FOR more than a week after
Edith’s call on Dr. Radcliffe she seemed to
take but little interest in anything, and remained
alone in her room for a greater part of the time,
except when her father was in the house. Since
her questions about her baby a slight reserve had
risen up between them. During this time she went
out at least once every day, and when questioned by
her mother as to where she had been, evaded any direct
answer. If questioned more closely, she would
show a rising spirit and a decision of manner that
had the effect to silence and at the same time to
trouble Mrs. Dinneford, whose mind was continually
on the rack.
One day the mother and daughter met
in a part of the city where neither of them dreamed
of seeing the other. It was not far from where
Mrs. Bray lived. Mrs. Dinneford had been there
on a purgational visit, and had come away lighter
in purse and with a heavier burden of fear and anxiety
on her heart.
“What are you doing here?” she demanded.
“I’ve been to St. John’s
mission sewing-school,” replied Edith. “I
have a class there.”
“You have! Why didn’t
you tell me this before? I don’t like such
doings. This is no place for you.”
“My place is where I can do
good,” returned Edith, speaking slowly, but
with great firmness.
“Good! You can do good
if you want to without demeaning yourself to work
like this. I don’t want you mixed up with
these low, vile people, and I won’t have it!”
Mrs. Dinneford spoke in a sharp, positive voice.
Edith made no answer, and they walked on together.
“I shall speak to your father
about this,” said Mrs. Dinneford. “It
isn’t reputable. I wouldn’t have you
seen here for the world.”
“I shall walk unhurt; you need
not fear,” returned Edith.
There was silence between them for
some time, Edith not caring to speak, and her mother
in doubt as to what it were best to say.
“How long have you been going
to St. John’s mission school?” at length
queried Mrs. Dinneford.
“I’ve been only a few times,” replied
Edith.
“And have a class of diseased
and filthy little wretches, I suppose—gutter
children?”
“They are God’s children,”
said Edith, in a tone of rebuke.
“Oh, don’t preach to me!” was angrily
replied.
“I only said what was true,” remarked
Edith.
There was silence again.
“Are you going directly home?”
asked Mrs. Dinneford, after they had walked the distance
of several blocks. Edith replied that she was.
“Then you’d better take
that car. I shall not be home for an hour yet.”
They separated, Edith taking the car.
As soon as she was alone Mrs. Dinneford quickened
her steps, like a person who had been held back from
some engagement. A walk of ten minutes brought
her to one of the principal hotels of the city.
Passing in, she went up to a reception-parlor, where
she was met by a man who rose from a seat near the
windows and advanced to the middle of the room.
He was of low stature, with quick, rather nervous
movements, had dark, restless eyes, and wore a heavy
black moustache that was liberally sprinkled with
gray. The lower part of his face was shaved clean.
He showed some embarrassment as he came forward to
meet Mrs. Dinneford.
“Mr. Feeling,” she said, coldly.
The man bowed with a mixture of obsequiousness
and familiarity, and tried to look steadily into Mrs.
Dinneford’s face, but was not able to do so.
There was a steadiness and power in her eyes that his
could not bear.
“What do you want with me, sir?”
she demanded, a little sharply.
“Take a chair, and I will tell
you,” replied Freeling, and he turned, moving
toward a corner of the room, she following. They
sat down, taking chairs near each other.
“There’s trouble brewing,”
said the man, his face growing dark and anxious.
“What kind of trouble?”
“I had a letter from George Granger yesterday.”
“What!” The color went out of the lady’s
face.
“A letter from George Granger. He wished
to see me.”
“Did you go?”
“Yes.”
“What did he want?”
Freeling took a deep breath, and sighed. His
manner was troubled.
“What did he want?” Mrs. Dinneford repeated
the question.
“He’s as sane as you or I,” said
Freeling.
“Is he? Oh, very well!
Then let him go to the State’s prison.”
Mrs. Dinneford said this with some bravado in her
manner. But the color did not come back to her
face.
“He has no idea of that,” was replied.
“What then?” The lady
leaned toward Freeling. Her hands moved nervously.
“He means to have the case in court again, but
on a new issue.”
“He does!”
