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"Yet only a few minutes ago you offered to leave me, for a bribe of a second million."
"There can't be a 'second' million till there's been a first."
"The principle is the same."
"There's where you're mistaken. I think now the time has come for you to understand. But I had a sneaking idea that perhaps you did understand, already. You have a sense of humour--a strong one, for a woman."
"Has a sense of humour anything to do with--this affair?"
"Yes. A grim one. But if you don't see it----"
"Sometimes for a minute I've wondered if I did see--something."
"What did you think you saw?"
"I--hardly care to put it into words."
"All right. I'll do it for you. But if I do, you must answer honestly."
"I will--if I answer at all."
"Very well, I'll risk your answering. You wondered pretty often and by flashes if the question of money ever had anything to do with my accepting the d.a.m.nable and disgusting offer Severance made to me. Was that it?"
"Ye-es. Though what else could it be, when you showed in every way that your love--if it was love--had turned to--to actual _hate_, before you married me?"
"Oh, not so bad as that!" Garth protested, something like a queer, suppressed laugh, shaking his voice.
"Dislike, then."
"That sounds as if I hadn't treated you decently."
"No, for you _have_. You've been very decent indeed--except that you've forced me to do lots of things I haven't wanted to do, like living in that suite at the Plaza and--and coming out here, and all that."
"Wasn't it necessary, as you were so anxious to avoid scandal?"
"There might have been other ways."
"I didn't see them. Anyhow, it's done now. It can't be undone. And as things were, I've tried to treat you as you want to be treated, all through. As to the money, I will defend myself there, since it seems that you have seen to the bottom of the well--where truth lies!--only in those short flashes. If Severance had ever tried to hand me a million dollars or any other sum for what I've done, I'd have thrown it in his face, and knocked the face in after it. That's what I meant from the first. So now you know."
"But--if you'd stopped wanting me? Why--why? You said yourself I didn't seem to be a judge of how much it took to kill love."
"Yes, I said that."
"And you said other things. You said a million was always useful to anyone----"
"There I banked again on your sense of humour. Or perhaps a little on your judgment of character."
"I must confess I've tried to judge yours!" Marise exclaimed, almost in spite of herself. "But I can't--I'm always stumbling against things--in the dark."
"Well, there's plenty of 'dark'! I admit that," said Garth. "Many people would say that of me. Perhaps the only one who wouldn't is little Mothereen, and we can't count her, can we? There are all sorts of horrid possibilities in the dark, where a character's concerned. My motive, though _not_ mercenary, might have been revenge punishment!"
"That's often seemed to me the most likely!" cried Marise. "Especially _now_."
"Especially now? Explain, please."
"Now, when you've brought _that girl_ out here, close to this house. You did bring her, didn't you? You asked me to be honest. Be honest yourself!"
"By my request she came."
"You paid for her to come?"
"Yes, I couldn't let her give up a good job in New York, even for awhile, and travel so far on my business, at her own expense--could I?"
"On your business?"
"Yes. I told you once that Miss Marks was an old friend. We've known each other for years. She used to live at Albuquerque. Cath and Bill, whom you met, are her cousins--or rather, Cath is. Mothereen is fond----"
"Ah, now I'm _sure_ of something I only wondered about before!"
"Will you tell me what that is?"
"A note for Meesis Garth from the Hotel El Tovar," announced the voice of the half-breed maid.
"Bring it to me!" Marise ordered.
The girl, instinctively aware that she'd interrupted a "scene," tripped across the terrace with an apologetic air. Marise almost s.n.a.t.c.hed an envelope from a little silver tray and tore it open. Her strong young eyes could just make out through the dusk a few lines of written words.
"This is from Zelie Marks!" she exclaimed, looking up at Garth. "She wants me to come over at once and see her at the hotel. She says she has been ill, and that's the reason she's staying on there."
"She tells the truth. She had appendicitis. They thought there'd have to be an operation, but they cured her up--or nearly--without. Why does she ask to see you?"
"She says she'll explain everything when I get there."
"Do you intend to go?"
"Yes. I'd like to hear--her story."
"All right--go. You shall have the car, of course. But there are a few things I'd prefer to tell you myself first."
"I'd rather hear everything from her."
Garth gave a shrug. "Very well. As you please. But you and she both seem to forget dinner-time. You'll be hungry if----"
"I won't be hungry!" cried Marise. "I want to start now."
"I'll see to it for you," said Garth, with that quiet, rather heavy air which irritated Marise sometimes and always puzzled her. For that was one of the things about him which upset her judgment of his character.