-
-Gunther turned over a card, studied it and carefully
-laid it down. It was his manner of settling
-a question he did not wish to answer.
-
-Slade was not offended by the rebuff. Holding
-most men in antagonism, he had conceived a violent
-admiration for Gunther and as he was the man above
-all others whom he wished to impress, he imitated
-his taciturnity, turning his imagination on the
-probable groups behind the three double doors, which
-once had closed on a famous conspiracy in a palace
-of turbulent medieval Florence.
-
-Gunther at this moment was probably the most
-powerful personal force in the United States, and,
-what was more extraordinary, in an era of public
-antipathy to its newly created magnates, enjoyed
-universal respect. As he showed himself rarely,
-never gave interviews, and surrounded himself by
-choice with that inciting element of seclusion which
-Napoleon by calculation adopted on his return from
-Italy, the public had magnified what it could not
-perceive. Even as royal personages of distinctly
-bourgeois caliber have been impressed on history by
-the exigencies of the kingly tradition as models of
-tact and statesmanship, so events and the necessities
-of the public imagination had combined to throw
-about the personality of Gunther an atmosphere of
-grandiose mystery. Just as it is true that what is
-a virtue in one man is a defect in another, the
-imagination he possessed was much less than he was
-credited with and his power lay in his ability to
-control it. For imagination, which is the genius of
-progress, in a banker approaches a crime.
-
-His strength lay in being that inevitable man who
-results as the balance wheel of conflicting interests.
-For beyond the Stock Exchange, which is a purely
-artificial organization, the financial powers will
-always create what amounts to a saving check, around
-one inevitable personality, whom they can trust and
-about whom, in times of common danger, they can
-rally as to a standard. At this moment, the invested
-wealth of the country, frightened at the cataclysm
-which threatened it, had thrown its resources
-implicitly into the hands of this one man, who came
-forward at the psychological time to stop the panic,
-issuing his orders, and marshaling his forces with
-a response of instant obedience.
-
-"What's going on here?" said Slade to himself.
-"And what's the proposition they're reckoning on
-squeezing out of me? I'd like to know what's going
-on behind those doors."
-
-As though in response to his wish the doors of
-the secretaries' room swung, and a round, rolling
-little man of fifty, in evening dress, came hurriedly
-out, holding in his hand a slip of paper. He
-approached the stolid player with precipitation, and yet,
-obeying a certain instinct of deference, which
-showed itself despite his disorder, he waited until
-Gunther had completed a play he had in hand
-before blurting out:
-
-"Mr. Gunther, this is the best we can do."
-
-Gunther took the slip which was offered to him,
-glanced at it and returned it abruptly.
-
-"Not sufficient," he said and took up his pack of
-cards.
-
-The emissary, crestfallen and desperate, returned
-to the conference and at the opening of the door
-the sound of violent discussion momentarily filled
-the anteroom as a sudden blast of storm.
-
-"I have it," said Slade, who had recognized Delancy
-Gilbert, of the firm of Gilbert, Drake & Bauerman,
-brokers and promoters of mining interests in
-Mexico, whose failure had been circulated from lip
-to lip in the last forty-eight hours. "I see that
-game. Gilbert's to be mulcted of his Osaba
-interests—for whom though? The United Mining,
-undoubtedly."
-
-Five minutes later the doors of the library opened
-in turn and a military figure, gray, bent, with tears
-in his eyes, came slowly out, the type of convenient
-figureheads which stronger men place in the
-presidencies of subsidiary corporations. He likewise
-placed a sheet of paper before the financier, watching
-him from the corner of his eye, his white finger
-working nervously in the grizzled mustache.
-
-"We've agreed on this, Mr. Gunther," he said
-desperately, in a voice shaken by suppressed emotion.
-"That's as far as we can go—and that means ruin!"
-
-Gunther examined the sheet with slow attention,
-nodding favorably twice; but at a third column he
-shook his head and, seizing a pencil, jotted down a
-figure, carefully drawing a circle around it.
-
-"That's what I must have," he said and returned
-to his solitaire.
-
-The emissary hesitated, seemed about to argue,
-and then, with a hopeless heave of his shoulders,
-retired. Gunther frowned but the frown was called
-forth by an unfavorable conjunction of the cards.
-Not once had he seemed to notice the presence of
-Slade. In the same position the promoter could not
-have helped stealing a glance to witness the effect.
-Slade registered the observation, mentally admitting
-the difference.
-
-"What does he keep me here for?" he thought,
-but almost immediately answered the question:
-"Effect on the others, of course. Well, let them
-pull their own chestnuts out of the fire."
-
-In the last emissary he had recognized General
-Arthur Roe Paxton, President of the Mohican
-Trust, exploiter of certain Southern oil fields, equally
-involved in the Osaba speculation. The knowledge
-of the operations which were being discussed—which
-he readily divined were the surrender of
-important holdings—prepared him for the demands
-he must expect to meet.
-
-At this moment Gunther swept the cards together,
-glanced at his watch, and pressed an electric button.
-
-"Mr. Slade," he said, fixing his lantern-like stare
-upon the promoter, "I need not tell you that we are
-in a desperate situation, that it is time for
-action—decisive and immediate action."
-
-Slade answered by an impatient jerking of his
-thumb, and, rising as he beheld the secretary
-returning from the private office where he had been sent
-by a look of Gunther's, said:
-
-"I understand perfectly. If the gentlemen whom
-I am to meet understand the situation as well as I
-do, we shall have no trouble."
-
-Gunther continued to study him thoughtfully,
-struck by the confidence of his attitude where
-desperation might have been expected. He seemed for
-a moment about to say something, but presently,
-giving a sign to his secretary, began thoughtfully
-to shuffle the cards.
-
-In the private office a group of men were
-assembled about the long table. The disposition of
-Slade had been but an incident in the discussion
-which had been called to decide upon the methods
-to be pursued in coming to the support of the
-market, and the deliberation had left its marks of
-dissension. Slade, on entering, rapidly surveyed the
-group, perceived its discord, and divided it into its
-component interests.
-
-"The United Mining is the key," he said, on
-recognizing Haggerty and Forscheim.
-
-The group was like a trans-section of that
-conflicting America which seems to hold the destiny
-of types. Fontaine, one of the landed proprietors
-of the city, French of descent and aristocratic by the
-purifying experience of two generations, was next
-to Haggerty, a cross-grained, roughly hewn type of
-the indomitable Irish immigrant of the seventies, who
-had risen to power out of the silver mines of the
-eighties. Leo Marx, olive in tint, whispering in
-manner, thin-veined and handsome, represented the
-Jewish aristocracy that had ingrained itself in the
-great banking houses of New York; while Forscheim,
-leading spirit of five brothers, abrupt, too aggressive
-or too compliant, cunning and unsatisfied, was the
-Hebrew of speculation, the creator of the great
-corporation known as the United Mining.
-
-Judge Seton B. Barton, representative of the great
-oil interests, was the grim Yankee, unrelieved by his
-modifying humor, implacable in small things as well
-as great, knowing no other interest in life except the
-passion of acquiring.
-
-Kraus, an ungainly, bulky German-American, had
-not moved from the half-retreating position he had
-taken on seating himself. He answered with a
-short movement of his head, watching every one
-with covetous, suspicious eyes that glimmered weakly
-over the spectacles which had slipped to the bridge
-of his nose, never suggested a move, and gave his
-assent the last. He was the owner of a fortune
-estimated at three hundred millions, acquired in
-lumber holdings over a territory in the West which
-would have made another Belgium.
-
-McBane, one of the strongest figures which the
-rise of the great steel industry had propelled into
-the public light, was a short, fussy, brisk little man,
-tenacious, agile, obstinate in opinion, while
-outwardly smiling with a general air of delighted
-surprise at his own success. He was the present
-active force in the group of steel magnates whose
-personal fortunes alone amounted to over three
-quarters of a billion.
-
-Marcus Stone, president of the greatest banking
-force of the country, the Columbus National, was a
-middle-westerner, sprung from the hardy soil of
-Ohio, virile, deep-lunged, direct and domineering,
-agent of colossal enterprises, rooted in conservatism
-and regarding his vocation as an almost sacred call.
-He accounted himself a poor man; he was worth
-only three millions.
-
-Rupert V. Steele, head of the legal firm of Steele,
-Forshay & Benton, corporation lawyers, was the
-type of the brilliant Southerner, adventuring into
-the Eldorado of New York as the Gascon seeks
-Paris or the Irishman the lure of London. He
-might almost be said to have created a new
-profession—the lawyer-promoter—and in his capacious,
-fertile head had been evolved the schemes of
-law-avoiding combinations that others received the credit
-for. In public he was one of the stanchest defenders
-of the Constitution and an eloquent exponent of the
-sanctity of the judiciary.
-
-With the exception of Fontaine and Marx, in
-this varied group of master-adventurers, all had
-begun life with little better than the coats on their
-backs, and the colossal fortunes which roughly
-totaled two billions had been amassed in virtually
-twenty years. This is a point which future
-economists may ponder over with profit.
-
-At Slade's entrance the conversation abruptly
-ceased and each in his own manner studied the new
-arrival; some with languid, confident curiosity;
-Forscheim, who had old scores to settle, with a glance of
-unrestrained satisfaction; Steele, leaning a little
-forward, eager in his inquisitorial mind to divine the
-attack, already convinced that such a personality as
-Slade would not come without an aggressive defense.
-
-The second glance reassured Slade, for he
-distinguished in the group the conflicting rivalries and
-perceived by what slender checks the irrepressible
-jealousies and antagonisms had been stilled.
-
-"If they've got together," he said to himself with
-a sudden delight in a favorable hazard, "it's because
-they're scared to the ground and they want to shut
-off the panic first and trim me second. Good!
-That's what I wanted to be sure of."
-
-He advanced to the head of the table, swinging
-into place a heavy chair which he swept through the
-air as though it had been paper, and, resolved to
-acquire the advantage of initiative, said:
-
-"Well, gentlemen, let's get right down to
-business. I've come to get five millions."
-
-In their astonishment several pushed back their
-chairs with a harsh, grating sound. Forscheim
-laughed aloud insolently, but Steele, sensitive to small
-things, instantly determined to employ caution, to
-be the last to crush him if he failed, and the first
-to support him if he had indeed the power to survive.
-
-"Mr. Slade," said Stone in his blasting manner,
-"your remark is in bad taste. The situation you
-are facing is an exceedingly serious one and only a
-prompt compliance on your part with the measures
-we have determined upon to avert a national
-calamity, will save you from bankruptcy"—he
-stopped, but not from hesitation, adding with a
-sudden flush of anger—"and worse."
-
-"We are here," said McBane, in tones of conviction
-which produced a nodding of assenting heads,
-"in the performance of a public duty. In carrying
-that out we do not intend to allow the fate of one
-man or a dozen to interfere with the steps we intend
-to take to restore public confidence."
-
-"And I repeat," said Slade, with a disdainful
-smile, "that I am here to get five millions; and you
-are going to give it to me."
-
-An outburst of exclamations followed this
-assertion, half angry, half contemptuous, above which
-was heard Forscheim's shrill nasal voice saying:
-
-"Dere is a shtate examiner, Mr. Shlade, don't
-forget dat."
-
-"My books are kept as carefully as yours, Forscheim,"
-said Slade, with a sudden angry concentration
-of his glance. He had once in a committee
-meeting taken Forscheim by the throat and flung him
-out of doors—a fear which the other could never
-forget. Then he struck the table a resounding blow
-with his fist, stilling the clamor.
-
-"Wait!" he exclaimed, rising until his bulky
-figure towered over the table. "Don't let's waste
-time. Come to the point. You think I've come
-here to receive your terms. You are mistaken.
-I've come here to deliver an ultimatum—my ultimatum."
-
-"Do you realize, sir," said Judge Barton sternly,
-"what the object of this meeting is? We are here
-to preserve the prosperity of this country for the
-next ten years, the homes and savings of millions
-of persons."
-
-"No, that is not why you are here," said Slade
-contemptuously. "I'll tell you why you are here.
-You are here to protect your own interests—first,
-last, and always! Because a panic to you means
-hundreds of millions, the end of development, the
-closing of markets; because at the end of a stock
-market panic is an industrial panic, and the end of
-any protracted individual depression means the
-colossal flattening out of your billion dollar trusts.
-That's why there'll never be another '93—that's
-the one good thing in the present situation the
-public doesn't know. There isn't going to be a '93 now,
-and you know it and I know it."
-
-"Suppose, Mr. Slade, you listen to our
-stipulations first," said McBane, but in a more conciliatory
-tone.
-
-Beyond his exposition which had struck all with its
-piercing verity, Slade had effected over them an
-almost physical mastery, which men grudgingly are
-forced to yield to masculine strength.
-
-"I know your demands," said Slade instantly.
-"Oh, there is no informer present. Nothing
-difficult. I know you and the way your minds work.
-You have three conditions: first, I am to resign
-the presidency of the Associated Trust; second,
-sell my stock control to a syndicate you have
-organized, which will stand as a guarantee to the public;
-third, the taking over of all my holdings in the
-Osaba territory by the United Mining Company.
-Am I right?"
-
-He did not need to wait for a reply; the answer
-was plain upon their countenances.
-
-"Now, gentlemen, I'm going to finish up," he
-said, pursuing his advantage. "Remember one
-thing: I'm not a Majendie. I fight to the last
-breath and when I'm downed I carry everything I
-get my hands on down with me.
-
-"Now, let's be perfectly plain. I know where I
-stand. If Majendie and the Atlantic Trust hadn't
-gone to smash, there wouldn't be a ghost of a show
-for me; you'd squeeze every last cent I had. I know
-it. I knew it then when I knew it was Majendie
-or me. But you see Majendie's dead and the
-Atlantic Trust—three hundred and eighty millions—has
-closed its doors. That makes all the difference
-in the world. You don't want to trim me—not
-primarily. Forscheim and the United Mining do—that's
-their private affair. What you men who count
-want, I repeat, is to stop this panic—to get me out
-of the way and stop the panic if you can; if you
-can't get me out of the way, to stop the panic at
-once—now—within twenty-four hours! Now,
-gentlemen, I defy you to let the Associated Trust
-close its doors tomorrow and prevent, with all your
-money, the wreck of every industry in the country."
-
-"You overestimate the importance of such a failure,"
-said Fontaine slowly, but without aggressiveness.
-
-Slade's attack had made a profound impression.
-
-"I have taken particular care that if the Associated
-fails, it'll be the biggest smash on record,"
-said Slade, ready now to play his trump card.
-
-"What do you mean?" demanded Haggerty,
-startled, while the others waited expectantly.
-
-"Just that," said Slade, not unwilling that they
-should know the depth of his game. "If the Associated
-fails, sixty-seven institutions fail from here
-to San Francisco. I have taken care of that in the
-last two months."
-
-"You haf ingreased your oplications at sooch a
-time!" fairly shrieked Forscheim, who saw his
-victory eluding him.
-
-"You bet I did," said Slade. "I made sure that
-I couldn't be *allowed* to fail."
-
-He took from his pocket a folded sheet and handed
-it to Steele, who had a moment before finally
-determined to come to his support.
-
-"That's what failure means. Pass it around,"
-he said.
-
-The lawyer elevated his eyebrows in astonishment.
-The disclosure of how Slade by negotiating
-loans with a number of subsidiary institutions
-throughout the country had made them united in
-his general fate, completed the dawning recognition
-of a master which had been forming in his mind.
-
-"He will beat them," he thought, passing on the
-paper. "He will go far. I must be his friend." Aloud
-he said carefully: "Of course, Mr. Slade, at
-the bottom the affairs of the Associated Trust are
-absolutely solvent."
-
-"Solvent under any system of banking in the world
-which does not withhold ready money on proper
-guarantees," said Slade, looking at him with a glance
-that showed the lawyer he had received his alliance;
-"solvent as the Atlantic Trust was, is, and will be
-proved to be. You gentlemen know that as well
-as I do."
-
-"Of course, Mr. Slade," said Steele, with an
-appearance of aggressiveness which the other
-understood perfectly, "one thing must be understood—the
-present speculative operations of the Trust
-Companies can not go on."
-
-"Now, gentlemen, to finish up," said Slade, who
-seized the hint. "Here's my answer: I will agree
-to any legislation, in fact will urge it, that will place
-the Trust Companies on the basis of the National
-Banks; that is, on the same conservative basis of
-loans and transactions. That is right. I am now
-convinced that it is for the best." He allowed a
-slight smile to show and continued: "I will resign
-as President of the Associated Trust three months
-from to-day. That I had already determined on.
-For what I wish to do, that would only be an
-embarrassment. You will lend me the five millions I
-wish and, better still, tomorrow morning make a
-simple announcement to the effect that, having
-consulted on the affairs of the Associated Trust, you
-have found no reasons for apprehension, and
-announce that you will come to its support. Sign it
-Fontaine, Gunther, McBane, Marx and Stone, and
-the run on the banks will end in twenty-four hours.
-Tomorrow morning I will personally assure Mr. Steele,
-by an examination of my books, that affairs
-are as I have described. After this examination you
-can place five millions to my disposal—if necessary.
-Believe me, this is a much better way to end the
-panic. You reassure public confidence by your
-guarantee. The other way, by forcing my resignation,
-you create an impression that everything is rotten.
-Besides, the first way has this advantage—it
-is the only way. That's my word, gentlemen; if
-you intend to stop the panic you've got to float me!"
-
-An hour later, having yielded not a jot of his
-position, turning a deaf ear to threats, expostulations
-and arguments, he rose victorious.
-
-In the anteroom he went up to Gunther, who was
-still bowed over his solitaire, waiting grimly until
-his word had been carried out.
-
-"Mr. Gunther," said Slade, stopping at the table,
-"we have come to an understanding. The gentlemen
-in the other room were agreeably surprised at
-my exposition of the affairs of the Associated Trust.
-They are going to lend me five millions."
-
-"Indeed!" said Gunther in a sort of grunt but
-with a countenance so impassive that Slade was
-moved to admiration.
-
-"Gunther," he said, suddenly carried away by a
-feeling of prophetic elation, "up to now you've
-known me only as a speculator. Now I'm going
-to become a conservative force. In a month I'm
-coming to you with a proposition. You're the only
-man I would ever trust. Good-night."
-
-His automobile was waiting. He threw himself
-riotously into it, giving the address of Mrs. Kildair's
-apartment; and as he felt the pleasant, exhilarating
-sensation which the speed of his machine conveyed
-to him, he repeated, feeling suddenly how at last
-he had emerged from the perils of the first phase
-which he had once so frankly defined:
-
-"Now, I'll be conservative!"
-
-Unlike Gunther, who had behind him the traditions
-of generations of authority, Slade had that
-typical quality so perplexing in the American
-millionaire of sudden fortune—the childlike eagerness
-for admiration. When he arrived at Mrs. Kildair's
-and found that she was still absent, he was consumed
-with a nervous impatience. He seated himself at
-the piano, playing over clumsily refrains of the crude
-ranch songs which came to him as an echo of his
-earlier struggling days. But these echoes of a past
-conflict seemed only to whet his impatience. He
-ended with a crashing discord and rose, lighting
-another cigar, pacing the broad space of the studio
-with rapid, restless strides, surprised at the
-annoyance which her absence brought him.
-
-When Mrs. Kildair entered, let in by Henriette,
-her maid, Slade flung aside his cigar and strode
-impatiently forward.
-
-One glance at his triumphant face told her what
-she wanted to know. She made a quick sign to him
-with her hand and turned her back, disengaging her
-opera cloak with exaggerated slowness, drawing a
-deep breath. Then she sent Henriette upstairs to
-her room to wait until she called.
-
-"Congratulations," she said calmly, entering the
-studio and extending her hand. "You have won!"
-
-"How do you know?" he said, taken back by her
-composure.
-
-"It is there—in your eyes," she said, passing
-her fingers so close to them that he seemed to feel
-their soft contact. "Tell me all about it."
-
-"Yes, I've beaten them—Fontaine, Barton,
-Forscheim, Haggerty, the whole lot of them," he
-cried with a gleeful laugh. "More, I've forced
-myself into their hidebound circle. You'll see—in a
-month I'll be one of them."
-
-At times roguishly delighted as a boy, at others
-with flashes of primitive power, he related to the
-eager woman all the details of the night and the
-desperate stake he had played to make a failure so
-colossal that they themselves would recoil before it.
-
-"And if Majendie had not killed himself?" she
-said breathlessly, womanlike perceiving the hazards
-of fate.
-
-"But he did!" he cried impatiently, unwilling to
-admit the element of chance in the destiny he had
-hewn for himself. But the thought sobered him.
-He looked down from the height to which his
-ambition had flung him. "It's true. It was either
-Majendie or me," he said quietly. "Shall I tell you
-something? That night we were here I knew he
-was lost—that he would do it. Don't ask me how
-I knew!" Then, shaking off the memory as an
-evil dream, he continued, extending his arm in crude
-magnetic gestures: "Well, that's over. I am where
-I want to be; the rest is easy. In a month—two
-months—they will see, Forscheim and Haggerty,
-how the trap they laid for me has sprung against
-them. Tonight will be worth twenty millions to me."
-
-"How do you mean?" she said eagerly, but she
-did not look at him. Slade, triumphant in his brute
-power, inspired her with an emotion she did not
-dare to show him yet.
-
-"Forscheim and Haggerty, the United Mining,"
-he said, forgetting his habitual caution in the now
-present desire to dazzle and overcome this woman
-who had so resisted him, who had become so
-suddenly necessary to him, "have laid their trap to get
-hold of the Osaba territory. They've stripped
-Gilbert and old General Paxton of their holdings, and
-they were sure they'd strip me. The Osaba gold
-fields will be one day worth hundreds of millions—another
-Eldorado. Well, they'll get a third interest
-tonight. I've got a third, and Striker and Benz.
-Mexican United, who've fought them tooth and
-nail, have another third. Each now has got to have
-what I've got or get out. I've got the control and
-when I sell—" He ended with a laugh. "I've
-licked Forscheim before but it will be nothing to
-this. They thought they had me down and they
-played into my hands!"
-
-Suddenly he changed his tone as the memory came
-to him of Gunther impassively waiting in his anteroom.
-
-"Now they'll see what I can do," he said savagely.
-"Gunther's the only real man among them. I must
-have Gunther. With him I can do what I
-want—construct, construct!"
-
-She rose, stopping him as he most wanted to continue.
-
-"You must go now," she said quietly; "I've already
-done what I shouldn't."
-
-He stopped, infuriated at this check to his
-inclinations, for, beyond his victory over the men he
-had fought, she still eluded him.
-
-"Did you care what happened to me—much?"
-he asked savagely.
-
-"Yes; I was surprised how much I cared," she
-said slowly, keeping her eyes on his.
-
-There are certain strong, direct characters who are
-most vulnerable in the moment of their greatest
-exaltation as the generality of men are weakest in their
-defeats. She saw in his eyes how much she lacked
-to his complete triumph and suddenly seized the
-opportunity by the forelock.
-
-"Why are you afraid to marry?" she said vigorously.
-"You are a child; you don't understand life.
-You don't know how to draw from it the incitements
-it can give you. You wish to be a great figure and
-you think you can remain an outcast."
-
-"What do you mean?" he said roughly, and
-advancing he took her by the shoulders without her
-recoiling.
-
-"You want to be another Gunther," she said,
-meeting his glance with an intensity of ambition
-greater than his, "and you wish to fight like a
-guerrilla. You think you need no one, and you need
-admiration, confidence, to be spurred on, flattered,
-cajoled, made to feel your greatness, to have it
-dinned into your ears day and night, to be surrounded
-by it. You have the vanity of a god and you don't
-know how to feed it."
-
-"Well, what would you do?" he said, still holding
-her from him.
-
-"I would make you what you should be: a
-personage—not a wanderer," she said with
-extraordinary energy. "I'd make your home a court; I'd
-show you what it meant to step into your box at
-the opera and have the feeling that every eye in
-the house turned to you. You want to do great
-things—but you want to feel that you have done
-great things, that others are impressed by them,
-envy and look up to you. You want that stimulus
-and there is only one way to get it. Take your
-place in society, where you belong among the great
-figures."
-
-"I find my own stimulus," he said, looking at her.
-
-"Listen, John Slade," she said furiously. "You
-think because you have always done what you want
-with women that that will continue. It won't. You
-are at a dangerous age. You have depended upon
-women; you cannot shake it off. The day will
-come when you'll be caught as every man is who
-plays beyond his youth and strength. Women will
-either hinder you or push you on. Make up your
-mind now. Which do you want?"
-
-"I want you!" he said, suddenly caught by her
-words that came as an answer to his new view of
-himself; and violently, characteristically, he added,
-enfolding her: "And when I want a thing, I want
-it now! Get your wraps on. We're going over to
-Jersey now and get married."
-
-"No, no," she said firmly though her heart was
-beating so that she thought he must hear it.
-
-"You've got me. I never expected it, but I've
-got to have you," he said and brutally, without
-thinking whether he hurt her or not, he forced her
-head up to his. She did not resist, intoxicated,
-carried away by her absolute helplessness in his arms.
-Then, confident, he renewed his demand that they
-should be married that night, at once.
-
-"No, no," she said, disengaging herself, and
-though all her natural being responded to his
-demand, her intellectual self conquered, knowing full
-well that beyond winning him, she must always
-maintain over him a certain moral superiority. "No.
-To do what I want to do, we must not give any one
-the slightest occasion to talk. Such an act as this
-would be suicidal."
-
-"When then?" he said furiously.
-
-"Announce our engagement tomorrow," she said,
-"and in a week we can be married very quietly."
-
-"A week!" he cried indignantly.
-
-"Or less," she said, smiling; "and now you must go."
-
-"You haven't said, 'I love you,'" he said with a
-last flash of antagonistic suspicion.
-
-"When I say it you will be satisfied," she said,
-with a look that revealed to him a new, undiscovered
-world.
-
-"Rita," he persisted doggedly, seizing her wrist,
-"I know what you can do, what you'll make of us,
-but that's not all. I don't want any cold-blooded
-reason-and-logic marriage. Look here. You've
-got to love me—like hell—do you understand?"
-
-She turned on him swiftly, opening her lips until
-her white teeth showed in their tense grip. Then,
-suddenly veiling her emotion in a relaxing smile,
-she said, as she rang for Henriette:
-
-"No woman could find it hard to love you, John
-Slade."
-
-When he had left she remained standing a long
-while very thoughtfully. Then she went quietly
-upstairs and fell almost immediately into a quiet,
-profound sleep. Her own self-possession surprised
-her; but unusual natures have this over common-place
-ones that they are continually surprising themselves.
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`CHAPTER XIX`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- CHAPTER XIX
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-When the next day Beecher reached his club he
-found all discussions centered upon John G. Slade
-and the astonishing and incomprehensible outcome
-of the conference at Gunther's of which
-naturally only the usual misinformation was known.
-The morning papers had contained a reassuring
-statement, backed by powerful names, of the
-condition of the Associated Trust, with promises of
-support. Gunther had publicly announced that he
-would bring twenty millions of ready money to
-relieve the financial stringency and, if that were not
-sufficient, twenty millions more. When the man in
-the Street comprehended that the great fortunes of
-the country had authorized this step, the effect was
-instantaneous. The stock market opened with loss
-of two to three points and immediately recovered
-this decline and, for the first time during the week,
-registered distinct advances. The runs on the banks
-still continued, but the lines of depositors were
-apparently less. At eleven o'clock Rupert V. Steele
-visibly entered the offices of the Associated Trust
-and, advancing to the deserted window of the
-cashier, made the first deposit. In a minute it was
-publicly announced that five millions of dollars had
-just been deposited to the credit of the great
-Columbus National. Half of the waiting line, wavered,
-turned and went home.
-
-"Well, Slade's turned the trick," said Gunther,
-joining his friend. "But how he managed to
-wriggle through is a mystery."
-
-"Haven't seen the papers," said Beecher. "What
-do they say about Emma Fornez?"
-
-"Couldn't be better. The third act bowled 'em
-over," said Gunther, laughing. Beecher had told
-him of the diva's prophecy. "By the way, Ted, my
-long shot may not prove such a wild one. Mapleson
-is a close friend of the Cheevers—rather attentive
-to the lady, who from all accounts is a rather frisky
-one. I telephoned McKenna about it and he seemed
-distinctly interested."
-
-"McKenna?" said Beecher, opening his eyes.
-
-"Well, yes," said Gunther, laughing; "but forget
-I told you. Besides, I have a feeling that things
-will open up now."
-
-"Is McKenna on the trail of any one?"
-
-"Well, yes," said Gunther slowly; "and I don't
-think it'll be long now before we hear of him. How
-about lunch?"
-
-At this moment a boy arrived with summons for
-Beecher to the telephone. He did not recognize the
-voice immediately.
-
-"You don't know who it is?" said a woman.
-
-He thought he recognized the tones of Miss
-Rivers, whom he had shamefully neglected in the
-excitement of the last days; but, warily, he did not
-commit himself.
-
-"You're disguising your voice," he said cautiously.
-
-"Not at all. You are not very flattering—but
-when one listens so much to the voice of Emma
-Fornez—"
-
-"Miss Charters," he said instantly.
-
-"At last."
-
-He was suddenly troubled at the discovery, for he
-had sincerely persuaded himself that he did not
-intend to see her again.
-
-"She is going to reproach me," he thought
-uneasily, "for not returning to see her last night.
-The devil! Well, I shall tell her the truth—I didn't
-like her companion."
-
-But instead of reproaches she said in very good
-humor:
-
-"Look out, I can be very jealous. What are
-you doing tonight?"
-
-"I am dining out," he said, fibbing promptly,
-determined to remain firm.
-
-"Oh—I'm sorry," she said, with a quick
-dropping of her tone. "I wanted you to take
-me to a dress rehearsal that will be very amusing."
-
-"I'm sorry too."
-
-"What are you doing this afternoon, around tea
-time?"
-
-"I have an engagement," he said truthfully.
-
-"With Emma Fornez?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"I am not very lucky, am I?" she said.
-
-The wounded tone in her voice made him feel a
-bit ashamed. He saw that she would not ask him
-again and relented a little.
-
-"Will you be in at four? I can drop in for a
-little chat then," he said, amazed at his own
-yielding even as he spoke the words.
-
-"Come then. I want very much to see you," she
-answered but without lightness.
-
-"Now I'm in it again!" he said ruefully as he
-left the telephone. "What the deuce made me say
-I'd go. Just because I didn't want to hurt
-her—O Lord! Steady, old boy, steady!"
-
-Outside the booth he found Gunther, an afternoon's
-paper in his hand, scanning it with excitement
-on every feature.
-
-"I say, Ted, here's news indeed," he cried.
-"What do you think of that?"
-
-He pointed to the headline on the front page
-where the engagement of John G. Slade to Mrs. Rita
-Kildair was announced in large type. The two
-young men looked at each other in profound
-astonishment.
-
-"By Jove!" said Beecher, suddenly enlightened.
-"That's what was at the bottom last night! Now
-I understand." In a moment he comprehended the
-full measure of the agony of uncertainty she must
-have suffered at his side in the returning automobile.
-"So that was her game after all!"
-
-"Now things'll begin to move," said Gunther
-eagerly. "If she really knows who's the thief, as
-McKenna believes, the ring ought to be returned in
-forty-eight hours."
-
-"Why?"
-
-"Because now that she is publicly engaged to
-Slade, any one who has been trading on the knowledge
-of how she got the ring won't have a shred to
-blackmail her with. You see it now becomes the
-engagement ring that Slade gave her and she can
-move openly; and from what I've seen of her, she'll
-lose no time. Ted, I'll prophesy in forty-eight hours
-we'll hear something about that ring."
-
-"I believe you're right," said Beecher as they
-went into luncheon; and, thinking of the curious
-conjunction of Mrs. Kildair's and Miss Charters'
-prophecy as to the return of the ring, he said to
-himself unwillingly: "If the ring is returned, does that
-mean that Mrs. Bloodgood took it?"
-
-A little after four he went to pay his call on
-Miss Charters and as he had become accustomed to
-her perplexing change of moods, he wondered in
-what temper she would receive him. She was in a
-Russian blouse of gray corduroy relieved by a broad
-lace collar and fitted loosely to her straight, lithe
-body by a belt at the waist, an effect of girlish
-simplicity, very yielding and artless.
-
-She did not wait for him in the sitting-room but
-came out into the hall, taking his hat and stick
-herself and leading the way. Once in the cosy
-sitting-room she stopped, turning to face him and suddenly
-taking his hands in hers.
-
-"Let me look at you," she said, drawing off and
-raising her eyes to his thoughtfully, while her lips
-twisted a little into a most serious sternness.
-
-"Little imp!" he thought grimly, prepared
-against her wiles and yet a little startled at this
-figure of a young girl which so tantalizingly confronted
-him.
-
-She saw at once, in the amused composure of his
-face, that she had been mistaken in ascribing his
-absence to the pique of jealousy. What she had on
-her lips she did not say, and suddenly alert at the
-realization that her presence no longer troubled him
-she drew him toward the fireplace, leading him to a
-great armchair.
-
-"There," she said, laughing, "you will see how
-we treat the prodigal son. Sit down." She brought
-a cushion and insisted upon placing it behind his
-back. "Don't get up. A scotch and soda? Sit
-still—I like to mix it."
-
-She went to a table and presently came back with
-the tumbler, offering it to him with a well simulated
-attitude of submission. When he took it, she dropped
-a curtsey and going to the library table,
-returned with a box of cigars and the matches.
-Continuing always the same game, determined to force
-a laugh, she lit the match, holding it to him between
-her rosy palms.
-
-"Is your lordship satisfied?"
-
-"I am."
-
-She lit a cigarette in turn and camping down on
-the bear rug, Eastern fashion, puffed a ring of
-smoke in the direction of the fire. For a moment
-neither spoke, she studying the embers, he
-enjoying this new side to her and awaiting the next
-development.
-
-"I'm very unhappy," she said at last, without
-looking at him.
-
-"I'm sorry," he answered sympathetically.
-
-"I have had a great disappointment. I read that
-play of Hargrave's again—there's nothing to it."
-
-"You surprise me."
-
-The fact was that Brockway, Stigler's stage director
-had torn it to pieces. She continued, repeating
-what Brockway had said:
-
-"The trouble is, it's not actable. It's like all
-plays that read well—I should have known it.
-There's no dramatic action. Then, it has one great
-fault—all young writers have it—you see, every
-scene should be a unit in itself, express one
-dramatic emotion, develop it, and increase it; and
-Hargrave puts three or four emotions in the same
-page—five or six," she continued indignantly. "It's
-all mixed up—topsy-turvy—no actress could
-make an effect." (This had been its chief merit two
-days before.) "It's very sad; I shall never find a
-play."
-
-"You were very enthusiastic a few days ago," he said.
-
-"Was I?" she said resentfully. "You see, the
-trouble is, in reading you imagine things that aren't
-there."
-
-"So Hargrave isn't a genius after all?" he asked.
-
-"He is very conceited—insufferably so," she said
-abruptly. "But you don't understand—it's the
-disappointment to me—I shall never find a play.
-Sometimes I feel like giving it all up. It's
-terrible—breaking your heart day after day. Yes,
-sometimes I feel like never acting again."
-
-"You are in a blue mood," he said cheerfully.
-
-"Everything has gone wrong," she said, pouting.
-"Even you have changed!"
-
-She looked at him with a look of a tired child,
-longing to climb into his lap to be consoled.
-
-"How so?" he said, opening his eyes.
-
-"Teddy, have I offended you?" she asked gently,
-seeing that she could not unbend him by playing
-upon his sympathy.
-
-"Not the least."
-
-She would have preferred any answer but this.
-
-"Why wouldn't you go with me tonight?" she
-said quickly.
-
-"Because I have another engagement," he said,
-instinctively glancing at the clock.
-
-She saw the look, sprang up from the rug furiously,
-and leaping toward the mantelpiece seized the
-offending clock and flung it across the room in a
-tantrum.
-
-"Go to your Emma Fornez!" she said, stamping
-her foot. "If you are going to sit here and
-measure the minutes, you can go!"
-
-He rose, startled at the passion of jealousy he
-had aroused.
-
-"I told you I had an engagement," he began.
-
-"Nonsense!" she burst out, still the prey of her
-anger. "You know very well you can keep her
-waiting half an hour if you wish, and you know
-very well that you can put off your engagement
-to-night—or is it with her, always with her?"
-
-"I don't care to discuss my engagements," he said
-coldly, an emotion which he was far from feeling,
-for the sudden wild-eyed fury into which he had
-plunged her awoke in him something that thrilled
-him, as he had been thrilled the day he had returned
-Mrs. Bloodgood to her home, at the thought of what
-a consuming passion might be.
-
-"Why do you tag around with her?" she continued
-heedlessly. "I should think you'd have more
-regard for your dignity—for what people
-think—Emma Fornez—ah!"
-
-She stopped, pressing her handkerchief to her eyes
-and then, feeling he had perceived it, she exclaimed:
-"If I cry it's because I am
-disappointed—disillusionized—angry!"
-
-She turned her back and went quickly to the
-window where the little Dresden clock lay shattered in
-a corner. She picked it up and looked at it,
-swallowing her anger. Then, as he continued to keep
-the silence, she came back, without looking at him,
-placed the clock on the mantelpiece again and said
-coldly:
-
-"Well, it is time for you to go—not to keep her
-waiting."
-
-"Good-afternoon," he said with a bow, and left
-the apartment.
-
-When he reached the street, he was overcome with
-surprise.
-
-"By Jove!" he said, swinging joyfully along.
-"Is it possible after all that she does care about
-me? How her eyes blazed—the little fury. That
-at least wasn't acting!"
-
-And though he remained until late, amused at
-Emma Fornez, he felt the flame of the other
-presence about him, obtruding itself at every moment;
-and he who had seen the play of strong emotions
-in Mrs. Bloodgood and Mrs. Kildair, avidly began
-to feel what it would mean to be loved with such
-intensity.
-
-Emma Fornez questioned him about Miss Charters
-but for the first time he resolutely concealed
-from her what had taken place.
-
-That night on his return to his rooms, he found a
-short note from Bruce Gunther:
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-DEAR TED,
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-Be at McKenna's offices to-morrow—ten sharp.
-Something doing.
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-\B.
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-P.S. Keep this to yourself—*savez*?
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`CHAPTER XX`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- CHAPTER XX
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-DEAR TEDDY,
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-I am very much ashamed at what happened yesterday.
-Please forgive my ill-humor and some day, when you have
-a spare hour, do come to see me.
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-.. class:: noindent white-space-pre-line
-
- Very cordially your friend,
- NAN CHARTERS.
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-This note was the first which Beecher read on
-awakening the next morning. He had slept by
-fits and starts, troubled by the memory of his last
-interview with the young actress. The sudden
-unchecked tempest of jealousy and anger which had
-revealed to him the dramatic intensity of the woman
-had made a more haunting impression on his
-imagination than all her premeditated appeals.
-
-"If after all she does love me? How tremendous
-it would be," he had said to himself a dozen
-times, turning restlessly, in the half stupor of
-waking sleep.
-
-He lived over again the scene—only this time it
-seemed to him that when she had flung the clock from
-her in a passion, he had laughed joyfully and caught
-her struggling in his arms, exulting in this rage which
-burned so close to him. His first impulse on reading
-her note was to telephone her immediately, but
-he resisted this movement, saying to himself that that
-would be surrendering all his advantage.
-
-"I'll call up later," he thought with a smile; "that
-will be much better."
-
-He went eagerly down to McKenna's office,
-wondering what surprise was in store. Gunther and
-McKenna were already in the latter's private office,
-as he entered, and with the first look he took at
-the detective's smiling countenance, he perceived
-that he must be on the track of something significant.
-
-"We were discussing Mrs. Kildair's engagement,"
-said Gunther. "McKenna agrees with me that it
-will expedite matters wonderfully."
-
-"How did Slade manage it?" said Beecher at once.
-
-The detective, without answering, went to his desk
-and picked up a square of cardboard on which he
-had pasted two clippings from the newspapers, one
-the announcement signed by Gunther, Sr., Marx and
-Fontaine, giving notice of their support of the
-Associated Trust, and the other the bare announcement
-of the prospective marriage of John G. Slade
-and Mrs. Rita Kildair.
-
-"I am going to preserve this and hang it up over
-my mantelpiece," he said, looking at it thoughtfully,
-"and when I have an idle hour, I'll stretch out,
-smoke up and study it. A couple of million people
-must have seen that—and that's all they'll ever
-know."
-
-"And you?"
-
-"I can only—deduce," he said, a twinkle in his
-eye. He glanced at the clock and said hurriedly:
-"Now we must get down to business. I am
-expecting some one in half an hour who ought to
-particularly interest you."
-
-"You know who took the ring!" said Beecher
-instantly.
-
-"I know several things," said McKenna briskly;
-"but everything in place. I promised you gentlemen,
-as you are interested in those things, a little history
-of the party that was at Mrs. Kildair's that night.
-It's nothing as literary style goes—just facts. Here
-it is. I'll skip the personal descriptions."
-
-He took up a bundle of notes, seated himself on the
-corner of the flat desk, and began to read:
-
-"Cheever, Stanley: Age 48; married; old New
-York family; left a fortune estimated at $425,000, at
-the death of his father, Ganet Cheever, when he was
-twenty-eight. Lived ten years abroad, principally
-London; inveterate gambler; lost heavily at Monte
-Carlo—sum estimated at $125,000; later became
-involved in a gambling scandal in England, but it was
-hushed up by his payment of a large sum to cover
-notes given. Continued to lose heavily at St. Petersburg,
-Baden and Paris; began borrowing large sums,
-meeting obligations with difficulty. Declared
-bankruptcy in Colorado, where he had gone to promote
-a mine; his statements contested by creditors who
-brought suit; contest settled out of court by
-payment by his relatives to avoid a family scandal.
-Returned to New York and engaged himself as an
-exploiter of well-known wine merchants. Married
-three years ago Lydia Borgen, daughter of a large
-importing grocer, who brought him $100,000.
-Lives at rate of $20,000 a year. Only known
-occupation gambling; said to have won fifty-five
-thousand dollars in three nights' play from Kane
-Wentworth and Thomas Haggerty, Jr.,—protested but
-paid. Method of play has occasioned numerous
-reports to his discredit. Accused operating a system
-of private signals with his wife, by Mrs. Elmer
-Jardine after scene at card-table; brought suit for libel
-against her and received $12,000 damages out of
-court to compromise it. Is not received in home of
-father-in-law. Cut off by mother's will. Frequently
-quarrels with his wife over the attentions of other
-men. Known to have applied unsuccessfully at
-several banks within the last month to raise loans.
-Heavily speculated on long side of recent market,
-purchasing large block of stocks, margined, on morning
-after theft of ring, and said to be heavily involved.
-Sought aid of wife's relatives day before yesterday;
-refused.
-
-"Cheever, Mrs. Lydia: Born Lydia Borgen, daughter
-Harris Borgen, German immigrant, who married
-Lydia Foley, waitress in Pearl Street restaurant.
-Father made fortune in grocery business, establishing
-with brother in South America a large importing
-office dealing in cocoa, coffee, and fruit. At death
-of uncle, Lydia became heir to $100,000. Father
-said to be worth three quarters of a million, but
-estranged from daughter, whose marriage he opposed.
-As a young girl Lydia, rebellious and wild,
-constantly involved in escapades, notably with an actor,
-James Rocker, with whom she attempted to elope
-and go on the stage. Kept under strict surveillance,
-but at age of seventeen ran off with Charles
-Bourgoyne, young English groom at Waltby's riding
-academy. Pursued and arrested just as about to be
-married in New Jersey. Bourgoyne arrested for
-abduction but later paid to leave country. Married at
-nineteen to Stanley Cheever, through mediation of
-mother and a Mrs. Dorgan, notorious marriage
-broker. Has become tool of husband in schemes
-of raising money while leading a separate existence.
-Keeps private bank account unknown to husband.
-Very extravagant in personal expenses which
-cannot be accounted for on known income. From
-beginning of married life has been conspicuous for
-her relations with other men, generally wealthy
-bachelors, who have subsequently lost money at cards:
-names best known, Edward Fontaine, Reginald
-Forrest, Thomas Haggerty, Jr. At present seen
-frequently with R. G. Mapleson of firm of Sontag & Co.—"
-
-"Mapleson!" said the two young men in a breath.
-
-"I know what you mean," said McKenna, raising
-his hand. "Wait till I get through"; and he continued
-to read in his matter-of-fact, unemotional voice
-these pages of hard, glaring facts that left his
-hearers straining forward to catch every word:
-
-"At present deeply involved in affair with
-E. V. Garraboy. Seems to have been introduced to the
-broker at desire of husband, to obtain through this
-channel information which his sister, Mrs. Enos
-Bloodgood, may have acquired from B. L. Majendie
-of financial affairs in general and particularly
-Atlantic Trust. Acquaintance developed into violent
-passion for Garraboy by Mrs. Cheever; has met him
-frequently of late, twice having been followed to
-his apartments. Of late, scenes with husband have
-been increasing in violence, coupled with mutual
-threats—believe rupture possible.
-
-"*Item*: Bills against Mrs. Cheever known to be
-outstanding include $13,800 to Sontag & Co., for
-jewels; $1,200 to Madame Cortin for hats, etc.;
-$8,300 to Friegel Bros., robes.
-
-"*Item*: The $100,000 she inherited, stands in
-her own name, but is believed to be now reduced to
-$75,000. Morning after theft of ring, sold short
-through Garraboy, her broker, 5,000 shares Union
-Pacific. For further details, see Garraboy.
-
-"Charming little domestic circle, eh?" said
-McKenna, laying down the sheet. "Now for another:
-
-"Bloodgood, Enos R.: Owner New York *Daily
-Star*; large holder of real estate in lower New York;
-director Metropolitan Opera; brought up, at death
-of his parents, by his grandfather, Joseph Bloodgood,
-president of the Northwestern Railroad, as his
-prospective heir. At age of 20, despite threats of his
-guardian, left college and married Charlotte Granby,
-daughter of his tutor. Promptly disinherited.
-Went to work as a clerk in Brooklyn drygoods store,
-living on twenty-five dollars a week, refusing all
-overtures from grandfather, who offered to forgive
-him on condition of separation from his wife,
-allowing her $20,000. Refused and lived in that
-condition for five years until her death, brought on by
-privations. Reconciled with grandfather and sent
-abroad for a journey through Europe. Two years
-later became violently infatuated with a Spanish
-singer of the Café Chantants and went with her on a
-trip to South America, again defying his guardian.
-At the end of a year, affair ended by a secret
-payment made by his grandfather to the woman to
-procure her desertion. Followed her and engaged in
-duel with her companion, from whom he received
-serious wounds. After recovery, returned to Paris,
-where he again became entangled in violent infatuations.
-On point of marrying an Austrian countess
-of doubtful history, fell ill with pneumonia and
-almost died. Returned to New York and became
-reconciled with grandfather. Seemed to turn over
-new leaf; entered journalism and made good record
-for steadiness and conservatism, leading exemplary
-life. Grandfather, in his will, however, contrary to
-expectations, cut him off with $20,000. Two months
-later, married Mrs. Georgiana Wakeman, fifteen
-years his senior, fortune estimated at ten millions,
-widow of former owner of N. Y. *Star*, which then
-passed under his control. Next ten years remarkable
-for his strict application to business and the
-dissoluteness of his private life. Mixed up in several
-promoting schemes with various success. At death
-of second wife, received bulk of fortune. Remained
-widower three years, greatly increasing fortune at
-period of Trust consolidations. Married third wife,
-Elise Garraboy, noted Southern beauty, no fortune.
-Union unhappy after first months; returned to his
-old habits. Three months ago forced to pay $15,000
-to prevent blackmailing suit on part of a Miss Edna
-Rusk, chorus girl. Plunged heavily on short side of
-late market in a pool formed to bear market; reputed
-to have made immense gains.
-
-"*Item*: Has been in confidential relations with
-Miss Maud Lille for some time. Visited her early
-morning, after theft of ring."
-
-"That's queer," said Gunther, startled at this final
-detail. "Did Bloodgood do anything in the market
-that day?"
-
-"Sold right and left," said McKenna, exchanging
-papers.
-
-Beecher, more impressionable than his companion,
-said nothing, overcome by the bare recital of this
-brutal, materialistic life that once had been young
-and stirred to unbelievable sacrifice.
-
-"Bloodgood, Mrs. Enos: Born Elise Garraboy;
-sister of Edward Garraboy; old Southern family,
-New Orleans; father Colonel Marston Garraboy;
-died when children were little. Mother married
-Boyd Hallowel, Englishman, third son Lord
-Carmody, came to live in New York. Hallowel died
-ten years later, leaving her with small income but
-social connections. Elise educated at convent; made
-début in society at age of eighteen; great beauty;
-numerous suitors; engaged in second season to Enos
-Bloodgood; engagement broken; married a year later.
-Story current, forced into it to save mother from
-bankruptcy. Left husband twice in first two years,
-but persuaded to return by mother. Met Bernard
-L. Majendie eight months ago at Palm Beach.
-Infatuation no secret; understood that two weeks
-before panic had placed her interests in hands of
-lawyers, who procured evidence for divorce; action
-halted temporarily. Night of party at Mrs. Kildair's,
-trunks packed for journey, tickets purchased
-at Grand Central to Montreal. Day after, made no
-investments in Wall Street. Following day, left
-home with trunks and returned shortly after suicide.
-Violent scenes with husband. Shut herself up in
-room for hours. That night went to home of
-Majendie, company with—"
-
-Suddenly McKenna stopped at a violent movement
-of surprise from Beecher, and said quickly, "—a
-woman and a young man. Said to be totally without
-funds; husband reputed to allow her only $120
-a month pocket-money. That's all."
-
-Gunther had been quick to see the agitation of his
-companion but, since he comprehended that whatever
-the part he had played Beecher wished to keep it in
-confidence, he pretended to have understood nothing.
-
-"Then there is no trace of Mrs. Bloodgood's
-having gone into the market?" he said.
-
-"None," replied McKenna. "There are other
-details, but they come better under head of the
-brother."
-
-He shuffled the remaining sheets and then, as
-though divining the unease of Beecher, he said in
-a matter-of-fact tone:
-
-"Here's the history of Miss Nan Charters; but as
-it gives us nothing important we don't know, I'll
-leave it out. Particularly as we're short of time.
-However, I'll say this—there is no record of any
-stock transactions except that which we know of
-already. The next is Miss Maud Lille, a curious
-character, too."
-
-Beecher drew a long breath and relaxed in his
-chair, grateful to McKenna for his consideration.
-
-"Lille, Maud," said the detective, reading. "Real
-name Margaret Case; daughter Rev. Hiram Case
-and Fanny Saunders, Zanesville, Ohio; left home at
-age of sixteen; studied one year to be trained nurse;
-left hospital and studied stenography; later joined
-traveling circus, business department; became press
-agent. Stranded in northern Arizona; earned living
-by writing for local newspapers under name Jane
-Anderson; went to San Francisco and from there to
-Honolulu, supporting herself by her writings,
-occasionally taking regular position as stenographer. In
-Hawaii met and married an eastern adventurer
-known under name of Edward Bracken; returned
-with him to San Francisco, where couple engaged in
-mining speculations. Husband pursued for fraud
-and fled; wife arrested but released. Went to
-Chicago after securing divorce and changed name to
-Maud Lille. Sent to Cripple Creek by Chicago
-*World* and made a hit by her graphic accounts of
-labor conditions. Married Patrick O'Fallon, wealthy
-mine owner. Went with him for trip in Europe but
-apparently dissatisfied with life left him and returned
-to newspaper work, establishing herself in New York.
-Not divorced. Under own name author of several
-successful novels; prefers Bohemian existence of
-journalist evidently, reporting prize-fights, political
-conventions, murder trials, etc. Attached to staff
-of New York *Star* and apparently much in confidence
-of owner. Lately much interested in stock market.
-On morning after theft met E. V. Garraboy at
-Levere's restaurant, near home, before breakfast;
-returned to her apartment and saw Enos Bloodgood
-two hours later. Reported sold short 500 shares
-Union Pacific."
-
-"By Jove," exclaimed Beecher as Gunther rose
-excitedly to his feet, "you've got it!"
-
-"Maud Lille took it first and transferred it to
-Garraboy," said Gunther, then he stopped, puzzled;
-"but Bloodgood—that's incredible!"
-
-"Hold in your horses," said McKenna, shaking
-his head with silent laughter, delighted, in fact, that
-they had fallen into his trap. "There's one more
-little history to read." He hesitated and then said:
-"Now, I don't want to play up to a little tin god on
-wheels, though that's easy enough. I'll say this,
-that a good deal of the information I am reading
-you I have had in hand. The gentleman whose
-bright little history I am going to read you, I have
-had my eyes on for some time. That'll develop.
-
-"Garraboy, Edward V.: Sent to military training
-school; expelled; went up north, boarding-school;
-expelled; tutored for college and went to Harvard;
-ran up debts to extent of over a thousand dollars in
-two months, signing promissory notes. Paid by
-stepfather, who withdrew him at the request of
-college authorities; cut off by family and sent to
-Chicago with four hundred dollars to enter business
-house. Instead, speculated in wheat market and said
-to have made a little money. Went to Denver with
-small capital and posed as son of wealthy parents.
-Made acquaintance of a family called Sanderson
-and shortly became engaged to daughter, heiress to
-considerable fortune. Engagement broken as result
-of investigations. Left Denver, leaving behind a
-number of debts and bad checks. Next, heard of in
-southern California, working in mine; got in
-shooting affray over daughter of Mexican and went into
-British Columbia. Used many names. Spent a year
-in small stock companies playing little rôles; made a
-lucky gamble in silver mine and went to San Francisco,
-living high. Went to Seattle; became engaged
-to a widow of large real estate manipulator;
-persuaded her to invest her money in land exploitation
-scheme in southern California which proved failure.
-Ran away from Seattle and went to Hawaii to sell
-imitation jewelry under name of Edward—"
-
-"Bracken!" exclaimed the two young men in one breath.
-
-"Exactly."
-
-"Married to Maud Lille!" cried Gunther, the
-first to recover his astonishment. "Why, the little
-toad! How the deuce did these women fall for him?"
-
-"Oh, that's a question by itself, Mr. Gunther,"
-said McKenna, smiling. "It's a good deal in studying
-what you're dealing with, and Garraboy watched
-them pretty close. Let me finish.
-
-"Came to San Francisco, as you know; fled to
-escape pursuit; changing name, shipped as clerk on a
-merchantman from New Orleans. Next known of
-him, returned from the Far East under own name
-with apparently a certain amount of money. On
-hearing marriage of his sister, came to New York and
-established himself in Wall Street, largely through
-the aid of Bloodgood, over whose head evidently
-has held some threat. Met Maud Lille and probably
-came to some understanding with her; has paid her
-money from time to time. Encouraged sister's
-infatuation for Majendie, whom sought to enlist in
-scheme for rice production in South; failed. Made
-money rapidly until three months ago, when several
-ventures failed and became involved. Secured
-personal loan of $10,000 from Majendie without knowledge
-of sister. Has lived at rate of $40,000 a year,
-running several establishments; said to have given
-$15,000 worth of jewelry to Mlle. Clo. D'Aresco, the
-dancer, on her last visit here. Made immense short
-sales in recent market and was on verge of failure
-when panic saved him. Has profited by infatuation
-of Mrs. Cheever to borrow large sums in last week.
-On day after theft sold steadily all day; under
-suspicions by his own clients and on verge of arrest,
-when drop in stocks turned tide in his favor.
-Reputed to have covered his losses and made $100,000
-in last three days."
-
-"You were on his track then!" exclaimed Beecher,
-suddenly enlightened.
-
-"I was and I am," said McKenna; "and in less
-than twenty-four hours I'll shake down that frisky
-gentleman for about forty-five thousand dollars that
-he has been speculating with. Four days ago I
-couldn't have collected forty-five cents. That's why
-I held off."
-
-"Good Lord!" said Beecher, suddenly remembering.
-"I say, McKenna, Miss Charters' money is
-tied up with him. You don't suppose—by Jove, I
-hope nothing's wrong!"
-
-"You give me the amount," said McKenna with
-a click of his teeth. "I'll get it. He knows, I guess,
-by this time what a pretty little story it would make
-in the morning papers. He won't resist—not he!"
-
-"Look here," said Beecher excitedly, putting his
-hand to his pocketbook. "By Jove, that's lucky.
-I've still got that order. I can telephone her now—"
-
-"Telephone nothing," said McKenna, reaching out
-his hand. "I don't need that order, except as a
-reference. Just keep it quiet. The young lady won't
-thank you less for your saving her without her
-knowledge, will she?"
-
-"No," said Beecher, flurried. "Here's the
-order. When'll you get at Garraboy?"
-
-"In about ten minutes," said McKenna, reaching
-over for a fresh cigar.
-
-"Here?"
-
-"Right here."
-
-"And the ring?" asked Gunther quickly.
-
-"What do you think?" said McKenna, his little
-eyes snapping through the blaze of the match as he
-lighted his cigar.
-
-"I think it lies between Mrs. Cheever, Miss Lille
-and Garraboy," said Gunther; "either woman took
-it and either passed it to Garraboy at the table—"
-
-"Well?" said McKenna, as Gunther hesitated.
-
-"Or Garraboy took it first and passed it to one
-of them."
-
-"Why?"
-
-"For fear that he or she had been seen taking it
-the first time—to cover up the tracks. Whoever
-may have seen the ring taken would believe the
-original thief had restored it and kept quiet."
-
-"That's ingenious, and I must say it may prove
-to have some bearing," said McKenna. "It's
-likewise possible. But you gentlemen have missed the
-whole point of what I've been reading you."
-
-"In what way?"
-
-"There's not one bit of evidence who took the
-ring," said McKenna, with a gesture at the
-recording sheets. "It shows who might have taken
-it—that's true. Now, what it shows is this—what was
-working in every one's mind the night of that party.
-You remember that it was on the night before
-Majendie's failure, and that the whole question of the
-panic hung on whether he was going to pull through
-or not. Now, of every one who was there, with the
-exception of Miss Charters, Mrs. Bloodgood and
-Mr. Beecher here, every one was in Wall Street up
-to their necks, and if they knew what had happened
-to Majendie they could call the turn. Now, what
-happened? Bloodgood was getting his information
-from Maud Lille, who got it from Garraboy, who
-easy enough could get it from his sister, not out
-of treachery, but unconsciously, you may be sure.
-Well, all these three got the straight tip. That's
-what the meeting next morning was about.
-Bloodgood never took the ring; that would be ridiculous;
-and Maud Lille, whatever her record for drifting, is
-not a crook. So those meetings were on the
-question of speculation, pure and simple.
-
-"Now, Mrs. Cheever got the news straight and
-Mr. Cheever didn't, though he depended on his wife
-working Garraboy. Cheever bought stocks and was
-caught. That likewise shows there may be some
-interesting developments in that charming little family,
-particularly when he finds out that Mrs. Cheever
-sold and won. Now, what have we to go on? Cheever's
-a crook—but if he took it, he did it alone.
-
-"Garraboy's a crook and, following Mr. Gunther's
-theory, he could have taken it alone or working with
-Mrs. Cheever. If there was any collusion, it was
-there. Gentlemen, I am only discussing possibilities."
-
-"If the ring was taken to raise money to gamble
-in Wall Street, then it lies between Cheever and
-Garraboy," said Gunther.
-
-"Say it this way: if Mrs. Cheever or Miss Lille
-took it, Garraboy would probably know—"
-
-"And Slade?" said Beecher.
-
-"If Slade took it, we're losing our time. Aren't
-we?" said McKenna.
-
-"McKenna, do you know?" said Gunther suddenly.
-
-"Unless I am very much mistaken, I'll know in
-twenty-four hours," said McKenna, "I know this—who
-has the ring and when he had it, and this
-evening, about 5:30 in the afternoon, I ought to
-know from the gentleman in question, who pawned
-it—unless I learn sooner."
-
-"Unless Garraboy confesses," said Beecher.
-
-"Gentlemen," said McKenna, answering with a
-nod an assistant who opened the door at this moment,
-"I'm not given to boasting, but I'll risk this." He
-went to the desk, wrote a name on a card, sealed
-it in an envelope and handed it to Beecher. "That's
-the name of the person who took the ring. Keep it
-until it is found. That sounds like Sherlock Holmes,
-but there's one reason why I feel like being a little
-stagey; and I don't mind admitting to you that I got
-to it by deduction—honest deduction, though!"
-
-"Why've you Garraboy here, then?" said Beecher,
-while the letter in his pocket seemed to radiate heat
-like an ember.
-
-"Do you want to know?—you'll be surprised,"
-said McKenna, going to the desk again. "Well, it's
-to convince myself that Garraboy had nothing to do
-with it."
-
-"What!" exclaimed the two.
-
-McKenna made them a signal to be silent and,
-taking up the loose sheets of the different records,
-started to place them in the drawer; but all at once
-he stopped, selected one, the record of the broker
-himself, and laid it face up on the table. The next
-moment the door opened and Garraboy came warily
-into the room.
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`CHAPTER XXI`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- CHAPTER XXI
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-At the sight of Beecher and Gunther, Garraboy
-stopped short, evidently nonplused.
-
-"I was told to come in," he said, lifting his eyebrows.
-
-"Quite right," said McKenna briskly, raising his
-voice a trifle. From the moment of the broker's
-entrance his eyes fastened on Garraboy, never
-leaving him. "Come right in."
-
-"I'm interrupting—" said Garraboy carefully,
-conscious of this set gaze.
-
-"Not in the least."
-
-"I thought our business was confidential, McKenna,"
-he said, without having moved from the position
-he had taken on entering. "I fail to see—"
-he stopped and looked again at the two young men.
-
-"Oh, Mr. Beecher and Gunther," said McKenna
-affably; "suppose we call them attorneys for one of
-your clients."
-
-"Miss Charters?"
-
-"You're a good guesser, Mr. Garraboy."
-
-The broker drew in his upper lip and, coming
-slowly forward, said:
-
-"The presence of these gentlemen is exceedingly
-distasteful to me."
-
-"You're not in a position to object, Mr. Garraboy."
-
-Garraboy turned his back and walked slowly back
-and forth, evidently in distressed conjecture, occasionally
-raising his head to shoot a glance at the three,
-half in rage, half in fear.
-
-All at once he stopped by the desk as though his
-mind had come to a certain decision, and, bearing
-heavily on it, said:
-
-"I do not know that I care, under the circumstances,
-to enter into any discussion. You, Mr. McKenna,
-represent my client, Mrs. Alva White; your
-claim against me is for forty-five thousand eight
-hundred and forty-six dollars." He drew out his
-pocketbook. "I have here a check made to your order." A
-second time he plunged his hand into his pocket
-and brought out a check-book. "I was not notified
-that Miss Charters' was also under discussion.
-However, I will settle that at once. To whose order,
-please?"
-
-McKenna, without answering, indicated himself
-with a jerk of his finger.
-
-Garraboy, seating himself at the desk, took up a
-pen and carefully filled in the check, blotted it and
-handed the two drafts to McKenna, who took them,
-endorsed them and, ringing, handed them to an
-assistant:
-
-"Present these at once. Telephone me as soon as
-they are honored."
-
-Garraboy carefully blotted the check-book in turn,
-replaced it in his pocket, and was thrusting back his
-chair from the desk when McKenna, turning on him
-sharply, said:
-
-"Garraboy, you stole that ring of Mrs. Kildair's."
-
-The broker, startled, jerked up his head.
-
-"So that's the meaning of all this!" he said angrily.
-
-"Answer my question!"
-
-But this time Garraboy, without wincing, rose
-suddenly to his feet.
-
-"McKenna, I have nothing more to say to you,"
-he said, scowling, "on this or any other question.
-Your claims are satisfied. I recognize no further
-right of you to insult me."
-
-"Don't move, Mr. Garraboy," said McKenna
-softly; "we've a lot of business still to talk over."
-
-"Are you trying to blackmail me?" said Garraboy
-furiously, folding his arms.
-
-"Garraboy, I've got the goods on you and there
-may be a paper or two in my pocket you wouldn't
-care to have served," said McKenna, the pupils of
-his eyes seeming to dwindle to a point as the whites
-showed under a well-simulated show of anger.
-"First place, you're going to sit here until I get a
-telephone those checks are cashed. Second, and this may
-surprise you, you're going to stick right by me—today
-and tonight, until you make up your mind
-whether you'll answer me or answer a court of
-justice. Third, before we get through here, I want your
-name at the bottom of a little document I've drawn
-up for you."
-
-"What do you mean?" said Garraboy, but with
-a note of apprehension in his voice.
-
-"A plain, honest recital of what you've been doing
-with other folks' property these last two months—"
-
-"You said—" fairly screamed the broker.
-
-"I said if you settled my claims I wouldn't
-prosecute—true, and I won't. But just the same you're
-getting out of business here in New York, and I'm
-going to hold a paper that'll keep you out."
-
-"Never!" exclaimed Garraboy in desperation.
-"Every cent I owe will be settled in twenty-four
-hours. I'll close up every account—I'll agree to
-that—but I'll not be blackmailed into this. You
-haven't a charge against me that'll stand in any
-court in this country—"
-
-"What about that ring?" said McKenna. "You
-were trying all over town to raise fifteen thousand
-dollars that day. Garraboy, you stole that ring,
-pawned it, and raised the money to hold off your
-loans."
-
-"That's a lie!" he said, clenching his fists. "I
-got it—"
-
-"Where?"
-
-"None of your business."
-
-"Where did you get the money to pay your interest
-and to put up the new margins you did?"
-
-"I was acting for others."
-
-"What others?"
-
-Garraboy opened his mouth to reply and then
-suddenly stopped.
-
-McKenna said immediately:
-
-"No, you won't say what others, because if you
-do claim you sold for others, here before witnesses,
-you know you'll restore a good deal more money
-than you figured out to disgorge. Oh, you're clever
-all right. Answer me—did you steal that ring?"
-
-"I did not," said Garraboy suddenly; "and I
-don't know anything more about it than Beecher
-here—in fact, considerably less." He looked over
-with a sneer on his lips and then quickly and firmly
-exclaimed: "McKenna, my mind's made up. I'm
-going out that door—now. If you attempt to
-prevent me, I'll hold Mr. Beecher and Mr. Gunther here
-as witnesses that you kept me here by force. And
-I'll have you up on—"
-
-All at once he seemed to choke on a word as his
-eyes, following the movement of the fist that struck
-the table, came suddenly in contact with the upturned
-sheet entitled:
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-.. class:: center
-
- "GARRABOY, EDWARD V."
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-The sight seemed to paralyze every muscle of his
-body. He sat down abruptly, drawing the document
-under his eye.
-
-"Take your time, Bracken, read it over carefully,"
-said McKenna in a soothing voice. He retired to
-the fireplace and relaxed into the easy chair awaiting
-the moment.
-
-Garraboy read hastily, fairly galloping through the
-pages. Then he stiffened in his chair, frowned and
-read carefully through it all again, considering each
-phrase.
-
-At the last, the three who watched him saw him
-push the paper from him, lock his hands in front of
-him and stare at McKenna. The correct, insolent
-man of the world had faded; instead, before them,
-bare to the bone, was the rascal, the desperate, clever
-adventurer. Suddenly making a quick resolve, he
-said in a tone that surprised them for its absence of
-emotion:
-
-"Give me the paper I'm to sign."
-
-McKenna jumped up and going to a shelf took
-down an affidavit.
-
-"It is always a pleasure to deal with profession,"
-he said genially, placing the document on the table.
-"Oh, read it first."
-
-Garraboy skimmed through it hastily, nodding.
-He took up his pen and paused.
-
-"It's understood that the contents will never be
-made public, directly or indirectly, so long as I keep
-out of the United States?"
-
-"Understood."
-
-"Your word of honor on it as a gentleman, McKenna?"
-
-"My word."
-
-"And yours, too, Mr. Beecher, Mr. Gunther?"
-
-Each repeated the promise in turn.
-
-Garraboy signed the confession and handed it to
-McKenna.
-
-"What now?"
-
-"You will, of course, wind up your business immediately."
-
-"I will telephone for my clerk to bring my books
-here at once for your inspection. I will draw the
-necessary checks and have them deposited to the
-credit of my clients this afternoon. One of your
-men can personally assure himself that everything is
-right. Will that satisfy you?"
-
-"Couldn't have proposed anything more practical,"
-said McKenna, nodding.
-
-"What next?"
-
-"Clean up that matter of the ring."
-
-Garraboy rose impatiently,
-
-"I haven't got the ring."
-
-"I don't believe you."
-
-"Are you going to keep me under surveillance?"
-
-"I am."
-
-"Until when?"
-
-"Until the ring is returned."
-
-"McKenna," said Garraboy desperately, "I think
-I've satisfied you. I'm not standing on technicalities.
-You've got me cold. I know it. Now, I'll tell you
-just how I stand. When everything is paid up, I
-stand pretty nearly $200,000 to the good. I'm going
-to get out—go abroad and stay there, and I want to
-catch the first boat out. If I had that ring, I'd throw
-it over, quick. That's straight goods."
-
-"Garraboy, did you steal that ring?" said McKenna again.
-
-"I did not." He took a handkerchief from his
-pocket and wiped away the perspiration which stood
-on his forehead.
-
-"Did you ever see before the detective, John
-Ryan, whom Mrs. Kildair called in?"
-
-Garraboy hesitated.
-
-"Did you?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Employed him?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Many times?"
-
-"Several."
-
-"And you recommended him to Mrs. Kildair?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"So you knew whom she would call in?"
-
-"No, I didn't think of that."
-
-"Garraboy, didn't you take the ring knowing that
-Ryan would be called in and that he would never
-make a search of you?"
-
-"I did not."
-
-"Do you know who took it?"
-
-"No."
-
-"That's sufficient," said McKenna, apparently
-satisfied.
-
-"What are you going to do?" asked Garraboy
-nervously.
-
-"Keep you on a rope until the ring turns up.
-
-"I want to get away," said Garraboy weakly.
-
-"I know that."
-
-The broker remained quiet a moment, turning a
-pencil with his moist fingers.
-
-"Will you answer one question?" he said at last.
-
-"What?"
-
-"Does Mrs. Kildair know—are you acting for her?"
-
-"Mrs. Kildair does not know what I'm doing,"
-said McKenna quietly.
-
-Garraboy rose with what seemed a little relief, a
-movement that McKenna was quick to note.
-
-"Well, I've made up my mind to tell you what I
-know," he said, after a few nervous steps.
-
-"Good."
-
-"I haven't got the ring," he said carefully.
-
-"Did you take it?"
-
-"I did not take it," said Garraboy, looking
-steadily in McKenna's eyes.
-
-"But you know?"
-
-"Yes, in a way I know," he said firmly. "A
-woman took it."
-
-"How do you know?"
-
-Garraboy did not answer immediately. He seemed
-reluctant to continue, frowning and moving restlessly
-from foot to foot. Finally he blurted out:
-
-"I don't know who took it first, but this is what
-happened—the God's truth. When Mrs. Kildair
-put out the lights and counted sixty-one, I heard the
-ring on the table." He hesitated a moment and said
-hurriedly: "I made up my mind to give them all a
-shock. I did not intend to keep the ring; I swear it.
-I put out my hand to take it—and I touched another
-hand—the hand of a woman."
-
-"Who took it?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Was that woman Mrs. Cheever, or Miss Lille?"
-said McKenna quickly.
-
-"I don't know."
-
-"You don't know."
-
-"No."
-
-"You have no idea?"
-
-"No."
-
-"No suspicion?"
-
-"No."
-
-"You were told nothing afterward?"
-
-"Nothing."
-
-"Garraboy, it's just possible you're not lying,"
-said McKenna with a frown; "though I'm not sure
-by a long shot. However, I'll know the truth before
-the sun goes down."
-
-"How?" said Garraboy, looking up.
-
-"I neglected to tell you," said McKenna, watching
-him, "that I know whom the ring was pawned with,
-and this evening the gentleman himself will tell me
-who pawned it. The time I keep you depends a good
-deal on what he says."
-
-"Then, this evening I will be free," said Garraboy
-joyfully, with such evident confidence that both
-young men were struck by it and McKenna, a little
-disturbed in his theory, continued staring at the face
-of Garraboy, which was illumined with a slight,
-malicious smile.
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`CHAPTER XXII`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- CHAPTER XXII
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-Half an hour later Gunther and Beecher,
-leaving McKenna's office with a promise to return
-that evening, went up town. In Beecher's pocket
-was a check on McKenna representing the amount of
-Miss Charters' account. Garraboy remained in the
-custody of the detective.
-
-"Well, what do you think of it?" said Gunther.
-
-"I think Garraboy lied," said Beecher.
-
-"Oh, about the reason he tried to take the ring—yes,
-naturally. He could make a plausible reason
-for that—you'd hardly expect him to say in so many
-words that he was a thief, if he really didn't get the
-ring, as he says."
-
-"I think he cooked up the lie right there," said
-Beecher obstinately. "I don't believe a word of it."
-
-"I don't know—I sort of think he told the truth."
-
-"Do you think any woman would have the nerve
-to go on after she had felt a hand on hers and knew
-that some one had a clue, not absolutely definite but
-almost so?"
-
-"But, Ted, if any one denounced her, wouldn't he
-have to acknowledge the fact of his own motive?
-That would be enough to shut any one up."
-
-"I think Garraboy lied," persisted Beecher. "I
-think he had a part in the theft and at least I am
-sure he knows all about it."
-
-"Listen to reason," said Gunther warmly. "If
-Garraboy signed a confession like McKenna handed
-him, he wouldn't stop at returning a ring—particularly
-when he knows that McKenna will keep hold of
-him till the affair is closed up. No, no; Garraboy
-says he's cleared $200,000—you may be sure he's
-got considerably more. He's satisfied. He wants
-to get away from here quick. McKenna's not the
-only one on his track, you may be sure of that. No,
-it doesn't stand to reason he'd balk at a little matter
-like the ring."
-
-Beecher was silent, digesting the argument.
-
-"There may be one explanation," he said at length.
-"You noticed that the fellow was particularly
-anxious to know if Mrs. Kildair was behind us?"
-
-"Yes, I noticed all that."
-
-"Now McKenna thinks, and I do too, that Mrs. Kildair
-all along has known who took the ring and
-has only been held up before this from prosecuting
-on account of a possible scandal."
-
-"But, that's over now—nothing can be said—it
-was an engagement ring, of course."
-
-"Exactly; and that's the reason why I'm going to
-make this guess—that Garraboy, knowing the game
-was up, returned the ring this morning."
-
-"By George!"
-
-"And that's the reason he told the lie he
-did—knowing that everything will blow over in
-twenty-four hours."
-
-"Ted, by the Lord Harry, I believe you've hit it!"
-said Gunther excitedly. "I say—"
-
-"What?"
-
-"Let's go up to your rooms—there may be a
-letter from Mrs. Kildair."
-
-Full of eagerness they went to Beecher's rooms—only
-to return empty-handed and disappointed. Then
-they hurried to the club and searched the letter-boxes
-without success.
-
-Disappointed and impatient they went in to a late
-lunch.
-
-"What are you going to do about that check of
-Miss Charters'?" said Gunther in an aggressive
-tone.
-
-"Take it round to her," said Beecher, looking at
-him out of the corner of his eye.
-
-"Mail it."
-
-"Why?"
-
-"Gratitude and a pretty woman are a dangerous
-combination," said Gunther gruffly; "especially for
-something soft like you."
-
-"You damned, impertinent cuss," said Beecher
-acridly.
-
-"Fact. Better let me call a messenger boy and
-send it around."
-
-But in the pleased state of mind in which he was,
-Beecher had not the slightest intention of surrendering
-the delightful opportunity which the visit promised.
-Likewise, he was indignant at hearing from
-Gunther the same implications which amused him
-from the lips of a fascinating woman like Emma
-Fornez.
-
-"You've got a fine idea of me," he answered
-hotly.
-
-"I have."
-
-"According to you, I oughtn't to be allowed to
-roam the streets without a keeper."
-
-"Exactly expressed."
-
-"Don't alarm yourself," said Beecher in a lofty,
-superior tone, and, believing every word, he added,
-"I'm quite able to take care of myself. I know
-how to amuse myself—and I know it is amusing
-myself, thank you. You think I don't know
-anything about women—well, I know better than some
-people how to keep my head straight."
-
-"So you're going around?" said Gunther with a
-grin.
-
-"I am."
-
-"I thought you said you had never met any one
-who could make you so angry?"
-
-"Come and get me at five o'clock," said Beecher,
-with a trifling wave of his hand.
-
-"I begin to have my doubts," said Gunther slowly,
-with the air of one steeling himself against a great
-calamity.
-
-Beecher had no such anticipation as he went lightly
-out of the club and took his way up the Avenue.
-For the last day he had thought much more of the
-possible feelings of Nan Charters toward his own
-receptive person than of analyzing the impregnability
-of his own position. He had not telephoned, desiring
-to effect a little surprise. But as he neared
-his destination he remembered that she might
-possibly be out.
-
-"In that case I'll leave a little note—just a line
-with the check—as though it were a casual affair,"
-he said to himself.
-
-But Miss Charters was in. An automobile was at
-the curb which he thought he recognized.
-
-Miss Charters herself answered the door, detaining
-him a moment in the anteroom.
-
-"I am so glad you came," she said in a low voice,
-but one in which it was impossible to mistake the
-pleasure. "I wanted you to know that. A friend
-of yours is here—but he won't stay long," she added
-softly, with that gentle appeal in her voice against
-which he knew no defense. "You'll stay—I want
-you to."
-
-"Who is it?" he asked.
-
-"Mr. Lorraine." And as she saw the instant
-stiffening that went through him, she said quickly,
-with that subtle, merciless flattery of which only
-women have the command, "Shall I send him away—if
-you wish?"
-
-"No."
-
-The two men greeted each other boisterously, but
-underneath their heartiness was a sudden sense of
-invaded territory.
-
-"Is he interested?" thought Lorraine, with an
-uneasy glance. "And why did she go out into the
-hall?"
-
-"What's his right here? Was he here to lunch,
-I wonder?" thought Beecher, and for the first time
-he felt something hot surging inside of himself.
-
-Each with an extra show of cordiality began to
-talk, addressing their remarks to the other. Only
-Lorraine, whose tenancy was thus threatened,
-continued to prolong his stay, anxiously watching the
-effect on the woman. At the end of half an hour,
-he no longer doubted, she was only waiting for him
-to go, uneasy and resentful at his delay.
-
-He rose, heavy of heart, and shook hands with
-Beecher, whom he would have liked to throttle, and
-nodding to Miss Charters, went toward the hall,
-hoping that she would follow him. But women in
-love match the wordless surrender and tenderness
-they show to the man to whom they yield with an
-equal cruelty toward those whose misfortune is to
-have loved them. She did not move, waiting
-impatiently until she heard the tardy click of the door.
