After Aggie's vigorous comment there followed a long silence. That volatile young person, little troubled as she was by sensitiveness, guessed the fact that just now further discussion of the event would be distasteful to Mary, and so she betook herself discreetly to a cigarette and the illustrations of a popular magazine devoted to the stage. As for the man, his reticence was really from a fear lest in speaking at all he might speak too freely, might betray the pervasive violence of his feeling. So, he sat motionless and wordless, his eyes carefully avoiding Mary in order that she might not be disturbed by the invisible vibrations thus sent from one to another. Mary herself was shaken to the depths. A great weariness, a weariness that cried the worthlessness of all things, had fallen upon her. It rested leaden on her soul. It weighed down her body as well, though that mattered little indeed. Yet, since she could minister to that readily, she rose and went to a settee on the opposite side of the room where she arranged herself among the cushions in a posture more luxurious than her rather precise early training usually permitted her to assume in the presence of others. There she rested, and soon felt the tides of energy again flowing in her blood, and that same vitality, too, wrought healing even for her agonized soul, though more slowly. The perfect health of her gave her strength to recover speedily from the shock she had sustained. It was this health that made the glory of the flawless skin, white with a living white that revealed the coursing blood beneath, and the crimson lips that bent in smiles so tender, or so wistful, and the limpid eyes in which always lurked fires that sometimes burst into flame, the lustrous mass of undulating hair that sparkled in the sunlight like an aureole to her face or framed it in heavy splendors with its shadows, and the supple erectness of her graceful carriage, the lithe dignity of her every movement.
But, at last, she stirred uneasily and sat up. Garson accepted this as a sufficient warrant for speech.
“You know—Aggie told you—that Cassidy was up here from Headquarters. He didn't put a name to it, but I'm on.” Mary regarded him inquiringly, and he continued, putting the fact with a certain brutal bluntness after the habit of his class. “I guess you'll have to quit seeing young Gilder. The bulls are wise. His father has made a holler.
“Don't let that worry you, Joe,” she said tranquilly. She allowed a few seconds go by, then added as if quite indifferent: “I was married to Dick Gilder this morning.” There came a squeal of amazement from Aggie, a start of incredulity from Garson.
“Yes,” Mary repeated evenly, “I was married to him this morning. That was my important engagement,” she added with a smile toward Aggie. For some intuitive reason, mysterious to herself, she did not care to meet the man's eyes at that moment.
Aggie sat erect, her baby face alive with worldly glee.
“My Gawd, what luck!” she exclaimed noisily. “Why, he's a king fish, he is. Gee! But I'm glad you landed him!”
“Thank you,” Mary said with a smile that was the result of her sense of humor rather than from any tenderness.
It was then that Garson spoke. He was a delicate man in his sensibilities at times, in spite of the fact that he followed devious methods in his manner of gaining a livelihood. So, now, he put a question of vital significance.
“Do you love him?”
The question caught Mary all unprepared, but she retained her self-control sufficiently to make her answer in a voice that to the ordinary ear would have revealed no least tremor.
“No,” she said. She offered no explanation, no excuse, merely stated the fact in all its finality.
Aggie was really shocked, though for a reason altogether sordid, not one whit romantic.
“Ain't he young?” she demanded aggressively. “Ain't he good-looking, and loose with his money something scandalous? If I met up with a fellow as liberal as him, if he was three times his age, I could simply adore him!”
It was Garson who pressed the topic with an inexorable curiosity born of his unselfish interest in the woman concerned.
“Then, why did you marry him?” he asked. The sincerity of him was excuse enough for the seeming indelicacy of the question. Besides, he felt himself somehow responsible. He had given back to her the gift of life, which she had rejected. Surely, he had the right to know the truth.
It seemed that Mary believed her confidence his due, for she told him the fact.
“I have been working and scheming for nearly a year to do it,” she said, with a hardening of her face that spoke of indomitable resolve. “Now, it's done.” A vindictive gleam shot from her violet eyes as she added: “It's only the beginning, too.”
Garson, with the keen perspicacity that had made him a successful criminal without a single conviction to mar his record, had seized the implication in her statement, and now put it in words.
“Then, you won't leave us? We're going on as we were before?” The hint of dejection in his manner had vanished. “And you won't live with him?”
“Live with him?” Mary exclaimed emphatically. “Certainly not!”
Aggie's neatly rounded jaw dropped in a gape of surprise that was most unladylike.
“You are going to live on in this joint with us?” she questioned, aghast.
“Of course.” The reply was given with the utmost of certainty.
Aggie presented the crux of the matter.
“Where will hubby live?”
There was no lessening of the bride's composure as she replied, with a little shrug.
“Anywhere but here.”
Aggie suddenly giggled. To her sense of humor there was something vastly diverting in this new scheme of giving bliss to a fond husband.
“Anywhere but here,” she repeated gaily. “Oh, won't that be nice—for him? Oh, yes! Oh, quite so! Oh, yes, indeed—quite so—so!”
Garson, however, was still patient in his determination to apprehend just what had come to pass.
“Does he understand the arrangement?” was his question.
“No, not yet,” Mary admitted, without sign of embarrassment.
“Well,” Aggie said, with another giggle, “when you do get around to tell him, break it to him gently.”
Garson was intently considering another phase of the situation, one suggested perhaps out of his own deeper sentiments.
“He must think a lot of you!” he said, gravely. “Don't he?”
For the first time, Mary was moved to the display of a slight confusion. She hesitated a little before her answer, and when she spoke it was in a lower key, a little more slowly.
“I—I suppose so.”
Aggie presented the truth more subtly than could have been expected from her.
“Think a lot of you? Of course he does! Thinks enough to marry you! And believe me, kid, when a man thinks enough of you to marry you, well, that's some thinking!”
