Linda Lee, Incorporated - BestLightNovel.com
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"And you?" The movement of enameled lips was imperceptible.
"I'll be along later, of course, as soon as I've dressed. You can send the car back for me. Why not?"
"Why not?"
But Lontaine took this inscrutable echo for a.s.sent, and with a grunt of relief disappeared into his dressing-room. A series of clicks sounded as he turned on lights. Still the woman seated before the mirror didn't move. But her interest centered no longer upon what she saw; though she did not avert her eyes from the glowing figure painted in those still, shallow depths, all her attention now was concentrated in another faculty: she was listening.
She heard Lontaine moving about, chair-legs sc.r.a.pe a hardwood floor, the snap of the bathroom light. A pause followed, then a clas.h.i.+ng noise of bottles and toilet articles impatiently s.h.i.+fted upon their gla.s.s shelf.
After that, Lontaine's returning footsteps. Then he reappeared in the doorway.
"h.e.l.lo! Thought you were going on ahead."
"Presently," f.a.n.n.y replied in brittle accents. "Plenty of time.
Something the matter?"
"Can't find my razors."
"No." At last the woman broke her pose: her counterfeit in the gla.s.s nodded gravely to the man behind her. "No," she iterated--and he had the flying thought that her voice had never vibrated so sweetly--"and you won't find them, either, Harry. They're in a safe place, it's no good your hunting for them."
"What!" Lontaine advanced one single, sudden stride. "What's that for?"
"I thought it might save trouble. You see, Harry, I haven't forgotten that hideous scene we had in London, last time you decided it was all up with you, there wasn't anything to do but cut your throat. I didn't see any sense in going through all that again."
After a full minute of silence Lontaine uttered heavily: "I see you've guessed...."
"There have been so many of these crises in our life together, Harry, I ought to know the signs--don't you think?"
The man stumbled to a chair, and bent a louring countenance over hands savagely laced. "What else can I do?" he muttered. "I'm in a hole there's no other way out of...."
"There are steamers every so often from San Francisco, for Honolulu, China, j.a.pan, the South Seas...."
"No use. They'd get me by wireless if they ever allowed me to go aboard.
Zinn ... I'm sure that Jew devil suspects ... insists on getting at the books first thing tomorrow."
"How much have you got into Cindy for?"
Lontaine said stupidly: "Eh? What's that?"
"How much have you ... borrowed, Harry?"
"Fifty thou--perhaps a bit more."
Following another little silence, f.a.n.n.y gave a curt laugh, left her chair and, standing at the dressing-table, began slowly to strip off her jewels, her sunburst brooch, her flexible bracelets, the pearls that had been her mother's, all her rings, even that slender hoop of platinum and diamonds which she had never removed since the day of her marriage.
"Stocks?" she enquired quietly. Lontaine replied with a dour nod and grunt. "Somebody's sure-fire tip, of course, some 'deal' that couldn't lose...." He grunted again. "Never learn anything from experience, do you, Harry? I've often wondered about the kink in your mind that makes you such a giddy come-on, eager to risk everything, even your honour, on the gossip of stock-market touts no better than yourself.... Ah, well!
it can't be helped, I suppose. You are what you are--and in my way, G.o.d knows, I'm no better. It's all been a ghastly failure, hasn't it, Harry?
If I'd been a stronger woman, I might have made it another story for you; if you'd been more of a man, you might even have saved me...."
Lontaine lifted his hand sharply, but his eyes wavered and fell under her level, ironic stare. "But it's no good crying now, nothing can change our natures at this late day."
She crossed to him and paused, looking down not unkindly at his bowed head and shoulders.
"I don't love you, Harry, and you don't love me. It's funny to think we ever did--isn't it? All the same, we've been through the rough together so often, I presume it's only natural I should be fond of you in this funny, twisted fas.h.i.+on. I don't want you to go away thinking I blame you...."
"Go away?" Lontaine groaned. "Where can I go, they wouldn't find me? I'd rather be dead than a convict!"
"Don't worry: I'll soon talk Cindy round, persuade her not to be too hard on you. She's fond of me, poor dear! and won't find out I'm as rotten as you are till you're at a safe distance. Here...." She bent over and poured that coruscating wealth of jewelry into the cup of Lontaine's hands. "These ought to see you a long way...."
"What!" Lontaine jumped up, staring in daze at the treasure in the hands that instinctively reached out to f.a.n.n.y, offering to give back her gift.
But she stepped away and stood with hands behind her, shaking her head so vigorously that the glistening short locks stood out like a brazen nimbus. "But, you, f.a.n.n.y--what will you--?"
"Never fear for me, Harry." She fixed his puzzled eyes with a smile of profoundly ironical significance. "I'll get along...."
"But these ... every blessed trinket you own!..."
"I'll get others."
His jaw dropped. She continued to posture lightly before him, an exquisitely fragile and pretty shape of youth deathless and audacious, a dainty spirit of mockery temptingly incarnate, diabolically sage, diabolically sure of the potency of her time-old lures.... What she had urged was true enough, too true; idle to let scruples on her account work his undoing. Let her alone and she'd get along, no fear, she'd get other jewels when she wanted them, just as she'd said, she'd go far....
At heart as wanton as he was weak....
He felt a creeping tide of blood begin to scorch his face, and avoided the cynical challenge of her eyes.
"If you're content," he mumbled ... "daresay there's nothing more to be said."
She nodded gayly, repeating the word "Nothing!" in a flute-like note of mirth. Hanging his head, he began wretchedly to stuff the plunder into his pockets, muttering half to himself: "What a pity! If only I could have had a bit of luck; if only we could have hit it off----!"
"If you hurry," she reminded him, "you can catch the night train for San Francisco, you can just about make it."
"Well...." He glanced uneasily at her, and again was conscious of the heat in his cheeks. "So it comes to this at last ... eh? ... good-bye!"
"Good-bye," she repeated, amiably casual.
"I daresay...." He gave a dubious chuckle. "Daresay it's stupid but, well, the usual thing, you know...."
"Usual thing?" she parroted, with faintly knitted brows.
"To kiss good-bye."
"You'll miss your train."
He developed a moment of desperately sincere emotion: "Fan! you've been a perfect brick to me, a perfect brick. I feel like a dog, leaving you like this."
"Oh!" she said, as one indulges a persistent child--"if you really want to kiss me, Harry, go ahead."
Nevertheless she turned her mouth aside, his lips brushed only her powdered cheek. Then she stepped back to her mirror and with a puff made good her imperceptible damage done by the caress. The gla.s.s showed Lontaine's shadow slinking out. She heard him blunder through the living-room, the slam of the screen-door. And her hand fumbled, the powder-puff dropped unheeded, mist drifted across her vision, she gasped a breathless "d.a.m.n!" Tears meant a wrecked make-up....
Though there was need enough for haste if he were to carry out the plan she had made for him, Lontaine dragged slowly down the walk, with a hang-dog air, the hands in his pockets fingering the price of the last sorry shreds of his self-respect. In the darkness the flesh of his face still burned with fire of shame....
Beside the car he halted and rested with a hand on the door for so long a time that the chauffeur grew inquisitive.