Mark Makes a Move
Passing hurriedly out of the cloakroom,
a little later, Ruth met Simonds, the lieutenant of
Frederic Fernand, in the passage. He was a ratfaced
little man, with a furtive smile. Not an unpleasant
smile, but it was continually coming and going, as
if he wished earnestly to win the favor of the men
before him, but greatly doubted his ability to do
so. Ruth Tolliver, knowing his genius for the
cards, knowing his cold and unscrupulous soul, detested
him heartily.
When she saw his eyes flicker up and
down the hall she hesitated. Obviously he wished
to speak with her, and obviously he did not wish to
be seen in the act. As she paused he stepped to
her, his face suddenly set with determination.
“Watch John Mark,” he
whispered. “Don’t trust him.
He suspects everything!”
“What? Everything about what?” she
asked.
Simonds gazed at her for a moment
with a singular expression. There were conjoined
cynicism, admiration, doubt, and fear in his glance.
But, instead of speaking again, he bowed and slipped
away into the open hall.
She heard him call, and she heard
Fernand’s oily voice make answer. And at
that she shivered.
What had Simonds guessed? How,
under heaven, did he know where she had gone when
she left the gaming house? Or did he know?
Had he not merely guessed? Perhaps he had been
set on by Fernand or Mark to entangle and confuse
her?
There remained, out of all this confusion
of guesswork, a grim feeling that Simonds did indeed
know, and that, for the first time in his life, perhaps,
he was doing an unbought, a purely generous thing.
She remembered, now, how often Simonds
had followed her with his eyes, how often his face
had lighted when she spoke even casually to him.
Yes, there might be a reason for Simonds’ generosity.
But that implied that he knew fairly well what John
Mark himself half guessed. The thought that she
was under the suspicion of Mark himself was terrible
to her.
She drew a long breath and advanced
courageously into the gaming rooms.
The first thing she saw was Fernand
hurrying a late comer toward the tables, laughing
and chatting as he went. She shuddered at the
sight of him. It was strange that he, who had,
a moment before, in the very cellar of that house,
been working to bring about the death of two men,
should now be immaculate, self-possessed.
A step farther and she saw John Mark
sitting at a console table, with his back to the room
and a cup of tea before him. That was, in fact,
his favorite drink at all hours of the day or night.
To see Fernand was bad enough, but to see the master
mind of all the evil that passed around her was too
much. The girl inwardly thanked Heaven that his
back was turned and started to pass him as softly
as possible.
“Just a minute, Ruth,”
he called, as she was almost at the door of the room.
For a moment there was a frantic impulse
in her to bolt like a foolish child afraid of the
dark. In the next apartment were light and warmth
and eager faces and smiles and laughter, and here,
behind her, was the very spirit of darkness calling
her back. After an imperceptible hesitation she
turned.
Mark had not turned in his chair,
but it was easy to discover how he had known of her
passing. A small oval mirror, fixed against the
wall before him, had shown her image. How much
had it betrayed, she wondered, of her guiltily stealthy
pace? She went to him and found that he was leisurely
and openly examining her in the glass, as she approached,
his chin resting on one hand, his thin face perfectly
calm, his eyes hazy with content. It was a habit
of his to regard her like a picture, but she had never
become used to it; she was always disconcerted by it,
as she was at this moment.
He rose, of course, when she was beside
him, and asked her to sit down.
“But I’ve hardly touched
a card,” she said. “This isn’t
very professional, you know, wasting a whole evening.”
She was astonished to see him flush
to the roots of his hair. His voice shook.
“Sit down, please.”
She obeyed, positively inert with surprise.
“Do you think I keep you at
this detestable business because I want the money?”
he asked. “Dear Heaven! Ruth, is that
what you think of me?” Fortunately, before she
could answer, he went on: “No, no, no!
I have wanted to make you a free and independent being,
my dear, and that is why I have put you through the
most dangerous and exacting school in the world.
You understand?”
“I think I do,” she replied falteringly.
“But not entirely. Let me pour you some
tea? No?”
He sighed, as he blew forth the smoke
of a cigarette. “But you don’t understand
entirely,” he continued, “and you must.
Go back to the old days, when you knew nothing of
the world but me. Can you remember?”
“Yes, yes!”
“Then you certainly recall a
time when, if I had simply given directions, you would
have been mine, Ruth. I could have married you
the moment you became a woman. Is that true?”
“Yes,” she whispered, “that is perfectly
true.” The coldness that passed over her
taught her for the first time how truly she dreaded
that marriage which had been postponed, but which
inevitably hung over her head.
“But I didn’t want such
a wife,” continued John Mark. “You
would have been an undeveloped child, really; you
would never have grown up. No matter what they
say, something about a woman is cut off at the root
when she marries. Certainly, if she had not been
free before, she is a slave if she marries a man with
a strong will. And I have a strong will, Ruth—very
strong!”
“Very strong, John,” she
whispered again. He smiled faintly, as if there
were less of what he wanted in that second use of the
name. He went on: “So you see, I faced
a problem. I must and would marry you. There
was never any other woman born who was meant for me.
So much so good. But, if I married you before
you were wise enough to know me, you would have become
a slave, shrinking from me, yielding to me, incapable
of loving me. No, I wanted a free and independent
creature as my wife; I wanted a partnership, you see.
Put you into the world, then, and let you see men
and women? No, I could not do that in the ordinary
way. I have had to show you the hard and bad
side of life, because I am, in many ways, a hard and
bad man myself!”