-Then she went to him directly, standing quite close,
-looking up at him like a penitent schoolgirl.
-
-"I thought he'd never go," she said impatiently,
-and then with an uneasy, searching look in her eyes,
-she said contritely: "Do you think I am very terrible?"
-
-He smiled and shook his head, but without profiting
-by the opportunity her attitude invited.
-
-"You were engaged to Charlie once, weren't
-you?" he said, trying to give the question an accent
-of natural curiosity.
-
-"No, never."
-
-"Almost?"
-
-She shook her head impatiently at the introduction
-of this topic.
-
-"People said so."
-
-She shrugged her shoulders.
-
-"But he is in love with you," he said positively.
-
-What she did not like was the quiet, inconsequential
-way he spoke, for in her own mood she did not
-detect the jealousy underneath.
-
-"Please don't let us talk of Mr. Lorraine," she
-said quickly. "I have never been engaged to
-Mr. Lorraine and never could; first, because I don't
-intend to marry, and, second, because if I did,
-Mr. Lorraine could never appeal to me."
-
-She broke off and going to the telephone said to
-him over her shoulder:
-
-"You're not in a hurry?"
-
-"No."
-
-"Good—then we need not be interrupted."
-
-She called the office and left word that she would
-not be at home. Then, rising, she came slowly back,
-very subdued, still alarmed at the undisturbed
-friendship in his look.
-
-"I was afraid you wouldn't come to see such a
-little virago," she said softly.
-
-"I came to see you on a matter of business," he
-said, without thinking of his words.
-
-Her face fell.
-
-"Oh, indeed."
-
-He drew out his pocketbook and took out the check.
-
-"Mr. Garraboy is leaving very suddenly for
-Europe," he said, turning over the bit of paper. "He
-has decided to wind up his affairs. He wished me
-to give you this check in settlement of your account,"
-with him.
-
-She stood quite still, her arms behind her back, but
-her eyes dangerously brilliant.
-
-"If it's only on business you came," she said,
-breathing deep, "you can keep your check."
-
-"But—"
-
-"Is it only on business you go to see other women?"
-
-He extended the check, and the jealousy Lorraine's
-presence had brought him made him seek to hurt her
-a little more.
-
-"Don't be unreasonable," he said.
-
-"If you don't answer," she said, stamping her
-foot, "I will tear it into pieces!"
-
-A quick, impulsive joy went through him at this
-revealing anger.
-
-"I came because I wanted to see you," he said
-with a provoking delight in his eyes. "This is of
-no importance."
-
-She took the check, still looking at him, became
-calmer, smiled, and then with a determined bob of
-her head, went to place it on her writing-desk. All
-at once she turned quickly:
-
-"But this is signed McKenna!"
-
-"That's a detail."
-
-"Your friend McKenna, the detective? Then you
-forced this out of him?"
-
-"It wasn't very hard."
-
-She let the check flutter from her fingers to the
-desk, thoughtfully considering it, divining slowly
-what it meant.
-
-"I am unreasonable," she said quietly, returning
-and holding out her hand. "Thank you. Why did
-you bother—after the way I acted?"
-
-"Well, just because," he answered, looking down
-into her eyes.
-
-"So, Garraboy is a defaulter," she said slowly.
-
-"I cannot tell you any more."
-
-All at once a thought came to her and an anxious
-frown passed over her forehead.
-
-"None of this is your money?" she said quickly.
-
-"No."
-
-"On your honor?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"It is a great thing you have done for me," she
-said solemnly. "I am very grateful."
-
-"Nonsense," he said lightly. "It was no trouble.
-I would have done it for any one."
-
-They were near the great dormer-windows, high
-above the threaded smoke and gray roofs of the
-city, now blending into fuzzy masses with the
-closing of the day.
-
-"Well, now that your business is over," she said,
-but with a new lightness, "I suppose you must be
-going?"
-
-"What do you want me to say?" he said, smiling
-with a growing feeling of well-being.
-
-"Why did you come?" she repeated maliciously,
-and, half-laughing, half-determined, she took the
-lapel of his coat in a gesture which, in her fingers,
-was almost a caress. She stood looking up at him,
-so happy, so brimming with the satisfaction of
-having him back, of regaining what she had feared to
-lose, that he could not resist the desire in her eyes.
-
-"Because I like you," he said.
-
-"Despite my tantrums and my moods?"
-
-"On account of them."
-
-"And would you have done what you did—for any one?"
-
-"Come to think of it—no."
-
-She was not content. She would rather that he
-had answered more sentimentally. She felt that he
-was stronger than she was, more controlled.
-
-"Are you interested in Emma Fornez?" she said,
-looking away from him.
-
-"Oh,—interested."
-
-"You like her?"
-
-"Yes, very much."
-
-"I shouldn't like to have you talked about."
-
-He did not answer.
-
-"What have I done that displeases you, Teddy?"
-she said all at once.
-
-But before he could answer, the room behind them
-dropped suddenly back into darkness.
-
-"The light's gone out," she said, startled, her hand
-on his arm.
-
-"The current's cut—that's all," he answered.
-
-"I'll light a lamp."
-
-"No. It's good here. Wait. It'll only be a moment."
-
-They remained in the dark, turning their glances
-out of the window, suddenly conscious of the panorama
-of the evening, the stir of departing multitudes,
-the end of labor and the evening of rest.
-
-"How plainly you can see," he said. "That's
-Brooklyn Bridge, isn't it?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-At the east three giant spans stood out across the
-unreal gray view that had neither banks nor green
-approaches, that cut its way like an invading flood
-through the cities. Innumerable, cottony puffs of
-steam, busy, hurrying, restless, rose from unseen
-hulls across the fading silhouettes of tangled spans.
-High to the south from a cyclopean tower a single ball
-of fire was shining. Below, in the long, straight
-avenues, the city was putting on its necklaces of
-brilliants; and from the black dotted masses that must
-be there somewhere in the growing obscurity,
-rushing home over the backs of the waters, high above
-housetops or deep through the bowels of the city, a
-great sigh seemed to rise with the sudden freshening
-of the twilight breeze, and the two human beings
-who looked down, as God looks down on this spectacle
-of a moving world, found nothing to express the
-sudden melancholy that troubled them, awakening
-vague desires, stirring them with the feeling of their
-own littleness.
-
-"Come," she said, turning away the first, and,
-lingering, looking back, placed a hand on his arm,
-repeating, "Come."
-
-He did not reply, looking beyond, deeply penetrated
-by all this humanity that each moment receded
-farther from them, isolating them, lifting them above
-the world into the loneliness of the skies. Her hand
-remained on his arm unconsciously, but this weight
-so soft but yet so imperious recalled him to himself.
-He thought no longer of what lay without. He
-looked at her. She was trembling. He too felt the
-subtle, disturbing restlessness of this dark that
-closed in about them, shutting out the peopled
-world—this mood of the day that exerts over human
-beings such a compelling desire.
-
-She turned and looked at him. He could not see
-her face distinctly, only the eyes—that seemed
-incapable of seeing all but this. Then abruptly,
-brusquely, by the same mutual impulse, they
-were in each other's arms, straining to each other,
-their lips irresistibly closed over each other, feeling
-themselves more and more wrapped around by this
-soft darkness that had cast them up, enfolding
-their loneliness in the great protective instinct of
-human love.
-
-The room flared up brilliantly. She recovered
-herself the first, drawing herself out of his arms,
-covering her face with fingers that still throbbed with
-the agony of their embrace.
-
-They could not look at each other, bewildered by
-the suddenness of what had happened. She went
-past him hurriedly to the fireplace, sitting down.
-He followed irresolutely, feeling his feet unsteady
-beneath him, all the intellectual forces within him
-submerged, drunk, overthrown by the sudden, delirious
-awakening of his senses, suddenly aroused by this
-revelation of woman.
-
-"What have we done? What was it?" she said
-breathlessly, without facing him. "We are crazy,
-Teddy,—crazy!"
-
-He came heavily to the other end of the fireplace,
-leaning on the mantel, looking down at the woman
-who was no longer an indefinite mystery of silks and
-colors, but a moving, living body that had stirred in
-his arms.
-
-"Teddy, we are crazy," she repeated. "What
-possessed us?"
-
-"It is you who are crazy now," he said abruptly.
-"What is the use of arguing? Those things are
-beyond us. It is over—it is settled. We had
-nothing to do with it."
-
-"No, no," she cried vigorously, jumping up. "It
-is not right. It isn't fair to you. We were swept
-off our feet."
-
-"Thank Heaven, yes."
-
-"But it's impossible, it's crazy—it's senseless. I
-don't want to marry, I don't want to fall in love. I
-want to be free—I must be free—I know that—you
-know that. So what then?"
-
-"What's the use of arguing? It's been settled
-for us."
-
-"But it isn't settled. I lost my head—you lost
-your head. We didn't know what we were doing.
-Marriage is impossible, absurd. I'm not a woman to
-marry—you would be unhappy—don't you see how
-ridiculous it is? I think only of myself—my career—"
-
-"What's all that amount to—you love me and I
-love you. It's always been so—we've been fools
-and I didn't know it."
-
-"But I don't know it," she cried; but at the same
-breath she knew that it was so. But this knowledge
-only roused in her the spirit to combat, to remit, to
-put away from her the threatening obstacle.
-
-"Nonsense. Why didn't you let me go? You
-wouldn't; you brought me back; you couldn't help
-it—and I came. I would have come if you had called
-me. I've said all that you say myself—what good
-did it do me? Here I am!"
-
-"Well, then—yes, we may love each other," she
-said desperately. "I don't know. I cannot reason it
-out—it may be so, perhaps—but even then? Teddy,
-it can't go on. Don't you see how wicked it would
-be—how wrong? Your wife can't be on the stage,
-and I can't give it up. It's everything—it's been
-my whole life. We must be strong—we must stop
-it. It's absurd—it's wrong."
-
-She came to him, seized with the two contrary
-impulses: an instinctive revolt, a desire to force him
-from her life, and something just as instinctive and
-irresistible that drew her back to him; and at the
-moment she said the most firmly, "No, no, it's absurd,
-it's wrong," she put out her hand and caught her
-fingers in his coat collar, just behind his ear, under
-the masses of his hair.
-
-He caught her to him, wrapping his arms around
-her; she continued to protest but, without resisting,
-her head dropped on his shoulder, her eyes closed,
-her lips breathlessly open.
-
-All at once from the hall came the sound of a key
-in the latch. They disengaged themselves hurriedly,
-arranging their disordered hair, standing ridiculously
-apart.
-
-From the antechamber came the voice of Miss
-Tilbury, the chaperon, discreetly remaining without:
-
-"Nan, dear, Mr. Hargrave is below. He has
-come for his manuscript."
-
-"But I'm not at home," she said in a muffled voice.
-
-"You ought to send it down to him, really."
-
-"Mr. Beecher is here—aren't you coming in?"
-
-"In a moment."
-
-The steps died out going to the back. Beecher,
-who had looked at the clock, uttered an exclamation.
-She came to him quickly, with the motions of the
-alert feline, and seizing his wrist said quickly:
-
-"Listen, Teddy, I will not hold you to what has
-happened. We are out of our senses, you and I.
-We are crazy—crazy. You must not see me for a
-while—two days at least—until we know what we
-are doing. Go, now, please—"
-
-Then, suddenly remembering that the same Hargrave
-had been the innocent cause of a little pain to
-him, she went quickly to the table and took up the
-offending play, and with that fine instinct of a woman
-to give even the smallest revenge to the man she loves,
-said:
-
-"Take this. Give it to Hargrave yourself. Say
-I cannot see him."
-
-"I shall see you tomorrow."
-
-"No, no; but telephone tonight."
-
-She listened a moment, her ear toward the hall
-like a child, and then sprang into his arms, and this
-time it seemed to him that it was she, not he, who
-dominated the embrace.
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`CHAPTER XXIII`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- CHAPTER XXIII
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-At half-past five, Beecher, his brain in a whirl,
-arrived breathlessly at the office of McKenna.
-As luck would have it, only Gunther and the detective
-were there.
-
-"My friend is a little late," said McKenna, with
-a quick, jerky glance at the clock.
-
-"Where's Garraboy?"
-
-"Twirling his thumbs in another room," said
-Gunther, laughing. "In a cussing bad humor, too."
-
-For the second time, McKenna glanced nervously
-at the clock. Beecher was struck with the mood of
-restlessness that obsessed him. He passed aimlessly
-from desk to window and back again, apparently
-oblivious to their presence, immersed in some calculation
-that left its outward mark in a deep furrow between
-the eyebrows, while the cigar between his lips
-had gone out unperceived.
-
-"Mr. Beecher," he said suddenly, stopping short,
-"I'm not sure but what I've gone off on a ridiculous
-tangent—it may be—it may be. Have you still got
-that envelope I gave you?"
-
-"Yes, in my pocket—here," said Beecher, surprised,
-laying his hand on his coat.
-
-"It was a ridiculous thing for me to do," said
-McKenna quickly. He made a movement of his
-hand as though to take it, but repressed it, saying:
-"All I ask is, don't open it until I ask you." Then,
-still ruffled, he turned away, saying to himself:
-"Guessing—humph! I'd fire a man for doing that."
-
-The telephone rang with a message from the outer
-office and a moment later, to the amazement of both
-young men, Mapleson, of the firm of Sontag &
-Company, came in smiling and businesslike.
-
-"How are you, McKenna?" he said affably,
-shaking hands. "Sorry to keep you waiting. What
-can I do for you?"
-
-He was a slender, dark young man of forty-two
-or three, very graceful, pleasant in voice and fluent
-in manner, with a sure instinct for ingratiating
-himself where it best could serve.
-
-"How do you do, Mr. Beecher," he said on being
-introduced. "I am very glad to know you,
-Mr. Gunther. I have the pleasure of knowing your
-father slightly. The country owes him a great debt
-for what he's done in this panic. Well, is there any
-mystery I can clear up for you?"
-
-He accepted a chair, crossed his legs easily, brought
-out a gold cigarette-case, offered it with a wave and
-smiled at their declinations.
-
-"Why, yes, Mr. Mapleson, you can give us a little
-information," said McKenna.
-
-"Anything I can do for you, McKenna, glad to do
-it," said Mapleson.
-
-"You may remember a ring that was sold by your
-firm a few months ago to Mr. John G. Slade," said
-McKenna directly; "a single ruby, valued, I believe,
-around thirty thousand dollars."
-
-Mapleson did not avert his eyes from the glance
-of the detective, yet without a movement of his body
-an instant change came in his manner. He drew in
-a puff of smoke, let it out, nodded carefully and
-said:
-
-"Yes, known as the Bogota ruby. I remember perfectly."
-
-"I understand that that ring was brought back
-within the last ten days and pledged for a
-considerable amount."
-
-"Indeed?" said Mapleson. He flung away the
-half smoked cigarette, and busied himself with
-selecting another. "Well, what do you want to know?"
-
-"I want to know the name of the person—man
-or woman—who pledged it."
-
-Mapleson changed his mind, shut the cigarette-case
-with a snap, clasped his hands in front of him,
-thumbs up and pressed against his teeth.
-
-"Can you tell me a little more?" he said at last.
-
-"No, I cannot," McKenna said frankly.
-
-The eyes of the jeweler wandered from the detective
-and settled on the face of Beecher. The look
-made the young man flush. It was as though the
-smiling, affable confidant of feminine mysteries and
-intrigues was asking himself what part in all this he
-were playing.
-
-"Can you tell me for whom you are acting,
-Mr. Beecher?" he said suddenly.
-
-McKenna made a gesture of warning, interrupting:
-
-"I'm sorry—we cannot."
-
-"Have you a warrant?" continued Mapleson
-seriously. "In other words, is this a friendly meeting,
-or a legal procedure?"
-
-"There is no warrant as yet. It is a case we particularly
-desire to keep out of court," said McKenna.
-
-"It is very embarrassing," said Mapleson frankly,
-"very. I don't know quite how to act. Of course,
-McKenna, considering your relations with our firm,
-I should always be glad to assist you in any way—you
-understand that. The present case is different.
-The ring was not pledged with Sontag & Company,
-but with me personally. It is a personal matter and
-a very delicate one."
-
-"I understand that," said McKenna, frowning.
-"And yet I must inform you that I shall probably
-have to proceed in the usual manner."
-
-"Of course, if I'm brought into court on a summons,"
-said Mapleson thoughtfully, "that is different.
-If I am faced by the fact that a theft has taken
-place, I can do nothing else but aid the law."
-
-"But now—"
-
-"At present? No, McKenna, I cannot give you
-the name of the person that pledged the ring with
-me. The case seems very complex to me—much
-more than you may believe; and as nothing is legally
-charged I prefer to keep my relations confidential."
-
-"Mr. Mapleson, can you answer this?"
-
-"What?"
-
-"Is your refusal because you believe the intention
-of the person who pledged it is to restore it to its
-owner?"
-
-Mapleson turned the question over a long time,
-whistling softly to himself. Finally he said:
-
-"I don't know. I know nothing."
-
-"Can you tell me the amount you advanced on
-the ring?"
-
-"Yes; I think I can tell you that," he said, after
-a moment's thought. "I advanced twenty-eight
-thousand dollars."
-
-"Twenty-eight?" said McKenna, lifting his eyebrows.
-"Twenty-eight on a ring worth only thirty
-thousand?"
-
-"It was not a business transaction—entirely,"
-said Mapleson stiffly.
-
-"Then Sontag & Company knew nothing about it?"
-
-"No."
-
-"Was the ring pledged the day before Majendie
-committed suicide?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"In the morning?"
-
-"Early in the morning."
-
-"One final question. The ring is still in your
-possession?"
-
-"No."
-
-"It is not in your possession?" said McKenna,
-with a sudden clearing of his forehead. "Mr. Mapleson,
-you are answering this because you feel bound—"
-
-"Not at all," said Mapleson quickly. "The ring
-was redeemed this morning. I know nothing more
-about it."
-
-The speculations which were occasioned by this
-disclosure were suddenly interrupted by a knock on
-the door.
-
-"Come!" said McKenna sharply.
-
-An assistant entered the room with two letters.
-McKenna looked at the first and nodded, and then
-seeing the address on the second looked up quickly,
-saying:
-
-"How did this come—this letter for Mr. Beecher?"
-
-"It was sent down from his apartment, I believe,
-sir. Mr. Beecher's man brought it, I think."
-
-"Very well."
-
-McKenna dismissed him with a gesture, but instead
-of opening his letter thrust both of them into
-his pocket.
-
-"That's all, Mr. Mapleson," he said with incisiveness.
-"I'm sorry to have troubled you. It's quite
-possible, as you perhaps believe, this case will be
-settled out of court."
-
-"Let's hope so," said Mapleson non-committally.
-"I'm always at your service, you know. It's I who
-should apologize. Mr. Gunther, remember me to
-your father. Mr. Beecher, I hope to meet you soon
-again."
-
-He shook hands warmly with Beecher, as though
-the young man had acquired a new value in his eyes,
-and went out.
-
-The moment the door had shut, McKenna had the
-two letters out of his pocket.
-
-"Two letters from the same lady," he said, tossing
-one to Beecher. "Both messages the same, too,
-I'll bet. Of course!"
-
-He laughed and extended the letter to Gunther,
-who read:
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-DEAR MR. MCKENNA:
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-The ring has just been returned. Can I see you at once?
-Take no further measures.
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-RITA KILDAIR.
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-McKenna was a changed man. All the indecision
-had left him. His eyes were sparkling with
-pleasure and he was laughing to himself, as he took up
-the telephone.
-
-"Here, give me Clancy," he cried impatiently.
-"Hello. What's the matter with Brady; hasn't he
-come back with that information yet? He has?
-Well, why the devil—send in the figures! Quick!"
-
-A moment later a slip was in his hand and he was
-gazing at it eagerly.
-
-"Mr. Beecher, give me half an hour's start—no,
-better, three quarters of an hour. Wait—have
-you got a car? Good. Drive me up to Mrs. Kildair's
-as fast as you can get me there."
-
-"What about Garraboy?" said Gunther. "Is he
-to go free?"
-
-"Not by a damn sight!" said McKenna joyfully
-rushing them down the hall. In the office he
-stopped to say hurriedly: "Clancy, stick by
-Garraboy—feed him—but keep him close until I telephone
-you!"
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`CHAPTER XXIV`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- CHAPTER XXIV
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-McKenna was not without that penetrating
-imagination that has in it the quality of vision,
-the power to invoke the figures of the past and to
-follow an idea into the recesses of the future. All
-that he had learned and all that he had tentatively
-surmised of the mysterious purposes of Rita Kildair,
-returned to him with renewed vividness as he entered
-the elevator saying briefly to a question:
-
-"I'm expected."
-
-In his long and profound pursuit of human lawlessness,
-the detective had formed a crude philosophy,
-built on the perception of the inequalities of justice.
-The beginning of all crime, if he could thus have
-phrased it to himself, was failure. For each man
-that he had sent to jail for embezzlement, in the
-capacious corridor of his memory he knew another
-who ethically was the greater rogue, and, as he had
-said to Beecher, each day he met one such, looked
-into his eyes, shook his hands and took his orders.
-For each woman upon whom public scorn had set the
-brand of adventuress, he knew another woman who
-stood enthroned by that same society. Confusedly
-in his mind he had shaped a crude analysis of life.
-For him only two classes existed, the strong and the
-weak. The strong was that brutal race which could
-not be held down by the restraints of society, who
-must rise, acquire power, dominate, obeying the
-natural instinct within them; the weak those who
-aided them in their upward progress, who served
-them when they had arrived, and who committed
-crimes in their names. It was not a moral view of
-life so much as it was a perception of the persisting
-law of all animal nature.
-
-The engagement to Slade, following so dramatically
-his triumphant rise from threatened disaster,
-had made him realize that whatever methods she
-had dared to employ, Mrs. Kildair was one of those
-whom society would never scorn for her failure.
-Intrigued as he was over the details of the theft of
-the ring, what absorbed him most was the woman.
-And determined at all hazards to force the defenses
-of her reserve, he rang the bell.
-
-Mrs. Kildair was at the piano, the riotous
-movements of an Hungarian Czardas filling the
-apartment. She broke off suddenly, rising as McKenna
-entered the studio. The mood of whirling ecstasy,
-suddenly cut off, was still in her flushed cheeks and
-excited eyes, as she glided rapidly toward him.
-
-She was in evening gown, of some flame-colored,
-filmy material, with sudden trembling flashes of gold
-bewildering to the eye, provoking to the imagination.
-The bodice, extreme in its daring, was not one of
-those stiff cuirasses, in which women encase
-themselves; rather the effect was of a billowy scarf that
-had caught and wrapped itself languidly about her.
-The low throat, the graceful arms, the brilliant row
-of pointed teeth over the full under lip, all had an
-extraordinary quality of vibrant, awake, impatient
-vitality.
-
-In seeing her thus, McKenna comprehended at
-once that she had prepared herself for Slade; but so
-daring was the effect of the seduction which she had
-barbarically planned to tantalize the financier, that
-McKenna himself felt the effect with a little nervous,
-conscious dropping of his eyes. The movement did
-not escape her, and not disdaining the tribute she
-smiled to herself a quick, feline little smile.
-
-"You, McKenna?" she said. "You are prompt."
-
-"I came immediately."
-
-"I was waiting for you."
-
-They stood a few feet apart in the middle of the
-studio studying each other, as two fencers take their
-measure before joining their swords.
-
-"You were at your office then?" she said the first.
-
-"Yes, I came up in Mr. Beecher's car."
-
-"Mr. Beecher was with you?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"I sent him—"
-
-"A letter, yes. He received it at my office."
-
-"But why didn't he come up with you?"
-
-"I asked him to give me half an hour here with you."
-
-"That was better," she said firmly.
-
-All the undisciplined impulses that had been stirring,
-gradually seemed to subside as she watched him,
-warily drawing about her an invisible defense.
-
-"Here is the ring," she said suddenly, extending
-her arm with a gesture that was no longer languid
-and feminine, but forceful and controlled.
-
-"I'd like to see it," he said.
-
-She drew it from her finger and held it out to him.
-He laid it in his palm and studied it profoundly.
-
-"What is it worth?" he asked.
-
-"Over thirty thousand dollars."
-
-"Ah," he said quickly. "Beecher told me you
-said fifteen thousand."
-
-She looked at him from under her eyelids.
-
-"I have just learned its value."
-
-"Remarkable—a splendid stone. It has had
-quite a history," he said, handing it back to her and
-watching it return to her finger. "Let's hope it will
-stay there quietly for some time."
-
-"You know its story?"
-
-"From the beginning. It will interest you. I'll
-send it to you."
-
-"Do."
-
-The last replies she had given were mechanical,
-her whole mind focused on him, alert for any
-sudden turn to her advantage, seeking to penetrate the
-tactics he would employ.
-
-"You kept away—on purpose," she said abruptly.
-
-"That's so."
-
-"Why?"
-
-"Well, call it a matter of vanity," he said.
-
-"In what way?"
-
-"You excited my curiosity—you were a little
-too clever in our last interview."
-
-"So you kept on with your investigations?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Successful?" she said lightly.
-
-"Very."
-
-"Indeed? Do you know who took the ring?"
-
-"The first time? No."
-
-She stopped, looked at him intently, and said:
-
-"The second time then?"
-
-"Yes, I know who took it the second time."
-
-"Who?"
-
-"You."
-
-She laughed without confusion and, turning from
-him, went toward the fireplace, resting one bare arm
-on the mantel, the red splash of the ruby showing
-like a flare of anger against her cheek. She looked
-back at McKenna, who had not moved, saying with
-an admonishing shake of her head:
-
-"McKenna, you are guessing."
-
-"It's a good guess."
-
-"Let me hear your theory."
-
-"It is not a theory today."
-
-"Indeed?"
-
-"Yesterday it was a guess; today, I know."
-
-"How do you know?"
-
-"Because today I saw Mapleson," he said, watching her.
-
-"Yes? Mapleson, of Sontag & Company? I
-know him very well," she replied with still no
-expression but amusement. "What then?"
-
-"The ring was pawned with him, a personal
-matter, the morning after the theft, for the sum of
-twenty-eight thousand dollars. It was redeemed
-today."
-
-"By whom?"
-
-"By you, naturally," said McKenna, yet despite
-his absolute conviction, her composure was such that
-he was almost shaken in his theory.
-
-"Mapleson never told you that."
-
-"No; he refused to answer. It lay in my mind
-between you and Mrs. Cheever. The fact that he
-would not answer, gave me my strongest clue."
-
-"In what way?"
-
-"If it had been Mrs. Cheever, he would not have
-concealed it, because it would have been a theft.
-But as it was you who came to him, he refused to
-divulge the name, because he knew that no crime
-had been committed and that we had either no right
-to be investigating, or were doing so to be blinded
-by you."
-
-"McKenna, you are guessing," said Mrs. Kildair
-again. "You are supposing that only Mrs. Cheever
-and I are on such terms with him that we could make
-such a personal transaction. As a matter of fact,
-not only Mrs. Bloodgood, but her husband and Miss
-Lille could have done the same thing."
-
-"True," said McKenna, but he added obstinately:
-"No, the only reason Mapleson withheld the name
-was because no crime had been committed."
-
-"Before we go on," she said with the same
-mocking smile, "would you mind telling me how you
-worked out this theory? Sit down. I really am
-interested."
-
-If McKenna had not in his possession one bit of
-information which he had withheld, he would have
-felt the nervousness of a possible and ridiculous
-failure. At it was, a doubt flashed across his mind; but
-he allowed her to see none of this hesitation.
-
-"I'm perfectly willing to let you know how it
-came about," he said, sitting down and speaking
-frankly. "I'm not laying claim to anything startling.
-I'll admit now that as to the details of how
-it was done, and why it was done, I don't know. I
-can guess; but I don't know. But as to tracing the
-ring and working back from that—that's A.B.C." Then,
-with a flash of intuition, he said abruptly:
-"Of course, Mapleson has just 'phoned you."
-
-"Well, go on," she said without reply, drawn
-back a little, listening intently.
-
-"The first thing I did was to locate the ring,"
-he began. "You yourself know how easy it is
-to follow a stone worth thirty thousand. You know
-that, because the moment you found out I was on the
-case, you knew I would learn that Slade gave it to
-you. That's why you had me come here—to block it."
-
-"That's true."
-
-"Now, for a while, I admit I was in the dark,
-following several clues, and I don't mind saying here
-that until your engagement I was not at all sure it
-wasn't Mr. Slade himself who had taken that way
-of recovering it."
-
-"That's strange," she said, startled. "Yes, I can
-see that was possible, too."
-
-"Now, what I was working on," said McKenna,
-"was the strongest motive—that whoever took it
-up, took it because he had to take it to raise money,
-to pay a debt or to gamble on the market. So I
-investigated two ways—first, the back histories and
-the present standing of every one at your party;
-second, in the great jewelry shops, to find out if the
-ring had been sold or pawned."
-
-"Of course."
-
-"I didn't believe it had been done openly—that
-would have been too risky—but through some
-channel like Mapleson. But I wasn't thinking of
-Mapleson then. I couldn't locate the ring. I found
-out that Bloodgood, Cheever, Mrs. Cheever, Miss
-Lille and Garraboy had all speculated heavily on the
-market next day. That didn't help much. Now I
-come to my interview with you."
-
-Mrs. Kildair nodded and leaned forward slightly.
-
-"That worried me. After that, I did one thing
-and thought another. Down at the bottom, there
-was something that kept me thinking about you,
-something that bothered me. That's where the
-guess-work comes in, but I don't know as I'd call it
-guess-work. It's an instinct you get when you come in
-contact with a person—it's put me on the right
-track many a time. I saw you didn't want anything
-done, but what fooled me was, I thought it was—" He
-hesitated, and then said boldly: "Mrs. Kildair,
-no use talking unless we say what we mean, is there?"
-
-"Quite right, be professional," she said with a
-quick nod. "You thought I wished to conceal what
-my true relations were with Slade? That's it, isn't it?"
-
-"Yes, that was it," he said slowly. "And being
-wrong myself, I figured out a possible motive. I
-was dead sure you knew who had taken the ring.
-Don't ask how—that's instinct—but I knew. So
-I figured out it was blackmail you were afraid of,
-and I began looking around for the lady or
-gentleman who would know that the ring had belonged
-to Slade. Do you see?"
-
-"Yes, go on. It's very plausible."
-
-"It looked like Garraboy, and it looked like the
-Cheevers at times," he said. "Then Mr. Beecher
-told me of seeing Mapleson in Mrs. Cheever's box
-at the opera, and that you said you knew him.
-That's what started me on Mapleson. Likewise, I
-began thinking more and more about that interview
-with you. Then came your engagement and I flung
-over all my theories, and got down to work. I
-began to look you up, and when I found out the
-situation from Mapleson, I made up my mind then and
-there, for one reason or another, you yourself took
-the ring the second time."
-
-"Is that all?"
-
-"No, this evening I got the last link I'd been
-waiting for."
-
-"What's that?"
-
-"Your account with your broker, and the record
-of sales," he said, bringing out a slip from his pocket.
-
-"Do you get convictions on such evidence as
-this?" she said steadily.
-
-"No," he said frankly; "but I get confessions."
-
-"Why should I take my own ring?"
-
-"The situation was unusual. You probably
-learned of Majendie's failure and you plunged on
-the short side."
-
-"But why not do so openly?" she said calmly.
-
-He hesitated.
-
-"Do you really want me to answer that?" he said
-finally.
-
-"We are not mincing words."
-
-"You were not engaged to Mr. Slade at that
-moment," he began.
-
-"How do you know?"
-
-"I do know. The one thing in your interview
-with me I particularly remember was your anxiety
-that Mr. Slade should know nothing."
-
-She remained thoughtful, bracing her fingers
-against each other, carefully considering what he
-had shown he knew.
-
-"And your theory is that I took the ring the
-second time," she said, "when whoever first took it
-had thrown it on the table, that I called in detectives
-to make Slade believe it had been stolen, so that I
-could gamble in Wall Street without being
-suspected."
-
-"Exactly," he said. "I have no means of knowing
-who took it first, but I would gamble my soul
-you took it the second time. For another reason:
-any one who took it knew he faced a search—that it
-was almost impossible to get it out of the room.
-The only person who could take it without being
-suspected was yourself."
-
-"McKenna," she said at last, but without the
-amusement that had formerly been in her eyes, "you
-are still guessing."
-
-He rose impatiently and went across the room, his
-hands behind his back.
-
-"Then, Mrs. Kildair," he said, turning, "do you
-wish me to report what I have just told you to my
-client, Mr. Beecher—as a guess?"
-
-She stood up at once, fully alert.
-
-"Mrs. Kildair, I am not an enemy," he continued,
-with a sudden change of manner. "I may not know
-all—but I know too much. Now, I'll tell you right
-out why I want your confidence. You marry John
-G. Slade. Slade is going to be one of the biggest
-figures in the country; I know that. I've had his
-business; I want to keep it. It's going to be ten
-times what it was before. More, I want his
-backing. I want several big jobs other agencies have
-got—The Bankers' Association, for one. Now,
-from what I've seen of you, the force back of Slade
-will be Mrs. Slade. Tell me yourself what I already
-know and I know I've got you as a friend. Keep
-it from me, and I know you'll supplant me with your
-husband. There may come a time when I can serve
-you—you never can tell. It's worth trying. I
-repeat I know too much. The only way to guard
-against it is by full confidence."
-
-"You are right. I will tell you," she said
-suddenly, and she added seriously, "I was prepared to
-tell you. But it is understood this remains our
-secret."
-
-"My word."
-
-"And that Mr. Beecher is not to have the slightest
-clue. Can you promise me that?"
-
-"I have another story ready."
-
-"Good. Then it is an alliance," she said, and she
-offered her hand abruptly, with a movement full of
-authority.
-
-McKenna shook hands, surprised at the masculine
-directness of her grip, surprised too at the utter
-disappearance from her face and attitude of all the
-impulsive fire and fascination that had first struck him.
-
-"You are right, and you are wrong," she said
-directly. "I took the ring, but in an entirely
-different way from what you believe. I did not take it
-at the table, as you think—do you know where I
-found it?"
-
-"Where?"
-
-"In the pocket of Mr. Beecher's overcoat."
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`CHAPTER XXV`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- CHAPTER XXV
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-McKenna was so startled at this announcement
-that the expression on his face brought
-a smile to the face of the woman.
-
-"Let me begin at the beginning," she said.
-
-While he seated himself, she continued moving
-about, her head down, her lip closed over her under
-lip, carefully considering the situation. She had no
-fear to give her confidence. She understood the
-man with whom she was dealing, the more so for his
-open avowal of his reasons for seeking her
-friendship. Also she was fully alive as to the strength
-of such an alliance. What she considered was how
-much she should reveal. To-morrow she would be
-Mrs. John G. Slade, at the goal of her ambitions,
-over what perilous paths only she herself knew.
-The knowledge of what she had won suffocated her,
-for the nature of dramatic and adventurous spirits
-is such that they must seek relief in confidence.
-More, they crave the admiration that only another
-can bring to complete their moments of self-intoxication.
-At this moment, when her rôle had been
-played, she craved applause. McKenna was not a
-friend—he was a machine, a rock that would give
-back an echo. Beside, what had he not divined?
-
-"McKenna," she began quietly, though weighing
-her words, "to any one else I might tell my story
-differently. With you it is otherwise. You are no
-fool. I shall speak openly. On the night of my
-party I was virtually ruined."
-
-"Ruined!" exclaimed McKenna, with an involuntary
-glance at the luxury which surrounded them.
-
-"When I say ruined, I mean for me," she said,
-nodding. She became thoughtful, looking beyond
-him, seeing a distant self. "When I came here I
-had fifteen thousand a year. I was not satisfied. I
-wanted forty. I gambled. I have always gambled.
-I lost heavily. That night I had only five thousand
-a year left. That was ruin for me. I speculated
-on the tips of a man who deliberately and for a
-purpose misinformed me. Can you guess who that
-man was?"
-
-"Slade," said McKenna instantly.
-
-"Yes, Slade," she said. "It has been a desperate
-struggle between us. Tomorrow I shall become
-his wife. That is what I want more than I have
-ever wanted anything else. It is my right—you
-will see what I will do. Understand me, if Slade
-had failed I should not have married him, and yet
-I tell you frankly he is the only man I have known
-that appeals to me in every way. However," she
-added, with a little abrupt movement of her closed
-hand, "that's over. I have won."
-
-"Did he know that you had lost?" asked McKenna slowly.
-
-"No," she said with a smile, "he never knew.
-Not that he would not have made it up—in his
-way. It is a game he must have played many times." She
-went to a writing-desk and, unlocking a drawer,
-brought out a note. "When I told you he gave me
-this ring with an offer of marriage," she said,
-returning, "that was not true. He had no thought of
-marriage then—far from it. He offered me the
-ring and I refused it, knowing that he did so only
-to try my weakness. Also, he wanted to find out
-what I knew of Majendie and the Atlantic Trust.
-When he left he sent it back with this note. Read it."
-
-McKenna took the sheet, smoothing out the
-wrinkles, and held it up.
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-DEAR LADY:
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-Apologies for my rudeness. If you won't accept a gift,
-at least wear the ring for a week. I should like to know
-what effect it could have on your cold little soul. Oblige
-my curiosity. It's only a little reparation for the
-disappointment I gave you.
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-\J.\G.\S.
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-Mrs. Kildair took the note again and returning to
-the desk locked it in the drawer.
-
-"This, then, was my situation the night of the
-party. I had lost two thirds of what I had. I was
-absolutely resolved to play everything I possessed
-on one last gamble. I need not remind you of the
-financial situation at that time. I knew Majendie
-and I knew Slade. Furthermore, I knew
-Mrs. Bloodgood. The problem was this—if Majendie
-was to be supported and the Atlantic Trust to be
-upheld, there would probably be no panic. If Majendie
-failed, I knew there would be a tremendous break
-in stocks—a killing for those who knew what was
-coming. That night everything depended on my
-solving Majendie's fate. I did and I won. It was
-a guess, but a guess such as you understand. I have
-known too many men not to know how a true man
-acts under such circumstances. He came from the
-meeting that had condemned him, and the first
-moment he greeted Mrs. Bloodgood, I was sure that he
-was lost. Later, as he bowed ironically to
-something I had said, I saw in the gaping of his pocket
-something that gave me another clue—a slight
-thing, but which had a lot to do with what
-followed—just an edge of a green folder."
-
-"A folder?" said McKenna, perplexed.
-
-"Yes, a folder that I thought might be a railroad
-time-table," she said, nodding. "I knew, of course,
-of Mrs. Bloodgood's infatuation. I had her
-confidence. I knew that she had started to procure a
-divorce. I likewise knew how often she had begged
-Majendie to elope with her. Furthermore, almost
-every one there that night was watching Majendie
-for the same purpose—all who were speculating;
-Mr. and Mrs. Cheever, Bloodgood, Garraboy, Maud
-Lille, Slade—who came in late, quite
-unexpected—were there on the same errand."
-
-"Yes, that I understood," said McKenna.
-
-"Now, I come to the actual theft of the ring.
-The moment I found it had been taken, I realized
-all the difficulties of my position, how dangerous
-any inquiry would be to my reputation, which would
-necessarily establish the fact of its being a gift of
-Slade's. I resolved on desperate measures. That
-is why I came back, had the doors locked, extinguished
-the lights, and announced that I would call
-in detectives to have every one searched, unless the
-ring was restored during the period in the dark,
-while I counted one hundred."
-
-"Did you suspect who had taken it?" asked McKenna.
-
-"There were several I could suspect—that was
-the trouble," she said. "As you know, when I had
-counted sixty-one, there was a sound on the table.
-Every one exclaimed! The ring had been restored!
-When the lights were lit the table was bare.
-Evidently a second thief had taken what the first had
-restored. That's what I thought—every one
-thought. I was wrong. There were not two thieves,
-there was only one."
-
-"The same person had put it down as a blind and
-taken it again," said McKenna slowly, as she waited
-for his comment.
-
-"No," she replied, smiling. "It was all cleverly
-planned, and only an accident prevented its being
-successful. My ring was never on the table."
-
-"The ring that was thrown down, then," said
-McKenna, suddenly enlightened, "was another ring—a
-blind—to cover what any one might have seen?
-I see!"
-
-"And also to make it appear that the ring was
-in the studio."
-
-"Yes, I understand it now," said McKenna,
-nodding, with a sudden snap of his fingers.
-
-"I immediately went out, locking the door, and
-telephoned for my detectives. To this point this was
-my only thought. When I had done that, I began to
-think over what had happened. It seemed incredible
-to me that any one should have dared take such
-a risk—particularly as a search was inevitable.
-When I returned to the studio and awaited the
-arrival of my detectives, this was my only thought. I
-studied each and I became convinced that the ring
-would not be found on any one. If that were true,
-where was it? In the studio, hidden somewhere—but
-even there it would be sure to be found—so
-why should any one have even risked that?" She
-stopped a moment and then said quietly, with again
-that same far-seeing look beyond him: "McKenna,
-in my life I have seen many strange scenes. I have
-known of many more. One such came back to me
-and I guessed this much—that the real ring had not
-been heard. But that was all. When the detectives
-arrived, I went quietly into the hall, still trying to
-work it out. Quite by accident, I brushed against
-one of the coats that was hanging over the railing
-and knocked it down. Absolutely mechanically,
-without knowing why I did it, when I picked it up
-I ran my hands in the pockets. In the second was
-the ring."
-
-"And the coat, you say, was Beecher's?" said
-McKenna, amazed.
-
-"Wait. I replaced it hurriedly, noticing how
-similar it was to another that still lay on the rail.
-Then I opened the door and ushered the detectives
-into the dining-room. I had the ring, but I did
-not know the thief. Then all at once it came over
-me to what use I might put what had occurred. I
-had the ring which had been offered me, but which
-I could not accept openly. I could now use it to raise
-money for the speculation I had resolved upon,
-without Slade's knowing of the obligation. Second, I
-wanted to make sure that I had really seen a
-time-table in the pocket of Majendie. I gave my order
-to that effect to the detectives and started the search."
-
-"Was it a time-table?"
-
-"Nothing was found. Majendie, profiting either
-by the first period of darkness, or the second, had
-thrown it away. I found it in the waste-basket a
-little later. It was a time-table and his very action
-made my guess a certainty."
-
-"But the thief?"
-
-"When the turn of Garraboy arrived," said Mrs. Kildair,
-"he left, as all did, without returning to
-the studio. I was watching him particularly. Five
-minutes after he left, he returned. He had taken
-Mr. Beecher's coat by mistake."
-
-An exclamation of annoyance escaped McKenna.
-He sprang up angrily.
-
-"Mrs. Kildair," he said, not attempting to restrain
-his annoyance, "that is the one thing Mr. Beecher
-neglected to tell me—see how we are handicapped—"
-
-"I'm not blaming you, McKenna," said Mrs. Kildair
-with a smile. "On the contrary, you discovered
-entirely too much."
-
-"It was cleverly worked out," said McKenna
-grimly, "and no risk. He had his wits about him.
-Sounding another ring on the table to limit the
-search to the studio was quick thinking. Planting
-it in Beecher's coat was better. Even if he were
-caught with it on, he could pretend amazement, a
-natural mistake. And if not, it was a clean
-getaway," he added ruefully. "All the same, I wish
-I'd known that detail."
-
-"For the rest you were right. Mapleson loaned
-me the money. He is an old acquaintance, and I
-have once or twice," she said carelessly, "rendered
-him important services. He did telephone me ten
-minutes before you came. I staked everything I
-had in the market. I doubled my losses. Is there
-any other point?"
-
-"Your having the detectives stay was, of course,
-a blind?"
-
-"Of course. I called Miss Charters and Garraboy
-on purpose. To this day I wonder who he
-thinks got the ring from him."
-
-"He suspects," said McKenna.
-
-"Probably," she said carelessly. Then she turned
-on him. "Now, McKenna, answer me a question."
-
-"Which one?"
-
-"It's a thing I want to know," she said, with a
-sudden shade of dread creeping over her face. "It
-is one of those fatalities in life that are so terrible.
-Majendie killed himself because he thought the
-detectives on his track had a warrant for his arrest.
-Weren't they, in fact, your men, simply placed there
-to record his movements for Slade?"
-
-"Mrs. Slade," said McKenna, not noticing the
-slip, "you have just given me a profound confidence.
-Would you trust in my power to keep it, if,
-supposing I knew anything, I should tell you? Ask
-your husband himself and tell me yourself. I am
-curious also."
-
-Mrs. Kildair, who saw in the politic evasion a
-feminine answer, nodded and drew back with a
-shudder.
-
-At this moment Kiki entering announced that
-Mr. Beecher was below.
-
-"Tell him the truth," said McKenna quickly.
-"That is, three quarters of the truth. Leave it to me."
-
-When Beecher entered, expectation and long-restrained
-curiosity on his face, McKenna, with a look
-of crestfallen defeat which completely deceived him,
-said immediately:
-
-"Mr. Beecher, have you that envelope I gave you?"
-
-"Am I to open it?" said Beecher eagerly, bringing
-it out.
-
-"On the contrary," said McKenna, taking it
-quickly. He took it and could not resist examining
-the edges to see if it had been tampered with.
-"This is one of my failures, Mr. Beecher," he said,
-tearing it into small pieces. "I've got too much
-vanity to let you see what an ass I've been."
-
-"What does this mean?" said Beecher, standing
-open-mouthed.
-
-"It means, Teddy," said Mrs. Kildair severely,
-"that it is entirely your fault."
-
-"My fault!"
-
-"Yes, your fault. You neglected to tell Mr. McKenna
-the one thing that was important."
-
-"What thing—what do you mean?"
-
-"That Mr. Garraboy went off with your coat by
-mistake."
-
-"Yes, Mr. Beecher," said McKenna, shaking his
-head, "by not telling me that one detail, you've made
-a fool out of me."
-
-"Then, Garraboy took it!" said Beecher, his face
-lighting up with a smile of triumph.
-
-"Garraboy took it, planted it in your pocket and
-then faked the ring at the table. The ring was
-returned through a woman who guessed it and had it
-restored. Her name is a secret, but you are at
-liberty to guess."
-
-"Miss Lille," said Beecher to himself. This
-dénouement, which coincided so closely with his own
-divination, completely convinced him.
-
-"If you've no further use for me," said McKenna,
-with the same hang-dog look, "I'll be going.
-Another time I hope to serve you better."
-
-"Thank you," said Mrs. Kildair, who contrived
-to add to the words a little smile, comprehensible
-only to the detective.
-
-"Permit me to give you my profound congratulations,"
-said McKenna, taking her hand with a bow
-that made Beecher open his eyes in wonder. "I
-wish you every success."
-
-"*Au revoir*, McKenna," said Mrs. Kildair, still
-smiling.
-
-"Good-night, McKenna," said Beecher in turn.
-
-"Oh, you," said the detective, going off grumbling;
-"I have a bone to pick with you."
-
-Beecher laughed guiltily when the door had closed.
-
-"By Jove," he said, "McKenna certainly is in
-bad humor. I'm sorry. But he was off on a
-tangent, wasn't he?"
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`CHAPTER XXVI`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- CHAPTER XXVI
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-"Just one thing I would like to know," said
-Beecher when Mrs. Kildair, following McKenna's
-lead, had left off with Garraboy's departure.
-
-"What?" she said, noticing his sudden embarrassment.
-
-He could not keep from his face a new consciousness,
-but he went on lamely:
-
-"Why did Miss Charters come back?"
-
-She laughed at what his manner revealed, and said:
-
-"So that's it! I told you she came when I
-telephoned her."
-
-"Yes, but why did you do that?"
-
-"Because I noticed her agitation and the way she
-watched one person in particular."
-
-"Mrs. Bloodgood?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"What did she tell you?"
-
-"She had seen Mrs. Bloodgood pick up the ring
-and try it on," said Mrs. Kildair. "The
-circumstances did seem suspicious, for Mrs. Bloodgood
-looked up in the mirror and saw her watching her.
-Miss Charters did not know whether she had returned
-it, I suppose. That was all. It did look
-bad—considering what happened afterward."
-
-"That was it, then," said Beecher, satisfied. He
-raised his head and saw Mrs. Kildair's eyes on him
-intently.
-
-"Well?" he said with an innocent expression.
-
-"How far has it gone?" said Mrs. Kildair.
-
-"What?"
-
-"Are you in love with Miss Charters?"
-
-"I wonder," he said evasively.
-
-"Are you serious?" she asked quickly.
-
-"And if I said yes—"
-
-"You are thinking of marriage?"
-
-"And if I were?"
-
-"You'd be a big fool," she said decisively.
-
-He raised his eyebrows, astonished and wounded.
-
-"You say this—the day before your own?"
-
-"Come here," she said, taking him by the wrist
-and leading him to the sofa. "Sit down there. Are
-you really seriously thinking of marriage?"
-
-"Yes, I am."
-
-She drew back in her chair, looking at him in
-doubt.
-
-"Teddy," she said at last, "you are too worth
-while to be spoiled like that. You have been too
-loyal a friend for me not to keep you from this blunder."
-
-"But, good heavens, am I not a responsible being?"
-
-"Listen," she said, cutting him off. She glanced
-at the clock. "I haven't much time, so don't
-interrupt me. I am very fond of you and what I say is
-in kindness. Yes, I am going to marry, and yet I
-say to you that you should not. I understand what
-it means. I have nothing to learn. There are two
-kinds of marriages, Teddy. The marriage that
-ninety-nine persons out of a hundred make—the
-marriage that is a joining of forces to fight the
-battle of life—has a definite object. The wife is the
-helpmate. The serious thing is to live, to pay the
-bills and to save a little money. You have nothing
-to do with that kind of marriage. The other kind
-of marriage is the marriage our sort makes, most of
-the time—no responsibilities, no object, and no
-struggle. You take a wife to help you enjoy
-yourself, and your enjoyment depends on piling up new
-sensations—in never being bored. Happiness in
-such conditions is a miracle. As a matter of fact,
-it is not a marriage at all, it is simply a liaison."
-
-"Even then?"
-
-"Yes, certain liaisons have lasted and been happy,"
-she admitted; "we know that, but only on the same
-terms that will make permanent happiness in such a
-marriage. You are not a worker—you are simply
-curious about life, and curiosity is not a thing that is
-satisfied by one experience. The marriage you would
-make now would simply be an experience in curiosity,
-with inevitable results. To have any chance of
-success, do you know what ought to be?"
-
-"What?"
-
-"There should be on each side an equal experience
-in curiosity. When you have known two hundred
-women, you will find that there is always one above
-the rest who is necessary to you. Miss Charters
-may be that one now, but without the experience I
-speak of, you will never recognize it until too late.
-Therefore," she said, standing up, "don't marry for
-ten years. Not with such eyes and such lips," she
-said, passing her hand over the flushed face of the
-young man. "I know what I'm speaking of. Life's
-a very big world when you're alone, and a very small
-patch when you're married. Wait. Think over
-what I've said, Teddy."
-
-He did think over what she had told him as he
-walked out into the street.
-
-"She sees very clearly," he said solemnly, "and
-there's a great deal in what she says—a great deal,"
-he repeated firmly, and stopping at the first hotel he
-telephoned Nan Charters.
-
-The next morning he received another note from her.
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-Just to repeat, Teddy dear, that I think too much of
-you to hold you to what happened yesterday. We must both
-think *seriously—very seriously*.
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-NAN.
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-"That's right: we must think seriously," he
-repeated solemnly, and reached for the papers, after
-eying the telephone for a long time.
-
-Gunther called up later in the morning to give
-him an astonishing bit of news—Garraboy had
-sailed for Europe at nine that morning, and on the
-same ship had gone Mrs. Cheever. But this news did
-not excite him in the least. He spent the morning
-very heavily, keeping to his promise not to telephone
-with great difficulty. He did not go to his club for
-luncheon, but took his meal alone at a chance restaurant.
-
-Then he went to call on Emma Fornez.
-
-"Aha, you have called to talk to me about your
-little Chartèrs," said the prima donna at once.
-
-"How do you know?" he said bluntly.
-
-"It's very simple; when a man's in love he never
-talks it over with a man—no, he always goes to
-another woman."
-
-"Well, would you be surprised if I married Miss
-Charters?" he said, glad to have arrived at the only
-topic which interested him.
-
-"If you what!" exclaimed Mme. Fornez, catapulting
-from the sofa.
-
-"If I marry," he repeated firmly.
-
-"Marry? Oh, no, no, no!" she cried, with her
-hands on her hips and bobbing her head to each
-negation. "Amuse yourself—love—flirt—break her
-heart or break yours—*est-ce que je sais*—but
-marry? What! You are mad!"
-
-"I mean it."
-
-"No, impossible! Marry one of us—an actress—you—a
-nice boy? *Allons donc*. You ought to
-be shut up. Marry Chartèrs. You might just as
-well marry Emma Fornez, and when I say that—oh,
-la, la! My poor boy, I pity you!"
-
-"But you all marry."
-
-"True. But what difference does it make to us?"
-she threw out her chin, the gesture of the peasant.
-"You are serious?"
-
-"Very."
-
-"Let me talk to you. I have only a minute. My
-masseuse is coming and in America one doesn't
-receive with a masseuse—*enfin*. Listen to me well.
-You want to marry seriously—for good, then?
-Children and all the rest? Well, my boy, you might
-just as well marry Emma Fornez and expect her to
-spend her days over a ragout as to marry Chartèrs.
-Will she give up her career?"
-
-"We haven't thought of that."
-
-"It makes no difference. On the stage, off the
-stage, it's the same thing. She won't change. Do
-you want to play the part of a valet, a little dancing
-dog, *hein*? For that's just what you'll be; and one
-of twenty. For she's used to crowds of men. She
-won't change. Love, my dear boy, is madness,
-hallucination, you are drunk; but everything returns as
-it was before—believe me. If I were a man I'd
-never fall in love with a woman until I married
-her—it's easy enough then. You would know what
-you're getting!"
-
-The masseuse came in, sliding on tiptoe from one
-door to another.
-
-"Victorine—*ma masseuse*! In a minute, in a
-minute, Madame Tenier. I'll be with you in a
-minute. Where was I? Teddy, you do not know us
-professional women—we are wrestlers, we are
-always struggling with you men—I warn you. No
-two ways. She will never be happy, my dear
-boy—because she never is happy. We are never happy, or
-we would not be what we are. And what of moods,
-day in and day out. *Tiens*—I'll tell you what you'll
-be—another Victorine. Victorine, *où diable es-tu*?
-No, no, Teddy; don't be a big fool; don't be an idiot.
-You are so nice. You can amuse yourself so well.
-Don't put your head in a noose. If she loves you
-now, she won't to-morrow; she can't help it. Then
-where'll you be—in the soup, *hein*. And she? No,
-no, believe me, Teddy, never marry, in the first
-place, and then never marry one of us."
-
-"There's something in what she says," thought
-Beecher, as he moodily descended in the elevator.
-"She knows her own kind better than I do."
-
-He looked undecidedly at the clock and went to
-pay a dinner call on Mrs. Craig Fontaine. In ten
-minutes they were on the same subject.
-
-"I am terribly upset," said the young widow.
-"I don't want any trouble to come to you, and I can't
-help thinking that what you are considering is a very
-risky step. In the first place, Teddy, you are too
-young."
-
-He made a movement of impatience at this repetition,
-which had begun to offend his sense of dignity.
-
-"You don't know what is ahead," she said warmly.
-"You do not realize that points of view change.
-What you seek now, romance, adventure, is not what
-you'll seek at thirty-five, and life is mostly after
-thirty-five, Ted. Today you are willing to
-sacrifice every friend in the world for one love;
-tomorrow you will realize that friends are our life, their
-ways, their companionship, their interests. Today
-you hold yourself very cheaply; tomorrow you will
-wake up, look round you, see what other women have
-brought to their husbands, and you will say, 'What
-am I worth?'"
-
-"You believe in mercenary marriages, then?" he
-said irritably.
-
-"No, but I believe in staying in the same society
-in which you belong. I don't want to be cruel, but
-Miss Charters is of another world. I know there is
-nothing against her. She may be able to enter your
-world, and then again she may not want to—may
-prefer the freedom of her own, and you will follow
-her. Have you thought of that? Your friends
-must be your wife's friends, or you will give them
-up. Marriage, Teddy, which can be the most
-decisive act in a man's life, is the one he throws away
-the most lightly. I'm only afraid you may wake up
-to what you might have done, Teddy. You are
-young, eager, you are not yet bored. You may feel
-the desire to be something, to do something that
-counts in your life. I don't want you then to wake
-up and realize that another marriage might have
-given you the connections you wanted, the added
-opportunity. At this moment marriage appears to you
-the only thing that counts; you will realize some day
-that it is the least thing in it." She smiled, as he
-looked amazed, and added: "No amount of discussion
-can make you understand these things—they
-must be lived. But, Teddy, before you leap, ask
-yourself seriously what you are worth."
-
-When he left Mrs. Fontaine's presence, he did so
-with lagging steps. The advice of these three
-women, so various and viewing life from such
-divergent points of view, profoundly impressed him.
-He tried to argue against what had been told him,
-and as this process irritated him beyond measure, he
-broke off, acknowledging their superior insight.
-But all at once he stopped short, enlightened by a
-sudden reflection.
-
-"If what they say is true ... why did they all marry?"
-
-This answer, which might seem no answer at all,
-appeared to the mind of the lover, which is to say to
-the mind seeking to be convinced, so complete and
-startling a refutation, that he swung on his heel, and
-went directly to offer himself to Miss Charters.
-
-
-
-
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. _`EPILOGUE`:
-
-.. class:: center large bold
-
- EPILOGUE
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-Three years after the close of these events
-there were gathered in a box of the Metropolitan
-Opera, Mr. and Mrs. Gunther, senior, the
-Teddy Beechers, Bruce Gunther and a Miss Clarice
-Fanning, of the Virginia Fannings, a young girl
-demure, direct, with already in the youthful instincts
-of her pose more than a suggestion of the dignity
-and elegance which would come to grace the woman.
-From time to time, by a little movement of her fan,
-she brought to her shoulder for a whispered
-comment Bruce Gunther, who, though he had seated
-himself behind Mrs. Beecher, was compensated by
-the advantage of thus exchanging glances. All
-these little messages, which the young girl flattered
-herself were so cleverly executed as to remain
-invisible, were seen by every one in the box with
-discreet enjoyment.
-
-At the end of the act the two young men excused
-themselves and departed to make a round of visits.
-
-"Nan's charming, Ted," said Gunther, who saw
-them both for the first time since their long stay
-in Europe. He added with the extra enthusiasm with
-which a man of the world conveys his surprise at
-an unexpected development: "By George! she has
-the manners of a duchess! The governor, crabby
-old critic, too, is quite won over by her."
-
-"She has developed beautifully," said Beecher,
-with a certain proprietary responsibility which young
-husbands feel deeply. "She is a remarkable
-woman! ... remarkable!"
-
-"Well, you fooled all the prophets," said Gunther
-in his blunt way.
-
-"How so?"
-
-"We gave you a year, at the most," said Gunther,
-who stopped short and looked at his friend as though
-to ask the explanation of such a miracle.
-
-"My wife adores me," said Beecher, with a smile.
-
-Gunther smiled to himself and thought that if the
-wife had developed as though by right into the sure
-and brilliant woman of the world, the husband at
-heart had retained the same boyish irreverence of
-the mysterious depths of life.
-
-"You ought to get into something, Ted," he said
-abruptly. "You can't loaf in America! ... I'll
-give you an opening."
-
-"That's why the Missus brought me back," said
-Beecher. "Look out, I may take up that offer!"
-
-This reply, unconsciously delivered, gave Gunther
-the first glimpse of light into the perplexing success
-of his friend's marriage.
-
-"Well, where's the first call?" he said, registering
-in his mind this last perception.
-
-"I want to drop in on Mrs. Fontaine, Mrs. Slade,"
-... he considered a moment and added, "Mrs. Bloodgood,
-too, I am anxious to see..."
-
-"Don't forget Emma Fornez ... you ought to
-go behind," said Gunther, for the opera was *Carmen*.
-
-"Yes," said Beecher, with a little hesitation.
-
-"Next act ... Let's drop in on Louise Fontaine,
-first..."
-
-"There are reasons ... just at present..."
-said Gunther with a slight frown. "Anyhow, here's
-Slade's box—let's begin here."
-
-Mrs. Slade at their entrance rose directly, and
-came to meet them in the antechamber.
-
-"How nice of you to come here first," she said
-with genuine pleasure, extending both her hands.
-"Mr. Gunther, go into the box ... I want a few
-minutes alone with Teddy!" She turned to Beecher,
-motioning him to a seat on the cushioned settee in
-the little pink and white room that was like a jewel
-box. "I saw you at once ... Your wife has made
-a sensation!"
-
-"It is you, Rita, who are astonishing!" he said
-abruptly.
-
-"How so?" she said, already comprehending the
-frank wonder in his eyes.
-
-"You always did fascinate us, you know," he said,
-reclining a bit, the better to take in the elegant
-sinuosities of her pose. "But that was nothing to you
-now ... You are the opera itself!"
-
-"Not quite yet," she said, with a confident little
-bob of the head. She added, "I am happy!"
-
-In truth, just as men of conscious greatness who,
-in the period of their struggles, have a certain brusque
-and impatient unease, suddenly in the day of their
-success acquire a dignity and a radiating charm that
-astonishes, so in her a similar transformation had
-operated. The old feline restlessness, the swift and
-nervous changes from Slavic somnolence to sparkling
-energy, has been subdued in a clear serenity, and as
-she received the flattering tribute of the young man
-who had been associated with her period of
-uncertainty, there was in her smile a new graciousness
-that was not without its authority.
-
-"You too are happy!—it shows!" she said after
-the moment which she allowed Beecher to study her.
-
-"Very!"
-
-"You have children?"
-
-"Two." Then recalling with a little pardonable
-malice the intention of his visit, he said: "You were
-a bad prophet, Rita! ... You remember?"
-
-"I do."
-
-"Well?..."
-
-"Well, I underestimated your intelligence, my dear
-Teddy," she said, with a fugitive smile. "You are
-settling in America?"
-
-"Yes, the Missus has planned to make me a captain
-of finance," he said with a laugh. "However,
-I am ready for something active."
-
-"Tell your wife," she said irrelevantly, "that I
-will come to see her after the next act. My husband
-returns tomorrow ... save the night after for us
-... I want to be as good a friend to her as you
-have been to me! ... Give my message exactly!"
-
-"I promise!"
-
-All at once his eyes, which had been searching,
-rested on her left hand. On the fourth finger,
-guarded by the gold band of her marriage, was the
-ruby ring.
-
-"It's the same, isn't it?" he asked.
-
-"I always wear it," she said, raising it to her
-eyes. "It is a fetish."
-
-"We ran across Garraboy a couple of times
-... He married her, you know."
-
-"She married him, you mean..."
-
-"Yes, that would be more correct ... watches
-the beggar like a hound ... a pleasant life he has
-of it! ... By the way, did the story about the ring
-ever leak out?"
-
-"Never!" She rose, as though feeling the
-end of the intermission. "Tell me one thing,
-Teddy...."
-
-"A dozen!"
-
-"Did you tell your wife I advised you not to marry?"
-
-"Never!"
-
-"Don't! ... There are things a woman doesn't
-forgive, and I want to be good friends!"
-
-Beecher nodded.
-
-Gunther came out, and she gave them her fingers,
-remaining tall and stately, her head inclined a little
-pensively, until they had left.
-
-"Most remarkable woman here!" said Gunther
-briefly. "In a year or so more she'll be the
-undisputed leader."
-
-"What about John G.?"
-
-"The coming man. You know we're in close
-relations with him. The Governor has a great
-admiration for him, and you know it isn't often the
-Governor is taken that way!"
-
-"What's he doing?"
-
-"Railroad unification, territorial development
-... only man in this country who can appreciate
-what the Canadian Pacific is doing!"
-
-"I thought he was considered rather a freebooter?"
-
-"So he was. Big men change when they get
-what they want. He had an interview with the old
-man, and laid his cards on the table. Governor said
-it was the frankest confidence he'd ever heard. When
-he went into the railroad field, it was at the mercy
-of a lot of clever little stock-jobbers, who were
-playing it like a game of roulette. Slade's driven 'em
-out, broken their backs, bankrupted them ... Oh! he
-strikes hard! ... Now there's a real railroad
-policy, with a national object."
-
-"You seem quite enthusiastic over him yourself,"
-said Beecher, glancing at the plates on the boxes.
-
-"I am. He's a constructive ... that's what we want!"
-
-"When did all this happen?"
-
-"A couple of months after that affair of the
-Atlantic Trust."
-
-Beecher stopped, and with a gesture showed his
-companion a plate on which was inscribed:
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-.. class:: center
-
- ENOS BLOODGOOD.
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-"I never can forget Majendie that night," he said,
-sobered by the recollection of the events in which
-he had been such an agitated spectator. "By Jove,
-he was true blue!"
-
-"If he'd had the nerve to face the music he'd be
-a rich man to-day," said Gunther, meditatively.
-
-"The Atlantic Trust is stronger than ever. Of
-course, technically, Majendie did things he had no
-right to do, but do you know, every investment he
-made has turned out enormously profitable! Queer
-how one man drops out and another pops up."
-
-"I wonder how much of it was business, and
-how much was..." Beecher broke off and a
-second time gestured in the direction of the box.
-
-"Who knows?" said Gunther, with a shrug of his
-shoulders.
-
-Beecher glanced down the corridor to assure
-himself there was yet time, and opened the door.
-
-In the front row of the box Mrs. Bloodgood was
-laughing gaily with three or four young men who
-were bending flatteringly over her. In the back
-Bloodgood was seated, dozing in a corner. Beecher
-hardly recognized him. Of the once rugged physique
-nothing remained but a senile fluttering. Some
-mysterious disease had struck him down and marked his
-hours. At this moment Mrs. Bloodgood, aware of a
-shadow in the doorway, turned and met the profound
-and memory-troubled gaze of the young man. She
-recognized him and in the same moment divined his
-thoughts. By a movement which she could not
-control, she brought her fan, which had been extended
-in a tantalizing gesture under the eyes of one of her
-satellites, into a protective barrier, as though to shield
-herself from the too frank melancholy of this
-disturbing gaze. Their eyes met. Beecher inclined his
-head. It was at the same time a salutation and an
-adieu.
-
-He found Gunther outside their box.
-
-"The old fellow's in a pretty bad way," said his
-friend, noticing his disturbed look.
-
-"It wasn't that!..."
-
-"Yes,—she's taking her revenge!" said Gunther
-with a laugh.
-
-To shake off this impression Beecher touched his
-friend on the arm, and forcing a smile, said, with a
-nod towards the box where Miss Fanning was waiting:
-
-"So it's serious, Bruce?"
-
-"But not for publication..." said Gunther with
-a nod.
-
-Beecher would have liked to put a further question,
-one which had presented itself already at the
-thought of Louise Fontaine; but he refrained, for he
-was aware in his friend of a certain new grimness
-and implacability of purpose which, as in his father,
-had the effect of withdrawing him from the ordinary
-club familiarity.
-
-After the second act he went behind the scenes to
-greet Emma Fornez, who had just received an ovation.
-
-The diva, with the same cry of delight in which
-she recognized him, asked him what he thought of
-her success.
-
-"You have reached the top.... Every new
-*Carmen* must now be advertised as greater than
-Emma Fornez!" he answered with a bow.
-
-"Ah, you have learned how to make compliments!
-... Bravo!" she exclaimed. She advanced her
-head, pointing to a little spot under her jeweled ear.
-"There! ... your recompense! ... You look as
-big a boy as ever! ... Tell me everything—all at
-once! ... Victorine, close the door. I see no
-one—*tu m'entends*? ... I am too red tonight, *hein*?"
-
-"Not from the boxes!"
-
-"*Si, si*! ... I must be more pale ... Sit down,
-sit down!" She enveloped her shoulders in a shawl,
-and studied her face in the flashing mirror, pulling
-her make-up box towards her. "You have come
-back ... for good, Teddy?"
-
-"Yes!"
-
-"You are always married?"
-
-"Yes!"
-
-"That's a pity—*enfin*! ... Happy?"
-
-"Very!"
-
-"Too bad! ... And you have come *pour tirer
-la langue à Emma Fornez* ... who tried to frighten
-you!"
-
-"Exactly!" said Beecher, laughing.
-
-"Oh, you needn't be so conceited about it! If
-you are still living together—it is because ..." she
-stopped a moment to correct the beady fringe of the
-eyes, "because your wife is a very, very clever
-woman!"
-
-"What?"
-
-"Oh, just that! ... and because she finds she
-can lead you around conveniently by the nose
-... just so!" She leaned over and illustrated her
-meaning with a little tweak before he could defend
-himself.
-
-"I see, you are quite furious that we are not divorced!"
-
-She shrugged her shoulders.
-
-"How many months is it?..."
-
-"Three years ... Three and a half!"
-
-"Bah! there is still hope!"
-
-To tease her for this, he drew back, grinning with
-elation.
-
-"Oh, you are having a beautiful time of it!" she
-said, watching him in the mirror. "It amuses you
-very much! ... But just you wait!" She raised
-her hand, counting the fingers. "Three, four,
-five—five years! That is the worst bridge of
-all! ... Even my old Jacquot—poor soul—stood me for
-five years! ... Just wait!" Then, struck by a
-sudden reflection, she proceeded to revenge herself.
-"If you are happy, I was right, after all! You
-remember ... first time I saw Chartèrs ... I said
-'it is not an actress, it is a woman!' ..." She
-emphasized the point with a satisfied shrug. "I was
-right, and there you are!"
-
-"Well, Emma, don't let's fight," he said, hugely
-amused. "I'm glad to see you again!"
-
-"I, too," she said, tapping his arm, and turning
-her darkened face towards him for better inspection.
-"Better so, *hein*? ... So you are rich now, Teddy
-... An uncle was good enough to die?"
-
-"Two!..."
-
-"Ah! ... what a pity! ... And now you are
-spoiled!" She began to soften the shadows of the
-eyes. "Tell me one thing..."
-
-"Yes?..."
-
-"You ... you did not tell her—the wife—about
-our little conspiracy?—the night of the cowboy
-party, *hein*?..." As he hesitated she caught
-the accusatory look in his eyes, and she wheeled about.
-"*Comment*! ... You were so stupid! ... *Dieu! que
-les hommes sont sôts*!"
-
-"Nonsense! ... she laughed over it!" he said,
-recovering himself. "Besides, she had guessed it
-already!"
-
-"My dear Teddy," she said, in very bad humor,
-"I take back all I said ... You were born a
-husband—typical! ideal!—You would be content with
-any one! ... with Victorine, even!"
-
-She flung the rabbit's foot furiously among the
-pigments.
-
-"*Allons*, we might just as well say adieu!"
-
-"Why?"
-
-"She does not know you have come?"
-
-"No, but..."
-
-"Well, well ... don't be fool enough to tell
-her! ... Go right back now. Make a call in some box
-where she can see you, and escape a good..." She
-stopped, shaking her hand in the direction of his ear.
-
-"You are mistaken!" he began, flushing. "You
-don't know her..."
-
-"Mistaken ... tra-la-la! ... and I know her! ... All
-I have to do is to see you, my poor Teddy,
-to understand ... absolutely ... in every little
-detail ... the woman who makes you so ... So—adieu!"
-
-"It is not as tragic as all that," he said, laughing,
-but giving his hand.
-
-"Adieu! ... adieu!"
-
-"I may come back ... when I am divorced?"
-
-"That will never happen!" she persisted,
-vindictively. "She has tamed you ... you are a
-domestic animal ... a house pet ... like the cat and the
-poodle dog!"
-
-"*Au revoir*, Emma," he said, refusing to be irritated.
-
-"Not good-by!" She took up a thread, broke it
-with a vicious jerk, and let the ends float away.
-"Victorine, *depêche-toi donc*!"
-
-Beecher, who had started with the intention of
-extracting a legitimate revenge, had received little
-satisfaction from his two interviews. Nevertheless, he
-was not so naïve as to reject Emma Fornez's advice.
-He went directly to Mrs. Craig Fontaine's box.
-Louise, as though she had waited impatiently his
-coming, started at once from her chair, meeting him
-in the privacy of the antechamber. He was struck
-at once by the constrained tensity of her glance.
-
-"You are in the Gunthers' box," she said, directly
-the first greetings were over. "Where is Bruce?
-Why didn't he come with you?"
-
-"We separated. I went behind to see Madame
-Fornez..." he said lamely.
-
-She was not deceived by his answer, made a rapid
-calculation and said abruptly:
-
-"Teddy, tell me the truth. Don't refuse me!
-... You may be doing me a favor ... the greatest! ... Is
-Bruce engaged? That little girl in the box?"
-
-Between them there had been the fullest loyalty,
-and a confidence since school days. He was not
-ignorant, therefore, of her infatuation for his friend,
-though what dramatic turn it might have taken in
-the years of his absence, he could only speculate.
-
-"Yes, it is true," he said. "It is not to be known
-... With you, Louise, it is different: you ought to
-know!"
-
-She sat down, and he was frightened by the swift,
-ashen pallor that rushed into her face. Alarmed, he
-made a movement towards her.
-
-"Wait!" she said, faintly. "There are two questions
-I must ask ... Did he, Bruce, send you to
-tell me this?"
-
-"No...." He hesitated, surprised at the
-question, adding: "That is, I think not...."
-
-"Is it to be public—immediately?"
-
-"No, not at once ... I am sure of that!"
-
-She nodded her head with a little relief, and,
-incapable of speech, raised her hand weakly as though
-to excuse herself, then laid it over her heart. He
-rose, turning his back, steadying himself. At the end
-of a long moment she touched him on the shoulder.
-
-"I will come ... tomorrow ... and call on
-your wife," she said, quietly. "Give her my very
-best wishes, will you? ... And ... thank
-you! ... You have done me a great service!..."
-
-When he reached his box Bruce was waiting for him.
-
-"You saw Louise?" he said directly.
-
-"Yes!"
-
-"You told her?"
-
-"Yes, I told her."
-
-"That was right!"
-
-They hesitated a moment, one whether to
-question, the other whether to explain.
-
-"I admire her as much as any woman," said Gunther,
-at last. "She made only one blunder ... At
-that, Fate was against her."
-
-This answer, and the way it was delivered, was all
-that Beecher was permitted to understand of an
-episode which deserves a novel to itself. Nevertheless,
-he felt that there must have been something far out
-of the ordinary to have brought forth from Gunther
-this eulogy, which sounded at the moment like an
-epitaph.
-
-When Beecher entered the lights were up on the
-act. During the time in which he had been absent,
-his wife, too, had been a prey to dramatic moods.
-The stage and the world had been before her eyes
-as the choices of her own life. She comprehended
-what Beecher did not, all the advantages of her first
-appearance in New York under the patronage of the
-Gunthers, that was in itself a social cachet.
-Mrs. Slade's flattering visit, as well as the accented
-cordiality of acquaintances who had bowed to her from
-their boxes, made her feel how easy would be her
-way in this world, so easy of access by one entrance
-and so hostile by a thousand others. She was
-satisfied. Her doubts, if she had yielded to them a
-moment, were gone. She had talked to Gunther of what
-she wanted for her husband, and made of him a
-friend, not insensible to the reason of the charm which
-she had exerted. But in the moment in which the
-social world presented itself to her as the endless
-stretching Pacific flashed upon the dazzled eyes of
-Balboa, she felt a sudden sense of loneliness and the
-need of support. She rested her hand on the
-strong-muscled arm of her husband, and designating with a
-smile the young girl who was so artlessly and artfully
-conveying her impatient delight at Bruce's return,
-she sent her husband one of those looks which only
-a perfectly happy woman has the power to retain
-... that first fugitive, timid offering in the eyes of
-lovers.
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-The next day Mrs. Craig Fontaine's engagement
-was announced in all the papers. It was a romance
-of long standing ... the engagement now made
-public for the first time was supposed to have lasted
-several months, etc.
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-Mrs. Slade had more than fulfilled her promise
-towards McKenna. Through her active friendship
-not only had he secured the entire patronage of her
-husband, but had finally acquired the coveted field of
-the Bankers' Association of America. His agency
-had tripled in its ramifications and its power. This
-man, who perceived clearly all the relative, often
-confusing, shades of morality, was at the bottom an
-idealist. He undertook two great campaigns: one
-which resulted in the exposing of the mysterious
-suzerainty over corrupt politics of a group of
-outwardly respectable capitalists; and the other in the
-purification of a great labor union from a band of
-terrorists, who were betraying their ideals and selling
-their sympathies. He had still one ambition, which
-he had confided alone to Mrs. Slade, to whom he was
-able to render in this period two invaluable
-services—he wished one day to become Police Commissioner
-of New York City, and create, in that cemetery of
-reputations, a great police system that would vie with
-the systems of Paris and London.
-
-Often Bruce Gunther would run into his office at
-the close of the afternoon. He appreciated the
-integrity of the detective, and he used him as he was
-learning to use many men ... as so many windows
-through which to look out on life. Gunther had not
-been entirely the dupe of Rita Kildair's explanation
-as to the theft of the ring. Above the mantelpiece
-in the inner office of McKenna, framed in simple
-passe-partout, hung the two clippings of the same
-date: one the bare statement of the bank's support of
-the Associated Trust, and underneath the engagement
-of Rita Kildair and John G. Slade.
-
-These dramatically aligned scraps of information
-for the public, never ceased to intrigue him. Many
-a time he considered a direct question, but refrained
-from respect. One day, however, pushed to the
-verge by his curiosity, he said abruptly:
-
-"McKenna, are you going to write your memoirs,
-some day?"
-
-"Perhaps—some day!"
-
-"You ought to—Publication fifty years from now."
-
-"May be ... may be!"
-
-"And that affair of the ring," said Gunther, pointing
-to the notices. "Will you tell the truth about
-that?"
-
-"What! Write down my mistakes?"
-
-"Was it a mistake?"
-
-McKenna nodded, gazing at the mantelpiece meditatively,
-with an expression that was indecipherable.
-
-"Bad mistake!"
-
-"But I should say one of those failures that are
-sometimes rather fortunate?" persisted Gunther.
-
-"Well, it's a good thing to know how to turn a
-failure to account. That's why a few of us get
-ahead," said McKenna in a matter-of-fact way, but
-for a moment Gunther seemed to perceive the faintest
-trace of a smile, lurking maliciously in the
-corners of his eyes.
-
-.. vspace:: 6
-
-.. pgfooter::
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- THE SIXTY-FIRST SECOND
-
-
-
-
-This ebook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this ebook or online at
-http://www.gutenberg.org/license. If you are not located in the United
-States, you'll have to check the laws of the country where you are
-located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: The Sixty-First Second
-Author: Owen Johnson
-Release Date: March 12, 2015 [EBook #37113]
-Reposted: May 06, 2016 [text corrections applied]
-Language: English
-Character set encoding: US-ASCII
-
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SIXTY-FIRST SECOND ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Al Haines.