“Yes; says that he’s innocent,
and that you and I know it—that he’s
the victim of a conspiracy, and that we are the conspirators!”
“Talk!—amounts to
nothing,” returned Mrs. Dinneford, with a faint
little laugh.
“I don’t know about that.
It’s ugly talk, and especially so, seeing that
it’s true.”
“No one will give credence to
the ravings of an insane criminal.”
“People are quick to credit
an evil report. They will pity and believe him,
now that the worst is reached. A reaction in public
feeling has already taken place. He has one or
two friends left who do not hesitate to affirm that
there has been foul play. One of these has been
tampering with a clerk of mine, and I came upon them
with their heads together on the street a few days
ago, and had my suspicions aroused by their startled
look when they saw me.”
“‘What did that man want
with you?’ I inquired, when the clerk came in.
“He hesitated a moment, and
then replied, ’He was asking me something about
Mr. Granger.’
“‘What about him?’
I queried. ’He asked me if I knew anything
in regard to the forgery,’ he returned.
“I pressed him with questions,
and found that suspicion was on the right track.
This friend of Granger’s asked particularly about
your visits to the store, and whether he had ever
noticed anything peculiar in our intercourse—anything
that showed a familiarity beyond what would naturally
arise between a customer and salesman.”
“There’s nothing in that,”
said Mrs. Dinneford. “If you and I keep
our own counsel, we are safe. The testimony of
a condemned criminal goes for nothing. People
may surmise and talk as much as they please, but no
one knows anything about those notes but you and I
and George.”
“A pardon from the governor
may put a new aspect on the case.”
“A pardon!” There was
a tremor of alarm in Mrs. Dinneford’s voice.
“Yes; that, no doubt, will be the first move.”
“The first move! Why, Mr.
Freeling, you don’t think anything like this
is in contemplation?”
“I’m afraid so. George,
as I have said, is no more crazy than you or I. But
he cannot come out of the asylum, as the case now stands,
without going to the penitentiary. So the first
move of his friends will be to get a pardon.
Then he is our equal in the eyes of the law.
It would be an ugly thing for you and me to be sued
for a conspiracy to ruin this young man, and have
the charge of forgery added to the count.”
Mrs. Dinneford gave a low cry, and shivered.
“But it may come to that.”
“Impossible!”
“The prudent man foreseeth the
evil and hideth himself, but the simple pass on and
are punished,” said Freeling. “It
is for this that I have sent for you. It’s
an ugly business, and I was a weak fool ever to have
engaged in it.”
“You were a free agent.”
“I was a weak fool.”
“As you please,” returned
Mrs. Dinneford, coldly, and drawing herself away from
him.
It was some moments before either
of them spoke again. Then Freeling said,
“I was awake all night, thinking
over this matter, and it looks uglier the more I think
of it. It isn’t likely that enough evidence
could be found to convict either of us, but to be tried
on such an accusation would be horrible.”
“Horrible! horrible!”
ejaculated Mrs. Dinneford. “What is to be
done?” She gave signs of weakness and terror.
Freeling observed her closely, then felt his way onward.
“We are in great peril,”
he said. “There is no knowing what turn
affairs will take. I only wish I were a thousand
miles from here. It would be safer for us both.”
Then, after a pause, he added, “If I were foot-free,
I would be off to-morrow.”
He watched Mrs. Dinneford closely,
and saw a change creep over her face.
“If I were to disappear suddenly,”
he resumed, “suspicion, if it took a definite
shape, would fall on me. You would not be thought
of in the matter.”
He paused again, observing his companion
keenly but stealthily. He was not able to look
her fully in the face.
“Speak out plainly,” said
Mrs. Dinneford, with visible impatience.
“Plainly, then, madam,”
returned Freeling, changing his whole bearing toward
her, and speaking as one who felt that he was master
of the situation, “it has come to this:
I shall have to break up and leave the city, or there
will be a new trial in which you and I will be the
accused. Now, self-preservation is the first law
of nature. I don’t mean to go to the State’s
prison if I can help it. What I am now debating
are the chances in my favor if Granger gets a pardon,
and then makes an effort to drive us to the wall, which
he most surely will. I have settled it so far—”
Mrs. Dinneford leaned toward him with
an anxious expression on her countenance, waiting
for the next sentence. But Freeling did not go
on.
