Mr. Bobby Markham swore aloud and ran his hands through what remained of his hair.
“Anna, you’re mad! What are you thinking of? Do you suppose for a moment that he’d hold his tongue? I tell you they’re giving smashing sentences. They’re out to stop the whole thing. It would come out that he got it from you. Do you suppose for a moment that he’d go to prison for you?”
“Oh, no,” said Anna quite gently, “he wouldn’t go to prison for me. He said so.”
“Then what are you driving at? He’d give you away.”
“Oh no,” said Anna again. Her earrings dazzled in the light. “Oh no, Bobby, he wouldn’t give me away, because he wouldn’t know anything about me. He wouldn’t say he’d had the stuff from me, because I shouldn’t have given it to him. I’m not quite a fool, you know.”
“You’re not going to give it to him?”
“No.”
“Then who is?”
“Isobel,” said Anna sweetly.
A silence came down between them. Bobby Markham went on looking at her. At last he said,
“Isobel?”
“I think perhaps he might go to prison for Isobel. It would be interesting to see if he would.”
Bobby Markham leaned back. For the moment he wanted to get farther away from Anna.
“Why have you got your knife into him like this? What’s he done? Why can’t you leave him alone? He hasn’t done you any harm.”
The words were hardly out before he regretted them. He had seen Anna in a fury once, and he had no wish to repeat the experience. The color went suddenly out of her face. Her eyes looked past him-big, black eyes, with something hot behind the blackness.
“Do you want me to answer that?”
He didn’t-not now-not when she looked like that. He wanted to get back to the George and have a whisky and soda. But Anna had not waited for an answer to her question.
“I’ll tell you what he’s done if you like. He has insulted me in the worst way that a man can insult a woman. He wanted to marry me once, and when I wouldn’t have him-” She choked and threw up a hand before her eyes.
“Oh!” she said in a deep, gasping note. “Men can be brutes-brutes-brutes!”
The startled Mr. Markham turned plum-colored with embarrassment.
“Anna-hold on-what do you mean?”
The hand that had covered her eyes was thrown out towards him in a really fine dramatic gesture.
“Don’t ask me-you’re my friend-don’t ask me any more.” She turned away a little and stood drooping, with the shawl falling in a long straight line from her shoulder. “That is why my uncle quarreled with him. I didn’t tell him everything. But I couldn’t-couldn’t go on seeing Car as if nothing had happened. Now Uncle John is beginning to hanker after him again-it’s an old man’s fancy, and I can’t, can’t bear it.” She leaned across the table to him suddenly with outstretched hands. “Bobby, I can’t bear it-I can’t! You must help me! Bobby-don’t you see that I can’t bear it! And if he does go to prison for this, it’s just, because he’s never been punished for what he did to me.”
Mr. Markham felt himself a good deal carried away.
“Look here, Anna-I say, don’t upset yourself like that.” He caught at her hand and held it. “Look here, if I do it-”
“You will? Oh, Bobby!”
“I didn’t say I would-I said if-” He paused and imprinted a fervent kiss upon the hand which lay uppermost in his. It was cold and smooth-it was very cold. He let go of it almost involuntarily. As she drew back, he said, “What do you want to bring the girl into it for? You’ve not got your knife into her, have you?”
“Isobel?” said Anna.
“Yes.”
There was a little pause. Anna’s emotion had passed; she looked beautiful and cool and smiling again.
“Oh, no,” she said.
“Then why bring her into it?”
“It won’t hurt her. You’ve very chivalrous, Bobby. You needn’t be afraid-Isobel won’t come to any harm, because Car-Car will be chivalrous too. He won’t give her away.”
Mr. Markham salved his conscience with this. He had a conscience, but he had trained it to a certain degree of docility. It would demand satisfaction, to be sure, but it had learned to be very easily satisfied. He told himself that it was satisfied now. Anna’s appeal had gone to his head and raised hopes which he had previously scarcely dared to entertain. Now, when he saw her withdrawing, cool and remote as a statue, he ventured beyond his prudence.
“Anna-” he said in an agitated voice, “if I do it-”
Instantly the statue came to life; the color rushed into the pale cheeks. She glowed and put her hands in his.
“You will!”
“If I do, will you-will you-let me take you out of it all?”
“Do you want to?” said Anna, looking at him.
“You know I do. I’ve made my pile. I got a lucky tip the other day and made enough to clear right out of all this other business. I’ll buy a place and settle down. You can have everything you want. I’m easy to live with-ask Cis. You wouldn’t mind Cis living with us, would you-Anna?”
She drew away her hand very slowly, looking down, her eyes hidden, her long black lashes making startling contrast with the white of the eyelids and the rich blush of the cheeks.
“Anna-will you?”
“Will you?” said Anna.
“If,” said Mr. Bobby Markham with as much firmness as remained in him.
XXIII
Car Fairfax ’s Diary:
September 23rd-I haven’t written anything down for days, because nothing special seems to have been happening- that is to say, nothing that has any bearing on this Z.10 business. I seem to have done nothing but run up against people I used to know, and they’ve all been very nice, and glad to see me and all that sort of thing. You don’t meet people when you’re crawling round looking for work in seedy clothes. It’s been topping meeting people again. I’d forgotten what jolly good sorts most of them were.
