The Auction Block Part 41
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"That's a lie!" Lorelei's voice was like a whip.
Mr. Wharton eyed her grimly. "That's something for Bob to determine--I have only the indications to go on. I don't blame him for losing his wits--you're very good-looking--but the affair must end. You're not a girl I'd care to have in my family--pardon my bluntness."
She met his eyes fairly. At no time had she flinched before him, although inwardly she had cringed and her flesh had quivered at his merciless attack.
"You have told Bob the truth," she began, slowly, "in the worst possible way; you have put me in the most unfavorable light. I dare say I never would have had the courage to tell him myself, although he deserves to know. I've been pretty--commercial-- because I had to be, but I never sold myself, and I sha'n't begin now. Bob isn't a child; he's nearly thirty years old--old enough to make up his own mind--and he must make this decision, not I."
Bob opened his lips, but his father forestalled him.
"What do you mean by that?"
"I have no price. If he's sick of the match we'll end it, and it won't cost you a cent."
Bob looked inscrutable; his father smiled for the first time during the interview.
"That's very decent of you," he said, "but of course I sha'n't put the good faith of your offer to the test. I don't want something for nothing. I'll take care of you nicely."
Thus far Bob had yielded precedence to his father, but he could no longer restrain himself. "Now let me take the chair," he commanded, easily. "My mind is made up. You see, I didn't marry 'Peter Knight, residence Vale,' nor 'James Knight, reputation bad,' nor even 'Mathilda Knight, wife of Peter.' I married this kid, and the books are closed. You say the Knights are a bad lot, and Lorelei's reputation is a trifle discolored: maybe you're right, but mine has some inky blots on it, too, and I guess the cleanest part of it would just about match the darkest that hers can show. I seem to have all the best of the deal."
"Don't be an a.s.s," growled his father.
"I've always been one--I may as well be consistent" Bob felt the slender form at his side begin to tremble, and smiled down into the troubled blue eyes upturned to his. "Maybe we'll both have to do some forgiving and forgetting. I believe that's usual nowadays."
"Oh, I'm not whitewas.h.i.+ng you," Hannibal snapped. "She probably knows what you are."
"I do," agreed Lorelei. "He's a--drunkard, and everything that means. But you taught him to drink before he could choose for himself."
Mr. Wharton smiled sneeringly. "Admirable! I begin to see that you're more than a pretty woman. Get his sympathy; it's good business. Now he'll think he must act the man. But that will wear off. And understand this: you can't graft off me. You and your family are due for a great disappointment. Bob hasn't anything, and he won't have until I die, but I'm good for thirty years yet.
I'm not going to disinherit him. I'm merely going to wait until you both get tired. Take my word for it, poverty is the most tiresome thing in the world."
"We can manage," said Lorelei.
"You speak for yourself, but he can't make a living--unless he has something in him that I never discovered. I fear you'll find him rather a heavy burden."
Throughout the interview Mr. Wharton had kept his temper quite perfectly, and his coolness at this moment argued a greater fixity of purpose than might have been inferred from a display of rage.
He made a final appeal to his son: "Can't you see that it won't do at all, Bob? I won't stand parasites, unless they're my own.
Either have done with the matter and let me pay the charges or--go through to the bitter finish on your own feet. She's supporting three loafers; I dare say she can take care of another, but it isn't quite right to put it upon her--she's sure to weary of it sometime. You'll notice I've said nothing about your mother so far, but--she's with me in this. I'll be in the city for several days, and I'd like to have you return to Pittsburg with me when I go. Mother is expecting you. If you decide to stick it out--"
Wharton's face showed more than a trace of feeling, his deep voice lowered a tone--"you may go to h.e.l.l, with my compliments, and I'll sit on the lid to keep you there."
He rose, took his hat, and stalked out of the apartment without so much as a backward glance.
CHAPTER XVIII
"Whew! That was a knockout. But who got licked?" Bob went to the little sideboard and helped himself to a stiff drink.
"Did he mean it?"