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: "'I shall have the detectives here--a man and a
-woman--within half an hour. There is nothing to do but wait'"--Page 61]
-
-
-
-
- *THE
- SIXTY-FIRST
- SECOND*
-
-
- BY
-
- OWEN JOHNSON
-
- AUTHOR OF "STOVER AT YALE," ETC.
-
-
-
- _ILLUSTRATED BY A. B. WENZELL_
-
-
-
- NEW YORK
- FREDERICK A. STOKES COMPANY
- PUBLISHERS
-
-
-
-
- _Copyright, 1912, 1913, by_
- THE MCCLURE PUBLICATIONS, INC.
-
- _Copyright, 1913, by_
- FREDERICK A. STOKES COMPANY
-
- _All rights reserved, including that of translation into foreign
- languages, including the Scandinavian_
-
- _March, 1913_
-
-
-
-
- *ILLUSTRATIONS*
-
-
-"'I shall have the detectives here--a man and a woman--within half an
-hour. There's nothing to do but wait'" . . . . . . _Frontispiece_
-
-"In that gay party one person was a thief--but which one? ... A match
-sputtered. There was a cry of amazement and horror. The table was
-absolutely bare"
-
-"'Look here, Rita. Can't I help out some way?'"
-
-"'Come outside--in the garden. I want to speak to you. Come quietly'"
-
-"'I have not hesitated to trust in you--you must in me'"
-
-"'Aha! I made them sit up, didn't I--your cold women!'"
-
-
-
-
- *The Sixty-First Second*
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER I*
-
-
-In the year 19--, toward the end of the month of October, the country
-was on the eve of a stupendous panic. A period of swollen prosperity
-had just ended in which Titans had striven in a frenzy for the millions
-that opportunity had spilled before them.
-
-For months the stock market had steadily lowered, owing to the flight of
-the small investor, affrighted by the succession of investigations, the
-fear of readjustments, and the distrust of the great manipulators. The
-public, which understands nothing of the secret wars and hidden
-alliances of finance, had begun tremulously to be aware of the
-threatening approach of a stupendous catastrophe. So in the ominous,
-grumbling days of October, when the air was full of confusing rumors and
-violent alarms, the public, with its necessity for humanizing all
-sensations, perceived distinctly only two figures, each dramatically in
-peril, about whose safety or ruin the whole comprehensible drama of the
-financial cataclysm seemed to center.
-
-These two figures, both presidents of great trust companies, giants in
-their own sphere, represented two opposite elements of that great mass
-of society which seeks its level in Wall Street. Bernard L. Majendie,
-president of the Atlantic Trust Company, member of every exclusive club,
-patron of the arts, representative of one of the oldest American
-families, accustomed to leadership and wealth from colonial times, was
-linked in a common danger with John G. Slade, president of the
-Associated Trust Company, promoter, manipulator, owner of a chain of
-Western newspapers, a man who had hauled himself out of the lowest
-depths of society. Many believed that both, in the relentless
-readjustment which the banks were forcing on the trust companies, were
-destined to be blotted out in the general catastrophe. Many others,
-perceiving the strange oppositeness of the two individuals, speculated
-on which would survive the other, if indeed either were to persist.
-
-About three o'clock of a certain afternoon, when each extra brought a
-new alarm, John G. Slade came abruptly from the great library, down the
-sounding marble descent that was a replica of the famous rampe of the
-Chateau of Gerny, into the tapestry-hung vestibule of his palace on
-upper Fifth Avenue.
-
-He stood a moment in blank meditation, while the third man held his
-overcoat open and ready, watching anxiously the frown on the face of the
-master, who stood before him, a massive six-foot-four. Already in the
-great marble home itself was that feeling of alarm from the outer world
-which had communicated itself to the servants. Suddenly Slade,
-returning to himself, detected the furtive scrutiny of the footman and
-the butler, who had so far departed from their correctly petrified
-attitudes as to exchange wondering glances. He frowned, pointed to his
-loose black felt hat and his favorite cane, and tore so rapidly through
-the heavily ironed doors and down the steps to the waiting automobile
-that the second footman stumbled twice in his haste to be before him.
-Two or three reporters, who had been lurking behind the great marble
-bastions, sprang forward as Slade, disappearing in the motor, was
-whirled away.
-
-"Up river," he said briefly, and sank back in his seat.
-
-He was in the middle forties, a man noticeable anywhere for the
-overmastering vitality of his carriage and the defiant poise of his
-head. Nature had admirably designed him for what he was intended to
-be--a being always at war with men and surrounding circumstances. His
-face was devoid of any fine indications of sensibility, of reflection,
-or humorous perception of life. The upper and lower maxillary bones
-were in such gaunt relief they seemed rather steel girders hung to
-support a granite will. The head was square, sunk rather than placed
-upon his shoulders, and the line of the head at the back was straight
-and full of crude power. He had, at the same time, a suggestion in the
-shoulders of the obstinacy of the buffalo, the most distinctive of
-American beasts, and in the eye-pits of the fatalism of the Indian,
-which as a type often seems not so much the physical tenacity of an
-unexplained race as it does the peculiar impress of a continent and an
-atmosphere surcharged with vitality.
-
-The eyes were a clear blue, the eyes of a boy in mischief who is still
-sublimely defiant of the tripping obstacles of an ethical code. This
-quality of the boy, characteristic too of the American, was the secret
-of all his seeming inconstancy of unrelenting cruelty and sudden
-sentimental impulsiveness. Life was to him a huge dare, and all the
-perils of finance the hazards of a monstrous gamble, which alone were
-able to supply him with that overwhelming quality of sensation that such
-men covet in life.
-
-A waif at six; a wharf rat at twelve, endowed with the strength of a
-man; leader of a gang at sixteen, hated, feared, always fighting;
-gaining his first start in politics, and then, by making a lucky strike
-in the silver mines of Colorado, educating himself with primitive
-necessary knowledge, always acquiring, never relaxing what his fingers
-touched, a terrible antagonist, risking his all a dozen times in the
-hunger for a greater stake--he had emerged at last from the churning
-vortex of a brutal struggle, possessor of a fortune that fifty times had
-hung on the events of a day. For five years he had been involved in
-countless lawsuits, accused of chicanery, extortion, conspiracy, and
-even murder. At the end of which period he came forth victorious,
-without losing a single suit, surrounded, it is true, by every calumny
-that could be invented, accused of manipulating legislatures, corrupting
-judges, and removing witnesses.
-
-Through it all he had remained unshattered, boyishly delighted, his body
-unyielding to the strain of sleepless nights and months of unrelenting
-vigilance. He had lived hard, ready to gamble for a thousand or a
-hundred thousand, cynically announcing his motto:
-
-"No friends. So long as every man is my enemy, I am safe."
-
-And this theory of life he had carried out to the minutest detail. Men
-represented to him simply the male of the species, to be met head on, to
-strive with and overthrow. So completely did this obsess him that no
-one, not even his secretaries (whom he changed constantly), had the
-slightest inkling of his plans. Two of his subordinates, hoping to
-profit by their intimacy, had foolishly invested on his deliberately
-given tips--and had been ruined. Afterward he cited their cases as a
-warning to other applicants.
-
-From the start, always counting on the year ahead, he had outrun his
-income. When he had ten thousand, he was spending fifteen; at fifty
-thousand, seventy-five. Every one who came in contact with him was paid
-twice over, and robbed him in the bargain--a fact on which he counted
-and to which he was quite indifferent.
-
-Coming to Wall Street in that period of fevered speculation, he had been
-among the first to perceive the enormous instruments at hand in the
-development of a chain of trust companies which would supply a
-conveniently masked agency for the enormous capital that he needed to
-compete on equal terms with the leaders of the Street.
-
-That now, for the first time, he was confronted with a situation of
-absolute and impending ruin, brought him not the slightest depression,
-but rather that exhilaration and sudden clearness of mind which is
-characteristic of the gambler face to face with the supreme hour which
-means absolute bankruptcy or a fortune.
-
-At every block some one on the crowded sidewalk, or a group in a passing
-carriage, turned with a hasty exclamation at the sight of his bulky
-figure under the black sombrero, fleeing in the red automobile that was
-itself at this period a rarity. At one point where a blockade compelled
-him to halt, a newsboy, jumping on the sideboard, thrust a newspaper in
-his face. He flung a dime and glanced at the headlines:
-
-
- MARKET STILL GOING DOWN
-
- RUMORED SUSPENSIONS
-
-
-Then he tossed it aside and returned to his own calculations. All at
-once he roused himself and addressed the chauffeur:
-
-"Harkness, Mrs. Braddon's. Take the park."
-
-But as the automobile, turning from the river, descended by way of green
-woods, he began restlessly to repent of his choice. His hatred of men
-had made him strangely dependent on women. It was not that they were
-able to establish any empire over his senses, but that they supplied a
-curious outlet to his vanity. At times, especially as in the present,
-when he felt the necessity of assembling every resource to meet a
-crisis, it became absolutely necessary for him to find, in the tribute
-he exacted from them, that self-confidence which he needed to override
-other obstacles. Often he would take in his automobile three or four
-women of that class which is half professional, half of the world, and,
-running slowly through the pleasant country, recount stories of his
-early struggles, of how he had railroaded an enemy to prison, or caught
-an adversary in a turn of the market and broken him. And when these
-tales of unrelenting enmity made his audience shudder, he keenly
-perceived it, and enjoyed almost a physical delight.
-
-But this afternoon, as the car came to a stop before one of the great
-apartment-houses that front the park, he remained seated, unsatisfied
-and defrauded. It was not a woman of the superficial wit of Mrs. Braddon
-who could occupy and stimulate his mind in this crisis.
-
-"Drive on," he said sharply. "Turn the corner and stop at the hotel."
-
-There he descended, and entering went to the telephone.
-
-"Mrs. Kildair?" he said eagerly, a moment later.
-
-"Who is it, please?"
-
-"This is Slade--John Slade. I'm coming over."
-
-"I can't see you now," said a voice with a curious musical quality of
-self-possession. "I told you five o'clock."
-
-"What difference does half an hour make?" he said impatiently.
-
-"I have other company. You will have to be patient. At five."
-
-The connection was shut off. He rose angrily, unaccustomed to any check
-to his immediate impulses. At the steps a boy came skipping down for the
-toll he had forgotten. He paid the exact amount, contrary to his
-custom, and drove his body back into the cushioned seat.
-
-"Where to, sir?" said Harkness, turning.
-
-"Anywhere," he answered gruffly, and, thwarted in his desire, he said to
-himself furiously: "That woman always opposes me! I must teach her a
-lesson. I won't go at all."
-
-But at the end of a moment he pulled out his watch impatiently and
-calculated the time.
-
-"Home," he said suddenly.
-
-At the house, he ran rapidly through the opening doors and up the stairs
-to his bedroom, where he unlocked a little safe fixed in the wall behind
-a tapestry that hid it, and took out a tray of rings. Sorting them
-quickly, with a low, cynical chuckle, he selected a magnificent ruby,
-slipped it into his pocket, closed the safe, and passed out of the house
-with the same rapidity with which he had entered.
-
-"Mrs. Kildair's, Harkness," he said. "Drive so as to get me there at
-five-fifteen."
-
-"Now we shall see," he said to himself, with a smile, gazing at the ring
-in the palm of his hand with a man's contemptuous contemplation of the
-stone which could hold such fascination over a woman's soul. For him it
-was absolutely necessary, as a first step toward his conquest of all his
-enemies, to feel his power over this one present resistance.
-
-The idea that had come into his head restored his good humor and aroused
-in him a certain joy of energy. He had forgot momentarily his errand,
-absorbed in his own battle for existence.
-
-"Today is Thursday," he said, with renewed energy. "Next Wednesday will
-be the crisis. I must find out what Majendie is going to do.
-Snelling's the man to know--or Garraboy."
-
-The car stopped. He sprang out and, without giving his name, entered
-the elevator. At the apartment a Japanese servant took his things and
-ushered him into the low-lit greens of the studio, which ran the height
-of the two floors that formed the duplex apartment.
-
-Mrs. Rita Kildair was stretched on a low Recamier sofa, watching him
-with amused eyes as he entered with that atmosphere of strife and fury
-that seemed always to play about him. She waited until he had come to
-her side before she raised her hand to his, in a gesture that had no
-animation, saying:
-
-"How do you do?"
-
-Something in the tranquil, amused self-possession of her pose made him
-stupidly repeat the question. Then, forgetting his resolve to show no
-impatience, he said impetuously:
-
-"Why did you keep me waiting?"
-
-"Because I did not wish to see your highness then."
-
-"Not dressed?"
-
-"No, I was simply amusing myself with a very nice boy."
-
-"Who?"
-
-She smiled, and, without heed to his question, motioned him to a chair
-with a little gesture, not of her arm, but of her fingers, on which she
-wore several rings of unusual luster. She had, as a woman, that same
-magnetic self-consciousness that distinguishes the great actress, aware
-that every eye is focused on her and that the slightest change of her
-hand or shift of her head has an instantaneous importance.
-
-Slade obeyed her with a sudden sense of warm content.
-
-"Smoke?" he said, taking out a cigar. "Permission?"
-
-He helped himself to a match, sunk himself in the great chair, crossed
-his legs, and looked at her.
-
-Rita Kildair gave that complex appearance of a woman much younger than
-she seemed, or of a woman much older. She was at that mental phase in
-her life when she exhaled to the fullest that perfume of mystery which
-is the most feminine and irresistible of all the powers that a woman
-exerts over the masculine imagination, if indeed it is not the sum of
-all seductions. The inexplicable in her own life and individuality was
-heightened in every way by the subservience of outward things, whether
-by calculation or by an instinctive sense of interpretation.
-
-The great studio, to the neglect of the electric chandelier, was lit by
-half a dozen candles, which flung about conflicting eddies of wavering
-lights and shadows. In farther corners were a divan, a piano, a
-portrait on an easel, lounges, waiting like so many shadows to be called
-forth. A standing lamp, not too near, bathed the couch on which she lay
-with a softened luster. Her tea-gown of liberty silk, with tones that
-changed and mingled with each other, was of the purple of the grape, an
-effect produced, too, by the superimposition of one filmy garment on the
-other. A slippered foot and ankle came forth from the fragrant disorder
-of the skirt, either by studied arrangement or by the impulse of a woman
-who is confident of all her poses. Her nose, quite the most individual
-feature, was aquiline, yet not such as is associated with a masculine
-character. Rather, it was vitally sensitive, and gave, in conjunction
-with the intent and instantaneous aspect of her grayish eyes, the
-instinctive, almost savage appetite for possession and sensation that is
-characteristic of her sex. No one looked at her without asking himself a
-question. Those who believed her under thirty wondered at the
-experiences that must have crowded in upon her. Those who believed her
-nearer forty still marveled at her mastery over youth. Those of an
-analytical mind left her always with a feeling of speculation framed in
-two questions--whence had she come and where would she end?
-
-It was this latter speculation more than any other that absorbed Slade,
-irresistibly intrigued by the elusiveness of a fascination which he
-could not analyze. She endured his fixed glance without annoyance,
-absorbed, too, in the thoughts which his entrance had brought her.
-Finally, adapting her manner to his, she said with his own abruptness:
-
-"Well, what do you want to say to me?"
-
-"I'm wondering what you are after in this life, pretty lady?" he said
-directly.
-
-"What do you want?"
-
-"Power."
-
-"Not to be bored."
-
-They smiled by common consent.
-
-"And now we know no more than we did before," he said.
-
-She stretched out her slender hand against the purple folds of her gown,
-and her eyes lingered on the jewels that she held caressingly before
-them--a look that did not escape the man.
-
-"By thunder, you're the strangest thing I've run into," he said,
-shifting his legs.
-
-"On each of the eight times we have been alone," she said, smiling, "you
-have made precisely that same discovery. Did you forget?"
-
-"I'd like to know something about you," he said.
-
-"How old I am--about my husband--what I am doing here--am I rich--what's
-my past--and so on. Consider all these questions asked and refused--for
-the ninth time. And now, what--why did you come here?"
-
-He put aside his cigar impatiently, propelled himself to his feet, and
-came forward until his knee touched the couch. She looked up,
-pleasantly aware of so much brute strength held in leash above her.
-
-"Sit down."
-
-And, as he remained standing, she took a little electric button attached
-to a coil that was on the couch, and pressed it. In the hall outside a
-buzz was heard, and then the soft, sliding step of Kiki.
-
-"Tea?" she said, turning to him with an amused look, the little button
-pressed against her thin, sharp row of teeth, that were clear and tiny
-as a child's.
-
-"No, of course not," he said furiously.
-
-"No tea, Kiki," she said, in that same round, musical tone from which
-she seldom varied. She held the button in her long fingers, caressing
-her cheek with it, and, looking at him with half-closed eyes, repeated:
-
-"Sit down."
-
-Though the forward movement of Slade had been unconscious and quite
-devoid of any personal object, he was angrily aware that she had availed
-herself of his action to introduce a tantalizing defiance which awakened
-all the savage in him, as he realized the helplessness of his crude
-strength before the raillery that shone from her eyes.
-
-He drew his chair closer to her, sat down on its edge, one knee forward,
-his chin in his hand half concealing his face, looking at her with the
-shrewd cruelty of a prosecuting attorney.
-
-"What's your game?" he said.
-
-"The game itself," she answered, with a little animation in her eyes and
-a scarcely perceptible, gradual turning of her whole body toward him.
-
-"What's your game?" he repeated.
-
-She looked at him a moment as she might have looked at a child, and
-then, imitating the gesture with which he had sunk his chin in his palm,
-said:
-
-"What a convenient formula! And is that the way you always begin?"
-
-"Perhaps."
-
-"Do you know," she continued, "it is extraordinary how simple you big
-men--you trust kings--are. You have the vision of an eagle on one side,
-and the groping glance of a baby when you deal with us. Sometimes I
-think that it's all instinct, that all you understand is to throw down
-what resists you--that you haven't great minds at all, and that that is
-all that interests you in business and in us. That is why a big man will
-always end up by meeting some little woman who will lead him around by
-the nose. Any little fool of a woman who knows enough never to cease
-resisting you can do it."
-
-"Do you like me?" he said brutally.
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Much?"
-
-"Quite a good deal."
-
-"Are you planning to marry me?"
-
-She smiled her languid, amused smile without shifting her glance from
-his.
-
-"Why don't you come to the point?" she said.
-
-"What do you mean?"
-
-"I don't have to ask your game; I know it."
-
-"What do you know?"
-
-"Shall I tell you why you came here at a moment when you are at bay,
-attacked everywhere?"
-
-"Why?"
-
-"To find out what I know about Majendie."
-
-"Do you know anything?"
-
-"He is coming here tonight," she said.
-
-"No, that is not it," he said scornfully, rising and again approaching
-her. "You know better. You exhilarate me--you wake me up; and I need
-to be stimulated. So you've got it back in your little brain to marry
-me," he said, looking down with amused contemplation at the reclining
-figure, that was not so much human as a perfumed bed of flowers; "that
-is, if I pull through and keep my head above water."
-
-He hesitated a moment, and then said:
-
-"Why did you keep me waiting? Just to annoy me?"
-
-"I wonder," she said, looking up from under her eyelashes at his
-towering figure. "Perhaps it was to teach you some things are
-difficult."
-
-"That's it, eh?"
-
-"Perhaps--and I'm afraid I shall irritate you many more times."
-
-He took a step nearer and said abruptly:
-
-"Look out! I don't play fair."
-
-"Neither do I," she said.
-
-She took the button up again, frowning in a nonchalant way, and held it
-a moment while she waited for his decision. He shrugged his shoulders
-and stood back, taking several steps toward the center of the room.
-
-"Listen, John G. Slade," she said, her tone changing from the felinely
-feminine to the matter-of-fact, "don't let's continue as children. You
-are no match for me at this game. I warn you. Come. Be direct. Will
-you have me as an ally?"
-
-He turned and looked at her, considering.
-
-"In what way?"
-
-"Is it of importance to you to know the probable fate of Majendie and
-the Atlantic Trust?"
-
-"Yes--in a way."
-
-"I may have means of learning just that information tonight."
-
-"What do you want in return?"
-
-"Full confidence. I want two questions answered."
-
-"What?"
-
-She had raised herself to a sitting position out of the languor which
-was not the indolence of the Oriental, but rather the volcanic
-slumbering of the Slav, always ready to break forth into sudden
-tremendous exertion.
-
-"Can the Associated Trust meet its Wednesday obligations without
-assistance?"
-
-"And second?" he said, amazed at the detailed knowledge that her
-question implied.
-
-"Second, if it can't, will the Clearing-house help it through?"
-
-"What difference to you would it make to know?"
-
-"It would."
-
-"How long have you known Bernard Majendie?" he said slowly.
-
-She accepted the question as a rebuff.
-
-"There are my terms," she said, sinking back on the couch. "You don't
-wish an ally, then?"
-
-"No."
-
-"You don't trust me?"
-
-"No."
-
-"I knew you wouldn't," she said indolently; "and yet, I could help you
-more than you think."
-
-"I trusted a man once," he said scornfully. "I have never made that
-mistake with a woman."
-
-"As you wish."
-
-"Are you trying a flyer?" he said, smiling. "That's the game, is it--a
-tip?"
-
-"I have told you," she said coldly and in a tone that carried
-conviction, "that what interests me is to win the game itself, the
-excitement and the perils. And I have been behind the scenes many
-times."
-
-"I believe it," he said abruptly. "I should like to hear--"
-
-"I am a woman who keeps the secrets of others and her own," she
-answered, interrupting his question.
-
-"And if you marry?" he said curiously.
-
-"Even then." She dismissed the return to the personal with the first
-quick movement of her hand and continued: "I should say, you are the
-best hated man in Wall Street."
-
-"That's not exactly inside information."
-
-"No one is going to come to your help out of friendship."
-
-"True."
-
-"If Majendie and the Atlantic Trust Company fail, nothing in this world
-can pull you through," she said, seeking in some uncontrolled movement
-of his an answer to the statement that was in reality a question.
-
-From the moment she had begun to question him, he experienced a sudden
-change. He was no longer dealing with a woman, but with an element he
-had outguessed a hundred times.
-
-All at once an odd idea came to him which struck him as stupendously
-ridiculous, and yet made him glower in covert admiration at the woman
-who watched him while seemingly engaged with the rearrangement of her
-draperies.
-
-"Is it possible, after all," he thought, "that that ambitious little
-head is playing with both Majendie and me, and that she is setting her
-cap for the survivor?"
-
-He came back, reseated himself, and said, with an appearance of candor
-which would have deceived most people:
-
-"You say Majendie is coming here tonight?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Do you know where he is this afternoon?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"And the object of his visit?"
-
-"The object is easy to guess," she said indifferently. "You know
-perfectly well that he is in conference with Fontaine, Marx, and
-Gunther, and what you wish to know is whether they are going to stand
-aside and let him sink. Are you ready to answer my two questions?"
-
-"And when will you know if he has failed or succeeded?"
-
-"Tonight."
-
-"He will tell you?"
-
-"I shall know tonight," she said, with an evasive smile.
-
-"What's your private opinion?"
-
-"They will come to his assistance," she said carefully.
-
-"Because they are his personal friends," he said, with an accent of
-raillery.
-
-"Naturally."
-
-"You believe Majendie will pull through?"
-
-"I do." She looked at him a moment, and asked the question, not so much
-to receive an answer as to judge from his manner: "Can the Associated
-Trust meet its obligations on Wednesday without assistance?"
-
-"I can," he said quietly, and to himself he added: "There--if Majendie
-has set her to pump me, little good that'll do him."
-
-"But if the Atlantic Trust Company shuts its doors," she persisted, "you
-are caught?"
-
-"That is the general opinion."
-
-"Will you fail?"
-
-"No."
-
-She was quiet a moment, dissatisfied, looked away from him and then
-said:
-
-"So you don't care to know what I shall learn to-night?"
-
-"My dear lady, I won't tell you a thing," he said, with a laugh, "so
-stop trying. Leave us to fight our own battles. Plot all you want in
-your cunning head your little feminine plans, but don't get beyond your
-depth."
-
-"I see you believe I'm interested in Majendie," she said, with a shrug
-of her shoulders. "You are not very well informed."
-
-"No," he said bluntly; "you are interested in no one but Rita Kildair.
-I know that much." He rose, took several strides back and forth, and,
-returning, stood by her. "I hate allies," he said; "I prefer to
-consider you as a woman."
-
-His remark brought a sharp gleam of curiosity to her eyes, a spark of
-instinctive sex antagonism that flashed and disappeared.
-
-"Remember, I have warned you," she said, retiring as abruptly into the
-feline languor of her pose.
-
-He stood, swayed by two emotions, the purely gentle, almost caressing
-effect her indolence brought him, and the desire to establish some
-sudden empire over her--to feel his strength above hers.
-
-"What's the weak point in your armor?" he said savagely.
-
-"I wouldn't tell you."
-
-"I think I know one."
-
-"Really?"
-
-He drew his chair still closer, and, leaning over, touched with his
-stubby forefinger the rings on her outstretched hand.
-
-"Jewels?" she said, smiling.
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Any woman is the same."
-
-"Why?"
-
-"I don't know--it is so," she said, and, raising the deep lusters, she
-allowed her glance to rest on them as in a dream of opium.
-
-He drew from his pocket the ring with the ruby, and held it out.
-
-"Try this on."
-
-She took it between her finger-tips slowly, looking at him with a glance
-that was a puzzled frown, and slipped it on her finger. Then she
-extended her hand gradually to the full length of her white arm against
-the purple, and half closed her eyes. There was no outward sign; only a
-deep breath went through her, as though an immense change had taken
-place in the inner woman.
-
-"Now I know what I want to know," he said, watching her closely with
-almost an animal joy in this sudden revelation of an appetite in her.
-
-"It's a wonderful stone," she said in a whisper; then she drew it off
-slowly, as though the flesh rebelled, and held it out to him, turning
-away her eyes.
-
-"Keep it."
-
-She raised her eyes and looked at him steadily.
-
-"You are cleverer than I thought," she said.
-
-"Keep it."
-
-"Is this for information about Majendie?" she said slowly.
-
-"Not for that."
-
-"For what, then?" she said steadily.
-
-"For a whim."
-
-"Thanks; I don't trust your whims."
-
-For all reply, he took her hand and again placed the ring on it.
-
-"Wear it," he said.
-
-She turned the stone quickly inside her palm as though unable to endure
-its lure, and looked at him profoundly.
-
-"_Are_ you going to pull through?" she said angrily.
-
-"Will it make a difference?" he asked, rising, with a quick glance at
-his watch.
-
-She rose in her turn, facing him with a sudden energy.
-
-"Do you know the one great mistake you have made?"
-
-"What?"
-
-"You have condemned yourself to success."
-
-"What do you mean by that?" he said.
-
-"You must always succeed, and that is terrible! At the first defeat
-every one will be up in arms against you--because every one wants to see
-you ruined."
-
-"Every one?" he said, looking in her eyes.
-
-A second time she took off the ring and gave it to him, and as he
-protested she said coldly:
-
-"Don't make me angry. The comedy has been amusing. Enough. Also,
-don't trouble yourself about my motives. I haven't the slightest
-intention of marrying you or any one else."
-
-And she accompanied the words with a gesture so imperative that, amazed
-at the change, he no longer insisted. As he put out his hand, she said
-suddenly, as if obeying an intuition:
-
-"I will tell you what you want to know. Gunther is almost sure to come
-to Majendie's aid. I know it by a woman. Take care of yourself."
-
-"And I will tell you exactly the opposite," he said, bluffing. "Gunther
-will not lend a cent; Majendie will go under, and I'll pull through."
-
-"You'll pull through even if the Atlantic Trust closes?"
-
-"Exactly."
-
-"Good-by," she said, with a shrug.
-
-"Remember what I said," he repeated, and went out.
-
-Five minutes later the bell rang, and Kiki brought her a little box and
-an envelope. She recognized Slade's writing, and read:
-
-
-DEAR LADY,
-
-Apologies for my rudeness. If you won't accept a gift, at least wear
-the ring for a week. I should like to know what effect it could have on
-your cold little soul. Oblige my curiosity. It's only a little
-reparation for the disappointment I gave you. J.G.S.
-
-
-"Decidedly, he is cleverer than I thought," she said musingly. In the
-box was the great ruby ring. She took it up, examined it carefully, made
-a motion as though to replace it in the box, and then suddenly slipped
-it on her finger.
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER II*
-
-
-Mrs. Kildair knew pretty nearly every one in that indescribable society
-in New York which is drawn from all levels, without classification, and
-imposes but one condition for membership--to be amusing. Her home, in
-fact, supplied that need of all limited and contending superimposed
-sets, a central meeting-ground where one entered under the protection of
-a flag of truce and departed without obligation. She knew every one,
-and no one knew her. No one knew beyond the vaguest rumors her history
-or her resources. No one had ever met a Mr. Kildair. There was always
-about her a certain defensive reserve the moment the limit of
-acquaintanceship had been touched. Mrs. Enos Bloodgood, who saw her
-most and gave her the fullest confidence, knew no more than that she had
-arrived from Paris five years before, with letters of introduction from
-the best quarters. Her invitations were eagerly sought by leaders of
-fashionable society, prima donnas, artists, visiting European
-aristocrats, and men of the moment. Her dinners were spontaneous, and
-the discussions, though gay and usually daring, were invariably under
-the control of wit and good taste.
-
-As soon as Slade's present had been received she passed into the
-dining-room to assure herself that everything was in readiness for the
-informal chafing-dish supper to which she had invited some of her most
-congenial friends, all of whom, as much as could be said of any one,
-were habitues of the studio. Then, entering her Louis Quinze bedroom,
-which exhaled a pleasant stirring atmosphere of perfume, she slipped off
-her filmy purple tea-gown and chose an evening robe of absolute black,
-of warm velvet, unrelieved by any color, but which gave to her shoulders
-and arms that softness and brilliancy which no color can impart.
-
-Several times she halted, and, seating herself at her dressing-table,
-fell into a fascinated contemplation of the great ruby that trembled
-luminously on her finger like a bubble of scarlet blood. When, in the
-act of deftly ordering the masses of her dark ruddy hair, her white
-fingers lost themselves among the tresses, she stopped more than once,
-entranced at the brilliancy of the stone against the white flesh and the
-sudden depths of her hair.
-
-She rose and began to move about the room; but her hand from time to
-time continued its coquetries above her forehead, as though the ring had
-suddenly added to her feminine treasury a new instinctive gesture.
-
-At half-past seven, having finished dressing, she opened the doors which
-made a thoroughfare between the studio and the small dining-room, and
-passed into the larger room, where, at one end, Kiki had brought forth
-three Sheraton tables, joined them, and set them with crystal and
-silver.
-
-"Put in order my bedroom," she said, with an approving nod, "and then
-you can go."
-
-She moved about the studio, studying the arrangements of the furniture,
-seeing always from the tail of her eye the scarlet spot on her finger.
-
-"I wonder what it's worth," she said softly. "Ten, fifteen thousand at
-the least." She held the ring from her, gazed at it dreamily. "I
-wonder what woman's eye has looked upon you, you wonderful gem," she
-whispered; and, as though transported with the vision of the past, she
-drew it slowly toward her and pressed her lips against it.
-
-At this moment a buzz sounded from the hall, and she recovered herself
-hastily and, a little ashamed, said with a feeling of alarm as she went
-to the door:
-
-"Slade is entirely too clever; I must send it back tomorrow morning."
-
-Before she could reach the door it had opened, and there entered, with
-the informality of assured acquaintance, a young man of twenty-five or
--six, smiling, boyish, delighted at having stolen a march on the other
-guests.
-
-"You are early," said Mrs. Kildair, smiling with instinctive reflection
-of the roguish enjoyment that shone on his handsome, confident face.
-
-"Heavens, haven't I been beating the pavements for fourteen minutes by
-the watch!" he said, laughing. "Regular kid trick." He took her hand,
-carrying it to his lips. "The way they do in France, you know."
-
-"You're a nice boy, Teddy," she said, patting his hand. "Now, hang up
-your coat, and help me with the candles."
-
-She watched him as he slipped his overcoat from the trim wide shoulders,
-revealing all at once the clean-cut, well-tailored figure, full of
-elasticity and youth. Teddy Beecher always gave her a sense of
-well-being and pleasant content, with his harum-scarum ways and inviting
-impudence. As he roused no intellectual resistance in her, she was all
-the more sensitive to the purely physical charm in him, which she
-appreciated as she might appreciate the finely strung body and
-well-modulated limbs of a Perseus by Benvenuto Cellini.
-
-"Will I help you? Command me," he said, coming in eagerly. "Don't you
-know, there's a little silver collar about my neck, and the inscription
-is, 'This dog belongs to Rita Kildair.' Jove, Rita, but you're stunning
-tonight!"
-
-He stood stock-still in frank amazement. He had known her but a short
-while, and yet he called her by her first name--a liberty seldom
-accorded; but the charm he unconsciously exerted over women, and which
-impatiently mystified other men, was in the very audacity of his
-enjoyment of life, which imparted to women the precious sense of their
-own youth.
-
-"Really?" she said, raising her hand to her hair, that he might notice
-the glorious ruby.
-
-"Look here--I've only got a miserable thirty thousand a year, but I've
-got a couple of uncles with liver trouble and a bum heart. Say the
-word--I'm yours."
-
-While he said it with a mock-heroic air, there was in his eyes a flash
-of excited admiration that she understood and was well pleased with.
-
-"Come, Teddy," she said, a little disappointed that he did not perceive
-the ring. "To work. Take this taper."
-
-He took the wax, contriving to touch her fingers with feigned
-artlessness.
-
-"I say, Rita, who's the mob here tonight? Do I know any one? I get the
-place next to you, of course?"
-
-"Begin over there," she directed. "The Enos Bloodgoods are coming;
-you've met her here."
-
-"I thought they were separated, or something."
-
-"Not yet."
-
-"By George, Rita, there's no one like you--serving us up a couple on the
-verge."
-
-"That is not all--I like situations," she said, with her slow smile.
-
-"I like Elise; but as for the old boy, he can slip on a banana peel and
-break his neck, for all I care.
-
-"Then there's a broker, Garraboy, Elise's brother."
-
-"Don't know him."
-
-"Maud Lille, who's written clever books--a journalist."
-
-"Don't know her--hate clever women."
-
-"Nan Charters--"
-
-"Who?" said Beecher, with upraised wick.
-
-"Nan Charters, who played in 'Monsieur Beaucaire.'"
-
-"Bully!"
-
-She smiled at his impetuousness, and continued:
-
-"Mr. Majendie and the Stanley Cheevers."
-
-"Oh, I say--not those--"
-
-"Well?" she said as he stopped.
-
-"You know the gambling story," he said reluctantly.
-
-"Club gossip."
-
-"Of course," he said, correcting himself. "One of my friends was
-present. The Cheevers play a good game, a well-united game, and have an
-unusual system of makes. They are very successful--let it go at that.
-You don't mean to say that Majendie'll be here?"
-
-"I expect him."
-
-"He was a friend of the dad's--a corker, too. I don't know much about
-those things, but isn't he supposed to be up against it?"
-
-Three knocks in close succession sounded on the outer door, and Garraboy
-entered with an air of familiarity that was displeasing to the younger
-man. The two saluted impertinently, with polite antagonism, detesting
-each other from the first look.
-
-"Go on with the candles, Teddy," said Mrs. Kildair, signaling to the
-newcomer, a young man of forty who seemed to have been born bald,
-wrinkled, and heavy-eyed. The long, bald head on the thin, straight
-little body, and the elongated white collar, gave him somewhat the look
-of an interrogation-mark. He was heavily perfumed.
-
-"What's the news of the market?" she asked.
-
-"Another odd turn--went up a couple of points," he said, looking at her
-hand. Unlike Beecher, he had instantly noted the new acquisition with a
-malicious smile. His thumb gave a little jerk and he added softly:
-"Something new?"
-
-"Yes. Why should the market go up?" she said, seeming to be intent only
-on the effect of the bracketed candles, that now licked the tapestried
-walls with their restless tongues.
-
-"There's a general belief that a group of the big fellows will stand
-behind the trust companies in return for certain concessions. I say,"
-he continued, watching the ruby ring, which instinctively she tried to
-conceal from him, "I hope Elise isn't going to make a fool of herself
-about Majendie."
-
-"Teddy, Teddy, you've forgotten the two over the plaque!" she said
-aloud--and, a little lower: "She won't; don't fear."
-
-"I know her better," he said, without, however, betraying the slightest
-brotherly agitation. "She is apt to do something crazy if anything went
-wrong with Majendie. Bloodgood's a hard-skinned old brute, but if there
-was anything public he'd cut up ugly."
-
-"I hear he's in the market."
-
-"Yes--on the short side, too--in deep."
-
-"And you?"
-
-He shrugged his shoulders.
-
-"I thought we never told secrets, Mrs. Kildair. Who else is coming? Am
-I representing the element of respectability again tonight?"
-
-"The what?" She looked at him steadily until he turned away nervously,
-with the unease of an animal. "Don't be an ass with me, my dear
-Garraboy."
-
-"By George," he said irritably, "if this were Europe I'd wager you were
-in the Secret Service, Mrs. Kildair."
-
-"Thank you," she said, smiling appreciatively, and returned toward young
-Beecher, who was waiting by the piano with ill-concealed resentment.
-
-The Stanley Cheevers entered--a short, chubby man with a bleached,
-vacant face tufted with mustache and imperial, devoid of eyebrows, with
-watery eyes that moved slowly with the motion of his gourd-like head;
-Mrs. Cheever, voluble, nervous, over-dressed, young with the youth of a
-child and pretty with the prettiness of a doll.
-
-Beecher, who knew them, bowed with a sense of curiosity to Mrs. Cheever,
-who held him a little with a certain trick she had of opening wide her
-dark, Oriental eyes; and dropped, with a sense of physical discomfort,
-the hand that Cheever flabbily pressed into his.
-
-"Decidedly, I am going to have a grand little time by myself," he said
-moodily. "Where the deuce does Rita pick up this bunch?"
-
-The Enos Bloodgoods were still agitated as they entered. His lips had
-not quite banished the scowl, nor her eyes the scorn.
-
-"Permit me, my dear," he said, taking off her wrap, and the words struck
-those who heard them with a sudden chill.
-
-He was of the unrelenting type that never loses its temper, but causes
-others to lose theirs, immovable in his opinions, with a prowling walk,
-a studied antagonism in his manner, while in his bulgy eyes was an
-impudent stare which fastened itself like a leech on the person
-addressed, to draw out his weakness.
-
-Elise Bloodgood, who seemed tied to her husband by an invisible leash,
-had a hunted, resisting quality back of a certain desperate dash which
-she assumed, rather than felt, in her attitude toward society--just as
-she touched with red, cheeks that were meant to be simply the background
-of eyes that were extraordinary, with a lurking sense of tragedy.
-
-"Rita, dear, I am almost frantic tonight," she said hastily, in one of
-those intimate moments of which women avail themselves in the midst of
-their enemies.
-
-"The last rumors are good," said Mrs. Kildair, bending over her
-ostensibly to arrange her scarf.
-
-"Who told you?"
-
-"Your brother. Every one downtown believes the panic is stopped. The
-market has gone up. Gunther and Snelling are Bernard's personal
-friends."
-
-"Friends?" she said bitterly. "Yes, that's just the trouble."
-
-"Besides, he is coming tonight--you knew?"
-
-"Yes, I knew," said Mrs. Bloodgood, with a glance at her husband, who,
-at the other side of the studio, seemed intent only on examining a
-reliquary in carved stone.
-
-"Then he will tell you himself," said Mrs. Kildair, rearranging a little
-ornament that made a splash of gold on the black hair of her companion.
-"Be careful---don't talk too much now."
-
-"What do I care?" she said rebelliously. "It has got to end sometime."
-
-She passed her husband, her dark shoulder flinching unconsciously at his
-near presence, and gave her hand to Stanley Cheever and young Beecher,
-who, though utterly unconscious of the entanglements of the evening, was
-struck by the moody sadness in her eyes that so strangely contradicted
-the laugh that was on her lips. But as he was wondering, a little
-constrained, how best to open the conversation, the door opened once
-more and two women entered--Nan Charters, who arrived like a little
-white cloud, vibrantly alert and pleased at the stir her arrival
-occasioned, and Maud Lille, who appeared behind her as a shadow, very
-straight, very dark, Indian in her gliding movements, with masses of
-somber hair held in a little too loosely for neatness.
-
-"Oh, dear, am I dreadfully late?" said Nan Charters, who swept into the
-studio the better to display her opera-cloak, a gorgeous combination of
-white and gold Japanese embroideries, which, mounting above her throat
-in conjunction with a scarf of mingling pinks, revealed only the tip of
-her vivacious nose and sparkling eyes.
-
-"You are strangely early," said Mrs. Kildair, who presented Beecher with
-a gesture which at the same time directed him to attend to the wraps.
-
-"Thank you," said Miss Charters, with a quick smile, and by an
-imperceptible motion she allowed the cloak to slip from her shoulders
-and glide into the waiting hands, revealing herself in a white satin
-shot with pigeon red, which caused the eyes of all the women present to
-focus suddenly. Garraboy, Cheever, and Bloodgood, who knew her, came up
-eagerly.
-
-Teddy Beecher, his arms crowded with the elusive garment, which gave him
-almost the feeling of a human body, bore it to the hall and arranged it
-with care, pleasantly aware of the perfume it exhaled. He returned
-eagerly, conscious of the instantaneous impression her smile had made on
-him as she turned to thank him, a look that had challenged and aroused
-him. She was still chatting gaily, surrounded by the three men, and he
-was forced to occupy himself with Mrs. Bloodgood. His eyes, however,
-remained on the young girl, who was listening with unaffected pleasure
-to the compliments of her male audience. Something in the chivalry of
-the younger man revolted at the spectacle of the sophisticated Garraboy
-and the worldly appetites in the eyes of Cheever and Bloodgood. He felt
-almost an uneasy sense of her peril, which was in effect an instinctive
-emotion of jealousy, and, profiting by the moment in which Mrs.
-Bloodgood turned to Miss Lille, he slipped to Miss Charters' side and
-contrived to isolate her.
-
-The studio was now filled with chatter. Mrs. Kildair passed from group
-to group, animating it with a word or two. With the exception of Teddy
-Beecher and Nan Charters, in the several groups there was but one
-question--the events of the day in the financial world and the probable
-outcome of the secret conference at Gunther's.
-
-Every one watched the clock, awaiting the last arrival with an
-impatience that was too truly founded on the safety of their personal
-fortunes to be concealed.
-
-"The conference ended at six-thirty," said Maud Lille to Bloodgood and
-Cheever; "Majendie left for his house immediately after. I had it from
-the city editor on the telephone."
-
-"Was any statement given out?" said Cheever, who put one finger to his
-lip, as he did when a little nervous.
-
-"None."
-
-"If he goes under, it means the bottom out of the market," said Cheever,
-fixing his owlish stare on Bloodgood's smug face.
-
-"Are you long?" asked Bloodgood, turning on him with curiosity.
-
-"A thousand shares," answered Cheever, but in a tone that carried no
-conviction.
-
-"He won't come," said Maud Lille obstinately.
-
-"If he does," said Cheever slowly, "he's pulled through and the market
-ought to go up." And a second time his finger jerked up to his lips,
-with the gesture of the stutterer.
-
-"He won't come," repeated Maud Lille.
-
-Bloodgood gave her a short look, trying to fathom the reason of her
-belief, a question he did not care to put before Cheever.
-
-At this moment Majendie appeared at the entrance of the studio. The
-conversation, which had been mounting in nervous staccatos, fell with
-the hollowness that one sometimes feels in the air before the first
-crash of a storm. By an uncontrollable impulse, each turned, eager to
-read in the first indication some clue to his personal fate.
-
-The last arrival had opened the outer door unheard, and, profiting by
-the commotion, had removed his overcoat and hat in the anteroom.
-
-When the rest of the party perceived him, Majendie was standing erect
-and smiling under the Turkish lamp that, hanging from the balcony, cast
-a mellow light on his genial, aristocratic forehead. In every detail,
-from the ruddy, delicately veined cheeks and white mustache to the
-slight, finely shaped figure at ease in the evening coat that fitted him
-as a woman's ball gown, he radiated the patrician, but the patrician of
-urbanity, tact, and generous impulses.
-
-"My dear hostess," he said at once, bending over Mrs. Kildair's hand
-with a little extra formality, "a thousand excuses for keeping you and
-your guests waiting. But just at present there are quite a number of
-persons who seem to be determined to keep me from my engagements. Am I
-forgiven?"
-
-"Yes," she answered, with a sudden feeling of admiration for the air of
-absolute good humor with which he pronounced these words, mystifying
-though they were to her sense of divination.
-
-"I think I know every one," he said, glancing around without a trace of
-emotion at Bloodgood and Cheever, whose presence could not have failed
-to be distasteful. "You are very good to be so lenient, and I will
-accept whatever penance you impose. Are we going to have one of those
-delightful chafing-dish suppers that only you know how to provide?"
-
-"What pride!" she murmured to herself, as he passed over to Miss
-Charters with a compliment that made her and Beecher break out laughing.
-
-Up to the moment, the group had found not the slightest indication of
-the probable outcome of the afternoon's conference. If anything, there
-was in his carriage a quiet exhilaration. But the moment was
-approaching when he must come face to face with Mrs. Bloodgood, who,
-either in order to gain time for the self-control that seemed almost
-beyond her, or that she might draw him into more immediate converse, had
-withdrawn so as to be the last he should greet. Majendie perceived
-instantly the imprudence of the maneuver, and by a word addressed to
-Mrs. Kildair, who followed at his side, contrived to bring himself to
-the farther side of the group, of which little Mrs. Cheever and Garraboy
-were the other two.
-
-"I make my excuses to the ladies first," he said, with a nod to
-Garraboy, whom he thus was enabled to pass. He offered his hand to Mrs.
-Bloodgood, saying: "Grant me absolution, and I promise to do everything
-I can to make you as gay as I feel now."
-
-Elise Bloodgood took his hand, glancing into his face with a startled
-glance, and immediately withdrew, murmuring something inaudible.
-
-Mrs. Kildair, who with everyone had been listening to his words for the
-double meaning that seemed to be conveyed, stepped in front of Mrs.
-Bloodgood to cover her too evident agitation.
-
-"Elise," she said sharply, pressing her hand, "get hold of yourself.
-You must! Everything is all right. Didn't you understand him?"
-
-"Ah, if he were going to die tomorrow he would never tell me," said Mrs.
-Bloodgood, pressing her handkerchief against her lips. "Nothing will
-ever break through his pride."
-
-"But he told you in so many words," said Mrs. Kildair--who, however,
-didn't believe what she said.
-
-"He told me nothing--nothing!"
-
-"You must control yourself," said Mrs. Kildair, alarmed at her emotion.
-
-"What do I care?"
-
-"But you must! Listen. When I go into the dining-room don't follow me.
-I will contrive to take your husband with me. Profit by the chance.
-Besides, you are in no state to judge. Does Bernard look like a man who
-has just been told he is ruined? Come, a little courage."
-
-She left her and, stepping into her bedroom, donned a Watteau-like
-cooking-apron, and, slipping her rings from her fingers, fixed the three
-on her pin-cushion with a hatpin. From the mirror in which she surveyed
-herself she could see the interior of the studio--Nan Charters' laughing
-face above the piano, where she was running off a succession of topical
-songs, surrounded by a chorus of men, while Beecher, at her side,
-solicitously turned the pages.
-
-"Teddy seems quite taken," she thought. But the tensity of the drama
-drove from her all other considerations. Completely mystified by
-Majendie's manner, she was studying the moment when she could throw him
-together with Elise Bloodgood, convinced that from the woman she would
-learn what the man concealed.
-
-"Your rings are beautiful, dear, beautiful," said the deep voice of Maud
-Lille, who, with Garraboy and Mrs. Cheever, was in the room.
-
-"I never saw the ruby before," said Mrs. Cheever in a nervous voice.
-"My dear, you are the most mysterious woman in the world. Think of
-having a ring like that, and never wearing it!"
-
-"It is a wonderful stone," said Mrs. Kildair, touching with her thin
-fingers the ring that lay uppermost.
-
-"It is beautiful--very beautiful," said the journalist, her eyes
-fastened on it with an uncontrollable fascination.
-
-Mrs. Cheever, her lips parted, her black eyes wide with eagerness,
-leaned over. She put out her fingers and let them rest caressingly on
-the ruby, withdrawing them as though the contact had burned them, while
-on either cheek little spots of red excitement showed.
-
-"It must be very valuable," she said, her breath catching slightly.
-
-Garraboy, moving forward, suddenly looked at the ring.
-
-"Yes, it is valuable--very much so," said Mrs. Kildair, glancing down.
-Then she went to the door that led into the studio, and clapped her
-hands:
-
-"Attention, everybody! Beecher and Garraboy are the chefs. Each one
-must choose his scullery-maid. Mr. Majendie is to make the punch.
-Everyone else is butler and waitress. Mrs. Cheever, did you ever peel
-onions?"
-
-"Good heavens, no!" said Mrs. Cheever, delicately recoiling.
-
-"Well, there are no onions to peel," said Mrs. Kildair, laughing. "All
-you have to do is to carry dishes or make the toast--on to the kitchen!"
-
-"Miss Charters, you are engaged at any salary you may name," said
-Beecher, forestalling Garraboy, who was coming forward.
-
-"But I shall drop every dish," said Nan Charters, rising from the piano.
-"I don't know anything about cooking."
-
-"Splendid! Then you'll make no mistakes."
-
-He installed her at one end of the table, and went off for the
-chafing-dish. When he returned, gingerly balancing it on a silver
-platter, Garraboy, profiting by his absence, was seated beside Nan
-Charters, speaking in a purposely low voice. She was listening,
-perfectly composed, looking straight before her with a tolerant,
-uninterested smile.
-
-If women often can conceal their true natures from women, men seldom
-deceive one another. There was a fixity in Garraboy's glance which
-Beecher understood and hotly resented. But at the moment when, setting
-the tray on the table, he was meditating some ill-advised remark, Mrs.
-Cheever, passing by, said with ill-concealed impatience in her thin,
-hurried voice:
-
-"Mr. Garraboy, I am sorry for you, but I have been assigned as your
-assistant, and I should like to know what I am to do."
-
-Garraboy rose immediately, bowed with perfect suavity, and rejoined Mrs.
-Cheever, who said to him something that the others did not hear, but at
-which they saw him shrug his shoulders.
-
-"Well, what are we going to make?" said Nan Charters, with the enjoyment
-that this exhibition of feminine jealousy had brought still in her eyes.
-
-"I don't like Garraboy," said Beecher directly.
-
-"Why not?" she said, smiling a little, and raising her eyebrows as
-though interrogating a child.
-
-"Because I like you," he answered abruptly.
-
-Accustomed to contend with men, she was surprised by the genuineness of
-his remark, which was inspired by a sentiment deeper than jealousy. She
-looked at him again with that sudden second estimate which is vital.
-
-"He is not difficult to handle," she said carelessly, unaware of the
-touch of intimacy which her reply permitted.
-
-"I don't like him," he said obstinately, "and I don't like his
-crowd--the crowd that is here to-night. They're like a pack of wolves.
-What the deuce does Rita see in them?"
-
-"Mrs. Kildair has generally, I should say, a very good reason for whom
-she invites," she said carelessly.
-
-"But these Cheevers--they're impossible. How the deuce do they live?"
-
-"I thought Mr. Majendie very charming."
-
-"Oh, Majendie--yes, I except him," he said enthusiastically. "He's a
-gentleman."
-
-"That counts a good deal with you?" she said, with a touch of raillery.
-
-"It does. I think a gentleman is almost the rarest thing you meet with
-today," he said, holding his ground, "a gentleman in the heart. I know
-only four or five."
-
-"Yes, you are right," she said, changing her tone. She looked at him a
-third time, at the honest, boyish loyalty so plainly written on his
-face, and said: "You haven't gone out much here?"
-
-"No; I'm just back from knocking around the world, hunting in Africa and
-all that sort of uselessness."
-
-"Come and tell me about it sometime.
-
-"May I?"
-
-She laughed at his impetuousness, and pointed to the contents of the
-chafing-dish, which had been simmering neglected; but more than once
-during the operation her glance returned to the eager, earnest face.
-
-Meanwhile, Garraboy, at the other end of the table, assisted by Mrs.
-Cheever and Maud Lille, was busy with a lobster a la Newburg. Mrs.
-Kildair, having finished in the kitchen, had entered the dining-room,
-where she established a sort of provisional serving-table. She called
-to her side Cheever and Bloodgood, and, under the pretext of arranging
-the dishes from the china-closet, kept them isolated. At this moment
-Elise Bloodgood approached Majendie, who, at the rear end of the studio,
-was occupied with the brewing of a punch. Natural as was the movement,
-it was instantly perceived by the four or five persons vitally
-interested. A moment afterward Mrs. Bloodgood passed into the bedroom;
-but there was in her carriage a triumph that she did not care to
-conceal.
-
-"He's won out," thought Bloodgood.
-
-"The shorts will be caught," thought Cheever. "The devil! I must
-cover."
-
-"Has he lied to her?" said Mrs. Kildair to herself. "If everything is
-all right, why should he conceal it from any one?"
-
-She went across the room, stopping at the punch-table.
-
-"Have you everything you need?" she asked.
-
-"Everything, thank you," Majendie answered gently; but there was in his
-voice a tired note, as if some effort had suddenly exhausted him.
-
-"I understood what you meant," she said, looking at him not without a
-little pity--an emotion which was rare with her. "Let me congratulate
-you on the result of this afternoon."
-
-"Thank you very much for your congratulations," he said quietly, taking
-her hand. "If you knew, you will understand why I was kept so late."
-
-As he bowed, the front of his jacket opening a little, she saw or
-fancied she saw in the inner pocket a strip of green, slightly
-protruding. She left him, still unconvinced, and turned to the company.
-
-"Everything ready, Teddy? All right. Every one sit down. Mrs. Cheever
-and Mrs. Bloodgood are appointed butlers--because real work will do them
-good. Sit down, sit down. I'll be back in a minute."
-
-As she turned to her bedroom, there came a strong ring, twice repeated.
-She paused, astonished.
-
-"Who can that be?" she thought, frowning, and directing her steps toward
-the antechamber. "No one is allowed to come up. It must be a
-telegram."
-
-She opened the door, and Slade entered.
-
-"I came right up," he said directly, "because I had no success on the
-telephone. You rather excited my curiosity this afternoon. Please
-invite me to your party."
-
-The first moment of irritation was succeeded, on her part, by the
-feeling of elation. The impulse that had brought Slade so unexpectedly
-there was a feeling of jealousy, in which Beecher and Majendie were
-confusedly mixed.
-
-"He wishes to watch me with his own eyes," she said triumphantly. "Very
-well; he shall be well punished."
-
-Slade's arrival produced a moment of profound astonishment. Bloodgood
-and Maud Lille exchanged quick glances, believing the meeting between
-Majendie and Slade had been premeditated. Garraboy plucked Cheever
-nervously by the sleeve, while Majendie, as if realizing that he was
-dealing with an antagonist of a different caliber, rose with a little
-nervous inflation of the chest. Rapid as had been the interim in the
-antechamber, Mrs. Kildair had had time to say:
-
-"Majendie is here. Do you know what happened this afternoon?"
-
-"I do," said Slade, with malicious enjoyment, and he added: "Do you?"
-
-"Yes," she replied, convinced, likewise, of the falsity of his
-statement. Then aloud she added: "Ladies and gentlemen, Mr. Slade, an
-impromptu guest."
-
-She passed with him about the table, introducing him where it was
-necessary. Slade and Majendie did not offer hands; each bowed with a
-quiet, measured politeness. On the contrary, when Beecher was reached,
-the older man grasped the hand of the younger, and held it a moment with
-a grip that, despite Beecher's own strength, made him wince.
-
-"Teddy, be a good boy and place Mr. Slade somewhere," she said, resting
-her hand purposely on the young man's shoulder. "I'll take off my apron
-and be back immediately."
-
-She stopped near Majendie, who had returned to the punch-table for an
-extra glass, and, seeing that her movements were followed by Slade,
-said:
-
-"Bernard, believe me, I did not plan it. I had no idea he was coming."
-
-"It makes not the slightest difference," he said instantly. "Mr. Slade
-and I have no quarrel. Please don't worry about me."
-
-"You're an awfully good sort," she said abruptly.
-
-"That is high praise from you," he said, with a little critical smile
-which showed he was not entirely the dupe of her maneuvers.
-
-She went into her bedroom, and, divesting herself of her apron, hung it
-in the closet. Then, going to her dressing-table, she drew the hatpin
-from the pin-cushion and carelessly slipped the rings on her fingers.
-All at once she frowned and looked quickly at her hand. Only two rings
-were there. The third one--the ring with the ruby--was gone!
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER III*
-
-
-Her first emotion was of irritation.
-
-"How stupid!" she said to herself, and, returning to her dressing-table,
-began to search among the silver and ivory boxes. All at once she
-stopped. She remembered with a vivid flash putting the pin through the
-three rings.
-
-She made no further search, but remained without moving, her fingers
-slowly tapping the table, her head inclined, her lips drawn in a little
-between her teeth, watching in the glass the crowded table reflected
-from the outer studio.
-
-In that gay party, one person was the thief--but which one? Each guest
-had had a dozen opportunities in the course of the time she had been in
-the kitchen.
-
-"Too much prinking, pretty lady," called out Garraboy, who, from where
-he was seated, could see her.
-
-"Not he," she said quickly. Then she reconsidered: "Why not? He's
-shifty--who knows? Let me think."
-
-To gain time, she went slowly back to the kitchen, her head bowed, her
-thumb between her teeth.
-
-"Who has taken it?"
-
-She ran over the characters of her guests and their situations as she
-knew them. Strangely enough, with the exception of Beecher and
-Majendie, at each her mind stopped upon some reason that might explain a
-sudden temptation.
-
-"And even Majendie--if he is bankrupt or running away," she thought.
-"No, I shall find out nothing this way. That is not the important thing
-just now. The important thing is to get the ring back. But how?"
-
-All at once she realized the full disaster of the situation. Slade
-would never believe her; and yet, how was it possible to admit before
-others who had lent her the ring?
-
-"What could I say to him?" she thought desperately. "No, no; I must have
-the ring back, whatever happens. I won't give him that hold. I must
-get it back--some way--somehow."
-
-And mechanically, deliberately, she continued to pace back and forth,
-her clenched hand beating the deliberate, rhythmic measure of her
-journey.
-
-In the studio, meanwhile, under the gay leadership of Majendie and Nan
-Charters, the spirits of the company began to rise. The rival chefs
-were surrounded by anxious admirers, who shouted laughing instructions
-or protested with mock agony against the shower of red pepper.
-
-The ceremony had served to bring Beecher and Nan Charters on terms of
-sympathetic familiarity. The young actress had the secret of what is
-meant by that much abused word--charm. Her vivacious movements were all
-charming. The eagerness with which her eyes seized the excitement of
-the moment, the soft and yet animated tones of her voice, the most
-casual gesture she made, or the most evident reply, all seemed invested
-with a peculiar charm which was at the same time a delight in pleasure
-and a happiness in the consciousness of pleasing.
-
-Beecher did not or could not conceal the empire she had so suddenly
-acquired over his imagination, while Nan Charters, quite aware of what
-was happening, laughingly provoked him further, a little excited beyond
-the emotions of an ordinary flirtation.
-
-During the progress of this personal duel, which, however, every one
-perceived with different emotions, Slade, placed at the middle of the
-table, followed only the expressions of Bernard Majendie, his scrutiny
-at times becoming so insistently profound that the banker several times
-noticed it with a swift glance of annoyed interrogation, which, however,
-did not alter in the least the fixity of the other's gaze.
-
-Meanwhile, two or three conversations, expressed in snatched phrases,
-took place between those whose interests in the stock market were put in
-jeopardy by the mystery as to Majendie's fate.
-
-"There'll be a rush of the shorts to cover tomorrow, if this is true,"
-said Cheever in a low whisper to his wife. "Pump Mrs. Bloodgood all you
-can."
-
-"How quick do you suppose they'll give the news out?" said Bloodgood to
-Garraboy. "It means a buying movement as soon as they do."
-
-"Any paper may have the news tomorrow," said the broker, and the glass
-that he took from the punch-table shook as he raised it.
-
-"Do you think Slade knows?"
-
-"I'm not sure--but I think he does," said Garraboy carefully. "Better
-meet me at the Waldorf at eleven. I'll get another line on it by then."
-
-"Why the deuce should he pull through?" said Bloodgood, with a quick,
-dull fury.
-
-Garraboy, with his malicious smile, perceiving that Bloodgood's hatred
-was purely financial, chuckled to himself, took a couple of glasses in
-rapid succession, and returned to the table under perfect control, not
-without a scowl at the other end of the table, where Nan Charters and
-young Beecher were laughingly disputing the possession of the
-pepper-shaker.
-
-A moment later, as Mrs. Cheever was exclaiming at their hostess'
-prolonged delay to Garraboy, who was dipping into the lobster a la
-Newburg, which he was preparing to serve, Mrs. Kildair slipped into the
-room like a lengthening shadow. Her entrance had been made with
-scarcely a perceptible sound, and yet each guest was aware of it, at the
-same moment, with the same uncontrollable nervous start.
-
-"Heavens, dear lady," exclaimed Garraboy, with a twitch of his arms.
-"You come in on us like a Greek tragedy. What is the surprise?"
-
-As he spoke, Beecher, looking up, saw her turn suddenly on him, drawing
-her forehead together until the eyebrows ran in a straight line.
-
-"I have something to say to you all," she said in a quiet, discordant
-voice, while her eyes ran restlessly through the company with a
-predatory sharpness.
-
-There was no mistaking the gravity in her voice. Garraboy extinguished
-the oil-lamp, covering the chafing-dish clumsily with a disagreeable
-tinny sound; Mrs. Cheever and Mrs. Bloodgood swung about abruptly; Maud
-Lille rose a little from her seat; Nan Charters, dramatically sensitive,
-seized unconsciously the arm of young Beecher; while the men, with the
-exception of Slade, who still watched Majendie like a terrier, imitated
-their movements of expectancy with a clumsy shuffling of the feet.
-
-"Mr. Bloodgood."
-
-"Yes, Mrs. Kildair?"
-
-"Kindly do as I ask."
-
-"Certainly."
-
-She had spoken his name with a peremptory positiveness that was almost
-an accusation. He rose, placing his napkin carefully at the side of his
-plate, raising his short eyebrows a little in surprise.
-
-"Go to the vestibule," she continued, immediately shifting her glance
-from him to the others. "Are you there? Shut the sliding doors that
-lead into the studio. Lock them. Bring me the key."
-
-He executed the order without bungling, while the company, in growing
-amazement, fascinated, watched his squat figure returning with the key.
-
-"You've locked it?" she said, making the question an excuse to bury her
-glance in his.
-
-"As you wished me to."
-
-"Thanks."
-
-She took from him the key, and, shifting slightly, likewise locked the
-door into her bedroom through which she had come.
-
-Then, transferring the keys to her left hand, seemingly unaware of
-Bloodgood, who still composedly awaited her further instructions, her
-eyes studied a moment the possibilities of the apartment and then
-returned to her guests.
-
-"Mr. Cheever," she said abruptly.
-
-"Yes, Mrs. Kildair."
-
-"Put out all the candles except the candelabrum on the table."
-
-"Put out the lights?" he said, rising, with his peculiar nervous
-movement of the fingers to the lips.
-
-"At once."
-
-Mr. Cheever, in rising, met the glance of his wife, and the look of
-questioning and wonder that passed did not escape the others.
-
-"But, my dear Mrs. Kildair," cried Nan Charters, with a little nervous
-catch of her breath, "what is it? I'm getting terribly worked up."
-
-"Miss Lille," said Mrs. Kildair's undeviating voice of command, while
-Beecher placed his hand firmly over his companion's, which had begun to
-open and shut in nervous tension.
-
-The journalist, more composed than the rest, had watched the proceedings
-from that shadowy calm which had made her presence almost unnoticed.
-Now, as though forewarned by professional instinct that something
-sensational was hanging on the moment, she rose quietly with almost a
-stealthy motion.
-
-"Put the candelabrum on this table--here," said Mrs. Kildair, after a
-long moment's confrontation. She indicated the large round table on
-which the punch-bowl was set. "No, wait. Mr. Bloodgood, first clear
-off the table, cover and all; I want nothing on it."
-
-As Bloodgood started to remove the punch-bowl, Majendie rose quickly and
-took the heavy candelabrum from the hands of Maud Lille, saying:
-
-"Permit me; that's rather heavy for you."
-
-"But, Mrs. Kildair--" began Mrs. Cheever's voice, in shrill crescendo.
-
-Mrs. Kildair, as though satisfied by her examination of the journalist,
-nodded to Majendie, and, perceiving the mahogany table clear, said
-without notice of Mrs. Cheever:
-
-"Good! Now put the candelabrum down on it."
-
-In a moment, as Cheever proceeded lumberingly on his errand, the
-brilliant cross-fire of lights dropped away in the studio, only a few
-smoldering wicks winking on the walls, while the high ceiling seemed to
-recede as it came under the sole dominion of the three candles bracketed
-in silver at the head of the bare mahogany table.
-
-"Now listen!" said Mrs. Kildair, and her voice was cold and abrupt. "My
-ring has just been stolen!"
-
-She said it suddenly, hurling the news at them, and waiting ferret-like
-for some indication in the chorus that broke out.
-
-The hand that Beecher still grasped shot out from him as though it had
-been stung. For the first time, Slade, forgetting Majendie, wheeled
-brusquely and concentrated his glance on Mrs. Kildair, who listened
-unmoved to the storm of exclamations:
-
-"Stolen!"
-
-"Oh, my dear Mrs. Kildair, not that!"
-
-"Stolen--by Jove!"
-
-"Rita dear!"
-
-"What! Stolen--here--tonight?"
-
-"The ring has been taken in the last twenty minutes," continued Mrs.
-Kildair, in the same determined, chiseled accents. "I am not going to
-mince words. The ring has been taken, and one of you here is the thief.
-This is exactly the situation."
-
-For a moment nothing was heard but an indescribable gasp, while each,
-turning by an uncontrollable impulse, searched the face of his
-neighbors. Suddenly Slade's deep bass broke out:
-
-"Stolen, Mrs. Kildair?"
-
-"Stolen," she replied quietly, meeting his inquisitorial glance.
-
-"Have you searched very carefully?" said Majendie. "Mistakes are easily
-made. It may have slipped to the floor. Are you certain that it has
-been taken?"
-
-"Exactly. There is not the slightest doubt," said Mrs. Kildair,
-conscious of the almost admiring suspicion in Slade's glance. "Three of
-you were in my bedroom when I took off my rings, placed a hatpin through
-them, and fastened them to the pin-cushion. Am I correct, Mr. Garraboy?"
-she added abruptly.
-
-"Perfectly so," said the broker, staring ahead with a sudden
-consciousness of his dilemma. He added punctiliously; "I was there."
-
-"With the exception of Mr. Slade, each of you has passed through my
-bedroom a dozen times. The ring is gone, and one of you has taken it."
-
-Mrs. Cheever gave a little scream and reached heavily for a glass of
-water. Mrs. Bloodgood said something inarticulate, covering her heart
-with her hand in the muffled outburst of masculine exclamation:
-
-"The devil you say!"
-
-"Incredible!"
-
-"I saw it."
-
-"By Jove! A nasty mess."
-
-Only Maud Lille's calm voice could be heard saying:
-
-"Quite true. I was in the room when you took them off. The ruby was on
-top."
-
-Mrs. Cheever sought to add her testimony, but was incapable of speech.
-In her agitation she spilled half of the glass of water as she put it
-down from her lips.
-
-"Was the ring valuable?" said Slade carefully, with a quiet enjoyment.
-
-Their eyes met a moment--a look incomprehensible to the others.
-
-"It was worth over fifteen thousand dollars," Mrs. Kildair answered, in
-the buzz of astonishment.
-
-"And what are you going to do about it?"
-
-"I have not minced words," she said, turning her eyes to Maud Lille and
-back to Garraboy. "There is a thief, and that thief is here in this
-room. Now, I am not going to stand on ceremony. I am going to have
-that ring back in one way or another--now. Listen to me carefully. I
-intend to have that ring back, and, until I do, not a soul shall leave
-this room."
-
-"A search?" said Slade quietly.
-
-"No," she said instantly, tapping on the table with her nervous
-knuckles. "I don't care to know the thief--all I want is the ring. And
-this is the way I am going to get it." She stopped for another quick,
-searching glance, and continued with cold control:
-
-"I am going to make it possible for whoever took it to restore it to me
-without possibility of detection. The doors are locked and will stay
-locked. I am going to put out the lights, and I am going to count one
-hundred--slowly. You will be in absolute darkness; no one will know or
-see what is done, and I give my word that I will count the full hundred.
-There will be no surprise, no turning up of lights. But if, at the end
-of that time, the ring is not placed here on this table, I shall
-telephone for detectives and have every one in this room searched. Am I
-clear?"
-
-The transfer of the candelabrum to the further table had left those of
-the diners who had remained by the dinner-table in half obscurity.
-Instantly there was a shifting and a dragging of chairs, a confused
-jumble of questions and explanations.
-
-Nan Charters for the second time seized the arm of Teddy Beecher. She
-murmured something which he did not hear. He glanced at her face, and
-for a moment an incredible suspicion crossed his mind. But the next, as
-he glanced down the table at the totally unnerved attitude of Mrs.
-Cheever and Mrs. Bloodgood, he understood better the agitation of his
-companion.
-
-"Do you suspect any one?" he whispered, by an impulse that seemed to
-spring into his mind.
-
-The young actress turned to him with almost an expression of terror in
-her eyes, which at the same time implored him to be silent.
-
-"She knows something," he thought, with a somber feeling. His own face
-was flushed. He felt that to all he must appear guilty. "Every one
-feels the same," he thought, looking again at his companion, who was
-gazing with almost frightened intensity straight ahead of her.
-
-He followed her glance, and saw that the object of her gaze was none
-other than Mrs. Enos Bloodgood, who still held her hand pressed over her
-breast, her lips parted as though suffocating with emotion. But, before
-he had time even to consider the bearing of this discovery, Mrs.
-Kildair's voice, firm and unrelenting, cut short the confusion.
-
-"Every one come to this table, please. Take your places here," she
-said, and to emphasize the command she rapped sharply for order.
-
-In the bustle that took place, Beecher was separated from Miss Charters,
-and when he found himself at the table she was opposite him, her eyes on
-the table.
-
-"Can you make a little room?" he heard Maud Lille's low voice say, and,
-drawing away from Cheever, who was on his right, he allowed the
-journalist to take her place beside him.
-
-Majendie was on the left of Mrs. Kildair, Slade next to him, sweeping
-the table slowly with his direct, lowering glance, his lips slightly
-pursed. Bloodgood, his hands sunk in his pockets, stared bullishly
-ahead, while between Cheever and his wife there passed a covert,
-terrible glance of interrogation. Garraboy, with his hands locked over
-his chin, arms folded, looked straight ahead staring fixedly at his
-hostess.
-
-Mrs. Kildair, having assured herself that all was arranged as she
-desired, blew out two of the three candles, which suddenly caused the
-eyes on the dim faces to stand out in startled relief.
-
-"I shall count one hundred--no more, no less," she said quietly.
-"Either the ring is returned or every one in this room is to be
-searched. Remember."
-
-She motioned to Slade, who, leaning over, blew out the remaining candle,
-while a little hysterical cry was heard from Mrs. Cheever.
-
-The wick shone a moment with a hot, glowing spire, and then everything
-was black. Mrs. Kildair began to count.
-
-"One--two--three--four--five--six--seven--eight--nine--ten--"
-
-She gave each number with the inexorable regularity of a clock's
-reiterated note.
-
-"Eleven--twelve--thirteen--fourteen-- fifteen--sixteen--seventeen--"
-
-In the room every sound was distinct--the rustle of a shifting dress,
-the grinding of a shoe, the deep, slightly asthmatic breathing of a man.
-
-"Twenty-one--twenty-two--twenty-three--
-twenty-four--twenty-five--twenty-six--"
-
-The counting went on, without the slightest variation, with a methodic,
-rasping reiteration that began to produce almost an hypnotic effect on
-the imaginations held in suspense.
-
-"Thirty--thirty-one--thirty-two--thirty-three--"
-
-A slight rasping breath was heard, and then a man nervously clearing his
-throat.
-
-"Thirty-nine--forty--forty-one--forty-two--"
-
-Still nothing had happened. No other sound had broken in on the
-strained attention of every ear. Yet the voice that counted did not vary
-in the slightest measure; only the sound became less human, more
-metallic.
-
-"Forty-seven--forty-eight--forty-nine-- fifty--fifty-one--fifty-two--"
-
-A woman had sighed--Mrs. Bloodgood next to him--the sigh of a woman
-yielding up consciousness to pain.
-
-"Fifty-four--fifty-five--fifty-six--fifty-seven
---fifty-eight--fifty-nine--sixty--sixty-one--"
-
-All at once, clear, ringing, unmistakable, on the sounding plane of the
-table was heard a quick metallic note that echoed and reechoed in the
-empty blackness.
-
-"The ring!"
-
-It was Maud Lille's deep voice that had cried out. Beecher suddenly
-against his shoulder felt the weight of Mrs. Bloodgood's swaying body.
-The voice that counted hesitated a moment, but only a moment.
-
-"Sixty-two--sixty-three--"
-
-Several voices began to protest:
-
-"No, no!"
-
-"Light the candles!"
-
-"It's too much!"
-
-"Don't go on!"
-
-"Seventy-five--seventy-six--seventy-seven--
-seventy-eight--seventy-nine--"
-
-The sound dominated the protest. Some one began to laugh, an
-hysterical, feverish laughter that chilled Beecher to the bones. He put
-out his hand and steadied the body of the woman next to him.
-
-"Eighty-five--eighty-six--"
-
-"Hurry, oh, hurry--please hurry!" cried the voice of Nan Charters, and
-some one else cried:
-
-"Enough--this is terrible!"
-
-"Ninety-five--ninety-six--ninety-seven-- ninety-eight--ninety-nine, and
-one hundred."
-
-At once a match sputtered in the hands of Slade. There was a cry from
-every one, and the table shivered with the weight of those who craned
-forward. Then a second cry of amazement and horror. The table was
-absolutely bare. The ring a second time had been taken.
-
-[Illustration: "In that gay party one person was a thief--but which one?
-... A match sputtered. There was a cry of amazement and horror. The
-table was absolutely bare"]
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER IV*
-
-
-For a full, strained moment not a sound escaped the company; even the
-strongest natures, Slade, Majendie and Rita Kildair seemed powerless to
-grasp what had taken place. Then the realization came, in a flash.
-What the first thief had failed to carry through another had boldly
-dared: a man or a woman, deliberately or hysterically, had seized the
-opportunity that had lain there, in the darkness, between the
-sixty-first second and the hundredth count.
-
-The match in Slade's hands burned his fingers, and went out. In the
-sudden blackness a dozen cries were heard:
-
-"Light the candle!"
-
-"Turn on the electric light!"
-
-"Search the floor!"
-
-"Stolen again!"
-
-"Ghastly!"
-
-"A light! A light!"
-
-Another match sputtered, and one candle caught the flame and flung its
-expanding circles of light around them.
-
-"It must have rolled to the floor," said Majendie's voice, among the
-first.
-
-"Nonsense!" broke in Slade's powerful bass. "There are no carpets; we
-would have heard it. There is a second thief here. Every one must be
-searched. Mrs. Kildair, if you wish I'll call up my detective agency."
-
-"No," said Mrs. Kildair instantly, and her voice had regained its calm.
-"I will attend to that myself."
-
-She went quickly to the door into the bedroom, unlocked it, passed
-through, and locked it again. A moment later the impatient ring of a
-telephone was heard.
-
-In the ill-lit studio the greatest confusion prevailed. Every one
-seemed, by a common impulse, to desire to escape to the farthest ends of
-the room, stumbling and bumping against one another in the obscurity.
-Some instinct impelled Beecher to Nan Charters' side. He took her arm
-with a strong, reassuring grip, expecting to find her still shaken with
-emotion; but, to his amazement, he found her entirely collected.
-
-"Thank you, I am all right," she said, releasing herself, with a little
-smile.
-
-"Are you sure?" he said doubtfully.
-
-At this moment, as he stood staring at her, perplexed, Slade's voice
-rang out peremptorily:
-
-"The electric lights--some one turn on the lights!"
-
-He left her, and, going to the wall toward the antechamber, pressed the
-three buttons embedded there. Instantly the great room was showered with
-a brutal glare. Near the piano, Mrs. Cheever was sunk in an arm-chair,
-in a seemingly hysterical state, while Mr. Cheever, glass in hand, was
-bending over her; Mrs. Bloodgood was seated at the dining-table, her
-head resting in her hands; Garraboy and Bloodgood were turning in the
-middle of the floor. Only Maud Lille, stoic and alert, remained at her
-original place. Slade and Majendie were carefully exploring the floor.
-
-Beecher did not at once return to his companion. Her sudden change
-perplexed him with thoughts that he did not wish to analyze too deeply.
-He expected that she would rejoin Mrs. Bloodgood; but the young actress,
-as though purposely avoiding her, went finally to where Maud Lille was
-standing, and said, with a command that startled Beecher:
-
-"Mr. Majendie, there is always a chance that the ring may have rolled
-off the table and been caught in somebody's dress. Such things have
-happened again and again. I suggest that every woman make a careful
-search."
-
-"Miss Charters is quite right," said Majendie, who, advancing to the
-middle of the studio, repeated the suggestion. "The situation is
-frightful; we must take every precaution to avoid the chances of an
-accident."
-
-The four women immediately began to examine the ruffles and draperies of
-their skirts--without success.
-
-All at once the door at the back of the room opened, and Mrs. Kildair
-reappeared.
-
-"I shall have the detectives here--a man and a woman--within half an
-hour," she said. "There is nothing to do but wait."
-
-She seated herself in a chair near the door, her hands stretched out
-over the arms, her head lowered. Every one sat down, with the exception
-of Maud Lille, who, however, shifted a little so as to have the support
-of the piano. No one spoke; the situation had passed beyond comment.
-
-On the dining-table the little alcohol-lamp under a chafing-dish burnt
-itself out unnoticed. At the end of thirty-five minutes, during which
-every one had been intent on the torturous progress of the clock, a
-sudden buzz was heard.