Yesterday I took Corinna out. She’s going down to Linwood some time this week. She talks a lot about Peter. I hate butting into other people’s affairs, but I thought she ought to know that he was married. We were having tea at a quite sort of place she picked, so I thought I’d make a plunge and get it over. I’m afraid I did it very badly, but I don’t see how you can break that sort of thing-besides I didn’t want her to think that I thought there was anything to break. She’d just been saying that Poppa thought the world of Peter, only once he’d said a thing he didn’t like to go back on it-“and of course I had said about a million times that I was just dying to go to Europe, so when he turned round and said I was to go, I couldn’t very well say much about not wanting to-could I? He said that Peter and I weren’t to write to each other, and I said ‘Poppa darling, you just pinch yourself and come awake! You’re about two hundred years out-this isn’t the eighteenth century.’ So he said we could write to each other as friends.”
I got as hot as I’ve ever been in my life, and I said,
“You’re a great friend of Peter’s.”
And she crinkled up the corners of her eyes and laughed like a child and said,
“I’m a great friend.”
“And so am I.” And there I stuck.
She stopped laughing-she’s as sharp as a needle-and asked quickly,
“What are you trying to say, Car?”
I shoved myself along by main force. The only thing I could do for her was to get it out quickly.
“We’re both his friends. Don’t you think he ought to give out his marriage? Secrets are stupid things-don’t you think so?” I went on because I was afraid to stop and I was afraid to look at her. Then when I had said “Don’t you think so?” I couldn’t think of anything else to say, so I stopped. Then I had to look.
She was sitting up quite straight, and rather puzzled.
“But we can’t because of Poppa,” she said. “Poppa won’t let us be engaged till I get back. He doe
sn’t say he will then, but I guess I’ll make him.” She laughed a little, but she kept looking at me.
It was perfectly horrible. I wanted her to tumble to it before she said anything like that. It was my fault-I ought to have been able to stop her. I was mad with Peter, and I could have kicked myself. I said,
“That’s a joke-because Peter must have told you that he was married.”
She sat there with her hands in her lap and her eyes wide open.
“It isn’t a joke,” she said in a little breathless voice.
I just forged ahead-I had to.
“Peter is married. He got married just before the smash. He was married before he met you.”
She never took her eyes off my face. I wished she would move, but she didn’t. Her voice didn’t shake at all, but there was so little of it that I don’t know how I heard what she was saying. I did her her say,
“Go on.”
“Peter married Fay Everitt just before the smash.”
I don’t think she had been breathing. She began now to take a long breath. When she had filled her lungs, she gave a shiver and drew the back of her hand across her eyes. It was just like seeing some one wake up.
“Oh, how you frightened me!” she said.
“My dear-” I began, but she leaned over the table and took hold of my wrist.
“Don’t be silly, Car-it’s not true.”
“Corinna-”
“Don’t be silly! Of course it’s not true.”
“My dear-”
“Peter would have told me,” she said, nodding earnestly and pinching my wrist.
I thought she was the pluckiest kid-but I won’t write down what I thought about Peter.
I began to say “I’m afraid-” but she stopped me.
“I’m not. I’m not the least bit afraid-there’s nothing to be afraid about. Let’s get this right out into the light and have a look at it. Who told you all this?”
I looked back at her and tried to remember. She held my wrist tight.
“You weren’t at the wedding, were you?” she said.
I never saw anything so confident as her eyes.
“No, I wasn’t.”
“You couldn’t have been. Nobody was. There wasn’t any wedding for you to be at. If fifty bishops all stood in a row and said they’d married Peter in Westminster Abbey, I shouldn’t believe them!”
She let go of me and sat bolt upright again. She had the air of sitting in judgment. If I’d had anything on my conscience, I should have wanted to clear out. Cocksure wasn’t the word for it.
“Now!” she said. “Did Peter tell you he was married?”
I was trying to think. I remember Peter and Fay going about together, and I remembered Peter saying “Look after Fay for me,” when she and I went to see him off. No, I didn’t-I remembered-
Corinna didn’t give me time.
“Did he? Did he tell you himself? Or did she tell you?”
I remembered.
What I remembered was Fay telling me what Peter had said. It came back in the very tones of her voice-“Peter says you’re to look after me for him. You will-won’t you?” And then, “We’re married. Didn’t he tell you? We’ve been married a month, but it’s a secret.” And then she cried and said, “Don’t tell him I told you-he’ll be so angry-but I can’t bear it all alone. You mustn’t tell him, but you can say nice things about me when you write, to cheer him up.”
“Did Peter tell you he was married?” said Corinna.
“No,” I said.
“Who told you?”
“Fay did.”
“And asked you not to tell Peter she’d told you.”
“How do you know?”
“That’s what I should have done if I’d been telling a lot of lies and didn’t want to be found out.”
I was appalled. It didn’t seem possible-but then it didn’t seem possible that Peter-
“Are you going on being afraid?” said Corinna in a little taunting voice.
I didn’t say anything. I was remembering a heap of little things.
