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"I have a conference in half an hour, Constance," he remarked, looking at his watch. "It is very important. It means getting money to support Motors on the opening to-morrow after I have gathered in again what I need. I think I can come pretty near doubling my holdings if I play it right. That's important. But so is this."
"I will listen," put in Constance. "Trust me. If anything else occurs I will tell you."
She was at the office early the next day, but not before Brainard who, bright and fresh, even though he had been up all night, was primed for the battle of his life at the opening of the market.
Brainard had swung in at the turn and had quietly acc.u.mulated the stock control which he needed. He was now bulling the market by matching orders, pyramiding stock which he owned, using every device that was known to his astute brain.
On up went Motors, recovering the forty points, gradually, and even going beyond in the reaction. Worthington and Sheppard had been squeezed out. Not for a moment did he let up.
As the clock on Trinity church struck three, the closing hour, Brainard wheeled suddenly in his chair.
"Miss Dunlap," he said quietly. "I wish that you would tell Worthington and Sheppard that I should like to see them in the board room at four."
Constance looked at her watch. There was time also to execute a little scheme of her own.
Four o'clock came. Brainard lounged casually across to the board room.
Instantly Constance had the receiver of the microphone at her ear, straining to catch every word, and to make notes of the stormy scene, if necessary.
Her door opened. It was Sybil Brainard.
The two women looked at each other coldly.
Constance was the first to speak.
"Mrs. Brainard," she began, "I asked you to come down here--not Mr.
Worthington. More than that, I asked the office boy to direct you here instead of to his office. Do you see that machine?"
Sybil looked at it without a sign of recognition.
"It is a microphone detective. It was the installing of that machine in the board room which you interrupted the other night."
"Was it necessary that Mr. Brainard should put his arm around you for that?" inquired Mrs. Brainard with biting sarcasm.
"I had just jumped down from the table and had almost lost my balance--that was all," pursued Constance imperturbably.
"Another of these microphone eavesdroppers told me of a conversation last night in your own apartment, Mrs. Brainard."
Her face blanched. "You--have one--there?"
"Yes. Mr. Brainard heard the first conversation, when Drummond and Mr.
Worthington were there. After they left he had to attend a conference himself. I alone heard what pa.s.sed when Mr. Worthington returned."
"You are at liberty to--"
"Mrs. Brainard. You do not understand. I have no reason to want to make you--"
An office boy tapped on the door and entered. "Mr. Brainard wants you, Miss Dunlap."
"I cannot explain now," resumed Constance. "Won't you sit here at my desk and listen over the microphone to what happens!"
She was gone before Mrs. Brainard could reply. What did it all mean?
Sybil put the black disc receiver to her ear as she had seen Constance do. Her hand trembled. "Why did she tell me that?" she murmured.
"You can't prove it," shouted a voice through the black disc at her ear. She was startled. It was the voice of Worthington.
"Miss Dunlap--have you that notebook?" came the deep tones of her husband.
Constance read from her first notes that part relating to the conspiracy to control Motors, carefully omitting the part about the Leblanc letters.
"It's a lie--a lie."
"No, it is not a lie. It is all good legal evidence, the record taken over the new microphone detective. Look up there over the chandelier, Worthington. The other end is in the top drawer of Miss Dunlap's desk."
"I'll fight that to a finish, Brainard. You are clever but there are other things besides Motors that you have to answer for."
"No. Those letters--that is what you mean--are in my possession now.
You didn't know that? All the eavesdropping, if you choose to call it that, was not done here, either, by a long shot, Worthington. I had one of these machines in my wife's reception room. I have all sorts of little sc.r.a.ps of conversation," he boasted. "I also have an account of a visit there from two--er--scoundrels--"
"Mrs. Brainard to see you, sir," announced a boy at the door.
Constance had risen. Her face was flushed and her breast rose and fell with excitement.
"Mr. Brainard," she interrupted. "I must explain--confess. Mrs.
Brainard has been sitting in my office listening to us over the microphone. I arranged it. I asked her to come down, using another name as a pretext. But I didn't think she would interrupt so soon. Before you see her--let me read this. It was a conversation I got after you had left last night and so far I have had no chance to tell you of it.
Some one," she laid particular stress on the word, "came back after that first interview. Listen."
"No, Lee," Constance read rapidly from her notes, "no. Don't think I am ungrateful. You have been one friend in a thousand through all this. I shall have my decree-soon, now. Don't spoil it-"
"But Sybil, think of Mm. What did he ever care for you! He has made you free already."
"He is still my husband."
"Take this latest escapade with this Miss Dunlap."
"Well, what do I really know about that?"
"You saw him."
"Yes, but maybe it was as he said."
The door was flung open, interrupting Constance's reading, and Sybil Brainard entered. The artificiality of the beauty parlor was all gone.
She was a woman, who had been wronged and deceived.
"Next friend--a true next friend--fiend would be better, Lee Worthington," she scorned. "How can you stand there and look me in the face, how could you tell me of your love for me, when all the time you cared no more for me or for any other woman than for that--that Leblanc! You knew that I, who was as jealous as I could be of Rodman, had heard a little--you added more. Yet when you had played on my feelings, you would have cast me off, too--I know it; I know your kind."
She paused for breath, then turned slowly to Brainard with a note of pathos in her voice.
"Our temperaments may have been different, Rodman. They were not when we were poor. Perhaps I have not developed with you, the way you want of me. But, Rodman, did you ever stop to think that perhaps, perhaps if I had ever had the chance to be taken into your confidence more often--"