-
-Mrs. Kildair rose and, passing out by way of the bedroom, was heard
-talking behind the closed doors that led into the hall, a sound followed
-by the indistinguishable jumble of voices.
-
-A nervous five minutes, and she reappeared, with the same
-incomprehensible calm that had marked her during the period in the dark.
-
-"The women will go into the bedroom," she said, without variation of her
-voice. "The men will be searched in the dining-room."
-
-"One moment," said Slade, taking a step in advance.
-
-Mrs. Kildair turned with a start, the first agitation noticeable.
-
-"It is absolutely necessary for me to keep an appointment at ten
-o'clock," he said, glancing at the clock, which stood at the last
-quarter. "As I was not here when the ring was first stolen, I ask the
-privilege of being examined the first."
-
-At this there was a murmur, and Mrs. Kildair hesitated.
-
-Slade, giving a disdainful shoulder to the protest, strode deliberately
-to Mrs. Kildair and spoke with her in a low voice. At the end of a
-moment Mrs. Kildair nodded as though convinced, and, going to the
-folding doors, unlocked them. Outside a man in a dark business suit, as
-grimly correct as an undertaker, was waiting with folded arms.
-
-Slade bowed and passed into the hall, shutting the doors behind him,
-while Mrs. Kildair came back slowly, evidently running over in her mind
-the order of selection.
-
-"Mrs. Bloodgood," she said finally, "will you go first?"
-
-Mrs. Bloodgood, surprised at the formal appellation, rose hastily, and
-started blindly for the vestibule through which Slade had passed.
-
-"In my bedroom, please," said Mrs. Kildair.
-
-The young woman checked herself, faltering a little, and entered the
-bedroom, where, for a moment, could be seen the drab figure of another
-woman, ornamented by a little toque with a red feather.
-
-"Mrs. Kildair," said Majendie, rising, "it is equally important for me
-to leave as soon as possible. While I know that I ask a favor, possibly
-all of you know that my affairs are at a vital stage, and I should
-appreciate it very much if there were no objection to my being examined
-the next."
-
-He turned, with a courteous bow, as he concluded.
-
-"I am perfectly willing," said Beecher at once.
-
-"I am not," said Bloodgood, while Cheever made a gesture of dissent.
-
-"Nor I," said Garraboy. "I have my own appointment, that means a great
-deal to me. I regret that I cannot accede to Mr. Majendie's request."
-
-"These gentlemen are quite within their rights," said Majendie,
-accepting the refusal with the same courtesy. He thanked Beecher with a
-smile, and added: "If you are willing, Mrs. Kildair, shall we draw lots
-for it?"
-
-"Quite so," said Mrs. Kildair, and she arranged four slips in her
-fingers and tendered them.
-
-Majendie drew the longest, and was, therefore, forced to wait until
-Garraboy, Bloodgood, and Cheever had passed ahead. He glanced at the
-clock with a sudden, uneasy look, and returned to his chair: but, for
-the first time, a frown appeared on his face, while his fingers tore
-into bits the slip of paper, which he did not notice he had retained.
-
-Beecher was unpleasantly aware that Garraboy was watching him, and this
-scrutiny, which might have been inspired by a personal jealousy, struck
-him as a deliberate suspicion. He returned the look with a belligerent
-intensity, conscious in his own mind that he had already formed a
-prejudice as to the identity of the second thief.
-
-"A woman might have taken the ring on impulse," he thought uneasily,
-"but only a man could have had the cold daring to take it the second
-time."
-
-He eliminated Majendie by an instinctive rejection; Slade appeared an
-equally impossible solution.
-
-"It's Cheever, Bloodgood, or Garraboy," he thought. "And Cheever hasn't
-the nerve--I don't believe it. It's Bloodgood or Garraboy--and Garraboy
-is the most likely."
-
-Suddenly a hot, panicky feeling came to him. What if the real
-thief--Garraboy, for instance--had slipped the ring into his own pocket?
-He unlocked his hands and hurriedly searched his clothes. Then annoyed
-at seeing this childish action come under the notice of the broker, he
-shifted in his seat and glanced toward Nan Charters. To his surprise,
-he found again the same indications of nervousness in the concentration
-of her eye on the door leading into the bedroom.
-
-At this moment Mrs. Bloodgood emerged, and Mrs. Cheever went in. At
-once the nervous tension of his companion seemed to relax, and she sank
-back in her seat, with an indifferent glance around the room.
-
-"Decidedly, there is something queer between the two," he thought,
-mystified.
-
-In the studio the same stony silence was maintained. Through the open
-doors that led to the antechamber Slade reappeared, hesitated a moment
-as if to reenter the studio, then bowed and went out. Behind him the
-detective was seen waiting. Garraboy rose and immediately passed into
-the back.
-
-Mrs. Bloodgood had taken her seat apart, staring ahead as though by a
-difficult process of mental control, for at times her glance, despite
-the consciousness of her husband's espionage, flashed over to where
-Majendie was impatiently following the movements of the clock.
-
-When Garraboy's search had ended, he followed the precedent of Slade,
-bowed without speaking, and departed; while Bloodgood, guarding the same
-silence, passed into the dining-room. Maud Lille succeeded Mrs.
-Cheever, who returned in the same state of agitation that she had shown
-from the beginning. She started to approach her husband, when Mrs.
-Kildair's controlled voice was heard:
-
-"Not there, please, Mrs. Cheever. Kindly sit at this side of the room
-with Mrs. Bloodgood."
-
-Mrs. Cheever flushed instantly, and sank, or rather collapsed, in the
-chair which had been indicated.
-
-All at once there came another ring, followed by two or three impatient
-taps on the outer door. There was a sudden stir in the room, where all
-nerves were clearly on the edge, and Mrs. Cheever gave a little scream.
-
-"I'll answer," said Cheever, rising.
-
-"Wait," said Mrs. Kildair. She started toward the door, and then,
-changing her mind, as if unwilling to relax her surveillance of events
-in the studio, stopped. "Mr. Beecher, please," she said thoughtfully.
-"See who it is." And she moved slightly toward the half-drawn
-portieres, to hear and at the same time to be concealed.
-
-Garraboy was outside, a coat on his arm.
-
-"Excuse me," he said, without emotion. "I took the wrong coat. Stupid
-of me. Just found it out."
-
-"It looks like mine," said Beecher, examining it.
-
-"Probably is," said Garraboy, who extracted another coat of similar
-appearance from the rack, plunged into his pockets and nodded. "Sure
-enough. Sorry. Good night."
-
-So thoroughly disagreeable an impression had the broker produced upon
-Beecher that, in a moment of suspicion, moved by an incredible thought,
-he ran his hands hastily through the pockets.
-
-"I shouldn't have been surprised," he grumbled to himself, and returned
-to the studio, where the conversation had been overheard.
-
-The search continued, ended, and, as all expected, no trace of the ring
-was found.
-
-Mrs. Kildair excused herself, evidently maintaining her calm with
-difficulty. The guests, murmuring inarticulate phrases, took their
-wraps, and young Beecher found himself shortly in a coupe beside Nan
-Charters.
-
-For several moments neither spoke, each absorbed in his own
-speculations. Beecher studied the figure at his side with covert
-glances, amazed at the transformation from the childlike charm which had
-first fascinated him. An hour before he had begun to wonder how far
-that feeling might develop in him; now, as he watched her, he was
-conscious of a dispassionate, almost resentful analysis. The fragrance
-of her perfume, a little too overpowering, filled the interior of the
-coupe. She herself, bending slightly forward, one elbow against the
-window-pane, pressed her ungloved knuckles against her chin, while her
-glance, set and controlled, was lost in the cloudy shadows and striped
-reflections of the street without.
-
-"What is terrible in such a situation," she said musingly, but without
-turning, "is that any one may be suspected."
-
-The words were spoken with almost an absolute change of personality.
-The very tone brought to him an increased antagonism.
-
-"Quite true," he said. "You may have taken it the first time, and I the
-second."
-
-She turned and tried to distinguish his expression; but, if he had hoped
-to startle, he was disappointed. She said, quite possessed:
-
-"Why do you put it that way?"
-
-"Because I am convinced that the second time was the deliberate action
-of a man, and that the first was the impulse of a woman."
-
-"Why a woman the first time?"
-
-"That is simply my feeling. A woman would not calculate the chances of
-detection, would have kept the ring on her person, and would have
-restored it. What do you think?"
-
-"Possibly," she said, her glance returning to the street.
-
-"But you don't agree with me," he said, leaning a little forward.
-
-"I don't know."
-
-"Miss Charters, will you allow me to ask you a question?"
-
-"What? Yes."
-
-"Don't you know that a woman took it the first time?"
-
-She turned very slowly and looked at him steadily a moment.
-
-"I do not know," she said at last.
-
-"But you suspect," he persisted.
-
-"Do you know, Mr. Beecher, that this is a very strange question?" she
-said. "Exactly what are you implying? Do you, by any chance, suspect
-me?"
-
-She said the last words gently, with a return of the first manner which
-had so held him. And again, without being able to resist, he felt the
-charm on his senses. He knew absolutely nothing about her. At times
-the most direct suspicions had entered his mind; never-the-less all at
-once he heard himself answering:
-
-"I know nothing in the world about you, Miss Charters, but my instinct
-tells me that is absolutely impossible."
-
-"Only?"
-
-"Only I can not forget your agitation at certain moments."
-
-"Naturally; that is my temperament."
-
-"You are perfectly calm now, and you were perfectly calm at certain
-times tonight."
-
-She turned suddenly in her seat and faced him, saying sharply:
-
-"What do you mean?"
-
-"May I speak frankly?"
-
-"I ask you to do so," she said peremptorily.
-
-"I think--in fact, I am convinced--that you suspect who took the ring in
-the first place."
-
-The cab was grinding against the curb. She put out her hand hurriedly,
-as if the impulse were to jump from the carriage. But immediately she
-checked the movement, and turned, saying very simply and directly:
-
-"Do you wish to be my friend?"
-
-"You know I do," he said, surprised.
-
-"Then, if you do, and trust me, never ask that question again--or make
-the slightest reference to it."
-
-She held out her hand. He took it, but without an answer, opened the
-door, saw her to her vestibule, and returned silent and moody, turning
-over again and again in his mind the sudden contradiction in her
-character.
-
-"I wonder if she repels or attracts me most," he said, tramping over the
-quiet pavements, which flung back the riotous thumping of his cane.
-But, as he went aimlessly along, he felt again creeping over him the
-suddenness of her charm and a certain unsatisfied restlessness to see
-her again, which came to him with the faint scent of the perfume that
-had clung to his coat.
-
-All at once he stopped.
-
-"I've got to get to the bottom of all this affair," he said abruptly.
-"I believe she's as straight as they make 'em; I'd wager my soul on
-it--but I've got to know!"
-
-And, boarding a surface car, he returned to Rita Kildair's.
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER V*
-
-
-He had arrived at the studio building and entered the lower vestibule
-before he was aware of the lateness of the hour. He pulled out his
-watch, and found that it was almost midnight.
-
-"Good heavens!" he said, taking a step back. "I quite forgot the time."
-He started to go, then turned to the switchboard. "Could I telephone up
-to Mrs. Kildair's apartment?"
-
-"Go right up, Mr. Beecher," said the hallboy, rising.
-
-"Are you certain?" he said doubtfully.
-
-"Sure. Orders is to send up any one who calls."
-
-A little surprised, he entered the elevator. At that moment a ring
-sounded, and on the indicator the figure 4 dropped.
-
-"That's her floor now," said the boy, starting up the elevator.
-
-At the fourth he came face to face with Garraboy, who saw him with a
-start of surprise and a sudden look of malice. The two nodded, without
-cordiality.
-
-"Hello," said Garraboy, looking at him with a curious fixity which he
-remembered after. "What are you doing here?"
-
-"What are you?" said Beecher abruptly.
-
-"Some valuable information to volunteer?" persisted the other, with a
-deliberate accent of irony.
-
-"Perhaps."
-
-"Indeed? Then you have come to assist in restoring the ring," said
-Garraboy in a low voice; and on his young, wrinkled face was a faint
-glimmer of a smile.
-
-"Perhaps," said Beecher, flushing angrily. "Does that annoy you?"
-
-"Not in the least," said Garraboy drily. "On the contrary, I am
-interested--exceedingly so." He lifted his hat slightly and stepped
-into the elevator.
-
-"Now, what in the devil has he got in his mind?" thought Beecher
-angrily. "And what was his idea in coming back? Nice look he gave me.
-Thought he had such an all-fired important engagement that he had to
-hurry away!"
-
-He tried the door absent-mindedly, and found it locked. A long moment
-after he had pressed a second time upon the bell, the door was opened by
-Rita Kildair herself, who drew back in evident astonishment.
-
-"You?" she said, frowning.
-
-"I was going to telephone," he said, a little embarrassed; "but they
-told me downstairs to come up."
-
-"Quite right."
-
-"Look here, Rita," he said, with a sudden feeling of intuition. "I know
-you probably think I'm a prime representative of the pinhead family, but
-I'm awfully broken up by what happened. Can't I help out some way?"
-
-[Illustration: "'Look here, Rita. Can't I help you out some way?'"]
-
-"Is that why you've come?" she said slowly.
-
-"Of course," he said, meeting her scrutiny with a puzzled glance.
-
-She considered a moment and then said abruptly:
-
-"Go in and sit down. I'm busy at the telephone. I'll be back in a
-moment."
-
-The studio was still blazing with the electric chandeliers, the
-dining-table still crowded with the untouched dinner, with that sense of
-desolation and fatigue which the aftermath of a banquet presents.
-Lighted up as it was, the studio had none of the mystery that
-charmed--rather, something of the cruel garishness of the white sun.
-
-He moved about aimlessly, arms crossed, his imagination repeopling the
-room with the strongly accentuated personalities who had gathered there
-an hour before, saying to himself over and over:
-
-"Now, why the deuce did Garraboy come back?"
-
-He approached the table and abstractedly took an almond and began
-munching it. Then, perceiving the chafing-dish, reached over, with a
-smile, and lifted the cover. But, at the moment his hand was
-outstretched, his eyes, obeying some mysterious instinct, rose to a long
-Venetian mirror opposite. In the clear reflection that showed the
-balcony of the second floor, he distinctly beheld the head of a woman
-protruding a little beyond the curtain.
-
-"What the deuce!" he said, covering the chafing-dish with a bang. "It
-can't be Rita--who then?"
-
-All at once he comprehended. If the ring had not been found in the
-search, it was because it had been concealed in the room, and the woman
-in the balcony was a detective set to watch the trap--if the real thief
-had the daring to return.
-
-At this moment Rita Kildair entered from the bedroom.
-
-"Good heavens, Rita!" he said directly. "You don't mean to say you
-suspect me?"
-
-"What do you mean?" she said, stopping short, her glance instinctively
-seeking the balcony.
-
-"I mean you've stuck a detective up there to see what I do the moment I
-come into the studio. Good heavens! what do you think I came for?"
-
-"My dear Teddy," she said, frowning at the stupidity of her spy, "is
-there any one who can't be suspected? Do you blame me?"
-
-"No, I suppose not," he blurted out. "Only, it gives a fellow a deuced
-creepy feeling to have a couple of eyes looking through him from behind
-the curtain. I say, why don't you search the place? The ring must be
-here!"
-
-"That is possible, of course," she said thoughtfully, her lip between
-her little teeth, an impulsive movement when she was plunged in thought.
-
-"Or are you waiting for the thief to come back here and try to recover
-it? Of course, that's the plan."
-
-"There's one thing," she said, with a quick, imperative gesture, looking
-at him closely, "I want you to remember. There is nothing public to be
-known. Whatever is done must be done quietly."
-
-"Oh, of course," he said hastily. "I say, Rita, let me try to work this
-out with you--give me your confidence! I wish you would."
-
-She considered a moment, as though puzzled by his offer.
-
-"I don't think it will ever be found," she said, shaking her head and
-looking at him.
-
-"But you suspect some one," he persisted.
-
-She hesitated a moment, and then shook her head.
-
-"No."
-
-The second's delay convinced him.
-
-"Man or woman?"
-
-"It is only a speculation," she answered slowly, "but I believe it was a
-woman."
-
-"Both times?"
-
-"Both times."
-
-He took a turn, moodily disturbed, and came back.
-
-"Tell me this, Rita," he said. "Who else came back here tonight?"
-
-"Garraboy," she answered slowly, "and--Mrs. Cheever."
-
-"Mrs. Cheever!" he exclaimed, astonished. "Why, she was on the verge of
-prostration."
-
-Mrs. Kildair smiled a thin, elusive smile, and was about to reply when
-there came a ring at the door.
-
-Instantly her manner changed. Placing her finger on her lips, at the
-same time sending him a glance that commanded the utmost silence, she
-took his hand and led him softly from the studio, through her bedroom
-into the further obscurity of the dining-room, which was lit only by the
-weak reflection which filtered through from the hall.
-
-"Sit here, and not a sound," she said, placing her lips so close to his
-ear that he felt the warm contact of her cheek. She gave him a slight
-pressure of her fingers, and went back into the studio by way of her
-bedroom, closing both doors.
-
-Beecher, left in the darkness, strained every nerve to catch the sound
-that would reveal the identity of the new arrival. It seemed to him
-that he heard the sound of another woman's voice, and then presently, as
-a shadow came to him through the twilight of the hall, he heard Mrs.
-Kildair saying:
-
-"--to telephone. Be back in a moment."
-
-The next instant she was at his side, pressing his hand to prevent the
-whisper that was on his lips. They sat thus side by side for what seemed
-a full five minutes before she rose and silently passed into the hall
-again. Beecher remained in complete bewilderment, unable to detect the
-slightest sound of the conversation that was taking place. That the
-same test was being applied to the new-comer which he himself had
-detected, he understood; but which one of the many guests it might be,
-he could not discover.
-
-At the end of an interminable interval, he heard a few faint sounds, the
-closing of the outer door, and presently the rustle of Mrs. Kildair's
-approach.
-
-"Come now," she said, waiting for him in the hall.
-
-"Who came back then?" he asked eagerly.
-
-She shook her head.
-
-"I can not tell you--at least, not now. There are reasons why it would
-not be quite fair," she said. Then, seeing his irritation, she tapped
-him on the arm and added: "Listen, Teddy. It is too late to talk over
-things. Run away now. Come in tomorrow at five."
-
-"I want to help, you know," he said, taking her hand, guiltily conscious
-of the smile with which she examined him--a smile that seemed to convict
-him of treason. For the moment, however, the memory of the younger
-woman was dimmed. He was conscious only of the indefinite lure of
-mystery which Rita Kildair always exerted over his curiosity the moment
-they were alone.
-
-"Look here, Rita," he said impulsively, "I should think, in a case like
-this, you'd want all the help you can get!"
-
-Her smile disappeared. She looked at him a moment with almost a
-masculine penetration, and then, her smile returning, said quietly:
-
-"It's curious, but each person who came back here tonight came back just
-to--help."
-
-Not only her words, but her manner, struck him with a sense of
-discomfort.
-
-"Come in tomorrow," she said, pushing him gently toward the door. She
-made a quick little motion with her fingers, looked at him with a
-penetrating seriousness, and disappeared, leaving him thoroughly
-confused and irritable.
-
-"Why, she acts as though she suspected me!" he said, remembering her
-continual examination. "Who the deuce came back then? What's Garraboy
-in all this? Does he suspect me, too, and has he been saying anything
-to Rita? What is terrible in such a situation is that any one may be
-suspected." Suddenly he perceived that he had repeated the very words
-that Nan Charters had used in the coupe.
-
-"By George, what a rotten mess! I feel like a pickpocket already," he
-said, with a sudden cold horror in his back. "Why shouldn't Rita
-suspect me as well as any one else? This is no pleasure party; this is
-serious--dead serious. I've got to work it out!"
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER VI*
-
-
-Teddy Beecher was a fair representative of the second generation. He
-still retained the rugged democracy of the father who had fought his way
-to a moderate fortune in the troubled regions of the coal-fields. To
-him a man was a man, whatever the quality of his coat. Left an orphan
-at fourteen, he had passed victoriously through boarding-school and
-college without seriously troubling the peace of mind of those who were
-competing for scholarship honors. He was liked because he liked every
-one, not with a politic assumption, but from a veritable enjoyment of
-life and men.
-
-After graduation, he had gone West on a ranch with several of his
-classmates, for the pure love of adventure and the delights of the great
-open spaces. Having thus begun his education, he continued it by
-knocking about the world, with periodic excursions in search of big
-game. He had known a great many types of men without knowing them in
-the least, and he appealed to all women without being deeply
-impressionable to their influence. His philosophy of life was very well
-summed up in a remark he had made on his return to New York--that he
-would probably go to work if he couldn't find anything better to do.
-
-When he awoke the day after Rita Kildair's party, it was with the clear
-and dispassionate vision of the morning. The dramatic occurrences of
-the night before flashed instantly into his consciousness, arousing all
-the energy of his young curiosity. He recalled the promise to solve the
-mystery he had made in a moment of enthusiasm, and with a renewed zest
-began to consider how he should prove himself.
-
-Several things immediately rose up to perplex him in the strange and
-dramatic climaxes at which he had assisted--the twisted undercurrents of
-which he was still completely ignorant. Why had Garraboy, and then Rita
-Kildair, adopted an attitude of suspicion toward him when he had
-returned? For Garraboy's hostility he found a ready answer in the
-mutual antagonism that had risen from the first exchange of glances; but
-the reception he had received at the hands of Mrs. Kildair thoroughly
-mystified him.
-
-"Of course, if the ring wasn't found in the search," he said, getting
-out of bed and ringing for his man, "it's got to be in the studio; of
-course--no way around that. Whoever took it the second time didn't get
-much opportunity to hide it, either--unless it was hidden after the
-candle was lit; there was a chance then--every one was stumbling around.
-By Jove! I believe that's how it was done. But then, why the deuce
-should more than one person return?"
-
-He stopped and suddenly remembered his own return.
-
-"That's so; a man might come back to offer help. But why a woman? And
-who the deuce came back after I did--Miss Lille or Mrs. Bloodgood?"
-
-At this moment the door opened on Charles, whom he had inherited with
-one half of the luxurious apartment from Freddie Duyckerman, who had
-gone to England for the hunting season.
-
-"Your bath is ready, sir," he said, standing with that perfectly vacuous
-expression which had been carefully trained to express neither joy,
-grief, hilarity, nor the natural surprise which he might have
-experienced at beholding his master, brush in hand, standing
-absent-mindedly before a great copper platter that was near the window.
-
-"Telephone up to the stables; I'll take Judy to-day," said Beecher,
-passing into the bathroom.
-
-A touch of the cold shower set his nerves to tingling and sent his mind
-to recalling pleasantly the pretty faces of the evening before, after
-the manner of young gentlemen of leisure with a proper share of vanity.
-Two figures rose immediately--Rita Kildair and Nan Charters. He
-remembered them both without excitement, but with different emotions.
-
-"By George, Rita's a thoroughbred," he said. "She has them all
-beat--mysterious as a sphinx. Prettiest sight in the world, seeing her
-manipulate a crowd. Jove, but she has nerve!" Then he reflected a
-little guiltily that he had rather deserted her for other shrines, and
-he resolved enthusiastically to make amends by throwing himself, heart
-and soul, into the recovery of the ring.
-
-"By George, it's something to have the confidence of a woman like that!"
-he exclaimed, sublimely fatuous. "That old mammoth of a Slade would
-give ten years of his life, I'll bet, to stand where I do with her."
-
-Then he remembered Nan Charters, with a little movement of impatience at
-the thought of his sentimentality.
-
-"What the deuce got into me last night?" he said, displeased with
-himself. "I acted like a school-boy. I suppose she thinks she's got me
-on her scalp-belt--easy as a stage-door Johnny. What the deuce got me
-wabbling so? These actresses are full of tricky stuff."
-
-He resolved that he would show her his complete indifference by not
-calling for at least a week, maybe two, and concluded, with profound
-penetration:
-
-"Good game. She'll remember how I started in, and wonder what changed
-me. That's it--keep 'em guessing."
-
-He went into the dining-room, where the coffee was boiling in the
-percolator, and sat down, after assuring himself by a trip to the
-opposite bedroom that Bo Lynch was still sleeping the profound sleep of
-the unjust..
-
-But hardly had he begun on the iced grape-fruit when a lank figure in
-peppermint pajamas appeared at the doorway, brushing from his
-sleep-laden eyes the long wisps of hair which, carefully treasured to
-conceal the bare upper regions, now hung about his sharp, supercilious
-nose.
-
-"Why the devil don't you breakfast with a chap?" he said, emerging.
-
-"Hello, Bo," said Beecher pleasantly. "Up till four or five, training
-for your polo match this afternoon?"
-
-"Well, Fontaine was there; we call it pairing off."
-
-"Auction?"
-
-"Yes, damn it. I cut that little wild ass of a Plunket six times
-running. He'd gamble away his grandmother on a couple of aces. I say,
-Teddy," he continued, with a little more animation, emptying a bottle of
-mineral water which Charles, knowing what might be termed the regularity
-of his habits, had set out for him, "do you ever try a flier in the
-market?"
-
-"I have been such a fool."
-
-"Look here; I've got a sure thing. Eddie Fontaine gave it to us last
-night--in dead secrecy, of course. Worried it from the old man, and you
-know old man Fontaine is the real thing. The whole Atlantic Trust
-business was patched up at a conference yesterday afternoon. Majendie's
-to get all the backing he needs."
-
-"Well, what of that?"
-
-"Why, you ignoramus, that means the banks have let up on the trust
-companies and are coming to the support of the market. Everything's
-'way down below where it ought to be. Stocks'll go up twenty points in
-two weeks. I've taken another thousand of Northern Pacific myself.
-Better get in on it."
-
-"Thanks; I'll circulate my money on a horse-race--something I know
-about. By the way, Majendie was there last night."
-
-"He was, was he?" said Lynch, with more animation. "How did he seem?"
-
-"Cool as a cucumber," said Beecher, who, however, was surprised to find
-how little he remembered of any one else's conduct. "I was in at one of
-Mrs. Kildair's affairs. By the way, Nan Charters was there."
-
-"Oh, was she?" said Lynch sleepily, hesitating between the call of his
-bedroom and the cooling aspect of the waiting grape-fruit.
-
-"Know anything about her?" asked Beecher, perceiving he would gain
-nothing by indirection.
-
-"Never met her," said Lynch. "Charlie Lorraine was crazy about her a
-couple of years ago. We thought he was going to marry her. I believe
-they were engaged, or had an understanding."
-
-"No scandal?"
-
-"Oh, she's perfectly straight. Charlie's a good proposition, but that
-didn't seem to hurry her any. She has a lot of 'em buzzing after her."
-
-"I say, Bo," said Beecher suddenly, "did you ever run up against a
-fellow called Garraboy?"
-
-"What's he do?"
-
-"He's a broker."
-
-Lynch reflected, yawning behind his hand. His occupation in life was
-supposed to be stocks and bonds, according to the city register.
-
-"Nope, never heard of the fellow."
-
-"Who'd know at the club?"
-
-"Ask Jack Lindabury or Tom Bovee. Well, ta-ta; I'm going to sleep out a
-bit for the match. Tell Charles to default me to the manicure and the
-scalpist," said Lynch, who termed thus the prim, middle-aged person who
-had guaranteed to preserve his numbered hairs. "By the way, how about a
-little bet on the match? I'll give you six to five."
-
-"Done for fifty," said Beecher obligingly.
-
-"See you at luncheon," said Lynch, who was soon heard plunging heavily
-into bed.
-
-Beecher belonged, without yet being one of them, to that set who live
-what in England is called a gentleman's life--racing, hunting, playing
-polo, seeking the sensations of big game or big fish, rather courting
-danger, drinking hard as a matter of pride, on the theory of the
-survival of the fittest, consuming the night in battles of cunning and
-physical endurance at the card-table. Beecher had returned to this
-society partly because most of his friends "belonged," partly because,
-being an idler himself, he liked their busy days dedicated to sensation,
-and their curious standards of what was and what was not permitted to be
-done. He had not as yet plunged into the whirl, being more curiously
-interested in the various sides of New York life that opened before him.
-He preserved, in the midst of the nervous American excess of his
-companion, a certain old-world moderation. He entered their card games
-in a desultory way for an hour or two at a time, but without that
-engulfing, brutal passion for mastery which kept Bo Lynch at the
-card-tables until dawn. When he joined a group at the bar, he drank
-with them as long as he wished and no longer--a difficult matter where a
-withdrawal usually was greeted with taunts; but there was about Beecher,
-young as he was, an atmosphere of authority which came from having
-proved himself among men the world over.
-
-He was rising from the table when the telephone rang, and, mindful of
-his afternoon engagement with Rita Kildair, he refused an invitation to
-join a party to the polo match. A call from Bruce Gunther urged him to
-be one of a gay party of six, bent on a lark for the evening.
-
-He enjoyed a furious gallop in the park, dressed, and swung alertly up
-the Avenue to his club for luncheon.
-
-There, all the talk was of the stock market which had gone up several
-points on the morning's tradings. Bo Lynch and Eddie Fontaine
-buttonholed him and besought him to avail himself of the opportunity: it
-was the chance of a lifetime, the crisis was over, stocks simply had to
-go up. The friends of Majendie, who was one of the directors of the
-club, were relieved and jubilant. He had weathered the crisis; there
-was nothing more to fear. The story which was told from lip to lip as
-being direct from headquarters was, that at the meeting on the afternoon
-before, Fontaine had declared, with his fist on the table, that he would
-never be a party to any movement that would jeopardize the future of his
-lifelong friend, Bernard Majendie. Some who still clung to the short
-interest even added, with an air of knowing more than they could tell,
-that the attack would now be concentrated on the Associated Trust with
-the intention of making an example of John Slade, a Western intruder who
-was protected by no ties of association and friendship.
-
-Beecher, true to his habits of caution, laughingly refused all offers to
-double his fortune. Bruce Gunther drew him aside, outlining his program
-for the evening.
-
-The thought of Nan Charters came into Beecher's mind, and he wondered
-curiously if she would be there.
-
-"I say, Bruce, what's all this hip-hurrah?" he asked as Gunther led him
-to the dining-room and they took seats at the long mahogany table. "Has
-Majendie really pulled through? Is the story true about Fontaine?
-Would you go into the market?"
-
-"They tell it on Fontaine now, do they?" said Gunther, with a short
-laugh. "It started with my old man, but I guess he was too tough a
-weight to carry. Ted, I don't know any more than you, but I know
-this--keep out."
-
-"My opinion," said Beecher, nodding to a new arrival.
-
-Bruce Gunther was his closest friend--a chum from boarding-school days.
-He was a stocky, rather ugly type, direct to the point of rudeness, with
-more than a trace of his father's power. Gunther Senior had, from a
-long and merciless examination of men, come to regard youth as a natural
-malady, an ebullition of heated blood to be lived down before a man was
-fit for great opportunities and the vision of great affairs. When young
-Gunther was graduated, he called him to his desk, wrote him out a check,
-and told him to take five years, sow his oats, and be through with
-it--at the end of which time his career would begin at the bottom of the
-great banking offices of Gunther & Company, New York, London, and Paris.
-Young Gunther was now completing the last year of his contract with a
-compressed savageness that would have wrecked any but the strongest
-constitution. At heart he awaited the end of his holiday with a feeling
-of relief and enthusiasm. He was quite unspoiled, and a terror to
-sycophants and boot-lickers. It was these sturdy, passionate qualities
-of energy and directness in him that had attracted Beecher.
-
-"Bruce, I'm on a very curious chase," he said, pushing back from the
-table, "and I want your help. It's too long and too confidential to tell
-you now. But two things I wish you would do for me: find out all you can
-quietly about two men--Enos Bloodgood and a fellow called Garraboy, a
-broker."
-
-"Garraboy--the brother-in-law?" said Gunther instantly. They left the
-table and went for cigars and coffee to the first room, to a window that
-gave on the Avenue. "I know him. He was blackballed here a couple of
-years ago. There were some ugly stories about him; I'll look 'em up.
-Bloodgood's another matter. I have heard rumors he was hard hit by the
-market. It's easy enough; I know several men I can call up. Can't you
-tell me the whole thing now?"
-
-When Beecher had finished, Gunther remained a long moment immersed in
-reflection.
-
-"By the Lord Harry, that is a problem," he said, suddenly waking up.
-"The dickens of a tangle! What the deuce was Slade doing there?" He
-relapsed into silence again, and as suddenly said decisively: "You're
-wrong on one point, Ted. It's not Garraboy or Bloodgood we ought to
-suspect first; it's Cheever--the Cheevers."
-
-"How the deuce are we going about it?" said Beecher.
-
-"I suppose Mrs. Kildair wants the whole thing kept quiet," said Gunther,
-rapping absent-mindedly on the arm of his chair.
-
-"Naturally; besides, I promised."
-
-"Of course. Well, we'll begin in a practical fashion. You don't mind
-spending a little money, do you?"
-
-"I expect to."
-
-Gunther rose and went to the telephone booths, where he remained for
-some time.
-
-"Half-past six in my rooms, Ted," he said, returning. "I'll put you up
-against the most interesting character in the United States--a real
-detective. Dress and come over."
-
-"But the girls," objected Beecher, remembering their engagement.
-
-"The girls can go hang," said Gunther, shrugging his shoulders. "They
-can always wait half an hour. This is something real."
-
-At five o'clock Beecher called on Mrs. Kildair, and found her out, to
-his considerable vexation. The bell-boy gave him a little note, which
-he opened and read:
-
-
-DEAR TEDDY:
-
-Forgive my breaking my engagement. All sorts of sudden and exciting
-things have crowded in on me to-day. Come to-morrow for luncheon.
-
-RITA.
-
-P.S. Remember--nothing public about last night!
-
-
-The prospect of a tete-a-tete with Mrs. Kildair appeased him somewhat,
-but his anticipations for the afternoon were sorely disappointed, and he
-started aimlessly back, with a feeling that a great hole had been made
-in the day. As he reached the corner, a red automobile cut in close to
-the curb, causing him to step hastily back. Inside he recognized Slade.
-He watched the red machine come to a stop before Mrs. Kildair's and then
-whirl away, after depositing the massive figure of its owner. Beecher,
-with a little wounded vanity, lingered a moment, hoping to see him
-reappear; but, as the sidewalk continued empty, he was forced to
-conclude that he had come by appointment.
-
-"She might at least have seen me," he said angrily. "What the deuce has
-she got to see Slade for?"
-
-All at once he perceived that his steps had led him in the general
-direction of the quarter in which Nan Charters resided, and, as he had
-come to make an impression on one woman, he soon began to consider
-transferring his attack on another. Only, he remembered that he had
-determined to treat Miss Charters with indifference, to correct any
-erroneous ideas that she might have formed from his previous impulsive
-conduct.
-
-"That's so," he said, angry now at himself, at her, and at a condition
-of affairs that left him with an hour of idleness on his hands. "If I
-call now, she'll think I'm hot on the trail. I could stop, though, and
-inquire about her health," he thought, hesitating; "that would seem
-natural, after last night."
-
-But he rejected this as a subterfuge, and continued his slow, uneven
-progress down Seventh Avenue, which he had selected at random in search
-of a little oddity and interest; and gradually he recognized that the
-vexation he felt was, in reality, not at being unable to find an excuse
-for calling on Miss Charters, but the keen sense of disappointment he
-had in missing an intimate hour with Rita.
-
-It was essentially the woman of the world in her that fascinated him,
-the woman of mysterious experience, of sure knowledge and complete
-command of situations. He wished to increase the intimacy of his
-position, because to be favored by her meant something--something that
-awoke his masculine sense of supremacy and fed his vanity. Determined
-on a long bachelorhood that would open to him all sorts and conditions
-of society and adventurous experiences, he had determined likewise to
-avoid the dangerous field of young girls of his own set and to exercise
-his curiosity with women of the world--older women, professional women,
-with whom an impulsive infatuation brought no risks, but something to be
-taken at value, a mood that was charming because it would pass.
-
-All at once an idea came to him that reconciled his easily satisfied
-conscience and appeared sublimely politic. He would drop in on Nan
-Charters, just to show his indifference.
-
-"I'll stay fifteen minutes--be quite formal and a little bored," he
-said, chuckling.
-
-And he went without too much enthusiasm toward his destination, thinking
-of Rita Kildair and planning in his imaginative mind a series of
-confidential conversations for the tete-a-tete on the morrow.
-
-"To see Miss Charters," he said, giving his card to the boy in the
-elevator, who turned it over doubtfully, hesitated, and disappeared like
-a float in an opera, mounting heavenward.
-
-Beecher ceased to think of Rita Kildair, and prepared himself, smiling
-astutely, for his approaching scene with the young actress whom he
-intended properly to discipline for her effrontery in imagining that
-he--Edward T. Beecher--had entertained for a moment any other than a
-polite social interest. Miss Charters excused herself--she was lying
-down and dining out.
-
-He cast a furious look at the telephone-booth, by means of which she
-might personally have assured him of her great regret, and stalked out
-in a worse temper than ever--Rita Kildair, Nan Charters, all the women
-in the world consigned to perdition.
-
-"Confound them all!" he said, brandishing his cane. "What a lot of time
-a man wastes over them. She might have telephoned me. They only exist
-in this world to distract us from what we ought to do. I wonder if she
-did it on purpose--just to give me an appetite. Well, if she did--she's
-succeeded," he said ruefully.
-
-He went to his rooms, resolved to meet her at every opportunity, to
-revenge himself by showing her he could play the game more cleverly than
-she could; and in his angry resolve there was very little trace of the
-indifference of which he had been so confident.
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER VII*
-
-
-Gunther had a suite in one of the newer hotels that tower over the
-eastern entrance to the park. When Beecher arrived, a quiet, powerfully
-built man was standing in front of the fireplace, smoking with
-enjoyment. Beecher recognized immediately Cyrus McKenna, formerly of
-the United States Secret Service, founder of the great detective agency
-that bore his name.
-
-"Ted, shake hands with my good friend Mr. McKenna," said Gunther,
-appearing in the doorway with a refractory collar in his grasp.
-"McKenna, shake hands with Mr. Beecher. Fire away, Ted. I'll be out in
-a second."
-
-"Glad to know you," said McKenna, grasping his hand.
-
-Beecher was aware of the quick, estimating scrutiny and a sense of
-unusual physical vitality. But he was disappointed in his first glance
-at this man whose investigations had been the terror of corrupt
-politicians and unscrupulous agitators. McKenna was physically the ideal
-detective, in that not a feature possessed a trace of oddity which could
-betray him to the public, in which he thus mingled without fear of
-recognition. He was neither short nor tall, neither thin nor unusually
-heavy. His head was round, well-spaced, and evenly formed, without
-affectation of mystery or astuteness, lit up by a jovial good humor when
-animated, and quite blank and indecipherable when in repose. The eyes
-alone, like the eyes of a painter or a sculptor seeking tones or
-modelings that escape the common glance, were noticeable for a certain
-quality of penetration, expressed in the countenance by innumerable fine
-lines that gathered in the eye-pits.
-
-"Mr. McKenna," said Beecher, who had an instinctive desire to impress
-the detective with the lucidity of his observations, "I will give you
-quickly the details that are important. First, here is the plan of the
-apartment, which may or may not be of use."
-
-He went to the low table-desk at the side, and drew out paper and
-pencil. McKenna brought up a chair at his side, and Gunther, coming in,
-sat down opposite.
-
-"It concerns the theft of a ruby ring worth over fifteen thousand
-dollars," said Beecher, busy with his pencil, "taken last night, between
-eight and eleven, at the apartment of Mrs. Rita Kildair. The
-circumstances are so extraordinary that you will be interested in the
-problem itself."
-
-The detective smiled in a slightly amused way and asked:
-
-"Am I retained in her interest or in yours?"
-
-"In mine," said Beecher quickly. "The theft took place at a social
-gathering, you understand, and in the party were persons well known in
-New York society. Mrs. Kildair, as is natural, particularly desires
-that nothing shall become public."
-
-"Does she know that you intend to consult me?"
-
-"No--and I am not sure I wish her to know."
-
-"Is she employing detectives?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Whom did the ring belong to?"
-
-"To Mrs. Kildair," said Beecher, annoyed that he had forgotten this
-rather important detail.
-
-"Let me see the plan," said McKenna, who glanced at it a moment and
-nodded. "Now go on."
-
-"There were eleven persons present, including Mrs. Kildair," said
-Beecher, after a moment's pause. McKenna took the pencil and prepared to
-inscribe the list. "Myself, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Cheever--"
-
-"I can give you a pointer on them," said Gunther, speaking for the first
-time.
-
-"Unnecessary," said McKenna. "I know the card episode."
-
-"Mr. and Mrs. Bloodgood."
-
-"Mrs. Bloodgood--yes."
-
-"Mr. Garraboy."
-
-"Joseph L. or Edward C., the broker?"
-
-"The broker. Miss Nan Charters."
-
-"The actress--yes."
-
-"Miss Maud Lille."
-
-"Know anything about her?"
-
-"She's a journalist; writes books too, I believe."
-
-"Well?"
-
-"Bernard L. Majendie and John Slade."
-
-The detective raised his eyebrows in surprise.
-
-"They were there--together?"
-
-"They came separately. Slade joined the party at the last moment; he
-was not expected."
-
-"A very interesting crowd," said the detective slowly, studying the
-list. "What servants?"
-
-"None."
-
-"You are sure?"
-
-"Mrs. Kildair has only two, a Japanese butler and a lady's maid, both of
-whom were out."
-
-"You are positive?"
-
-"Absolutely. The occasion was an informal supper. Mrs. Kildair, while
-preparing the dishes, placed her three rings on the pin-cushion of her
-dressing-table--at this point here on the plans--fastening them with a
-hatpin. The table, as you see, can be easily seen both from the studio
-and the dining-room."
-
-"What were the circumstances of her placing the rings on the
-pin-cushion? First, when did it occur? After all the guests had
-arrived?"
-
-"Yes," said Beecher, who immediately corrected himself. "No, I'm wrong;
-Slade arrived later. But, as I say, he was a surprise. Majendie was the
-last of the invited party to come. Immediately afterward Mrs. Kildair
-went into her bedroom to put on an apron and take off her rings."
-
-"Who was in the room?"
-
-"Mrs. Cheever, Miss Lille, and Garraboy," said Beecher slowly.
-
-"They saw her take off the ring?"
-
-"Yes; they even announced it later."
-
-"Was there much passing to and fro?"
-
-"All the time. I am quite sure every one was in the room several
-times."
-
-"Did any one use the hall?" said the detective, indicating it on the
-plan. "I see it opens into the dining-room also."
-
-"Quite a number," said Beecher. "I remember using it myself. We were
-all going and coming, carrying dishes, glasses, bottles, provisions."
-
-"One question: did you notice the ring on the pin-cushion yourself?"
-
-"Yes; I distinctly remember seeing two or three rings, I don't remember
-which."
-
-"Go on."
-
-"After about three quarters of an hour of preparation, we took our
-places at the table, with the exception of Mrs. Kildair, who was still
-moving about us. It was then that Slade came in, was introduced, and
-took his place."
-
-"He did not pass into the bedroom, then?"
-
-"No. Mrs. Kildair went in immediately, took off her apron, and
-discovered the loss of the ruby ring."
-
-Beecher, without further interruptions from McKenna, recounted in detail
-the return of Mrs. Kildair, the locking of the doors, the extinguishing
-of the lights, the announcement of the theft, the beginning of the
-counting, the sound of the ring on the table, and the discovery of its
-second disappearance. Then he stopped, awaiting the questioning of the
-detective.
-
-"No; go right on," said McKenna, with a little gesture of his pencil
-that dotted an imaginary _i_.
-
-Beecher continued, describing the lighting of the lights, the confusion
-in the room, the sending for the detectives, the discussion as to the
-order of search, and the failure to recover the ring. Omitting his
-personal observations of Miss Charters and their conversation in the
-cab, he recounted his return to Mrs. Kildair's, his meeting with
-Garraboy, the discovery of the detective, the strangeness of Mrs.
-Kildair's attitude, and her concealment of the identity of the next
-visitor. He concluded, and both young men looked at the detective as if
-they expected him to solve the problem on the instant--an attitude that
-was not lost on McKenna.
-
-"I suppose you young men believe every word that has been written on
-deduction," he said, grinning and biting off the end of another cigar.
-"Presume you've already determined that a woman took the ring, and
-lacked the nerve to face the risk--that the strong, daring nature of a
-man seized the opportunity the second time, and, because Slade and
-Majendie are millionaires and Bloodgood the respectable owner of a
-newspaper, the thief is either Garraboy, a gambler in stocks, or
-Cheever, with an ugly reputation."
-
-The two young men smiled guiltily.
-
-"But I say, McKenna, you don't reject deduction entirely," said Gunther.
-
-"Oh, no, I believe in 'deduction forward,'" said McKenna, laughing. "If
-I know there's a thief in the company, I deduce he'll steal if he gets
-the chance. Now, before I put a few more questions to you, let me tell
-you this. My business isn't in deducing how the theft was done (I get
-my man and sweat him out; he'll tell me that), but who did it; and for
-that it don't take any deduction, either. Give me time, money, and no
-strings on me, there isn't any crime can't be worked out."
-
-"But how the deuce are you going to locate a ring," said Beecher, "if
-you don't know whom to follow?"
-
-"The ring's the easiest part," said the detective. "You may not know it,
-but every stone of great value is what's called a named stone; every
-jeweler knows of it. Now, there aren't many rubies worth over fifteen
-thousand floating around. If you don't believe it, I'll show you how
-easy it's done. Inside a week I'll give you the history of the stone
-and just how it came into the hands of Mrs. Kildair."
-
-"You mean no one can dispose of it to a jeweler without its being
-recognized?"
-
-"Unless he's done it within these twenty-four hours, which is quite
-probable if a certain suspicion of mine isn't far wrong."
-
-"Deduction," said Gunther, laughing.
-
-"Not entirely; and, besides, that's not quite fair. It just happens that
-I may be interested in a couple of persons in your party from another
-tack. No, gentlemen; deduction's all right, if it's honest deduction
-and if you use it in its place; but the great thing's motive.
-Ninety-nine times out of a hundred, get down to your motives and you get
-your criminals. Show me the person who needed to steal that ring, or who
-just simply had to steal it, and you've got your man."
-
-"But suppose that applies to two persons there, or even three," said
-Gunther, who perceived that the detective did not intend to commit
-himself.
-
-"Possibly."
-
-"Or it may be the hysterical act of a woman who will never attempt to
-sell the ring."
-
-"Possible--more than possible."
-
-"And then it will never be found."
-
-"That's right."
-
-"But you don't think that's the case," said Gunther. "And you have an
-opinion."
-
-McKenna gave him a quick look of appreciation.
-
-"That's right; but it's not who took it, but why it was taken. In
-forty-eight hours I'll know a little bit more about the habits of the
-ladies and gentlemen we're dealing with, and then I'll be more
-communicative." He paused, with a little pardonable pleasure in the
-mystification he was preparing, and added: "In forty-eight hours I'll
-give you a little story about each of the persons who were at that party
-which'll beat anything in the story-telling line you ever came up
-against. Now, Mr. Beecher, before we get down to questions, here's one
-thing I want you to do. Find out from Mrs. Kildair what's her detective
-agency. Say you've a friend who's trying to track a valet for stealing
-and want a good address--see?"
-
-"You are not going to shadow the detectives?" said Gunther curiously.
-
-"You bet I am, till I know more about them," said McKenna. "Young man,
-I can tell you more than twenty cases I've been on where the detective
-who was called in to make a search went cahoots with the thief."
-
-"Detectives!" said Beecher, amazed.
-
-"You bet. I don't trust my own, when I've got anything that's got to be
-done right. I don't trust any one man; I put two on it. My dear
-fellow, the crooks that pick your pocket or break into your house are
-only amateurs. The real criminal, the criminal of brains, joins a
-police force, becomes a detective, a clerk, goes slowly, gets to be a
-cashier or president of a bank. You think I'm joking. Not at all. Look
-here; just stop and think it over, and you won't laugh. For every bank
-president who takes the funds of his bank, speculates, and _loses_, how
-many do you think win out and never get caught?"
-
-"That's so," said Gunther thoughtfully.
-
-"It's too big a subject," said McKenna, smiling. "I shake hands every
-day with gentlemen who ought to be breaking rocks. Now, let's get back
-to business. Mr. Beecher, what did you notice of any kind last night
-that would make you suspect any one? I don't mean opinions, but eyes."
-
-Beecher hesitated an interval that did not escape the notice of the
-detective.
-
-"Nothing," he said at last, unwilling to mention the name of Nan
-Charters. He added, to cover the hesitation: "I suspected Garraboy, but
-I admit there's no proof--personal dislike."
-
-"Why do you dislike him?"
-
-Beecher shrugged his shoulder and his glance went to one side.
-
-"Mr. Gunther, will you get me my office?" said McKenna, suddenly looking
-at his watch. "You know the number."
-
-Gunther disappeared in the hall in search of the telephone.
-
-"Now, Mr. Beecher," said McKenna, smiling, "I'm like a doctor, you know.
-There's no use calling me in unless you give me all the facts. What's
-the name of the lady who excited your suspicion, whom Mr. Garraboy was
-so attentive to, and on account of whom, I rather guess, you got
-interested in this case?"
-
-The startled look Beecher gave him amply gratified McKenna, who
-continued:
-
-"What's Miss Charters' position in this business?"
-
-Beecher admitted the correctness of the surmise with a laugh, and,
-Gunther being absent, quickly recounted the different moments of Nan
-Charters' agitation and the conversation in the cab.
-
-At this moment Gunther returned. "I say, McKenna," he said, "some one's
-trying to get you on the wire."
-
-McKenna passed to the telephone, and almost immediately returned.
-
-"Look here, gentlemen," he said, "if you want to try your hand at
-deduction, here's something to work on. The Clearing-house has just
-refused to clear for the Atlantic Trust, Majendie's resignation has been
-accepted, and tomorrow there'll be a run on every bank in the city--and
-God help those who're caught in the stock market!"
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER VIII*
-
-
-The two young men and McKenna descended by the elevator into the lobby
-of the hotel. The news of the Clearing-house's drastic action against
-the Atlantic Trust was already in the scare-heads of the evening papers,
-though Majendie's resignation was still unknown. The halls were crowded
-with a fleet of newspapers, spread out, fluttering feverishly.
-Everywhere was a suppressed murmur and nervous tension, which
-occasionally exploded in exclamations when acquaintances met. The news
-was indeed staggering to the little man of the Street; the great
-Atlantic Trust with its hundreds of millions of deposits was on the
-verge of collapse and this at the end of a period of depression and
-alarm!
-
-As they proceeded toward the carriage entrance, Gunther stopped to speak
-to one of the clerks at the desk, who, with a frightened face, came out
-to seek his advice. McKenna profited by the moment to say to Beecher:
-
-"By the way, if you're a friend of Miss Charters', find out if she has
-any money invested in Wall Street, and who she's dealing through."
-
-"Does it mean a panic?" said Beecher, surprised. "Do you mean she ought
-to get out?"
-
-"Too late," said McKenna. "Find out what I asked you. I'm in a hurry.
-Say good-night to Mr. Gunther for me. And, say, if you're so interested
-in this case, get him to put you wise to Majendie and Mrs. Bloodgood."
-
-He gave a quick nod, and mingled in the crowd about the north entrance.
-Beecher watched him with a feeling of disillusionment. The detective
-had expressed no opinion, had brought to bear on the problem none of the
-instantaneous analysis which he had expected; in fact, had deliberately
-avoided even a discussion of the natural probabilities. Had this
-complete reticence been associated with an individuality of impressive
-oddity, he would have perhaps regarded it with respect. As it was, he
-was conscious only of being defrauded as though some one were tearing
-away a precious illusion.
-
-"There's a poor devil; got all his money tied up in the Atlantic Trust,"
-said Gunther, joining him and passing out to the waiting automobile.
-
-"The Atlantic Trust can't fail," said Beecher, amazed. "Things aren't
-as bad as that."
-
-"Don't know. Lots of queer things have been worked lately. Anyhow,
-what's bound to happen is--I should say--a receivership and closed doors
-to-morrow."
-
-"But that means panic."
-
-"Sure."
-
-Beecher was silent a while. He thought of Majendie of the night before,
-correct, restrained, prodigal of small courtesies.
-
-"By Jove, how game he was!" he said aloud. "I should hate to think there
-was anything crooked in him."
-
-They had reached Forty-second Street in their smooth and rapid flight.
-There, newsboys were shrieking the latest extra, dodging under the heads
-of horses, swinging on the steps of surface-cars, bumping their shrill
-way through the crowd, with their hysterical instinct for heightening
-the effect of a sensation.
-
-Gunther stopped the automobile and bought a handful of papers which a
-dozen urchins fought to press into his hands. On every sheet, front
-page, accompanied by sudden scare-heads, was the photograph of Bernard
-L. Majendie, whose resignation had been demanded and accepted.
-
-The two scanned the pages for additional details. Some papers hinted at
-criminal actions--the district attorney had been suddenly summoned to
-town. Scattered through the sheets were photographs entitled,
-"Majendie's Palace on Fifth Avenue." "$100,000 Yacht of Deposed
-President." "Newport Estate of Millionaire."
-
-"Is he a crook after all?" said Beecher, flinging down the extra.
-
-"No, he is not a crook," said Gunther quietly, repeating the words with
-slow emphasis. "He is a speculator, a great speculator, and he has been
-made the victim of greater speculators who covet his territory. Then,
-there is this to be said: I doubt if at the present moment any great
-public corporation would face an investigation without alarm."
-
-"What do you mean?" said Beecher, with his thoughts still wandering back
-to the handsome, stoic features of the Majendie of the night before.
-
-Gunther began to speak, and, as he became serious and animated, Beecher
-followed him with surprise, noting the vigor and vitality that
-transformed the young idler.
-
-"The present era we are passing through," said Gunther, "is probably
-America at its worst. We see only the gorgeous facades of things: the
-skyscraper, the industries that have developed into little kingdoms. We
-only try to comprehend statistics, and we are satisfied that we have
-bounded into greatness. As a matter of fact, the true test of the
-industrial greatness of a country is honesty. Dishonesty and graft are
-economic weakness--waste. A railroad that is spending a million a year
-to fight off hold-up state laws is by so much handicapped in its
-function of promoting commerce by low freight rates. A corporation that
-secures its franchise by bribing aldermen has taught them to blackmail
-in the future. It is difficult to say where the responsibility
-began--whether capital corrupted politics, or whether, in our
-unscientific political system, corruption was not inevitable."
-
-"What do you mean by that?"
-
-"At this time, when our political history is one of business
-development, we are over-burdened with useless offices. Aldermen and
-legislators who receive on an average less than a thousand a year--often
-less than it costs to be elected--are suddenly intrusted with the
-responsibilities of laws and franchises involving millions. When you
-ask yourself how a man is to continue a political career, support a
-family, and fight a costly fight for reelection on a thousand a year,
-the wonder is that any remain honest. We have not the slightest
-conception of values in America; the worst paid professions are those
-the vigor of the nation depends on most--the minister, the teacher, and
-the legislator. There are ministers living on five hundred a year,
-teachers on six hundred, legislators on less, while the carpenter or
-plumber who doesn't make at least $5 a day is unorganized." Then,
-perceiving that he had wandered from his subject, he added: "You see,
-Ted, this state of affairs results: politics becomes the business of
-business. Industry is at the mercy of the legislator, and the
-legislator knows it. He may restrict the field of business of insurance
-companies, prohibit others from operating in his state, add or detract
-from the wealth of individuals by tariffs, force the adoption of certain
-building material on contractors, regulate rates of railroads and force
-them to adopt certain life-preserving devices; can create rival
-franchises or tax out of existence corporations that refuse to pay its
-blackmail.
-
-"That is why there are, back in the secret life of every great business,
-ledgers it is not good the public should see. That is one reason why
-business goes into politics, nominates its men, and assists them--in
-order to protect itself against strikes and blackmail. The great
-political alliance of business is almost always expressed by the
-railroad which is the natural agent. All this is known; every newspaper
-that will shriek out horrified editorials next week knows this; but when
-the Atlantic Trust is caught in a business depression, and is unable to
-get ready money from influences it has antagonized, the public will
-learn only that one institution has secretly contributed to a political
-party, maintained a huge fund for lobbying purposes, made loans on
-securities that were speculative, and transgressed the letter of the
-law. The public will be indignant, and Majendie will be disgraced."
-
-"But, Bruce," said Beecher, who was thinking of the analysis that had
-been made, "if we are so riddled with corruption, where is it all going
-to end?"
-
-"The end will come in the opening of another phase of national life. We
-will become honest through the purifying process of another generation.
-Honesty, you see, has this one great advantage over corruption--it is
-the goal of corruption. Those who acquire, wish to retain, to resist
-those who in turn wish to graft from them. Stealing was an attribute of
-distinction, until men came to live together. The next generation will
-purify and reorganize."
-
-"I didn't know you'd gone into things so deeply," said Beecher,
-impressed.
-
-"I've worked like a pup since I started to amuse myself," said Gunther,
-with a laugh.
-
-The automobile drew up before the glittering doors of Lazare's, and a
-gilded footman, recognizing it, flashed obsequiously to their door.
-
-"Say, let's cut this out," said Gunther, frowning. "I'm out of the mood
-now. Let's run off for a chop and a baked potato somewhere. I'm tired
-of this."
-
-"Too late," said Beecher, laughing and pointing to an upper window where
-a feminine arm was waving frantically. "We're caught." Then, suddenly
-he remembered the hint of McKenna's, and added: "I say, what's the story
-about Majendie and Mrs. Bloodgood? I'm not up on the gossip, you know."
-
-Gunther signaled impatiently to the flunky to close the door, and
-related, what every one knew, the attachment of the financier and the
-wife of the owner of the New York _Star_.
-
-"Of course, every one believes what he chooses in such matters," he
-said. "Personally, knowing Majendie, I believe it's purely
-platonic--such things do happen. He has a sort of old-fashioned
-chivalry, you know. Bloodgood is a hard old nut, leads his own
-life--chorus girls' friend and all that--thirty years older than his
-wife--parents got her into it--and I shouldn't be surprised if he took
-advantage of the situation to touch up Majendie through the Atlantic
-Trust for a good-sized loan. The rumor was that Mrs. Bloodgood was to
-get a divorce. If so, it may have been held up by this rotten business.
-One thing's clear: she's crazy about Majendie, and doesn't care who sees
-it--poor devil. Well, let's get out."
-
-They entered Lazare's, saluted by a sudden storm of clatter, music, and
-shrill laughter. Lazare himself, seeing Gunther, came up hurriedly,
-anxiety in his olive face, while several employees hovered near, with
-eager ears. Gunther exchanged again a few words on the financial
-situation, and led the way into the elevator.
-
-"McKenna's a great one," he said. "Rather puzzled you, didn't he?
-There's no show about him--he's direct. You'll see the way he works.
-It'll be a revelation."
-
-Beecher did not answer.
-
-The disclosure of the relations of Majendie and Mrs. Bloodgood had
-suddenly recalled the suspicion that had come to him the night before,
-while following the agitation of Nan Charters; and he was asking
-himself, in a bewildered manner, if Mrs. Bloodgood, desperate, perhaps
-on the verge of a separation, had not in an uncontrollable moment taken
-the ring. Gunther continued in praise of McKenna:
-
-"It's the organization that's wonderful. It's like a spider-web, and
-McKenna sits in the center and pulls the threads. What the public never
-gets is this--that half of the work's done before McKenna's on the case.
-He knows to-day where every forger is living, every cracksman. He's got
-his informers in every saloon, in every cheap hotel, where thugs
-congregate. If a bank's robbed, nine times out of ten he can tell in a
-day who's done the job, because he knows who's disappeared from his
-regular haunts. A detective agency is a great news bureau that never
-prints its news."
-
-"I guess the case is more complicated than I thought," said Beecher,
-struck by the new lead. "It begins to look as though a whole lot of
-persons might have taken the ring."
-
-"Thinking of Mrs. B?" said Gunther quickly.
-
-"Yes," said Beecher meditatively. They were in the corridor leading to
-the private dining-rooms. He put his hand out and checked his companion.
-
-"I say, who's Madame Fornez?"
-
-"Opera squealer," said Gunther irreverently; "Carmen and all that sort
-of thing. Bob Holliday's daffy about her. Come on; let's face the
-music."
-
-He nodded to the attendant waiting with extended ears, who now sprang
-forward to open the door on the flaring room and the dazzling white of
-the richly covered table set for five.
-
-Holliday and two women in decollete instantly burst into exclamations of
-reproach.
-
-"Sorry; couldn't be helped--business," said Gunther, without taking the
-pains for a more elaborate apology. Then, sure of his explanation, he
-added: "You probably missed it. Poor old Majendie's up the spout.
-Forced resignation. There'll be the devil to pay to-morrow."
-
-The reproaches ceased, succeeded by a rush of excited questions.
-Holliday, a tall, scoured blond, who had been drumming at the piano, was
-so disturbed by the news that he forgot his duties as a host.
-
-"_Allons_, Bobbie," said Mme. Fornez, turning her great Spanish eyes on
-Beecher with an expression of approval, "introduce your nice-looking
-friend."
-
-Beecher, amid laughter, was presented. Mme. Fornez, who, from pride
-perhaps, chose to retain the freedom of the peasant, tapped him
-familiarly on the arm and said: "I like you. You don't look so clean
-and stupid as most of your dollar men. You will sit by my side. I
-select you. Monsieur Gunthere, Bobbie--enough of your old panics and
-your stocks; you have two charming ladies present, that's all you need
-to know. Bobbie, obey me at once!"
-
-Beecher was giving his hand to Mrs. Craig Fontaine, a young widow,
-slight, with quick eyes, and almost masculine vitality, and an
-extraordinary elegance of dress and carriage, whom Gunther called
-Louise. She was scarcely twenty-six, possessed of a large fortune from
-her husband, who had been killed in a steeplechase three years before.
-Her position in society was unquestioned, and, being of a singular
-temperament, she did as she pleased. She was seen everywhere with young
-Gunther, and gossip had already arranged their marriage--an eventuality
-which she alone, who ambitiously desired it, knew to be impossible.
-
-Beecher, who was particularly sensitive to the air of distinction that
-always surrounded her, even when most unbending, took her hand with a
-little extra gallantry, saying:
-
-"I changed my mind on your account only, Louise, and I expect you to
-reward me."
-
-Between the two, from his college days, had been a sort of confidential
-intimacy which Beecher had the knack of cultivating.
-
-Holliday having ordered the dinner, Mme. Fornez took special delight in
-countermanding everything that could be countermanded, substituting
-other wines and abolishing the soup, scolding her escort all the while
-with a calculated tyranny which Mrs. Fontaine admired with a slight
-smiling tribute of her lips, as the clever advertisement of a
-professional woman that Mr. Holliday's fetch and carry attentions were
-entirely on her own sufferance.
-
-"How have you escaped being married?" said Mrs. Fontaine in a bantering
-tone to Beecher, after Mme. Fornez had relinquished him for a moment.
-
-"Because I fly like a coward," he said, pleased at the compliment
-implied.
-
-"Seriously, Teddy, you've been back in civilization two months and you
-are not yet caught?"
-
-"I am not the marrying kind," he said, with conviction.
-
-"What's he say--your Teddy?" said Mme. Fornez, turning, with a laugh.
-
-Beecher repeated his statement.
-
-"_Allons donc_, you!" She broke into a ripple of laughter. "What do
-you say, Madame Fontaine?"
-
-Mrs. Fontaine's reply was a tolerant, amused smile, and, leaning over,
-she pinched his ear.
-
-Beecher furiously defended himself.
-
-"Yes, that's what all you women say. You think you can catch any man.
-It irritates you to think any man can resist you."
-
-"Ah, no, no," said Mme. Fornez energetically. "There are lots of men who
-can't be married. I don't say that, but what I say is this: a woman
-knows, the moment she meets one of you, if he is the kind that marries.
-A clever woman knows if she can marry him, but all women know if he is
-the marrying kind the moment they look in his eye. Is it not so, Madame
-Fontaine?"
-
-"Of course," said Mrs. Fontaine calmly, with a glance around the table.
-
-"Nonsense," said Beecher valiantly; "women are as easily fooled as men."
-
-Mme. Fornez, drawing back her head, surveyed him critically.
-
-"Teddy, you will marry the first pretty woman who makes up her mind to
-marry you," she said, tapping the table, amid laughter. "I see it; I
-know it."
-
-"I say, how do you see it?" said Holliday, who was what might be called
-"_un faux Anglais_."
-
-"It is in the eye; it responds or it does not respond," said Mme.
-Fornez, who shrugged her shoulders in Holliday's direction, and said:
-"You, you will never marry unless--unless there is one _big_ panic.
-Teddy, here, has the responsive eye. I saw it at once when I said he
-was a nice boy. Oh, you needn't be furious and blush," she added,
-pulling his other ear. "It is quite right. I like you. You shall play
-with me. You are much nicer than Bobbie, who is all collar and cuffs."
-
-"And Mr. Gunther?" said Beecher, to cover his confusion.
-
-Mme. Fornez looked at him with the same critical estimation.
-
-"Ah, Monsieur Gunthere is very interesting," she said. "What do you
-think, Madame Fontaine?"
-
-She asked the question with a little of that malice which women can not
-help showing toward one another. But Mrs. Fontaine, with the perfect
-control that never left her, answered at once:
-
-"Bruce will marry, but he is not the marrying kind. He will marry when
-he pleases and how he pleases, not the least sentimentally, a woman, a
-young girl, who will raise up a family of children--a son to succeed
-him, as he will succeed his father."
-
-"Yes, yes, that's it," said Mme. Fornez excitedly. "He can not be
-caught; any woman would know that."
-
-Gunther smiled without embarrassment.
-
-"Perhaps," he said.
-
-"Yes, any woman would know it," repeated Mrs. Fontaine, looking at him
-with a little smile. "The reason is, as Madame Fornez says, in the
-eyes--they don't respond. It's more than that, they make no
-distinction. They look at a woman as they do at a man. He is quite to
-be congratulated."
-
-"Ah, _la pauvre femme_," said Mme. Fornez--who was very romantic--in a
-whisper, pressing Beecher's arm. Then aloud, taking pity, "_Allons, mes
-enfants_, we are getting too serious. Bobbie, jump up and play us
-something lively."
-
-The dinner continued gaily. They reached the theater in the middle of
-the second act of the operetta, and deranged the whole orchestra in the
-five minutes necessary for Mme. Fornez to be sure that she was properly
-recognized. Then, having carried off Elsie Ware, a dainty prima donna
-with the wiles and figure of a child, they proceeded to the party at
-Lindabury's studio, Mme. Fornez complimenting Elsie Ware on the quality
-of her voice, which was insignificant, and saying nothing of her acting,
-which was distinguished for its charm and natural gaiety.
-
-Beecher, squeezed in between Louise Fontaine and Mme. Fornez, slightly
-bewildered by the fragrance of soft, filmy wraps, immensely flattered by
-the favor he had won, nevertheless was wondering to himself whether
-among the gay party he was approaching would be the laughing eyes and
-rebellious ashen hair of Nan Charters, whom he intended to treat _en
-ennemi_, and whom he particularly wished to witness his triumphant entry
-at the side of the celebrated Emma Fornez.
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER IX*
-
-
-The party was in full progress when they arrived. Jack and Tom
-Lindabury resided, as far as they could be said to reside anywhere, in a
-great green stone house of the 1860 period, with a deep garden in the
-back on which originally stood a stable, access to which was had, in the
-Parisian style, by a long, vaulted passage at one side. The Lindaburys,
-having discovered, as many other young men of fortune did at this
-period, the social adaptability of the artist's atelier, had transformed
-the stable into a great studio, with a kitchen and two or three
-dressing-rooms, which served when the place was given over to amateur
-theatricals or to the not always restrained fetes of the brothers'
-invention.
-
-Gunther's party emerged from the hollow passage into the sudden cool of
-the short garden, where masked stone seats and arbors were faintly
-disclosed by the great stable lantern which swung at the entrance of the
-studio. Several couples, profiting by the obscurity, could be seen
-moving in the sudden shadows of the garden, laughing with a nervous,
-stifled laughter, as groups crossed or joined one another.
-
-Holliday and Beecher, recognizing acquaintances, saluted them with the
-light banter, which was the note of the evening. Mme. Fornez, inside,
-called her companions with exclamations of surprise which drew the
-whispered curiosity of every one to her entrance.
-
-"Oh, how funny it is! Look, Teddy, what do you call it? It is
-your--cowboy life, is it not?"
-
-The great room had been transformed into a mining saloon of the type
-made popular by a certain play of the day. A bar ran across one end,
-presided over by an impossibly wicked bartender. A roulette-wheel was
-crowded at one side, while a negro orchestra, in 1850 costume, was
-busily sawing away, led by a cotton-head darky on a soap-box, who droned
-out his directions. Three-fourths of the room were in costume, Indian,
-Spanish, cowboy or frontier At the appearance of the new arrivals in
-evening dress, a shout went up:
-
-"Tenderfeet, tenderfeet!"
-
-"Fine them!"
-
-"Shoot 'em up!"
-
-But, in deference to Mrs. Fontaine and Emma Fornez, the protest was not
-so boisterous or accompanied by such rushing tactics as had greeted
-others. Nevertheless they were fined and escorted to one of the
-dressing-rooms. The men were forced to don dusters and white top-hats,
-and the women were given sombreros and mantillas.
-
-Mme. Fornez, despite the frowns of Holliday, clung to Beecher's arm,
-insisting on being personally conducted, plying him with innumerable
-questions.
-
-"Oh what a terrible man! What an awful knife. I like the black
-men--_sont ils rigolots_--with their red and white collars. I want to
-see the bar-man toss drinks--so, in the air, Teddy. Come this way."
-
-All at once she stopped, and, facing about, took him by the lapels of
-the coat.
-
-"It does not annoy you that I adopt you--that I call you Teddy?" she
-said, with a simulation of timidity and a sudden concentration of her
-swimming black eyes.
-
-"Emma," he said, laughing, "if you stop there I shall die of
-disappointment."
-
-She frowned a little at the "Emma," but yielded the point.
-
-"You are not very responsive, Monsieur Beecher," she said, with a flash,
-"when I am so nice to you."
-
-"My dear Emma," said Beecher, who, not being in love, could see clearly,
-"if I don't fall at your feet, it's because I know very well that the
-moment I did you would bulldoze me like Bob Holliday."
-
-Emma Fornez looked at him with a sudden gay approval.
-
-"Teddy, you are very nice," she said decidedly. "You understand how to
-play. I forbid you to fall in love, to get caught by any other woman,
-you understand. You are to be mine for the whole season--_hein_?"
-
-"Nothing promised," said Beecher, laughing.
-
-Holliday came with two or three friends, clamoring to be introduced.
-Beecher profited by the confusion to make the turn of the room, which
-was crowded with laughing groups striving to penetrate the disguises of
-others while maintaining their own. At the faro table, a group from his
-club called to him to join them, but he kept on, saluting the dealer,
-costumed according to Bret Harte, with an approving wave of the hand.
-
-The assembly was one of those curious social demarcations which prevail
-when formal society essays to be Bohemian, and which is probably evolved
-by the women in their always curious desire to study at close range
-those whose lives they are generally condemning. As is usually the
-case, the guests were made up of those who remained wrapped up in a
-mantel of inquisitive respectability, and would go early; a large body
-who waited impatiently for this first secession; and a certain element,
-not all professionals, at present exceedingly punctilious, who would
-inherit the right to put out the lanterns and close up the doors.
-
-Young Beecher, pacing restlessly, nodding and smiling, searched in the
-crowd without quite admitting to himself what it was he sought. In the
-short period of his return, he had gone into many different sets, always
-retaining the prerogatives of his own. The women, besides those of the
-younger married women whom he knew, were of the opera, the stage, one or
-two, even, whose names were electrically displayed in vaudeville. He
-was caught up, greeted enthusiastically, and extricated himself with
-deftness, seeking in a general way to reach the great fireplace near
-which he had detected the figure of Mrs. Kildair.
-
-The men, without exception, were of his own kind--of that second
-generation which is the peculiar problem of America. They were strong,
-well put together, with heads chiseled somewhat on the vigorous lines of
-the father spirits, condemned by the accident of wealth to the most
-un-American of professions, the idler. Without the mental languor of
-the foreign dilettante, consumed in reality by their own imprisoned
-energy, they were a restless, dissatisfied testimony of the error of
-their own civilization, the inability of the great, barbaric,
-money-acquiring American to comprehend the uses of wealth. Tonight,
-threatened with tomorrow's disaster, stirred by the restlessness of the
-multitude, this excess of baffled energy was felt everywhere: at the
-bar, in the Anglo-Saxon intensity; at the faro table where the play had
-a certain desperate counterpart of the spirit that had assembled the
-future; in the momentary sudden accesses of gaiety that began to spread
-through the hesitant crowd, as an overturned bottle spreads its fluid
-over the cloth.
-
-Beecher, too, without comprehending it, felt the stimulus, awakening all
-the nervous unemployed funds of energy within him and the intoxication
-of movement and laughter that brought him a sudden feverish hilarity,
-brought also a sense of unrest and dissatisfaction. Underneath all the
-over-excited spirits of frivolity was a current of grave apprehension
-which he felt in the occasional groupings of men and the low snatches of
-conversation which reached him.
-
-"Bo Lynch's cleaned out."
-
-"--not the only one."
-
-"--and thousands thrown on the market."
-
-"Eddie Fontaine's crowd."
-
-"Copper'll blow up higher than a kite!"
-
-"--if Slade goes too."
-
-"They say there's a line formed in front of the Atlantic."
-
-In his progress he encountered Jack Lindabury, lank and
-broad-shouldered, with the magnificent shell of a head that might have
-been set on the shoulders of a Gladstone. They shook hands with
-cordiality.
-
-"Devil of a mess about Majendie," said Lindabury.
-
-"Are you hit?"
-
-"Of course; Eddie Fontaine's had us all in on his tip. Some of the
-crowd are liable to be wiped out. They tell me Bo Lynch had plunged
-every cent in the world."
-
-"Shouldn't wonder," said Beecher, reflecting. "Is he here?"
-
-"Sure; he's the bartender," said Lindabury.
-
-Beecher, surprised, nodded and made his way toward the end that had been
-converted into a frontier saloon, where, behind enormous mustaches, he
-recognized the long features of his fellow lodger.
-
-"What'll y'have?" said Lynch, in hoarse accents. Then, perceiving that
-he was recognized, he drew Beecher aside and said anxiously:
-
-"You owe me fifty, Ted; we pulled it out. Go over and stake it at the
-table for me, if you've got it."
-
-"Sorry," said Beecher, eying him critically and resolving to lie.
-
-"Oh, well," said Lynch philosophically, "it'll look big as a house
-to-morrow."
-
-"Are you cleaned out, Bo?" said Beecher anxiously.
-
-"Oh, no; I'm worth thousands," said Lynch, with a grin, "until the
-market opens to-morrow."
-
-"Tough luck."
-
-"Steve Plunkett's worse--he's got to negotiate his gold fillings, they
-say."
-
-A party came up, clamoring for attention, and Lynch hastened to the
-rescue. Beecher continued curiously toward the faro table, admiring
-with an admiration tinged with compassion the _sang froid_ of the
-losers, who in a desperate attempt to recover the imminent loss of the
-morrow, were staking sums that made the spectators raise their eyebrows
-in amazement.
-
-"Supposing that Jap came back and sneaked the ring the second time,"
-said Gunther, taking his arm.
-
-Beecher started in surprise.
-
-"I wasn't thinking of that," he said.
-
-"But I was. That puzzle of yours has been running in my head ever
-since. I've got six people now absolutely logically worked out for the
-thief--perfect deduction. Take me over to Mrs. Kildair; I want to meet
-that woman."
-
-"I say, Bruce," said Beecher as they started to cross the room, "it's
-going to be an awful smash. All the boys are caught. There'll be the
-deuce to pay here later on."
-
-"Shouldn't wonder--they started in pretty fierce."
-
-"Eat, drink, and be merry--eh?"
-
-"Sure."
-
-By the hazards of the crowd they found themselves opposite Nan Charters,
-who was on the arm of Charlie Lorraine, a clean-cut, pleasant type of
-the racing set, decidedly handsome in a dark way.
-
-"Hello, fellows, any old clothes to give away?" said Lorraine, who had
-the topic of the evening in jest. "I speak first. How the deuce did
-Eddie Fontaine miss you two? Heard what we are doing? We are organizing
-the Eddie Club. Every one who's taken his tip is going up to live on
-Eddie's farm for the winter--great idea, eh?"
-
-While Gunther and Lorraine were laughing over this plan, a creation of
-Bo Lynch's, Beecher was listening to Nan Charters, with a difficult
-attempt at calming the sudden emotion which her appearance with Lorraine
-had fired within him.
-
-"What a dreadful time you chose to call!" she said directly. "Don't you
-know that it takes a modern woman hours to mix her war-paint?"
-
-She looked at him with a little tantalizing malice in her eyes.
-
-"Coquette," he thought furiously. "She is delighted because I was ass
-enough to call and give her the opportunity to refuse to see me."
-
-"Oh, not a call," he said aloud, committing the stupidity of lying. "I
-was just rushing downtown, and stopped to inquire how you were after
-last night."
-
-This answer brought a natural pause. Each looked at the other, he with
-defiance, she with laughter in her eyes.
-
-"You're staying late," he said at last, because her listening attitude
-forced him to say something.
-
-"Yes, indeed."
-
-"It'll be more amusing when it thins out," he said in a purposely
-languid tone.
-
-"When the sight-seers have left--yes," she said, smiling.
-
-Wishing to show what slight importance he attached to the encounter, he
-contrived to nudge Gunther as a signal that he was ready; but, his
-friend proving insensible, he was forced to proceed.
-
-"Did you come with Mrs. Kildair?" he said perfunctorily.
-
-"No."
-
-"With whom?" he asked, regretting the question as soon as it was
-uttered.
-
-"With Mr. Lorraine--of course," she said, looking down modestly, but
-beneath her eyelids he divined again the cunning malice.
-
-At this moment, to his delight, Emma Fornez perceived him, and, being
-profoundly bored by her chance cavalier, a purely passive listener
-thoroughly bewildered by her sallies, gave a cry of joy:
-
-"Teddy, traitor, where have you been?"
-
-Dismissing her companion with a bob of her head, she seized Beecher's
-arm, exclaiming:
-
-"Heavens--save me! I have been shrieking at a deaf-mute."
-
-In the crowd, the head of her late companion could be seen, rolling his
-uncomprehending eyes. Beecher, overjoyed at the arrival, which gave him
-an advantage he was quick to perceive, nodded to Miss Charters and
-departed, exaggerating, for her benefit, the confidential intimacy which
-Mme. Fornez's attitude permitted.
