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Sommers moved impatiently.
"It isn't time for that."
"No?" she asked rather than a.s.sented, and turned her face to the city. "I am not sure; sometimes I think it is the ripe time. There can be nothing more."
Sommers did not answer, but began to skate slowly. Half an hour later they climbed over the hills of sh.o.r.e ice, and he hurried away to the Keystone.
Alves walked slowly south on the esplanade. The gray sea of ice was covered now with the winter sun. The pools and creva.s.ses sent up sheets of steam.
Her eyes followed the ice lingeringly. Once she turned back to the lake, but finally she started across the frozen gra.s.s plots in the direction of the temple. She could see from a distance a black figure seated on the portico, and she hastened her steps. She recognized the familiar squat, black-clothed person of Mrs. Ducharme. There, in the sunlight between the broken pillars, this gloomy figure seemed of ill omen. Alves regretted that she had turned back from the ice.
Mrs. Ducharme showed no sign of life until Alves reached the steps. She was worn and unkempt. A ragged straw hat but partly disguised her rumpled hair.
Alves recalled what Miss M'Gann had said about her drinking.
"I've been to see you two, three times," Mrs. Ducharme said, in a hoa.r.s.e, grumbling tone; "but you'se always out. This time I was a-going to wait if I'd stayed all night."
"Come in," Alves answered, unlocking the door. The woman dragged herself into the temple.
"Not so tidy a place as you and the other one had," she remarked mournfully.
Alves waited for her to declare her errand; but as she seemed in no haste to speak, she asked,
"Did you ever find Ducharme?"
The d.u.c.h.esse nodded sombrely, closing her eyes.
"The woman shook him time of the strikes, when his money was gone."
"Well, isn't that what you wanted?"
Mrs. Ducharme nodded her head slowly.
"She made him bad. He drinks, awful sometimes, and whenever I say anything, he says he's going back to Peory, to that woman."
Alves waited for the expected request for money. "They'se awful, these men; but a woman can't get on without _'em_, no more than the men without _us_. Only the men don't care much which one. Any one will do for a time. Do you find the new one any better?"
"I am very happy," Alves replied with a flush; "but I don't care to talk about my affairs."
"You needn't be so close," the woman exclaimed irritably. "I know all about _you_. The _real_ one was a fine gentleman, even if he did liquor bad."
"I told you," Alves repeated, "that I didn't care to talk of my affairs.
What do you want?"
"I've come here to talk of your affairs," Mrs Ducharme answered insolently.
"And I guess you'll listen. He,--I don't mean the doctor,--the real 'un, came of rich, respectable folks. He told me all about it, and got me to write 'em for money, and his sister sent him some."
"So that was where he obtained the money to drink with when he got out of the cottage!" Alves exclaimed.
The woman nodded, and added, "He gave me some, too."
Alves rose and opened the door.
"I don't see why you came here," she said briefly, pointing to the door.
But Mrs. Ducharme merely laughed and kept her seat.
"Did he, the doctor feller, ever ask you anything about his death?" she asked.
Alves looked at her blankly.
"When he signed that paper you gave the undertaker?" continued the d.u.c.h.esse.
"I don't know what you mean!" Alves exclaimed, closing the door and walking away from the woman.
"How did _he_ die?" Mrs. Ducharme whispered.
"You know as well as I," Alves cried, terrified now by the mysterious air the woman a.s.sumed.
"Yes!" Mrs. Ducharme whispered again. "I know as well as you. I know, and I can tell. I know how the wife gave him powders,--sleeping powders the doctor ordered,--the doctor who was hanging around, and ran off with her just after the funeral."
The woman's scheme of extracting blackmail flashed instantly into Alves's mind.
"You foul creature," she gasped, "you know it is an abominable lie--"
"Think so? Well, Ducharme didn't think so when I told him, and there are others that 'ud believe it, if I should testify to it!"
Alves walked to and fro, overwhelmed by the thoughts of the evil which was around her. At last she faced Mrs. Ducharme, who was watching her closely.
"I see what it means. You want money--blackmail, and you think you've got a good chance. But I will not give you a cent. I will tell Dr. Sommers first, and let him deal with you."
"The doctor! What does he say about his dying quiet and nice as he did? I guess the doctor'll see the point."
Alves started. What did Sommers think? What were his half-completed inquiries? What did his conduct the night of Preston's death mean? This wretched affair was like a curse left to injure her by the miserable creature she had once been tied to. But Sommers would believe her! She had given Preston but _one_ powder, and he had said two were safe. She must tell him exactly what she had done.
"You had better go now," she said to the woman more calmly. "I shall let Dr. Sommers know what your story is. He will answer you."
"Better not tell him," the woman replied, with a laugh. "He _knows_ all he wants to--or I'd 'a' gone to him at once. When he hears about the sc.r.a.pe, he'll run and leave you. You ain't married, anyway!"
"Go," Alves implored.
Mrs. Ducharme rose and stood irresolutely.
"I don't want much, not to trouble you. I'll give you a day to think this over, and to-morrer morning I'll be here at nine sharp to get your answer."
When the woman had gone, Alves tried to reason the matter out calmly. She had been too excited. The charge was simply preposterous, and, inexperienced as she was, she felt that nothing could be made of it in any court. But the mere suggestion of a court, of a public inquiry, alarmed her, not for herself but for Sommers, who would suffer grievously. And it did not seem easy to discuss the matter with him as she must now; it would bring up distressing scenes. Her face burned at the thought. The woman's tale was plausible. Had Sommers wondered about the death? Gradually it came over her that Sommers had always suspected this thing. She was sure of it.
He had not spoken of it because he wished to protect her from her own deed.
But, now, he would not believe her. The Ducharme woman's tale would fit in with his surmises. No! he _must_ believe her. And beside this last fear, the idea of publicity, of ventilating the old scandal, thus d.a.m.ning him finally and hounding him out of his little practice, faded into inconsequence. The terrible thing was that for eighteen months he had carried this belief about her in his heart.
She tried to divert her excited mind from the throng of suspicions and fears by preparing dinner. One o'clock came, then two, and Sommers did not arrive. Mrs. Ducharme might have waited for him at the entrance to the avenue, and he might have turned back to debate with himself what he should do. But she acquitted him of that cowardice.