He said it, almost literally, through
his teeth. His face was fierce, defying her—his
eyes were wistful, entreating her not to agree with
him. Such a sudden rush of pity for the man swept
over her that she put out her hand and pressed his.
He looked down at her hand for a moment, and she felt
his fingers trembling under that gentle pressure.
“I understand more now,”
she said slowly, “than I have ever understood
before. But I’ll never understand entirely.”
“A thing that’s understood
entirely is despised,” he said, with a careless
sweep of his hand. “A thing that is understood
is not feared. I wish to be feared, not to make
people cower, but to make them know when I come, and
when I go. Even love is nothing without a seasoning
of fear. For instance”—he flushed
as the torrent of his speech swept him into a committal
of himself—“I am afraid of you, dear
girl. Do you know what I have done with the money
you’ve won?”
“Tell me,” she said curiously,
and, at the same time, she glanced in wonder, as a
servant passed softly across the little room.
Was it not stranger than words could tell that such
a man as John Mark should be sitting in this almost
public place and pouring his soul out into the ear
of a girl?
“I shall tell you,” said
Mark, his voice softening. “I have contributed
half of it to charity.”
Her lips, compressed with doubt, parted
in wonder. “Charity!” she exclaimed.
“And the other half,”
he went on, “I deposited in a bank to the credit
of a fictitious personality. That fictitious personality
is, in flesh and blood, Ruth Tolliver with a new name.
You understand? I have only to hand you the bank
book with the list of deposits, and you can step out
of this Tolliver personality and appear in a new part
of the world as another being. Do you see what
it means? If, at the last, you find you cannot
marry me, my dear, you are provided for. Not out
of my charity, which would be bitter to you, but out
of your own earnings. And, lest you should be
horrified at the thought of living on your earnings
at the gaming table, I have thrown bread on the waters,
dear Ruth. For every dollar you have in the bank
you have given another to charity, and both, I hope,
have borne interest for you!”
His smile faded a little, as she murmured,
with her glance going past him: “Then I
am free? Free, John?”
“Whenever you wish!”
“Not that I ever shall wish,
but to know that I am not chained, that is the wonderful
thing.” She looked directly at him again:
“I never dreamed there was so much fineness
in you, John Mark, I never dreamed it, but I should
have!”
“Now I have been winning Caroline
to the game,” he went on, “and she is
beginning to love it. In another year, or six
months, trust me to have completely filled her with
the fever. But now enters the mischief-maker
in the piece, a stranger, an ignorant outsider.
This incredible man arrives and, in a few days, having
miraculously run Caroline to earth, goes on and brings
Caroline face to face with her lover, teaches Jerry
Smith that I am his worst enemy, gets enough money
to pay off his debt to me, and convinces him that
I can never use my knowledge of his crime to jail
him, because I don’t dare bring the police too
close to my own rather explosive record.”
“I saw them both here!”
said the girl. She wondered how much he guessed,
and she saw his keen eyes probe her with a glance.
But her ingenuousness, if it did not disarm him, at
least dulled the edge of his suspicions.
“He was here, and the trap was
laid here, and he slipped through it. Got away
through a certain room which Fernand would give a million
to keep secret. At any rate the fellow has shown
that he is slippery and has a sting, too. He
sent a bullet a fraction of an inch past Fernand’s
head, at one point in the little story.
“In short, the price is too
high. What I want is to secure Caroline Smith
from the inside. I want you to go to her, to persuade
her to go away with you on a trip. Take her to
the Bermudas, or to Havana—any place you
please. The moment the Westerner thinks his lady
is running away from him of her own volition he’ll
throw up his hands and curse his luck and go home.
They have that sort of pride on the other side of the
Rockies. Will you go back tonight, right now,
and persuade Caroline to go with you?”
She bowed her head under the shock
of it. Ronicky Doone had begged her to send Caroline
Smith to meet her lover. Now the counterattack
followed.
“Do you think she’d listen?”
“Yes, tell her that the one
thing that will save the head of Bill Gregg is for
her to go away, otherwise I’ll wipe the fool
off the map. Better still, tell her that Gregg
of his own free will has left New York and given up
the chase. Tell her you want to console her with
a trip. She’ll be sad and glad and flattered,
all in the same moment, and go along with you without
a word. Will you try, Ruth?”
“I suppose you would have Bill
Gregg removed—if he continued a nuisance?”
“Not a shadow of a doubt. Will you do your
best?”
She rose. “Yes,”
said the girl. Then she managed to smile at him.
“Of course I’ll do my best. I’ll
go back right now.”
He took her arm to the door of the
room. “Thank Heaven,” he said, “that
I have one person in whom I can trust without question—one
who needs no bribing or rewards, but works to please
me. Good-by, my dear.”
He watched her down the hall and then
turned and went through room after room to the rear
of the house. There he rapped on a door in a peculiar
manner. It was opened at once, and Harry Morgan
appeared before him.
“A rush job, Harry,” he said. “A
little shadowing.”
Harry jerked his cap lower over his
eyes. “Gimme the smell of the trail, I’m
ready,” he said.
“Ruth Tolliver has just left
the house. Follow her. She’ll probably
go home. She’ll probably talk with Caroline
Smith. Find a way of listening. If you hear
anything that seems wrong to you—anything
about Caroline leaving the house alone, for instance,
telephone to me at once. Now go and work, as
you never worked for me before.”