Somehow, the crude expression of this professional adventuress penetrated to Mary's conscience, though it held in it the truth to which her conscience bore witness, to which she had tried to shut her ears.... And now from the man came something like a draught of elixir to her conscience—like the trump of doom to her scheme of vengeance.
Garson spoke very softly, but with an intensity that left no doubt as to the honesty of his purpose.
“I'd say, throw up the whole game and go to him, if you really care.”
There fell a tense silence. It was broken by Mary herself. She spoke with a touch of haste, as if battling against some hindrance within.
“I married him to get even with his father,” she said. “That's all there is to it.... By the way, I expect Dick will be here in a minute or two. When he comes, just remember not to—enlighten him.”
Aggie sniffed indignantly.
“Don't worry about me, not a mite. Whenever it's really wanted, I'm always there with a full line of that lady stuff.” Thereupon, she sprang up, and proceeded to give her conception of the proper welcoming of the happy bridegroom. The performance was amusing enough in itself, but for some reason it moved neither of the two for whom it was rendered to more than perfunctory approval. The fact had no depressing effect on the performer, however, and it was only the coming of the maid that put her lively sallies to an end.
“Mr. Gilder,” Fannie announced.
Mary put a question with so much of energy that Garson began finally to understand the depth of her vindictive feeling.
“Any one with him?”
“No, Miss Turner,” the maid answered.
“Have him come in,” Mary ordered.
Garson felt that he would be better away for the sake of the newly married pair at least, if not for his own. He made hasty excuses and went out on the heels of the maid. Aggie, however, consulting only her own wishes in the matter, had no thought of flight, and, if the truth be told, Mary was glad of the sustaining presence of another woman.
She got up slowly, and stood silent, while Aggie regarded her curiously. Even to the insensitive observer, there was something strange in the atmosphere.... A moment later the bridegroom entered.
He was still clean-cut and wholesome. Some sons of wealthy fathers are not, after four years experience of the white lights of town. And the lines of his face were firmer, better in every way. It seemed, indeed, that here was some one of a resolute character, not to be wasted on the trivial and gross things. In an instant, he had gone to her, had caught her in his arms with, “Hello, dear!” smothered in the kiss he implanted on her lips.
Mary strove vainly to free herself.
“Don't, oh, don't!” she gasped.
Dick Gilder released his wife from his arms and smiled the beatific smile of the newly-wed.
“Why not?” he demanded, with a smile, a smile calm, triumphant, masterful.
“Agnes!”... It was the sole pretext to which Mary could turn for a momentary relief.
The bridegroom faced about, and perceived Agnes, who stood closely watching the meeting between husband and wife. He made an excellent formal bow of the sort that one learns only abroad, and spoke quietly.
“I beg your pardon, Miss Lynch, but”—a smile of perfect happiness shone on his face—“you could hardly expect me to see any one but Mary under the circumstances. Could you?”
Aggie strove to rise to this emergency, and again took on her best manner, speaking rather coldly.
“Under what circumstances?” she inquired.
The young man exclaimed joyously.
“Why, we were married this morning.”
Aggie accepted the news with fitting excitement.
“Goodness gracious! How perfectly lovely!”
The bridegroom regarded her with a face that was luminous of delight.
“You bet, it's lovely!” he declared with entire conviction. He turned to Mary, his face glowing with satisfaction.
“Mary,” he said, “I have the honeymoon trip all fixed. The Mauretania sails at five in the morning, so we will——”
A cold voice struck suddenly through this rhapsodizing. It was that of the bride.
“Where is your father?” she asked, without any trace of emotion.
The bridegroom stopped short, and a deep blush spread itself over his boyish face. His tone was filled full to overflowing with compunction as he answered.
“Oh, Lord! I had forgotten all about Dad.” He beamed on Mary with a smile half-ashamed, half-happy. “I'm awfully sorry,” he said earnestly. “I'll tell you what we'll do. We'll send Dad a wireless from the ship, then write him from Paris.”
But the confident tone brought no response of agreement from Mary. On the contrary, her voice was, if anything, even colder as she replied to his suggestion. She spoke with an emphasis that brooked no evasion.
“What was your promise? I told you that I wouldn't go with you until you had brought your father to me, and he had wished us happiness.” Dick placed his hands gently on his wife's shoulders and regarded her with a touch of indignation in his gaze.
“Mary,” he said reproachfully, “you are not going to hold me to that promise?”
The answer was given with a decisiveness that admitted of no question, and there was a hardness in her face that emphasized the words.
“I am going to hold you to that promise, Dick.”
For a few seconds, the young man stared at her with troubled eyes. Then he moved impatiently, and dropped his hands from her shoulders. But his usual cheery smile came again, and he shrugged resignedly.
“All right, Mrs. Gilder,” he said, gaily. The sound of the name provoked him to new pleasure. “Sounds fine, doesn't it?” he demanded, with an uxorious air.
“Yes,” Mary said, but there was no enthusiasm in her tone.
The husband went on speaking with no apparent heed of his wife's indifference.
“You pack up what things you need, girlie,” he directed. “Just a few—because they sell clothes in Paris. And they are some class, believe me! And meantime, I'll run down to Dad's office, and have him back here in half an hour. You will be all ready, won't you?”
Mary answered quickly, with a little catching of her breath, but still coldly.
“Yes, yes, I'll be ready. Go and bring your father.”
“You bet I will,” Dick cried heartily. He would have taken her in his arms again, but she evaded the caress. “What's the matter?” he demanded, plainly at a loss to understand this repulse.
“Nothing!” was the ambiguous answer.
“Just one!” Dick pleaded.
“No,” the bride replied, and there was determination in the monosyllable.
It was evident that Dick perceived the futility of argument.
“For a married woman you certainly are shy,” he replied, with a sly glance toward Aggie, who beamed back sympathy. “You'll excuse me, won't you, Miss Lynch,... Good-by, Mrs. Gilder.” He made a formal bow to his wife. As he hurried to the door, he expressed again his admiration for the name. “Mrs. Gilder! Doesn't that sound immense?” And with that he was gone.