-
-"Who is that woman?" said Emma Fornez immediately. "She is watching us.
-She doesn't seem pleased. _Tant pis_!"
-
-"Nan Charters--one of our younger actresses."
-
-"Ah! Good?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"She is pretty--in a way," said Mme. Fornez, using her lorgnette,
-without caring in the least that Miss Charters perceived it. "_Pas
-mal--pas mal_. Not much temperament--afraid to uncover her shoulders.
-It is not an actress; it is a woman. You are interested, Teddy?"
-
-"No."
-
-"Oh, _avec ca_. You are in love?"
-
-"I met her last night for the first time."
-
-"That's not an answer. Yes, you have a guilty look. You are a little
-taken--she provokes you--these little dolls always do. I will give you
-good advice; I will help you."
-
-"How?" said Beecher, a bit confused.
-
-"I will be very, very nice with you," said his companion gaily, her feet
-dancing to the music. "A woman always wants what another woman wants,
-particularly when she is a little actress and I am Emma Fornez. It's
-very simple, but it never fails; only, I will not help you if you are
-really in love, you understand?"
-
-Beecher solemnly assured her that she need have no fear.
-
-"Very well, then. Be sure to pay attention to Madame Fontaine too; she
-likes you. We are the two women most distinguished here tonight--both
-high, high above your little Charters. It will double the effect. Do
-as I say; it'll be amusing."
-
-Gunther joined them, protesting.
-
-"I say, Madame Fornez, it's not fair. We'll have to get up a Whitecaps
-party and kidnap Ted, if you don't stop."
-
-"Oh, we understand each other perfectly," said Beecher, delighted to
-perceive that Nan Charters was still following his progress. "Whenever
-Emma wants to escape from some one, she remembers that she's crazy about
-me. It is all arranged."
-
-Emma Fornez burst out laughing and gave him a little pat on his shoulder
-with the lorgnon.
-
-"We are--chums, you say--_hein_, Teddy? Monsieur Gunthere is different.
-I like to talk with him--seriously."
-
-But at this moment, in response to a clamor, one of the negroes began
-dancing a shuffle in a quickly formed circle. Emma Fornez rushed off,
-with a cry of delight, deserting both young men.
-
-"You've made a killing, Ted," said Gunther, laughing.
-
-"Pooh! she'll forget my name tomorrow," said Beecher, who, however,
-believed nothing of the sort. "Come on."
-
-Mrs. Kildair was standing by the great Italian fireplace, her glance
-playing incessantly through the crowd, nodding from time to time, but
-without hearing the remarks of two or three older men who surrounded
-her. So different was the magnetic animation of her whole attitude from
-the ordinary feline languor of her pose, that Beecher noticed it at
-once, an impression heightened by the flash of the eyes and the almost
-electric warmth of her hand as she greeted him. Mrs. Kildair, who had
-followed his entrance with Mrs. Craig Fontaine and Emma Fornez and
-moreover was particularly pleased at his presenting young Gunther, was
-unusually gracious.
-
-Gunther, with his direct, almost obtrusive stare, studied her with
-unusual curiosity, conversed a little, and departed, after receiving a
-cordial invitation from her to call.
-
-"What is the matter with you, Rita?" said Beecher immediately.
-
-"Matter--how do you mean?"
-
-"I have never seen you so excited."
-
-"Really, do I seem so?" she said, waving to some one on the floor.
-
-"Extraordinarily so."
-
-"I am generally--dormant," she said, laughing. "Yes, I am excited
-tonight."
-
-"You are on the track of the ring--you have found it," he said
-instantly, with a pang of disappointment.
-
-"No, not that," she said, with a frown.
-
-An idea came to him. He imagined that she too, like the good gambler he
-felt her to be, was laughing before the irretrievable disaster of the
-morrow.
-
-"Look here, Rita," he said sympathetically, "you're not caught in the
-stock market, are you?
-
-"No, no, of course not." She saw the look on his face, and was touched
-by it. "Ruined and dying game? No, no; I am excited, very much
-excited, that's all. Will you ask me to dance, sir?"
-
-"Are they dancing?"
-
-"Of course. Hurry up!"
-
-Some of the more ardent spirits, impatient for the crowd to thin out,
-were whirling about, clearing an expanding circle by force of their
-revolving attacks. In a moment they were moving among the dancers.
-
-Mrs. Kildair danced remarkably well. In this lithe body, so pliant and
-yet so inspired with the vertigo of the waltz, Beecher was again aware
-of the strange excitement that seemed to animate her whole being, and
-continued to ask himself the cause of such an unusual emotion. From
-time to time, the light fingers on his arms contracted imperiously,
-urging him to a wilder measure. He had a strange sensation of mystery
-and flight, as though he were no longer dancing, but whirling around
-with her in his arms, each striving, in the frantic flight, to conquer
-the other.
-
-The dance ended. The spectators burst into applause. Mrs. Kildair, half
-opening her eyes, thanked him with a grateful smile. He walked away
-with her on his arm, agitated and troubled. What all the brilliance of
-Emma Fornez had not been able to accomplish, one touch of Rita Kildair
-had effected.
-
-"I've lots of things to ask you," he said hurriedly, remembering
-McKenna's suggestions.
-
-"No, no; not now--tomorrow," she said breathlessly, with the same
-caressing, half-veiled look. She gave him her hand in dismissal.
-
-He understood. The sensation which had come in the few moments of their
-vertigo had been too extraordinary to be dimmed by a descent to
-conversation.
-
-He left her, as always, aware of the artist in her, that never failed in
-the conception of a situation.
-
-"If I fall in love, it won't be with Nan Charters," he said, following
-Mrs. Kildair with his eyes.
-
-Then, mindful of Emma Fornez's advice, he joined Mrs. Fontaine, staying
-with her until she gave the signal to leave for those who had come to
-watch.
-
-With this departure, in which Mrs. Kildair joined, a certain element of
-restraint disappeared. The unmistakable rising note of loosened tongues
-freed from Anglo-Saxon restraint by the scientifically contrived punch,
-began to mount above the rhythmic beat of the music, which itself seemed
-suddenly possessed of a wilder abandon. At the roulette table the
-players, coldly concentrated, continued in strained attitudes, oblivious
-of all but the blinding green nap before them.
-
-Toward two o'clock the thirty or forty who still remained formed a
-circle, camping on the floor, Indian fashion, clamoring for songs and
-vaudeville turns. Jack Lindabury and Bo Lynch gave their celebrated
-take-off on grand opera. Elsie Ware, riotously acclaimed, accompanied
-by an hilarious chorus, sang her famous successes, turning to and fro
-coquetting with first one man and then another.
-
-Emma Fornez, excited as a child, without waiting to be urged, ran to the
-piano and struck the first riotous chords of the "Habanera" of _Carmen_.
-Instantly there was a scramble for the sides of the long piano, and when
-she looked up again it was into a score of comically adoring faces, each
-striving to attract her attention. But Beecher, first to a position of
-vantage, received the full concentration of the diva's glances. Flushed
-with the peculiar fleeting intoxication of exuberant youth--the
-knowledge of the evening's success with women others coveted--he leaned
-far over the piano, resting his chin in his hands, gazing with a
-provoking malice into the eyes of the singer, exaggerating the intensity
-of his look, maliciously obvious of Nan Charters, whom he felt at his
-side. Emma Fornez, lending herself to the maneuver, opened her wide,
-languorous eyes, singing to him alone, with a little forward leaning of
-her body:
-
- "_L'amour est enfant de la Boheme,_
- _Il n'a jamais connu de loi_
- _Si tu m'aimes._"
-
-
-The song ended in a furore. Mme. Fornez was overwhelmed with
-spontaneous adulation, and Beecher, laughing and struggling, was choked
-and carried away by the indignant suitors. Escaping, he came back,
-happy and resolved on more mischief. He had always had a passion for
-what is called fancy dancing, and in Europe had learned the dances of
-the country. He proposed to Emma Fornez a Spanish dance, and the idea
-was received with shouts of enthusiasm. Every one camped on the floor
-again, while three or four of the men, converting their sombreros into
-imaginary tambourines, shook them frantically in the air, led by Bo
-Lynch, who had somehow procured a great tin tray.
-
-"You dance--are you sure?" asked Emma Fornez, looking at his flushed
-face with an anxious look; for some of the men, notably Lorraine and
-Lynch, were in a visibly excited state.
-
-"Very well," he said confidently.
-
-"_Allons_, then!"
-
-The dance he had chosen was one somewhat akin to the tarantella, a slow
-movement gradually and irresistibly singing up into a barbaric frenzy at
-the climax--one of those dances that are the epitome of primal coquetry,
-of the savage fascinating allurements of the feline, provoking to the
-dancer, doubly provoking to the spectator, bewildered by the sudden
-antagonisms of the poses and the brusque yieldings. At the end,
-according to Spanish custom, the dance ended in an embrace. Emma
-Fornez, surprised to find so inspired a partner, transported by the
-mood, ended laughingly with a kiss, her warm arms remaining languidly a
-moment about the shoulders of the young man, whom she complimented with
-expressions of surprise. Besieged at every side with cries for an
-encore, they repeated the dance, freer in their revolving movements from
-the intimacy of the first passage.
-
-From time to time Beecher had managed to steal a glance in the direction
-of Nan Charters. She was sitting straight and unrelaxing, her eyes
-never leaving him, the lines of her mouth drawn a little tightly. When
-Emma Fornez had embraced him for the second time, Beecher, relaxing,
-perceived that Nan Charters turned her back and was conversing volubly,
-her shoulders rising and falling with little rapid movements, while her
-fan had the same nervous lashing that one sees in the uneasy panther.
-
-He was delighted at his success, at the revenge he had inflicted, at the
-superiority he had regained. The dances began again, but he did not
-dance. He held himself near the entrance, surveying the scene
-triumphantly. The experience was new to him; in the few years he had
-passed since college, he had been really out of the world. This
-game--the most fascinating of all the games of chance that can fascinate
-the gambler in each human being--the game between man and woman, came to
-him as a revelation, with a zest that was almost a discovery of his
-youth.
-
-All at once a feminine hand was laid on his arm and the voice of Nan
-Charters said:
-
-"Come outside--in the garden. I want to speak to you. Come quietly."
-
-[Illustration: "'Come outside--in the garden. I want to speak to you.
-Come quietly'"]
-
-Elated by a strange, almost cruel feeling of conquest, he followed her,
-with a last look back at the studio, at the littered bar, where Bo Lynch
-was still calling raucously for customers, at the silent intensity of
-the gamblers, whom he occasionally perceived between the flitting
-dresses of the dancers. In the middle of the floor Lorraine and
-Plunkett, stumbling and unsteady, were solemnly waltzing in each other's
-arms--the specter of the morning forgotten.
-
-He closed the door softly and joined the young actress, who was waiting
-for him at some distance.
-
-"Can you take me home?" she asked directly. "Mr. Lorraine is in such a
-condition that I do not wish to go with him."
-
-"Certainly," he said, a feeling of protection replacing the first
-victorious perception of the fire of jealousy he had awakened in her.
-
-Gunther's automobile was waiting, and they entered it. She did not say
-a word to him, and he, determined to force her to begin the
-conversation, waited with a pleased enjoyment until three-quarters of
-the journey had been accomplished. All at once she turned, and, taking
-him by the lapels of the coat, brought him toward her as one scolds a
-child.
-
-"Are you so angry because I didn't see you this afternoon?" she said,
-smiling.
-
-The feminine defensive instinct of avoiding the issue by ambushing it
-with subterfuges, is equaled only by that instinct for attack which
-brushes aside all preliminaries and strikes directly. Beecher, taken
-off his guard, was a prey to two contrary impulses. Two replies,
-absolutely opposed and illogically joined, came to his lips. One
-brutal, still charged with the savageness of the evening, to say:
-
-"Angry? Not at all. Aren't you claiming a little too much?"
-
-And the other, a warm, yielding desire to blurt out frankly:
-
-"Yes, I was angry. I wanted to see you."
-
-She waited. Her large eyes, seeming larger in the dim light of the
-carriage, continued steadily on him. The first impulse dominated the
-second, but was modified by it.
-
-"Angry? What a curious idea!" he began, with a half laugh. "You were
-so upset--"
-
-She interrupted him, shaking her head.
-
-"Why did you act the way you did tonight? Don't do things that are not
-like you. That is not the way we began."
-
-He was silent, not knowing what to answer. Presently she withdrew into
-her corner, glanced out of the window, as if to assure herself that they
-were near their destination, and, placing her hand over his, said
-gently:
-
-"You are very sympathetic to me. Keep it so."
-
-For all that he said to himself that it was his favor with other women
-that made him precious to her, he felt a certain yielding of the spirit.
-He wondered if he could take her in his arms; but he restrained himself,
-and closed his two hands over hers.
-
-"Yes, we are very sympathetic," he said; but he did not say all he
-meant.
-
-"What a foolish boy you are," she said finally, looking up at him.
-"Don't you know that if I say one word you will go wherever I want you
-to?"
-
-He was so taken by surprise at the audacity and confidence of her
-remark, that he could not collect himself for an answer, outgeneraled by
-the woman who had so calculated to a nicety her last words that the
-arrival of the automobile left him without response.
-
-He went home, repeating to himself what she had asserted, resisting a
-wild desire to return to the Lindaburys' and forget there the disorder
-in his soul; and, though he rebelled scornfully against her confident
-assertion, the incessant repetition of it did leave an impression.
-
-As he passed the great marble facade of the Atlantic Trust, an unusual
-sight made him bend out of the window. In the chill gray of the coming
-dawn, a thin line of depositors was waiting, some standing, others
-huddled on campstools. At the sight the seriousness of life smote him,
-and he returned home, the tremulous turns of the human gamble he had
-played feverishly blended and confused with the dark realities of the
-rising tragedy of speculation.
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER X*
-
-
-When, the next morning, Beecher struggled out of a profound stupor, it
-was to be awakened by the sounds of Bo Lynch at the telephone. He
-rolled out of bed after a startled gaze at his watch, recalling in a
-flash the incidents of the night before. As he emerged he heard the
-final phrase, and the click of the released receiver:
-
-"Sell at once--throw them over."
-
-Bo Lynch, a pad of paper in one hand, a tumbler of cracked ice in the
-other, already dressed for the day, greeted him nonchalantly:
-
-"Morning."
-
-"How late did you stay?" asked Beecher.
-
-"Oh, we breakfasted together," said Lynch, with a wry smile; "charming
-little repast. But I picked up enough to pay for my winter's stabling."
-
-Beecher glanced at the clock, which was approaching the hour.
-
-"Waiting for the opening?"
-
-"Yes." His glance followed Beecher's with a sudden concentration, and,
-taking up a matchbox, he struck a match and threw it away. "Waiting to
-see if I can escape working another year."
-
-Beecher, comprehending that sympathy would be distasteful, picked up the
-morning papers. The scareheads were alive with the note of panic: a
-dozen banks were threatened with runs; a rumor was abroad that the
-Atlantic Trust and two other great institutions might close their doors
-within the next twenty-four hours; an interview with Majendie protested
-against the action of the Clearing-house, asserting the recklessness of
-the move and the solvency of the Trust Company; a riot was feared on the
-East Side, where the small Jewish depositors, always prey to alarms,
-were in a state of frenzy; vague, guarded hints of further actions to be
-expected by the Clearing-house against another prominent chain of banks,
-and a report that John G. Slade was to tender his resignation, were
-joined with rumors from the office of the State Examiner of Banks that
-there might be grounds for the criminal prosecution of certain
-officials.
-
-The telephone rang. Lynch went to the receiver, arranging his pad
-methodically on the table. Beecher stopped reading, listening to the
-broken threads.
-
-"All right, go ahead." ...
-
-"How much?" ...
-
-"Whew! Give me the Northern Pacific figures now." ...
-
-"Yes--yes--I see." ...
-
-"Something of a break, isn't it?" ...
-
-"All right." ...
-
-"No--that's all in the game. Thank you. I'll send my check to-day.
-Thanks."
-
-He put up the receiver, glanced curiously at the clock, which marked
-twelve minutes after ten, and studied the pad.
-
-Beecher had never been intimate with Lynch, but he liked him and his
-standards of Britannic phlegm. He belonged to that curious freemasonry
-of men, an indefinable, invisible standard of association, but one that
-cannot be counterfeited.
-
-"How did you come out?" he said carelessly.
-
-"About as I expected. The market has gone wild."
-
-Bo Lynch poured out a morning peg, adjusted his cravat critically in the
-mirror, and took up his hat.
-
-"Lunching at the club?"
-
-"Not to-day."
-
-"It'll be a cheerful funeral. So long."
-
-After his departure Beecher studied the jotted figures on the pad. In
-the twelve minutes of the opening, Lynch had lost a clear thirty-two
-thousand dollars.
-
-By the time he had dressed and breakfasted, he had answered the
-telephone a dozen times, messages from men he knew, anxious to learn if
-his intimacy with young Gunther had brought him any valuable
-information; inquiries as to the effect on his personal fortunes, and
-rumors of individual losses.
-
-He himself remained undisturbed by the frenzy. His own fortune, thanks
-to the wise provision of a hard-headed father, was safely invested in
-solid properties, and the world of speculation had not entered his ken.
-He returned to his newspapers, read everything bearing on the personal
-fate of John G. Slade, which interested him extraordinarily since his
-encounter with that abrupt and forceful personality, and, rising, asked
-himself how he could kill the time until the hour of his luncheon with
-Rita Kildair.
-
-The irritation he had felt at the end of his ride with Nan Charters had
-disappeared. Studying the evening calmly, he analyzed her words with a
-clearer perception. He comprehended that, beyond all the cleverness of
-her attitude, she had been veritably piqued by his indifference and his
-absorption by Emma Fornez, who treated her as a little actress.
-Considering the encounter thus, he smiled occasionally, congratulating
-himself that the conversation had ended so abruptly--when a continuance
-would have led him perhaps to say some of those sudden, illogical
-remarks which are irresistibly drawn from a man by the provoking contact
-of certain feminine personalities.
-
-"She may say what she wants," he said, selecting a cigarette. "She was
-caught by her own tricks." He took several steps, and grinned to
-himself. "It's an amusing game, and a game that will be amusing to
-play."
-
-Despite this feeling of confidence and elation, he had an irresistible
-desire to telephone her, to indulge himself in the pleasure of hearing
-her voice again. He had resisted the impulse several times, convincing
-himself of the tactical error; and yet, the more he argued against it,
-the more the desire haunted him.
-
-Ordinarily he spent an agreeable half-hour after breakfast, calling up
-on the telephone those of the opposite sex with whom he was in the
-relation of a good comrade. He enjoyed these morning snatches of
-intimacy, with an enjoyment untouched with any seriousness. This
-morning, as he took the telephone in hand, he thought first of Emma
-Fornez, but as he had neglected to make his adieu to her on leaving with
-Nan Charters, he considered a moment while he formulated an acceptable
-apology.
-
-The prima donna answered him from the languid idleness of her bed, where
-she was resting in a state of complete exhaustion.
-
-"I am ab-so-lutely _fini_," she said in an anguished tone. "It is
-fright-ful. I shall never be able to sing--never!" Then she
-remembered. "I am very angry with you--yes, yes,--very angry."
-
-Beecher explained, with crocodile tears, how he had been forced to come
-to the aid of a distressed and helpless female.
-
-"Ta-ta-ta! Stuff and nonsense! You could have boxed her up in a
-carriage and sent her home--yes, yes, you could. But you are in
-love--you are weak--you wanted an excuse--she made a fool of you--she
-twisted you around her finger!"
-
-Beecher denied the charge with indignation.
-
-"If you wanted to, you could have come back to me--yes, you could."
-
-"But you had deserted me--I was furious."
-
-The conversation continued ten minutes on these purely conventional
-lines and ended with a promise to drop in that afternoon for tea.
-
-He had hardly ended when Mrs. Fontaine called up with an invitation to
-her box, for Mme. Fornez's debut in Carmen the following week.
-
-Then he called up Miss Rivers, not because he particularly wished to
-talk with her, for he had determined on her decapitation, so to speak,
-but in order to appease somewhat the desire he had to telephone some one
-else. In conversing over the telephone, he felt a revival of interest
-and promised to try to drop in for a call that afternoon.
-
-He rose, looking down at the telephone in a dissatisfied way, and,
-turning his back, went in search of his hat.
-
-"She'll expect me to telephone, of course," he thought; "besides, what
-excuse could I give? I'm not going to play into her game--not by a long
-shot. I know the kind--entirely too much brain-work to suit me. Oh,
-yes, she'd like to annex me--because I've been attentive to Emma
-Fornez--sure; but when it comes down to business. Mr. Charles Lorraine
-has a hundred thousand a year and I have thirty. She knows that." He
-laughed disdainfully and repeated, "You bet she knows that--well, so do
-I."
-
-He returned to the sitting-room and selected a cane, glancing out of the
-corner of his eye at the accursed telephone.
-
-"I won't," he said, taking three steps toward it and then turning
-abruptly away.
-
-At the moment when he stood wavering, it began to ring. He went to it
-hastily. Miss Charters was calling him...
-
-"How lucky!" he said purposely. "I was just going out. I heard you
-from the hall."
-
-"You know, I never realized until this morning what I had done," said
-the voice at the other end. "I was so upset by Mr. Lorraine's condition
-that I forgot you were there with Madame Fornez."
-
-"Clever girl," he said to himself, smiling. Then aloud: "Oh, I
-explained matters."
-
-"I was afraid I'd got you into trouble."
-
-"No, indeed. Madame Fornez is a good sort; she understood at once."
-
-"I'm so glad. You've 'phoned her already then?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-He remembered McKenna's suggestion, but he did not wish to make the
-demand direct.
-
-"Something of a smash in Wall Street to-day," he said carelessly.
-
-"You weren't caught, were you?" she said, with a note of quick sympathy
-which he admired.
-
-"No; I don't speculate."
-
-"I was afraid you might have."
-
-"By Jove," he said, "I hope you didn't lose anything."
-
-"No, I don't think so," she said doubtfully. "I had some money
-invested, but I suppose if I hold on that'll come up again."
-
-"Not on margins?"
-
-"No, indeed."
-
-"Who's your broker?"
-
-"Mr. Garraboy."
-
-"Who?"
-
-"Mr. Garraboy."
-
-The news produced on him a strangely ominous effect. He forgot all the
-parleying and the tactical planning of his campaign, overshadowed by a
-sudden sense of sympathy.
-
-"I want to talk to you about that," he said anxiously. "Have you much
-in his hands?"
-
-"Much for me--about twenty thousand."
-
-"Are you going to be in this afternoon? Can I see you?"
-
-"I wish you would."
-
-Something in her voice struck him by its weakness.
-
-"You are not worried, are you?" he said.
-
-"A little."
-
-"Why don't you call him up?"
-
-"I've been trying to."
-
-He was going to offer to telephone for her, when he remembered the
-antagonism he had felt for the broker, and refrained until a fuller
-knowledge. He reassured her, making light of her doubts, though feeling
-an instinctive anxiety for himself. Then he called up McKenna; but the
-detective was out, and, leaving word that he would try later, he went
-for his morning ride.
-
-A little before one o'clock he was in the softly lighted studio of Mrs.
-Kildair, waiting for his hostess with the pleasurable anticipation of a
-confidential tete-a-tete. On one thing he was thoroughly resolved--to
-convince her of the seriousness of his purpose in offering his
-assistance. As he paced slowly and irregularly about the room, his
-mind, perplexed by the mystery of the disappearance of the ring,
-instinctively considering the possibilities for concealment, he was
-surprised to hear, behind the closed doors of the bedroom, the sound of
-voices in agitated discussion. He stopped, perplexed, for in his walk
-about the room he had arrived at a point in such close proximity that
-the tones were easily distinguishable.
-
-"But I have already made up my mind," cried a voice which he recognized
-at once as Mrs. Bloodgood's.
-
-Mrs. Kildair answered her, but in a lower tone--a note of warning and
-remonstrance.
-
-"Oh, what do I care for the world!" repeated the voice, on a higher
-note. "The world is all against me. I have only one life--I want to
-live some of it."
-
-Beecher, ill at ease, realizing that he had stumbled on a situation
-which he had no right to surprise, tip-toed away. Hardly had he seated
-himself when the door opened brusquely, and Mrs. Bloodgood appeared,
-saying:
-
-"No, no; it is decided. I'm going. My only regret is that we waited so
-long."
-
-Two spots of red showed on her dark cheeks, while her head was carried
-defiant, alive with sudden energy. Beecher was struck with the unwonted
-brilliancy and youth which the emotion that possessed her had
-communicated to her whole body. Mrs. Kildair followed her, with the
-frown of one who disapproves, but who knows the futility of any
-contradiction.
-
-Beecher rose hastily, emerging from the shadow. The two women stopped,
-surprised at his presence, considering him nervously. The few snatches
-of conversation he had heard, coupled with what Gunther had revealed to
-him of the infatuation of Mrs. Bloodgood and Majendie, made him divine
-the intention of elopement they had been discussing. His sympathy was
-touched by the distress of the young woman, and, advancing quickly, he
-said, with a pretense of shame:
-
-"By Jove, I must have been nodding! A thousand pardons."
-
-"How long have you been here?" said Mrs. Kildair.
-
-"About ten minutes," he said, rubbing his eyes and laughing. "Confound
-that chair--it's infernally comfortable, after being up all night. You
-made me jump."
-
-Mrs. Bloodgood had regained her calm. She embraced Mrs. Kildair and
-held out her hand to Beecher.
-
-"Won't you let me see you to your carriage?" he said eagerly, with a
-smile of such good will that she perceived that whatever he had
-overheard, she had no need to fear.
-
-"It's not necessary--but thank you," she said, giving him a grateful
-smile.
-
-He went to the door, opening it with a little exaggerated courtesy, and
-returned thoughtfully to Mrs. Kildair, who was watching him fixedly.
-
-"You overheard?" she said directly.
-
-"A little."
-
-"And what did you understand from it?"
-
-"Why, frankly, knowing what I do, I should believe that Mrs. Bloodgood
-had decided to run away," he answered slowly; "which means, of course,
-one man. I am sorry. I could not help hearing."
-
-Mrs. Kildair had seated herself on the Recamier sofa and was studying
-him, undecided as to what she should say.
-
-"You have heard too much, Teddy, not to know all," she said, reassured
-by the directness of his glance. "Besides, in twenty-four hours it will
-be in every paper in the country. I do not need to ask your promise to
-keep secret what you have heard. She is leaving her home and going
-openly away with Mr. Majendie--this very afternoon."
-
-"Majendie running off?" said Beecher, astounded.
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Now--at such a time as this--when he is under fire? I don't believe
-it!"
-
-"I should not have believed it either," said Mrs. Kildair thoughtfully.
-
-"I know his kind," declared Beecher warmly; "he would never commit such
-a folly--never!"
-
-"And yet, that is what is going to happen."
-
-"That is terrible. Doesn't she realize that he lays himself open to
-every charge? He'll be called a defaulter and an absconder--it is worse
-than death!"
-
-"She realizes nothing," said Mrs. Kildair in a solemn voice, "except
-that she has hated one man and lived with him ten years, and that now,
-when everything is against the man she adores, she will sacrifice
-anything to be at his side."
-
-"But the sacrifice he is making--"
-
-"Her sacrifice is too great--she doesn't realize that," said Mrs.
-Kildair, rising. "Poor Elise! Her life has been terrible. She is wild
-with anxiety, with the thought of what Majendie may do. When one has
-suffered as much as she has, one more sorrow will not stop her."
-
-Beecher was silent, overcome by the vision of an emptiness which he
-could divine only in a general way, having as yet little knowledge of
-the silent tragedies that pass at our elbows. When Mrs. Kildair turned
-again, it was with all her accustomed poise.
-
-"We can do nothing," she said calmly. "Let us forget it. Luncheon is a
-little late. We shall be three; I asked Mr. Slade to join us. By the
-way, you were kind enough to offer me your help in the matter of my
-ring. I shan't need it now, but thanks all the same."
-
-"What do you mean?" he asked, surprised.
-
-"My detectives assure me they are on the right track," she said
-carelessly. "All I ask of you, as I have of every one, is to keep this
-unfortunate occurrence to yourself."
-
-Beecher had been on the point of informing her of his retaining McKenna,
-confident of her approval. Ignorant as he was of Mrs. Kildair's dread
-that Slade's ownership of the ring might come to light, with all the
-consequent public misunderstanding, he was disagreeably impressed by her
-announcement. He did not for one moment believe her statement that the
-right clue had been found. All he understood was that, for some reason,
-she desired to keep him out of the case, and this understanding
-irritated him. And the introduction of Slade at what he had considered
-his privileged hour annoyed him even more. His curiosity increased
-twofold as he was forced to retain his information. Then he remembered
-McKenna's hint, and said carelessly:
-
-"By Jove, that reminds me--I want the address of your detective agency."
-
-She raised her eyes very slowly, and her glance rested on his for a full
-moment.
-
-"Why do you ask that?" she said.
-
-He repeated the story he had prepared of a friend's demand, mentioning
-Gunther's name.
-
-Mrs. Kildair rose as though reluctantly, motioning him to wait, and,
-going to her room, returned after a long moment with an address on a
-slip of paper.
-
-"There, Teddy," she said, giving it to him. Her manner had completely
-changed. She was again the Rita Kildair who treated him _en camarade_.
-"You are disappointed in not working out an exciting mystery," she said,
-laughing. "Do you know, Teddy, I am quite surprised at you."
-
-"How so?" he said warily.
-
-"I should have thought by this time you would have engaged half the
-detectives in New York," she said, turning from him to arrange the
-cushions at her back. "And here you have done nothing."
-
-Beecher was not deceived by the innocence of the interrogation.
-
-In the last days his wits had been trained by contact with different
-feminine personalities. He understood that she wished to find out what
-he had done and assumed at once an attitude of boyish candor.
-
-"It's not my fault, Rita," he said contritely. "You put me off--you
-remember."
-
-"That's so," she said. She motioned to him with a little gesture of her
-fingers and indicated a chair at her side. "Come here, you great boy,"
-she said, smiling. "You are furious at me, aren't you?"
-
-"Why?" he said, sitting near her, with a resolve to resist all her
-curiosity.
-
-"You like to be the confidant of pretty women, Teddy," she said,
-laughing as he blushed. "To be on the inside--to know what others
-can't. Well, you shan't be deprived."
-
-He looked at her in surprise.
-
-"What I told you is not true," she said candidly. "I have no clue, as
-yet, and am quite in the dark. I give you permission to do all you can.
-You see," she continued, holding out her hand with a charming smile, "I
-give you my full confidence--confidence for confidence--_n'est ce pas_?"
-
-Beecher made a rapid mental reservation and repeated her phrase,
-expecting a direct examination, but her manner became thoughtful again
-and she said pensively:
-
-"Besides, you have stumbled on a confidence yourself, and if you are to
-be trusted with that you should be trusted entirely." She looked at him
-quietly for a moment, and then added: "As a proof of my trust, Teddy, I
-am going to ask you to be my ally now. Mr. Slade will be here shortly.
-I do not wish to be alone with him. Do not go until he is gone."
-
-This request, implying as it did his own superior intimacy, delighted
-Beecher. He felt half of his suspicions vanish as he answered wisely:
-
-"I understand. He is quite daffy about you, isn't he?"
-
-"Quite. But he has to be kept in place."
-
-"Oh, of course."
-
-"And now you are happy again," she said, tapping his arm with a little
-friendly gesture and smiling inwardly at the satisfaction which began to
-radiate from his face. "Teddy, you are a nice boy. I will teach you
-what the world is; you shall be my confidant, and we will laugh
-together; only, you must not be sentimental, you understand."
-
-"Never," he said with vigorous assertion. Then his conscience began to
-reprove him, and he blurted out: "I say, Rita, I haven't been quite
-honest, but you rubbed me the wrong way. I really have been on the
-job."
-
-"Besides Gunther, whom else have you talked with?" she asked.
-
-"McKenna, the detective; and he's dead keen on the case," he said
-enthusiastically, not noticing what she had implied.
-
-"Oh, McKenna!" she said, nodding appreciatively. "You have done well."
-
-She sat up, suddenly serious, and, extending her hand, took from him the
-address she had given him.
-
-"Did McKenna tell you to find out my detective?" she said slowly.
-
-Beecher comprehended all at once how he had played into her game, but,
-with her glance on his, it was impossible to deny.
-
-"Yes," he said; "he told me that he'd been on a dozen cases where the
-detectives who had come in to make a search had gone partners with the
-thief. He wanted to be certain there had been a real search."
-
-This seemed to reassure her, for she nodded with a return of her
-careless manner, as though comprehending the situation. Then, crumpling
-in her hands the paper with the address, she allowed her body to regain
-its former languid position and said:
-
-"I should like to meet McKenna; you must bring him around. How is he
-starting on the case?"
-
-Before Beecher could answer, the bell rang and Slade's bulky figure
-crowded the frame of the doorway. He entered, and the portieres, at his
-passing, rolled back like two storm clouds.
-
-Whether or not Mrs. Kildair had calculated the effect of the intimacy of
-Beecher's position, Slade saw it at once as he noted savagely the
-involuntary separating movement which each unconsciously performed, and,
-perceiving it, exaggerated its importance. The look he gave the younger
-man revealed to the amused woman how much he would have liked in
-barbaric freedom to have seized him and crushed him in his powerful
-arms.
-
-"Sorry to be late," he said abruptly, glancing at the clock. "I've
-taken the liberty to leave your telephone number, Mrs. Kildair, in case
-something important turns up."
-
-They passed immediately into the dining-room, Mrs. Kildair enjoying this
-clash of opposite personalities. Slade was not a man of small talk,
-disdaining the easy and ingratiating phrases with which other men
-establish a congenial intimacy. For the first quarter of an hour he
-withdrew from the conversation, and, being hungry, ate with relish.
-Beecher, abetted by his hostess, taking a malicious pleasure in the
-superiority he enjoyed, chatted of a hundred and one things which he
-shared with his listener, incidents of the party at Lindabury's, gossip
-of the world they knew, Emma Fornez and Holliday, Mrs. Fontaine and
-Gunther. Then, naturally drawn to the one topic that charged the air
-with the electricity of its drama, he related the uproar in the city,
-the long lines of depositors before the banks, the incident of Bo Lynch
-in the morning, and the effect on the men they knew. In this both he
-and Mrs. Kildair had an ulterior motive--to make Slade talk: Mrs.
-Kildair, for reasons of her own, Beecher alive to his dramatic closeness
-to the one man about whose success or ruin all the storm of rumor and
-gossip was raging.
-
-"Stocks are still dropping," said Mrs. Kildair, glancing at Slade, who
-appeared quite unconscious. "An enormous quantity of holdings have been
-thrown on the market."
-
-"How long do you think it will keep up?"
-
-"That depends; a day, a week--Mr. Slade knows better than any one."
-
-Slade looked up suddenly.
-
-"What do they say about me?" he asked grimly.
-
-"Every one expects the Associated Trust to be the next," said Beecher
-frankly.
-
-"Probably. I'll tell you one bit of news," he added quietly. "The
-Clearing-house will refuse to clear for us this afternoon."
-
-"But that means failure," said Mrs. Kildair, with a quick glance at him.
-
-"We shall see."
-
-"But the run has already started."
-
-"Oh, yes; we have paid off five depositors already," he said, with a
-smile that was almost imperceptible.
-
-"Only five?"
-
-"It takes a long time to verify some accounts. Then the law allows
-discretion in payment--takes quite a while to count out five thousand in
-half dollars." All at once he leaned forward heavily and began to
-speak, contemplatively interested. "The real truth is the thing that is
-never known. The newspapers never print the news. Sometimes it is
-given to them in confidence, to make certain that they won't print it.
-How much do you suppose will ever be known of the real causes of the
-present crisis? Nothing. They may let the market go to the dogs for
-three days, six days, a month, ruin thousands of victims, and the public
-will never know that the whole thing can be stopped now, in twenty-four
-hours, by ten men. And, when they get ready, ten men _will_ stop it.
-Then there'll be columns of adulation--patriotic services, unselfish
-devotion, and all that; and what will have happened--ten men will be in
-pocket a few millions as the result of their sacrificing devotion. The
-public must have a victim in order to be calmed, to be satisfied that
-everything has been changed. Then a weak man, some unlucky lieutenant,
-will be served up, and things will go on again, until one group of
-millions is ready to attack another. How the public will howl! Majendie
-has taken the gambler's risk; Majendie has failed. There's the
-crime--failure; and yet, ninety per cent. of the fortunes today have
-turned on the scale--up or down--win or lose. For every promoter that
-wins, twenty fail with a little different turn of the luck.
-
-"We're all criminals--only we don't steal directly. We get it done for
-us. We want franchises for a great railroad system. We shut our
-eyes--hire an agent--go out and get this, no strings, no
-directions--show us only your results! Everything is in
-irresponsibility. A million dollars can commit no crime. After all,
-it's in the motive--a man who steals because he's hungry is a thief; a
-corporation that bribes a legislature and steals franchises, to create a
-great system of transportation, is performing a public service. It's
-all in what you're after. There're two ways to look at every big man;
-see the two periods--first, when he is trying to get together
-money--power; and second, what he creates when he has it. Same in
-politics--a man's better in office than running for it. Every man of
-power wants to arrive, anything to arrive, but when he gets
-there--then's the second period. The way to judge us is whether we want
-money only, or money to create something big."
-
-"And you?"
-
-"I want sixty millions," said Slade abruptly. "Will I get it?" He
-shrugged his shoulders, and taking a knife balanced it in seesaw on his
-finger, letting it finally drop with an exclamation of impatience.
-"That's the danger--the getting of it. I may have it in two years more
-and then again--" He opened his hand as though flinging sand in the
-air, and added: "In a week it may be over. _Rouge et noir_--one bad
-turn at the beginning and Napoleon Bonaparte would have been shot as a
-conspirator. Up to the present, I've been living the first
-period--afterward I'll justify it; I'll build."
-
-"In what way?" said Mrs. Kildair, who, while following his brutal
-exposition with the tribute instinctive to force, was nevertheless aware
-that this unusual revelation of himself had likewise a trifling
-object--the over-awing of the younger rival.
-
-"Railroads--a great system--an empire in itself," said Slade; and there
-came in his eyes a flash of the enthusiast which surprised her. But,
-unwilling to enlarge on this topic, he continued: "What I've said sounds
-raw, doesn't it? So it is. If I do what I want, I justify myself.
-There are only two classes of human beings--those like you two here, who
-get through life with the most pleasure you can, who get through--pass
-through; and then a few, a handful, who create something--an empire,
-like Rhodes, invent a locomotive or a system of electric production, add
-something to human history. What if they steal, or grind out the lives
-of others? They're the only ones who count. And the public knows it--it
-forgives everything to greatness; it's only petty crime it hates. Look
-at the sympathy a murderer gets on trial--look at the respect a great
-manipulator gets. Why? Because to murder and steal are natural human
-instincts. A couple of thousand years ago, it was a praiseworthy act
-for one ancestor, who coveted a hide or a cave that another ancestor
-had, to go out and kill him. All animals steal by instinct. We are
-only badly educated animals, and we admire in others what we don't dare
-do ourselves. Only succeed--succeed! Ah, there is the whole of it!"
-
-At this moment the telephone rang, and Slade rose and went to it with a
-little more emotion than he usually showed.
-
-"Is this the cause of his outburst?" thought Mrs. Kildair, while she and
-Beecher instinctively remained silent.
-
-At the end of a short moment, Slade returned. The two observers, who
-glanced at him quickly, could not find the slightest clue of what had
-transpired. Only he seemed more composed.
-
-"Speaking of stealing, take the case of the ring," he said, relaxing in
-a chair. "We know this--incredible as it may seem--that there were at
-least two thieves in the company; as a matter of fact, there were many
-more. My own opinion is that the crime was not an ordinary one--that
-whoever took it the second time took it out of an uncontrollable spirit
-of bravado, an overpowering impulse to do an almost impossible thing."
-
-"By the way--" Beecher began, and then suddenly looked at Mrs. Kildair
-interrogatively. Then, receiving permission, he continued: "You know
-who returned that night?"
-
-Slade nodded.
-
-"Yourself, Mrs. Cheever, Garraboy, and Miss Charters."
-
-"Miss Charters?" said Beecher, turning in amazement to Mrs. Kildair.
-
-She nodded, with a little frown.
-
-"As I told Mrs. Kildair," said Slade, not noticing that Beecher,
-overwhelmed by this discovery, did not hear him, "I do not believe for a
-moment that the thief would return. Any one who had the daring to seize
-the ring the second time had the daring to carry off the ring; in fact,
-had some such plan in mind. Whoever came back may have come back out of
-sympathy, or with the idea that the ring was still in the studio--in
-which case, we have a third manifestation of instinct."
-
-They had passed into the studio again. Slade spoke with all his old
-decision, the energy of action replacing the bitterness of his former
-meditative mood. He glanced at the clock, and took his leave in a
-quick, impersonal manner. Beecher, ignoring the looks Mrs. Kildair sent
-him, departed with Slade, refusing an invitation to join him in the
-automobile, and continuing on foot.
-
-He was absolutely at a loss to account for Miss Charters' returning to
-the studio after having gone to her apartment. If she had any
-suggestion to offer, why had she not waited, or even requested him to
-return with her? Why, in fact, could she not have waited until the
-following day--instead of risking the journey at such an hour?
-
-Full of disturbing surmises, he continued his walk until he reached the
-great thoroughfare of Forty-second Street, where he turned eastward
-toward the station, oblivious to the excitement in the street, the
-break-neck arrival of the newspaper wagons and the sudden, shrill
-scattering of urchins, extras in hand.
-
-All at once, at the western corner of the station, he raised his eyes
-instinctively. A coupe with trunks behind it disengaged itself from the
-confusion of traffic and, turning, slowly passed him. Inside, he
-recognized the dark, defiant eyes of Mrs. Enos Bloodgood.
-
-In a moment he guessed the full significance of her presence: she had
-come to meet Majendie, to burn all bridges behind her, in the supreme
-sacrifice of everything for the possession of a happiness she had never
-known.
-
-The next instant he was gazing horror-stricken at the head-lines of an
-extra that a newsboy flung in his face:
-
-
- SUICIDE OF BERNARD L. MAJENDIE
-
-
-He became perfectly collected, clear in mind and instinctive in action,
-with the decision he had felt in the last charges of a wounded elephant.
-If Mrs. Bloodgood were here, it was because she expected to meet
-Majendie; because she was ignorant of the tragedy that had taken place.
-
-Retracing his steps, he arrived at the carriage the moment Mrs.
-Bloodgood's hand had thrown open the door.
-
-"Excuse me," he said, with an authority which instantly impressed the
-woman by its ominous seriousness. "Something terrible has happened. I
-must speak to you." Then, turning to the coachman, without being
-overheard, he gave him Mrs. Kildair's address, saying: "Drive there
-quickly. Five dollars to you if you get me there in ten minutes."
-
-Then he opened the door and joined the woman who, drawn back in the
-corner like an animal at bay, already trembling with what she did not
-know, awaited him.
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER XI*
-
-
-For an interval, while the coachman, spurred on by the prospect of
-reward, tore through the short streets, Beecher continued looking into
-Mrs. Bloodgood's eyes--eyes that were aghast with mute, terrified
-interrogations which she did not dare to phrase.
-
-Suddenly she perceived the extra which he had bought. She extended her
-hand, looking at it fearfully.
-
-"Give it to me," she said.
-
-He hesitated, and in the moment of irresolution she seized it. A cry of
-pain, a low cry torn from the soul, made him stiffen in his seat,
-steeling himself against the expected. But no further sound came. When
-he turned, she was sitting transfixed, staring wide-eyed at the
-newspaper which seemed glued to her fingers. Alarmed at the rigidity of
-her emotion, he leaned over and disengaged the paper from her
-unresisting fingers. The action seemed abruptly to revive her. She
-gave another cry, and tore the newspaper from him with such energy that
-a great, ill-shaped fragment remained in her clutch.
-
-"No, no, not that--no, no!" she cried, frantically seeking to decipher
-the bare six lines that recorded the tragedy. All at once she flung the
-sheet from her, turning to read the truth in his face.
-
-"Ah, it is true!" she cried, and her hand, as though holding him guilty
-of the fact, violently pushed him from her.
-
-"Mrs. Bloodgood--" Beecher began hesitatingly, frightened at the
-paroxysm that shook her body.
-
-But the emotion was still of horror, without as yet the realization of
-the finality that had come. She felt that Majendie was in danger--in
-terrible danger; that she must get to him, somehow, some way, and fling
-herself in front of that awful something that threatened him, ward off,
-in some way prevent, the thing that was coming. She seized the arm of
-the terrified young man, imploring him, still dry-eyed:
-
-"Take me to him--at once--no--I must--take me--Bernard--oh!"
-
-She fell back exhausted, faint.
-
-"Be calm; please be calm," he repeated, helpless before the utter
-disorder of her suffering.
-
-All at once the annihilation of self into which she had fallen was
-succeeded by a quick paroxysm of energy. She bounded upright on the
-seat, seizing his arm so that the nails hurt him.
-
-"I will go to him!" she cried. "You shall not stop me. He may be only
-wounded. The report is false--must be false. I will go to him!"
-
-"The very thing that you must not do--that you can not do," he said
-firmly; and then, seized with an inspiration, he added: "Listen--listen
-to me, Mrs. Bloodgood, I am taking you to Rita's; if you must go to him,
-go with her. Two women can go; one would cause a great scandal. You
-can not put that on him--you must think of him now. We are going to
-Rita's--Rita's!" he added, putting his lips to her ears to make her hear
-him.
-
-He put his hand on her shoulder and forced her gently back. She held
-her clasped hands rigidly strained between her knees, staring out beyond
-the confines of the carriage.
-
-"He is not dead," she said in a whisper; "he is wounded."
-
-"As soon as we get to Rita's," he continued reassuringly, "I will
-telephone. I'll find out everything."
-
-"Wounded," she repeated, nodding--without hearing him.
-
-"If he is, we three can go--it will seem quite natural," he said
-hastily, eying nervously her dry, uncomprehending grief, fearing the
-coming outburst of realization.
-
-"Almost there," he said, looking out of the window. "Hold on to
-yourself. Be game. There are always a few persons below."
-
-She did not answer, but her lips curled slightly in contempt, and she
-put her hand spasmodically to her throat.
-
-"You're right, the whole thing may be false--a wild rumor," he said
-quickly, talking to her as to a child. "A fake story--who knows? See,
-there are no details. Here we are. A little courage! Go right into the
-elevator."
-
-He signaled the driver to wait, and followed her hastily into the
-elevator, standing between her bowed figure and the boy.
-
-Mrs. Kildair was in the studio, pacing the floor; and at the first
-glance each saw that she knew the report, and that it was true. Mrs.
-Bloodgood crumpled on the floor, without consciousness.
-
-"My smelling-salts are on my bureau," said Mrs. Kildair quickly. "Lift
-her on the sofa first, and then get them."
-
-"Is it true?" he said, raising the slender, lifeless body.
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Dead?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"When did it happen?"
-
-"At two o'clock."
-
-"She wishes to go to him," he said warningly. "The carriage is below.
-She has her trunks. She was to have met him at the station. What shall
-I do?"
-
-"She must be gotten back to her house as soon as possible," said Mrs.
-Kildair with energy. "The trunks must return at once. Everything hangs
-on a hair; I know Bloodgood." She cast a glance at the still inanimate
-body and added: "Wait. Spirits of ammonia will be better. I'll get
-it."
-
-Mrs. Bloodgood returned to consciousness slowly, looking from one to the
-other with a dazed, pleading look.
-
-"Then it is so," she said at last.
-
-The two looked at her without being able to answer. Suddenly she
-bounded up erect, her fists striking her forehead.
-
-"It is I who have done it!" she cried, and for the second time fell back
-lifeless on the floor.
-
-"Go down now; send the trunks back," said Mrs. Kildair to Beecher.
-"Tell him to do it as quickly as possible--no, tell him nothing. Go
-quickly."
-
-When Beecher returned, Mrs. Bloodgood was on her feet again, passing
-from spot to spot ceaselessly, one hand clutching a handkerchief to
-press back the sobs that shook her from time to time, the other
-stretched out in front of her, beating a mechanical time to the one
-phrase which she repeated again and again:
-
-"I've done it--I've done it--I've done it!"
-
-Mrs. Kildair, leaning by the piano, knowing that each period must have
-its expression, awaited the right moment. Beecher, at a sign from her,
-slipped quietly into a chair.
-
-"Yes, it's I--it's I--I!" said the indistinguishable voice.
-
-"You have done nothing," said Mrs. Kildair solemnly. "It is fate."
-
-"No, no. Only I am to blame," she answered, stopping short, each word
-coming slowly through the torrents of tears.
-
-Mrs. Kildair passed quietly to her side.
-
-"You are not to blame, dear," she said; "don't think that."
-
-"Oh, you don't know," she said, suddenly acquiring a terrible calm that
-froze the young man. "At what time did he--did it happen?"
-
-"At two."
-
-"I knew it! Ten minutes before, he telephoned me; he said--oh, what do
-I know?--said a thousand things but the one in his mind. Asked me if I
-still was resolved to go."
-
-"But then, Elise--"
-
-"You don't understand! It was I who insisted on his going--I--I! I
-told him, if he would not go, I would come openly to his house--I would
-not be separated from him. Oh, my God! I didn't know--I didn't!"
-
-She abandoned herself to her transports once more, flinging herself on
-her knees and praying, as an uncomprehending child prays:
-
-"O God, don't let it be true--please don't let it be so!"
-
-Beecher covered his eyes suddenly with his hands. Mrs. Kildair allowed
-her for a moment to tire herself in supplication and anguish. Then she
-went to her, grasping her shoulder.
-
-"Elise."
-
-Mrs. Bloodgood stopped, rose, and went to the window, where she stood
-swaying.
-
-"I'm going to him," she said, pressing her knuckles against her temples.
-
-"Get hold of yourself," said Mrs. Kildair, avoiding the error of
-opposition.
-
-For a long moment neither spoke, while Mrs. Bloodgood, passing to and
-fro, struggled to fight down the sobs that were choking her. At last
-she stopped, facing Mrs. Kildair.
-
-"I am going to him," she said.
-
-The other woman, with a look of great compassion, shook her head in a
-slow negation, looking full at her.
-
-"But he said I could!" she cried, stretching out her hands toward
-Beecher.
-
-"You can't."
-
-"But he said so--he promised."
-
-"No; it is impossible."
-
-"I _will_ go!"
-
-"There are twenty reporters waiting for just that," Said Mrs. Kildair.
-Then, raising her voice, she said impressively: "Elise, there is
-something you must do--something ten times more terrible."
-
-"What?"
-
-"Return home--and at once."
-
-"Never!" The cry burst from her as her whole body was shaken with
-indignation. "Never in the world--never again!"
-
-"Listen," said Mrs. Kildair, seizing her arm, and Beecher was struck
-with the savageness of her energy. "Things are no longer the same. You
-are alone--absolutely alone. Do you understand what that means--without
-a cent--alone?"
-
-"What do I care?"
-
-"Not now; but in a week, in a month-- You think you know the greatest
-suffering in the world; you don't--the greatest is poverty. Whatever
-has happened, you are Mrs. Enos Bloodgood. Only yourself can destroy
-that. One life is ended in you. You have loved. That will never come
-again--not the same. Life is long and terrible."
-
-"What, you can suggest such a thing?" said Mrs. Bloodgood, raising her
-head indignantly. "Such an infamy?"
-
-"Yes--because I know. The world is not an equal one. A woman can not
-fight as a man can. A year from now, when you can suffer no further, do
-you want to wake up in a dingy boarding-house, cut off from all you have
-lived in? For a great love--perhaps--but to be alone? No, no! Elise,
-you will do as I say because I can see better than you. You are Mrs.
-Enos Bloodgood--you have everything that a million women covet. It is
-your life; you will go back."
-
-"Ah, how can you say that to me now?" said Mrs. Bloodgood, pressing her
-handkerchief to her eyes.
-
-"Because the world is different from the world of this morning--because
-everything is different, Elise. There are no longer the reasons that
-existed. You are alone against the world. You know your husband--one
-public word or action, and he will cast you off like an old shoe."
-
-"How can I go back?" she said, sitting down, half subdued. "How can I
-get the strength? I don't know yet what has happened. I can't realize
-it--oh, if I had only had my way! If he had only let me leave a
-month--two months ago. If I'd only been firm; if we had gone that
-night--that night we were here--when I begged him to. If he had only
-loved me more than his honor, as I loved him. If only I--"
-
-"Elise," said the quiet voice of Mrs. Kildair.
-
-The young woman checked herself, breaking off and moving again; but
-almost immediately broke out again:
-
-"And now you want me to go back to _him_. Oh, if you knew how I hate
-him, how I loathe him--what that life means--how cruel he can be, how he
-can make me suffer by a word or a look--how he enjoys--"
-
-"Elise, Elise!"
-
-"I can't go, Rita, I can't! Don't ask me to go now. Let me stay a
-while here, just tonight, where I can weep," she cried.
-
-"No, no. It must be now--soon. You have left your home with your
-trunks--he knows it. If you return--you return because you are
-worried--the panic--on his account."
-
-"Ah, what a lie!"
-
-"Elise," said Mrs. Kildair, coming forward again and arresting the
-other's arm, "listen. You are not what I am. You are not strong--you
-are weak. You are a woman of the world, worldly, loving worldly things,
-who for a moment has been transformed by a great passion. The whole
-earth has no such passion any longer. Do you understand? Something is
-gone--your youth is ended. Keep tight hold of the little that is left.
-Come, be strong. Dissimulate as you have before. Come."
-
-"Not now," said Mrs. Bloodgood, terrified.
-
-"Yes, now. If possible, you must be back before he returns."
-
-And Beecher, from his chair where he had watched, forgotten by both
-women, saw Mrs. Kildair, who not for a moment had deviated from the
-vital issue, draw the unresisting woman by the very force of her energy
-into the bedroom, from which shortly they emerged again.
-
-"I am ready," said Mrs. Bloodgood in a voice that was scarcely
-distinguishable. She had thrown over her head a thick veil, behind
-which her features were only dimly visible.
-
-"Telephone for a carriage," said Mrs. Kildair.
-
-"I have done so," said Beecher, who had availed himself of the interval.
-
-"But the trunks?" said Mrs. Bloodgood, turning helplessly.
-
-"They went back long ago."
-
-"Ah!" She took a few weak steps and turned. "But I shall see him?"
-
-"I give you my word."
-
-"Tonight?"
-
-"Tonight."
-
-Mrs. Bloodgood made a little sign of acquiescence, and passed out of the
-door. The carriage was waiting. Beecher silently handed her into it,
-feeling the sudden heaviness on his arm. They rolled away. She did not
-lift her veil, and he could not guess what look was on her face. Twice
-she made him change their course, in order to put off the final dreaded
-moment.
-
-"You have been kind," she said at last. "I owe you much. Thank you.
-Now I will go back."
-
-"Don't speak of thanks at such a time," he said hastily. "If I can help
-you in any way, any time--"
-
-"I know." All at once, forgetting his presence, she burst out: "Oh, how
-I loved him! I would have done anything for him--anything! I can't
-believe it. It doesn't seem possible!"
-
-"Be careful, Mrs. Bloodgood," he said, alarmed. "Be careful--please."
-
-"You need have no fear," she said slowly. "All that is over." But,
-still obsessed, she seized his arm. "Only I want you to know that I
-loved him so that nothing made any difference. Any one can know it. I
-would have gone--"
-
-"I know it," he said quickly, taking her hand to quiet her.
-
-"Oh, yes, I loved him--the only real thing in my life!" she repeated,
-sinking back.
-
-Ahead he saw the great Italian facade of the Bloodgood residence, where
-twenty servants awaited the call of this shadow at his side, whose
-invitation could make a social reputation. Then his quick eye, as they
-neared the steps, perceived the squat, stolid figure of Mr. Enos
-Bloodgood at the door.
-
-"He is just come out--your husband," he said hurriedly, with a sudden
-new sensation of dread. And he repeated, a little excitement in his
-voice, fearing she did not understand the danger: "Be careful; he is
-there--your husband."
-
-"Yes, I saw him."
-
-She took the veil from her hat, and, folding it, handed it to him, her
-face set in hardness and contempt.
-
-"You might say Mrs. Kildair had invited--"
-
-"I know what to say," she said, checking him, and a smile incongruous at
-the moment gave the last touch of tragedy to the imagination of her
-companion. "Open the door."
-
-He gazed at her, struck with the strange, dual personality in the frail,
-proud body--the abandon of the woman who loved and the calm of the woman
-who hated. She who a moment before had cared nothing for what she
-revealed to him in the unrestraint of her sorrow, did not hesitate now a
-moment, face to face with the peril of such a confrontation.
-
-"Open the door," she repeated sharply.
-
-Recalled to his senses, he sprang out and gave her his hand,
-accompanying her to the chiseled marble steps, where he left her, with a
-lift of his hat to the husband above who awaited her with a quiet,
-cynical enjoyment.
-
-"I thought, my dear, you had gone off for a jolly little jaunt," said
-Mr. Bloodgood, without variation in the provoking evenness of his voice.
-
-She came up the steps to his level, and acknowledged his presence with
-an inclination of her head.
-
-"I intended to," she said, in the same ceremonious tone. "But I was so
-alarmed at the news from Wall Street that I did not wish to leave you at
-such a time."
-
-"Indeed? I am quite touched," he answered, with perfect solemnity.
-"You are always so thoughtful, my dear."
-
-She entered. He followed her as though shutting off all retreat, and
-the gorgeous flunky who had run out disappeared, too. To Beecher, with
-all the anguish of the scene at Rita Kildair's still vivid in his mind,
-it was as though he had seen a living woman enter her appointed tomb.
-
-"Where shall I drive, sir?" said the driver.
-
-"Anywhere!" he cried furiously.
-
-But at the end of five minutes he emerged from the stupor into which he
-had been plunged, the somber horror rolling away like scudding
-storm-clouds. A new emotion--the inevitable personal application--broke
-over him like a ray of light.
-
-"To be loved like that--" he thought suddenly, with a feeling of envy.
-"Terrible, terrible--and yet how marvelous!"
-
-He gave directions to drive to Nan Charters' with a new curiosity in his
-soul--the inevitable personal emotion that, strangely enough, even
-against his will, dominated all the somber melancholy which this reverse
-of a glittering medal had brought him.
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER XII*
-
-
-He had completely forgotten, in the press of dramatic events, the
-disturbing fact of Nan Charters' return the night of the theft. He
-remembered it suddenly, as one remembers sorrow after a profound sleep.
-But the recalling of it affected him differently. The revelation of
-Mrs. Bloodgood's hidden life had left him in a dangerous and vulnerable
-mood--a mood of quickened compassion and outgoing sympathy. He was
-still determined to force a direct answer from Miss Charters, but
-already he had formed that answer in his heart, as he for the hour felt
-no longer the selfish combat of vanity, but the need of charity and
-gentleness.
-
-In one of the profound moods which color the visible world, he stood at
-the window of the little sitting-room, awaiting her arrival, looking out
-on the serried flight of unutterably commonplace roofs, gray and drab
-with the gray of the turning day. And it seemed to him that this
-twilight was different from other twilights, heavily weighted down with
-more of the sadness of inexplicable lives. One tragedy seemed to invoke
-a thousand tragedies, in the cramped immobility of these inscrutable
-windows which had not yet begun to warm with the flicker of human cheer.
-He saw only the brutal struggle to live, and felt only the mystery of
-suffering, which was still a thing apart from his life. Standing
-reverently thus, he asked himself two questions which, sooner or later,
-each man of heart and sensibility puts to himself in the awakening to
-conscious existence:
-
-"Why do they go on?"
-
-"What is my justification?"
-
-And in his heart, still young and stirred to sympathy, he felt the
-beginning of a revolt at what he had been, at his inability to find a
-satisfying answer to that second question. He no longer awaited the
-interview in the spirit of strife, but with a sudden feeling of
-impulsive friendliness which, had he been an older man, might have
-alarmed him with its dangers. The profound melancholy of youth, violent
-because unconquered and strange, had him still in its grip when, all at
-once, he felt an emotion of well-being and returning comfort.
-
-She came into the room and without formal greeting gave him her hand
-with a welcome in her eyes, as though their friendship were of such
-strong duration that formalities were out of place.
-
-"Draw the curtains," she said, going to the electric lamp on the table,
-which woke like a golden sun from the shadows. "It's cozier. Shall we
-light the fire? Yes, it's more cheery."
-
-"Let me," he said hastily.
-
-"Quite unnecessary."
-
-He watched her sudden stooping movement, that brought the loose,
-intricate tea-gown about her agile body, outlining the limbs, which had
-the quick animal grace that is peculiar to the unconquered maiden. Her
-pose, strong and alive with power and self-reliance, recalled to him
-sharply the sense of opposition. He was annoyed that she should have
-done so naturally what he should have done, feeling in her too much
-self-reliance.
-
-She rose, looking down with a childish delight at the sudden burst and
-roar of the flame. Then she turned, studying his face. The artist in
-her made her quickly aware of the remnants of the emotion which had
-stirred him.
-
-"What is it?" she said, with the gentleness that was tantalizing to him.
-"You have a strange look."
-
-"Yes," he answered; "I have been behind the scenes."
-
-"What do you mean?"
-
-"I have been with Mrs. Bloodgood all the afternoon--found her at the
-station as she was leaving."
-
-"Mrs. Bloodgood was running away," she said, puzzled, but with a fear in
-her eyes that did not escape him.
-
-"What--you did not know!" he exclaimed. "Majendie killed himself this
-afternoon at two o'clock."
-
-"Majendie--Mrs. Bloodgood!"
-
-She looked at him a moment with a face struck with horror, and then fell
-back into a chair, seized with the suddenness of the climax.
-
-"I beg your pardon; I thought you knew," he blurted out.
-
-"No, no--nothing. Tell me--tell me all," she said; and he saw that back
-of her alarm was a significance to her that heightened the effect of the
-tragedy.
-
-He told her first the bare details of the suicide as he knew them; and
-then, in response to her hurried questions, began to retell the
-afternoon. He spoke impulsively, almost as an echo of the drama he had
-witnessed. Occasionally she stopped him with a more detailed question.
-Moved out of his self-consciousness, he described, more eloquently than
-he knew, the conflict between the two women at Mrs. Kildair's, and the
-emotions which had suddenly brought him wide-eyed to the spectacle of
-the black, turbulent river of despair.
-
-"I can't forget it--it haunts me now," he said, when he had ended with
-Mrs. Bloodgood's return into the home of her husband. "It makes me see
-something in life I didn't understand--that I am just beginning to see."
-
-He looked at her. Her face was wet with tears. All at once, astonished,
-he recalled what he had told.
-
-"What have I done?" he cried, aghast. "I had no right to repeat it. I
-didn't realize what I was saying!"
-
-"Don't fear," she said, shuddering, and she extended her hands to the
-fire, as though the recital had frozen her body. "Poor woman--poor,
-lonely woman!"
-
-He sat down near her, close to the fire, and, stretching out his hand,
-touched her arm.
-
-"Listen, Nan," he said, so profoundly that she could not mistake the
-emotion. "It has made a great difference in me. It may be a mood--it
-may pass; but I hope it won't. It makes me dissatisfied. Look here--I
-don't want to go on as we have, thrusting and parrying. I don't want it
-to be just a game. The real feeling in me toward a woman is
-different--it's one of chivalry, I know. Let's drop all artifices.
-Let's be honest with each other--good friends, or something else, as it
-may come."
-
-She considered the depths of the fire a moment, and turned, looking at
-him dreamily, feeling how much older she was in the knowledge of the
-doubts of the world than the young, impulsive nature that looked out at
-her from such honest eyes.
-
-"Will you?" he asked, as she looked away again.
-
-She shook her head, in doubt as to an answer; but the good in her
-stirred by the good in him expressed itself in the quick pressure of
-thanks which her hand conveyed to him.
-
-"I am not the least in love," he said quickly. "What I say I say
-because--oh, I don't know! I'm dissatisfied with myself. This thing has
-gotten below my skin. Life's too rotten. I want you to believe in
-me--in my strength. You are sympathetic--_multa sympatica_. I don't
-know; I hate to think of your fighting alone such a rotten hard fight."
-
-She nodded slowly, understanding perhaps better than he his thought, yet
-half won to his appeal already.
-
-She took his hand in both of hers, pressing it in emphasis from time to
-time, not looking at him, staring at something that formed before her
-eyes.
-
-"No one has ever spoken to me just like this," she said gently. "One
-thing I would never want to happen, Teddy--I would never want to hurt
-you! That is why I hesitate--why I am afraid. You are only a great big
-boy. You won't understand me. I am very selfish--very worldly."
-
-"You are nothing of the sort," he said furiously, withdrawing his hand.
-"You may think so, but I know you better."
-
-She turned, amused; but her smile left her as she looked into his eyes.
-To her surprise, a feeling of unease came to her; she felt a new
-longing--to be for a moment quite childlike and helpless.
-
-"Don't blunder into anything, Teddy," she answered, shaking her head,
-herself a little disturbed. "With some men I would not care. With
-you--yes, it would make me feel like a criminal to hurt you."
-
-He understood that she was warning him of the futility of expecting to
-find in her a woman. But if she had calculated, which she had not, on
-any move surer to arouse him, she could have found no better expedient.
-The impossibility implied, coupled with the impulsive generosity in her
-voice, made her a thousand times more desirable. He rose brusquely,
-and, standing with his back to the fire, looked down at the dramatic
-face, which the flames lighted with the flare of footlights.
-
-"There are certain things that we must understand together," he said
-with authority, obeying the instinct which told him that to succeed he
-must take the upper hand.
-
-Her eyebrows came together in a straight flight.
-
-"I have not hesitated to trust in you--you must in me. Tell me. You
-have reason to suspect that Mrs. Bloodgood took the ring--at least, the
-first time?"
-
-[Illustration: "'I have not hesitated to trust in you--you must in me'"]
-
-She shook her head, but without anger.
-
-"Don't you understand," he said quickly, "that I must know why you acted
-as you did?"
-
-Still her only answer was a deep-taken breath.
-
-"I swear to you, if Mrs. Bloodgood did take it," he said, "I would not
-condemn her. On the contrary, I would pity her."
-
-"Why should Mrs. Bloodgood, who has millions, do such a thing?" she said
-quietly.
-
-"Because, from what I know, Mrs. Bloodgood, who has millions, as the
-wife of Enos Bloodgood, has not as much money in her pocket as you or
-I." He stopped. "She took it to have some means of escape, didn't
-she?"
-
-"No, she did not take it," she answered, but in a tone that brought no
-conviction.
-
-"You see, I know that you returned to Mrs. Kildair's that night," he
-said, irritated.
-
-"How did you know?" she said quickly.
-
-"Mrs. Kildair told me--no, that's not true; some one else did."
-
-"Mrs. Kildair herself called me on the telephone and asked me to come,"
-she said slowly.
-
-"And questioned you?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"As to what you had seen?" he said, with a great feeling of relief that
-should have warned him of his true interest.
-
-"Yes."
-
-"What did you answer?"
-
-She rose and approached him, looking at him with only friendliness.
-
-"If the ring is not restored in two weeks," she said, "then I will tell
-you what you wish to know."
-
-"You think that, if Mrs. Bloodgood took it, she will now have no use for
-it," he persisted, seizing the idea.
-
-"I know nothing at all," she answered, emphasizing the "know." "This
-promise must satisfy you. I only have a suspicion, and I don't want to
-do an injustice to another--remember that. I have never said it was
-Mrs. Bloodgood I suspected. Now I want to talk to you about my own
-affairs."
-
-He was covered with contrition that he should have forgotten her
-difficulties.
-
-"Good heavens!" he said hastily. "What have I been thinking of? Please
-don't think I don't care; I've been in such a whirl--"
-
-She checked him with a gesture and a smile, motioning him to sit down
-again.
-
-"Have you had any word?"
-
-She shook her head.
-
-"Of course, it's a terrible day on the Street," he hastened to reply.
-"Everything's up in the air--they're like a lot of lunatics. Garraboy
-hasn't had time to think. That oughtn't to alarm you."
-
-"But I left word at his office for him to telephone me, and it is now,"
-she said, glancing at the clock, "an hour and a half since the close."
-
-"There are probably a hundred inquiries of the same sort awaiting him,"
-he said to reassure her. "What are you afraid of?"
-
-"I don't know--and yet I am a little anxious. Suppose he has used my
-stocks? Such things happen every day."
-
-"The best thing is to find out at once how Garraboy stands--if he's been
-caught in the drop or not. Then we can take our measures."
-
-"How'll you do that?"
-
-"Call up Bruce Gunther and get him on the trail. May I telephone?"
-
-"Do so."
-
-"He's probably at the club now," he said, taking up the receiver and
-giving a number. "Yes, he's in. That's lucky. I'll get him in a
-moment." Then he added irritably: "How the deuce did you ever come to
-deal with Garraboy?"
-
-"Why, I've known him ever since I came to New York. I wanted to invest
-some money--I didn't know any one else; and then, he was very--friendly;
-wanted to make some money for me. That's how it was."
-
-"Hello," said Beecher. "Is that you, Bruce? It's I--Ted."
-
-"Where the deuce have you been?" said the voice at the other end. "I've
-been trying to get you all over town."
-
-"You have?"
-
-"You bet I have; McKenna's turned up a real clue--wants to see you at
-once. Pick me up here at the club, will you?"
-
-"All right. But say, Bruce, I want you to do something for me. Find
-out all you can about Garraboy--you know, the fellow we spoke about. Has
-he been on the wrong side of the market or not? Understand? It's
-important."
-
-"I'll do it. Anything else?"
-
-"Yes. A friend of mine has some stocks with him, about twenty thousand
-worth--you see the situation--and she's a little bit worried. Can't get
-any satisfaction."
-
-"Wants 'em back?"
-
-"Yes. What's the best way to do?"
-
-"Um! Get a transfer to you and call for them tomorrow."
-
-"Of course; see you later."
-
-He put down the telephone and turned gaily to his companion, who was
-waiting with anxiety.
-
-"That's all right. Bruce will get the information and I'll telephone
-you this evening. Now, the best way to operate is this." He took out
-his check-book and wrote a check for twenty thousand dollars to her
-name. "I'll buy those stocks. Here's my check; give me an
-acknowledgment for the shares, with an order on Garraboy to deliver."
-
-She looked at him doubtfully, holding the check gingerly in her fingers.
-
-"What's the matter?" he said. "If there's any little difference one way
-or the other, we can arrange that later."
-
-"Supposing Garraboy has failed and sold my stocks?"
-
-"He hasn't."
-
-"But if he has?"
-
-"That's my risk," he started to say, but checked himself. "Why, of
-course, then it's off. This is just to give me the power to get them
-away at once. A man can do what a woman can't."
-
-She was grateful to him for his perception of delicacy.
-
-"On that basis, yes," she said. Then she stopped and looked at him with
-a whimsical but favoring smile. "As it is, Teddy, what do you know of
-me to take even this chance?"
-
-The opening was too direct. She saw it at once, and, to forestall his
-answer, said more lightly:
-
-"It is a great service. Tell me what to write."
-
-As she was drawing up the paper under his directions, a placid,
-emotionless woman of forty entered from the rear.
-
-"That Mr. Hargrave is here, Nan dear," she said. "You gave him an
-appointment, you know."
-
-"Mrs. Tilbury, my companion," said Miss Charters. "Very well; in a
-moment."
-
-Mrs. Tilbury passed patiently out to deliver the message. Beecher was
-delighted with the correctness and cold respectability of such a
-chaperon.
-
-"Mr. Hargrave is a young dramatist," said Miss Charters, finishing the
-document. "He's coming to read some masterpiece to me. He wrote a
-one-act piece three years ago that was very clever, and now, of course,
-I can't risk refusing to hear him--he might have a work of genius at
-last. This is my fourth trial." She put the paper from her
-impatiently. "I'm sorry."
-
-He was displeased also at this sudden recall of the other life in her,
-the world of the theater, which crowded the walls with its signed
-photographs.
-
-"I'll telephone as soon as I know," he said, dissembling his irritation.
-
-She went to the door with him, annoyed also at the interruption.
-
-"I'm coming tomorrow," he said, and he held out his hand with a little
-defiance.
-
-She did not resent the assumption of right, still introspectively
-puzzled at the new moods into which she had fallen. And, still pensive,
-she said:
-
-"Come."
-
-Below, in the anteroom, he sent a look of antagonism and scorn at a
-young man, a little extravagantly dressed, who carried a portfolio under
-his arm with a sense, too, of irritation and pride.
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER XIII*
-
-
-When he had gone into the brisk air of the street, his mental vision
-returned with the crispness of the night. He was astonished at what he
-had said and done.
-
-"But I am not in love--not in the least," he repeated. "Then what was
-it?"
-
-He was quite perplexed at perceiving the astonishing difference her
-presence and her absence made in his attitude. He repeated to himself
-quite seriously with a little wonder that, if he were in danger of
-falling in love, he would be a prey to that disturbing emotion now,
-absent as well as present.
-
-"I am perfectly calm," he said, flourishing his cane. "Not in the least
-excited. It's very queer."
-
-All the same, he returned to the interview, and recalled the incidents
-without illusion. He comprehended now what he had not comprehended
-then, the full significance of his offer of friendship--in fact, that it
-was not an approach to friendship but to something very different, and
-the relations which had now been established between them were those of
-confidence and intimacy that lay on the borderline of great emotions.
-
-"It's very odd," he said, "I wish to be honest and open with her, and
-yet I said what I don't feel--suggested what I have not the least
-thought of. I'll be hanged if I understand it, unless she has the power
-to make me believe in emotions that don't exist,--Emma Fornez was right,
-she is the type that provokes you. I must be very careful."
-
-But one thing he did not perceive--that the city no longer oppressed him
-with its bleak struggle and serried poverty, that he swung lightly over
-the crisp pavements, breathing the alert and joyous air, that in him the
-joy of living awakened, as the myriad lights awoke the city of the
-night, the city rising from the fatigue of labor with its avid zest for
-pleasure and excitement.
-
-"What is the clue McKenna's got hold of?" he thought eagerly, as the
-massive, cheery windows of the club came into view across the stirring,
-care-fleeing homeward rush of the Avenue.
-
-The moment he entered the crowded anteroom, the tragic day returned with
-redoubled gloom. The death of Majendie oppressed every voice--nothing
-else was discussed. He found himself caught up in the crowd at the bar,
-listening with a strange sense of irony to those who touched in
-haphazard the event which he knew so profoundly. The wildest rumors
-were current. Majendie had shot himself after the discovery of an
-enormous shortage in the funds of the Atlantic Trust. The Atlantic
-Trust had been looted, the effect on Wall Street had been to confirm the
-wildest rumors, the market would plunge down to-morrow, the awful loss
-of the day would be surpassed; it was the panic of '93 over again. The
-inevitable mysterious informant in the crowd arrived with a new rumor:
-Majendie had tried to escape, had been prevented by detectives, who had
-been shadowing him for days, and had then gone in and shot himself just
-as the warrant for his arrest arrived. Another gave this version;
-Majendie had not shot himself, he had been murdered.
-
-Every one exclaimed at this.
-
-"That's the story in the Associated Press offices," continued the
-informant obstinately. "A man whose whole fortune was locked up in the
-Atlantic--a small depositor--got into the house on some pretext, and
-shot him--crazy, of course. It's not been verified, but that's the
-story."
-
-"Tell you what I heard," said another, in a low voice, to a group that
-eddied about him. "It's true he was shot, but he wasn't shot in his own
-home. He was shot last night in his box at the opera by a man who is as
-well known as old Fontaine. The old story, of course, trespassing in
-married quarters. The whole thing was kept dark--got him out of the box
-after the crowd went out, and took him home, where he died at midnight.
-Heard the names in the case, but pledged not to repeat them."
-
-Each rumor received a momentary credence, in the excitement of the
-moment. Some one defending the personal friend, insisted on melancholia
-and despondency, citing the example of an uncle who had taken his life
-after the disgrace of his son. No one spoke the name of Mrs. Bloodgood,
-waiting the moment of confidences _a trois_. In the stupefaction of the
-moment, even the personal losses, which had been tremendous, were
-momentarily forgotten. Gradually inquiries began to be made as to the
-extent of the panic. Then at once a division was apparent. There was
-already the party of the shorts, eager and vociferous, staking their
-last chance of recouping on a still wider spread of the devastating
-drop, which they now as ardently desired as though a thousand homes
-would not suffer for every point acquired.
-
-Beecher separated himself from these enthusiasts of failure, and passed
-into the front room, where he was signaled by Gunther, who was in one of
-the numerous small groups. He found a chair and joined the party, in
-which were Fontaine, Lynch, and Steve Plunkett. The conversation, which
-was controversial, continued without interruption.
-
-"Don't be an ass, Ed," said Lynch, with irritation; "nothing can stop
-the market."
-
-"The Atlantic Trust is as solvent as Gunther & Co.," insisted Fontaine,
-with a nervous, emphatic gesture. "Every depositor will be paid in
-full."
-
-"It'll be in the hands of a receiver before the week's over--bet you
-five to three."
-
-"Possibly; but then--"
-
-"Moreover, what of the public? What's the public going to do when it
-hears Majendie's committed suicide? What'll it think? It'll think the
-whole blamed institution is rotten to the core--looted!"
-
-"Sure," said Plunkett, and he added savagely, his glance lost in the
-distance: "Damn it, if I'd known the news an hour earlier, I could have
-made fifty thousand."
-
-"Why, look at the situation," continued Bo Lynch, excited by his own
-images. "The Clearing-house closed against the Associated Trust and all
-its allies; runs on banks all over the country; Slade forced to the
-wall, out of it in a couple of days, perhaps--God knows, another
-suicide, maybe; two failures up into the hundreds of
-millions--everything in the country thrown on the market! Look at the
-sales to-day; they'll be doubled to-morrow. Nothing can hold out against
-it. The country'll go crazy! I tell you, '93 was nothing to it."
-
-Gunther rose.
-
-"What do you think, Bruce?" said Plunkett anxiously.
-
-"Don't know a thing about it," said Gunther brusquely. "Neither does
-Eddie or Bo. If you want to gamble, gamble."
-
-He nodded to Beecher, and they moved out together.
-
-"Let's cut out of this den of lunatics," he said. "My machine's here;
-supposing we run down to McKenna's and get him off for a quiet chop.
-I've already telephoned."
-
-"He's got some news?"
-
-"Yes, but I don't know what it is. Jump in."
-
-"What about Garraboy?"
