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"Some one under this roof has been guilty of this most atrocious act,"
continued the doctor, in a stern voice. "We suspect--we know the guilty party, and that party is in this very room!"
Dorothy clasped her hands in dumb agony, and her terrified eyes never left the form of him who had once been her lover.
"You do not answer me, Mrs. Brown," said the doctor, frowning. "What have you to say?"
"What could I say?" she sobbed, piteously.
"The one who is guilty of this diabolical deed must be held accountable for it," said the doctor, facing her sternly. "A just punishment must and shall be meted out to the wicked party. If you say that you will not admit the truth, then I will turn the affair over to Mr. Garner, here and now!"
What would they do with Jack? In imagination she saw him in a prison cell, perhaps doomed to drag out all the after years of his life there, and the thought seemed to drive her to madness.
"I will take it upon myself, and Jack shall go free," she said to herself--"yes blameless and free."
Slowly the doctor stepped around to Jack's side.
"What have you to say in this matter, Mr. Garner?" he said.
"Let me answer instead of him," Dorothy panted, hoa.r.s.ely. "He knows nothing about it. Oh, hear me!--listen to me, I pray you! It is I--I whom you must hold guilty. Do with me as you will!"
Both of the doctors nodded toward each other. A groan broke from Garner's lips--this acknowledgement was so terrible for him to hear from this strange woman's lips.
"Who are you, and what was your motive for this horrible crime?" asked the doctor, sternly. "You must make a clean breast of why you attempted to poison Miss Staples, here and now."
There was one person in that room who listened to Dorothy's most extraordinary confession, white with terror, and that was--Nadine Holt.
She knew full well that the stranger was entirely guiltless; then why under heaven had she placed herself in such a horrible position?
Nadine recovered her outward composure by a great effort, and listened intently to what they were saying.
"You must reveal your ident.i.ty here and now," Doctor Crandall was repeating, vehemently, "or I shall force you to do so. When we once become convinced who you are, and your motive for this crime, then we will know how to proceed against you. In the first place, I order you to remove both the wig and gla.s.ses which we have discovered that you are wearing. Your ident.i.ty is the first step in this matter."
Like a flash Dorothy flung herself at Jack Garner's feet.
Ere he could put out his hand toward her, Doctor Crandall had sprung forward, and with a quick motion gently but deftly s.n.a.t.c.hed the wig from her head and the gla.s.ses from her eyes, and Dorothy--Dorothy Glenn stood revealed, in all her terror, before the astonished gaze of Jack Garner and Nadine Holt.
"You--you!" cried Jack, in horror too great for words.
"Save me--save me!" gasped the girl.
He wondered that he did not go mad, then and there at the sight of her.
"Let me go!" she panted, imploring.
The doctor shook his head.
"You must be held answerable for your crime," he said, sternly. "You showed no pity to the girl lying here so helpless, and why should it be shown you? She lies here in a deep sleep, and when she awakens we shall know whether it is life or death she has to face. We hope it is life, but we can not be too sure. In the interim, while we decide your fate, you should thank Heaven that your plans are frustrated. We can not decide, until the crisis is past, as to what is best to be done."
"Jack," she whispered again, "let me go far away and leave you with Jessie. She will recover, and you will marry her and be happy after all, and I--I will never cross your path again."
He tore away the white little hands that clung to him, and turned to the doctors. They were awed at the sight of his white, desperate face.
"You have both a.s.sured me that Miss Staples will not die from this poisoning," he said, hoa.r.s.ely; "and I--I, the one most vitally interested in this affair, say to you: Open that door and let her go her way."
Ah, G.o.d! that they should meet and part like this, after all those weary months of heartache!
"G.o.d only knows her object in coming here in disguise and committing this awful crime," was his mental thought; but aloud, he only said:
"Go, and may Heaven forgive you! Go to the father of your child."
A terrible lump rose in his throat; he could say no more.
The little one had crept out of Dorothy's arms, and out into the middle of the floor; but Dorothy never, in that awful moment, thought of the child. She was so stunned that the full import of his words did not strike her just then.
She only knew that he was opening the door for her, and harshly commanding her to go.
Like a storm-driven swallow, with one quick glance in his face, the girl turned and fled from the room, and out of the house.
"You were too generous toward her," cried one of the doctors. "See! she has abandoned her little child, Mr. Garner."
Then suddenly the doctor stopped short, and looked first at the fair-haired, beautiful babe, then at Mr. Garner, and said no more.
CHAPTER x.x.xVIII.
When Dorothy fled so precipitately from the room, she fairly ran into the arms of a man who was crouching at one side, listening intently.
With a muttered imprecation, he drew back, and it was then Dorothy saw his face.
"Hus.h.!.+ On your life, don't dare to make an outcry!" cried the harsh voice of Harry Kendal.
Before she could utter the scream that welled up from her heart, he had seized her in his strong arms, thrown a dark shawl over her head, dashed out into the street with her, and into a cab in waiting.
Too weak to struggle, too weak to cry out, her head fell backward upon her abductor's shoulder, and she knew no more.
When she awoke to consciousness of what was transpiring about her, she found herself still in the coach beside Kendal, and the vehicle was whirling along through the suns.h.i.+ne and shadow of a country road with alarming rapidity.
"Dorothy--my darling Dorothy!" he cried, clasping her hands and showering kisses upon her upturned face. "Oh, Dorothy, my little bride that is to be, why did you fly from me so cruelly the morning after the great ball at our home in Yonkers?"
"Do not speak to me! Stop this coach immediately, and let me get out!"
she cried. "How dare you attempt to thrust your unwelcome face in my way again? Go back to Iris Vincent, for whom you left me; or to Nadine Holt, whose heart and whose life you have wrecked. I know you for what you are, and I abhor you a thousand times more than I ever imagined I fancied you."
"Do you mean that you do not wish to go back to the Yonkers home and marry me?" he demanded.
But before she could find time to reply, he went on: