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Before she is aware of his purpose, he has her two wrists in a vice-like grip; and bending down, until his lips almost touch the glossy locks on her averted head, he is pouring out, in swift cutting sentences, the story of the inquest; all the d.a.m.ning evidence is swiftly rehea.r.s.ed; nothing that can weigh against his rival, is omitted.
Feeling instinctively that he utters the truth; paralyzed by the weight of his words; she stands with head drooping more and more, with cheeks growing paler, with hands that tremble and grow cold in his clasp.
He sees her terror, a sudden thought possesses his brain; grasping her hands still tighter, he goes madly on:
"Constance Wardour, in spite of the coldness between you, you love Clifford Heath. _What will you do to save him?_"
[Ill.u.s.tration: "Constance Wardour, you love Clifford Heath."]
"This is too much! This is horrible!" She makes a mad effort to free herself from his grasp.
The question comes like a taunt, a declaration of her helplessness.
Coming from him, it is maddening. It restores her courage; it makes her mistress of herself once more.
"Don't repeat that question," she says, flas.h.i.+ng upon him a look of defiance.
"I _do_ repeat it!" he goes on wildly. "Go to O'Meara; to whom you please; satisfy yourself that Clifford Heath has a halter about his neck; then come to me, and tell me if you will give yourself as his ransom. _I can save him if I will._ I _will_ save him, only on one condition. You know what that is."
With a sudden fierce effort she frees herself from his clasp, and stands erect before him, fairly panting with the fierceness of her anger.
"Traitor! _monster!_ Cain! Not to save all the lives of my friends; not to save the world from perdition, would I be your wife! _You_ would denounce the destroyer of that worthless clay below us. _You!_ Before that should happen, to save the world the knowledge that such a monster exists, _I_ will tell the world where the guilt lies, _for I know_."
Before he can realize the full meaning of her words, the dressing-room door is closed between them, and Frank Lamotte stands gnas.h.i.+ng his teeth, beating the air with his hands in a frenzy of rage and despair.
While he stands thus, a step comes slowly up the stairs; he turns to meet the gaze of his father.
"Frank," says Jasper Lamotte, in low, guarded accents, "Come down to the library at once. It is time you knew the truth."
CHAPTER x.x.xIV.
A LAST RESORT.
Like a man in a dream, Frank Lamotte obeys his father's call, never once thinking that the summons is strangely worded. Over and over in his mind the question is repeating itself--What did she mean? Was he going mad?
Was he dreaming? Had Constance Wardour really said a word that rendered himself and all that household unsafe? If she knew who should stand in Clifford Heath's stead, would she really spare the culprit? No; it was impossible. Was her talk bravado? was she seeking to deceive him?
"Impossible," he reasons. "If she knew who struck that blow, then I am ruined utterly. But she does not know--she can not."
Jasper Lamotte leads the way to the library. It seems natural that he should move softly, cautiously. A supernatural stillness pervades the lower floor. Frank Lamotte shudders and keeps his eyes turned away from the closed-up drawing room with its silent tenant.
When they are seated face to face, with locked door and closely drawn curtains, Frank looks across at his father, and notes for the first time that day the lines of care settling about the sallow mouth, and underneath the dark, brooding eyes. A moment of silence rests between them, while each reads the signs of disaster in the face of the other.
Finally the elder says, with something very like a sneer in his voice:
"One would think you a model mourner, your visage is sufficiently woful." Then leaning across the table, and elevating one long forefinger; "Something more than the simple fact of Burrill's death has shaken you, Frank. _What is it?_"
Frank Lamotte utters a low mirthless laugh.
"I might say the same of you, sir; your present pallor can scarcely be attributed to grief."
"True;" a darker shadow falling across his countenance. "Nor is it grief. It is bitter disappointment. Have you seen Miss Wardour?"
"Yes;" averting his head.
"And your case in that quarter?"
"Hopeless."
"What!" sharply.
"Hopeless, I tell you, sir; do I look like a prosperous wooer? she will not look at me. She will not touch me. She will not have me at any price."
Jasper Lamotte mutters a curse. "Then you have been playing the poltroon," he says savagely.
The countenance of the younger man grows livid. He starts up from his chair, then sinks weakly back again.
"Drop the subject," he says hoa.r.s.ely. "That card is played, and lost. Is this all you have to say?"
"All! I wish it were. What took me to the city?"
"What took you, true enough. The need of a few thousands, ready cash."
"Yes. Well! I have not got the cash."
"But--good heavens! you had ample--securities."
"Ample securities, yes," with a low grating laugh. "Look, I don't know who has interposed thus in our favor, but--if John Burrill were alive to-night you and I would be--beggars."
"Impossible, while you hold the valuable--"
"Bah! valuable indeed! you and I have been fooled, duped, deluded. Our treasured securities are--"
"Well, are what?"
"Shams."
"Shams!" incredulously. "But that is impossible."
"Is it?" cynically. "Then the impossible has come to pa.s.s. There's nothing genuine in the whole lot."
A long silence falls between them. Frank Lamotte sits staring straight before him; sudden conviction seems to have overtaken his panic-stricken senses. Jasper Lamotte drums upon the table impatiently, looking moody and despondent.
"A variety of queer things may seem plain to you now," he says, finally.
"Perhaps you realize the necessity for instant action of some sort."
Frank stirs restlessly, and pa.s.ses his hand across his brows.