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The sub-editor left Madeira by the next calling steamer, liberally remunerated for his services.
Relieved of his presence, the Carleighs and Mrs. Veynol stayed on. They stayed for another fortnight. Then they traveled to Nice, arriving a little in advance of the season.
No one of them, however, was quite happy. The serpent had entered paradise, and its sweetest fruits had turned acrid.
In these days Sir Caryll talked more with his mother-in-law than he did with his wife. Her experience was wider, and she had more imagination.
Occasionally there were revelations that were like sudden drops into icy waters. For instance, one day when they had gone to Monte Carlo together, leaving Rosamond at Nice with a headache or some other ill, she surprised him by saying:
"It's odd Nina Darling never told you of us."
"You mean she knew?" he asked in astonishment.
"I'm not sure. We've never met--since. But we were great friends five years ago in Simla."
"It isn't possible she knows?" said Carleigh.
"I wouldn't be certain," said the whilom Mrs. Ramsay. "She can keep a secret. None better. You know, there's no doubt she shot poor Darling.
They were alone in the gun-room together, and he couldn't have done it himself."
"I'll never believe that," he returned.
"Then you'll never believe the truth."
"But why? What was her object?"
"She wanted him out of the way to marry Lord Kneedrock, who was supposed to be dead, but was only buried for eight years in the South Seas."
"Nonsense!" said Carleigh. "She doesn't love Kneedrock. Never did. I've seen them together. I've heard them both talk, and I know."
"I told you she could keep a secret," said Sibylla Veynol.
They returned to Nice before dinner, and Carleigh found his wife reading.
"Feeling more fit?" he asked.
"I shall never feel more fit," she answered without looking up from her book.
"You don't mean it's incurable? Have you had in the physician?"
"Oh, it's not physical," she replied petulantly. "It's mental. It's the conditions. I'm sick of everything. You don't care in the least for me any more. You haven't since mama came back. You had an a.s.signation with her in the gardens of the hotel at Funchal the very next morning, and you kissed her there under my window. I saw you."
The thing took him so by surprise that he couldn't muster a single word for defense.
"I do wish you'd leave me," she went on. "Why don't you ask mama to bolt with you? I'm sure she would, and then I'd be rid of you both."
He nearly reeled under the shock of that speech. It held him still mute.
It was painfully plain that something was wrong in a social fabric which made it possible for a wife to say such a thing--a young and pretty wife, too. And to say it without seeming to find it very heinous.
He noticed that she yawned and went on reading her book.
When he fully sensed it all, hours later, alone on the promenade, he decided to go off. But not with "mama."
CHAPTER XXIII
A Mysterious Widow of Bath
Just as soon as she could possibly manage it Nina left the Dalgries, and alone with her maid hied herself to that stupidest of all English resorts--Bath.
There she took a flat and secured two servants, and kept herself so secluded that the story went abroad that the blind beggar in the famous poem was a beauty beside her.
Some said that she was sightless and some that she had been scarred beyond all recognition; but n.o.body really knew because n.o.body had really seen her.
n.o.body, that is to say, except her surgeon and his a.s.sistant, and Delphine, the French maid.
Nina chose Bath because of this wonderful surgeon, Dr. Pottow, who was connected with the chief hospital there, and knew more about the skin and cutaneous affections than any man in England.
He promised to restore her if restoration were possible, but he was very reticent about the method until his success was a.s.sured. Then he told her that it had been necessary to resort to the grafting of new and healthy skin to take the place of that which had been scorched practically to a cinder.
"But where did you get it?" Nina asked, deeply interested. She knew that it had not been taken from her and transplanted.
"I was fortunate enough to find a volunteer," answered the surgeon.
"I suppose she required some fabulous price," Nina rejoined. "But if it has given me back an unmarred countenance I shall be only too glad to pay."
"There is nothing to pay," Dr. Pottow told her. "He gave it gratuitously, and was glad to."
"_He_ gave it!" exclaimed the patient, starting up, impelled by flooding emotions.
"Yes, he."
"Shall I have to shave?" she asked, seriously startled by the dread possibility.
"No," came the answer with a smile. "The skin wasn't from his chin.
There'll be no beard to bother you."
"I'd much rather had it from my own s.e.x," she pouted.
"My s.e.x is less selfish," said the surgeon. "Few women would sacrifice their cuticle that an afflicted sister might regain her beauty."
"Still I don't like the idea of being even that much man," she insisted.
"I have always been so thoroughly--so entirely feminine."
"The cells are constantly renewing themselves." It was the scientist speaking. "You will wear these only temporarily."