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"I love you," she said. "I shall always love you, no matter what happens."
"As you know, Hector Woodridge escaped."
"But he is dead."
"That is uncertain. He may be, or he may have got away and be in hiding. He must be greatly changed, no one would recognize him," he said.
"It is hardly possible," she said.
"Perhaps not, but still he may be alive, and if he is, the woman who ruined him had better beware. I believe he would kill her if he met her. What have you to confess to me? You see I have placed my character in your hands; you can ruin me socially if you wish."
"I do not wish, and I thank you for the trust you have placed in me,"
she said. "I am afraid to confess all to you, afraid you will never speak to me again when you know who I am."
"Who you are?" he exclaimed.
"I told you, when you remarked on the curious coincidence that my name was Mrs. Elroy, that I was not the Mrs. Elroy connected with Hector Woodridge's case."
"Well," he said.
"I told you a lie. I am the same Mrs. Elroy. It was my husband Hector Woodridge shot. It was me he was in love with."
He looked at her without speaking for several minutes. The silence was painful; he was thinking how to launch his thunderbolt, how best to trap and overwhelm her. There was no escape, she was entirely at his mercy.
"You ruined Hector Woodridge, sent him to penal servitude for life,"
he said.
"I was not entirely to blame. We loved, or at least we thought so."
"How did it happen?" he asked.
"The shooting?"
"Yes."
"It was quite unpremeditated; had the revolver not been there it would never have happened. I believe my husband intended to shoot him, and me--it was his revolver."
Hector wondered if this were true.
"The revolver was on a small table. I saw it but did not remove it; had I done so the tragedy would not have happened."
"Why did you leave it there?" he asked.
"I do not know; probably because I did not wish my husband to know I was afraid. I was aware he had found us out, that an exposure must come sooner or later. He was madly in love with me; I almost hated him, he was so weak, almost childish, and I wanted a strong man to rule me. Shall I go on, do you despise me, look upon me as a very wicked woman?" she asked in a strained voice.
"Go on," he said; "tell me the whole story, how he was shot, everything."
"I will, I will make a full confession; but be merciful in your judgment, remember I am doing this because I love you, that I do not want it to stand between us, I plead to you not to throw all the blame on me. Hector Woodridge was a strong man and I loved him, I believe he loved me, he overcame all my scruples. I yielded to him, gave myself to him--surely that was a great sacrifice, my name, honor, everything for his sake. We were together in my husband's study. We thought he was in London, but he did not go; he set a trap and caught us. I shall never forget the look on his face when he came into the room. I saw his eyes rest on the revolver, and I felt it was our lives or his, but we stood between him and the weapon.
"Hector Woodridge guessed what was in his mind; he must have done so, for he laid his hand on the revolver. My husband saw the movement and said, 'Put that down, you scoundrel,' and advanced toward us. Hector raised the revolver and told him to stand back. He did so; he was afraid.
"There was an angry altercation. I remember saying I was tired of him, that I would live with him no longer, that I loved Hector Woodridge.
This drove him to distraction; he became furious, dangerous; he would have killed us without hesitation had he possessed the revolver, there was such a murderous look in his eyes. Does my sordid story interest you?" she asked.
"It does; everything you do or say interests me," he said.
"And you do not utterly despise me, think me too bad to be in decent society, to be sitting here alone with you?"
"Go on," he said in a tone that was half a command, and which caused her to feel afraid of something unknown.
"At last Elroy's rage got the better of his prudence; he made a dash forward to seize the revolver, raised in Hector's hand. It was the work of a second, his finger was on the trigger; he pulled it, there was a report, Elroy staggered forward, fell on his face, dead," she said with a blanched face, and trembling voice.
"_You_ pulled the trigger," he said, calmly looking straight at her.
CHAPTER XXVIII
HOW HECTOR HAD HIS REVENGE
This direct charge so astonished her that for a few moments she did not recognize its full significance. She sat wildly staring at him, completely overwhelmed.
He watched; her terror fascinated him, he could not take his eyes off her.
She tried to speak and failed, seemed on the point of fainting. He let down the window; the cool air revived her, but she was in a deplorably nervous condition.
At last the words came.
"I pulled the trigger?" she said. "What do you mean, how can you possibly know what happened?"
"I said you pulled the trigger. It is true, is it not?"
"No; Hector Woodridge shot my husband," she said in a low voice. She was afraid of him; his knowledge seemed uncanny--or was it merely guesswork?
"That is a lie," he said.
"How dare you say that!" she said, her courage momentarily flas.h.i.+ng out.
He smiled.
"I thought this was to be a full confession," he said.
"I will say no more; you do not believe me," she said.
"Then I will continue it," he said, and she seemed petrified with fright. He gave her no chance. He related the history of the trial; so minute were his particulars that she wondered if he were a man, or a being possessed of unearthly knowledge.