There was silence in the drawing-room until the two women heard the closing of the outer door of the apartment. Then, at last, Aggie relieved her pent-up emotions in a huge sigh that was near a groan.
“Oh Gawd!” she gasped. “The poor simp!”
Later on, Garson, learning from the maid that Dick Gilder had left, returned, just as Mary was glancing over the release, with which General Hastings was to be compensated, along with the return of his letters, for his payment of ten thousand dollars to Miss Agnes Lynch.
“Hello, Joe,” Mary said graciously as the forger entered. Then she spoke crisply to Agnes. “And now you must get ready. You are to be at Harris's office with this document at four o'clock, and remember that you are to let the lawyer manage everything.”
Aggie twisted her doll-like face into a grimace.
“It gets my angora that I'll have to miss Pa Gilder's being led like a lamb to the slaughter-house.” And that was the nearest the little adventuress ever came to making a Biblical quotation.
“Anyhow,” she protested, “I don't see the use of all this monkey business here. All I want is the coin.” But she hurried obediently, nevertheless, to get ready for the start.
Garson regarded Mary quizzically.
“It's lucky for her that she met you,” he said. “She's got no more brains than a gnat.”
“And brains are mighty useful things, even in our business,” Mary replied seriously; “particularly in our business.”
“I should say they were,” Garson agreed. “You have proved that.”
Aggie came back, putting on her gloves, and cocking her small head very primly under the enormous hat that was garnished with costliest plumes. It was thus that she consoled herself in a measure for the business of the occasion—in lieu of cracked ice from Tiffany's at one hundred and fifty a carat. Mary gave over the release, and Aggie, still grumbling, deposited it in her handbag.
“It seems to me we're going through a lot of red tape,” she said spitefully.
Mary, from her chair at the desk, regarded the malcontent with a smile, but her tone was crisp as she answered.
“Listen, Agnes. The last time you tried to make a man give up part of his money it resulted in your going to prison for two years.”
Aggie sniffed, as if such an outcome were the merest bagatelle.
“But that way was so exciting,” she urged, not at all convinced.
“And this way is so safe,” Mary rejoined, sharply. “Besides, my dear, you would not get the money. My way will. Your way was blackmail; mine is not. Understand?”
“Oh, sure,” Aggie replied, grimly, on her way to the door. “It's clear as Pittsburgh.” With that sarcasm directed against legal subtleties, she tripped daintily out, an entirely ravishing vision, if somewhat garish as to raiment, and soon in the glances of admiration that every man cast on her guileless-seeming beauty, she forgot that she had ever been annoyed.
Garson's comment as she departed was uttered with his accustomed bluntness.
“Solid ivory!”
“She's a darling, anyway!” Mary declared, smiling. “You really don't half-appreciate her, Joe!”
“Anyhow, I appreciate that hat,” was the reply, with a dry chuckle.
“Mr. Griggs,” Fannie announced. There was a smile on the face of the maid, which was explained a minute later when, in accordance with her mistress's order, the visitor was shown into the drawing-room, for his presence was of an elegance so extraordinary as to attract attention anywhere—and mirth as well from ribald observers.
Meantime, Garson had explained to Mary.
“It's English Eddie—you met him once. I wonder what he wants? Probably got a trick for me. We often used to work together.”
“Nothing without my consent,” Mary warned.
“Oh, no, no, sure not!” Garson agreed.
Further discussion was cut short by the appearance of English Eddie himself, a tall, handsome man in the early thirties, who paused just within the doorway, and delivered to Mary a bow that was the perfection of elegance. Mary made no effort to restrain the smile caused by the costume of Mr. Griggs. Yet, there was no violation of the canons of good taste, except in the aggregate. From spats to hat, from walking coat to gloves, everything was perfect of its kind. Only, there was an over-elaboration, so that the ensemble was flamboyant. And the man's manners precisely harmonized with his clothes, whereby the whole effect was emphasized and rendered bizarre. Garson took one amazed look, and then rocked with laughter.
Griggs regarded his former associate reproachfully for a moment, and then grinned in frank sympathy.
“Really, Mr. Griggs, you quite overcome me,” Mary said, half-apologetically.
The visitor cast a self-satisfied glance over his garb.
“I think it's rather neat, myself.” He had some reputation in the under-world for his manner of dressing, and he regarded this latest achievement as his masterpiece.
“Sure some duds!” Garson admitted, checking his merriment.
“From your costume,” Mary suggested, “one might judge that this is purely a social call. Is it?”
“Well, not exactly,” Griggs answered with a smile.
“So I fancied,” his hostess replied. “So, sit down, please, and tell us all about it.”
While she was speaking, Garson went to the various doors, and made sure that all were shut, then he took a seat in a chair near that which Griggs occupied by the desk, so that the three were close together, and could speak softly.
English Eddie wasted no time in getting to the point.
“Now, look here,” he said, rapidly. “I've got the greatest game in the world.... Two years ago, a set of Gothic tapestries, worth three hundred thousand dollars and a set of Fragonard panels, worth nearly as much more, were plucked from a chateau in France and smuggled into this country.”
“I have never heard of that,” Mary said, with some interest.
“No,” Griggs replied. “You naturally wouldn't, for the simple reason that it's been kept on the dead quiet.”
“Are them things really worth that much?” Garson exclaimed.
“Sometimes more,” Mary answered. “Morgan has a set of Gothic tapestries worth half a million dollars.”
Garson uttered an ejaculation of disgust.
“He pays half a million dollars for a set of rugs!” There was a note of fiercest bitterness come into his voice as he sarcastically concluded: “And they wonder at crime!”
Griggs went on with his account.
“About a month ago, the things I was telling you of were hung in the library of a millionaire in this city.” He hitched his chair a little closer to the desk, and leaned forward, lowering his voice almost to a whisper as he stated his plan.