-
-"Rumor is, he's in heavy. McKenna's looking that up, too."
-
-"I say, Bruce, what do you really think about the situation?" said
-Beecher, forced to contain his curiosity. "Are we going to the
-bow-wows?"
-
-"If you ask what I _think_," said Gunther meditatively, "I think it's
-the devil to pay. Far as I can see, a lot depends on John G. Slade.
-There's no doubt there's a crowd after his scalp."
-
-"Will they get it?"
-
-"Looks so; but he's got nine lives, they say."
-
-"Where the deuce are we going?" said Beecher, suddenly aware of the
-swift flight through the now deserted regions of the lower city.
-
-"Down to McKenna's offices."
-
-"As late as this?"
-
-"Guess these days keep him pretty busy."
-
-"Didn't he say anything about his clue?"
-
-"Said he'd traced the history of the stone."
-
-They soon came to a stop in one of the blocks on Broadway within a
-stone's throw of old Trinity, and, descending, entered a dingy
-four-story building pinched in among the skyscrapers. At the second
-flight of worm-eaten stairs, Gunther pushed open a smoky glass door and
-entered a short antechamber inclosed in sanded glass with sliding
-pigeon-holes for observation. Their arrival being expected, they were
-immediately shown down a contracted hallway studded with doors, to an
-open room, comfortably furnished, with a fire burning in the grate.
-
-"Join you in a moment, gentlemen," said McKenna, nodding around the door
-of the adjoining room.
-
-Gunther unceremoniously helped himself at the open box of cigars.
-
-"Ted," he said enthusiastically, "why the deuce do the novelists concoct
-their absurdly stalking detectives, who deduce everything at a glance,
-with their impossible logical processes? Don't they see the real thing
-is so much bigger? It's not the fake individual mind that's wonderful;
-it's the system--this system. A great agency like this is simply an
-expression of society itself--organized order against unorganized
-disorder. It's an unending struggle, and the odds are all on one side.
-By George, what impresses me is the completeness with which society has
-organized itself--made use of all inventions, telephone, telegraph, the
-photograph, the press, everything turned on the criminal to run him
-down. For a hundred detectives employed here, there are a thousand
-allies, in every trade, in every depot, in every port, along every line
-of travel. When you think of the agencies that McKenna can stir up by a
-word, then you begin to realize the significance of the detective in the
-structure of society."
-
-McKenna, who had heard the last words, entered, vitally alert and
-physically excited by the joy of unusual labor.
-
-"Now I'm with you," he said, appropriating an easy-chair. "Let's see
-where we'll begin. Oh, Mr. Beecher, you wanted certain information
-about that broker Garraboy, didn't you?"
-
-"What have you found out?" said Beecher, with a conscious eagerness that
-struck both hearers.
-
-"It just so happened I had a line on your man from another direction,"
-said McKenna. "Well, he's hit the market right. What would have
-happened if this panic hadn't come just right, is another question--a
-rather interesting question. However, Garraboy's known to have been
-heavy on the short side, and, from all reports, stands to make a
-killing."
-
-"Then Miss Charters' stocks are all right?"
-
-"They're all right--yes--now," said McKenna carefully; "but my advice is
-to get hold of them--P.D.Q. Mr. Garraboy is somewhat of a gambler. Now,
-here's a bit of history about a certain ruby that will interest you," he
-continued, drawing out a memorandum. In his manner was a little amused
-self-satisfaction, as one who relished the mystification of the
-outsiders. "In the first place, your ruby ring is not worth fifteen
-thousand."
-
-"No?" said Beecher in amazement.
-
-"It's worth considerably more," said the detective, with a grin. "Its
-last sale was at the price of thirty-two thousand dollars."
-
-"What!" said both young men in chorus.
-
-"Just that."
-
-"But then, why should Mrs. Kildair value it at fifteen?" exclaimed
-Beecher.
-
-"That's rather an interesting point," said McKenna, "and we'll touch on
-that later. The stone is as well known in the trade as John L. Sullivan
-to you and me. It was first sold in New Amsterdam in the year 1852 to a
-firm of Parisian jewelers. From them it was bought for a well-known,
-rather frisky lady called La Panthere by a Count d'Ussac, who ruined
-himself. La Panthere was killed later by a South American lover and her
-effects sold at auction. The ruby was bought by the firm of Gaspard
-Freres, and set in a necklace which was sold to the Princess de
-Grandliev. At the fall of the Second Empire, the necklace was broken up
-and this particular stone went over to England, where it was set in a
-ring and sold to a young dandy, the Earl of Westmorley, who was killed
-steeplechasing. A woman named Clara Hauk, an adventuress, had the ring
-in her possession, and successfully defeated the efforts of the family
-to regain it. She got into bad water in the '80's and sold it to a
-South African, who carried it off to the Transvaal with him. It
-reappeared in the offices of Gaspard Freres in 1891 on the finger of a
-young Austrian woman who sold it for twenty-two thousand dollars and
-disappeared without giving her name. An Italian, the Marchese di
-Rubino, bought it for a wedding present to his daughter, who kept it
-until 1900, when she pledged it to pay the gambling debts of her
-husband. It was then brought to this country by the wife of a Western
-rancher, who sold it five years later to Sontag & Co. The last sale
-known was just two months ago."
-
-"Two months?" said Beecher, craning forward.
-
-"The price, as I said, was thirty-two thousand, and the purchaser was a
-certain gentleman very much before the public now--John G. Slade."
-
-This announcement was so entirely unexpected that it left the two young
-men staring at each other, absolutely incapable of speech.
-
-"But then," said Gunther, the first to recover, "the ring was given her
-by Slade!"
-
-"At a cost of thirty-two thousand," said the detective in a quick,
-businesslike tone.
-
-"You are sure?"
-
-"As positive as any one can be. There are only three other rings--"
-
-"That's why she wanted to keep it quiet!" exclaimed Beecher, rousing
-himself from his stupor. The whole machination of Mrs. Kildair became
-comprehensible to him on the instant. "Now I see!"
-
-"Precisely," said McKenna. "Of course there is a chance that Slade did
-not give her the ring; that I'll know tomorrow."
-
-"How?"
-
-"Make an inquiry--for a supposed purchaser, of course; find out if the
-ring is still at Slade's."
-
-"It's useless," said Beecher firmly. "I know that McKenna's right.
-This explains everything," he continued, turning to the detective.
-"That's why she acted so strangely "--he checked himself. "I saw Mrs.
-Kildair--took lunch with her--to-day--"
-
-"Did you find out whom she employed?" said McKenna quietly.
-
-Beecher opened his lips to answer in the affirmative, and stopped
-abruptly. For the first time, he realized that Mrs. Kildair had taken
-back the address. He rose nervously, frowning at the stupidity he would
-be forced to disclose.
-
-"By Jove, I am an ass!" he said, dropping his glance; and he related the
-scene in which Mrs. Kildair had first given him the address and then
-taken it away.
-
-"It's not important, Mr. Beecher," said the detective pensively, his
-mind working behind the recital. "She didn't give you the right
-address."
-
-"How do you know?" said Beecher, turning.
-
-"Because she recovered the paper as soon as she found out you were
-employing me," he answered; but his mind was still out of the room. He
-took out a pencil and began tapping his memorandum with quick, nervous
-jots. "Her mind worked pretty quick," he said.
-
-"Why do you want to know her detectives?" asked Gunther.
-
-"You see, the case is complicated," said McKenna, rousing himself. "I
-won't go into her relations with Slade just now, but it's quite evident
-to any one they were such that Mrs. Kildair prefers to lose the ring
-rather than to have it discovered how it came to her. See?"
-
-"I see," said Gunther.
-
-Beecher, silent, was turning over in his mind all the incidents of
-Slade's and Mrs. Kildair's conduct, striving to reach some explanation
-but the natural one that forced itself on him.
-
-"That's why," continued McKenna, "I'd like to know, first, if the
-detectives are straight--can be depended upon; second, if they were told
-to make a search; and, third, if they were told not to find the ring."
-
-"But why not?"
-
-"Because, Mr. Gunther, whoever took that ring the second time didn't
-take it on impulse or without a plan; whoever took it probably--I don't
-say certainly--knew enough of its history to know that Slade gave it to
-Mrs. Kildair, and reckoned on the fact that she would not dare to make
-it public. See?"
-
-The corners of his eyes contracted suddenly, as though through the
-movement of propelling forward the quick, decisive glance.
-
-"Then you think," said Beecher slowly, "that she is--"
-
-"Look here, Mr. Beecher," said the detective quickly, "there is one
-thing no human being can ever say offhand; what says the Bible--the way
-of a man with a maid--well, make that woman in general. You don't know,
-and I don't know, what the situation is right there, and we may never
-know. All the same, we're now started on solid ground; it may lead to
-something, and it may not, but what I want to know before we get much
-further is who and how many there that night knew or guessed Slade gave
-her the ring."
-
-"Of course," said Gunther. "But how--"
-
-"By patience and by running down every alley till we find it is an
-alley," said McKenna. "That's one thing to keep in mind, and let's put
-it this way. Was there any one there that night who had to have money
-quick, and who knew that the fact of Slade's giving the ring would tie
-Mrs. Kildair's hands? Now, if that condition existed, we're on a strong
-motive."
-
-"You don't consider that the only lead," said Beecher, convinced as he
-was of the probability of Mr. Majendie's participation.
-
-"Lord, no. Here's one other point to work on, Mr. Beecher. What's the
-situation today between Slade and Mrs. Kildair? Has there been any
-quarrel--say within the last ten days?"
-
-"I don't think so; and yet--" Beecher stopped, remembering Mrs.
-Kildair's curious request for him to outstay the promoter. "What if
-there was?"
-
-"Slade's a remarkable character," said McKenna, smiling. "Just how
-remarkable a few people will learn shortly. If he had quarreled or
-she's been trying to trick him--just like him to take the ring the
-second time."
-
-"By George!" said Gunther. "Why not?"
-
-"That's only something to be kept in the background," said McKenna,
-rising.
-
-He turned to Beecher, considering him profoundly.
-
-"Sorry you told Mrs. Kildair I was on the case," he said.
-
-Beecher blushed at the memory of the way in which he had been brought to
-disclose the information, and the confusion all at once revealed to the
-detective the probable means she had taken.
-
-At this moment the door opened and a voice called him.
-
-"Telephone, sir--personal."
-
-When the detective had left, Beecher and Gunther looked at each other in
-amazement in which a curious doubt was beginning to form.
-
-"Why the deuce should Slade give her the ring, Ted?" said Gunther
-abruptly.
-
-"I don't know," Beecher answered, perplexed. "I know what you
-think--that's natural; but I don't believe it. She's deeper than
-that--that is, I think so."
-
-But he ended perplexed, contracting his eyebrows, nervously jerking at a
-button on his coat.
-
-McKenna reentered, and on his face was a smile of anticipation and
-mischief.
-
-"Some one called me up just then," he said shortly; "some one I've been
-expecting to call me up. Guess who?"
-
-"Slade," said Gunther, startled.
-
-"Mrs. Kildair," said Beecher.
-
-"Mrs. Kildair is right," said McKenna. "I'm going up to see her
-tonight." And he added meditatively, "It ought to be quite an
-interesting little chat."
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER XIV*
-
-
-At eight o'clock promptly McKenna presented himself at the door of Mrs.
-Kildair's apartment. Kiki, with his velvet glide, ushered him into the
-studio. The electric chandeliers were dull; only the great standing
-lamp was lit, throwing a foggy luster about the room, massing enormous
-dark silhouettes and spaces in the corners.
-
-"Is it a precaution?" he thought grimly, considering this serviceable
-obscurity.
-
-He felt a sudden heightened sense of curiosity and defiance, a feeling
-that had been growing within him ever since the discovery of Slade's
-connection with the ring, and the brief, disjointed details of Beecher's
-interview. Every profession develops, back of its elaborate technique,
-a sudden quality of instinct which exists as the almost mechanical and
-unguided operation of the disciplined mind. McKenna had no sooner
-entered the room than he perceived the woman with a quick defensive "on
-guard" of all his faculties.
-
-He stopped in the center of the room, like a pointer flushing his game,
-and in the second's rapid inhalation he completely changed his scheme of
-attack. He felt at once that he had to do not alone with--what he
-expected--a woman of unusual physical attraction, clever, with the
-defensive intuition of one who has evaded the scrutiny of society; but
-with a woman of mental grasp and decision. He felt it everywhere: in
-the remarkable adjustment of the square room which broke it up into half
-a dozen separate groups, distinctive and sure as though so many separate
-selves; in the harmony of color and proportion, which he felt without
-analysis; in the seduction of the Recamier couch with its eastern
-drapery of blue and gold; in the friendly comfort of the grouped chairs
-by the baronial fireplace; in the correct intimacy of the reading-table
-at one end and the formality of the grouped chairs by the piano. All
-these notes were to him notes of the hand that had arranged them, as he
-felt in the struggling muscles of the bared marble torsos, wrestling on
-the mantel, and the lithe, virile body of the discus-thrower on the
-table, the virility and aggressiveness of the woman. This perception
-awoke his defiance as though one personality had been substituted for
-another.
-
-"What does she want with me?" he thought. "Is she daring enough to tell
-me all, or is she worried at what I may know?"
-
-While he was still in the midst of his reflections, Mrs. Kildair
-entered. She was in street costume: a tailor-made dress of dark blue,
-edged with black braid, the stiffness and sobriety relieved by a full
-fichu at her throat. The red flight of a feather crossed the
-Gainsborough hat.
-
-"How do you do?" she said, nodding to him, a crisp, businesslike
-abruptness in her voice. "A little more light would be better. Thanks.
-The button is by the door."
-
-Prepared as he had been to be surprised, he had not expected this
-businesslike manifestation. He went to the wall, following her
-directions, and threw on the lights.
-
-"Only the side lights," she said. "That's it. Shall we sit here?"
-
-She took her position by the reading-table in a great high-backed
-upholstered arm-chair. Obeying her gesture, he drew up his chair to a
-position opposite. In the varied experiences of thirty years, he had
-come into contact with women of all walks of life. Without the
-psychological analysis of subtleties of the lawyer and the novelist, he
-had an unerring instinct for the crux of character. "Is she good or is
-she bad?" was the question that, in ninety cases out of a hundred, he
-put to himself at the turning-point of his campaigns. For the first
-time, despite his previous prejudice, he was in doubt for an answer, but
-he recognized in her at once the stamp of that superior brood which
-raises some men to fame and fortune where others by one trait of
-conscience or weakness end in a disgraceful failure.
-
-"I have wanted to meet you for a long time, Mr. McKenna," she said
-directly, but without the accompanying smile of feminine flattery. "Mr.
-Slade has told me much about you."
-
-"Slade?" he said, with a quick simulation of surprise, while admiring
-the abruptness, amazing in a woman, with which she had launched her
-attack.
-
-"You realize, of course, Mr. McKenna," she continued quietly, without
-giving him time to deny her first implication, "that Mr. Beecher, in
-engaging you, has, quite without his knowledge, brought on a situation
-that is very embarrassing to me."
-
-"Good!" thought the detective. "She has made up her mind to tell the
-whole story." Aloud he said, without change of expression: "In what
-way, Mrs. Kildair?"
-
-"A situation exists which makes it extremely difficult for me to recover
-my ring without disclosing to the public matters in my own private life
-that at present are liable to great misconstruction."
-
-She spoke professionally, without variation in her voice, as a doctor
-speaking with dispassionate directness. McKenna did not answer,
-resolving by his silence to force her to talk.
-
-"A week," she continued without pause, though her eyes remained without
-wavering on his, "--ten days at the most--may completely change this
-position. I won't conceal from you that I am extremely sorry that you
-have been brought into the case." McKenna could not control an
-expression of surprise. "But, now that you are in it, I shall be forced
-to give you a confidence against my inclination."
-
-"But--" began the detective.
-
-"One moment," she said, interrupting him. "Before I give you this
-confidence I wish to ask one question."
-
-"Mrs. Kildair, I must remind you," said McKenna warily, "that I am
-engaged in the interests of Mr. Beecher, and can do nothing without his
-permission."
-
-"Are you representing any one besides Mr. Beecher?" she said, ignoring
-his objection.
-
-"What do you mean?" he said carefully, to gain time.
-
-"Are you, in this particular case, representing Mr. Slade?" she said
-directly.
-
-"I have never said that I was employed by him, Mrs. Kildair," he said
-slowly, comprehending now the full purpose of her opening question.
-
-"Mr. Slade has told me himself of your work in connection with the Gray
-Fox Mines, the Farmers' and Travelers' Bank, and the more personal
-affair of your recovery of his letters from a Miss Minna Weston. You
-see, I am informed."
-
-"I have worked for Mr. Slade," said McKenna.
-
-"And are you doing so now?" she asked sharply.
-
-"I never refer to my clients, Mrs. Kildair," he said stiffly.
-
-"I desire to put this matter entirely in your hands--without reserve,"
-she said quickly. "All I ask from you is a promise that,
-notwithstanding your relations with him past or present, nothing I say
-to you shall be repeated to Mr. Slade, or to any one else."
-
-"Mrs. Kildair," said McKenna, every faculty joyfully grateful for the
-contest of wits he felt impending, "I must remind you that my employer
-is Mr. Beecher, and that I can promise nothing that will keep him from
-doing anything he desires.
-
-"Mr. Beecher is acting for me," she said calmly. "Very well; your
-position is correct. I will put it this way. Subject to Mr. Beecher's
-approval, will you give me your word that you will repeat nothing of
-what I may tell you?"
-
-"If Mr. Beecher is willing, I am," said McKenna obstinately. "That's my
-word."
-
-"Now I can speak to you freely," said Mrs. Kildair.
-
-"I have not promised yet," broke in McKenna.
-
-"I will take the risk," she said, brushing aside the obstacle with an
-impatient gesture.
-
-"I remain entirely free to communicate anything to Mr. Beecher,"
-interposed the detective instantly.
-
-"You do not understand," she said, without irritation. "Mr. Beecher, in
-retaining you, did so to assist me, and only after he had secured my
-permission. Now I desire, in order to arrive at quicker results and to
-be free to give you my full confidence, to transfer that authority
-direct to me. In other words, Mr. McKenna, I wish to retain you myself
-and for myself only."
-
-"That, Mrs. Kildair, depends entirely on Mr. Beecher," repeated the
-detective.
-
-"But if he acquiesces, will you act in my interests only?"
-
-McKenna was about to interpose another evasion, when he reflected that
-he would have time to acquaint Beecher with what had happened and to
-advise him either to accept or to refuse.
-
-"Very well," he replied cautiously, feeling instinctively that some trap
-was being prepared without yet perceiving what it could be. "I will
-leave it that way."
-
-"Good," she said, with a little nod of her head. "Now, what have you
-done?"
-
-"I can not answer that, Mrs. Kildair," he said, smiling; "not under my
-present arrangement."
-
-"You have, of course, discovered that the ring belongs to Mr. Slade?"
-
-Quite unconsciously, she had adopted his own tactics, the tactics of the
-inquisitor, who hurls the vital question at the suspect, and then seeks
-the answer in the almost imperceptible response in the eyes.
-
-"Yes, I know that," said McKenna, who felt that the surprise he had
-experienced at having the tables thus turned on him had revealed the
-truth to the questioner. "That is, I know the ring did belong to Mr.
-Slade."
-
-"Have you informed Mr. Beecher of the fact?"
-
-"It has just come to my knowledge," said McKenna; "I shall, naturally,
-inform him."
-
-Mrs. Kildair looked at him a moment with an appearance of reflection.
-
-"The question was quite unnecessary," she said. "Of course, you have
-told him, and you have every right to deny it." Then she continued with
-more decision: "This is exactly my danger--you see, I won't mince words.
-It is a situation which constantly occurs, and which is inexplicable
-except by one construction in the eyes of society. Now--"
-
-"I warn you," again objected the detective.
-
-"I do not propose to explain my relations with Mr. Slade," continued
-Mrs. Kildair coldly. "They are such that a great deal depends on the
-events of the next few days. At present it is enough that I can not
-explain my possession of the ring in any way that can satisfy
-publicity."
-
-"Mr. Slade did not give you the ring?" said McKenna, in slow
-progression.
-
-She carefully considered the question.
-
-"Mr. Slade sent me the ring with an offer of marriage," said Mrs.
-Kildair evenly, with an appearance of great frankness. "The ring
-arrived on the night of the party, and I committed the imprudence of
-wearing it. If its source now becomes known, I must appear before the
-world either as Mr. Slade's mistress or as his fiancee; and at present I
-have not made up my mind whether I shall marry him."
-
-The directness of this avowal left McKenna immersed in thought. He
-looked at her, unaware of the fixity of his stare; and, inclined as
-always to skepticism, he asked himself if back of all the outer gilt of
-this proud, determined woman, there were not a stalking shadow of
-insistent poverty, whether the game she was playing with Slade were not
-a greater drama than that in which he was engaged; whether, in fact, it
-lay not on a turn of the balance whether the world should know her as
-the wife or that very alternative which she had dreaded in the exposure
-of the ownership of the ring?
-
-"What does she really want of Slade?" he said to himself, staring so
-profoundly beyond the set gaze of the woman that, for the first time,
-she moved with a little annoyance.
-
-"Mr. McKenna!" she said sharply.
-
-"I beg your pardon," he said, stiffening abruptly.
-
-"You perceive now the delicacy of my position," she said; "and why I
-desire to have you completely in my interests."
-
-"I do," he answered, but still clinging to the saving rope of defiance.
-"I only regret that you told me this before Mr. Beecher's--"
-
-"Now ask me any questions you wish," she said, interrupting him
-impatiently.
-
-"I don't feel at liberty to do so, Mrs. Kildair," he said warily,
-convinced that her whole motive was to find out the extent of his
-knowledge. "I prefer to know first where I stand."
-
-"Very well," she said. "Let us talk of other things, then." Her manner
-changed to one of a lighter, inconsequential curiosity. "There is one
-point in the frightful happenings of the day I should like to know."
-
-"What, madam?" said McKenna, whose instinct warned him to adopt a tone
-of artless attention.
-
-"Majendie was followed by detectives, was he not?"
-
-"That is the report."
-
-"And he was on the point of leaving when he perceived that he would be
-followed?"
-
-"That is what I have been told."
-
-"And, believing that he was about to be arrested, he returned to the
-house and shot himself."
-
-"That's the story."
-
-"As a matter of fact, wasn't he mistaken?"
-
-"In what way?" said McKenna, steeling himself under an appearance of
-surprise.
-
-"Were not the detectives your own men--placed by you at Mr. Slade's
-orders to acquaint him with every move of Mr. Majendie?" persisted Mrs.
-Kildair.
-
-"That would make a good Sunday thriller," said McKenna, laughing
-boisterously.
-
-"That is my guess," she said, drawing back as though satisfied. "I am
-certain that Majendie committed suicide through the blunder of believing
-he was threatened with arrest."
-
-"My dear Mrs. Kildair," said the detective, rising, "I see that what you
-want to know is, am I for or against Mr. Slade. If I'm not in his
-employ you think I'm retained by his enemies. Well, I don't intend to
-give you any information."
-
-She made no answer, but, rising in turn, glanced at the clock.
-
-"Since you are here," she said carelessly, "you may as well look over
-the ground." And, without waiting, she went to the door. "This is my
-bedroom. The ring was placed here."
-
-He had hardly made his quick professional scrutiny when there came a
-ring at the door, and at a sign from Mrs. Kildair they returned to the
-studio.
-
-"What now?" thought McKenna, who remembered her glance at the clock.
-"Slade or who?"
-
-To his surprise, it was Beecher who entered. Mrs. Kildair went directly
-to him, a smile of confidence and welcome on her face, holding out an
-eager hand, and by the elation of her movements, the detective
-comprehended how she had played him.
-
-"Teddy," she said directly, "I have a favor to ask you, and I trust you
-so completely that I know I need not explain it further. Mr. McKenna
-and I have had a very complete understanding. I wish him to represent
-me entirely. I do not mean that you should not continue to work on the
-case," she added quickly, as she felt instinctively the gesture of
-warning McKenna made behind her back. "All I wish you to tell him is
-that anything I may have told him or will tell him shall be considered
-confidential until the time I am able to tell you myself. I must throw
-myself on your chivalry and protection as the fine gentleman I have seen
-you to be," she added, looking at him with a moistening of the eyes in
-which there was respect and a more tender emotion.
-
-McKenna, though perceiving how completely she had prepared the isolation
-of the confidence he had just heard, did not again signal his objection,
-perhaps divining the futility of opposing such an appeal.
-
-Beecher bowed in assent.
-
-"Certainly, Rita," he said, with a pride that brought a smile of
-amusement to McKenna's lips. "I wish McKenna to do everything he can for
-you and in exactly the way you wish."
-
-"Thank you," she said, with a little pressure of his hand. Then
-turning, she added: "This I will say to you both. I have my reasons for
-believing that the ring will be returned within ten days; if it isn't
-then I shall have more to disclose."
-
-"Returned?" said Beecher, struck by the similarity of her prophecy and
-that of Nan Charters.
-
-"Exactly. Until then, I believe all that is necessary is to wait for
-developments." She turned toward the detective, who waited like a
-statue. "Mr. McKenna, I know you are a busy man. I won't keep you. Mr.
-Beecher has come to assist me on a very painful errand, one on which I
-would trust no other man that I know in New York." She held out her
-hand. "I do not often make mistakes in men, or I should not have told
-you what I did. Good-night; I shall call you soon."
-
-McKenna bowed, experiencing, despite his resentment at her mastery of
-the evening, a feeling of respect and deference.
-
-"Beecher is a kitten in her hands," he said to himself as he entered the
-street. "She played me as she wanted to. One thing's certain. She
-wants to employ me to keep me from doing anything. Evidently her own
-game is more important than the ring--or is there blackmail mixed up in
-this? I have it! Mrs. Kildair knows the thief, but is afraid to act
-until--until certain things straighten out between her and Mr. John G.
-Slade."
-
-
-"And now, Teddy," said Mrs. Kildair, as soon as the door had closed
-behind the detective, "you know what I want of you. I have arranged
-everything. My carriage is waiting."
-
-Half an hour later, Mrs. Bloodgood joined them, heavily veiled. They
-drove to the house next to that of Majendie, and, at a word from Mrs.
-Kildair, Beecher remained below on guard in the flickering obscurity of
-the street. The two women went hurriedly up the steps of Majendie's
-home, where the door was opened for them by some one who had been
-awaiting their arrival.
-
-For a full half-hour Beecher, prey to a profound melancholy, continued
-his aimless, mechanical pacing, his head raised, glancing past the
-jagged black silhouettes of the house-tops at the reddened clouds of the
-unreal night, which brought him not a clear vision of immense and
-purifying spaces but the heavy reflection of the illuminated, surging
-streets.
-
-"What will my life be?" he thought, conjuring up the future. "Calm and
-commonplace? Or shall I ever be linked to some such tragedy--torn to
-pieces, all in a day--wrecked!"
-
-The door opened and two shadows passed down the steps. He returned
-hastily, saw them into the carriage, and stood with uncovered head, a
-lump in his throat, as they drove on. Then he went directly to his
-rooms, and, exhausted by the emotions of the day, fell heavily into a
-sleep that was almost a stupor.
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER XV*
-
-
-The next morning he was awakened by Gunther's abrupt hand.
-
-"Up, up, you sluggard!"
-
-He jumped out hastily and found it was almost half-past eight.
-
-"Nice time to sleep," said Gunther sarcastically. "Have you forgotten a
-little visit we're to make to that sweet person, Mr. Garraboy? You've
-got just twenty-two minutes to beautify yourself and fill the inner
-being."
-
-"If we're to see your charming friend, Mr. Garraboy," said Gunther half
-an hour later, as they were speeding for the congested, stirring, lower
-city, "we've got to nip our man before the opening of the Stock
-Exchange. Now let's hear what happened at Mrs. Kildair's last night."
-
-The events in which Mrs. Bloodgood was concerned were sealed in
-confidence; but Beecher felt at liberty to recount to his friend the
-bare details of McKenna's visit as he had known them.
-
-"What the deuce is behind it all?" said Gunther, puzzled. "I got
-McKenna on the wire and that's all he would tell me. What's the reason
-she wants to bottle up everything? What's her mix-up with Slade?
-Depend upon it, Ted, that woman knows more than we do--or why should she
-expect the ring to be returned? She's got a reason for that."
-
-"If it's returned," said Beecher, "it's Mrs. Bloodgood who took it."
-
-"Never! No woman ever got that ring out of the apartment--not alone;
-not a Mrs. Bloodgood, or a Nan Charters, or a Mrs. Cheever, or--"
-Suddenly he reflected. "Ted, there's one person I'd like to meet."
-
-"Miss Lille?"
-
-"Yes. Supposing we look her up a little more."
-
-"I've thought quite a lot about her," said Beecher musingly; and,
-remembering all at once her self-possession on the night of the theft,
-he added: "There's nothing weak about her certainly; still, I can't see
-the motive."
-
-They had left behind them the free, unbounded sky, boring their way
-through the towering sides of the sky-scraping district, where buildings
-rose in regular, comb-like structures, with their thousands of human
-cells tenanted by human bees. Entering a street where the obstructed
-sun never shone, they were swept on by the feverish rush of
-fellow-beings and shot up sixteen stories to their destination. The
-office-boy in the antechamber took their cards with the condescension
-which only an office-boy between the ages of twelve and sixteen can
-feel, and disappeared within.
-
-"The old screw'll keep us waiting half an hour, said Gunther, who
-disliked all delays.
-
-"Bet he's trying to figure out what we're here for?" said Beecher, who
-admitted to himself a delicious satisfaction at the prospective
-humiliation of the man he cordially disliked.
-
-The next moment Garraboy himself appeared at the rail, dapper, dried up,
-and severe.
-
-"How do you do?" he said sharply, but without inviting them in. "What
-can I do for you? It's a very busy day for me."
-
-"I assure you I don't intend to take any more time than I am compelled
-to," said Beecher stiffly, with an accent that gave another meaning to
-the phrase. He plunged his hand into his pocket. "I have an order for
-you."
-
-"Oh, yes, I remember now," said Garraboy, with a malicious drawing up of
-his lips. "You can save yourself the trouble."
-
-"What do you mean?" asked Beecher, greatly surprised.
-
-"You have an order on me to deliver certain stocks I hold for Miss
-Charters?"
-
-"I have."
-
-"Well, Miss Charters has changed her mind," said Garraboy, letting his
-glance rest on Beecher with the vacant, impudent stare of which he was
-master.
-
-"You have seen Miss Charters?" said Beecher, growing very angry.
-
-"I have; and when I explained to her that she had been unduly excited by
-some one who evidently is not aware that there are laws in civilized
-countries adequate to deal with those who attack the reputations or
-interests--"
-
-"Sir!" exclaimed Beecher, moving so quickly toward the rail that
-Garraboy hastily retreated.
-
-"When Miss Charters learned that, and likewise that she had parted with
-stocks worth considerably over twenty thousand dollars, she changed her
-mind very quickly."
-
-"Mr. Garraboy," said Gunther abruptly, "all this is not to the point.
-We have a formal order on you for certain stocks. Ted, present it."
-
-"True, I forgot," said Garraboy, and produced from his coat a letter,
-which he looked over with nonchalant delay and finally handed to
-Beecher. "I presume you are acting from altruistic motives and are not
-standing on technicalities. Here is a little note which Miss Charters
-requested me to give you."
-
-"That has nothing to do with it," said Gunther at once, for the
-personality of the broker aroused the pugnacious side of him. "Your
-transaction has been closed. Get your stocks."
-
-Beecher, frowning, unable to conceal the vexation that this unexpected
-check brought him, opened the letter. The address by its formality
-completed his irritation:
-
-
-DEAR MR. BEECHER:
-
-Mr. Garraboy has called and explained everything satisfactorily. I am
-afraid I was needlessly alarmed last night and did him an injustice. As
-he has shown me how advantageous it will be for me to transfer my
-holdings to other stocks, now far below their market value, I have
-decided not to lose the opportunity. Thank you just the same for your
-interest in this matter. I shall be in at five this afternoon and will
-explain to you more fully.
-
-Cordially yours,
- NAN CHARTERS.
-
-
-The two watched him read to the end, fold the letter carefully, and put
-it in his pocket.
-
-"Well?" said Garraboy.
-
-"Insist on the delivery, Ted," said Gunther militantly. "If Miss
-Charters wants to return them again, that's her affair. The stocks are
-yours."
-
-He looked at his friend with a glance of warning which sought to convey
-to him the distrust he could not openly phrase.
-
-"If Mr. Beecher wishes to stand on technicalities," said Garraboy, in
-his even, oily voice, "he can do so. He can make a very nice profit.
-Which is it? I repeat, I can not give you much time."
-
-"Miss Charters' letter is sufficient," said Beecher suddenly.
-"Good-day."
-
-The feeling of mortification and chagrin which her action had brought on
-him dominated all other feelings. He went out in a rage, tearing the
-letter into minute fragments. Without a word they reached the street
-and entered the automobile.
-
-"Last time I ever try to help a woman!" he said, between his teeth.
-
-"What the deuce did you play into his game for?" said Gunther. "He's
-bamboozled her. I believe the fellow is an out-and-out crook--he's got
-a rotten bad eye. Why the deuce didn't you get the stocks?"
-
-"She can take her own risks," said Beecher furiously. "It's her own
-affair if she's going to blow hot and cold. By Jove, Bruce, I never met
-any one who could make me so mad clear through and through."
-
-He stopped, biting his lips, and Gunther with a shy glance stored away
-for future comment the impression he received.
-
-"What's the use of taking them seriously?" he said, with a shrug of the
-shoulders. "Amuse yourself, but don't let them absorb you. Suppose we
-take a turn at the Curb and see what's doing."
-
-With the opening of the market, all the giant sides of Wall Street
-seemed suddenly animated with the fury of a disturbed ant-hill. Every
-one was rushing in and out, carrying with them the pollution of disaster
-and alarm. Eddie Fontaine and Steve Plunkett hurried past them with
-quick nods. At the curb market the brokers were shrieking and flinging
-their frantic signals in the air. They entered the Stock Exchange,
-nodding to the doorkeeper, who knew Gunther, and reached the balcony,
-their ears suddenly smitten with the confused uproar from below. They
-stood there a few minutes, marveling at that Inferno of speculation and
-embattled greed flung before them in all the nakedness of man's terror;
-and then left, oppressed by the too frank exhibition of their mortal
-counterparts.
-
-"What's doing?" asked Gunther as they returned.
-
-The doorkeeper, with a shrug of his shoulders, flung down his thumb--the
-gesture of the Roman circus.
-
-"You like that?" said Beecher, when once more they were in the
-automobile and the din and oppression of cell-like monstrosities had
-receded.
-
-"I do," Gunther replied, locking and unlocking his broad hands.
-
-"Horrible!"
-
-"That's only one side of it--speculation," said Gunther warmly; "but
-even that is impressive. Look beyond those little mobs we saw, get the
-feeling of the whole country, the vast nation, rising in anger--flinging
-over hundreds of thousands of holdings--sweeping down the little
-gamblers with the tremendous waves of its alarm. Beyond that the whole
-vibrating industry of the nation is here, within a quarter of a
-mile--the great projects of development, the wars of millions, the
-future of immense territories to the West and the South. There's a big
-side to it--a real side--that gets me. I've a mind to walk down now and
-face the old governor and tell him I'm ready."
-
-"Why don't you?" said Beecher. He himself had felt the restlessness of
-indecision and enforced idleness. He gave a laugh. "You know, Bruce,
-I'm beginning to feel the same way. Either I've got to get into the
-current somewhere, or I'm going to pack off for Africa some fine day."
-
-"By the way, Tilton's up at the club. He's here for a few days, getting
-ready for a lion hunt or something."
-
-"Tilton?" exclaimed Beecher joyfully. "By Jove, I must get hold of him.
-I'd go in a minute!"
-
-He believed what he said. The whirl of emotions into which he had
-lately been plunged--revealing to him as it had all the mercenary,
-clutching side of the city--had left him disturbed, rebellious, longing
-to be away from the mass of men in general, and of women in particular,
-the brilliant, keen, and calculating women of the city with whom he had
-been thrown. Impatient and disillusionized, without realizing the true
-cause, he repeated:
-
-"By Jove, I'd go in a minute!"
-
-In the afternoon he went to call on Miss Charters. After having declared
-twenty times that he would not go near her, he suddenly remembered, at
-the end of a wearied discussion between his conscience and his
-inclination, that his check for twenty thousand dollars was to be
-reclaimed and, at once seizing such a satisfactory reason, he abandoned
-the attitude of embattled dignity which he had logically built up.
-
-"That's true; I must get the check," he said, and he set out.
-
-But as he neared his destination and began to rehearse all the grave
-causes for offense that he held against her, he was surprised at the
-slender stock of ammunition he held.
-
-"Why, it was perfectly natural," he thought, struck by the idea--having
-considered her reasons for the first time. "If Garraboy called and
-explained everything to her satisfaction, why shouldn't she change her
-mind? Besides, there is nothing against Garraboy--nothing definite.
-After all, I may have been unjust to him."
-
-Very sheepish, he felt his irritation slipping away as he yielded to the
-eager desire of once more entering her presence.
-
-"What the deuce was I so wild about?" he asked himself, amazed, as he
-entered the elevator.
-
-But all at once he remembered that she had allowed him to receive the
-news at the hands of a person intensely disagreeable to him.
-
-"Why didn't she telephone me? That's the whole point."
-
-And, all his irritation restored by this one outstanding fact, he
-entered the apartment with the dignity of a justly offended person.
-
-She was seated by the fire in an easy-chair, and she did not rise as he
-entered. She was bending eagerly forward, an open manuscript in her
-hand, and, without turning, she made a little sign to him to be seated
-until she should have finished.
-
-"Wonderful!" she cried at last, dropping the play in her lap. "It is
-wonderful!" she repeated, her whole body vibrating with the enthusiasm
-of her mood. "Wonderful--astonishing--what a scene!" And, tapping the
-manuscript with a gesture of decision, she exclaimed: "I will play that
-part--it will be an enormous sensation!"
-
-Her mind still obsessed by the thought of the newly discovered
-masterpiece, she turned toward Beecher, who was seated like a ramrod on
-the edge of his chair.
-
-"A marvelous play! Really, that Mr. Hargrave is a coming man."
-Forgetting her previous estimate, she rushed on: "Isn't it strange--I
-always knew he would do it, from the very first! What is extraordinary
-is the subtlety of it--how he twines two or three emotions together in
-the same scene. What a glorious chance for an actress! I must telephone
-the office."
-
-As she rose, a slip of paper which she had been using as a marker
-fluttered to the floor. She picked it up, recognized it, and handed it
-to him.
-
-"Oh, yes, here's your check!" she said. "I put it there so as not to
-forget it. Thanks very much. I'll explain in a minute. I must
-telephone Stigler; I'm all excited!"
-
-Beecher, more annoyed by this revelation of her professional life than
-by the rub to his vanity, took the check and pocketed it--not having
-pronounced a word since his arrival.
-
-She considered him carefully from the corner of her eye as she took up
-the telephone; but her personal emotion was too buoyant for trivial
-interruptions.
-
-Stigler, her manager, was out, and she put down the receiver with a jar
-of impatience. She looked at Beecher again, and, perceiving that there
-was an explanation due, sought at once to shift the responsibility.
-
-"Do you know, really, you were ridiculously alarmed last night," she
-said, a spirit of opposition in her voice. "I don't know what made you
-so panicky."
-
-"Of course," he said sarcastically, "I realize now that I should never
-have stirred you up, when everything was so calm. It's strange that I
-did not explain to you the natural reasons for Mr. Garraboy's not
-calling you up--but then, I usually lose my head at such times."
-
-"You are angry!" she said.
-
-"What a strange idea! On the contrary, it was a charming experience to
-enter Mr. Garraboy's office and be so delightfully reassured that
-everything was so prosperous with him."
-
-She did not like irony, or know how to combat it, so she frowned and
-said:
-
-"I telephoned you."
-
-"Why should you do that? You might have deprived me of the pleasure of
-meeting your charming friend, Mr. Garraboy."
-
-"I telephoned. You were not in."
-
-"When?"
-
-"Last night. Four times."
-
-He was mollified by this, but tried not to show it.
-
-"And this morning?"
-
-"But I never get up before ten," she cried, aghast.
-
-"Your explanations are crushingly convincing," he said, with a bow and a
-smile.
-
-She watched him with an uneasy look, totally unconscious of any sense of
-obligation, accustomed as she was to have her requests for service
-regarded as favors. The reaction from their last interview had left her
-in a coldly antagonistic state, determined to pluck in the bud this
-progress toward intimacy which had so threatened her scheme of life.
-Now, seeing him collected and ironical, she was instinctively alarmed at
-the distance which he, not she, had placed between them.
-
-"My dear Teddy," she began, in a more confidential tone.
-
-"Teddy?" he said, smiling.
-
-He was perfectly good-natured, and as she felt that he was not
-irritated, but amusing himself at her tricks which he had divined, she
-was uneasy under this ironical examination. She felt that he had
-escaped her; and, disturbed by this thought, she looked at him, seeing
-all at once his quality. As he had made not the slightest reference to
-the very apparent obligation which he had been willing to undergo for
-her, she felt his social superiority and his reticence of good breeding.
-Besides, other women--brilliant women--had been attracted by him: Mrs.
-Craig Fontaine, Mrs. Kildair, and, above all, Emma Fornez. But another
-mood had possession of her, the mood of the artist transformed by the
-joy of personal sensation. She wished to keep him, but at the moment
-she was irritated that such a little thing should come to interfere with
-the joy of the imagined future triumph.
-
-"Don't be horrid, Teddy," she said impatiently, and, wishing to appease
-him quickly, that she might talk to him of the play, she continued: "The
-fact is, Mr. Garraboy has done everything he could for me. He sold my
-stocks a week ago, foreseeing this panic, and saved me several thousand
-dollars. He offered to give me his check for twenty-two thousand five
-hundred dollars, or to reinvest it for me when the time came in the
-enormous bargains that can be picked up now. What was I to do?"
-
-"You're quite right, and I made a great mistake to mislead you so," he
-answered, with great seriousness.
-
-"It wasn't your fault," she said abruptly.
-
-"Wasn't it?" he said, opening his eyes with a show of surprise.
-
-She comprehended that she would have to surrender, and, changing her
-tone to one of gentleness, she said:
-
-"It was a great thing for you to do what you did, Teddy--I shall never
-forget it."
-
-"Nonsense," he said, persisting in misunderstanding her. "I often get
-up early--that was nothing at all."
-
-"You are not at all the way you were last time," she said reproachfully,
-forgetting that that was just what she wished to avoid.
-
-But at this moment the telephone rang. Stigler, her manager, was
-calling. Immediately she forgot their misunderstanding, carried away by
-the enthusiasm of the moment. Beecher, with a clear vision, followed
-her, noticing in her voice, as she sought to cajole the manager, the
-same caressing pleading which she had employed a moment before with him.
-
-"Now I really see her," he thought, with a liberation of his spirit.
-"Emma was entirely wrong. She's not a woman--she always an actress."
-
-"I'll send you the play right away," she was saying. "Mr. Hargrave is
-coming. I'll have him take it to the hotel. But you must read it
-tonight. Promise! Oh, yes, lots of comedy--delicious! Heart interest
-and big scenes--yes, sensational. Just the part for Fannestock. I must
-have him for the part! You'll see him in every line! Now, Mr. Stigler,
-please read it tonight!"
-
-"Ah, there's Fannestock too," said Beecher grimly to himself.
-
-She rose from telephoning, joyous and excited.
-
-"Oh, if Stigler will only see it! It's a great part--a great part!
-There's a wonderful scene at the close of the third act, between the two
-women and the father, that will bring down the house."
-
-Miss Tilbury came in to announce that Mr. Hargrave was calling. An
-expression of delight lit up the features of the actress. But all at
-once she turned anxiously to Beecher, who had risen stiffly.
-
-"By Jove, I've overstayed my time," he said readily, glancing at the
-clock.
-
-She was grateful, and yet dissatisfied that he had suggested what she
-wished, and, recalling his new spirit of independence, she said
-anxiously, with a compensating smile:
-
-"Teddy, call me up in the morning--this is so important."
-
-In the hallway he stepped aside while Hargrave, a frail, oldish-young
-man, entered, with his famished, doubting glance.
-
-"Oh, it is wonderful--wonderful!" cried the actress, seizing both his
-hands. "I am still thrilled. Wonderful---wonderful!"
-
-"You liked it?" said Hargrave timidly. At her words, he saw heaven open
-before his eyes in a confused vision of frantic audiences, applauding
-critics, checks for thousands for royalty, all confused by rolling
-automobiles, magnificent bouquets and languishing feminine eyes.
-
-"Like it!" continued Nan Charters, retaining hold of one hand to draw
-him into the salon. "It is marvelous! How could you know all this so
-young!"
-
-Beecher, in the excitement, quietly made his escape. In the elevator,
-to the surprise of the wondering bell-boy, he was seized with a mad
-laughter, which continued to convulse him as he rolled into the street.
-
-"Heaven be praised!" he exclaimed. "Cured--cured, by Jove! I wouldn't
-have missed it for worlds!"
-
-On turning the corner of his club, he ran into Becker, a club
-acquaintance whom he tolerantly disliked.
-
-"Becker, old boy," he said, seizing his arm and flourishing his cane in
-the direction of the club, "what can I buy you? Come on--_en avant_!"
-
-"What the deuce has got in you?" said that correct youth.
-
-"Joy, laughter, everything! I'm happy as a Croton water-bug on a hot
-marble slab!"
-
-At the bar, he gathered every one in sight, slapping them on their
-shoulders. His comrades looked at him with envy and awe, believing that
-he had profited by a tip to make a killing in the market. Their own
-enjoyment was little enough. The market, outdoing the day before, had
-plunged like a wild steer into the maelstrom of panic. A billion
-dollars had receded, scattered, evaporated in the mad day. The disaster
-had reached the whole country; every bank was threatened. The United
-States Treasury had been implored to come to the assistance of the
-country. Gunther, Fontaine, Marx, Haggerty, were in hourly conference;
-while before the swelling hurricane of fright, every paper was imploring
-its readers to stand firm.
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER XVI*
-
-
-The next day Beecher did not consider for a moment telephoning to Nan
-Charters, despite her last request. He felt that it was a chapter
-closed in his life--one of those innumerable false paths down which one
-plunges, only the quicker to return. His own serenity did not even
-surprise him. He went off for the morning to play rackets with Bruce
-Gunther, and lunched at the club with Tilton, who urged him to join his
-hunt, an invitation which he discussed with enthusiasm.
-
-The news from the stock market was the same--ten point losses in the
-early trading. Banks all over the country had suspended payments for a
-week in order to weather the storm. The panic had ceased to be one of
-speculative concern only. Every one was anxiously asking if a permanent
-blow had not been dealt to the industries of the country. Many freely
-prophesied that, if the downward rush were not checked within three
-days, it would take the country ten years to restore its shattered
-prosperity. There was a rumor that the big men of the Street had made up
-a fund, reaching to many millions, which would be brought on the morrow
-to the support of the market. The run on the Associated Trust still
-continued, checked though it was by delay and technicalities. Yet the
-fall of Slade was hourly predicted.
-
-Beecher lingered after luncheon, played a hundred points at billiards
-and won, an hour's bridge and won again. Then he went off in high
-spirits to call on Emma Fornez, an appointment arranged over the
-telephone.
-
-"So, you bad boy, you and your little Charters have quarreled," said the
-prima donna, greeting him with an accusing smile, though in her voice
-was the pitch of the nervous excitement which her coming debut that
-night had communicated.
-
-"Not in the least," he said, a little surprised at the insinuation.
-
-"Ta-ta-ta! Enough of your stuff and nonsense," she said, with a shrug
-of her shoulders. "You are too big a simpleton--a little woman like
-that will always get the best of you."
-
-"But there is no quarrel, and I am not in the least interested."
-
-"Oh, _avec ca_--keep away--better keep away! You will burn your fingers.
-Just the kind of a little doll that is dangerous. Women like that are
-like half colors between one thing and the other--very dangerous! A
-young girl--_jeune fille_--would bore you now, and an old campaigner
-like Emma Fornez would amuse you; but a little thing like that is too
-puzzling for you. I see just how it is," she continued, placing her
-hands on her hips and bobbing her head energetically, while Beecher,
-very much pleased to be so lectured, listened with a mocking look.
-"Yes, yes, I know very well! She gets you--how do you say?--going and
-coming. When she is an actress you say she is different from the
-rest--what a child! And when she is playing the child, you say what a
-difference--she is such an artist! You laugh--see!"
-
-Beecher broke out laughing at this characterization which came so near
-the truth.
-
-"What I have said is very good--very good," repeated Emma Fornez,
-pleased. "It's all studied, very carefully studied out, but it takes
-with young simpletons, big geese, good-looking boys--don't I know?
-_Est-ce-que j'en ai joue de ces tours la_? Come, now, what did you fight
-about?"
-
-Beecher had an inclination to take her into his confidence; but he
-resisted the impulse, and to turn the conversation said artfully:
-
-"By Jove, you look stunning! You won't have to sing a note."
-
-She was in a filmy peignoir, and, as his glance showed an amused
-admiration, she said, with a look of apology which she did not feel at
-all, gathering the peignoir closer with a perfectly simulated modesty:
-
-"It's very bad--my receiving you like this. I am going through my
-costumes. They are dreams. Wait, you shall see--you wish to see them?
-Good!" All at once she stopped and, seizing his arm, cried: "Teddy, I
-am in a cold fright--I shiver all over whenever I think of it. New York
-audiences are terrible. It will be a big, big failure, won't it?"
-
-"There, I'll give you my lucky piece," he said, patting her shoulder as
-he would a child's.
-
-"Will you!" she cried, delighted; and; running into the bedroom, she
-called back: "I will show you the costume for the second act first. You
-will fall down and adore me. Keep me talking, Teddy--I shall go into
-hysterics. Oh, I am so frightened!"
-
-She tried her voice, singing a scale, inquiring anxiously, her head
-peering around the door: "That sounds bad, _hein_?"
-
-"Marvelous!" said Beecher, who did not know one note from another.
-
-Reassured, she entered radiantly, took two or three steps forward, and,
-lifting the castanets on her fingers, flung herself into the pose of
-Carmen exulting in the return of her lover.
-
-"Carmen, Teddy," she cried, with a toss of her head. "Carmen is
-different from all other roles. To succeed in Carmen, one must be a
-Carmen one's self--_enfant de la Boheme_. You like this? Wait--wait a
-moment."
-
-Back in her bedroom, she continued, pausing from time to time to shriek
-at her maid: "Teddy, you do me so much good--you take my mind off....
-Victorine, _tu m'assassine_! ... Teddy, they will think me beautiful,
-_hein_? You will stay--you will talk to me until I go?"
-
-"Wish I could," said Beecher, to whom this peep behind the scenes was
-novel. "The deuce is, I'm dining with Mrs. Fontaine--going in her box."
-
-"And Charters--she is going too?"
-
-"I don't know."
-
-"What--you don't know?" she said, emerging, a shawl of shaded luminous
-greens flung over the shoulder of a russet taffeta. She seized him by
-the chin with the savage gesture of the Bohemian. "You lie to me! You
-love her--and you know!" Then, slipping on the sofa beside him, half
-playful, half feline, she pleaded: "Tell me, Teddy--tell me just to
-distract me. Be a nice boy--you see how nervous I am--please!"
-
-Beecher did not resist. He recounted lightly, making little of the few
-passages at arms between him and Nan Charters, ending with a droll
-reproduction of his laughing exit, cured and disillusionized.
-
-"Ah, my poor Teddy!" said Emma Fornez, shaking her head. "Everything
-you say proves what I feared."
-
-"What?"
-
-"You are in love; you are beyond hope!
-
-"What, after I've told you this?"
-
-"Exactly. She asked you to telephone, you didn't. Why? Because you
-are in love--you are afraid."
-
-"Emma, I will tell you the truth," he said, with an excusing shrug.
-
-"Aha!"
-
-"I was attracted--"
-
-"Good!"
-
-"But I saw what an idiot I would be."
-
-"Very good!"
-
-"I am completely cured, and if I didn't telephone, it is--"
-
-"Because you are in love," said Emma promptly.
-
-"Nonsense!"
-
-"You will see her tomorrow; if not, day after tomorrow. And the longer
-you stay away, the worse for you."
-
-The arrival of Spinetti, the conductor, to run over a last few points,
-broke in upon this interesting discussion. Beecher departed, after a
-promise to come behind after the second act with a budget of news. He
-returned to his rooms, undisturbed by the charges of Emma Fornez.
-
-"I haven't thought of her the whole day," he said contentedly. "If I
-didn't telephone, it's because--well, because--what's the use? I have
-other things more interesting to do."
-
-In his apartment he found McKenna waiting for him, in company with
-Gunther, who was already dressed for dinner at Mrs. Fontaine's.
-
-"Hello, McKenna," he said, surprised. "What's up?"
-
-The two had been discussing energetically, and the little difficult
-hesitation told him that he himself had been the subject of
-conversation.
-
-"I'm called off on an important case," said McKenna. "Thought I'd
-better have an understanding with you first."
-
-"What understanding?" he said. His eye was attracted by the heaped-up
-mail on a side table, and he moved over to examine it, with a curiosity,
-utterly illogical, to see if Miss Charters had written him.
-
-"Mr. Beecher, I have a request to make of you," said McKenna quickly.
-
-"What's that?"
-
-"Don't open any letters or answer the telephone until I am gone."
-
-"Why, yes; but--" He cut off with a look of interrogation.
-
-"Pump it into him, Mac," said Gunther, throwing himself back and puffing
-forth great volumes of smoke.
-
-"The truth is, Mr. Beecher," said McKenna, smiling, "Mrs. Kildair played
-us both to the queen's fashion."
-
-"What was I to do?" said Beecher warmly. "Whom does the ring belong to,
-anyway? Is there any reason I should do what she doesn't want me to?"
-
-"No--no," said McKenna slowly.
-
-"Could I have refused a direct demand from her like that? And what
-reason could I give if I had?"
-
-"You couldn't," said McKenna, eying the end of his cigar. "She did the
-job neatly. I admire that woman--don't know when I've met one of that
-sex who's caught my fancy so."
-
-"I suppose you're sick of the case and want to get out," said Beecher,
-believing he had divined the errand. "Don't know as I blame you."
-
-"No, I don't want to quit," said McKenna slowly, while Gunther smiled to
-himself. "I should say, rather, there are things in this case that make
-me particularly interested--interested for my own curiosity to go a
-little deeper. Only, I want to be sure we understand things the same
-way. You don't understand from anything Mrs. Kildair said, do you, that
-I am prevented from going on working on my own hook?"
-
-"Why, no; of course not," said Beecher, reflecting. "I understand two
-things: one, that Mrs. Kildair wishes to keep in confidence what she
-said to you, which I should say was the explanation of certain facts
-connected with her having the ring."
-
-"Second?" said McKenna.
-
-"Second, that she believes the ring will be returned, and until she is
-sure it is she doesn't wish to give us certain suspicions or knowledge
-that she has."
-
-"First rate--just right," said McKenna, rising quickly, showing
-satisfaction in the instant alertness of his movements. "That's what I
-understand; we understand each other." As he spoke, the telephone rang.
-He made a quick gesture of opposition as Beecher started, saying: "Not
-now, sir; I'd rather you wouldn't answer--not just now."
-
-Beecher looked at Gunther, who nodded and said:
-
-"McKenna's got a good reason. You'll understand later."
-
-"Now, Mr. Beecher, I've just one thing to say before I go," said
-McKenna, while the insistent bell continued its querulous summons. "I'd
-prefer you wouldn't mention to any one that you saw me. At any rate, as
-Mrs. Kildair evidently isn't anxious for quick results, there's nothing
-to be done now. Perhaps by tomorrow there may be a different turn to the
-case."
-
-"What do you mean?" said Beecher. "Why don't you tell me what you
-know?"
-
-"You forget, Mr. Beecher; you yourself have stopped me there," said
-McKenna, with a slightly malicious smile. "However, there's going to be
-a little meeting tonight that may have a whole lot to do with the
-fortunes of a good many people; and when it's over it may, or may not,
-throw a new light on this case."
-
-"They're going to put Slade through the same initiation they gave
-Majendie," said Gunther, at a look from Beecher. "There's a meeting of
-the big fellows at the governor's tonight--a sort of
-sheep-shearing--though Slade's not much of a lamb."
-
-"And his wool grows close to the hide," said McKenna, with one of his
-rare laughs. "However, I can tell you this much: whatever happens I
-don't believe there'll be any exit by the bullet route--not if I know
-John G. Slade. Now, sir, I've got to disappear for a while on my own
-troubles."
-
-"Where can I get you?" asked Beecher.
-
-"You can't get me," said McKenna, with one of his sudden contractions of
-the eyelids. "That's the whole point--not till I get you. I'm off, and
-you don't know where," he added, offering his hand. "Maybe two days;
-maybe a week."
-
-"I don't understand," said Beecher, with a puzzled expression.
-
-"I do," said Gunther, pulling his sleeve.
-
-"Now, there are two little points may interest you gentlemen as expert
-deducers," said McKenna, with his hat on his head. "One is, I've found
-out who those detectives were that night--they're crooks. Second--and
-don't forget this--I share Mrs. Kildair's opinion that the ring is going
-to be returned."
-
-"Then you know who took it!" exclaimed Beecher, while Gunther looked up
-suddenly.
-
-"I don't know a single thing," said McKenna, "but I'm getting to the
-suspicious stage. So long."
-
-The telephone had stopped. Beecher, left open-mouthed by the exit of
-McKenna, turned to Gunther, who had resumed his easy lounge.
-
-"What the deuce is going on, Bruce? What's all this mystery?"
-
-"Look over your mail," said Gunther irrelevantly.
-
-Beecher obeyed the suggestion. At the end of a moment he exclaimed:
-
-"Hello! Why, here's a note from Mrs. Kildair--sent by messenger,
-evidently."
-
-"Read it."
-
-Beecher glanced at it hurriedly.
-
-
-DEAR TEDDY:
-
-Have been trying all day to get hold of McKenna, but they tell me at his
-office he's out of town. I want to see him very much. If you know
-where he is, please have him call me up. Shall see you at Mrs.
-Fontaine's tonight.
-
-RITA.
-
-P.S. Please find McKenna if you possibly can.
-
-
-"By Jove--McKenna!" he exclaimed, and hastened toward the door, only to
-be stopped by Gunther.
-
-"Ted, you blockhead, what are you doing?"
-
-"Going after McKenna."
-
-"Just what he doesn't want."
-
-Beecher stopped short, suddenly comprehending.
-
-"That's it, is it?" he said, returning. "He wants to keep clear of Mrs.
-Kildair's, then?"
-
-"You see," said Gunther, "it is not often that McKenna gets
-double-crossed. When he does, he doesn't particularly relish it. Mrs.
-Kildair may be perfectly right in bottling up the whole affair; but,
-after what happened yesterday, Mac isn't going to stop until he gets to
-the bottom."
-
-"But why disappear?"
-
-"Because, you little white fluffy toy donkey, the last thing in the
-world Mrs. Kildair wants is to have him do anything at all, and, as you
-are putty in the hands of any pretty woman, he doesn't intend to have
-you call him off."
-
-"I'll see Mrs. Kildair at Louise's. What am I to say?"
-
-Gunther shrugged his shoulders.
-
-"Wonder if she's really playing to be Mrs. Slade," he said grimly. "If
-she is, she'll give that up after tonight."
-
-"What's going to happen to him, Bruce?"
-
-"He'll come out with so little left that a Committee on Virtue will
-arrest him for indecent exposure--and the country will be saved."
-
-Beecher stopped before the telephone.
-
-"Wonder if Mrs. Kildair really was on the 'phone?" he said meditatively.
-The thought recalled Miss Charters, but without disturbing his
-equanimity.
-
-"Bruce," he said joyfully, rushing to dress, "Tilton's crazy to have me
-go to Africa with him. By Jove, I've half made up my mind! Give me a
-man's life; a life with men, out in the open--dogs and horses, and
-nothing but a few lions and fat elephants to bother you!"
-
-When they arrived at Mrs. Fontaine's, they found, to their surprise,
-that Mrs. Kildair had been delayed by an automobile breaking down, and
-would only join them later at the opera.
-
-Not one of them had the faintest suspicion, when later Mrs. Kildair
-calmly entered the box, that she had passed through two hours of supreme
-agitation that had left her torn between hope and dread--her whole
-future staked on one turn. Slade, face to face with the crisis that
-would determine whether he would survive as one of the figures of the
-financial world, or return staggering into the oblivion of the
-commonplace, had gone to see her in the afternoon.
-
-Confronted, too, by the imminent outcome of a gamble that had absorbed
-all her ambitions and her hopes, she had recklessly thrown aside all the
-restraints which she had interposed between them; and by an impulse of
-daring which makes such women irresistible to men, having invented an
-excuse for Mrs. Fontaine, had kept him to dinner, trusting to his
-protection, insisting on his confidence.
-
-Afterward she had driven him to the gray, prison-like structure which
-Gunther called a home, and seen him, defiant with a defiance she had
-breathed into him, with the scorn of the gambler who comes at length to
-the ultimate stake walk up the steps past the group of newspaper men,
-who, suddenly ceasing their chatter, huddled together and watched him
-with a unanimous craning of their heads.
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER XVII*
-
-
-Mrs. Craig Fontaine's box was in the lower grand tier in that favored
-circle which, in the present struggle for social supremacy, is the
-ultimate battlefield. Her entrance was one of the six important
-arrivals of the night which affected the immense audience with a
-curiosity only less intense than the entrance of the prima donna. Mrs.
-Fontaine, approaching the curtain that shut out the swimming vision of
-faces, took a preparatory glance, and as the row of boxes still showed a
-profusion of gaps, she delayed their entrance on the pretext of waiting
-for Mrs. Kildair. Besides Gunther and Beecher, there were in the party
-Lady Fitzhugh Mowbray, a young woman of the striking English blonde
-type, and the Duke de Taleza-Corti, of the royal house of Italy, a
-cosmopolite, dry, frail in body, affecting the English monocle, with a
-perpetual introspective smile on his keen lips.
-
-The absence of Mrs. Kildair had left Mrs. Fontaine in very bad humor.
-Not only did she consider an invitation to her box as a sort of royal
-command that should take precedence over all calamities, and render
-accidents impossible, but she felt that she would miss the effect which
-her well-balanced party had promised. Fortunately, at that moment the
-door opened and Mrs. Kildair entered.
-
-"My dear Mrs. Fontaine," she said immediately, in a voice that could not
-be heard by the rest, "the explanation I sent you is not true. It was
-not a question of a break-down. There are crises in our lives that
-cannot be put off. I can tell you no more than this, but I know you
-will understand that nothing except a matter of supreme importance would
-ever make me miss an invitation of yours."
-
-Mrs. Fontaine looked at her and, seeing beyond the surface calm the
-fires of a profound agitation, was pleased that Mrs. Kildair had not
-sought an easy excuse, but had thrown herself on her woman's generosity.
-Also she perceived that she was strikingly dressed in a robe of that
-luminous, elusive green that breaks forth in the flickering driftwood,
-subdued and given distance by a network of black lace. It was exactly
-the contrast that she would have chosen as a foil to her own costume.
-She smiled, pressed her guest's hand sympathetically and signaled to
-Gunther, who removed her wrap.
-
-Mrs. Kildair murmured an involuntary tribute while the Duke de
-Taleza-Corti, with the over-frank admiration which the Latin permits,
-said point blank:
-
-"If I am to sit behind you, Madame, you must bandage my eyes."
-
-Mrs. Fontaine had chosen the one color which, above all others, seemed
-to have been created to frame her dark imperious beauty--a warm purple,
-the tone of autumn itself, which gave to her shoulders and throat the
-softness of ivory. About her neck was a double string of pearls which
-were worth ten times the receipts of the house.
-
-"Let's go in," she said, glancing at Gunther with a hope that she might
-find his eyes a little troubled. She signed to him to take the seat
-behind hers, placing Beecher back of Mrs. Kildair, and while the rest of
-her party immediately swept the house with their opera-glasses, she
-remained quiet, conscious of the sudden focus, unwilling to show herself
-curious of other women.
-
-"Look," said Mrs. Kildair to Beecher in a low aside; "Mrs. Bloodgood is
-in her box. What daring!" she added after a moment's examination. "She
-has dressed herself in black."
-
-Beecher, following her directions, beheld Mrs. Bloodgood, without a
-single jewel or a relieving touch of color, sitting proudly, looking
-fixedly at the stage, disdainful of the stir and gossip which her
-dramatic appearance occasioned. Behind in the crowded box Mr. Bloodgood
-was standing, smiling and contented, showing himself with a malicious
-enjoyment.
-
-"How can she do it?" he said.
-
-"After the first act," said Mrs. Kildair, with a sudden impulse of
-generosity, "go and see her. Take Mr. Gunther. It will give her
-strength."
-
-"It is decidedly brilliant," said Lady Mowbray. "The parterre is much
-more effective than Covent Garden."
-
-"There should be a guide to tell us all the histories of these boxes,"
-said Taleza-Corti, with his keen perception of values. "The opera is
-the record of society. The history of America for the next twenty years
-will be written here by those who descend from the galleries into the
-orchestra, and those who force their way from the orchestra into the
-boxes. I like to think of your millionaires who might have begun up
-there under the roof. Fonda, our great novelist, says that the opera is
-the city reduced to the terms of the village. It always impresses me.
-Magnificent!"
-
-No one listened to him. The women nodded from time to time as their
-glasses encountered those of acquaintances; Beecher, troubled at a
-figure which he had half perceived in the orchestra and which he sought
-to distinguish, fancied a resemblance to Nan Charters; Gunther, bored by
-a spectacle which had no novelty for him, watched Mrs. Kildair, noting
-the nervous hands and the occasional quickly taken breaths, asking
-himself what had been the real cause of her absence, half divining in a
-confused way the truth.
-
-Mrs. Fontaine was languidly curious of those who had a right to her
-interest. She was in her element--jealous of this multitude as an
-actress, pleased at the fine effect she had produced. And in her
-triumph she was recalled to the one thing she desired to complete her
-ambition, to give her that command of this assemblage which she was
-forced to acknowledge to another. Her glance went to the box in the
-middle of the horseshoe, as it did covetously each night.
-
-"Your father isn't here tonight," she said to Bruce Gunther with a
-little surprise.
-
-"No. There is some big pow-wow on," he answered.
-
-Mrs. Kildair took up her glasses suddenly, turning them haphazard. The
-remark revived in her all the agitation of the afternoon.
-
-"I shall never be able to sit through this," she said to herself,
-leaning forward. "If I only knew--"
-
-Mrs. Fontaine, could she have known the thoughts that were galloping
-through the brain of her guest, would have been astounded at their
-similarity. Mrs. Kildair, too, had her ambitions, ambitions as
-passionately held and nourished on one hope. The interview that
-afternoon with Slade, an interview in which for the first time she had
-made him feel the need of her, had all at once brought the prize within
-her grasp. If he could but emerge from this one supreme danger, she
-said to herself that she had at last the opportunity to rate herself
-here among the leaders of this society which she coveted, had always
-coveted and would never cease to covet.
-
-"Give me Slade and twenty millions even," she said to herself with a
-great intaking of breath, "and I can do anything. I will dominate this
-in five years." But the more violently burned the fire of her desire,
-the more weak and faltering was her hope. "Ah, will he win out--can
-he--how is it possible?" she said bitterly. "Oh, what a gamble it all
-is--and I must sit here--continue to sit here like a stone--while in an
-hour it may all be decided!"
-
-"You've seen Fornez in _Carmen_?" said Taleza-Corti to Gunther. "Very
-fine."
-
-"First appearance here," said Gunther briefly. He touched Beecher on the
-arm. "Friends of yours over there, Ted."
-
-"Who?"
-
-"The Cheevers--little to your right--row above. Hello," he added
-suddenly. "See who's with them?"
-
-"Who?" said Beecher, who did not recognize the rest of the party.
-
-Gunther placed his finger on his lips, with a warning glance at Mrs.
-Kildair, and then, bending forward, said:
-
-"I say, Mrs. Kildair, who is that tall, rather black chap in the box
-with the Stanley Cheevers? He's looking this way now."
-
-Mrs. Kildair raised her glasses.
-
-"Mr. Mapleson," she said directly.
-
-"He's the head of Sontag & Company, the jewelers, isn't he?"
-
-"Yes, I believe so."
-
-"Queer looking chap--ever know him?"
-
-"Yes. Why?"
-
-She turned, looking at the questioner with a fixity that told him she
-was not entirely ignorant of his real interest.
-
-"He must have been in Paris when you were," he said quickly. "I hear he
-had quite a career there."
-
-She turned away with indifference, gazed once more through her glasses
-and said:
-
-"Yes, there were quite a number of stories about his rise. He is a man
-with a genius for friendships."
-
-"Rather attentive to Mrs. Cheever, isn't he?" persisted Gunther.
-
-"I didn't know it."
-
-Beecher did not then seize the drift of the inquiry, still absorbed as
-he was in the attempt to gain a clearer view of the profile in the
-orchestra which reminded him of Nan Charters. Lady Mowbray continued
-silent, busy as a true Briton in the search for the ridiculous in this
-assemblage which at first glance had impressed her.
-
-All at once the lights went out and the first act was on. The entrance
-of Emma Fornez was eagerly awaited as a new sensation to an audience
-which yearly must be served with the novel and startling. It had been
-rumored that her impersonation was even a bit shocking, and the house,
-stirred by the expectation, waited hopefully. At the end of the act
-opinions were divided: the galleries applauded frantically, moved by the
-sure magnetism of a great artist, but the boxes and most of the
-orchestra waited undecided, each afraid to be the leader.
-
-"But I don't see anything shocking at all," said the voice of a young
-woman in the next box, a note of complaint in her voice.
-
-"Wait--it's in the second act," answered the sarcastic note of a man.
-
-"Ah, the love scene," said the woman mollified.
-
-The two young men rose, giving their places to arriving visitors, and
-went into the corridors on their rounds. Beecher was thoughtful. He
-had at last assured himself that he had not been mistaken--Miss Charters
-was present. He had detected her with her glasses on his box, but he
-had not succeeded in seeing who was her companion.
-
-"I'd give a good deal to know how well Mrs. Cheever knows Mapleson,"
-said Gunther eagerly.
-
-"I say, what do you mean by poking me?" asked Beecher suddenly.
-
-"Didn't you get on? Mapleson is the head of Sontag & Company; Sontag &
-Company sold the ring to Slade. Now if Mapleson and Mrs. Cheever are
-intimate it's possible--just a chance--Mrs. Cheever may have known the
-facts. See?"
-
-Beecher shrugged his shoulders.
-
-"It's a long shot."
-
-"But a chance. I'll pick up some one here in five minutes who can tell
-me."
-
-Beecher entered the Bloodgood box and, making his way to the front, gave
-his hand to Mrs. Bloodgood. Four or five men, impelled by curiosity,
-were before him, mentally registering their reports to add to the fund
-of gossip. Mrs. Bloodgood, glad to avail herself of the opportunity,
-had turned her back on the audience and was holding her head against
-these social scouts, who discussed Slade, which was a manner of
-discussing Majendie.
-
-She welcomed Beecher's arrival as that of an ally and made him the
-pretext of withdrawing from the general conversation. The moment he
-looked at her, he had the tact to perceive that any display of sympathy
-would be an offense. There was no trace left of the weak and desperate
-woman. Instead, he was aware of an immense change in her, a
-transformation that was moral, and looking into her eyes he could not
-realize that he had ever seen them weep.
-
-"They'll force out Slade," said a voice.
-
-"Where are you tonight?" she asked quietly.
-
-"In Mrs. Craig Fontaine's box," he said.
-
-"Mrs. Kildair is there, isn't she?"
-
-"Yes." He hesitated, but did not deliver her message. The woman before
-him asked compassion from no one. In the commotion at his side he
-caught a phrase: "Wonder if Slade will kill himself too?"
-
-"Do you like Fornez?" he said hastily, and despite himself he looked
-into her eyes to see what effect the remark had made.
-
-"Very much," she said coldly, a little staccato. And then calmly, to end
-a subject that was disagreeable to her, she turned to the other.
-"Fornez has made a success, don't you think?"
-
-Beecher left presently, oppressed by the hardness that he felt in her.
-
-"There's a woman who will never have any pity," he thought as he left.
-Mr. Bloodgood, who remembered him with a malicious smile, shook his hand
-with extra cordiality.
-
-"Did you give my message?" asked Mrs. Kildair as he took his place.
-
-"It was wiser not," he said. Then all at once, struck by the fatigue in
-her face, he asked anxiously: "Are you very tired?"
-
-"Yes, very," she said.
-
-In this box, too, nothing had been spoken of except the drama, which at
-that moment was centered about John G. Slade. As nothing could possibly
-be known, every one arrived with a fresh rumor, and the burden of all
-was the annihilation of the Westerner. The sudden darkness came to her
-as a relief. She relaxed wearily in her chair and forced her mind to
-forget itself in the sudden access of gaiety from the stage.
-
-This second act was a veritable triumph for Emma Fornez. In the scene
-of Don Jose's return she acted with such fine and natural primitive
-passion that all the constricted little feminine natures in the audience
-were stirred by the pulsing exhibition of an emotion they had carefully
-choked or reduced to mathematics, and, really moved, trembling in their
-imprisoned bodies, they applauded for the first time. Then suddenly
-they ceased--a little ashamed.
-
-In descending the stairway to go behind the stage, Beecher perceived
-Miss Charters in the distance of the shifting crowd. He stopped, by a
-movement he did not analyze, to speak to a purely chance acquaintance,
-hoping that she would perceive him. Then he continued to the
-dressing-room of the prima donna.
-
-Emma Fornez was in a state of frenzied delight.
-
-"I have them, Teddy--I have them! Is it not so?" she cried, clapping
-her hands together as a child. She flung her arms about him, embracing
-him. In fact, she embraced every one--even Victorine, her maid.
-
-"The house is wild with enthusiasm," he said, laughing.
-
-"Aha! I made them sit up, didn't I--your cold women! It's the second
-act, Teddy--the second--you get them there. Bah! They don't even know
-what I did to them." All at once she stopped, seriously assuming a
-countenance of terror. "Oh, but the critics--what will the monsters
-say! They never like it when the audience is too enthusiastic."
-
-[Illustration: "'Aha! I made them sit up, didn't I--your cold women!'"]
-
-"I saw Macklin applauding, Madame," said Spinetti, putting his head into
-the room.
-
-"Angel!" cried Emma Fornez, and she embraced Spinetti. Then, knowing in
-herself that the day was won, she began to amuse her audience. "Do you
-know what the critics will write? I'll tell you. The audience was
-carried off its feet in the second act. They will praise the first.
-They will say the second was obvious, and they will praise the third
-act, because there I shall do a little trick to them--in the card scene.
-I shall be very noble--very tragic. I will make a little picture of
-death before my eyes--with all his bones rattling and his great big
-hollow eyes, and they shall see it on my face--so! And I'll look very
-steady--noble--profound--like a queen. See?--a thing which Carmen would
-nevere, nevere do, for she's a little wretch of an animal that would be
-frightened to death. But you will see they will all like it--it's their
-moral that you have to serve up to them."
-
-"Third act--third act," came the running call from the flies. "All on
-the stage for the third act."
-
-When Beecher entered the corridor, Miss Charters was only a short
-distance away. He was prepared for Lorraine as a companion, but he felt
-a sudden anger at the sight of Garraboy, who in turn, suddenly
-comprehending the aim of his partner's maneuvers, looked anything but
-pleased.
-
-She nodded to him, holding out her hand.
-
-"She is wonderful, Teddy, wonderful. Have you seen her? Is she
-pleased?"
-
-"She is a great, great artist," he said with extra warmth. "She is
-pleased as a child."
-
-The two men had nodded with that impertinent jerk of the head which in
-society conveys the effect of a bucket of water.
-
-"Come and see me after the next act," she said, looking at him closely.
-
-"If I can," he said hastily.
-
-He went up the steps and from the tail of his eye saw her linger,
-watching him as he went. A little contrition, a sudden sympathy came to
-him, but he repressed it angrily, saying to himself between his teeth:
-
-"Garraboy--how can she stand for that!"
-
-When he returned to the box, Mrs. Kildair and Mrs. Fontaine were in the
-anteroom in low converse. He was suddenly struck with the look of age
-in Mrs. Kildair's face.
-
-"But I assure you--I can go alone," she was saying.
-
-"I would not allow it," said Mrs. Fontaine firmly. Then turning to
-Beecher she said, so as not to reach the others: "Teddy, as soon as the
-curtain is up, step out. Mrs. Kildair is not well. You will take her
-home. I have ordered the automobile. You can get back for the last
-act."
-
-Mrs. Kildair made no further remonstrance--she was at the end of her
-tether.
-
-"Sit here," she said to Beecher, sitting down on the couch. "I don't
-want to be noticed."
-
-"You're ill!" he said alarmed.
-
-"Yes, ill," she said mechanically.
-
-At this moment the house became still. She rose with a return of energy
-and signaled him that she was ready. Five minutes later they were in
-the automobile fleeing uptown.
-
-A moment of weakness was rare in her life, yet she comprehended it
-without seeking to delude herself.
-
-"At twenty I should not even have trembled," she said to herself,
-sinking back into the cushioned seat and watching the lights of the
-streets flash past the window with a comforting emotion of speed. "Now
-it is different. Every life has one supreme opportunity--this is mine.
-I know it."
-
-Had a woman been at her side instead of Beecher, she would have given
-her confidence in the terrible necessity for sharing the emotion that
-was too vital to her. As it was, she restrained herself, remaining
-silent by a last effort of her will, but her hand on the window-frame
-began a nervous syncopated beating, imitating the click of the fleeing
-rails which one hears on a railroad train.
-
-"You are feeling better?" said the young man in a troubled voice.
-
-"Open the window--just for a moment," she answered.
-
-The sudden blast of cold air, damp as though laden with the tears of the
-city, terrified her with its suggestion of despair and defeat.
-
-"No, no, shut it!" she said hurriedly.
-
-He obeyed and then to distract her, began:
-
-"I received your note, Rita, just before coming, McKenna--"
-
-"No, no," she said, interrupting him, "that is nothing. Just let me be
-quiet a moment--get hold of myself."
-
-But in a few moments she was forced to seek the stimulus of the air
-again, and she cried hurriedly, not concealing her agitation:
-
-"Open, open quick!"
