PAGE 6
A Night At "Hays"
by
“Well?” she said, in a half-contemptuous toleration.
“Well?” said Jack, in an equally ill-disguised discontent, but an evident desire to placate the woman before him. “It’s all right, you know. I’ve had my say. It’ll come right, Lottie, you’ll see.”
The woman smiled again, and glanced around the bare walls of the room.
“And I suppose,” she said, drily, “when it comes right I’m to take the place of your sister in the charge of this workhouse and succeed to the keys of that safe in the other room?”
“It’ll come all right, I tell you; you can fix things up here any way you’ll like when we get the old man straight,” said Jack, with the iteration of feebleness. “And as to that safe, I’ve seen it chock full of securities.”
“It’ll hold one less to-night,” she said, looking at the fire.
“What are you talking about?” he asked, in querulous suspicion.
She drew a paper from her pocket.
“It’s that draft of yours that you were crazy enough to sign Dawson’s name to. It was lying out there on the desk. I reckon it isn’t a thing you care to have kept as evidence, even by your father.”
She held it in the flames until it was consumed.
“By Jove, your head is level, Lottie!” he said, with an admiration that was not, however, without a weak reserve of suspicion.
“No, it isn’t, or I wouldn’t be here,” she said, curtly. Then she added, as if dismissing the subject, “Well, what did you tell her?”
“Oh, I said I met you in New York. You see I thought she might think it queer if she knew I only met you in San Francisco three weeks ago. Of course I said we were married.”
She looked at him with weary astonishment.
“And of course, whether things go right or not, she’ll find out that I’ve got a husband living, that I never met you in New York, but on the steamer, and that you’ve lied. I don’t see the USE of it. You said you were going to tell the whole thing squarely and say the truth, and that’s why I came to help you.”
“Yes; but don’t you see, hang it all!” he stammered, in the irritation of weak confusion, “I had to tell her SOMETHING. Father won’t dare to tell her the truth, no more than he will the neighbors. He’ll hush it up, you bet; and when we get this thing fixed you’ll go and get your divorce, you know, and we’ll be married privately on the square.”
He looked so vague, so immature, yet so fatuously self-confident, that the woman extended her hand with a laugh and tapped him on the back as she might have patted a dog. Then she disappeared to follow Zuleika in the kitchen.
When the two women returned together they were evidently on the best of terms. So much so that the man, with the easy reaction of a shallow nature, became sanguine and exalted, even to an ostentatious exhibition of those New York graces on which the paternal Hays had set such store. He complacently explained the methods by which he had deceived Dr. Dawson; how he had himself written a letter from his father commanding him to return to take his brother’s place, and how he had shown it to the Doctor and been three months in San Francisco looking for work and assisting Lottie at the theatre, until a conviction of the righteousness of his cause, perhaps combined with the fact that they were also short of money and she had no engagement, impelled him to his present heroic step. All of which Zuleika listened to with childish interest, but superior appreciation of his companion. The fact that this woman was an actress, an abomination vaguely alluded to by her father as being even more mysteriously wicked than her sister and mother, and correspondingly exciting, as offering a possible permanent relief to the monotony of her home life, seemed to excuse her brother’s weakness. She was almost ready to become his partisan–AFTER she had seen her father.