Part 5 (2/2)

”Oh, I forget nothing! I said royal blood. My father, madam, was the brother of the Czar, and my mother was Pauline Felix. You don't seem to understand----” after a moment's pause. ”It was my mother whose name you said should not cross any decent woman's lips--my mother----”

She broke down into wild sobs.

”When I said it I did not know that you---- I am sorry.” Frances suddenly walked away, pulling open her collar. It seemed to her that there was no breath in the world. George followed her. ”Did you know this?” she said at last, in a hoa.r.s.e whisper. ”And you are--married to her? There is no way of being rid of her?”

”No, there is no way,” said Waldeaux stoutly. ”And if there were, I should not look for it. I am sorry that there is any smirch on Lisa's birth. But even her mother, I fancy, was not altogether a bad lot.

Bygones must be bygones. I love my wife, mother. She's worth loving, as you'd find if you would take the trouble to know her. Her dead mother shall not come between her and me.”

”She's like her, George!” said Mrs. Waldeaux, with white, trembling lips. ”I ought to have seen it at first. Those luring, terrible eyes.

It is Pauline Felix's heart that is in her. Rotten to the core--rotten----”

”I don't care. I'll stand by her.” But George's face, too, began to lose its color. He shook himself uncomfortably. ”The thing's done now,” he muttered.

”Certainly, certainly,” Frances repeated mechanically. ”Tell her that I am sorry I spoke of her mother before her. It was rude--brutal. I ask her pardon.”

”Oh, she'll soon forget that! Lisa has a warm heart, if you take her right. There's lots of hearty fun in her too. You'll like that. Are you going now? Good-by, dear. We will come and see you in the morning. The thing will not seem half so bad when you have slept on it.”

He paused uncertainly, as she still stood motionless. She was facing the grim walls of Stafford House, looming dimly through the mist, her eyes fixed as if she were studying the sky line.

”George,” she said. ”You don't understand. You will come to me always.

But that woman never shall cross my threshold.” ”Mother! Do you mean what you say?”

It was a man, not a shuffling boy that spoke now. ”Do you mean that we are not to go to you to-morrow? Not to go home in October? Never----”

”Your home is open to you. But Pauline Felix's child is no more to me than a wild beast--or a snake in the gra.s.s, and never can be.” She faced him steadily now.

”There she is,” said Frances, looking at the little black figure under the trees, ”and here am I. You can choose between us.”

”Those whom G.o.d hath joined together,” muttered George. ”You know that.”

”You have known her for three weeks,” cried Frances vehemently. ”I gave you life. I have been your slave every hour since you were born.

I have lived but for you. Which of us has G.o.d joined together?”

”Mother, you're d.a.m.nably unreasonable! It is the course of nature for a man to leave his parents and cleave to his wife.”

”Yes, I know,” she said slowly. ”You can keep that foul thing in your life, but it never shall come into mine.”

”Then neither will I. I will stand by my wife.”

”That is the end, then?”

She waited, her eyes on his.

He did not speak.

She turned and left him, disappearing slowly in the rain and mist.

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