“Let's go after them. They were smuggled, mind you, and no matter what happens, he can't squeal. What do you say?”
Garson shot a piercing glance at Mary.
“It's up to her,” he said. Griggs regarded Mary eagerly, as she sat with eyes downcast. Then, after a little interval had elapsed in silence, he spoke interrogatively:
“Well?”
Mary shook her head decisively. “It's out of our line,” she declared.
Griggs would have argued the matter. “I don't see any easier way to get half a million,” he said aggressively.
Mary, however, was unimpressed.
“If it were fifty millions, it would make no difference. It's against the law.”
“Oh, I know all that, of course,” Griggs returned impatiently. “But if you can——”
Mary interrupted him in a tone of finality.
“My friends and I never do anything that's illegal! Thank you for coming to us, Mr. Griggs, but we can't go in, and there's an end of the matter.”
“But wait a minute,” English Eddie expostulated, “you see this chap, Gilder, is——”
Mary's manner changed from indifference to sudden keen interest.
“Gilder?” she exclaimed, questioningly.
“Yes. You know who he is,” Griggs answered; “the drygoods man.”
Garson in his turn showed a new excitement as he bent toward Mary.
“Why, it's old Gilder, the man you——”
Mary, however, had regained her self-control, for a moment rudely shaken, and now her voice was tranquil again as she replied:
“I know. But, just the same, it's illegal, and I won't touch it. That's all there is to it.”
Griggs was dismayed.
“But half a million!” he exclaimed, disconsolately. “There's a stake worth playing for. Think of it!” He turned pleadingly to Garson. “Half a million, Joe!”
The forger repeated the words with an inflection that was gloating.
“Half a million!”
“And it's the softest thing you ever saw.”
The telephone at the desk rang, and Mary spoke into it for a moment, then rose and excused herself to resume the conversation over the wire more privately in the booth. The instant she was out of the room, Griggs turned to Garson anxiously.
“It's a cinch, Joe,” he pleaded. “I've got a plan of the house.” He drew a paper from his breast-pocket, and handed it to the forger, who seized it avidly and studied it with intent, avaricious eyes.
“It looks easy,” Garson agreed, as he gave back the paper.
“It is easy,” Griggs reiterated. “What do you say?”
Garson shook his head in refusal, but there was no conviction in the act.
“I promised Mary never to——”
Griggs broke in on him.
“But a chance like this! Anyhow, come around to the back room at Blinkey's to-night, and we'll have a talk. Will you?”
“What time?” Garson asked hesitatingly, tempted.
“Make it early, say nine,” was the answer. “Will you?”
“I'll come,” Garson replied, half-guiltily. And in the same moment Mary reentered.
Griggs rose and spoke with an air of regret.
“It's 'follow the leader,'” he said, “and since you are against it, that settles it.”
“Yes, I'm against it,” Mary said, firmly.
“I'm sorry,” English Eddie rejoined. “But we must all play the game as we see it.... Well, that was the business I was after, and, as it's finished, why, good-afternoon, Miss Turner.” He nodded toward Joe, and took his departure.
Something of what was in his mind was revealed in Garson's first speech after Griggs's going.
“That's a mighty big stake he's playing for.”
“And a big chance he's taking!” Mary retorted. “No, Joe, we don't want any of that. We'll play a game that's safe and sure.”
The words recalled to the forger weird forebodings that had been troubling him throughout the day.
“It's sure enough,” he stated, “but is it safe?”
Mary looked up quickly.
“What do you mean?” she demanded.
Garson walked to and fro nervously as he answered.
“S'pose the bulls get tired of you putting it over on 'em and try some rough work?”
Mary smiled carelessly.
“Don't worry, Joe,” she advised. “I know a way to stop it.”
“Well, so far as that goes, so do I,” the forger said, with significant emphasis.
“Just what do you mean by that?” Mary demanded, suspiciously.
“For rough work,” he said, “I have this.” He took a magazine pistol from his pocket. It was of an odd shape, with a barrel longer than is usual and a bell-shaped contrivance attached to the muzzle.
“No, no, Joe,” Mary cried, greatly discomposed. “None of that—ever!”
The forger smiled, and there was malignant triumph in his expression.
“Pooh!” he exclaimed. “Even if I used it, they would never get on to me. See this?” He pointed at the strange contrivance on the muzzle.
Mary's curiosity made her forget for a moment her distaste.
“What is it?” she asked, interestedly. “I have never seen anything like that before.”
“Of course you haven't,” Garson answered with much pride. “I'm the first man in the business to get one, and I'll bet on it. I keep up with the times.” For once, he was revealing that fundamental egotism which is the characteristic of all his kind. “That's one of the new Maxim silencers,” he continued. “With smokeless powder in the cartridges, and the silencer on, I can make a shot from my coat-pocket, and you wouldn't even know it had been done.... And I'm some shot, believe me.”
“Impossible!” Mary ejaculated.
“No, it ain't,” the man asserted. “Here, wait, I'll show you.”
“Good gracious, not here!” Mary exclaimed in alarm. “We would have the whole place down on us.”
Garson chuckled.
“You just watch that dinky little vase on the table across the room there. 'Tain't very valuable, is it?”
“No,” Mary answered.
In the same instant, while still her eyes were on the vase, it fell in a cascade of shivered glass to the table and floor. She had heard no sound, she saw no smoke. Perhaps, there had been a faintest clicking noise. She was not sure. She stared dumfounded for a few seconds, then turned her bewildered face toward Garson, who was grinning in high enjoyment.
“I would'nt have believed it possible,” she declared, vastly impressed.
“Neat little thing, ain't it?” the man asked, exultantly.
“Where did you get it?” Mary asked.
“In Boston, last week. And between you and me, Mary, it's the only model, and it sure is a corker for crime.”