"My dear, time wears away mountains, and rivers dry up, and the whole solar system is gradually running down, I believe; but dad isn't governed by any natural laws whatsoever. He's built of reinforced concrete, and time hardens him. He's impervious to rust or decay, and gravity exerts no power over him."
"Then I think you'd better make your choice to-night."
Bob's eyes opened. "I have. Don't you understand? I'm going to stand pat--that is, unless"--he hesitated, his smile was a bit uncertain--"unless you're sick of your bargain. I'm afraid you haven't come out of the deal very well. You thought I was rich-- and so did I until a moment ago--but I'm not. I've run through a good deal. I don't blame you for considering me a fine catch or for marrying me. You see, I never expected to find a girl who'd take me for anything except my money, so I'm not offended or disappointed or surprised. A bank-account looms up just as big on Fifth Avenue as it does on Amsterdam, and there aren't any more love matches over there than elsewhere. I'm not blind to my short- comings, either; there are a lot of bad habits waiting to be acquired by a chap with time and money like me. I can't live without booze; I don't know how to earn a living; I'm a corking spendthrift. That's one side. Balanced against that, I possess-- let me see--I possess a fair sense of humor. Not a very even account, is it?"
For once in his life Bob showed unmistakable self-consciousness; this was, so far as Lorelei knew, his maiden effort to be serious.
He ran on hurriedly: "What I mean to convey is this: I have no regrets, no questions to ask, no reproaches. I got all I expected, and all I was ent.i.tled to when I married you. But it seems that you've been cheated, and--I'm ready to do the square thing. I'll step aside and give you another chance, if you say so."
During this little declaration Lorelei had watched him keenly; she appeared to be seriously weighing his offer.
"I was getting pretty tired of things," he added, "and I s'pose I'd have wound up in the D. T. parlors of some highly exclusive inst.i.tution or behind a bath-room door with a gas-tube in my teeth. But--I met you, and you went to my head. I wanted you worse than I ever wanted anything--worse even than I ever wanted liquor.
And now I have you. I've had you for one day, and that's something. I suppose it's silly to talk about starting over--I don't want to reform if I don't have to; moderation strikes me as an awful cold proposition; but it looks as if reform were indicated if I'm to keep you. I'm just an alb.u.m of expensive habits, and--we're broke. Maybe I could--do something with myself if you took a hand. It's a good deal to ask of a girl like you, but"--he regarded her timidly, then averted his eyes--"if you cared to try it we MIGHT make it go for a while. And you might get to care for me a little--if I improve." Again he paused hopefully.
"I've been as honest as I know how. Now, won't you be the same?"
Lorelei roused herself, and spoke with quiet decision.
"I'll go through to the end, Bob."
Bob started and uttered an inarticulate word or two; in his face was a light of gladness that went to the girl's heart. His name had risen freely to her lips; he felt as if she had laid her hand in his with a declaration of absolute trust.
"You mean that?"
She nodded.
He took her in his arms and kissed her gently; then, feeling her warm against his breast, he burst the bonds that had restrained him up to this moment and covered her face, her neck, her hair with pa.s.sionate caresses. For the first time since his delirium of the night before he abandoned himself to the hunger her beauty excited, and she offered him no resistance.
At last she freed herself, and, straightening the disorder of her hair, smiled at him mistily.
"Wait. Please--"
"Beautiful!" His eyes were aflame. "You're my wife. Nothing can change that."
"Nothing except--yourself. Now, you MUST listen to me." She forced him reluctantly into his chair and seated herself opposite. He leaned forward and kissed her once more, then seized her hand and held it. At intervals he crushed his lips into its pink palm. "We must start honestly," she began. "Do you mind if I hurt you?"
"You can't hurt me so long as you don't--leave me. Your eyes have haunted me every night. I've seen the curve of your neck--your lips. No woman was ever so perfect, so maddening."
"Always that. You're not a husband at this moment; you're only a man."
He frowned slightly.
"That's what makes this whole matter so difficult," she went on.
"Don't you see?"
He shook his head.
"You don't love me, you're drunk with--something altogether different to love. ... It's true," she insisted. "You show it. You don't even know the real me."
The Auction Block Part 41
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The Auction Block Part 41 summary
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