-
-The crisis which she felt approaching with every block which fell behind
-was so immense, the stake so ardently coveted, so weakly feared, that
-she had in the last eternal waiting moments a sensation of vertigo, that
-swept down and seized her even as on the football field before the
-blowing of the whistle the stanchest player feels his heart lying before
-him on the ground. She opened her lips, drinking in the chill,
-revivifying draught, unaware of the strange impression her disordered
-countenance in the embrasure of the window made on the occasional
-passers-by.
-
-"Better first in a village than second in Rome."
-
-She found herself repeating the saying mechanically, without quite
-understanding how it had so suddenly leaped into her mind. Then, as the
-automobile turned into her street, and she felt that he was there
-waiting as he had promised, successful or ruined; that now in ten
-minutes all would be over, she would know; all at once, without that
-sense of humor which deserts us in great stress, she began to pray
-confusedly to some one immense, whom she had never understood, but one
-who seemed to hold all fates in the balancing of his fingers.
-
-"Are you better? What shall I do? Shall I come up with you?" asked
-Beecher, totally in the dark.
-
-"No, no--wait," she said hurriedly, as the machine ground to a stop.
-She did not rise at once, stiffening in her seat, grasping the arm of
-the young man until he winced under the contraction of her fingers.
-
-"Good!" she said suddenly; and before he could prevent her she was out
-on the sidewalk. "No, no; stay in. Thanks, thanks a thousand times.
-I'll send you back."
-
-Before he could protest, she shut the door firmly and nodded to the
-chauffeur.
-
-The elevator boy was already at the swinging glass doors, holding them
-open for her entrance.
-
-"Mr. Slade here, Jo?" she said instantly.
-
-"Yes, ma'am; upstairs."
-
-"How long?"
-
-"About half an hour."
-
-She entered the elevator and descended at the landing, waiting until it
-had disappeared.
-
-"Now for it!" she said, pressing the bell. And by a last display of her
-will, she sent through her body a wave of cold resolution that left her
-outwardly impassive with a little touch of scorn on her lips.
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER XVIII*
-
-
-It is only in the supreme crisis of a colossal disaster that a nation,
-which fondly believes it elects its governing bodies, perceives its real
-masters, and then in the alarm and confusion of its apprehension, it
-does not recognize what it is shown. The group of ten men who were
-assembled at Gunther's, awaiting the arrival of Slade, either in
-themselves or through the influences they represented, could bring to
-their support over ten billions of capital. If it were possible to
-conceive of a master spirit who could unite these ten men, forgetting
-mutual jealousy and distrust, into one unanimous body with but a single
-object, in five years these ten men, without the impediment of law,
-could own every necessary newspaper and magazine in the country, operate
-every railroad, and, by the simple process of reinvesting their earnings
-annually, control every important industry, every necessary chain of
-banks, the entire food supply of the nation, and, at the cost of twenty
-million dollars every four years and by remaining unknown, control the
-necessary number of candidates in both political parties in matters
-essential to their financial interests. That such a coalition will
-remain a fantasy, is due to two factors: the human nature of such
-individuals and the human nature of multitudes which, were they
-successful, would find the corrective in massacre. When such a monetary
-alliance does take place, it is usually from the necessity, as they see
-it, of saving the country by the simple process of enriching themselves.
-
-When Slade arrived, he entered by the separate entrance to Gunther's
-personal apartments, which were situated in a lower wing of the
-monstrous turreted granite structure which might have served for a
-miniature Bastile. One of the secretaries was at the door carefully
-scrutinizing all arrivals. The moment he entered, he was aware that his
-fate was not the only one that was under discussion.
-
-The wing of the house was laid out in the form of a Maltese cross, with
-a square anteroom in the center, heavily spread with silk Persian rugs,
-and furnished with easy divans and upholstered chairs. Above was a
-skylight, now transformed into a vast reflector for the burst of
-electric lights.
-
-Four entrances of equal height in heavy Florentine relief gave on this
-anteroom; from Gunther's private office, from the library, from the
-rooms of the private secretaries, and from the outer entrance by which
-Slade advanced. In the middle of the anteroom Gunther was seated at a
-small card-table, studiously engrossed in a game of solitaire. He was a
-medium-seized man who, without an effect of bulk, conveyed an instant
-impression of solidity, while the head, remarkable in the changed
-physiognomy of the present day, had the falcon-like, eerie quality,
-characteristic of the spreading eyebrows and deep-set glance of the
-American before the Civil War. Slow in movement, slow in speech, he was
-likewise slow in the deliberation with which his scrutiny left the face
-he was considering.
-
-At the vigorous shock of Slade's coming, he completed a row of carefully
-laid cards and lifted his head.
-
-"How do you do, Mr. Gunther?" said Slade, whose eye was instantly set on
-the half-opened doors leading into the library, from which sounds of
-altercation were issuing.
-
-Slade's arrival seemed to surprise Gunther, who looked at his watch and
-said, without rising:
-
-"You're ahead of time, Mr. Slade."
-
-"Always like to look over the ground when there's a battle," said Slade,
-who in fact had intentionally effected a surprise.
-
-"Sit down."
-
-He motioned to the secretary, who, moving on springs, brought cigars and
-a light.
-
-"I'll have to keep you waiting, Mr. Slade. There is a conference taking
-place."
-
-Slade glanced from the library to the closed doors of the secretaries'
-room.
-
-"How many conferences have you?"
-
-Gunther turned over a card, studied it and carefully laid it down. It
-was his manner of settling a question he did not wish to answer.
-
-Slade was not offended by the rebuff. Holding most men in antagonism,
-he had conceived a violent admiration for Gunther and as he was the man
-above all others whom he wished to impress, he imitated his taciturnity,
-turning his imagination on the probable groups behind the three double
-doors, which once had closed on a famous conspiracy in a palace of
-turbulent medieval Florence.
-
-Gunther at this moment was probably the most powerful personal force in
-the United States, and, what was more extraordinary, in an era of public
-antipathy to its newly created magnates, enjoyed universal respect. As
-he showed himself rarely, never gave interviews, and surrounded himself
-by choice with that inciting element of seclusion which Napoleon by
-calculation adopted on his return from Italy, the public had magnified
-what it could not perceive. Even as royal personages of distinctly
-bourgeois caliber have been impressed on history by the exigencies of
-the kingly tradition as models of tact and statesmanship, so events and
-the necessities of the public imagination had combined to throw about
-the personality of Gunther an atmosphere of grandiose mystery. Just as
-it is true that what is a virtue in one man is a defect in another, the
-imagination he possessed was much less than he was credited with and his
-power lay in his ability to control it. For imagination, which is the
-genius of progress, in a banker approaches a crime.
-
-His strength lay in being that inevitable man who results as the balance
-wheel of conflicting interests. For beyond the Stock Exchange, which is
-a purely artificial organization, the financial powers will always
-create what amounts to a saving check, around one inevitable
-personality, whom they can trust and about whom, in times of common
-danger, they can rally as to a standard. At this moment, the invested
-wealth of the country, frightened at the cataclysm which threatened it,
-had thrown its resources implicitly into the hands of this one man, who
-came forward at the psychological time to stop the panic, issuing his
-orders, and marshaling his forces with a response of instant obedience.
-
-"What's going on here?" said Slade to himself. "And what's the
-proposition they're reckoning on squeezing out of me? I'd like to know
-what's going on behind those doors."
-
-As though in response to his wish the doors of the secretaries' room
-swung, and a round, rolling little man of fifty, in evening dress, came
-hurriedly out, holding in his hand a slip of paper. He approached the
-stolid player with precipitation, and yet, obeying a certain instinct of
-deference, which showed itself despite his disorder, he waited until
-Gunther had completed a play he had in hand before blurting out:
-
-"Mr. Gunther, this is the best we can do."
-
-Gunther took the slip which was offered to him, glanced at it and
-returned it abruptly.
-
-"Not sufficient," he said and took up his pack of cards.
-
-The emissary, crestfallen and desperate, returned to the conference and
-at the opening of the door the sound of violent discussion momentarily
-filled the anteroom as a sudden blast of storm.
-
-"I have it," said Slade, who had recognized Delancy Gilbert, of the firm
-of Gilbert, Drake & Bauerman, brokers and promoters of mining interests
-in Mexico, whose failure had been circulated from lip to lip in the last
-forty-eight hours. "I see that game. Gilbert's to be mulcted of his
-Osaba interests--for whom though? The United Mining, undoubtedly."
-
-Five minutes later the doors of the library opened in turn and a
-military figure, gray, bent, with tears in his eyes, came slowly out,
-the type of convenient figureheads which stronger men place in the
-presidencies of subsidiary corporations. He likewise placed a sheet of
-paper before the financier, watching him from the corner of his eye, his
-white finger working nervously in the grizzled mustache.
-
-"We've agreed on this, Mr. Gunther," he said desperately, in a voice
-shaken by suppressed emotion. "That's as far as we can go--and that
-means ruin!"
-
-Gunther examined the sheet with slow attention, nodding favorably twice;
-but at a third column he shook his head and, seizing a pencil, jotted
-down a figure, carefully drawing a circle around it.
-
-"That's what I must have," he said and returned to his solitaire.
-
-The emissary hesitated, seemed about to argue, and then, with a hopeless
-heave of his shoulders, retired. Gunther frowned but the frown was
-called forth by an unfavorable conjunction of the cards. Not once had he
-seemed to notice the presence of Slade. In the same position the
-promoter could not have helped stealing a glance to witness the effect.
-Slade registered the observation, mentally admitting the difference.
-
-"What does he keep me here for?" he thought, but almost immediately
-answered the question: "Effect on the others, of course. Well, let them
-pull their own chestnuts out of the fire."
-
-In the last emissary he had recognized General Arthur Roe Paxton,
-President of the Mohican Trust, exploiter of certain Southern oil
-fields, equally involved in the Osaba speculation. The knowledge of the
-operations which were being discussed--which he readily divined were the
-surrender of important holdings--prepared him for the demands he must
-expect to meet.
-
-At this moment Gunther swept the cards together, glanced at his watch,
-and pressed an electric button.
-
-"Mr. Slade," he said, fixing his lantern-like stare upon the promoter,
-"I need not tell you that we are in a desperate situation, that it is
-time for action--decisive and immediate action."
-
-Slade answered by an impatient jerking of his thumb, and, rising as he
-beheld the secretary returning from the private office where he had been
-sent by a look of Gunther's, said:
-
-"I understand perfectly. If the gentlemen whom I am to meet understand
-the situation as well as I do, we shall have no trouble."
-
-Gunther continued to study him thoughtfully, struck by the confidence of
-his attitude where desperation might have been expected. He seemed for
-a moment about to say something, but presently, giving a sign to his
-secretary, began thoughtfully to shuffle the cards.
-
-In the private office a group of men were assembled about the long
-table. The disposition of Slade had been but an incident in the
-discussion which had been called to decide upon the methods to be
-pursued in coming to the support of the market, and the deliberation had
-left its marks of dissension. Slade, on entering, rapidly surveyed the
-group, perceived its discord, and divided it into its component
-interests.
-
-"The United Mining is the key," he said, on recognizing Haggerty and
-Forscheim.
-
-The group was like a trans-section of that conflicting America which
-seems to hold the destiny of types. Fontaine, one of the landed
-proprietors of the city, French of descent and aristocratic by the
-purifying experience of two generations, was next to Haggerty, a
-cross-grained, roughly hewn type of the indomitable Irish immigrant of
-the seventies, who had risen to power out of the silver mines of the
-eighties. Leo Marx, olive in tint, whispering in manner, thin-veined
-and handsome, represented the Jewish aristocracy that had ingrained
-itself in the great banking houses of New York; while Forscheim, leading
-spirit of five brothers, abrupt, too aggressive or too compliant,
-cunning and unsatisfied, was the Hebrew of speculation, the creator of
-the great corporation known as the United Mining.
-
-Judge Seton B. Barton, representative of the great oil interests, was
-the grim Yankee, unrelieved by his modifying humor, implacable in small
-things as well as great, knowing no other interest in life except the
-passion of acquiring.
-
-Kraus, an ungainly, bulky German-American, had not moved from the
-half-retreating position he had taken on seating himself. He answered
-with a short movement of his head, watching every one with covetous,
-suspicious eyes that glimmered weakly over the spectacles which had
-slipped to the bridge of his nose, never suggested a move, and gave his
-assent the last. He was the owner of a fortune estimated at three
-hundred millions, acquired in lumber holdings over a territory in the
-West which would have made another Belgium.
-
-McBane, one of the strongest figures which the rise of the great steel
-industry had propelled into the public light, was a short, fussy, brisk
-little man, tenacious, agile, obstinate in opinion, while outwardly
-smiling with a general air of delighted surprise at his own success. He
-was the present active force in the group of steel magnates whose
-personal fortunes alone amounted to over three quarters of a billion.
-
-Marcus Stone, president of the greatest banking force of the country,
-the Columbus National, was a middle-westerner, sprung from the hardy
-soil of Ohio, virile, deep-lunged, direct and domineering, agent of
-colossal enterprises, rooted in conservatism and regarding his vocation
-as an almost sacred call. He accounted himself a poor man; he was worth
-only three millions.
-
-Rupert V. Steele, head of the legal firm of Steele, Forshay & Benton,
-corporation lawyers, was the type of the brilliant Southerner,
-adventuring into the Eldorado of New York as the Gascon seeks Paris or
-the Irishman the lure of London. He might almost be said to have
-created a new profession--the lawyer-promoter--and in his capacious,
-fertile head had been evolved the schemes of law-avoiding combinations
-that others received the credit for. In public he was one of the
-stanchest defenders of the Constitution and an eloquent exponent of the
-sanctity of the judiciary.
-
-With the exception of Fontaine and Marx, in this varied group of
-master-adventurers, all had begun life with little better than the coats
-on their backs, and the colossal fortunes which roughly totaled two
-billions had been amassed in virtually twenty years. This is a point
-which future economists may ponder over with profit.
-
-At Slade's entrance the conversation abruptly ceased and each in his own
-manner studied the new arrival; some with languid, confident curiosity;
-Forscheim, who had old scores to settle, with a glance of unrestrained
-satisfaction; Steele, leaning a little forward, eager in his
-inquisitorial mind to divine the attack, already convinced that such a
-personality as Slade would not come without an aggressive defense.
-
-The second glance reassured Slade, for he distinguished in the group the
-conflicting rivalries and perceived by what slender checks the
-irrepressible jealousies and antagonisms had been stilled.
-
-"If they've got together," he said to himself with a sudden delight in a
-favorable hazard, "it's because they're scared to the ground and they
-want to shut off the panic first and trim me second. Good! That's what
-I wanted to be sure of."
-
-He advanced to the head of the table, swinging into place a heavy chair
-which he swept through the air as though it had been paper, and,
-resolved to acquire the advantage of initiative, said:
-
-"Well, gentlemen, let's get right down to business. I've come to get
-five millions."
-
-In their astonishment several pushed back their chairs with a harsh,
-grating sound. Forscheim laughed aloud insolently, but Steele,
-sensitive to small things, instantly determined to employ caution, to be
-the last to crush him if he failed, and the first to support him if he
-had indeed the power to survive.
-
-"Mr. Slade," said Stone in his blasting manner, "your remark is in bad
-taste. The situation you are facing is an exceedingly serious one and
-only a prompt compliance on your part with the measures we have
-determined upon to avert a national calamity, will save you from
-bankruptcy"--he stopped, but not from hesitation, adding with a sudden
-flush of anger--"and worse."
-
-"We are here," said McBane, in tones of conviction which produced a
-nodding of assenting heads, "in the performance of a public duty. In
-carrying that out we do not intend to allow the fate of one man or a
-dozen to interfere with the steps we intend to take to restore public
-confidence."
-
-"And I repeat," said Slade, with a disdainful smile, "that I am here to
-get five millions; and you are going to give it to me."
-
-An outburst of exclamations followed this assertion, half angry, half
-contemptuous, above which was heard Forscheim's shrill nasal voice
-saying:
-
-"Dere is a shtate examiner, Mr. Shlade, don't forget dat."
-
-"My books are kept as carefully as yours, Forscheim," said Slade, with a
-sudden angry concentration of his glance. He had once in a committee
-meeting taken Forscheim by the throat and flung him out of doors--a fear
-which the other could never forget. Then he struck the table a
-resounding blow with his fist, stilling the clamor.
-
-"Wait!" he exclaimed, rising until his bulky figure towered over the
-table. "Don't let's waste time. Come to the point. You think I've
-come here to receive your terms. You are mistaken. I've come here to
-deliver an ultimatum--my ultimatum."
-
-"Do you realize, sir," said Judge Barton sternly, "what the object of
-this meeting is? We are here to preserve the prosperity of this country
-for the next ten years, the homes and savings of millions of persons."
-
-"No, that is not why you are here," said Slade contemptuously. "I'll
-tell you why you are here. You are here to protect your own
-interests--first, last, and always! Because a panic to you means
-hundreds of millions, the end of development, the closing of markets;
-because at the end of a stock market panic is an industrial panic, and
-the end of any protracted individual depression means the colossal
-flattening out of your billion dollar trusts. That's why there'll never
-be another '93--that's the one good thing in the present situation the
-public doesn't know. There isn't going to be a '93 now, and you know it
-and I know it."
-
-"Suppose, Mr. Slade, you listen to our stipulations first," said McBane,
-but in a more conciliatory tone.
-
-Beyond his exposition which had struck all with its piercing verity,
-Slade had effected over them an almost physical mastery, which men
-grudgingly are forced to yield to masculine strength.
-
-"I know your demands," said Slade instantly. "Oh, there is no informer
-present. Nothing difficult. I know you and the way your minds work.
-You have three conditions: first, I am to resign the presidency of the
-Associated Trust; second, sell my stock control to a syndicate you have
-organized, which will stand as a guarantee to the public; third, the
-taking over of all my holdings in the Osaba territory by the United
-Mining Company. Am I right?"
-
-He did not need to wait for a reply; the answer was plain upon their
-countenances.
-
-"Now, gentlemen, I'm going to finish up," he said, pursuing his
-advantage. "Remember one thing: I'm not a Majendie. I fight to the
-last breath and when I'm downed I carry everything I get my hands on
-down with me.
-
-"Now, let's be perfectly plain. I know where I stand. If Majendie and
-the Atlantic Trust hadn't gone to smash, there wouldn't be a ghost of a
-show for me; you'd squeeze every last cent I had. I know it. I knew it
-then when I knew it was Majendie or me. But you see Majendie's dead and
-the Atlantic Trust--three hundred and eighty millions--has closed its
-doors. That makes all the difference in the world. You don't want to
-trim me--not primarily. Forscheim and the United Mining do--that's
-their private affair. What you men who count want, I repeat, is to stop
-this panic--to get me out of the way and stop the panic if you can; if
-you can't get me out of the way, to stop the panic at once--now--within
-twenty-four hours! Now, gentlemen, I defy you to let the Associated
-Trust close its doors tomorrow and prevent, with all your money, the
-wreck of every industry in the country."
-
-"You overestimate the importance of such a failure," said Fontaine
-slowly, but without aggressiveness.
-
-Slade's attack had made a profound impression.
-
-"I have taken particular care that if the Associated fails, it'll be the
-biggest smash on record," said Slade, ready now to play his trump card.
-
-"What do you mean?" demanded Haggerty, startled, while the others waited
-expectantly.
-
-"Just that," said Slade, not unwilling that they should know the depth
-of his game. "If the Associated fails, sixty-seven institutions fail
-from here to San Francisco. I have taken care of that in the last two
-months."
-
-"You haf ingreased your oplications at sooch a time!" fairly shrieked
-Forscheim, who saw his victory eluding him.
-
-"You bet I did," said Slade. "I made sure that I couldn't be _allowed_
-to fail."
-
-He took from his pocket a folded sheet and handed it to Steele, who had
-a moment before finally determined to come to his support.
-
-"That's what failure means. Pass it around," he said.
-
-The lawyer elevated his eyebrows in astonishment. The disclosure of how
-Slade by negotiating loans with a number of subsidiary institutions
-throughout the country had made them united in his general fate,
-completed the dawning recognition of a master which had been forming in
-his mind.
-
-"He will beat them," he thought, passing on the paper. "He will go far.
-I must be his friend." Aloud he said carefully: "Of course, Mr. Slade,
-at the bottom the affairs of the Associated Trust are absolutely
-solvent."
-
-"Solvent under any system of banking in the world which does not
-withhold ready money on proper guarantees," said Slade, looking at him
-with a glance that showed the lawyer he had received his alliance;
-"solvent as the Atlantic Trust was, is, and will be proved to be. You
-gentlemen know that as well as I do."
-
-"Of course, Mr. Slade," said Steele, with an appearance of
-aggressiveness which the other understood perfectly, "one thing must be
-understood--the present speculative operations of the Trust Companies
-can not go on."
-
-"Now, gentlemen, to finish up," said Slade, who seized the hint.
-"Here's my answer: I will agree to any legislation, in fact will urge
-it, that will place the Trust Companies on the basis of the National
-Banks; that is, on the same conservative basis of loans and
-transactions. That is right. I am now convinced that it is for the
-best." He allowed a slight smile to show and continued: "I will resign
-as President of the Associated Trust three months from to-day. That I
-had already determined on. For what I wish to do, that would only be an
-embarrassment. You will lend me the five millions I wish and, better
-still, tomorrow morning make a simple announcement to the effect that,
-having consulted on the affairs of the Associated Trust, you have found
-no reasons for apprehension, and announce that you will come to its
-support. Sign it Fontaine, Gunther, McBane, Marx and Stone, and the run
-on the banks will end in twenty-four hours. Tomorrow morning I will
-personally assure Mr. Steele, by an examination of my books, that
-affairs are as I have described. After this examination you can place
-five millions to my disposal--if necessary. Believe me, this is a much
-better way to end the panic. You reassure public confidence by your
-guarantee. The other way, by forcing my resignation, you create an
-impression that everything is rotten. Besides, the first way has this
-advantage--it is the only way. That's my word, gentlemen; if you intend
-to stop the panic you've got to float me!"
-
-An hour later, having yielded not a jot of his position, turning a deaf
-ear to threats, expostulations and arguments, he rose victorious.
-
-In the anteroom he went up to Gunther, who was still bowed over his
-solitaire, waiting grimly until his word had been carried out.
-
-"Mr. Gunther," said Slade, stopping at the table, "we have come to an
-understanding. The gentlemen in the other room were agreeably surprised
-at my exposition of the affairs of the Associated Trust. They are going
-to lend me five millions."
-
-"Indeed!" said Gunther in a sort of grunt but with a countenance so
-impassive that Slade was moved to admiration.
-
-"Gunther," he said, suddenly carried away by a feeling of prophetic
-elation, "up to now you've known me only as a speculator. Now I'm going
-to become a conservative force. In a month I'm coming to you with a
-proposition. You're the only man I would ever trust. Good-night."
-
-His automobile was waiting. He threw himself riotously into it, giving
-the address of Mrs. Kildair's apartment; and as he felt the pleasant,
-exhilarating sensation which the speed of his machine conveyed to him,
-he repeated, feeling suddenly how at last he had emerged from the perils
-of the first phase which he had once so frankly defined:
-
-"Now, I'll be conservative!"
-
-Unlike Gunther, who had behind him the traditions of generations of
-authority, Slade had that typical quality so perplexing in the American
-millionaire of sudden fortune--the childlike eagerness for admiration.
-When he arrived at Mrs. Kildair's and found that she was still absent,
-he was consumed with a nervous impatience. He seated himself at the
-piano, playing over clumsily refrains of the crude ranch songs which
-came to him as an echo of his earlier struggling days. But these echoes
-of a past conflict seemed only to whet his impatience. He ended with a
-crashing discord and rose, lighting another cigar, pacing the broad
-space of the studio with rapid, restless strides, surprised at the
-annoyance which her absence brought him.
-
-When Mrs. Kildair entered, let in by Henriette, her maid, Slade flung
-aside his cigar and strode impatiently forward.
-
-One glance at his triumphant face told her what she wanted to know. She
-made a quick sign to him with her hand and turned her back, disengaging
-her opera cloak with exaggerated slowness, drawing a deep breath. Then
-she sent Henriette upstairs to her room to wait until she called.
-
-"Congratulations," she said calmly, entering the studio and extending
-her hand. "You have won!"
-
-"How do you know?" he said, taken back by her composure.
-
-"It is there--in your eyes," she said, passing her fingers so close to
-them that he seemed to feel their soft contact. "Tell me all about it."
-
-"Yes, I've beaten them--Fontaine, Barton, Forscheim, Haggerty, the whole
-lot of them," he cried with a gleeful laugh. "More, I've forced myself
-into their hidebound circle. You'll see--in a month I'll be one of
-them."
-
-At times roguishly delighted as a boy, at others with flashes of
-primitive power, he related to the eager woman all the details of the
-night and the desperate stake he had played to make a failure so
-colossal that they themselves would recoil before it.
-
-"And if Majendie had not killed himself?" she said breathlessly,
-womanlike perceiving the hazards of fate.
-
-"But he did!" he cried impatiently, unwilling to admit the element of
-chance in the destiny he had hewn for himself. But the thought sobered
-him. He looked down from the height to which his ambition had flung him.
-"It's true. It was either Majendie or me," he said quietly. "Shall I
-tell you something? That night we were here I knew he was lost--that he
-would do it. Don't ask me how I knew!" Then, shaking off the memory as
-an evil dream, he continued, extending his arm in crude magnetic
-gestures: "Well, that's over. I am where I want to be; the rest is
-easy. In a month--two months--they will see, Forscheim and Haggerty,
-how the trap they laid for me has sprung against them. Tonight will be
-worth twenty millions to me."
-
-"How do you mean?" she said eagerly, but she did not look at him.
-Slade, triumphant in his brute power, inspired her with an emotion she
-did not dare to show him yet.
-
-"Forscheim and Haggerty, the United Mining," he said, forgetting his
-habitual caution in the now present desire to dazzle and overcome this
-woman who had so resisted him, who had become so suddenly necessary to
-him, "have laid their trap to get hold of the Osaba territory. They've
-stripped Gilbert and old General Paxton of their holdings, and they were
-sure they'd strip me. The Osaba gold fields will be one day worth
-hundreds of millions--another Eldorado. Well, they'll get a third
-interest tonight. I've got a third, and Striker and Benz. Mexican
-United, who've fought them tooth and nail, have another third. Each now
-has got to have what I've got or get out. I've got the control and when
-I sell--" He ended with a laugh. "I've licked Forscheim before but it
-will be nothing to this. They thought they had me down and they played
-into my hands!"
-
-Suddenly he changed his tone as the memory came to him of Gunther
-impassively waiting in his anteroom.
-
-"Now they'll see what I can do," he said savagely. "Gunther's the only
-real man among them. I must have Gunther. With him I can do what I
-want--construct, construct!"
-
-She rose, stopping him as he most wanted to continue.
-
-"You must go now," she said quietly; "I've already done what I
-shouldn't."
-
-He stopped, infuriated at this check to his inclinations, for, beyond
-his victory over the men he had fought, she still eluded him.
-
-"Did you care what happened to me--much?" he asked savagely.
-
-"Yes; I was surprised how much I cared," she said slowly, keeping her
-eyes on his.
-
-There are certain strong, direct characters who are most vulnerable in
-the moment of their greatest exaltation as the generality of men are
-weakest in their defeats. She saw in his eyes how much she lacked to
-his complete triumph and suddenly seized the opportunity by the
-forelock.
-
-"Why are you afraid to marry?" she said vigorously. "You are a child;
-you don't understand life. You don't know how to draw from it the
-incitements it can give you. You wish to be a great figure and you
-think you can remain an outcast."
-
-"What do you mean?" he said roughly, and advancing he took her by the
-shoulders without her recoiling.
-
-"You want to be another Gunther," she said, meeting his glance with an
-intensity of ambition greater than his, "and you wish to fight like a
-guerrilla. You think you need no one, and you need admiration,
-confidence, to be spurred on, flattered, cajoled, made to feel your
-greatness, to have it dinned into your ears day and night, to be
-surrounded by it. You have the vanity of a god and you don't know how
-to feed it."
-
-"Well, what would you do?" he said, still holding her from him.
-
-"I would make you what you should be: a personage--not a wanderer," she
-said with extraordinary energy. "I'd make your home a court; I'd show
-you what it meant to step into your box at the opera and have the
-feeling that every eye in the house turned to you. You want to do great
-things--but you want to feel that you have done great things, that
-others are impressed by them, envy and look up to you. You want that
-stimulus and there is only one way to get it. Take your place in
-society, where you belong among the great figures."
-
-"I find my own stimulus," he said, looking at her.
-
-"Listen, John Slade," she said furiously. "You think because you have
-always done what you want with women that that will continue. It won't.
-You are at a dangerous age. You have depended upon women; you cannot
-shake it off. The day will come when you'll be caught as every man is
-who plays beyond his youth and strength. Women will either hinder you
-or push you on. Make up your mind now. Which do you want?"
-
-"I want you!" he said, suddenly caught by her words that came as an
-answer to his new view of himself; and violently, characteristically, he
-added, enfolding her: "And when I want a thing, I want it now! Get your
-wraps on. We're going over to Jersey now and get married."
-
-"No, no," she said firmly though her heart was beating so that she
-thought he must hear it.
-
-"You've got me. I never expected it, but I've got to have you," he said
-and brutally, without thinking whether he hurt her or not, he forced her
-head up to his. She did not resist, intoxicated, carried away by her
-absolute helplessness in his arms. Then, confident, he renewed his
-demand that they should be married that night, at once.
-
-"No, no," she said, disengaging herself, and though all her natural
-being responded to his demand, her intellectual self conquered, knowing
-full well that beyond winning him, she must always maintain over him a
-certain moral superiority. "No. To do what I want to do, we must not
-give any one the slightest occasion to talk. Such an act as this would
-be suicidal."
-
-"When then?" he said furiously.
-
-"Announce our engagement tomorrow," she said, "and in a week we can be
-married very quietly."
-
-"A week!" he cried indignantly.
-
-"Or less," she said, smiling; "and now you must go."
-
-"You haven't said, 'I love you,'" he said with a last flash of
-antagonistic suspicion.
-
-"When I say it you will be satisfied," she said, with a look that
-revealed to him a new, undiscovered world.
-
-"Rita," he persisted doggedly, seizing her wrist, "I know what you can
-do, what you'll make of us, but that's not all. I don't want any
-cold-blooded reason-and-logic marriage. Look here. You've got to love
-me--like hell--do you understand?"
-
-She turned on him swiftly, opening her lips until her white teeth showed
-in their tense grip. Then, suddenly veiling her emotion in a relaxing
-smile, she said, as she rang for Henriette:
-
-"No woman could find it hard to love you, John Slade."
-
-When he had left she remained standing a long while very thoughtfully.
-Then she went quietly upstairs and fell almost immediately into a quiet,
-profound sleep. Her own self-possession surprised her; but unusual
-natures have this over common-place ones that they are continually
-surprising themselves.
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER XIX*
-
-
-When the next day Beecher reached his club he found all discussions
-centered upon John G. Slade and the astonishing and incomprehensible
-outcome of the conference at Gunther's of which naturally only the usual
-misinformation was known. The morning papers had contained a reassuring
-statement, backed by powerful names, of the condition of the Associated
-Trust, with promises of support. Gunther had publicly announced that he
-would bring twenty millions of ready money to relieve the financial
-stringency and, if that were not sufficient, twenty millions more. When
-the man in the Street comprehended that the great fortunes of the
-country had authorized this step, the effect was instantaneous. The
-stock market opened with loss of two to three points and immediately
-recovered this decline and, for the first time during the week,
-registered distinct advances. The runs on the banks still continued,
-but the lines of depositors were apparently less. At eleven o'clock
-Rupert V. Steele visibly entered the offices of the Associated Trust
-and, advancing to the deserted window of the cashier, made the first
-deposit. In a minute it was publicly announced that five millions of
-dollars had just been deposited to the credit of the great Columbus
-National. Half of the waiting line, wavered, turned and went home.
-
-"Well, Slade's turned the trick," said Gunther, joining his friend.
-"But how he managed to wriggle through is a mystery."
-
-"Haven't seen the papers," said Beecher. "What do they say about Emma
-Fornez?"
-
-"Couldn't be better. The third act bowled 'em over," said Gunther,
-laughing. Beecher had told him of the diva's prophecy. "By the way,
-Ted, my long shot may not prove such a wild one. Mapleson is a close
-friend of the Cheevers--rather attentive to the lady, who from all
-accounts is a rather frisky one. I telephoned McKenna about it and he
-seemed distinctly interested."
-
-"McKenna?" said Beecher, opening his eyes.
-
-"Well, yes," said Gunther, laughing; "but forget I told you. Besides, I
-have a feeling that things will open up now."
-
-"Is McKenna on the trail of any one?"
-
-"Well, yes," said Gunther slowly; "and I don't think it'll be long now
-before we hear of him. How about lunch?"
-
-At this moment a boy arrived with summons for Beecher to the telephone.
-He did not recognize the voice immediately.
-
-"You don't know who it is?" said a woman.
-
-He thought he recognized the tones of Miss Rivers, whom he had
-shamefully neglected in the excitement of the last days; but, warily, he
-did not commit himself.
-
-"You're disguising your voice," he said cautiously.
-
-"Not at all. You are not very flattering--but when one listens so much
-to the voice of Emma Fornez--"
-
-"Miss Charters," he said instantly.
-
-"At last."
-
-He was suddenly troubled at the discovery, for he had sincerely
-persuaded himself that he did not intend to see her again.
-
-"She is going to reproach me," he thought uneasily, "for not returning
-to see her last night. The devil! Well, I shall tell her the truth--I
-didn't like her companion."
-
-But instead of reproaches she said in very good humor:
-
-"Look out, I can be very jealous. What are you doing tonight?"
-
-"I am dining out," he said, fibbing promptly, determined to remain firm.
-
-"Oh--I'm sorry," she said, with a quick dropping of her tone. "I wanted
-you to take me to a dress rehearsal that will be very amusing."
-
-"I'm sorry too."
-
-"What are you doing this afternoon, around tea time?"
-
-"I have an engagement," he said truthfully.
-
-"With Emma Fornez?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"I am not very lucky, am I?" she said.
-
-The wounded tone in her voice made him feel a bit ashamed. He saw that
-she would not ask him again and relented a little.
-
-"Will you be in at four? I can drop in for a little chat then," he
-said, amazed at his own yielding even as he spoke the words.
-
-"Come then. I want very much to see you," she answered but without
-lightness.
-
-"Now I'm in it again!" he said ruefully as he left the telephone. "What
-the deuce made me say I'd go. Just because I didn't want to hurt her--O
-Lord! Steady, old boy, steady!"
-
-Outside the booth he found Gunther, an afternoon's paper in his hand,
-scanning it with excitement on every feature.
-
-"I say, Ted, here's news indeed," he cried. "What do you think of that?"
-
-He pointed to the headline on the front page where the engagement of
-John G. Slade to Mrs. Rita Kildair was announced in large type. The two
-young men looked at each other in profound astonishment.
-
-"By Jove!" said Beecher, suddenly enlightened. "That's what was at the
-bottom last night! Now I understand." In a moment he comprehended the
-full measure of the agony of uncertainty she must have suffered at his
-side in the returning automobile. "So that was her game after all!"
-
-"Now things'll begin to move," said Gunther eagerly. "If she really
-knows who's the thief, as McKenna believes, the ring ought to be
-returned in forty-eight hours."
-
-"Why?"
-
-"Because now that she is publicly engaged to Slade, any one who has been
-trading on the knowledge of how she got the ring won't have a shred to
-blackmail her with. You see it now becomes the engagement ring that
-Slade gave her and she can move openly; and from what I've seen of her,
-she'll lose no time. Ted, I'll prophesy in forty-eight hours we'll hear
-something about that ring."
-
-"I believe you're right," said Beecher as they went into luncheon; and,
-thinking of the curious conjunction of Mrs. Kildair's and Miss Charters'
-prophecy as to the return of the ring, he said to himself unwillingly:
-"If the ring is returned, does that mean that Mrs. Bloodgood took it?"
-
-A little after four he went to pay his call on Miss Charters and as he
-had become accustomed to her perplexing change of moods, he wondered in
-what temper she would receive him. She was in a Russian blouse of gray
-corduroy relieved by a broad lace collar and fitted loosely to her
-straight, lithe body by a belt at the waist, an effect of girlish
-simplicity, very yielding and artless.
-
-She did not wait for him in the sitting-room but came out into the hall,
-taking his hat and stick herself and leading the way. Once in the cosy
-sitting-room she stopped, turning to face him and suddenly taking his
-hands in hers.
-
-"Let me look at you," she said, drawing off and raising her eyes to his
-thoughtfully, while her lips twisted a little into a most serious
-sternness.
-
-"Little imp!" he thought grimly, prepared against her wiles and yet a
-little startled at this figure of a young girl which so tantalizingly
-confronted him.
-
-She saw at once, in the amused composure of his face, that she had been
-mistaken in ascribing his absence to the pique of jealousy. What she
-had on her lips she did not say, and suddenly alert at the realization
-that her presence no longer troubled him she drew him toward the
-fireplace, leading him to a great armchair.
-
-"There," she said, laughing, "you will see how we treat the prodigal
-son. Sit down." She brought a cushion and insisted upon placing it
-behind his back. "Don't get up. A scotch and soda? Sit still--I like
-to mix it."
-
-She went to a table and presently came back with the tumbler, offering
-it to him with a well simulated attitude of submission. When he took
-it, she dropped a curtsey and going to the library table, returned with
-a box of cigars and the matches. Continuing always the same game,
-determined to force a laugh, she lit the match, holding it to him
-between her rosy palms.
-
-"Is your lordship satisfied?"
-
-"I am."
-
-She lit a cigarette in turn and camping down on the bear rug, Eastern
-fashion, puffed a ring of smoke in the direction of the fire. For a
-moment neither spoke, she studying the embers, he enjoying this new side
-to her and awaiting the next development.
-
-"I'm very unhappy," she said at last, without looking at him.
-
-"I'm sorry," he answered sympathetically.
-
-"I have had a great disappointment. I read that play of Hargrave's
-again--there's nothing to it."
-
-"You surprise me."
-
-The fact was that Brockway, Stigler's stage director had torn it to
-pieces. She continued, repeating what Brockway had said:
-
-"The trouble is, it's not actable. It's like all plays that read
-well--I should have known it. There's no dramatic action. Then, it has
-one great fault--all young writers have it--you see, every scene should
-be a unit in itself, express one dramatic emotion, develop it, and
-increase it; and Hargrave puts three or four emotions in the same
-page--five or six," she continued indignantly. "It's all mixed
-up--topsy-turvy--no actress could make an effect." (This had been its
-chief merit two days before.) "It's very sad; I shall never find a
-play."
-
-"You were very enthusiastic a few days ago," he said.
-
-"Was I?" she said resentfully. "You see, the trouble is, in reading you
-imagine things that aren't there."
-
-"So Hargrave isn't a genius after all?" he asked.
-
-"He is very conceited--insufferably so," she said abruptly. "But you
-don't understand--it's the disappointment to me--I shall never find a
-play. Sometimes I feel like giving it all up. It's terrible--breaking
-your heart day after day. Yes, sometimes I feel like never acting
-again."
-
-"You are in a blue mood," he said cheerfully.
-
-"Everything has gone wrong," she said, pouting. "Even you have changed!"
-
-She looked at him with a look of a tired child, longing to climb into
-his lap to be consoled.
-
-"How so?" he said, opening his eyes.
-
-"Teddy, have I offended you?" she asked gently, seeing that she could
-not unbend him by playing upon his sympathy.
-
-"Not the least."
-
-She would have preferred any answer but this.
-
-"Why wouldn't you go with me tonight?" she said quickly.
-
-"Because I have another engagement," he said, instinctively glancing at
-the clock.
-
-She saw the look, sprang up from the rug furiously, and leaping toward
-the mantelpiece seized the offending clock and flung it across the room
-in a tantrum.
-
-"Go to your Emma Fornez!" she said, stamping her foot. "If you are
-going to sit here and measure the minutes, you can go!"
-
-He rose, startled at the passion of jealousy he had aroused.
-
-"I told you I had an engagement," he began.
-
-"Nonsense!" she burst out, still the prey of her anger. "You know very
-well you can keep her waiting half an hour if you wish, and you know
-very well that you can put off your engagement to-night--or is it with
-her, always with her?"
-
-"I don't care to discuss my engagements," he said coldly, an emotion
-which he was far from feeling, for the sudden wild-eyed fury into which
-he had plunged her awoke in him something that thrilled him, as he had
-been thrilled the day he had returned Mrs. Bloodgood to her home, at the
-thought of what a consuming passion might be.
-
-"Why do you tag around with her?" she continued heedlessly. "I should
-think you'd have more regard for your dignity--for what people
-think--Emma Fornez--ah!"
-
-She stopped, pressing her handkerchief to her eyes and then, feeling he
-had perceived it, she exclaimed: "If I cry it's because I am
-disappointed--disillusionized--angry!"
-
-She turned her back and went quickly to the window where the little
-Dresden clock lay shattered in a corner. She picked it up and looked at
-it, swallowing her anger. Then, as he continued to keep the silence,
-she came back, without looking at him, placed the clock on the
-mantelpiece again and said coldly:
-
-"Well, it is time for you to go--not to keep her waiting."
-
-"Good-afternoon," he said with a bow, and left the apartment.
-
-When he reached the street, he was overcome with surprise.
-
-"By Jove!" he said, swinging joyfully along. "Is it possible after all
-that she does care about me? How her eyes blazed--the little fury.
-That at least wasn't acting!"
-
-And though he remained until late, amused at Emma Fornez, he felt the
-flame of the other presence about him, obtruding itself at every moment;
-and he who had seen the play of strong emotions in Mrs. Bloodgood and
-Mrs. Kildair, avidly began to feel what it would mean to be loved with
-such intensity.
-
-Emma Fornez questioned him about Miss Charters but for the first time he
-resolutely concealed from her what had taken place.
-
-That night on his return to his rooms, he found a short note from Bruce
-Gunther:
-
-
-DEAR TED,
-
-Be at McKenna's offices to-morrow--ten sharp. Something doing.
-
-B.
-
-P.S. Keep this to yourself--_savez_?
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER XX*
-
-
-DEAR TEDDY,
-
-I am very much ashamed at what happened yesterday. Please forgive my
-ill-humor and some day, when you have a spare hour, do come to see me.
-
-Very cordially your friend,
- NAN CHARTERS.
-
-
-This note was the first which Beecher read on awakening the next
-morning. He had slept by fits and starts, troubled by the memory of his
-last interview with the young actress. The sudden unchecked tempest of
-jealousy and anger which had revealed to him the dramatic intensity of
-the woman had made a more haunting impression on his imagination than
-all her premeditated appeals.
-
-"If after all she does love me? How tremendous it would be," he had
-said to himself a dozen times, turning restlessly, in the half stupor of
-waking sleep.
-
-He lived over again the scene--only this time it seemed to him that when
-she had flung the clock from her in a passion, he had laughed joyfully
-and caught her struggling in his arms, exulting in this rage which
-burned so close to him. His first impulse on reading her note was to
-telephone her immediately, but he resisted this movement, saying to
-himself that that would be surrendering all his advantage.
-
-"I'll call up later," he thought with a smile; "that will be much
-better."
-
-He went eagerly down to McKenna's office, wondering what surprise was in
-store. Gunther and McKenna were already in the latter's private office,
-as he entered, and with the first look he took at the detective's
-smiling countenance, he perceived that he must be on the track of
-something significant.
-
-"We were discussing Mrs. Kildair's engagement," said Gunther. "McKenna
-agrees with me that it will expedite matters wonderfully."
-
-"How did Slade manage it?" said Beecher at once.
-
-The detective, without answering, went to his desk and picked up a
-square of cardboard on which he had pasted two clippings from the
-newspapers, one the announcement signed by Gunther, Sr., Marx and
-Fontaine, giving notice of their support of the Associated Trust, and
-the other the bare announcement of the prospective marriage of John G.
-Slade and Mrs. Rita Kildair.
-
-"I am going to preserve this and hang it up over my mantelpiece," he
-said, looking at it thoughtfully, "and when I have an idle hour, I'll
-stretch out, smoke up and study it. A couple of million people must
-have seen that--and that's all they'll ever know."
-
-"And you?"
-
-"I can only--deduce," he said, a twinkle in his eye. He glanced at the
-clock and said hurriedly: "Now we must get down to business. I am
-expecting some one in half an hour who ought to particularly interest
-you."
-
-"You know who took the ring!" said Beecher instantly.
-
-"I know several things," said McKenna briskly; "but everything in place.
-I promised you gentlemen, as you are interested in those things, a
-little history of the party that was at Mrs. Kildair's that night. It's
-nothing as literary style goes--just facts. Here it is. I'll skip the
-personal descriptions."
-
-He took up a bundle of notes, seated himself on the corner of the flat
-desk, and began to read:
-
-"Cheever, Stanley: Age 48; married; old New York family; left a fortune
-estimated at $425,000, at the death of his father, Ganet Cheever, when
-he was twenty-eight. Lived ten years abroad, principally London;
-inveterate gambler; lost heavily at Monte Carlo--sum estimated at
-$125,000; later became involved in a gambling scandal in England, but it
-was hushed up by his payment of a large sum to cover notes given.
-Continued to lose heavily at St. Petersburg, Baden and Paris; began
-borrowing large sums, meeting obligations with difficulty. Declared
-bankruptcy in Colorado, where he had gone to promote a mine; his
-statements contested by creditors who brought suit; contest settled out
-of court by payment by his relatives to avoid a family scandal. Returned
-to New York and engaged himself as an exploiter of well-known wine
-merchants. Married three years ago Lydia Borgen, daughter of a large
-importing grocer, who brought him $100,000. Lives at rate of $20,000 a
-year. Only known occupation gambling; said to have won fifty-five
-thousand dollars in three nights' play from Kane Wentworth and Thomas
-Haggerty, Jr.,--protested but paid. Method of play has occasioned
-numerous reports to his discredit. Accused operating a system of
-private signals with his wife, by Mrs. Elmer Jardine after scene at
-card-table; brought suit for libel against her and received $12,000
-damages out of court to compromise it. Is not received in home of
-father-in-law. Cut off by mother's will. Frequently quarrels with his
-wife over the attentions of other men. Known to have applied
-unsuccessfully at several banks within the last month to raise loans.
-Heavily speculated on long side of recent market, purchasing large block
-of stocks, margined, on morning after theft of ring, and said to be
-heavily involved. Sought aid of wife's relatives day before yesterday;
-refused.
-
-"Cheever, Mrs. Lydia: Born Lydia Borgen, daughter Harris Borgen, German
-immigrant, who married Lydia Foley, waitress in Pearl Street restaurant.
-Father made fortune in grocery business, establishing with brother in
-South America a large importing office dealing in cocoa, coffee, and
-fruit. At death of uncle, Lydia became heir to $100,000. Father said
-to be worth three quarters of a million, but estranged from daughter,
-whose marriage he opposed. As a young girl Lydia, rebellious and wild,
-constantly involved in escapades, notably with an actor, James Rocker,
-with whom she attempted to elope and go on the stage. Kept under strict
-surveillance, but at age of seventeen ran off with Charles Bourgoyne,
-young English groom at Waltby's riding academy. Pursued and arrested
-just as about to be married in New Jersey. Bourgoyne arrested for
-abduction but later paid to leave country. Married at nineteen to
-Stanley Cheever, through mediation of mother and a Mrs. Dorgan,
-notorious marriage broker. Has become tool of husband in schemes of
-raising money while leading a separate existence. Keeps private bank
-account unknown to husband. Very extravagant in personal expenses which
-cannot be accounted for on known income. From beginning of married life
-has been conspicuous for her relations with other men, generally wealthy
-bachelors, who have subsequently lost money at cards: names best known,
-Edward Fontaine, Reginald Forrest, Thomas Haggerty, Jr. At present seen
-frequently with R. G. Mapleson of firm of Sontag & Co.--"
-
-"Mapleson!" said the two young men in a breath.
-
-"I know what you mean," said McKenna, raising his hand. "Wait till I
-get through"; and he continued to read in his matter-of-fact,
-unemotional voice these pages of hard, glaring facts that left his
-hearers straining forward to catch every word:
-
-"At present deeply involved in affair with E. V. Garraboy. Seems to
-have been introduced to the broker at desire of husband, to obtain
-through this channel information which his sister, Mrs. Enos Bloodgood,
-may have acquired from B. L. Majendie of financial affairs in general
-and particularly Atlantic Trust. Acquaintance developed into violent
-passion for Garraboy by Mrs. Cheever; has met him frequently of late,
-twice having been followed to his apartments. Of late, scenes with
-husband have been increasing in violence, coupled with mutual
-threats--believe rupture possible.
-
-"_Item_: Bills against Mrs. Cheever known to be outstanding include
-$13,800 to Sontag & Co., for jewels; $1,200 to Madame Cortin for hats,
-etc.; $8,300 to Friegel Bros., robes.
-
-"_Item_: The $100,000 she inherited, stands in her own name, but is
-believed to be now reduced to $75,000. Morning after theft of ring,
-sold short through Garraboy, her broker, 5,000 shares Union Pacific.
-For further details, see Garraboy.
-
-"Charming little domestic circle, eh?" said McKenna, laying down the
-sheet. "Now for another:
-
-"Bloodgood, Enos R.: Owner New York _Daily Star_; large holder of real
-estate in lower New York; director Metropolitan Opera; brought up, at
-death of his parents, by his grandfather, Joseph Bloodgood, president of
-the Northwestern Railroad, as his prospective heir. At age of 20,
-despite threats of his guardian, left college and married Charlotte
-Granby, daughter of his tutor. Promptly disinherited. Went to work as a
-clerk in Brooklyn drygoods store, living on twenty-five dollars a week,
-refusing all overtures from grandfather, who offered to forgive him on
-condition of separation from his wife, allowing her $20,000. Refused
-and lived in that condition for five years until her death, brought on
-by privations. Reconciled with grandfather and sent abroad for a
-journey through Europe. Two years later became violently infatuated
-with a Spanish singer of the Cafe Chantants and went with her on a trip
-to South America, again defying his guardian. At the end of a year,
-affair ended by a secret payment made by his grandfather to the woman to
-procure her desertion. Followed her and engaged in duel with her
-companion, from whom he received serious wounds. After recovery,
-returned to Paris, where he again became entangled in violent
-infatuations. On point of marrying an Austrian countess of doubtful
-history, fell ill with pneumonia and almost died. Returned to New York
-and became reconciled with grandfather. Seemed to turn over new leaf;
-entered journalism and made good record for steadiness and conservatism,
-leading exemplary life. Grandfather, in his will, however, contrary to
-expectations, cut him off with $20,000. Two months later, married Mrs.
-Georgiana Wakeman, fifteen years his senior, fortune estimated at ten
-millions, widow of former owner of N. Y. _Star_, which then passed under
-his control. Next ten years remarkable for his strict application to
-business and the dissoluteness of his private life. Mixed up in several
-promoting schemes with various success. At death of second wife,
-received bulk of fortune. Remained widower three years, greatly
-increasing fortune at period of Trust consolidations. Married third
-wife, Elise Garraboy, noted Southern beauty, no fortune. Union unhappy
-after first months; returned to his old habits. Three months ago forced
-to pay $15,000 to prevent blackmailing suit on part of a Miss Edna Rusk,
-chorus girl. Plunged heavily on short side of late market in a pool
-formed to bear market; reputed to have made immense gains.
-
-"_Item_: Has been in confidential relations with Miss Maud Lille for
-some time. Visited her early morning, after theft of ring."
-
-"That's queer," said Gunther, startled at this final detail. "Did
-Bloodgood do anything in the market that day?"
-
-"Sold right and left," said McKenna, exchanging papers.
-
-Beecher, more impressionable than his companion, said nothing, overcome
-by the bare recital of this brutal, materialistic life that once had
-been young and stirred to unbelievable sacrifice.
-
-"Bloodgood, Mrs. Enos: Born Elise Garraboy; sister of Edward Garraboy;
-old Southern family, New Orleans; father Colonel Marston Garraboy; died
-when children were little. Mother married Boyd Hallowel, Englishman,
-third son Lord Carmody, came to live in New York. Hallowel died ten
-years later, leaving her with small income but social connections.
-Elise educated at convent; made debut in society at age of eighteen;
-great beauty; numerous suitors; engaged in second season to Enos
-Bloodgood; engagement broken; married a year later. Story current,
-forced into it to save mother from bankruptcy. Left husband twice in
-first two years, but persuaded to return by mother. Met Bernard L.
-Majendie eight months ago at Palm Beach. Infatuation no secret;
-understood that two weeks before panic had placed her interests in hands
-of lawyers, who procured evidence for divorce; action halted
-temporarily. Night of party at Mrs. Kildair's, trunks packed for
-journey, tickets purchased at Grand Central to Montreal. Day after,
-made no investments in Wall Street. Following day, left home with
-trunks and returned shortly after suicide. Violent scenes with husband.
-Shut herself up in room for hours. That night went to home of Majendie,
-company with--"
-
-Suddenly McKenna stopped at a violent movement of surprise from Beecher,
-and said quickly, "--a woman and a young man. Said to be totally
-without funds; husband reputed to allow her only $120 a month
-pocket-money. That's all."
-
-Gunther had been quick to see the agitation of his companion but, since
-he comprehended that whatever the part he had played Beecher wished to
-keep it in confidence, he pretended to have understood nothing.
-
-"Then there is no trace of Mrs. Bloodgood's having gone into the
-market?" he said.
-
-"None," replied McKenna. "There are other details, but they come better
-under head of the brother."
-
-He shuffled the remaining sheets and then, as though divining the unease
-of Beecher, he said in a matter-of-fact tone:
-
-"Here's the history of Miss Nan Charters; but as it gives us nothing
-important we don't know, I'll leave it out. Particularly as we're short
-of time. However, I'll say this--there is no record of any stock
-transactions except that which we know of already. The next is Miss
-Maud Lille, a curious character, too."
-
-Beecher drew a long breath and relaxed in his chair, grateful to McKenna
-for his consideration.
-
-"Lille, Maud," said the detective, reading. "Real name Margaret Case;
-daughter Rev. Hiram Case and Fanny Saunders, Zanesville, Ohio; left home
-at age of sixteen; studied one year to be trained nurse; left hospital
-and studied stenography; later joined traveling circus, business
-department; became press agent. Stranded in northern Arizona; earned
-living by writing for local newspapers under name Jane Anderson; went to
-San Francisco and from there to Honolulu, supporting herself by her
-writings, occasionally taking regular position as stenographer. In
-Hawaii met and married an eastern adventurer known under name of Edward
-Bracken; returned with him to San Francisco, where couple engaged in
-mining speculations. Husband pursued for fraud and fled; wife arrested
-but released. Went to Chicago after securing divorce and changed name
-to Maud Lille. Sent to Cripple Creek by Chicago _World_ and made a hit
-by her graphic accounts of labor conditions. Married Patrick O'Fallon,
-wealthy mine owner. Went with him for trip in Europe but apparently
-dissatisfied with life left him and returned to newspaper work,
-establishing herself in New York. Not divorced. Under own name author
-of several successful novels; prefers Bohemian existence of journalist
-evidently, reporting prize-fights, political conventions, murder trials,
-etc. Attached to staff of New York _Star_ and apparently much in
-confidence of owner. Lately much interested in stock market. On morning
-after theft met E. V. Garraboy at Levere's restaurant, near home, before
-breakfast; returned to her apartment and saw Enos Bloodgood two hours
-later. Reported sold short 500 shares Union Pacific."
-
-"By Jove," exclaimed Beecher as Gunther rose excitedly to his feet,
-"you've got it!"
-
-"Maud Lille took it first and transferred it to Garraboy," said Gunther,
-then he stopped, puzzled; "but Bloodgood--that's incredible!"
-
-"Hold in your horses," said McKenna, shaking his head with silent
-laughter, delighted, in fact, that they had fallen into his trap.
-"There's one more little history to read." He hesitated and then said:
-"Now, I don't want to play up to a little tin god on wheels, though
-that's easy enough. I'll say this, that a good deal of the information
-I am reading you I have had in hand. The gentleman whose bright little
-history I am going to read you, I have had my eyes on for some time.
-That'll develop.
-
-"Garraboy, Edward V.: Sent to military training school; expelled; went
-up north, boarding-school; expelled; tutored for college and went to
-Harvard; ran up debts to extent of over a thousand dollars in two
-months, signing promissory notes. Paid by stepfather, who withdrew him
-at the request of college authorities; cut off by family and sent to
-Chicago with four hundred dollars to enter business house. Instead,
-speculated in wheat market and said to have made a little money. Went
-to Denver with small capital and posed as son of wealthy parents. Made
-acquaintance of a family called Sanderson and shortly became engaged to
-daughter, heiress to considerable fortune. Engagement broken as result
-of investigations. Left Denver, leaving behind a number of debts and
-bad checks. Next, heard of in southern California, working in mine; got
-in shooting affray over daughter of Mexican and went into British
-Columbia. Used many names. Spent a year in small stock companies
-playing little roles; made a lucky gamble in silver mine and went to San
-Francisco, living high. Went to Seattle; became engaged to a widow of
-large real estate manipulator; persuaded her to invest her money in land
-exploitation scheme in southern California which proved failure. Ran
-away from Seattle and went to Hawaii to sell imitation jewelry under
-name of Edward--"
-
-"Bracken!" exclaimed the two young men in one breath.
-
-"Exactly."
-
-"Married to Maud Lille!" cried Gunther, the first to recover his
-astonishment. "Why, the little toad! How the deuce did these women
-fall for him?"
-
-"Oh, that's a question by itself, Mr. Gunther," said McKenna, smiling.
-"It's a good deal in studying what you're dealing with, and Garraboy
-watched them pretty close. Let me finish.
-
-"Came to San Francisco, as you know; fled to escape pursuit; changing
-name, shipped as clerk on a merchantman from New Orleans. Next known of
-him, returned from the Far East under own name with apparently a certain
-amount of money. On hearing marriage of his sister, came to New York
-and established himself in Wall Street, largely through the aid of
-Bloodgood, over whose head evidently has held some threat. Met Maud
-Lille and probably came to some understanding with her; has paid her
-money from time to time. Encouraged sister's infatuation for Majendie,
-whom sought to enlist in scheme for rice production in South; failed.
-Made money rapidly until three months ago, when several ventures failed
-and became involved. Secured personal loan of $10,000 from Majendie
-without knowledge of sister. Has lived at rate of $40,000 a year,
-running several establishments; said to have given $15,000 worth of
-jewelry to Mlle. Clo. D'Aresco, the dancer, on her last visit here.
-Made immense short sales in recent market and was on verge of failure
-when panic saved him. Has profited by infatuation of Mrs. Cheever to
-borrow large sums in last week. On day after theft sold steadily all
-day; under suspicions by his own clients and on verge of arrest, when
-drop in stocks turned tide in his favor. Reputed to have covered his
-losses and made $100,000 in last three days."
-
-"You were on his track then!" exclaimed Beecher, suddenly enlightened.
-
-"I was and I am," said McKenna; "and in less than twenty-four hours I'll
-shake down that frisky gentleman for about forty-five thousand dollars
-that he has been speculating with. Four days ago I couldn't have
-collected forty-five cents. That's why I held off."
-
-"Good Lord!" said Beecher, suddenly remembering. "I say, McKenna, Miss
-Charters' money is tied up with him. You don't suppose--by Jove, I hope
-nothing's wrong!"
-
-"You give me the amount," said McKenna with a click of his teeth. "I'll
-get it. He knows, I guess, by this time what a pretty little story it
-would make in the morning papers. He won't resist--not he!"
-
-"Look here," said Beecher excitedly, putting his hand to his pocketbook.
-"By Jove, that's lucky. I've still got that order. I can telephone her
-now--"
-
-"Telephone nothing," said McKenna, reaching out his hand. "I don't need
-that order, except as a reference. Just keep it quiet. The young lady
-won't thank you less for your saving her without her knowledge, will
-she?"
-
-"No," said Beecher, flurried. "Here's the order. When'll you get at
-Garraboy?"
-
-"In about ten minutes," said McKenna, reaching over for a fresh cigar.
-
-"Here?"
-
-"Right here."
-
-"And the ring?" asked Gunther quickly.
-
-"What do you think?" said McKenna, his little eyes snapping through the
-blaze of the match as he lighted his cigar.
-
-"I think it lies between Mrs. Cheever, Miss Lille and Garraboy," said
-Gunther; "either woman took it and either passed it to Garraboy at the
-table--"
-
-"Well?" said McKenna, as Gunther hesitated.
-
-"Or Garraboy took it first and passed it to one of them."
-
-"Why?"
-
-"For fear that he or she had been seen taking it the first time--to
-cover up the tracks. Whoever may have seen the ring taken would believe
-the original thief had restored it and kept quiet."
-
-"That's ingenious, and I must say it may prove to have some bearing,"
-said McKenna. "It's likewise possible. But you gentlemen have missed
-the whole point of what I've been reading you."
-
-"In what way?"
-
-"There's not one bit of evidence who took the ring," said McKenna, with
-a gesture at the recording sheets. "It shows who might have taken
-it--that's true. Now, what it shows is this--what was working in every
-one's mind the night of that party. You remember that it was on the
-night before Majendie's failure, and that the whole question of the
-panic hung on whether he was going to pull through or not. Now, of
-every one who was there, with the exception of Miss Charters, Mrs.
-Bloodgood and Mr. Beecher here, every one was in Wall Street up to their
-necks, and if they knew what had happened to Majendie they could call
-the turn. Now, what happened? Bloodgood was getting his information
-from Maud Lille, who got it from Garraboy, who easy enough could get it
-from his sister, not out of treachery, but unconsciously, you may be
-sure. Well, all these three got the straight tip. That's what the
-meeting next morning was about. Bloodgood never took the ring; that
-would be ridiculous; and Maud Lille, whatever her record for drifting,
-is not a crook. So those meetings were on the question of speculation,
-pure and simple.
-
-"Now, Mrs. Cheever got the news straight and Mr. Cheever didn't, though
-he depended on his wife working Garraboy. Cheever bought stocks and was
-caught. That likewise shows there may be some interesting developments
-in that charming little family, particularly when he finds out that Mrs.
-Cheever sold and won. Now, what have we to go on? Cheever's a
-crook--but if he took it, he did it alone.
-
-"Garraboy's a crook and, following Mr. Gunther's theory, he could have
-taken it alone or working with Mrs. Cheever. If there was any
-collusion, it was there. Gentlemen, I am only discussing
-possibilities."
-
-"If the ring was taken to raise money to gamble in Wall Street, then it
-lies between Cheever and Garraboy," said Gunther.
-
-"Say it this way: if Mrs. Cheever or Miss Lille took it, Garraboy would
-probably know--"
-
-"And Slade?" said Beecher.
-
-"If Slade took it, we're losing our time. Aren't we?" said McKenna.
-
-"McKenna, do you know?" said Gunther suddenly.
-
-"Unless I am very much mistaken, I'll know in twenty-four hours," said
-McKenna, "I know this--who has the ring and when he had it, and this
-evening, about 5:30 in the afternoon, I ought to know from the gentleman
-in question, who pawned it--unless I learn sooner."
-
-"Unless Garraboy confesses," said Beecher.
-
-"Gentlemen," said McKenna, answering with a nod an assistant who opened
-the door at this moment, "I'm not given to boasting, but I'll risk
-this." He went to the desk, wrote a name on a card, sealed it in an
-envelope and handed it to Beecher. "That's the name of the person who
-took the ring. Keep it until it is found. That sounds like Sherlock
-Holmes, but there's one reason why I feel like being a little stagey;
-and I don't mind admitting to you that I got to it by deduction--honest
-deduction, though!"
-
-"Why've you Garraboy here, then?" said Beecher, while the letter in his
-pocket seemed to radiate heat like an ember.
-
-"Do you want to know?--you'll be surprised," said McKenna, going to the
-desk again. "Well, it's to convince myself that Garraboy had nothing to
-do with it."
-
-"What!" exclaimed the two.
-
-McKenna made them a signal to be silent and, taking up the loose sheets
-of the different records, started to place them in the drawer; but all
-at once he stopped, selected one, the record of the broker himself, and
-laid it face up on the table. The next moment the door opened and
-Garraboy came warily into the room.
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER XXI*
-
-
-At the sight of Beecher and Gunther, Garraboy stopped short, evidently
-nonplused.
-
-"I was told to come in," he said, lifting his eyebrows.
-
-"Quite right," said McKenna briskly, raising his voice a trifle. From
-the moment of the broker's entrance his eyes fastened on Garraboy, never
-leaving him. "Come right in."
-
-"I'm interrupting--" said Garraboy carefully, conscious of this set
-gaze.
-
-"Not in the least."
-
-"I thought our business was confidential, McKenna," he said, without
-having moved from the position he had taken on entering. "I fail to
-see--" he stopped and looked again at the two young men.
-
-"Oh, Mr. Beecher and Gunther," said McKenna affably; "suppose we call
-them attorneys for one of your clients."
-
-"Miss Charters?"
-
-"You're a good guesser, Mr. Garraboy."
-
-The broker drew in his upper lip and, coming slowly forward, said:
-
-"The presence of these gentlemen is exceedingly distasteful to me."
-
-"You're not in a position to object, Mr. Garraboy."
-
-Garraboy turned his back and walked slowly back and forth, evidently in
-distressed conjecture, occasionally raising his head to shoot a glance
-at the three, half in rage, half in fear.
-
-All at once he stopped by the desk as though his mind had come to a
-certain decision, and, bearing heavily on it, said:
-
-"I do not know that I care, under the circumstances, to enter into any
-discussion. You, Mr. McKenna, represent my client, Mrs. Alva White;
-your claim against me is for forty-five thousand eight hundred and
-forty-six dollars." He drew out his pocketbook. "I have here a check
-made to your order." A second time he plunged his hand into his pocket
-and brought out a check-book. "I was not notified that Miss Charters'
-was also under discussion. However, I will settle that at once. To
-whose order, please?"
-
-McKenna, without answering, indicated himself with a jerk of his finger.
-
-Garraboy, seating himself at the desk, took up a pen and carefully
-filled in the check, blotted it and handed the two drafts to McKenna,
-who took them, endorsed them and, ringing, handed them to an assistant:
-
-"Present these at once. Telephone me as soon as they are honored."
-
-Garraboy carefully blotted the check-book in turn, replaced it in his
-pocket, and was thrusting back his chair from the desk when McKenna,
-turning on him sharply, said:
-
-"Garraboy, you stole that ring of Mrs. Kildair's."
-
-The broker, startled, jerked up his head.
-
-"So that's the meaning of all this!" he said angrily.
-
-"Answer my question!"
-
-But this time Garraboy, without wincing, rose suddenly to his feet.
-
-"McKenna, I have nothing more to say to you," he said, scowling, "on
-this or any other question. Your claims are satisfied. I recognize no
-further right of you to insult me."
-
-"Don't move, Mr. Garraboy," said McKenna softly; "we've a lot of
-business still to talk over."
-
-"Are you trying to blackmail me?" said Garraboy furiously, folding his
-arms.
-
-"Garraboy, I've got the goods on you and there may be a paper or two in
-my pocket you wouldn't care to have served," said McKenna, the pupils of
-his eyes seeming to dwindle to a point as the whites showed under a
-well-simulated show of anger. "First place, you're going to sit here
-until I get a telephone those checks are cashed. Second, and this may
-surprise you, you're going to stick right by me--today and tonight,
-until you make up your mind whether you'll answer me or answer a court
-of justice. Third, before we get through here, I want your name at the
-bottom of a little document I've drawn up for you."
-
-"What do you mean?" said Garraboy, but with a note of apprehension in
-his voice.
-
-"A plain, honest recital of what you've been doing with other folks'
-property these last two months--"
-
-"You said--" fairly screamed the broker.
-
-"I said if you settled my claims I wouldn't prosecute--true, and I
-won't. But just the same you're getting out of business here in New
-York, and I'm going to hold a paper that'll keep you out."
-
-"Never!" exclaimed Garraboy in desperation. "Every cent I owe will be
-settled in twenty-four hours. I'll close up every account--I'll agree
-to that--but I'll not be blackmailed into this. You haven't a charge
-against me that'll stand in any court in this country--"
-
-"What about that ring?" said McKenna. "You were trying all over town to
-raise fifteen thousand dollars that day. Garraboy, you stole that ring,
-pawned it, and raised the money to hold off your loans."
-
-"That's a lie!" he said, clenching his fists. "I got it--"
-
-"Where?"
-
-"None of your business."
-
-"Where did you get the money to pay your interest and to put up the new
-margins you did?"
-
-"I was acting for others."
-
-"What others?"
-
-Garraboy opened his mouth to reply and then suddenly stopped.
-
-McKenna said immediately:
-
-"No, you won't say what others, because if you do claim you sold for
-others, here before witnesses, you know you'll restore a good deal more
-money than you figured out to disgorge. Oh, you're clever all right.
-Answer me--did you steal that ring?"
-
-"I did not," said Garraboy suddenly; "and I don't know anything more
-about it than Beecher here--in fact, considerably less." He looked over
-with a sneer on his lips and then quickly and firmly exclaimed:
-"McKenna, my mind's made up. I'm going out that door--now. If you
-attempt to prevent me, I'll hold Mr. Beecher and Mr. Gunther here as
-witnesses that you kept me here by force. And I'll have you up on--"
-
-All at once he seemed to choke on a word as his eyes, following the
-movement of the fist that struck the table, came suddenly in contact
-with the upturned sheet entitled:
-
- "GARRABOY, EDWARD V."
-
-
-The sight seemed to paralyze every muscle of his body. He sat down
-abruptly, drawing the document under his eye.
-
-"Take your time, Bracken, read it over carefully," said McKenna in a
-soothing voice. He retired to the fireplace and relaxed into the easy
-chair awaiting the moment.
-
-Garraboy read hastily, fairly galloping through the pages. Then he
-stiffened in his chair, frowned and read carefully through it all again,
-considering each phrase.
-
-At the last, the three who watched him saw him push the paper from him,
-lock his hands in front of him and stare at McKenna. The correct,
-insolent man of the world had faded; instead, before them, bare to the
-bone, was the rascal, the desperate, clever adventurer. Suddenly making
-a quick resolve, he said in a tone that surprised them for its absence
-of emotion:
-
-"Give me the paper I'm to sign."
-
-McKenna jumped up and going to a shelf took down an affidavit.
-
-"It is always a pleasure to deal with profession," he said genially,
-placing the document on the table. "Oh, read it first."
-
-Garraboy skimmed through it hastily, nodding. He took up his pen and
-paused.
-
-"It's understood that the contents will never be made public, directly
-or indirectly, so long as I keep out of the United States?"
-
-"Understood."
-
-"Your word of honor on it as a gentleman, McKenna?"
-
-"My word."
-
-"And yours, too, Mr. Beecher, Mr. Gunther?"
-
-Each repeated the promise in turn.
-
-Garraboy signed the confession and handed it to McKenna.
-
-"What now?"
-
-"You will, of course, wind up your business immediately."
-
-"I will telephone for my clerk to bring my books here at once for your
-inspection. I will draw the necessary checks and have them deposited to
-the credit of my clients this afternoon. One of your men can personally
-assure himself that everything is right. Will that satisfy you?"
-
-"Couldn't have proposed anything more practical," said McKenna, nodding.
-
-"What next?"
-
-"Clean up that matter of the ring."
-
-Garraboy rose impatiently,
-
-"I haven't got the ring."
-
-"I don't believe you."
-
-"Are you going to keep me under surveillance?"
-
-"I am."
-
-"Until when?"
-
-"Until the ring is returned."
-
-"McKenna," said Garraboy desperately, "I think I've satisfied you. I'm
-not standing on technicalities. You've got me cold. I know it. Now,
-I'll tell you just how I stand. When everything is paid up, I stand
-pretty nearly $200,000 to the good. I'm going to get out--go abroad and
-stay there, and I want to catch the first boat out. If I had that ring,
-I'd throw it over, quick. That's straight goods."
-
-"Garraboy, did you steal that ring?" said McKenna again.
-
-"I did not." He took a handkerchief from his pocket and wiped away the
-perspiration which stood on his forehead.
-
-"Did you ever see before the detective, John Ryan, whom Mrs. Kildair
-called in?"
-
-Garraboy hesitated.
-
-"Did you?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Employed him?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Many times?"
-
-"Several."
-
-"And you recommended him to Mrs. Kildair?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"So you knew whom she would call in?"
-
-"No, I didn't think of that."
-
-"Garraboy, didn't you take the ring knowing that Ryan would be called in
-and that he would never make a search of you?"
-
-"I did not."
-
-"Do you know who took it?"
-
-"No."
-
-"That's sufficient," said McKenna, apparently satisfied.
-
-"What are you going to do?" asked Garraboy nervously.
-
-"Keep you on a rope until the ring turns up.
-
-"I want to get away," said Garraboy weakly.
-
-"I know that."
-
-The broker remained quiet a moment, turning a pencil with his moist
-fingers.
-
-"Will you answer one question?" he said at last.
-
-"What?"
-
-"Does Mrs. Kildair know--are you acting for her?"
-
-"Mrs. Kildair does not know what I'm doing," said McKenna quietly.
-
-Garraboy rose with what seemed a little relief, a movement that McKenna
-was quick to note.
-
-"Well, I've made up my mind to tell you what I know," he said, after a
-few nervous steps.
-
-"Good."
-
-"I haven't got the ring," he said carefully.
-
-"Did you take it?"
-
-"I did not take it," said Garraboy, looking steadily in McKenna's eyes.
-
-"But you know?"
-
-"Yes, in a way I know," he said firmly. "A woman took it."
-
-"How do you know?"
-
-Garraboy did not answer immediately. He seemed reluctant to continue,
-frowning and moving restlessly from foot to foot. Finally he blurted
-out:
-
-"I don't know who took it first, but this is what happened--the God's
-truth. When Mrs. Kildair put out the lights and counted sixty-one, I
-heard the ring on the table." He hesitated a moment and said hurriedly:
-"I made up my mind to give them all a shock. I did not intend to keep
-the ring; I swear it. I put out my hand to take it--and I touched
-another hand--the hand of a woman."
-
-"Who took it?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Was that woman Mrs. Cheever, or Miss Lille?" said McKenna quickly.
-
-"I don't know."
-
-"You don't know."
-
-"No."
-
-"You have no idea?"
-
-"No."
-
-"No suspicion?"
-
-"No."
-
-"You were told nothing afterward?"
-
-"Nothing."
-
-"Garraboy, it's just possible you're not lying," said McKenna with a
-frown; "though I'm not sure by a long shot. However, I'll know the
-truth before the sun goes down."
-
-"How?" said Garraboy, looking up.
-
-"I neglected to tell you," said McKenna, watching him, "that I know whom
-the ring was pawned with, and this evening the gentleman himself will
-tell me who pawned it. The time I keep you depends a good deal on what
-he says."
-
-"Then, this evening I will be free," said Garraboy joyfully, with such
-evident confidence that both young men were struck by it and McKenna, a
-little disturbed in his theory, continued staring at the face of
-Garraboy, which was illumined with a slight, malicious smile.
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER XXII*
-
-
-Half an hour later Gunther and Beecher, leaving McKenna's office with a
-promise to return that evening, went up town. In Beecher's pocket was a
-check on McKenna representing the amount of Miss Charters' account.
-Garraboy remained in the custody of the detective.
-
-"Well, what do you think of it?" said Gunther.
-
-"I think Garraboy lied," said Beecher.
-
-"Oh, about the reason he tried to take the ring--yes, naturally. He
-could make a plausible reason for that--you'd hardly expect him to say
-in so many words that he was a thief, if he really didn't get the ring,
-as he says."
-
-"I think he cooked up the lie right there," said Beecher obstinately.
-"I don't believe a word of it."
-
-"I don't know--I sort of think he told the truth."
-
-"Do you think any woman would have the nerve to go on after she had felt
-a hand on hers and knew that some one had a clue, not absolutely
-definite but almost so?"
-
-"But, Ted, if any one denounced her, wouldn't he have to acknowledge the
-fact of his own motive? That would be enough to shut any one up."
-
-"I think Garraboy lied," persisted Beecher. "I think he had a part in
-the theft and at least I am sure he knows all about it."
-
-"Listen to reason," said Gunther warmly. "If Garraboy signed a
-confession like McKenna handed him, he wouldn't stop at returning a
-ring--particularly when he knows that McKenna will keep hold of him till
-the affair is closed up. No, no; Garraboy says he's cleared
-$200,000--you may be sure he's got considerably more. He's satisfied.
-He wants to get away from here quick. McKenna's not the only one on his
-track, you may be sure of that. No, it doesn't stand to reason he'd
-balk at a little matter like the ring."
-
-Beecher was silent, digesting the argument.
-
-"There may be one explanation," he said at length. "You noticed that the
-fellow was particularly anxious to know if Mrs. Kildair was behind us?"
-
-"Yes, I noticed all that."
-
-"Now McKenna thinks, and I do too, that Mrs. Kildair all along has known
-who took the ring and has only been held up before this from prosecuting
-on account of a possible scandal."
-
-"But, that's over now--nothing can be said--it was an engagement ring,
-of course."
-
-"Exactly; and that's the reason why I'm going to make this guess--that
-Garraboy, knowing the game was up, returned the ring this morning."
-
-"By George!"
-
-"And that's the reason he told the lie he did--knowing that everything
-will blow over in twenty-four hours."
-
-"Ted, by the Lord Harry, I believe you've hit it!" said Gunther
-excitedly. "I say--"
-
-"What?"
-
-"Let's go up to your rooms--there may be a letter from Mrs. Kildair."
-
-Full of eagerness they went to Beecher's rooms--only to return
-empty-handed and disappointed. Then they hurried to the club and
-searched the letter-boxes without success.
-
-Disappointed and impatient they went in to a late lunch.
-
-"What are you going to do about that check of Miss Charters'?" said
-Gunther in an aggressive tone.
-
-"Take it round to her," said Beecher, looking at him out of the corner
-of his eye.
-
-"Mail it."
-
-"Why?"
-
-"Gratitude and a pretty woman are a dangerous combination," said Gunther
-gruffly; "especially for something soft like you."
-
-"You damned, impertinent cuss," said Beecher acridly.
-
-"Fact. Better let me call a messenger boy and send it around."
-
-But in the pleased state of mind in which he was, Beecher had not the
-slightest intention of surrendering the delightful opportunity which the
-visit promised. Likewise, he was indignant at hearing from Gunther the
-same implications which amused him from the lips of a fascinating woman
-like Emma Fornez.
-
-"You've got a fine idea of me," he answered hotly.
-
-"I have."
-
-"According to you, I oughtn't to be allowed to roam the streets without
-a keeper."
-
-"Exactly expressed."
-
-"Don't alarm yourself," said Beecher in a lofty, superior tone, and,
-believing every word, he added, "I'm quite able to take care of myself.
