Part 32 (1/2)
”Tell me what is its _timbre_, if you care to.”
”I will. You're an old friend, and I can talk to you. But you tell me one thing first: Is a man really a fool to marry a woman with a past?”
”You are going to?”
”I have tried not to. I have been trying not to for three years. Listen!
When I was travelling in j.a.pan I met her. She was with an American called Glinn.”
”What?”
”You knew him?”
”No! It's all right. I was surprised, because at the moment I was thinking of that very name.”
”Oh! Well, she pa.s.sed as Mrs Glinn; but, somehow, it got out that she was something else. The usual story, you know. People fought shy of her; but I don't think she cared much. Glinn was devoted to her, and she loved him, and was as true to him as any wife could have been. Then the tragedy came.”
”What was it?”
”Glinn died suddenly in Tokio, of typhoid. She nursed him to the end.
And when the end came her situation was awful, so lonely and deserted.
There wasn't a woman in the hotel who would be her friend; so I tried to come to the rescue, arranged her affairs, saw about the funeral, and did what I could. She was well off; Glinn left her nearly all his money. He would have married her, only he had a wife alive somewhere.”
”And you fell in love with her, of course?”
”That was the sort of thing. If you knew her you would not wonder at it.
She was not a bad woman. Glinn had been the only one. She loved him too much; that was all. She came to Europe, and lived in Paris for a time, keeping the name of Mrs Glinn. I used to see her sometimes, but I never said anything. You see, there was her past. In fact, I have been fighting against her for three years. I went to India to get cured; but it was no good. And now, here I am.”
”And she is in Paris?”
”No, in London at present; but I didn't know her address till to-day. I think she had her doubts of me, and meant to give me the slip.”
”How did you find it out?”
”Quite by chance. I was walking in Mill Street, Knightsbridge, and saw her pa.s.s in a victoria.”
Maine got up suddenly, and went over to the spirit-stand. ”In Mill Street?” he said.
”Yes. The carriage stopped at No. 100. She went in. A footman came out and carried in her rug. _Ergo_, she lives there.”
”How hot it is!” said Maine in a hard voice. He threw up one of the windows and leaned out. He felt as if he were choking. A little way down the street a half-tipsy guardsman was reeling along, singing his own private version of ”Tommy Atkins.” He narrowly avoided a lamp-post by an abrupt lurch which took him into the gutter. Maine heard some one laugh.
It was himself.
”Well, old chap,” said Manning, who had come up behind him, ”what would you advise me to do? I'm in a fix. I'm in love with Eve--that's her name; I can't live without her happily, and yet I hate to marry a woman with a--well, you know how it is.”
Maine drew himself back into the room and faced round. ”Does she love you?” he asked; and there was a curious change in his manner towards his friend.
”I don't know that she does,” Manning said, rather uncomfortably. ”But that would come right. She would marry me, naturally.”