The sinister association of ideas made Mary shudder, but she said no more. She would have shuddered again, if she could have guessed the vital part that pistol was destined to play. But she had no thought of any actual peril to come from it. She might have thought otherwise, could she have known of the meeting that night in the back room of Blinkey's, where English Eddie and Garson sat with their heads close together over a table.
“A chance like this,” Griggs was saying, “a chance that will make a fortune for all of us.”
“It sounds good,” Garson admitted, wistfully.
“It is good,” the other declared with an oath. “Why, if this goes through, we're set up for life. We can quit, all of us.”
“Yes,” Garson agreed, “we can quit, all of us.” There was avarice in his voice.
The tempter was sure that the battle was won, and smiled contentedly.
“Well,” he urged, “what do you say?”
“How would we split it?” It was plain that Garson had given over the struggle against greed. After all, Mary was only a woman, despite her cleverness, and with all a woman's timidity. Here was sport for men.
“Three ways would be right,” Griggs answered. “One to me, one to you and one to be divided up among the others.”
Garson brought his fist down on the table with a force that made the glasses jingle.
“You're on,” he said, strongly.
“Fine!” Griggs declared, and the two men shook hands. “Now, I'll get——”
“Get nothing!” Garson interrupted. “I'll get my own men. Chicago Red is in town. So is Dacey, with perhaps a couple of others of the right sort. I'll get them to meet you at Blinkey's at two to-morrow afternoon, and, if it looks right, we'll turn the trick to-morrow night.”
“That's the stuff,” Griggs agreed, greatly pleased.
But a sudden shadow fell on the face of Garson. He bent closer to his companion, and spoke with a fierce intensity that brooked no denial.
“She must never know.”
Griggs nodded understandingly.
“Of course,” he answered. “I give you my word that I'll never tell her. And you know you can trust me, Joe.”
“Yes,” the forger replied somberly, “I know I can trust you.” But the shadow did not lift from his face.
Mary dismissed Garson presently, and betook herself to her bedroom for a nap. The day had been a trying one, and, though her superb health could endure much, she felt that both prudence and comfort required that she should recruit her energies while there was opportunity. She was not in the least surprised that Dick had not yet returned, though he had mentioned half an hour. At the best, there were many things that might detain him, his father's absence from the office, difficulties in making arrangements for his projected honeymoon trip abroad—which would never occur—or the like. At the worst, there was a chance of finding his father promptly, and of that father as promptly taking steps to prevent the son from ever again seeing the woman who had so indiscreetly married him. Yet, somehow, Mary could not believe that her husband would yield to such paternal coercion. Rather, she was sure that he would prove loyal to her whom he loved, through every trouble. At the thought a certain wistfulness pervaded her, and a poignant regret that this particular man should have been the one chosen of fate to be entangled within her mesh of revenge. There throbbed in her a heart-tormenting realization that there were in life possibilities infinitely more splendid than the joy of vengeance. She would not confess the truth even to her inmost soul, but the truth was there, and set her a-tremble with vague fears. Nevertheless, because she was in perfect health, and was much fatigued, her introspection did not avail to keep her awake, and within three minutes from the time she lay down she was blissfully unconscious of all things, both the evil and the good, revenge and love.
She had slept, perhaps, a half-hour, when Fannie awakened her.
“It's a man named Burke,” she explained, as her mistress lay blinking. “And there's another man with him. They said they must see you.”
By this time, Mary was wide-awake, for the name of Burke, the Police Inspector, was enough to startle her out of drowsiness.
“Bring them in, in five minutes,” she directed.
She got up, slipped into a tea-gown, bathed her eyes in cologne, dressed her hair a little, and went into the drawing-room, where the two men had been waiting for something more than a quarter of an hour—to the violent indignation of both.
“Oh, here you are, at last!” the big, burly man cried as she entered. The whole air of him, though he was in civilian's clothes, proclaimed the policeman.
“Yes, Inspector,” Mary replied pleasantly, as she advanced into the room. She gave a glance toward the other visitor, who was of a slenderer form, with a thin, keen face, and recognized him instantly as Demarest, who had taken part against her as the lawyer for the store at the time of her trial, and who was now holding the office of District Attorney. She went to the chair at the desk, and seated herself in a leisurely fashion that increased the indignation of the fuming Inspector. She did not trouble to ask her self-invited guests to sit.
“To whom do I owe the pleasure of this visit, Inspector?” she remarked coolly. It was noticeable that she said whom and not what, as if she understood perfectly that the influence of some person brought him on this errand.
“I have come to have a few quiet words with you,” the Inspector declared, in a mighty voice that set the globes of the chandeliers a-quiver. Mary disregarded him, and turned to the other man.
“How do you do, Mr. Demarest?” she said, evenly. “It's four years since we met, and they've made you District Attorney since then. Allow me to congratulate you.”
Demarest's keen face took on an expression of perplexity.
“I'm puzzled,” he confessed. “There is something familiar, somehow, about you, and yet——” He scrutinized appreciatively the loveliness of the girl with her classically beautiful face, that was still individual in its charm, the slim graces of the tall, lissome form. “I should have remembered you. I don't understand it.”
“Can't you guess?” Mary questioned, somberly. “Search your memory, Mr. Demarest.”
Of a sudden, the face of the District Attorney lightened.
“Why,” he exclaimed, “you are—it can't be—yes—you are the girl, you're the Mary Turner whom I—oh, I know you now.”
There was an enigmatic smile bending the scarlet lips as she answered.
“I'm the girl you mean, Mr. Demarest, but, for the rest, you don't know me—not at all!”
The burly figure of the Inspector of Police, which had loomed motionless during this colloquy, now advanced a step, and the big voice boomed threatening. It was very rough and weighted with authority.
“Young woman,” Burke said, peremptorily, “the Twentieth Century Limited leaves Grand Central Station at four o'clock. It arrives in Chicago at eight-fifty-five to-morrow morning.” He pulled a massive gold watch from his waistcoat pocket, glanced at it, thrust it back, and concluded ponderously: “You will just about have time to catch that train.”