-I know how to amuse myself--and I know it is amusing myself, thank you.
-You think I don't know anything about women--well, I know better than
-some people how to keep my head straight."
-
-"So you're going around?" said Gunther with a grin.
-
-"I am."
-
-"I thought you said you had never met any one who could make you so
-angry?"
-
-"Come and get me at five o'clock," said Beecher, with a trifling wave of
-his hand.
-
-"I begin to have my doubts," said Gunther slowly, with the air of one
-steeling himself against a great calamity.
-
-Beecher had no such anticipation as he went lightly out of the club and
-took his way up the Avenue. For the last day he had thought much more of
-the possible feelings of Nan Charters toward his own receptive person
-than of analyzing the impregnability of his own position. He had not
-telephoned, desiring to effect a little surprise. But as he neared his
-destination he remembered that she might possibly be out.
-
-"In that case I'll leave a little note--just a line with the check--as
-though it were a casual affair," he said to himself.
-
-But Miss Charters was in. An automobile was at the curb which he
-thought he recognized.
-
-Miss Charters herself answered the door, detaining him a moment in the
-anteroom.
-
-"I am so glad you came," she said in a low voice, but one in which it
-was impossible to mistake the pleasure. "I wanted you to know that. A
-friend of yours is here--but he won't stay long," she added softly, with
-that gentle appeal in her voice against which he knew no defense.
-"You'll stay--I want you to."
-
-"Who is it?" he asked.
-
-"Mr. Lorraine." And as she saw the instant stiffening that went through
-him, she said quickly, with that subtle, merciless flattery of which
-only women have the command, "Shall I send him away--if you wish?"
-
-"No."
-
-The two men greeted each other boisterously, but underneath their
-heartiness was a sudden sense of invaded territory.
-
-"Is he interested?" thought Lorraine, with an uneasy glance. "And why
-did she go out into the hall?"
-
-"What's his right here? Was he here to lunch, I wonder?" thought
-Beecher, and for the first time he felt something hot surging inside of
-himself.
-
-Each with an extra show of cordiality began to talk, addressing their
-remarks to the other. Only Lorraine, whose tenancy was thus threatened,
-continued to prolong his stay, anxiously watching the effect on the
-woman. At the end of half an hour, he no longer doubted, she was only
-waiting for him to go, uneasy and resentful at his delay.
-
-He rose, heavy of heart, and shook hands with Beecher, whom he would
-have liked to throttle, and nodding to Miss Charters, went toward the
-hall, hoping that she would follow him. But women in love match the
-wordless surrender and tenderness they show to the man to whom they
-yield with an equal cruelty toward those whose misfortune is to have
-loved them. She did not move, waiting impatiently until she heard the
-tardy click of the door. Then she went to him directly, standing quite
-close, looking up at him like a penitent schoolgirl.
-
-"I thought he'd never go," she said impatiently, and then with an
-uneasy, searching look in her eyes, she said contritely: "Do you think I
-am very terrible?"
-
-He smiled and shook his head, but without profiting by the opportunity
-her attitude invited.
-
-"You were engaged to Charlie once, weren't you?" he said, trying to give
-the question an accent of natural curiosity.
-
-"No, never."
-
-"Almost?"
-
-She shook her head impatiently at the introduction of this topic.
-
-"People said so."
-
-She shrugged her shoulders.
-
-"But he is in love with you," he said positively.
-
-What she did not like was the quiet, inconsequential way he spoke, for
-in her own mood she did not detect the jealousy underneath.
-
-"Please don't let us talk of Mr. Lorraine," she said quickly. "I have
-never been engaged to Mr. Lorraine and never could; first, because I
-don't intend to marry, and, second, because if I did, Mr. Lorraine could
-never appeal to me."
-
-She broke off and going to the telephone said to him over her shoulder:
-
-"You're not in a hurry?"
-
-"No."
-
-"Good--then we need not be interrupted."
-
-She called the office and left word that she would not be at home.
-Then, rising, she came slowly back, very subdued, still alarmed at the
-undisturbed friendship in his look.
-
-"I was afraid you wouldn't come to see such a little virago," she said
-softly.
-
-"I came to see you on a matter of business," he said, without thinking
-of his words.
-
-Her face fell.
-
-"Oh, indeed."
-
-He drew out his pocketbook and took out the check.
-
-"Mr. Garraboy is leaving very suddenly for Europe," he said, turning
-over the bit of paper. "He has decided to wind up his affairs. He
-wished me to give you this check in settlement of your account," with
-him.
-
-She stood quite still, her arms behind her back, but her eyes
-dangerously brilliant.
-
-"If it's only on business you came," she said, breathing deep, "you can
-keep your check."
-
-"But--"
-
-"Is it only on business you go to see other women?"
-
-He extended the check, and the jealousy Lorraine's presence had brought
-him made him seek to hurt her a little more.
-
-"Don't be unreasonable," he said.
-
-"If you don't answer," she said, stamping her foot, "I will tear it into
-pieces!"
-
-A quick, impulsive joy went through him at this revealing anger.
-
-"I came because I wanted to see you," he said with a provoking delight
-in his eyes. "This is of no importance."
-
-She took the check, still looking at him, became calmer, smiled, and
-then with a determined bob of her head, went to place it on her
-writing-desk. All at once she turned quickly:
-
-"But this is signed McKenna!"
-
-"That's a detail."
-
-"Your friend McKenna, the detective? Then you forced this out of him?"
-
-"It wasn't very hard."
-
-She let the check flutter from her fingers to the desk, thoughtfully
-considering it, divining slowly what it meant.
-
-"I am unreasonable," she said quietly, returning and holding out her
-hand. "Thank you. Why did you bother--after the way I acted?"
-
-"Well, just because," he answered, looking down into her eyes.
-
-"So, Garraboy is a defaulter," she said slowly.
-
-"I cannot tell you any more."
-
-All at once a thought came to her and an anxious frown passed over her
-forehead.
-
-"None of this is your money?" she said quickly.
-
-"No."
-
-"On your honor?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"It is a great thing you have done for me," she said solemnly. "I am
-very grateful."
-
-"Nonsense," he said lightly. "It was no trouble. I would have done it
-for any one."
-
-They were near the great dormer-windows, high above the threaded smoke
-and gray roofs of the city, now blending into fuzzy masses with the
-closing of the day.
-
-"Well, now that your business is over," she said, but with a new
-lightness, "I suppose you must be going?"
-
-"What do you want me to say?" he said, smiling with a growing feeling of
-well-being.
-
-"Why did you come?" she repeated maliciously, and, half-laughing,
-half-determined, she took the lapel of his coat in a gesture which, in
-her fingers, was almost a caress. She stood looking up at him, so
-happy, so brimming with the satisfaction of having him back, of
-regaining what she had feared to lose, that he could not resist the
-desire in her eyes.
-
-"Because I like you," he said.
-
-"Despite my tantrums and my moods?"
-
-"On account of them."
-
-"And would you have done what you did--for any one?"
-
-"Come to think of it--no."
-
-She was not content. She would rather that he had answered more
-sentimentally. She felt that he was stronger than she was, more
-controlled.
-
-"Are you interested in Emma Fornez?" she said, looking away from him.
-
-"Oh,--interested."
-
-"You like her?"
-
-"Yes, very much."
-
-"I shouldn't like to have you talked about."
-
-He did not answer.
-
-"What have I done that displeases you, Teddy?" she said all at once.
-
-But before he could answer, the room behind them dropped suddenly back
-into darkness.
-
-"The light's gone out," she said, startled, her hand on his arm.
-
-"The current's cut--that's all," he answered.
-
-"I'll light a lamp."
-
-"No. It's good here. Wait. It'll only be a moment."
-
-They remained in the dark, turning their glances out of the window,
-suddenly conscious of the panorama of the evening, the stir of departing
-multitudes, the end of labor and the evening of rest.
-
-"How plainly you can see," he said. "That's Brooklyn Bridge, isn't it?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-At the east three giant spans stood out across the unreal gray view that
-had neither banks nor green approaches, that cut its way like an
-invading flood through the cities. Innumerable, cottony puffs of steam,
-busy, hurrying, restless, rose from unseen hulls across the fading
-silhouettes of tangled spans. High to the south from a cyclopean tower a
-single ball of fire was shining. Below, in the long, straight avenues,
-the city was putting on its necklaces of brilliants; and from the black
-dotted masses that must be there somewhere in the growing obscurity,
-rushing home over the backs of the waters, high above housetops or deep
-through the bowels of the city, a great sigh seemed to rise with the
-sudden freshening of the twilight breeze, and the two human beings who
-looked down, as God looks down on this spectacle of a moving world,
-found nothing to express the sudden melancholy that troubled them,
-awakening vague desires, stirring them with the feeling of their own
-littleness.
-
-"Come," she said, turning away the first, and, lingering, looking back,
-placed a hand on his arm, repeating, "Come."
-
-He did not reply, looking beyond, deeply penetrated by all this humanity
-that each moment receded farther from them, isolating them, lifting them
-above the world into the loneliness of the skies. Her hand remained on
-his arm unconsciously, but this weight so soft but yet so imperious
-recalled him to himself. He thought no longer of what lay without. He
-looked at her. She was trembling. He too felt the subtle, disturbing
-restlessness of this dark that closed in about them, shutting out the
-peopled world--this mood of the day that exerts over human beings such a
-compelling desire.
-
-She turned and looked at him. He could not see her face distinctly,
-only the eyes--that seemed incapable of seeing all but this. Then
-abruptly, brusquely, by the same mutual impulse, they were in each
-other's arms, straining to each other, their lips irresistibly closed
-over each other, feeling themselves more and more wrapped around by this
-soft darkness that had cast them up, enfolding their loneliness in the
-great protective instinct of human love.
-
-The room flared up brilliantly. She recovered herself the first,
-drawing herself out of his arms, covering her face with fingers that
-still throbbed with the agony of their embrace.
-
-They could not look at each other, bewildered by the suddenness of what
-had happened. She went past him hurriedly to the fireplace, sitting
-down. He followed irresolutely, feeling his feet unsteady beneath him,
-all the intellectual forces within him submerged, drunk, overthrown by
-the sudden, delirious awakening of his senses, suddenly aroused by this
-revelation of woman.
-
-"What have we done? What was it?" she said breathlessly, without facing
-him. "We are crazy, Teddy,--crazy!"
-
-He came heavily to the other end of the fireplace, leaning on the
-mantel, looking down at the woman who was no longer an indefinite
-mystery of silks and colors, but a moving, living body that had stirred
-in his arms.
-
-"Teddy, we are crazy," she repeated. "What possessed us?"
-
-"It is you who are crazy now," he said abruptly. "What is the use of
-arguing? Those things are beyond us. It is over--it is settled. We
-had nothing to do with it."
-
-"No, no," she cried vigorously, jumping up. "It is not right. It isn't
-fair to you. We were swept off our feet."
-
-"Thank Heaven, yes."
-
-"But it's impossible, it's crazy--it's senseless. I don't want to
-marry, I don't want to fall in love. I want to be free--I must be
-free--I know that--you know that. So what then?"
-
-"What's the use of arguing? It's been settled for us."
-
-"But it isn't settled. I lost my head--you lost your head. We didn't
-know what we were doing. Marriage is impossible, absurd. I'm not a
-woman to marry--you would be unhappy--don't you see how ridiculous it
-is? I think only of myself--my career--"
-
-"What's all that amount to--you love me and I love you. It's always
-been so--we've been fools and I didn't know it."
-
-"But I don't know it," she cried; but at the same breath she knew that
-it was so. But this knowledge only roused in her the spirit to combat,
-to remit, to put away from her the threatening obstacle.
-
-"Nonsense. Why didn't you let me go? You wouldn't; you brought me
-back; you couldn't help it--and I came. I would have come if you had
-called me. I've said all that you say myself--what good did it do me?
-Here I am!"
-
-"Well, then--yes, we may love each other," she said desperately. "I
-don't know. I cannot reason it out--it may be so, perhaps--but even
-then? Teddy, it can't go on. Don't you see how wicked it would be--how
-wrong? Your wife can't be on the stage, and I can't give it up. It's
-everything--it's been my whole life. We must be strong--we must stop
-it. It's absurd--it's wrong."
-
-She came to him, seized with the two contrary impulses: an instinctive
-revolt, a desire to force him from her life, and something just as
-instinctive and irresistible that drew her back to him; and at the
-moment she said the most firmly, "No, no, it's absurd, it's wrong," she
-put out her hand and caught her fingers in his coat collar, just behind
-his ear, under the masses of his hair.
-
-He caught her to him, wrapping his arms around her; she continued to
-protest but, without resisting, her head dropped on his shoulder, her
-eyes closed, her lips breathlessly open.
-
-All at once from the hall came the sound of a key in the latch. They
-disengaged themselves hurriedly, arranging their disordered hair,
-standing ridiculously apart.
-
-From the antechamber came the voice of Miss Tilbury, the chaperon,
-discreetly remaining without:
-
-"Nan, dear, Mr. Hargrave is below. He has come for his manuscript."
-
-"But I'm not at home," she said in a muffled voice.
-
-"You ought to send it down to him, really."
-
-"Mr. Beecher is here--aren't you coming in?"
-
-"In a moment."
-
-The steps died out going to the back. Beecher, who had looked at the
-clock, uttered an exclamation. She came to him quickly, with the motions
-of the alert feline, and seizing his wrist said quickly:
-
-"Listen, Teddy, I will not hold you to what has happened. We are out of
-our senses, you and I. We are crazy--crazy. You must not see me for a
-while--two days at least--until we know what we are doing. Go, now,
-please--"
-
-Then, suddenly remembering that the same Hargrave had been the innocent
-cause of a little pain to him, she went quickly to the table and took up
-the offending play, and with that fine instinct of a woman to give even
-the smallest revenge to the man she loves, said:
-
-"Take this. Give it to Hargrave yourself. Say I cannot see him."
-
-"I shall see you tomorrow."
-
-"No, no; but telephone tonight."
-
-She listened a moment, her ear toward the hall like a child, and then
-sprang into his arms, and this time it seemed to him that it was she,
-not he, who dominated the embrace.
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER XXIII*
-
-
-At half-past five, Beecher, his brain in a whirl, arrived breathlessly
-at the office of McKenna. As luck would have it, only Gunther and the
-detective were there.
-
-"My friend is a little late," said McKenna, with a quick, jerky glance
-at the clock.
-
-"Where's Garraboy?"
-
-"Twirling his thumbs in another room," said Gunther, laughing. "In a
-cussing bad humor, too."
-
-For the second time, McKenna glanced nervously at the clock. Beecher
-was struck with the mood of restlessness that obsessed him. He passed
-aimlessly from desk to window and back again, apparently oblivious to
-their presence, immersed in some calculation that left its outward mark
-in a deep furrow between the eyebrows, while the cigar between his lips
-had gone out unperceived.
-
-"Mr. Beecher," he said suddenly, stopping short, "I'm not sure but what
-I've gone off on a ridiculous tangent--it may be--it may be. Have you
-still got that envelope I gave you?"
-
-"Yes, in my pocket--here," said Beecher, surprised, laying his hand on
-his coat.
-
-"It was a ridiculous thing for me to do," said McKenna quickly. He made
-a movement of his hand as though to take it, but repressed it, saying:
-"All I ask is, don't open it until I ask you." Then, still ruffled, he
-turned away, saying to himself: "Guessing--humph! I'd fire a man for
-doing that."
-
-The telephone rang with a message from the outer office and a moment
-later, to the amazement of both young men, Mapleson, of the firm of
-Sontag & Company, came in smiling and businesslike.
-
-"How are you, McKenna?" he said affably, shaking hands. "Sorry to keep
-you waiting. What can I do for you?"
-
-He was a slender, dark young man of forty-two or three, very graceful,
-pleasant in voice and fluent in manner, with a sure instinct for
-ingratiating himself where it best could serve.
-
-"How do you do, Mr. Beecher," he said on being introduced. "I am very
-glad to know you, Mr. Gunther. I have the pleasure of knowing your
-father slightly. The country owes him a great debt for what he's done
-in this panic. Well, is there any mystery I can clear up for you?"
-
-He accepted a chair, crossed his legs easily, brought out a gold
-cigarette-case, offered it with a wave and smiled at their declinations.
-
-"Why, yes, Mr. Mapleson, you can give us a little information," said
-McKenna.
-
-"Anything I can do for you, McKenna, glad to do it," said Mapleson.
-
-"You may remember a ring that was sold by your firm a few months ago to
-Mr. John G. Slade," said McKenna directly; "a single ruby, valued, I
-believe, around thirty thousand dollars."
-
-Mapleson did not avert his eyes from the glance of the detective, yet
-without a movement of his body an instant change came in his manner. He
-drew in a puff of smoke, let it out, nodded carefully and said:
-
-"Yes, known as the Bogota ruby. I remember perfectly."
-
-"I understand that that ring was brought back within the last ten days
-and pledged for a considerable amount."
-
-"Indeed?" said Mapleson. He flung away the half smoked cigarette, and
-busied himself with selecting another. "Well, what do you want to
-know?"
-
-"I want to know the name of the person--man or woman--who pledged it."
-
-Mapleson changed his mind, shut the cigarette-case with a snap, clasped
-his hands in front of him, thumbs up and pressed against his teeth.
-
-"Can you tell me a little more?" he said at last.
-
-"No, I cannot," McKenna said frankly.
-
-The eyes of the jeweler wandered from the detective and settled on the
-face of Beecher. The look made the young man flush. It was as though
-the smiling, affable confidant of feminine mysteries and intrigues was
-asking himself what part in all this he were playing.
-
-"Can you tell me for whom you are acting, Mr. Beecher?" he said
-suddenly.
-
-McKenna made a gesture of warning, interrupting:
-
-"I'm sorry--we cannot."
-
-"Have you a warrant?" continued Mapleson seriously. "In other words, is
-this a friendly meeting, or a legal procedure?"
-
-"There is no warrant as yet. It is a case we particularly desire to
-keep out of court," said McKenna.
-
-"It is very embarrassing," said Mapleson frankly, "very. I don't know
-quite how to act. Of course, McKenna, considering your relations with
-our firm, I should always be glad to assist you in any way--you
-understand that. The present case is different. The ring was not
-pledged with Sontag & Company, but with me personally. It is a personal
-matter and a very delicate one."
-
-"I understand that," said McKenna, frowning. "And yet I must inform you
-that I shall probably have to proceed in the usual manner."
-
-"Of course, if I'm brought into court on a summons," said Mapleson
-thoughtfully, "that is different. If I am faced by the fact that a theft
-has taken place, I can do nothing else but aid the law."
-
-"But now--"
-
-"At present? No, McKenna, I cannot give you the name of the person that
-pledged the ring with me. The case seems very complex to me--much more
-than you may believe; and as nothing is legally charged I prefer to keep
-my relations confidential."
-
-"Mr. Mapleson, can you answer this?"
-
-"What?"
-
-"Is your refusal because you believe the intention of the person who
-pledged it is to restore it to its owner?"
-
-Mapleson turned the question over a long time, whistling softly to
-himself. Finally he said:
-
-"I don't know. I know nothing."
-
-"Can you tell me the amount you advanced on the ring?"
-
-"Yes; I think I can tell you that," he said, after a moment's thought.
-"I advanced twenty-eight thousand dollars."
-
-"Twenty-eight?" said McKenna, lifting his eyebrows. "Twenty-eight on a
-ring worth only thirty thousand?"
-
-"It was not a business transaction--entirely," said Mapleson stiffly.
-
-"Then Sontag & Company knew nothing about it?"
-
-"No."
-
-"Was the ring pledged the day before Majendie committed suicide?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"In the morning?"
-
-"Early in the morning."
-
-"One final question. The ring is still in your possession?"
-
-"No."
-
-"It is not in your possession?" said McKenna, with a sudden clearing of
-his forehead. "Mr. Mapleson, you are answering this because you feel
-bound--"
-
-"Not at all," said Mapleson quickly. "The ring was redeemed this
-morning. I know nothing more about it."
-
-The speculations which were occasioned by this disclosure were suddenly
-interrupted by a knock on the door.
-
-"Come!" said McKenna sharply.
-
-An assistant entered the room with two letters. McKenna looked at the
-first and nodded, and then seeing the address on the second looked up
-quickly, saying:
-
-"How did this come--this letter for Mr. Beecher?"
-
-"It was sent down from his apartment, I believe, sir. Mr. Beecher's man
-brought it, I think."
-
-"Very well."
-
-McKenna dismissed him with a gesture, but instead of opening his letter
-thrust both of them into his pocket.
-
-"That's all, Mr. Mapleson," he said with incisiveness. "I'm sorry to
-have troubled you. It's quite possible, as you perhaps believe, this
-case will be settled out of court."
-
-"Let's hope so," said Mapleson non-committally. "I'm always at your
-service, you know. It's I who should apologize. Mr. Gunther, remember
-me to your father. Mr. Beecher, I hope to meet you soon again."
-
-He shook hands warmly with Beecher, as though the young man had acquired
-a new value in his eyes, and went out.
-
-The moment the door had shut, McKenna had the two letters out of his
-pocket.
-
-"Two letters from the same lady," he said, tossing one to Beecher.
-"Both messages the same, too, I'll bet. Of course!"
-
-He laughed and extended the letter to Gunther, who read:
-
-
-DEAR MR. MCKENNA:
-
-The ring has just been returned. Can I see you at once? Take no further
-measures.
-
-RITA KILDAIR.
-
-
-McKenna was a changed man. All the indecision had left him. His eyes
-were sparkling with pleasure and he was laughing to himself, as he took
-up the telephone.
-
-"Here, give me Clancy," he cried impatiently. "Hello. What's the matter
-with Brady; hasn't he come back with that information yet? He has?
-Well, why the devil--send in the figures! Quick!"
-
-A moment later a slip was in his hand and he was gazing at it eagerly.
-
-"Mr. Beecher, give me half an hour's start--no, better, three quarters
-of an hour. Wait--have you got a car? Good. Drive me up to Mrs.
-Kildair's as fast as you can get me there."
-
-"What about Garraboy?" said Gunther. "Is he to go free?"
-
-"Not by a damn sight!" said McKenna joyfully rushing them down the hall.
-In the office he stopped to say hurriedly: "Clancy, stick by
-Garraboy--feed him--but keep him close until I telephone you!"
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER XXIV*
-
-
-McKenna was not without that penetrating imagination that has in it the
-quality of vision, the power to invoke the figures of the past and to
-follow an idea into the recesses of the future. All that he had learned
-and all that he had tentatively surmised of the mysterious purposes of
-Rita Kildair, returned to him with renewed vividness as he entered the
-elevator saying briefly to a question:
-
-"I'm expected."
-
-In his long and profound pursuit of human lawlessness, the detective had
-formed a crude philosophy, built on the perception of the inequalities
-of justice. The beginning of all crime, if he could thus have phrased it
-to himself, was failure. For each man that he had sent to jail for
-embezzlement, in the capacious corridor of his memory he knew another
-who ethically was the greater rogue, and, as he had said to Beecher,
-each day he met one such, looked into his eyes, shook his hands and took
-his orders. For each woman upon whom public scorn had set the brand of
-adventuress, he knew another woman who stood enthroned by that same
-society. Confusedly in his mind he had shaped a crude analysis of life.
-For him only two classes existed, the strong and the weak. The strong
-was that brutal race which could not be held down by the restraints of
-society, who must rise, acquire power, dominate, obeying the natural
-instinct within them; the weak those who aided them in their upward
-progress, who served them when they had arrived, and who committed
-crimes in their names. It was not a moral view of life so much as it
-was a perception of the persisting law of all animal nature.
-
-The engagement to Slade, following so dramatically his triumphant rise
-from threatened disaster, had made him realize that whatever methods she
-had dared to employ, Mrs. Kildair was one of those whom society would
-never scorn for her failure. Intrigued as he was over the details of the
-theft of the ring, what absorbed him most was the woman. And determined
-at all hazards to force the defenses of her reserve, he rang the bell.
-
-Mrs. Kildair was at the piano, the riotous movements of an Hungarian
-Czardas filling the apartment. She broke off suddenly, rising as
-McKenna entered the studio. The mood of whirling ecstasy, suddenly cut
-off, was still in her flushed cheeks and excited eyes, as she glided
-rapidly toward him.
-
-She was in evening gown, of some flame-colored, filmy material, with
-sudden trembling flashes of gold bewildering to the eye, provoking to
-the imagination. The bodice, extreme in its daring, was not one of those
-stiff cuirasses, in which women encase themselves; rather the effect was
-of a billowy scarf that had caught and wrapped itself languidly about
-her. The low throat, the graceful arms, the brilliant row of pointed
-teeth over the full under lip, all had an extraordinary quality of
-vibrant, awake, impatient vitality.
-
-In seeing her thus, McKenna comprehended at once that she had prepared
-herself for Slade; but so daring was the effect of the seduction which
-she had barbarically planned to tantalize the financier, that McKenna
-himself felt the effect with a little nervous, conscious dropping of his
-eyes. The movement did not escape her, and not disdaining the tribute
-she smiled to herself a quick, feline little smile.
-
-"You, McKenna?" she said. "You are prompt."
-
-"I came immediately."
-
-"I was waiting for you."
-
-They stood a few feet apart in the middle of the studio studying each
-other, as two fencers take their measure before joining their swords.
-
-"You were at your office then?" she said the first.
-
-"Yes, I came up in Mr. Beecher's car."
-
-"Mr. Beecher was with you?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"I sent him--"
-
-"A letter, yes. He received it at my office."
-
-"But why didn't he come up with you?"
-
-"I asked him to give me half an hour here with you."
-
-"That was better," she said firmly.
-
-All the undisciplined impulses that had been stirring, gradually seemed
-to subside as she watched him, warily drawing about her an invisible
-defense.
-
-"Here is the ring," she said suddenly, extending her arm with a gesture
-that was no longer languid and feminine, but forceful and controlled.
-
-"I'd like to see it," he said.
-
-She drew it from her finger and held it out to him. He laid it in his
-palm and studied it profoundly.
-
-"What is it worth?" he asked.
-
-"Over thirty thousand dollars."
-
-"Ah," he said quickly. "Beecher told me you said fifteen thousand."
-
-She looked at him from under her eyelids.
-
-"I have just learned its value."
-
-"Remarkable--a splendid stone. It has had quite a history," he said,
-handing it back to her and watching it return to her finger. "Let's
-hope it will stay there quietly for some time."
-
-"You know its story?"
-
-"From the beginning. It will interest you. I'll send it to you."
-
-"Do."
-
-The last replies she had given were mechanical, her whole mind focused
-on him, alert for any sudden turn to her advantage, seeking to penetrate
-the tactics he would employ.
-
-"You kept away--on purpose," she said abruptly.
-
-"That's so."
-
-"Why?"
-
-"Well, call it a matter of vanity," he said.
-
-"In what way?"
-
-"You excited my curiosity--you were a little too clever in our last
-interview."
-
-"So you kept on with your investigations?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Successful?" she said lightly.
-
-"Very."
-
-"Indeed? Do you know who took the ring?"
-
-"The first time? No."
-
-She stopped, looked at him intently, and said:
-
-"The second time then?"
-
-"Yes, I know who took it the second time."
-
-"Who?"
-
-"You."
-
-She laughed without confusion and, turning from him, went toward the
-fireplace, resting one bare arm on the mantel, the red splash of the
-ruby showing like a flare of anger against her cheek. She looked back
-at McKenna, who had not moved, saying with an admonishing shake of her
-head:
-
-"McKenna, you are guessing."
-
-"It's a good guess."
-
-"Let me hear your theory."
-
-"It is not a theory today."
-
-"Indeed?"
-
-"Yesterday it was a guess; today, I know."
-
-"How do you know?"
-
-"Because today I saw Mapleson," he said, watching her.
-
-"Yes? Mapleson, of Sontag & Company? I know him very well," she
-replied with still no expression but amusement. "What then?"
-
-"The ring was pawned with him, a personal matter, the morning after the
-theft, for the sum of twenty-eight thousand dollars. It was redeemed
-today."
-
-"By whom?"
-
-"By you, naturally," said McKenna, yet despite his absolute conviction,
-her composure was such that he was almost shaken in his theory.
-
-"Mapleson never told you that."
-
-"No; he refused to answer. It lay in my mind between you and Mrs.
-Cheever. The fact that he would not answer, gave me my strongest clue."
-
-"In what way?"
-
-"If it had been Mrs. Cheever, he would not have concealed it, because it
-would have been a theft. But as it was you who came to him, he refused
-to divulge the name, because he knew that no crime had been committed
-and that we had either no right to be investigating, or were doing so to
-be blinded by you."
-
-"McKenna, you are guessing," said Mrs. Kildair again. "You are
-supposing that only Mrs. Cheever and I are on such terms with him that
-we could make such a personal transaction. As a matter of fact, not
-only Mrs. Bloodgood, but her husband and Miss Lille could have done the
-same thing."
-
-"True," said McKenna, but he added obstinately: "No, the only reason
-Mapleson withheld the name was because no crime had been committed."
-
-"Before we go on," she said with the same mocking smile, "would you mind
-telling me how you worked out this theory? Sit down. I really am
-interested."
-
-If McKenna had not in his possession one bit of information which he had
-withheld, he would have felt the nervousness of a possible and
-ridiculous failure. At it was, a doubt flashed across his mind; but he
-allowed her to see none of this hesitation.
-
-"I'm perfectly willing to let you know how it came about," he said,
-sitting down and speaking frankly. "I'm not laying claim to anything
-startling. I'll admit now that as to the details of how it was done, and
-why it was done, I don't know. I can guess; but I don't know. But as
-to tracing the ring and working back from that--that's A.B.C." Then,
-with a flash of intuition, he said abruptly: "Of course, Mapleson has
-just 'phoned you."
-
-"Well, go on," she said without reply, drawn back a little, listening
-intently.
-
-"The first thing I did was to locate the ring," he began. "You yourself
-know how easy it is to follow a stone worth thirty thousand. You know
-that, because the moment you found out I was on the case, you knew I
-would learn that Slade gave it to you. That's why you had me come
-here--to block it."
-
-"That's true."
-
-"Now, for a while, I admit I was in the dark, following several clues,
-and I don't mind saying here that until your engagement I was not at all
-sure it wasn't Mr. Slade himself who had taken that way of recovering
-it."
-
-"That's strange," she said, startled. "Yes, I can see that was
-possible, too."
-
-"Now, what I was working on," said McKenna, "was the strongest
-motive--that whoever took it up, took it because he had to take it to
-raise money, to pay a debt or to gamble on the market. So I
-investigated two ways--first, the back histories and the present
-standing of every one at your party; second, in the great jewelry shops,
-to find out if the ring had been sold or pawned."
-
-"Of course."
-
-"I didn't believe it had been done openly--that would have been too
-risky--but through some channel like Mapleson. But I wasn't thinking of
-Mapleson then. I couldn't locate the ring. I found out that Bloodgood,
-Cheever, Mrs. Cheever, Miss Lille and Garraboy had all speculated
-heavily on the market next day. That didn't help much. Now I come to
-my interview with you."
-
-Mrs. Kildair nodded and leaned forward slightly.
-
-"That worried me. After that, I did one thing and thought another.
-Down at the bottom, there was something that kept me thinking about you,
-something that bothered me. That's where the guess-work comes in, but I
-don't know as I'd call it guess-work. It's an instinct you get when you
-come in contact with a person--it's put me on the right track many a
-time. I saw you didn't want anything done, but what fooled me was, I
-thought it was--" He hesitated, and then said boldly: "Mrs. Kildair, no
-use talking unless we say what we mean, is there?"
-
-"Quite right, be professional," she said with a quick nod. "You thought
-I wished to conceal what my true relations were with Slade? That's it,
-isn't it?"
-
-"Yes, that was it," he said slowly. "And being wrong myself, I figured
-out a possible motive. I was dead sure you knew who had taken the ring.
-Don't ask how--that's instinct--but I knew. So I figured out it was
-blackmail you were afraid of, and I began looking around for the lady or
-gentleman who would know that the ring had belonged to Slade. Do you
-see?"
-
-"Yes, go on. It's very plausible."
-
-"It looked like Garraboy, and it looked like the Cheevers at times," he
-said. "Then Mr. Beecher told me of seeing Mapleson in Mrs. Cheever's
-box at the opera, and that you said you knew him. That's what started me
-on Mapleson. Likewise, I began thinking more and more about that
-interview with you. Then came your engagement and I flung over all my
-theories, and got down to work. I began to look you up, and when I
-found out the situation from Mapleson, I made up my mind then and there,
-for one reason or another, you yourself took the ring the second time."
-
-"Is that all?"
-
-"No, this evening I got the last link I'd been waiting for."
-
-"What's that?"
-
-"Your account with your broker, and the record of sales," he said,
-bringing out a slip from his pocket.
-
-"Do you get convictions on such evidence as this?" she said steadily.
-
-"No," he said frankly; "but I get confessions."
-
-"Why should I take my own ring?"
-
-"The situation was unusual. You probably learned of Majendie's failure
-and you plunged on the short side."
-
-"But why not do so openly?" she said calmly.
-
-He hesitated.
-
-"Do you really want me to answer that?" he said finally.
-
-"We are not mincing words."
-
-"You were not engaged to Mr. Slade at that moment," he began.
-
-"How do you know?"
-
-"I do know. The one thing in your interview with me I particularly
-remember was your anxiety that Mr. Slade should know nothing."
-
-She remained thoughtful, bracing her fingers against each other,
-carefully considering what he had shown he knew.
-
-"And your theory is that I took the ring the second time," she said,
-"when whoever first took it had thrown it on the table, that I called in
-detectives to make Slade believe it had been stolen, so that I could
-gamble in Wall Street without being suspected."
-
-"Exactly," he said. "I have no means of knowing who took it first, but
-I would gamble my soul you took it the second time. For another reason:
-any one who took it knew he faced a search--that it was almost
-impossible to get it out of the room. The only person who could take it
-without being suspected was yourself."
-
-"McKenna," she said at last, but without the amusement that had formerly
-been in her eyes, "you are still guessing."
-
-He rose impatiently and went across the room, his hands behind his back.
-
-"Then, Mrs. Kildair," he said, turning, "do you wish me to report what I
-have just told you to my client, Mr. Beecher--as a guess?"
-
-She stood up at once, fully alert.
-
-"Mrs. Kildair, I am not an enemy," he continued, with a sudden change of
-manner. "I may not know all--but I know too much. Now, I'll tell you
-right out why I want your confidence. You marry John G. Slade. Slade
-is going to be one of the biggest figures in the country; I know that.
-I've had his business; I want to keep it. It's going to be ten times
-what it was before. More, I want his backing. I want several big jobs
-other agencies have got--The Bankers' Association, for one. Now, from
-what I've seen of you, the force back of Slade will be Mrs. Slade. Tell
-me yourself what I already know and I know I've got you as a friend.
-Keep it from me, and I know you'll supplant me with your husband. There
-may come a time when I can serve you--you never can tell. It's worth
-trying. I repeat I know too much. The only way to guard against it is
-by full confidence."
-
-"You are right. I will tell you," she said suddenly, and she added
-seriously, "I was prepared to tell you. But it is understood this
-remains our secret."
-
-"My word."
-
-"And that Mr. Beecher is not to have the slightest clue. Can you
-promise me that?"
-
-"I have another story ready."
-
-"Good. Then it is an alliance," she said, and she offered her hand
-abruptly, with a movement full of authority.
-
-McKenna shook hands, surprised at the masculine directness of her grip,
-surprised too at the utter disappearance from her face and attitude of
-all the impulsive fire and fascination that had first struck him.
-
-"You are right, and you are wrong," she said directly. "I took the
-ring, but in an entirely different way from what you believe. I did not
-take it at the table, as you think--do you know where I found it?"
-
-"Where?"
-
-"In the pocket of Mr. Beecher's overcoat."
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER XXV*
-
-
-McKenna was so startled at this announcement that the expression on his
-face brought a smile to the face of the woman.
-
-"Let me begin at the beginning," she said.
-
-While he seated himself, she continued moving about, her head down, her
-lip closed over her under lip, carefully considering the situation. She
-had no fear to give her confidence. She understood the man with whom
-she was dealing, the more so for his open avowal of his reasons for
-seeking her friendship. Also she was fully alive as to the strength of
-such an alliance. What she considered was how much she should reveal.
-To-morrow she would be Mrs. John G. Slade, at the goal of her ambitions,
-over what perilous paths only she herself knew. The knowledge of what
-she had won suffocated her, for the nature of dramatic and adventurous
-spirits is such that they must seek relief in confidence. More, they
-crave the admiration that only another can bring to complete their
-moments of self-intoxication. At this moment, when her role had been
-played, she craved applause. McKenna was not a friend--he was a
-machine, a rock that would give back an echo. Beside, what had he not
-divined?
-
-"McKenna," she began quietly, though weighing her words, "to any one
-else I might tell my story differently. With you it is otherwise. You
-are no fool. I shall speak openly. On the night of my party I was
-virtually ruined."
-
-"Ruined!" exclaimed McKenna, with an involuntary glance at the luxury
-which surrounded them.
-
-"When I say ruined, I mean for me," she said, nodding. She became
-thoughtful, looking beyond him, seeing a distant self. "When I came
-here I had fifteen thousand a year. I was not satisfied. I wanted
-forty. I gambled. I have always gambled. I lost heavily. That night I
-had only five thousand a year left. That was ruin for me. I speculated
-on the tips of a man who deliberately and for a purpose misinformed me.
-Can you guess who that man was?"
-
-"Slade," said McKenna instantly.
-
-"Yes, Slade," she said. "It has been a desperate struggle between us.
-Tomorrow I shall become his wife. That is what I want more than I have
-ever wanted anything else. It is my right--you will see what I will do.
-Understand me, if Slade had failed I should not have married him, and
-yet I tell you frankly he is the only man I have known that appeals to
-me in every way. However," she added, with a little abrupt movement of
-her closed hand, "that's over. I have won."
-
-"Did he know that you had lost?" asked McKenna slowly.
-
-"No," she said with a smile, "he never knew. Not that he would not have
-made it up--in his way. It is a game he must have played many times."
-She went to a writing-desk and, unlocking a drawer, brought out a note.
-"When I told you he gave me this ring with an offer of marriage," she
-said, returning, "that was not true. He had no thought of marriage
-then--far from it. He offered me the ring and I refused it, knowing
-that he did so only to try my weakness. Also, he wanted to find out
-what I knew of Majendie and the Atlantic Trust. When he left he sent it
-back with this note. Read it."
-
-McKenna took the sheet, smoothing out the wrinkles, and held it up.
-
-
-DEAR LADY:
-
-Apologies for my rudeness. If you won't accept a gift, at least wear
-the ring for a week. I should like to know what effect it could have on
-your cold little soul. Oblige my curiosity. It's only a little
-reparation for the disappointment I gave you.
-
-J.G.S.
-
-
-Mrs. Kildair took the note again and returning to the desk locked it in
-the drawer.
-
-"This, then, was my situation the night of the party. I had lost two
-thirds of what I had. I was absolutely resolved to play everything I
-possessed on one last gamble. I need not remind you of the financial
-situation at that time. I knew Majendie and I knew Slade. Furthermore,
-I knew Mrs. Bloodgood. The problem was this--if Majendie was to be
-supported and the Atlantic Trust to be upheld, there would probably be
-no panic. If Majendie failed, I knew there would be a tremendous break
-in stocks--a killing for those who knew what was coming. That night
-everything depended on my solving Majendie's fate. I did and I won. It
-was a guess, but a guess such as you understand. I have known too many
-men not to know how a true man acts under such circumstances. He came
-from the meeting that had condemned him, and the first moment he greeted
-Mrs. Bloodgood, I was sure that he was lost. Later, as he bowed
-ironically to something I had said, I saw in the gaping of his pocket
-something that gave me another clue--a slight thing, but which had a lot
-to do with what followed--just an edge of a green folder."
-
-"A folder?" said McKenna, perplexed.
-
-"Yes, a folder that I thought might be a railroad time-table," she said,
-nodding. "I knew, of course, of Mrs. Bloodgood's infatuation. I had
-her confidence. I knew that she had started to procure a divorce. I
-likewise knew how often she had begged Majendie to elope with her.
-Furthermore, almost every one there that night was watching Majendie for
-the same purpose--all who were speculating; Mr. and Mrs. Cheever,
-Bloodgood, Garraboy, Maud Lille, Slade--who came in late, quite
-unexpected--were there on the same errand."
-
-"Yes, that I understood," said McKenna.
-
-"Now, I come to the actual theft of the ring. The moment I found it had
-been taken, I realized all the difficulties of my position, how
-dangerous any inquiry would be to my reputation, which would necessarily
-establish the fact of its being a gift of Slade's. I resolved on
-desperate measures. That is why I came back, had the doors locked,
-extinguished the lights, and announced that I would call in detectives
-to have every one searched, unless the ring was restored during the
-period in the dark, while I counted one hundred."
-
-"Did you suspect who had taken it?" asked McKenna.
-
-"There were several I could suspect--that was the trouble," she said.
-"As you know, when I had counted sixty-one, there was a sound on the
-table. Every one exclaimed! The ring had been restored! When the lights
-were lit the table was bare. Evidently a second thief had taken what the
-first had restored. That's what I thought--every one thought. I was
-wrong. There were not two thieves, there was only one."
-
-"The same person had put it down as a blind and taken it again," said
-McKenna slowly, as she waited for his comment.
-
-"No," she replied, smiling. "It was all cleverly planned, and only an
-accident prevented its being successful. My ring was never on the
-table."
-
-"The ring that was thrown down, then," said McKenna, suddenly
-enlightened, "was another ring--a blind--to cover what any one might
-have seen? I see!"
-
-"And also to make it appear that the ring was in the studio."
-
-"Yes, I understand it now," said McKenna, nodding, with a sudden snap of
-his fingers.
-
-"I immediately went out, locking the door, and telephoned for my
-detectives. To this point this was my only thought. When I had done
-that, I began to think over what had happened. It seemed incredible to
-me that any one should have dared take such a risk--particularly as a
-search was inevitable. When I returned to the studio and awaited the
-arrival of my detectives, this was my only thought. I studied each and
-I became convinced that the ring would not be found on any one. If that
-were true, where was it? In the studio, hidden somewhere--but even
-there it would be sure to be found--so why should any one have even
-risked that?" She stopped a moment and then said quietly, with again
-that same far-seeing look beyond him: "McKenna, in my life I have seen
-many strange scenes. I have known of many more. One such came back to
-me and I guessed this much--that the real ring had not been heard. But
-that was all. When the detectives arrived, I went quietly into the
-hall, still trying to work it out. Quite by accident, I brushed against
-one of the coats that was hanging over the railing and knocked it down.
-Absolutely mechanically, without knowing why I did it, when I picked it
-up I ran my hands in the pockets. In the second was the ring."
-
-"And the coat, you say, was Beecher's?" said McKenna, amazed.
-
-"Wait. I replaced it hurriedly, noticing how similar it was to another
-that still lay on the rail. Then I opened the door and ushered the
-detectives into the dining-room. I had the ring, but I did not know the
-thief. Then all at once it came over me to what use I might put what
-had occurred. I had the ring which had been offered me, but which I
-could not accept openly. I could now use it to raise money for the
-speculation I had resolved upon, without Slade's knowing of the
-obligation. Second, I wanted to make sure that I had really seen a
-time-table in the pocket of Majendie. I gave my order to that effect to
-the detectives and started the search."
-
-"Was it a time-table?"
-
-"Nothing was found. Majendie, profiting either by the first period of
-darkness, or the second, had thrown it away. I found it in the
-waste-basket a little later. It was a time-table and his very action
-made my guess a certainty."
-
-"But the thief?"
-
-"When the turn of Garraboy arrived," said Mrs. Kildair, "he left, as all
-did, without returning to the studio. I was watching him particularly.
-Five minutes after he left, he returned. He had taken Mr. Beecher's
-coat by mistake."
-
-An exclamation of annoyance escaped McKenna. He sprang up angrily.
-
-"Mrs. Kildair," he said, not attempting to restrain his annoyance, "that
-is the one thing Mr. Beecher neglected to tell me--see how we are
-handicapped--"
-
-"I'm not blaming you, McKenna," said Mrs. Kildair with a smile. "On the
-contrary, you discovered entirely too much."
-
-"It was cleverly worked out," said McKenna grimly, "and no risk. He had
-his wits about him. Sounding another ring on the table to limit the
-search to the studio was quick thinking. Planting it in Beecher's coat
-was better. Even if he were caught with it on, he could pretend
-amazement, a natural mistake. And if not, it was a clean getaway," he
-added ruefully. "All the same, I wish I'd known that detail."
-
-"For the rest you were right. Mapleson loaned me the money. He is an
-old acquaintance, and I have once or twice," she said carelessly,
-"rendered him important services. He did telephone me ten minutes
-before you came. I staked everything I had in the market. I doubled my
-losses. Is there any other point?"
-
-"Your having the detectives stay was, of course, a blind?"
-
-"Of course. I called Miss Charters and Garraboy on purpose. To this
-day I wonder who he thinks got the ring from him."
-
-"He suspects," said McKenna.
-
-"Probably," she said carelessly. Then she turned on him. "Now,
-McKenna, answer me a question."
-
-"Which one?"
-
-"It's a thing I want to know," she said, with a sudden shade of dread
-creeping over her face. "It is one of those fatalities in life that are
-so terrible. Majendie killed himself because he thought the detectives
-on his track had a warrant for his arrest. Weren't they, in fact, your
-men, simply placed there to record his movements for Slade?"
-
-"Mrs. Slade," said McKenna, not noticing the slip, "you have just given
-me a profound confidence. Would you trust in my power to keep it, if,
-supposing I knew anything, I should tell you? Ask your husband himself
-and tell me yourself. I am curious also."
-
-Mrs. Kildair, who saw in the politic evasion a feminine answer, nodded
-and drew back with a shudder.
-
-At this moment Kiki entering announced that Mr. Beecher was below.
-
-"Tell him the truth," said McKenna quickly. "That is, three quarters of
-the truth. Leave it to me."
-
-When Beecher entered, expectation and long-restrained curiosity on his
-face, McKenna, with a look of crestfallen defeat which completely
-deceived him, said immediately:
-
-"Mr. Beecher, have you that envelope I gave you?"
-
-"Am I to open it?" said Beecher eagerly, bringing it out.
-
-"On the contrary," said McKenna, taking it quickly. He took it and
-could not resist examining the edges to see if it had been tampered
-with. "This is one of my failures, Mr. Beecher," he said, tearing it
-into small pieces. "I've got too much vanity to let you see what an ass
-I've been."
-
-"What does this mean?" said Beecher, standing open-mouthed.
-
-"It means, Teddy," said Mrs. Kildair severely, "that it is entirely your
-fault."
-
-"My fault!"
-
-"Yes, your fault. You neglected to tell Mr. McKenna the one thing that
-was important."
-
-"What thing--what do you mean?"
-
-"That Mr. Garraboy went off with your coat by mistake."
-
-"Yes, Mr. Beecher," said McKenna, shaking his head, "by not telling me
-that one detail, you've made a fool out of me."
-
-"Then, Garraboy took it!" said Beecher, his face lighting up with a
-smile of triumph.
-
-"Garraboy took it, planted it in your pocket and then faked the ring at
-the table. The ring was returned through a woman who guessed it and had
-it restored. Her name is a secret, but you are at liberty to guess."
-
-"Miss Lille," said Beecher to himself. This denouement, which coincided
-so closely with his own divination, completely convinced him.
-
-"If you've no further use for me," said McKenna, with the same hang-dog
-look, "I'll be going. Another time I hope to serve you better."
-
-"Thank you," said Mrs. Kildair, who contrived to add to the words a
-little smile, comprehensible only to the detective.
-
-"Permit me to give you my profound congratulations," said McKenna,
-taking her hand with a bow that made Beecher open his eyes in wonder.
-"I wish you every success."
-
-"_Au revoir_, McKenna," said Mrs. Kildair, still smiling.
-
-"Good-night, McKenna," said Beecher in turn.
-
-"Oh, you," said the detective, going off grumbling; "I have a bone to
-pick with you."
-
-Beecher laughed guiltily when the door had closed.
-
-"By Jove," he said, "McKenna certainly is in bad humor. I'm sorry. But
-he was off on a tangent, wasn't he?"
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER XXVI*
-
-
-"Just one thing I would like to know," said Beecher when Mrs. Kildair,
-following McKenna's lead, had left off with Garraboy's departure.
-
-"What?" she said, noticing his sudden embarrassment.
-
-He could not keep from his face a new consciousness, but he went on
-lamely:
-
-"Why did Miss Charters come back?"
-
-She laughed at what his manner revealed, and said:
-
-"So that's it! I told you she came when I telephoned her."
-
-"Yes, but why did you do that?"
-
-"Because I noticed her agitation and the way she watched one person in
-particular."
-
-"Mrs. Bloodgood?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"What did she tell you?"
-
-"She had seen Mrs. Bloodgood pick up the ring and try it on," said Mrs.
-Kildair. "The circumstances did seem suspicious, for Mrs. Bloodgood
-looked up in the mirror and saw her watching her. Miss Charters did not
-know whether she had returned it, I suppose. That was all. It did look
-bad--considering what happened afterward."
-
-"That was it, then," said Beecher, satisfied. He raised his head and
-saw Mrs. Kildair's eyes on him intently.
-
-"Well?" he said with an innocent expression.
-
-"How far has it gone?" said Mrs. Kildair.
-
-"What?"
-
-"Are you in love with Miss Charters?"
-
-"I wonder," he said evasively.
-
-"Are you serious?" she asked quickly.
-
-"And if I said yes--"
-
-"You are thinking of marriage?"
-
-"And if I were?"
-
-"You'd be a big fool," she said decisively.
-
-He raised his eyebrows, astonished and wounded.
-
-"You say this--the day before your own?"
-
-"Come here," she said, taking him by the wrist and leading him to the
-sofa. "Sit down there. Are you really seriously thinking of marriage?"
-
-"Yes, I am."
-
-She drew back in her chair, looking at him in doubt.
-
-"Teddy," she said at last, "you are too worth while to be spoiled like
-that. You have been too loyal a friend for me not to keep you from this
-blunder."
-
-"But, good heavens, am I not a responsible being?"
-
-"Listen," she said, cutting him off. She glanced at the clock. "I
-haven't much time, so don't interrupt me. I am very fond of you and
-what I say is in kindness. Yes, I am going to marry, and yet I say to
-you that you should not. I understand what it means. I have nothing to
-learn. There are two kinds of marriages, Teddy. The marriage that
-ninety-nine persons out of a hundred make--the marriage that is a
-joining of forces to fight the battle of life--has a definite object.
-The wife is the helpmate. The serious thing is to live, to pay the
-bills and to save a little money. You have nothing to do with that kind
-of marriage. The other kind of marriage is the marriage our sort makes,
-most of the time--no responsibilities, no object, and no struggle. You
-take a wife to help you enjoy yourself, and your enjoyment depends on
-piling up new sensations--in never being bored. Happiness in such
-conditions is a miracle. As a matter of fact, it is not a marriage at
-all, it is simply a liaison."
-
-"Even then?"
-
-"Yes, certain liaisons have lasted and been happy," she admitted; "we
-know that, but only on the same terms that will make permanent happiness
-in such a marriage. You are not a worker--you are simply curious about
-life, and curiosity is not a thing that is satisfied by one experience.
-The marriage you would make now would simply be an experience in
-curiosity, with inevitable results. To have any chance of success, do
-you know what ought to be?"
-
-"What?"
-
-"There should be on each side an equal experience in curiosity. When
-you have known two hundred women, you will find that there is always one
-above the rest who is necessary to you. Miss Charters may be that one
-now, but without the experience I speak of, you will never recognize it
-until too late. Therefore," she said, standing up, "don't marry for ten
-years. Not with such eyes and such lips," she said, passing her hand
-over the flushed face of the young man. "I know what I'm speaking of.
-Life's a very big world when you're alone, and a very small patch when
-you're married. Wait. Think over what I've said, Teddy."
-
-He did think over what she had told him as he walked out into the
-street.
-
-"She sees very clearly," he said solemnly, "and there's a great deal in
-what she says--a great deal," he repeated firmly, and stopping at the
-first hotel he telephoned Nan Charters.
-
-The next morning he received another note from her.
-
-
-Just to repeat, Teddy dear, that I think too much of you to hold you to
-what happened yesterday. We must both think _seriously--very
-seriously_.
-
-NAN.
-
-
-"That's right: we must think seriously," he repeated solemnly, and
-reached for the papers, after eying the telephone for a long time.
-
-Gunther called up later in the morning to give him an astonishing bit of
-news--Garraboy had sailed for Europe at nine that morning, and on the
-same ship had gone Mrs. Cheever. But this news did not excite him in
-the least. He spent the morning very heavily, keeping to his promise
-not to telephone with great difficulty. He did not go to his club for
-luncheon, but took his meal alone at a chance restaurant.
-
-Then he went to call on Emma Fornez.
-
-"Aha, you have called to talk to me about your little Charters," said
-the prima donna at once.
-
-"How do you know?" he said bluntly.
-
-"It's very simple; when a man's in love he never talks it over with a
-man--no, he always goes to another woman."
-
-"Well, would you be surprised if I married Miss Charters?" he said, glad
-to have arrived at the only topic which interested him.
-
-"If you what!" exclaimed Mme. Fornez, catapulting from the sofa.
-
-"If I marry," he repeated firmly.
-
-"Marry? Oh, no, no, no!" she cried, with her hands on her hips and
-bobbing her head to each negation. "Amuse yourself--love--flirt--break
-her heart or break yours--_est-ce que je sais_--but marry? What! You
-are mad!"
-
-"I mean it."
-
-"No, impossible! Marry one of us--an actress--you--a nice boy? _Allons
-donc_. You ought to be shut up. Marry Charters. You might just as
-well marry Emma Fornez, and when I say that--oh, la, la! My poor boy, I
-pity you!"
-
-"But you all marry."
-
-"True. But what difference does it make to us?" she threw out her chin,
-the gesture of the peasant. "You are serious?"
-
-"Very."
-
-"Let me talk to you. I have only a minute. My masseuse is coming and
-in America one doesn't receive with a masseuse--_enfin_. Listen to me
-well. You want to marry seriously--for good, then? Children and all the
-rest? Well, my boy, you might just as well marry Emma Fornez and expect
-her to spend her days over a ragout as to marry Charters. Will she give
-up her career?"
-
-"We haven't thought of that."
-
-"It makes no difference. On the stage, off the stage, it's the same
-thing. She won't change. Do you want to play the part of a valet, a
-little dancing dog, _hein_? For that's just what you'll be; and one of
-twenty. For she's used to crowds of men. She won't change. Love, my
-dear boy, is madness, hallucination, you are drunk; but everything
-returns as it was before--believe me. If I were a man I'd never fall in
-love with a woman until I married her--it's easy enough then. You would
-know what you're getting!"
-
-The masseuse came in, sliding on tiptoe from one door to another.
-
-"Victorine--_ma masseuse_! In a minute, in a minute, Madame Tenier.
-I'll be with you in a minute. Where was I? Teddy, you do not know us
-professional women--we are wrestlers, we are always struggling with you
-men--I warn you. No two ways. She will never be happy, my dear
-boy--because she never is happy. We are never happy, or we would not be
-what we are. And what of moods, day in and day out. _Tiens_--I'll tell
-you what you'll be--another Victorine. Victorine, _ou diable es-tu_?
-No, no, Teddy; don't be a big fool; don't be an idiot. You are so nice.
-You can amuse yourself so well. Don't put your head in a noose. If she
-loves you now, she won't to-morrow; she can't help it. Then where'll
-you be--in the soup, _hein_. And she? No, no, believe me, Teddy, never
-marry, in the first place, and then never marry one of us."
-
-"There's something in what she says," thought Beecher, as he moodily
-descended in the elevator. "She knows her own kind better than I do."
-
-He looked undecidedly at the clock and went to pay a dinner call on Mrs.
-Craig Fontaine. In ten minutes they were on the same subject.
-
-"I am terribly upset," said the young widow. "I don't want any trouble
-to come to you, and I can't help thinking that what you are considering
-is a very risky step. In the first place, Teddy, you are too young."
-
-He made a movement of impatience at this repetition, which had begun to
-offend his sense of dignity.
-
-"You don't know what is ahead," she said warmly. "You do not realize
-that points of view change. What you seek now, romance, adventure, is
-not what you'll seek at thirty-five, and life is mostly after
-thirty-five, Ted. Today you are willing to sacrifice every friend in
-the world for one love; tomorrow you will realize that friends are our
-life, their ways, their companionship, their interests. Today you hold
-yourself very cheaply; tomorrow you will wake up, look round you, see
-what other women have brought to their husbands, and you will say, 'What
-am I worth?'"
-
-"You believe in mercenary marriages, then?" he said irritably.
-
-"No, but I believe in staying in the same society in which you belong.
-I don't want to be cruel, but Miss Charters is of another world. I know
-there is nothing against her. She may be able to enter your world, and
-then again she may not want to--may prefer the freedom of her own, and
-you will follow her. Have you thought of that? Your friends must be
-your wife's friends, or you will give them up. Marriage, Teddy, which
-can be the most decisive act in a man's life, is the one he throws away
-the most lightly. I'm only afraid you may wake up to what you might
-have done, Teddy. You are young, eager, you are not yet bored. You may
-feel the desire to be something, to do something that counts in your
-life. I don't want you then to wake up and realize that another
-marriage might have given you the connections you wanted, the added
-opportunity. At this moment marriage appears to you the only thing that
-counts; you will realize some day that it is the least thing in it."
-She smiled, as he looked amazed, and added: "No amount of discussion can
-make you understand these things--they must be lived. But, Teddy,
-before you leap, ask yourself seriously what you are worth."
-
-When he left Mrs. Fontaine's presence, he did so with lagging steps.
-The advice of these three women, so various and viewing life from such
-divergent points of view, profoundly impressed him. He tried to argue
-against what had been told him, and as this process irritated him beyond
-measure, he broke off, acknowledging their superior insight. But all at
-once he stopped short, enlightened by a sudden reflection.
-
-"If what they say is true ... why did they all marry?"
-
-This answer, which might seem no answer at all, appeared to the mind of
-the lover, which is to say to the mind seeking to be convinced, so
-complete and startling a refutation, that he swung on his heel, and went
-directly to offer himself to Miss Charters.
-
-
-
-
- *EPILOGUE*
-
-
-Three years after the close of these events there were gathered in a box
-of the Metropolitan Opera, Mr. and Mrs. Gunther, senior, the Teddy
-Beechers, Bruce Gunther and a Miss Clarice Fanning, of the Virginia
-Fannings, a young girl demure, direct, with already in the youthful
-instincts of her pose more than a suggestion of the dignity and elegance
-which would come to grace the woman. From time to time, by a little
-movement of her fan, she brought to her shoulder for a whispered comment
-Bruce Gunther, who, though he had seated himself behind Mrs. Beecher,
-was compensated by the advantage of thus exchanging glances. All these
-little messages, which the young girl flattered herself were so cleverly
-executed as to remain invisible, were seen by every one in the box with
-discreet enjoyment.
-
-At the end of the act the two young men excused themselves and departed
-to make a round of visits.
-
-"Nan's charming, Ted," said Gunther, who saw them both for the first
-time since their long stay in Europe. He added with the extra
-enthusiasm with which a man of the world conveys his surprise at an
-unexpected development: "By George! she has the manners of a duchess!
-The governor, crabby old critic, too, is quite won over by her."
-
-"She has developed beautifully," said Beecher, with a certain
-proprietary responsibility which young husbands feel deeply. "She is a
-remarkable woman! ... remarkable!"
-
-"Well, you fooled all the prophets," said Gunther in his blunt way.
-
-"How so?"
-
-"We gave you a year, at the most," said Gunther, who stopped short and
-looked at his friend as though to ask the explanation of such a miracle.
-
-"My wife adores me," said Beecher, with a smile.
-
-Gunther smiled to himself and thought that if the wife had developed as
-though by right into the sure and brilliant woman of the world, the
-husband at heart had retained the same boyish irreverence of the
-mysterious depths of life.
-
-"You ought to get into something, Ted," he said abruptly. "You can't
-loaf in America! ... I'll give you an opening."
-
-"That's why the Missus brought me back," said Beecher. "Look out, I may
-take up that offer!"
-
-This reply, unconsciously delivered, gave Gunther the first glimpse of
-light into the perplexing success of his friend's marriage.
-
-"Well, where's the first call?" he said, registering in his mind this
-last perception.
-
-"I want to drop in on Mrs. Fontaine, Mrs. Slade," ... he considered a
-moment and added, "Mrs. Bloodgood, too, I am anxious to see..."
-
-"Don't forget Emma Fornez ... you ought to go behind," said Gunther, for
-the opera was _Carmen_.
-
-"Yes," said Beecher, with a little hesitation.
-
-"Next act ... Let's drop in on Louise Fontaine, first..."
-
-"There are reasons ... just at present..." said Gunther with a slight
-frown. "Anyhow, here's Slade's box--let's begin here."
-
-Mrs. Slade at their entrance rose directly, and came to meet them in the
-antechamber.
-
-"How nice of you to come here first," she said with genuine pleasure,
-extending both her hands. "Mr. Gunther, go into the box ... I want a few
-minutes alone with Teddy!" She turned to Beecher, motioning him to a
-seat on the cushioned settee in the little pink and white room that was
-like a jewel box. "I saw you at once ... Your wife has made a
-sensation!"
-
-"It is you, Rita, who are astonishing!" he said abruptly.
-
-"How so?" she said, already comprehending the frank wonder in his eyes.
-
-"You always did fascinate us, you know," he said, reclining a bit, the
-better to take in the elegant sinuosities of her pose. "But that was
-nothing to you now ... You are the opera itself!"
-
-"Not quite yet," she said, with a confident little bob of the head. She
-added, "I am happy!"
-
-In truth, just as men of conscious greatness who, in the period of their
-struggles, have a certain brusque and impatient unease, suddenly in the
-day of their success acquire a dignity and a radiating charm that
-astonishes, so in her a similar transformation had operated. The old
-feline restlessness, the swift and nervous changes from Slavic
-somnolence to sparkling energy, has been subdued in a clear serenity,
-and as she received the flattering tribute of the young man who had been
-associated with her period of uncertainty, there was in her smile a new
-graciousness that was not without its authority.
-
-"You too are happy!--it shows!" she said after the moment which she
-allowed Beecher to study her.
-
-"Very!"
-
-"You have children?"
-
-"Two." Then recalling with a little pardonable malice the intention of
-his visit, he said: "You were a bad prophet, Rita! ... You remember?"
-
-"I do."
-
-"Well?..."
-
-"Well, I underestimated your intelligence, my dear Teddy," she said,
-with a fugitive smile. "You are settling in America?"
-
-"Yes, the Missus has planned to make me a captain of finance," he said
-with a laugh. "However, I am ready for something active."
-
-"Tell your wife," she said irrelevantly, "that I will come to see her
-after the next act. My husband returns tomorrow ... save the night
-after for us ... I want to be as good a friend to her as you have been
-to me! ... Give my message exactly!"
-
-"I promise!"
-
-All at once his eyes, which had been searching, rested on her left hand.
-On the fourth finger, guarded by the gold band of her marriage, was the
-ruby ring.
-
-"It's the same, isn't it?" he asked.
-
-"I always wear it," she said, raising it to her eyes. "It is a fetish."
-
-"We ran across Garraboy a couple of times ... He married her, you know."
-
-"She married him, you mean..."
-
-"Yes, that would be more correct ... watches the beggar like a hound ...
-a pleasant life he has of it! ... By the way, did the story about the
-ring ever leak out?"
-
-"Never!" She rose, as though feeling the end of the intermission.
-"Tell me one thing, Teddy...."
-
-"A dozen!"
-
-"Did you tell your wife I advised you not to marry?"
-
-"Never!"
-
-"Don't! ... There are things a woman doesn't forgive, and I want to be
-good friends!"
-
-Beecher nodded.
-
-Gunther came out, and she gave them her fingers, remaining tall and
-stately, her head inclined a little pensively, until they had left.
-
-"Most remarkable woman here!" said Gunther briefly. "In a year or so
-more she'll be the undisputed leader."
-
-"What about John G.?"
-
-"The coming man. You know we're in close relations with him. The
-Governor has a great admiration for him, and you know it isn't often the
-Governor is taken that way!"
-
-"What's he doing?"
-
-"Railroad unification, territorial development ... only man in this
-country who can appreciate what the Canadian Pacific is doing!"
-
-"I thought he was considered rather a freebooter?"
-
-"So he was. Big men change when they get what they want. He had an
-interview with the old man, and laid his cards on the table. Governor
-said it was the frankest confidence he'd ever heard. When he went into
-the railroad field, it was at the mercy of a lot of clever little
-stock-jobbers, who were playing it like a game of roulette. Slade's
-driven 'em out, broken their backs, bankrupted them ... Oh! he strikes
-hard! ... Now there's a real railroad policy, with a national object."
-
-"You seem quite enthusiastic over him yourself," said Beecher, glancing
-at the plates on the boxes.
-
-"I am. He's a constructive ... that's what we want!"
-
-"When did all this happen?"
-
-"A couple of months after that affair of the Atlantic Trust."
-
-Beecher stopped, and with a gesture showed his companion a plate on
-which was inscribed:
-
- ENOS BLOODGOOD.
-
-
-"I never can forget Majendie that night," he said, sobered by the
-recollection of the events in which he had been such an agitated
-spectator. "By Jove, he was true blue!"
-
-"If he'd had the nerve to face the music he'd be a rich man to-day,"
-said Gunther, meditatively.
-
-"The Atlantic Trust is stronger than ever. Of course, technically,
-Majendie did things he had no right to do, but do you know, every
-investment he made has turned out enormously profitable! Queer how one
-man drops out and another pops up."
-
-"I wonder how much of it was business, and how much was..." Beecher
-broke off and a second time gestured in the direction of the box.
-
-"Who knows?" said Gunther, with a shrug of his shoulders.
-
-Beecher glanced down the corridor to assure himself there was yet time,
-and opened the door.
-
-In the front row of the box Mrs. Bloodgood was laughing gaily with three
-or four young men who were bending flatteringly over her. In the back
-Bloodgood was seated, dozing in a corner. Beecher hardly recognized
-him. Of the once rugged physique nothing remained but a senile
-fluttering. Some mysterious disease had struck him down and marked his
-hours. At this moment Mrs. Bloodgood, aware of a shadow in the doorway,
-turned and met the profound and memory-troubled gaze of the young man.
-She recognized him and in the same moment divined his thoughts. By a
-movement which she could not control, she brought her fan, which had
-been extended in a tantalizing gesture under the eyes of one of her
-satellites, into a protective barrier, as though to shield herself from
-the too frank melancholy of this disturbing gaze. Their eyes met.
-Beecher inclined his head. It was at the same time a salutation and an
-adieu.
-
-He found Gunther outside their box.
-
-"The old fellow's in a pretty bad way," said his friend, noticing his
-disturbed look.
-
-"It wasn't that!..."
-
-"Yes,--she's taking her revenge!" said Gunther with a laugh.
-
-To shake off this impression Beecher touched his friend on the arm, and
-forcing a smile, said, with a nod towards the box where Miss Fanning was
-waiting:
-
-"So it's serious, Bruce?"
-
-"But not for publication..." said Gunther with a nod.
-
-Beecher would have liked to put a further question, one which had
-presented itself already at the thought of Louise Fontaine; but he
-refrained, for he was aware in his friend of a certain new grimness and
-implacability of purpose which, as in his father, had the effect of
-withdrawing him from the ordinary club familiarity.
-
-After the second act he went behind the scenes to greet Emma Fornez, who
-had just received an ovation.
-
-The diva, with the same cry of delight in which she recognized him,
-asked him what he thought of her success.
-
-"You have reached the top.... Every new _Carmen_ must now be advertised
-as greater than Emma Fornez!" he answered with a bow.
-
-"Ah, you have learned how to make compliments! ... Bravo!" she
-exclaimed. She advanced her head, pointing to a little spot under her
-jeweled ear. "There! ... your recompense! ... You look as big a boy as
-ever! ... Tell me everything--all at once! ... Victorine, close the
-door. I see no one--_tu m'entends_? ... I am too red tonight, _hein_?"
-
-"Not from the boxes!"
-
-"_Si, si_! ... I must be more pale ... Sit down, sit down!" She
-enveloped her shoulders in a shawl, and studied her face in the flashing
-mirror, pulling her make-up box towards her. "You have come back ...
-for good, Teddy?"
-
-"Yes!"
-
-"You are always married?"
-
-"Yes!"
-
-"That's a pity--_enfin_! ... Happy?"
-
-"Very!"
-
-"Too bad! ... And you have come _pour tirer la langue a Emma Fornez_ ...
-who tried to frighten you!"
-
-"Exactly!" said Beecher, laughing.
-
-"Oh, you needn't be so conceited about it! If you are still living
-together--it is because ..." she stopped a moment to correct the beady
-fringe of the eyes, "because your wife is a very, very clever woman!"
-
-"What?"
-
-"Oh, just that! ... and because she finds she can lead you around
-conveniently by the nose ... just so!" She leaned over and illustrated
-her meaning with a little tweak before he could defend himself.
-
-"I see, you are quite furious that we are not divorced!"
-
-She shrugged her shoulders.
-
-"How many months is it?..."
-
-"Three years ... Three and a half!"
-
-"Bah! there is still hope!"
-
-To tease her for this, he drew back, grinning with elation.
-
-"Oh, you are having a beautiful time of it!" she said, watching him in
-the mirror. "It amuses you very much! ... But just you wait!" She
-raised her hand, counting the fingers. "Three, four, five--five years!
-That is the worst bridge of all! ... Even my old Jacquot--poor
-soul--stood me for five years! ... Just wait!" Then, struck by a sudden
-reflection, she proceeded to revenge herself. "If you are happy, I was
-right, after all! You remember ... first time I saw Charters ... I said
-'it is not an actress, it is a woman!' ..." She emphasized the point
-with a satisfied shrug. "I was right, and there you are!"
-
-"Well, Emma, don't let's fight," he said, hugely amused. "I'm glad to
-see you again!"
-
-"I, too," she said, tapping his arm, and turning her darkened face
-towards him for better inspection. "Better so, _hein_? ... So you are
-rich now, Teddy ... An uncle was good enough to die?"
-
-"Two!..."
-
-"Ah! ... what a pity! ... And now you are spoiled!" She began to soften
-the shadows of the eyes. "Tell me one thing..."
-
-"Yes?..."
-
-"You ... you did not tell her--the wife--about our little
-conspiracy?--the night of the cowboy party, _hein_?..." As he hesitated
-she caught the accusatory look in his eyes, and she wheeled about.
-"_Comment_! ... You were so stupid! ... _Dieu! que les hommes sont
-sots_!"
-
-"Nonsense! ... she laughed over it!" he said, recovering himself.
-"Besides, she had guessed it already!"
-
-"My dear Teddy," she said, in very bad humor, "I take back all I said
-... You were born a husband--typical! ideal!--You would be content with
-any one! ... with Victorine, even!"
-
-She flung the rabbit's foot furiously among the pigments.
-
-"_Allons_, we might just as well say adieu!"
-
-"Why?"
-
-"She does not know you have come?"
-
-"No, but..."
-
-"Well, well ... don't be fool enough to tell her! ... Go right back now.
-Make a call in some box where she can see you, and escape a good..."
-She stopped, shaking her hand in the direction of his ear.
-
-"You are mistaken!" he began, flushing. "You don't know her..."
-
-"Mistaken ... tra-la-la! ... and I know her! ... All I have to do is to
-see you, my poor Teddy, to understand ... absolutely ... in every little
-detail ... the woman who makes you so ... So--adieu!"
-
-"It is not as tragic as all that," he said, laughing, but giving his
-hand.
-
-"Adieu! ... adieu!"
-
-"I may come back ... when I am divorced?"
-
-"That will never happen!" she persisted, vindictively. "She has tamed
-you ... you are a domestic animal ... a house pet ... like the cat and
-the poodle dog!"
-
-"_Au revoir_, Emma," he said, refusing to be irritated.
-
-"Not good-by!" She took up a thread, broke it with a vicious jerk, and
-let the ends float away. "Victorine, _depeche-toi donc_!"
-
-Beecher, who had started with the intention of extracting a legitimate
-revenge, had received little satisfaction from his two interviews.
-Nevertheless, he was not so naive as to reject Emma Fornez's advice. He
-went directly to Mrs. Craig Fontaine's box. Louise, as though she had
-waited impatiently his coming, started at once from her chair, meeting
-him in the privacy of the antechamber. He was struck at once by the
-constrained tensity of her glance.
-
-"You are in the Gunthers' box," she said, directly the first greetings
-were over. "Where is Bruce? Why didn't he come with you?"
-
-"We separated. I went behind to see Madame Fornez..." he said lamely.
-
-She was not deceived by his answer, made a rapid calculation and said
-abruptly:
-
-"Teddy, tell me the truth. Don't refuse me! ... You may be doing me a
-favor ... the greatest! ... Is Bruce engaged? That little girl in the
-box?"
-
-Between them there had been the fullest loyalty, and a confidence since
-school days. He was not ignorant, therefore, of her infatuation for his
-friend, though what dramatic turn it might have taken in the years of
-his absence, he could only speculate.
-
-"Yes, it is true," he said. "It is not to be known ... With you,
-Louise, it is different: you ought to know!"
-
-She sat down, and he was frightened by the swift, ashen pallor that
-rushed into her face. Alarmed, he made a movement towards her.
-
-"Wait!" she said, faintly. "There are two questions I must ask ... Did
-he, Bruce, send you to tell me this?"
-
-"No...." He hesitated, surprised at the question, adding: "That is, I
-think not...."
-
-"Is it to be public--immediately?"
-
-"No, not at once ... I am sure of that!"
-
-She nodded her head with a little relief, and, incapable of speech,
-raised her hand weakly as though to excuse herself, then laid it over
-her heart. He rose, turning his back, steadying himself. At the end of
-a long moment she touched him on the shoulder.
-
-"I will come ... tomorrow ... and call on your wife," she said, quietly.
-"Give her my very best wishes, will you? ... And ... thank you! ... You
-have done me a great service!..."
-
-When he reached his box Bruce was waiting for him.
-
-"You saw Louise?" he said directly.
-
-"Yes!"
-
-"You told her?"
-
-"Yes, I told her."
-
-"That was right!"
-
-They hesitated a moment, one whether to question, the other whether to
-explain.
-
-"I admire her as much as any woman," said Gunther, at last. "She made
-only one blunder ... At that, Fate was against her."
-
-This answer, and the way it was delivered, was all that Beecher was
-permitted to understand of an episode which deserves a novel to itself.
-Nevertheless, he felt that there must have been something far out of the
-ordinary to have brought forth from Gunther this eulogy, which sounded
-at the moment like an epitaph.
-
-When Beecher entered the lights were up on the act. During the time in
-which he had been absent, his wife, too, had been a prey to dramatic
-moods. The stage and the world had been before her eyes as the choices
-of her own life. She comprehended what Beecher did not, all the
-advantages of her first appearance in New York under the patronage of
-the Gunthers, that was in itself a social cachet. Mrs. Slade's
-flattering visit, as well as the accented cordiality of acquaintances
-who had bowed to her from their boxes, made her feel how easy would be
-her way in this world, so easy of access by one entrance and so hostile
-by a thousand others. She was satisfied. Her doubts, if she had
-yielded to them a moment, were gone. She had talked to Gunther of what
-she wanted for her husband, and made of him a friend, not insensible to
-the reason of the charm which she had exerted. But in the moment in
-which the social world presented itself to her as the endless stretching
-Pacific flashed upon the dazzled eyes of Balboa, she felt a sudden sense
-of loneliness and the need of support. She rested her hand on the
-strong-muscled arm of her husband, and designating with a smile the
-young girl who was so artlessly and artfully conveying her impatient
-delight at Bruce's return, she sent her husband one of those looks which
-only a perfectly happy woman has the power to retain ... that first
-fugitive, timid offering in the eyes of lovers.
-
-
-The next day Mrs. Craig Fontaine's engagement was announced in all the
-papers. It was a romance of long standing ... the engagement now made
-public for the first time was supposed to have lasted several months,
-etc.
-
-
-Mrs. Slade had more than fulfilled her promise towards McKenna. Through
-her active friendship not only had he secured the entire patronage of
-her husband, but had finally acquired the coveted field of the Bankers'
-Association of America. His agency had tripled in its ramifications and
-its power. This man, who perceived clearly all the relative, often
-confusing, shades of morality, was at the bottom an idealist. He
-undertook two great campaigns: one which resulted in the exposing of the
-mysterious suzerainty over corrupt politics of a group of outwardly
-respectable capitalists; and the other in the purification of a great
-labor union from a band of terrorists, who were betraying their ideals
-and selling their sympathies. He had still one ambition, which he had
-confided alone to Mrs. Slade, to whom he was able to render in this
-period two invaluable services--he wished one day to become Police
-Commissioner of New York City, and create, in that cemetery of
-reputations, a great police system that would vie with the systems of
-Paris and London.
-
-Often Bruce Gunther would run into his office at the close of the
-afternoon. He appreciated the integrity of the detective, and he used
-him as he was learning to use many men ... as so many windows through
-which to look out on life. Gunther had not been entirely the dupe of
-Rita Kildair's explanation as to the theft of the ring. Above the
-mantelpiece in the inner office of McKenna, framed in simple
-passe-partout, hung the two clippings of the same date: one the bare
-statement of the bank's support of the Associated Trust, and underneath
-the engagement of Rita Kildair and John G. Slade.
-
-These dramatically aligned scraps of information for the public, never
-ceased to intrigue him. Many a time he considered a direct question,
-but refrained from respect. One day, however, pushed to the verge by
-his curiosity, he said abruptly:
-
-"McKenna, are you going to write your memoirs, some day?"
-
-"Perhaps--some day!"
-
-"You ought to--Publication fifty years from now."
-
-"May be ... may be!"
-
-"And that affair of the ring," said Gunther, pointing to the notices.
-"Will you tell the truth about that?"
-
-"What! Write down my mistakes?"
-
-"Was it a mistake?"
-
-McKenna nodded, gazing at the mantelpiece meditatively, with an
-expression that was indecipherable.
-
-"Bad mistake!"
-
-"But I should say one of those failures that are sometimes rather
-fortunate?" persisted Gunther.
-
-"Well, it's a good thing to know how to turn a failure to account.
-That's why a few of us get ahead," said McKenna in a matter-of-fact way,
-but for a moment Gunther seemed to perceive the faintest trace of a
-smile, lurking maliciously in the corners of his eyes.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SIXTY-FIRST SECOND ***
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