The end came swiftly. The next
day Ben Travers drove down to Rincona. Mrs. Abbott
listened to his garnished tale with bulging eyes and
her three chins quivering with excitement. She
had heard no gossip worth mentioning since she left
town, and privately she hated the summer and Alta.
“You should have seen her face
when she came out of that church,” cried Travers
for the third time; he was falling into the senile
habit of repeating himself. “It was fairly
distorted and she looked as if she had been crying
for a week. Mark my words, Masters had been making
the hottest kind of love to her—he was little
more composed than she. Bet you an eagle to a
dime they elope within a week.”
“Serve Howard Talbot right for
marrying a woman twenty years younger than himself
and a Northerner to boot. Do you think he suspects?”
“Not he. Now, I must be
off. If I didn’t call on the Hathaways and
Montgomerys while I’m down here they’d
never forgive me.”
“Both have house parties,”
said Mrs. Abbott enviously. “Just like
you to get it first! I’d go with you but
I must write to Antoinette McLane. She’ll
have to believe that her paragon is headed for
the rocks this time.”
Mrs. McLane was having an attack of
the blues when the letter arrived and did not open
her mail until two days later. Then she drove
at once to San Francisco. She was too wise in
women to remonstrate with Madeleine, but she went
directly to Dr. Talbot’s office. It was
the most unpleasant duty she had ever undertaken, but
she knew that Talbot would not doubt his wife’s
fidelity, and she was determined to save Madeleine.
She had considered the alternative of going to Masters,
but even her strong spirit quailed before the prospect
of that interview. Besides, if he were as deeply
in love with Madeleine as she believed him to be,
it would do no good. She had little faith in
the self-abnegation of men where their passions were
concerned.
Dr. Talbot was in his office and saw
her at once, and they talked for an hour. His
face was purple and she feared a stroke. But he
heard her quietly, and told her she had proved her
friendship by coming to him before it was too late.
When she left him he sat for another hour, alone.