Mary regarded the stockily built officer with a half-amused contempt, which she was at no pains to conceal.
“Working for the New York Central now?” she asked blandly.
The gibe made the Inspector furious.
“I'm working for the good of New York City,” he answered venomously.
Mary let a ripple of cadenced laughter escape her.
“Since when?” she questioned.
A little smile twisted the lips of the District Attorney, but he caught himself quickly, and spoke with stern gravity.
“Miss Turner, I think you will find that a different tone will serve you better.”
“Oh, let her talk,” Burke interjected angrily. “She's only got a few minutes anyway.”
Mary remained unperturbed.
“Very well, then,” she said genially, “let us be comfortable during that little period.” She made a gesture of invitation toward chairs, which Burke disdained to accept; but Demarest seated himself.
“You'd better be packing your trunk,” the Inspector rumbled.
“But why?” Mary inquired, with a tantalizing assumption of innocence. “I'm not going away.”
“On the Twentieth Century Limited, this afternoon,” the Inspector declared, in a voice of growing wrath.
“Oh, dear, no!” Mary's assertion was made very quietly, but with an underlying firmness that irritated the official beyond endurance.
“I say yes!” The answer was a bellow.
Mary appeared distressed, not frightened. Her words were an ironic protest against the man's obstreperous noisiness, no more.
“I thought you wanted quiet words with me.”
Burke went toward her, in a rage.
“Now, look here, Mollie——” he began harshly.
On the instant, Mary was on her feet, facing him, and there was a gleam in her eyes as they met his that bade him pause.
“Miss Turner, if you don't mind.” She laughed slightly. “For the present, anyway.” She reseated herself tranquilly.
Burke was checked, but he retained his severity of bearing.
“I'm giving you your orders. You will either go to Chicago, or you'll go up the river.”
Mary answered in a voice charged with cynicism.
“If you can convict me. Pray, notice that little word 'if'.”
The District Attorney interposed very suavely.
“I did once, remember.”
“But you can't do it again,” Mary declared, with an assurance that excited the astonishment of the police official.
“How do you know he can't?” he blustered.
Mary laughed in a cadence of genial merriment.
“Because,” she replied gaily, “if he could, he would have had me in prison some time ago.”
Burke winced, but he made shift to conceal his realization of the truth she had stated to him.
“Huh!” he exclaimed gruffly. “I've seen them go up pretty easy.”
Mary met the assertion with a serenity that was baffling.
“The poor ones,” she vouchsafed; “not those that have money. I have money, plenty of money—now.”
“Money you stole!” the Inspector returned, brutally.
“Oh, dear, no!” Mary cried, with a fine show of virtuous indignation.
“What about the thirty thousand dollars you got on that partnership swindle?” Burke asked, sneering. “I s'pose you didn't steal that!”
“Certainly not,” was the ready reply. “The man advertised for a partner in a business sure to bring big and safe returns. I answered. The business proposed was to buy a tract of land, and subdivide it. The deeds to the land were all forged, and the supposed seller was his confederate, with whom he was to divide the money. We formed a partnership, with a capital of sixty thousand dollars. We paid the money into the bank, and then at once I drew it out. You see, he wanted to get my money illegally, but instead I managed to get his legally. For it was legal for me to draw that money—wasn't it, Mr. Demarest?”
The District Attorney by an effort retained his severe expression of righteous disapprobation, but he admitted the truth of her contention.
“Unfortunately, yes,” he said gravely. “A partner has the right to draw out any, or all, of the partnership funds.”
“And I was a partner,” Mary said contentedly. “You, see, Inspector, you wrong me—you do, really! I'm not a swindler; I'm a financier.”
Burke sneered scornfully.
“Well,” he roared, “you'll never pull another one on me. You can gamble on that!”
Mary permitted herself to laugh mockingly in the face of the badgered official.
“Thank you for telling me,” she said, graciously. “And let me say, incidentally, that Miss Lynch at the present moment is painlessly extracting ten thousand dollars from General Hastings in a perfectly legal manner, Inspector Burke.”
“Well, anyhow,” Burke shouted, “you may stay inside the law, but you've got to get outside the city.” He tried to employ an elephantine bantering tone. “On the level, now, do you think you could get away with that young Gilder scheme you've been planning?”
Mary appeared puzzled.
“What young Gilder scheme?” she asked, her brows drawn in bewilderment.
“Oh, I'm wise—I'm wise!” the Inspector cried roughly. “The answer is, once for all, leave town this afternoon, or you'll be in the Tombs in the morning.”
Abruptly, a change came over the woman. Hitherto, she had been cynical, sarcastic, laughing, careless, impudent. Now, of a sudden, she was all seriousness, and she spoke with a gravity that, despite their volition, impressed both the men before her.
“It can't be done, Inspector,” she said, sedately.
The declaration, simple as it was, aroused the official to new indignation.
“Who says it can't?” he vociferated, overflowing with anger at this flouting of the authority he represented.
Mary opened a drawer of the desk, and took out the document obtained that morning from Harris, and held it forth.
“This,” she replied, succinctly.
“What's this?” Burke stormed. But he took the paper.
Demarest looked over the Inspector's shoulder, and his eyes grew larger as he read. When he was at an end of the reading, he regarded the passive woman at the desk with a new respect.
“What's this?” Burke repeated helplessly. It was not easy for him to interpret the legal phraseology. Mary was kind enough to make the document clear to him.
“It's a temporary restraining order from the Supreme Court, instructing you to let me alone until you have legal proof that I have broken the law.... Do you get that, Mr. Inspector Burke?”
The plethoric official stared hard at the injunction.
“Another new one,” he stuttered finally. Then his anger sought vent in violent assertion. “But it can't be done!” he shouted.
