The Immortal Moment

Chapter 26

"Oh, don"t laugh. He _is_ good."

"Well, I don"t say he isn"t--only----" he smiled.

"You forget," she said. "He doesn"t know."

"Are you quite sure he doesn"t know?"

"Quite--quite sure."

"And you are not going to enlighten him?"

She drew back before his penetrating gaze. "I can"t. I couldn"t bear him to know."

"How do you propose to prevent his knowing? Do you think you"re clever enough to keep him in the dark for ever?"

"Why not? He hasn"t seen things in the broad daylight, under his very nose. There were plenty of things to see."

"You mean he"s stupid?"

"I mean I haven"t been clever, if that"s what you think. Once I did nearly tell him."

"Supposing somebody else tells him?"

"If they do it"ll only be their word against mine. And he"d take my word against anybody"s."

"Poor devil!"

He seemed to meditate, dispa.s.sionately, on the poor devil"s case, and hers.

"You little fool. It isn"t a question of people"s words. How are you going to get rid of the facts?"

"He needn"t know them."

"You forget. I"m one of them. How are you going to get rid of me?"

"Oh, Wilfrid--you"re not going to tell him? You said you wouldn"t."

"Of course I said I wouldn"t--I"d even be glad to get rid of myself to oblige you, Kitty, but I can"t. Here I am. How are you going to account for me?"

"I"ve thought of that. He needn"t see you. It"ll be all right, Wilfrid, if you"ll go away."

"No doubt. But I haven"t gone away."

He emphasised his point by rising and taking up a commanding position on the hearthrug.

Some one knocked at the door, and she started violently.

It was only a servant, bringing a note for her.

She read it and handed it to Marston, looking piteously at him as he stood his ground.

"Mr. Lucy can come up," she said. "We have finished all we had to say."

"I think there are one or two points," he replied, "still unsettled."

She turned to the servant.

"Will you tell Mr. Lucy I"m engaged for the present. I will see him later."

"No, my dear Mrs. Tailleur, not on my account. There"s no reason why you shouldn"t see Mr. Lucy now. No reason at all."

She stood tortured with indecision.

"Mrs. Tailleur will see Mr. Lucy now."

"I will see him in ten minutes."

"Very good, ma"am."

The servant withdrew.

Marston shrugged his shoulders.

"There you are. Here we both are. Here we are all three in the same hotel. An uncomfortably small hotel. How are you--or rather, how is he--going to get over that?"

"It would be all right if you"d only go. I"ve told him you were a man coming on business."

"My dear Kitty, that was quite unworthy of you."

"Well, what could I do? It"s not as if I was in the habit of telling lies."

"I won"t criticise it if it was a first attempt. But in telling a lie, my child, it"s as well to select one that bears some resemblance to the truth. Do I look like a man who comes on business?"

"You will go before he comes, won"t you?"

"No, I don"t think I will."

"You have nothing," she said, "to gain by staying."

"I suppose you think you have everything to gain by my going?"

"Oh, Wilfrid, give me my chance."

"I"m giving you your chance, you little fool. I wouldn"t produce that pocket-handkerchief if I were you. It"s quite the most damaging thing about you."

She gave a hysterical laugh, and put the pocket-handkerchief away.

"You are utterly unfit," he commented, "to manage your own affairs."

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