“Well?” said Corinna.
“We’ll have to make sure,” I said.
She gave a judicial nod.
“Right away. I’m going to cable Peter, and I’m going to see Fay Everitt just as fast as I can get to her. And I’m going to ask her where she was married, and if she puts up a bluff and says where, then we’re going along to inspect that register, and if it’s got Peter’s name on it-” She paused.
“Well?” I said.
The color rose brightly in her cheeks.
“Well, then it’ll be just the meanest kind of nightmare, and you can pinch me till I wake up, Car Fairfax.”
XXIV
When she heard the knock on her door, Fay Everitt turned slowly without the least suspicion that she was turning to meet a reckoning. She had spent a lazy afternoon- first a hot bath; then a little sleep; then a novel, chocolates, and some of those cigarettes which Car so unreasonably disapproved of. She was one of those people who could be desperately unhappy or desperately frightened at one moment, and the next forget, for the time at least, that there was anything to be unhappy about. She could come to the surface of her thoughts and move about there with, as it were, a thin sheet of ice between her and the things that moved darkly below. At any moment the ice might break. It was breaking now, though she did not know it.
She turned, blew a little puff of smoke into the already hazy air, and called,
“Come in!”
Even when the door opened and Car stood aside to let Corinna Lee pass him, her only feeling was one of sharp annoyance because he was not alone.
They came in, and Car shut the door. Corinna spoke at once. She had no intention of shaking hands with Fay. She stood a yard from the door, small, determined, purposeful, with round gray eyes that were very brightly aware. They took in the room with its green curtains-the bed, low and couch-like, with a green spread which was just out of key; the shabby carpet; the old chair, with one very new cushion, gold and green with a black spider embroidered on it; the mantelshelf, dominated by a large framed photograph of Peter. Peter’s eyes in the photograph looked straight at Corinna.
She spoke at once in a little composed voice:
“I’m very pleased to find you in, Miss Everitt, because there’s something I want to ask you. And I don’t think I’ll sit down, thank you”-this as Fay waved her towards a chair-“because it won’t take you any time at all just to answer what I want to ask.”
Fay stiffened. She was standing in the middle of the room with her book in her left hand and the right at her lips replacing her cigarette. She paused, stared, lifted her eyebrows at Car, and remarked,
“Americans are always in a hurry, I suppose.”
“Well, I’m in a hurry,” said Corinna briskly. “I’m in a hurry to know whether it is true that you say you are Mrs. Peter Lymington.”
The book fell out of Fay’s hand with a crash. She jerked round to face Car on Corinna’s right.
“You told her! How dare you?” And then and there she stopped, choked down the anger that was carrying her out of her depth, and faced Corinna again. “I have never called myself Mrs. Peter Lymington!”
“Have you ever said you were married to him?” The hand with the cigarette fell to Fay’s side. “Did you tell Car Fairfax you were married to Peter?”
There was no answer.
Corinna did not move. Her small gray-gloved hands rested one on either side of the big lump of rose quartz which covered the catch of her gray lizard bag. Her small gray-shod feet were planted firmly. Her stern young gaze never left Fay’s frightened face. It had been angry at first, but it was frightened now. The ice had broken and let her down amongst all those dark fears which sometimes came out at night and brought a reign of terror with them.
Corinna spoke again in the same clear voice:
“Did you tell Car Fairfax that you were married to Peter? Car says you did. Is he telling a lie?”
/> Fay looked at Car. For three years she had looked to him whenever there was anything unpleasant to be done. She looked to him now.
He came forward and put a hand on her arm.
“Haven’t you got anything to say, Fay?”
She shook her head.
“You’re not married to Peter?”
She shook it again.
“Why did you say you were?”
Fay moved back a step, freeing herself. She spoke for the first time since the questions had begun; and she spoke to Car, not to Corinna:
“Tell her to go away,” she said only just above her breath.
“Well, I don’t want to stay,” said Corinna soberly. She turned and went out of the room without another word.
Car followed her down the stairs.
“Do you want a taxi?”
“No-I guess I’d like to walk.”
“I must go back. This has got to be cleared right up.”
She nodded, and on an impulse put her face up to be kissed.
He kissed the soft round cheek, and both of them felt a certain comfort. The kiss seemed to bring the pleasant ordered ways of family affection into sight again. He patted her shoulder, and she went out, her eyes not stern any longer but vaguely troubled. Why should any one tell stupid lies like that? Why should they?
Car went back. He was shocked, and he was beginning to be angry. He didn’t understand what had happened, or why it had happened. He felt rather as if some one had struck him in the face; he would be angry as soon as he got over the first shock of surprise.
He found Fay just where he had left her, standing in the middle of the room staring at the door, waiting for him to come back. The end of her cigarette had scorched her thin green dress. A faint smell of burning crept through the smell of her cigarette.
Car was glad enough to have something to be angry about.
“Good Lord, Fay, what are you doing? You’ll be on fire in a minute!”
She dropped the cigarette then, as she had dropped the book, just opening her fingers and letting it go.
“Now!” he said. “What’s the meaning of this? What did you do it for?”
Beggar’s Choice Page 14