“You might ask Mr. Demarest,” Mary suggested, pleasantly, “as to whether or not it can be done. The gambling houses can do it, and so keep on breaking the law. The race track men can do it, and laugh at the law. The railroad can do it, to restrain its employees from striking. So, why shouldn't I get one, too? You see, I have money. I can buy all the law I want. And there's nothing you can't do with the law, if you have money enough.... Ask Mr. Demarest. He knows.”
Burke was fairly gasping over this outrage against his authority.
“Can you beat that!” he rumbled with a raucously sonorous vehemence. He regarded Mary with a stare of almost reverential wonder. “A crook appealing to the law!”
There came a new note into the woman's voice as she answered the gibe.
“No, simply getting justice,” she said simply. “That's the remarkable part of it.” She threw off her serious air. “Well, gentlemen,” she concluded, “what are you going to do about it?”
Burke explained.
“This is what I'm going to do about it. One way or another, I'm going to get you.”
The District Attorney, however, judged it advisable to use more persuasive methods.
“Miss Turner,” he said, with an appearance of sincerity, “I'm going to appeal to your sense of fair play.”
Mary's shining eyes met his for a long moment, and before the challenge in hers, his fell. He remembered then those doubts that had assailed him when this girl had been sentenced to prison, remembered the half-hearted plea he had made in her behalf to Richard Gilder.
“That was killed,” Mary said, “killed four years ago.”
But Demarest persisted. Influence had been brought to bear on him. It was for her own sake now that he urged her.
“Let young Gilder alone.”
Mary laughed again. But there was no hint of joyousness in the musical tones. Her answer was frank—brutally frank. She had nothing to conceal.
“His father sent me away for three years—three years for something I didn't do. Well, he's got to pay for it.”
By this time, Burke, a man of superior intelligence, as one must be to reach such a position of authority, had come to realize that here was a case not to be carried through by blustering, by intimidation, by the rough ruses familiar to the force. Here was a woman of extraordinary intelligence, as well as of peculiar personal charm, who merely made sport of his fulminations, and showed herself essentially armed against anything he might do, by a court injunction, a thing unheard of until this moment in the case of a common crook. It dawned upon him that this was, indeed, not a common crook. Moreover, there had grown in him a certain admiration for the ingenuity and resource of this woman, though he retained all his rancor against one who dared thus to resist the duly constituted authority. So, in the end, he spoke to her frankly, without a trace of his former virulence, with a very real, if rugged, sincerity.
“Don't fool yourself, my girl,” he said in his huge voice, which was now modulated to a degree that made it almost unfamiliar to himself. “You can't go through with this. There's always a weak link in the chain somewhere. It's up to me to find it, and I will.”
His candor moved her to a like honesty.
“Now,” she said, and there was respect in the glance she gave the stalwart man, “now you really sound dangerous.”
There came an interruption, alike unexpected by all. Fannie appeared at the door.
“Mr. Edward Gilder wishes to see you, Miss Turner,” she said, with no appreciation of anything dynamic in the announcement. “Shall I show him in?”
“Oh, certainly,” Mary answered, with an admirable pretense of indifference, while Burke glared at Demarest, and the District Attorney appeared ill at ease.
“He shouldn't have come,” Demarest muttered, getting to his feet, in reply to the puzzled glance of the Inspector.
Then, while Mary sat quietly in her chair at the desk, and the two men stood watching doubtfully the door, the maid appeared, stood aside, and said simply, “Mr. Gilder.”
There entered the erect, heavy figure of the man whom Mary had hated through the years. He stopped abruptly just within the room, gave a glance at the two men, then his eyes went to Mary, sitting at her desk, with her face lifted inquiringly. He did not pause to take in the beauty of that face, only its strength. He stared at her silently for a moment. Then he spoke in his oritund voice, a little tremulous from anxiety.
“Are you the woman?” he said. There was something simple and primitive, something of dignity beyond the usual conventions, in his direct address.
And there was the same primitive simplicity in the answer. Between the two strong natures there was no subterfuge, no suggestion of polite evasions, of tergiversation, only the plea of truth to truth. Mary's acknowledgment was as plain as his own question.
“I am the woman. What do you want?”... Thus two honest folk had met face to face.
“My son.” The man's answer was complete.
But Mary touched a tragic note in her question. It was asked in no frivolous spirit, but, of a sudden, she guessed that his coming was altogether of his own volition, and not the result of his son's information, as at first she had supposed.
“Have you seen him recently?” she asked.
“No,” Gilder answered.
“Then, why did you come?”
Thereat, the man was seized with a fatherly fury. His heavy face was congested, and his sonorous voice was harsh with virtuous rebuke.
“Because I intend to save my boy from a great folly. I am informed that he is infatuated with you, and Inspector Burke tells me why—he tells me—why—he tells me——” He paused, unable for a moment to continue from an excess of emotion. But his gray eyes burned fiercely in accusation against her.
Inspector Burke himself filled the void in the halting sentence.
“I told you she had been an ex-convict.”
“Yes,” Gilder said, after he had regained his self-control. He stared at her pleadingly. “Tell me,” he said with a certain dignity, “is this true?”
Here, then, was the moment for which she had longed through weary days, through weary years. Here was the man whom she hated, suppliant before her to know the truth. Her heart quickened. Truly, vengeance is sweet to one who has suffered unjustly.
“Is this true?” the man repeated, with something of horror in his voice.
“It is,” Mary said quietly.
For a little, there was silence in the room. Once, Inspector Burke started to speak, but the magnate made an imperative gesture, and the officer held his peace. Always, Mary rested motionless. Within her, a fierce joy surged. Here was the time of her victory. Opposite her was the man who had caused her anguish, the man whose unjust action had ruined her life. Now, he was her humble petitioner, but this servility could be of no avail to save him from shame. He must drink of the dregs of humiliation—and then again. No price were too great to pay for a wrong such as that which he had put upon her.
At last, Gilder was restored in a measure to his self-possession. He spoke with the sureness of a man of wealth, confident that money will salve any wound.
