Выбрать главу

“That is what I mean.”

As her eyes caught the headline Paula gave a little involuntary cry, and the paper fell from her hands. Then, as she read the first two or three paragraphs, and realized the full meaning of them, her face grew pale and her eyes sought Bernard’s in a sort of dumb protest.

“It isn’t true!” she cried.

Bernard was silent.

“It can’t be true! It means — everything is gone! It can’t be true!”

Then, while Bernard sat silently regarding her, she bent over the paper and read the article through to the end. When she spoke her voice was dry and hard. “If — but there are no ifs. It is all gone. I have nothing. I am a pauper.”

“Worse than that.” Bernard spoke grimly. “You are in debt. I spoke to Grimshaw an hour ago over the telephone. Dudley has disappeared — which means that his liabilities must be met by you. Grimshaw says there is absolutely no hope.”

Paula stared at him as though fascinated, unable to speak.

“Well?” she said finally.

Bernard arose and, passing around the table, stood by her chair. “It is well,” he said, looking down at her. “Our partnership is dissolved.”

Paula recoiled as though he had struck her. “You mean—”

“What I say. And I thank God for it! Do you think I haven’t known what you’ve been thinking all these months? A thousand times I have read in your eyes all — and more — that you have said this morning. It has made my life unbearable. That is why I’m glad it’s all over — that the weary farce is ended.”

“Then — you are through?”

“With the partnership, yes. Your share of the capital has disappeared; therefore the firm belongs to me. My first care will be to keep it intact.” He stood silent for a moment, regarding her gravely.

“It isn’t what you said that hurts. Your every action and thought has been a silent accusation which it was impossible for me to answer. I have been dumb, but not blind. You have condemned me without a hearing. You needn’t have told me that you have never loved me; if you had, you could never have believed me to be — what you have said.”

Paula lifted her eyes slowly, and tried in vain to meet his. Then, suddenly, the strength of her lie failed her; she buried her face in her hands and sobbed brokenly. “I can’t give you up! I can’t!” she moaned.

Then, as though by magic, Bernard’s face cleared, and was filled with light. “Good God! Of course not!” he exclaimed fiercely. “I won’t let you! Didn’t I say the firm belongs to me?”

When Evans answered the bell, ten minutes later, he stopped short in the doorway and viewed the scene before him with unconcealed dismay. Both chairs — occupied — were placed squarely together at the farther end of the table.

“Evans,” said Bernard, “I want to ask you a question. I suppose you have read the papers?”

“Yes, sir.”

“Then, you know of our — good fortune. Thank God, we have to economize! Your — er — pickings will probably be reduced. The question is, do you want to stay?”

“No, sir,” said Evans promptly. “Not if I have to serve breakfast. I can stand the rest.”

“Evans!”

“How can I help it, sir? Look at that!” He pointed at the chairs indignantly. “You know, sir, I’ve always tried to keep my self-respect, which I can’t do going into rooms backwards. And even for the sake of your father—”

“Very well.” Bernard grinned happily. “We’ll have Maggie serve breakfast after today.”

Evans turned to go.

“But,” Bernard continued, “this morning you’ll have to suffer. Bring back the fruit tray and make another pot of coffee. We’re going to celebrate.”

The Mother of Invention

William Frederick Marston blew a cone of cigarette smoke thoughtfully into the air, sighed despairingly, and read the cablegram for the third time:

WALK HOME TIRED OF YOUR FOOLISHNESS NOT A CENT.

Jonathan Marston.

“I suppose,” said William Frederick aloud, “he thinks he’s funny. And the first two words, which are entirely useless and perfectly offensive, cost him an extra half-dollar. The governor is getting extravagant.”

He tossed his cigarette into a porcelain urn on the table, lit another, and crossing the room, seated himself in a chair by the window and gazed thoughtfully out at the throng in the street below.

The hour was half past three in the afternoon; the street, the Rue Royale, Paris. Trim speedy taxicabs, with their air of fussy importance, glided along the farther curb; here and there an old-fashioned cabriolet or hansom dodged helplessly about in the rush of the modern traffic. The pedestrians sauntered, strolled, trotted, paraded — did everything, in short, except walk. The chauffeurs and cab drivers courteously exchanged scurrilous epithets, the sergent de ville at the corner blew his whistle furiously, waving his arms wildly in all directions, and barefooted gamins darted through the crowd, crying late evening editions of the newspapers. Over all was the soft radiance of the September sun.

But the humor and color of this animated scene was entirely lost upon William Frederick Marston. Perched high in the air on the horns of a dire dilemma, he was madly struggling in a desperate effort to regain a footing on solid earth.

For perhaps half an hour he remained sitting by the window, smoking many cigarettes and trying ţo think. But his situation was so fantastically horrible, so utterly unprecedented, that he found it impossible to shape his thoughts. There was no ground on which to build. The hypothesis being absurd, how could he be expected to arrive at a logical conclusion?

Suddenly he rose to his feet, thrust his hand into his vest pocket and drew forth three franc-pieces and one or two sous. For a moment he gazed at them mournfully, then returned them to his pocket, crossed to a wardrobe, took from it his hat and gloves, and left the room.

In fifteen minutes he returned, looking, if possible, more dejected than before. He entered the room with a slow, irresolute step, closing the door behind him with exaggerated care. Depositing his hat and gloves on the table, he crossed the room and stood by the window. Again he thrust his hand into his vest pocket, and drew it forth. It contained three sous. Opening the window, he tossed them into the street below and smiled with tragic amusement as he saw three or four gamins dart toward them. Then, with a deep sounding sigh, he sank back in a chair by the window, muttering, “I — Billy Marston — to lose three francs at roulette! It is horrible.”

It was, indeed; too, it was incredible. But alas! It was true. And now the three francs were gone, and William Frederick Marston began to think in earnest.

How it had come about he could scarcely have told. His recollection of the events of the three months previous was somewhat dimmed by their whirlwind rapidity and unusual and varied character. He had a faint memory of an affair of the heart à la Byron at Milan, a disgraceful though amusing experience among the beachcombers at Marseilles, and a disastrous hour of recklessness at Monte Carlo. He had mentioned none of these incidents in his letters to his father, Jonathan Marston, of New York, who had seen fit to send his son, William Frederick, on an educational tour of the Mediterranean during the summer vacation preceding his senior year at Harvard.

The tour of the Mediterranean had been abruptly halted by the misfortune at Monte Carlo. William Frederick had cabled to New York for additional funds and on receiving them he had departed for Paris. Struck by the beauty of that city, he had immediately decided to buy it, and discovered too late that he had squandered his last sou on a worthless option. The fall term at Harvard was to begin in two weeks. He cabled his father: