Part 8 (1/2)
Once more he showed himself to be her match in the game of give and take. Hardly were the words out of her mouth than he endorsed them again, with what was almost like the semblance of a grin upon his blubber-like face.
”You are.”
”And I propose to let you see that I'm your wife.”
”No doubt.”
”Your real, actual wife, not a puppet, a thing you can pull by a string.”
”Quite so.”
”You may imagine, perhaps, that I'm a mere dummy, an automaton, which can be set in movement only when you choose. If you do, you're wrong, as I intend to show you, Mr. Cuthbert Grahame.”
”Precisely, Mrs. Cuthbert Grahame.”
It seemed, for an instant, as if a torrent of words was trembling at the tip of her tongue, needing but a touch to set them loose; if so, the touch did not come. Turning, she went and stood by an open window; resting her hand on the sill she leaned out, as if she needed fresh air. She looked out on to a garden which was evidently of considerable size, but which sadly needed attention. The gra.s.s could not have been cut for months; it competed with weeds for possession of the footpaths. There were flowers, but they needed pruning; the weeds threatened to choke them in their own beds. Beyond, the ground rose; everywhere the slopes were covered with trees, pines for the most part--scarcely a cheerful framework to what was already bidding fair to become a scene of desolation. In spite of the sweet, clean air and of the brilliant suns.h.i.+ne, in her surroundings, as she saw them, there was a hint of something uncongenial, unfriendly, which did not tend to make her mood a gayer one.
While she still seemed to be absorbing the spirit of the landscape, Mr. Grahame's voice came to her out of the bed.
”I want to speak to you.”
She heard him, but it was not until he had repeated the same sentence three times that she chose to favour him with her attention. Bringing her head back into the room she turned her face slightly towards the speaker.
”Well?”
”Why did you marry me?”
”Because I was told that you would be dead inside two hours.”
Although the reply was brutal in its plainness, it did not seem to hurt him in the least--indeed, it seemed rather to amuse him.
”That's a poor reason. What were you to gain by my death?”
”Dr. Twelves told me that I should have twenty thousand pounds.”
”Did he? I see. That was the bait. You're a ready-witted young woman.”
”You mean that you think I'm a fool.”
”Not at all; no more than the rest of your s.e.x, or, for the matter of that, of mine. We're all fools; only some of us are fools of a special brand. Who are you?”
”I'm your wife.”
”You've told me that already. I mean who were you before you were my wife?”
She moved her hand to and fro, restlessly, upon the window sill.
”I've half a mind to tell you.”
”Make it a whole one. Yours should be a story not without features of interest. Besides, a husband ought to know something about his wife.”
She stood up straighter, her back to the window, looking towards the bed with gleaming eyes. It was evidently easier to provoke her to an exhibition of temper than him.