"I can"t betray this secret even to you, my boy."
"Does any one else share it?"
"Why do you use that queer tone? What do you mean?" The father"s last question was barely breathed.
"Nothing," the boy answered with a toss of his head. "Does any one in this house suspect it?"
"Possibly."
Again Tom paused, watching keenly:
"On the day you returned and found Helen here, you quarrelled with Cleo?"
Norton wheeled with sudden violence:
"We won"t discuss this question further, sir!"
"Yes, we will," was the steady answer through set teeth. "Haven"t you been afraid of Cleo?"
The father"s eyes were looking into his now with a steady stare:
"I refuse to be cross-examined, sir!"
Tom ignored his answer:
"Hasn"t Cleo been blackmailing you?"
"No--no."
The boy held his father"s gaze until it wavered, and then in cold tones said:
"You are not telling me the truth!"
Norton flinched as if struck:
"Do you know what you are saying. Have you lost your senses?"
Tom held his ground with dogged coolness:
"_Have_ you told me the truth?"
"Yes."
"It"s a lie!"
The words were scarcely spoken when Norton"s clenched fist struck him a blow full in the face.
A wild cry of surprise, inarticulate in fury, came from the boy"s lips as he staggered against the table. He glared at his father, drew back a step, his lips twitching, his breath coming in gasps, and suddenly felt for the revolver in his pocket.
With a start of horror the father cried:
"My boy!"
The hand dropped limp, he leaned against the table for support and sobbed:
"O G.o.d! Let me die!"
Norton rushed to his side, his voice choking with grief:
"Tom, listen!"
"I won"t listen!" he hissed. "I never want to hear the sound of your voice again!"
"Don"t say that--you don"t mean it!" the father pleaded.
"I do mean it!"
Norton touched his arm tenderly:
"You can"t mean it, Tom. You"re all I"ve got in the world. You mustn"t say that. Forgive me--I was mad. I didn"t know what I was doing. I didn"t mean to strike you. I forgot for a moment that you"re a man, proud and sensitive as I am----"
The boy tore himself free from his touch and crossed the room with quick, angry stride and turned:
"Well, you"d better not forget it again"--he paused and drew himself erect.
"You"re my father, but I tell you to your face that I hate and loathe you----"
The silver-gray head drooped:
"That I should have lived to hear it!"
"And I want you to understand one thing," Tom went on fiercely, "if an angel from heaven told me that Helen"s blood was tainted, I"d demand proofs! You have shown none, and I"m not going to give up the woman I love!"
Norton supported himself by the table and felt his way along its edges as if blinded. His eyes were set with a half-mad stare as he gripped Tom"s shoulders:
"I love you, my boy, with a love beyond your ken, a love that can be fierce and cruel when G.o.d calls, and sooner than see you marry this girl, I"ll kill you with my own hands if I must!"
The answer came slowly:
"And you can"t guess what"s happened?"
"Guess--what"s--happened!" the father repeated in a whisper. "What do you mean?"
"That I"m married already!"
With hands uplifted, his features convulsed, the father fell back, his voice a low piteous shriek:
"Merciful G.o.d!--No!"
"Married an hour before you dragged me away in that campaign!" he shouted in triumph. "I knew you"d never consent and so I took matters into my own hands!"