“How much?” he asked, baldly.
Mary smiled an inscrutable smile.
“Oh, I don't need money,” she said, carelessly. “Inspector Burke will tell you how easy it is for me to get it.”
Gilder looked at her with a newly dawning respect; then his shrewdness suggested a retort.
“Do you want my son to learn what you are?” he said.
Mary laughed. There was something dreadful in that burst of spurious amusement.
“Why not?” she answered. “I'm ready to tell him myself.”
Then Gilder showed the true heart of him, in which love for his boy was before all else. He found himself wholly at a loss before the woman's unexpected reply.
“But I don't want him to know,” he stammered. “Why, I've spared the boy all his life. If he really loves you—it will——”
At that moment, the son himself entered hurriedly from the hallway. In his eagerness, he saw no one save the woman whom he loved. At his entrance, Mary rose and moved backward a step involuntarily, in sheer surprise over his coming, even though she had known he must come—perhaps from some other emotion, deeper, hidden as yet even from herself.
The young man, with his wholesome face alight with tenderness, went swiftly to her, while the other three men stood silent, motionless, abashed by the event. And Dick took Mary's hand in a warm clasp, pressed it tenderly.
“I didn't see father,” he said happily, “but I left him a note on his desk at the office.”
Then, somehow, the surcharged atmosphere penetrated his consciousness, and he looked around, to see his father standing grimly opposite him. But there was no change in his expression beyond a more radiant smile.
“Hello, Dad!” he cried, joyously. “Then you got my note?”
The voice of the older man came with a sinister force and saturnine.
“No, Dick, I haven't had any note.”
“Then, why?” The young man broke off suddenly. He was become aware that here was something malignant, with a meaning beyond his present understanding, for he saw the Inspector and Demarest, and he knew the two of them for what they were officially.
“What are they doing here?” he demanded suspiciously, staring at the two.
“Oh, never mind them,” Mary said. There was a malevolent gleam in her violet eyes. This was the recompense of which she had dreamed through soul-tearing ages. “Just tell your father your news, Dick.”
The young man had no comprehension of the fact that he was only a pawn in the game. He spoke with simple pride.
“Dad, we're married. Mary and I were married this morning.”
Always, Mary stared with her eyes steadfast on the father. There was triumph in her gaze. This was the vengeance for which she had longed, for which she had plotted, the vengeance she had at last achieved. Here was her fruition, the period of her supremacy.
Gilder himself seemed dazed by the brief sentence.
“Say that again,” he commanded.
Mary rejoiced to make the knowledge sure.
“I married your son this morning,” she said in a matter-of-fact tone. “I married him. Do you quite understand, Mr. Gilder? I married him.” In that insistence lay her ultimate compensation for untold misery. The father stood there wordless, unable to find speech against this calamity that had befallen him.
It was Burke who offered a diversion, a crude interruption after his own fashion.
“It's a frame-up,” he roared. He glared at the young man. “Tell your father it ain't true. Why, do you know what she is? She's done time.” He paused for an instant, then spoke in a voice that was brutally menacing. “And, by God, she'll do it again!”
The young man turned toward his bride. There was disbelief, hope, despair, in his face, which had grown older by years with the passing of the seconds.
“It's a lie, Mary,” he said. “Say it's a lie!” He seized her hand passionately.
There was no quiver in her voice as she answered. She drew her hand from his clasp, and spoke evenly.
“It's the truth.”
“It's the truth!” the young man repeated, incredulously.
“It is the truth,” Mary said, firmly. “I have served three years in prison.”
There was a silence of a minute that was like years. It was the father who broke it, and now his voice was become tremulous.
“I wanted to save you, Dick. That's why I came.”
The son interrupted him violently.
“There's a mistake—there must be.”
It was Demarest who gave an official touch to the tragedy of the moment.
“There's no mistake,” he said. There was authority in his statement.
“There is, I tell you!” Dick cried, horrified by this conspiracy of defamation. He turned his tortured face to his bride of a day.
“Mary,” he said huskily, “there is a mistake.”
Something in her face appalled him. He was voiceless for a few terrible instants. Then he spoke again, more beseechingly.
“Say there's a mistake.”
Mary preserved her poise. Yes—she must not forget! This was the hour of her triumph. What mattered it that the honey of it was as ashes in her mouth? She spoke with a simplicity that admitted no denial.
“It's all quite true.”
The man who had so loved her, so trusted her, was overwhelmed by the revelation. He stood trembling for a moment, tottered, almost it seemed would have fallen, but presently steadied himself and sank supinely into a chair, where he sat in impotent suffering.
The father looked at Mary with a reproach that was pathetic.
“See,” he said, and his heavy voice was for once thin with passion, “see what you've done to my boy!”
Mary had held her eyes on Dick. There had been in her gaze a conflict of emotions, strong and baffling. Now, however, when the father spoke, her face grew more composed, and her eyes met his coldly. Her voice was level and vaguely dangerous as she answered his accusation.
“What is that compared to what you have done to me?”
Gilder stared at her in honest amazement. He had no suspicion as to the tragedy that lay between him and her.
“What have I done to you?” he questioned, uncomprehending.
Mary moved forward, passing beyond the desk, and continued her advance toward him until the two stood close together, face to face. She spoke softly, but with an intensity of supreme feeling in her voice.
“Do you remember what I said to you the day you had me sent away?”
The merchant regarded her with stark lack of understanding.
“I don't remember you at all,” he said.
The woman looked at him intently for a moment, then spoke in a colorless voice.
“Perhaps you remember Mary Turner, who was arrested four years ago for robbing your store. And perhaps you remember that she asked to speak to you before they took her to prison.”
The heavy-jowled man gave a start.
“Oh, you begin to remember. Yes! There was a girl who swore she was innocent—yes, she swore that she was innocent. And she would have got off—only, you asked the judge to make an example of her.”