“How have you settled it?”
she demanded, trembling as she spoke with the excitement
of suspense.
“That I am not going to the wall if I can help
it.”
“How will you help it?”
“I have an accomplice;”
and this time he was able to look at Mrs. Dinneford
with such a fixed and threatening gaze that her eyes
fell.
“You have?” she questioned, in a husky
voice.
“Yes.”
“Who?”
“Mrs. Helen Dinneford.
And do you think for a moment that to save myself
I would hesitate to sacrifice her?”
The lady’s face grew white. She tried to
speak, but could not.
“I am talking plainly, as you
desired, madam,” continued Freeling. “You
led me into this thing. It was no scheme of mine;
and if more evil consequences are to come, I shall
do my best to save my own head. Let the hurt
go to where it rightfully belongs.”
“What do you mean?” Mrs. Dinneford tried
to rally herself.
“Just this,” was answered:
“if I am dragged into court, I mean to go in
as a witness, and not as a criminal. At the first
movement toward an indictment, I shall see the district
attorney, whom I know very well, and give him such
information in the case as will lead to fixing the
crime on you alone, while I will come in as the principal
witness. This will make your conviction certain.”
“Devil!” exclaimed Mrs.
Dinneford, her white face convulsed and her eyes starting
from their sockets with rage and fear. “Devil!”
she repeated, not able to control her passion.
“Then you know me,” was
answered, with cool self-possession, “and what
you have to expect.”
Neither spoke for a considerable time.
Up to this period they had been alone in the parlor.
Guests of the house now came in and took seats near
them. They arose and walked the floor for a little
while, still in silence, then passed into an adjoining
parlor that happened to be empty, and resumed the
conference.
“This is a last resort,”
remarked Freeling, softening his voice as they sat
down—“a card that I do not wish to
play, and shall not if I can help it. But it
is best that you should know that it is in my hand.
If there is any better way of escape, I shall take
it.”
“You spoke of going away,” said Mrs. Dinneford.
“Yes. But that involves a great deal.”
“What?”
“The breaking up of my business,
and loss of money and opportunities that I can hardly
hope ever to regain.”
“Why loss of money?”
“I shall have to wind up hurriedly,
and it will be impossible to collect more than a small
part of my outstanding claims. I shall have to
go away under a cloud, and it will not be prudent to
return. Most of these claims will therefore become
losses. The amount of capital I shall be able
to take will not be sufficient to do more than provide
for a small beginning in some distant place and under
an assumed name. On the other hand, if I remain
and fight the thing through, as I have no doubt I
can, I shall keep my business and my place in society
here—hurt, it may be, in my good name, but
still with the main chance all right. But it
will be hard for you. If I pass the ordeal safely,
you will not. And the question to consider is
whether you can make it to my interest to go away,
to drop out of sight, injured in fortune and good
name, while you go unscathed. You now have it
all in a nutshell. I will not press you to a decision
to-day. Your mind is too much disturbed.
To-morrow, at noon, I would like to see you again.”
Freeling made a motion to rise, but Mrs. Dinneford
did not stir.
“Perhaps,” he said, “you
decide at once to let things take their course.
Understand me, I am ready for either alternative.
The election is with yourself.”
Mrs. Dinneford was too much stunned
by all this to be able to come to any conclusion.
She seemed in the maze of a terrible dream, full of
appalling reality. To wait for twenty-four hours
in this state of uncertainty was more than her thoughts
could endure. And yet she must have time to think,
and to get command of her mental resources.
“Will you be disengaged at five o’clock?”
she asked.
“Yes.”
“I will be here at five.”
“Very well.”
Mrs. Dinneford arose with a weary air.
“I shall want to hear from you
very explicitly,” she said. “If your
demand is anywhere in the range of reason and possibility,
I may meet it. If outside of that range, I shall
of course reject it. It is possible that you
may not hold all the winning cards—in fact,
I know that you do not.”
“I will be here at five,” said Freeling.
“Very well. I shall be on time.”
And they turned from each other, passing
from the parlor by separate doors.