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"I can't believe it. She wouldn't send the poor little thing up there all alone; no, sir! I--I wouldn't let her do it." He was pacing the floor. His forehead was moist.
"Miss Duluth appreciates one condition that you don't seem able to grasp," said Fairfax, bluntly. "She wants to keep the child as far removed from stage life and its environments as possible. She wants her to have every advantage, every opportunity to grow up entirely out of reach of the--er--influences which now threaten to surround her."
Harvey stopped in front of him. "Is this what you came out here for, Mr. Fairfax? Did Nellie tell you to do this?"
"I will be perfectly frank with you. She asked me to come out and talk it over with you."
"Why didn't she come herself?"
"She evidently was afraid that you would overrule her in the matter."
"I never overruled her in my life," cried Harvey. "She isn't afraid of me. There's something else."
"I can only say, sir, that she intends to put the child in the convent before Christmas. She goes on the road after the holidays," said Fairfax, setting his huge jaw.
Harvey sat down suddenly, limp as a rag. His mouth filled with water--a cold, sickening moisture that rendered him speechless for a moment. He swallowed painfully. His eyes swept the little room as if in search of something to prove that this was the place for Phoebe--this quiet, happy little cottage of theirs.
"Before Christmas?" he murmured.
"See here, Mr.--ah--Mr., here is the situation in a nutsh.e.l.l:--Nellie doesn't see why she should be keeping up two establishments. It's expensive. The child will be comfortable and happy in the convent and this house will be off her hands. She----"
"Why don't she give up her flat in town?" demanded Harvey, miserably.
"That's where the money goes."
"She expects to give it up the first of the year," said Fairfax. "The road tour lasts till May. She is going to Europe for the summer."
"To Europe?" gasped Harvey, feeling the floor sink under his feet.
He did not think to inquire what was to become of him in the new arrangement.
"She needs a sea voyage, travel--a long vacation, in fact. It is fully decided. So, you see, the convent is the place for Phoebe."
"But where do I come in?" cried the unhappy father. "Does she think for a minute that I will put my child in a convent so that we may be free to go to Europe and do things like that? No, sir! Dammit, I won't go to Europe and leave Phoebe in a----"
Fairfax was getting tired of the argument. Moreover, he was uncomfortable and decidedly impatient to have it over with. He cut in rather harshly on the other's lamentations.
"If you think she's going to take you to Europe, you're very much mistaken. Why, man, have you no pride? Can't you understand what a d.a.m.ned useless bit of dead weight you are, hanging to her neck?"
It was out at last. Harvey sat there staring at him, very still; such a pathetic figure that it seemed like rank cowardice to strike again.
And yet Fairfax, now that he had begun, was eager to go on striking this helpless, inoffensive creature with all the frenzy of the brutal victor who stamps out the life of his vanquished foe.
"She supports you. You haven't earned a dollar in four years. I have it from her, and from others. It is commonly understood that you won't work, you won't do a stroke toward supporting the child. You are a leech, a barnacle, a--a--well, a loafer. If you had a drop of real man's blood in you, you'd get out and earn enough to buy clothes for yourself, at least, and the money for a hair cut or a shoe s.h.i.+ne. She has been too good to you, my little man. You can't blame her for getting tired of it. The great wonder is that she has stood for it so long."
Words struggled from Harvey's pallid lips.
"But she loves me," he said. "It's all understood between us. I gave her the start in life. She will tell you so. I----"
"You never did a thing for her in your life," broke in the big man, harshly. He was consumed by an ungovernable hatred for this little man who was the husband of the woman he coveted.
"I've always wanted to get a job. She wouldn't let me," protested Harvey, a red spot coming into each of his cheeks. "I don't want to take the money she earns. I never have wanted to. But she says my place is here at home, with Phoebe. Somebody's got to look after the child. We've talked it over a----"
"I don't want to hear about it," snapped Fairfax, hitting the arm of his chair with his fist. "You're no good, that's all there is to it.
You are a joke, a laughing stock. Do you suppose that she can possibly love a man like you? A woman wants a man about her, not the caricature of one."
"I intend to get a job as soon as----" began Harvey, as if he had not heard a word his visitor was saying.
"Now, see here," exclaimed Fairfax, coming to his feet. "I'm a man of few words. I came out here to make you a proposition. It is between you and me, and no one need be the wiser. I'm not such a fool as to intrust a thing of this kind to an outsider. Is there any likelihood of any one hearing us?"
Nellie's husband shrank lower into his chair and shook his head. He seemed to have lost the power of speech. Fairfax drew a chair up closer, however, and lowered his voice.
"You've got a price. Men of your type always have. I told Nellie I would see you to-day. I'll be plain with you. She's tired of you, of this miserable attachment. You are impossible. That's settled. We won't go into that. Now I'm here, man to man, to find out how much you will take and agree to a separation."
Harvey stiffened. He thought for a moment that his heart had stopped beating.
"I don't believe I understand," he muttered.
"Don't you understand the word 'separation'?"
"Agree to a separation from what? Great G.o.d, you don't mean a separation from Phoebe?"
"Don't be a fool! Use your brain, if you've got one."
"Do--you--mean--Nellie?" fell slowly, painfully from the dry lips of the little man in the Morris chair.
"Certainly."
"Does she want to--to leave me?" The tears started in his big blue eyes. He blinked violently.
"It has come to that. She can't go on as she has been going. It's ridiculous. You are anxious to go back to Blakeville, she says. Well, that's where you belong. Somebody's drug store out there you'd like to own, I believe. Now, I am prepared to see that you get that drug store and a matter of ten or twenty thousand dollars besides. Money means nothing to me. All you have to do is to make no answer to the charges she will bring----"
Harvey leaped to his feet with a cry of abject pain.
"Did she send you here to say this to me?" he cried, shrilly, his figure shaking with suppressed fury.
"No," said Fairfax, involuntarily drawing back. "This is between you and me. She doesn't know----"
"Then, d.a.m.n you!" shrieked Harvey, shaking his fist in the big man's face, "what do you mean by coming here like this? What do you think I am? Get out of here! I'm a joke, am I? Well, I'll show you and her and everybody else that I'm a h.e.l.l of a joke, let me tell you that! I was good enough for her once. I won her away from every fellow in Blakeville. I can do it again. I'll show you, you big bluffer! Now, get out! Don't you ever come here again, and--don't you ever go near my wife again!"
Fairfax had arisen. He was smiling, despite his astonishment.
"I fancy you will find you can't go so far as that," he sneered.
"Get out, or I'll throw you out!"
"Better think it over. Twenty-five thousand and no questions asked.
Take a day or two to think----"
With a shriek of rage Harvey threw himself at the big man, striking out with all his might. Taken by surprise, Fairfax fell away before the attack, which, though seemingly impotent, was as fierce as that of a wildcat.