Part 6 (2/2)

”That horrid woman has been staring at us all the time. I don't see what you see in her to admire.”

Poor Barker's admiration had been limited to a few words of civility in the enforced contact of that huge caravansary and in his quiet, youthful recognition of her striking personality. But he was just then too preoccupied with his interview with Stacy to reply, and perhaps he did not quite understand his wife. It was odd how many things he did not quite understand now about Kitty, but that he knew must be HIS fault.

But Mrs. Barker apparently did not require, after the fas.h.i.+on of her s.e.x, a reply. For the next moment, as they moved towards their rooms, she said impatiently, ”Well, you don't tell what Stacy said. Did you get the money?”

I grieve to say that this soul of truth and frankness lied--only to his wife. Perhaps he considered it only lying to HIMSELF, a thing of which he was at times miserably conscious. ”It wasn't necessary, dear,” he said; ”he advised me to sell my securities in the bank; and if you only knew how dreadfully busy he is.”

Mrs. Barker curled her pretty lip. ”It doesn't take very long to lend ten thousand dollars!” she said. ”But that's what I always tell you.

You have about made me sick by singing the praises of those wonderful partners of yours, and here you ask a favor of one of them and he tells you to sell your securities! And you know, and he knows, they're worth next to nothing.”

”You don't understand, dear”--began Barker.

”I understand that you've given your word to poor Harry,” said Mrs. Barker in pretty indignation, ”who's responsible for the Ditch purchase.”

”And I shall keep it. I always do,” said Barker very quietly, but with that same singular expression of face that had puzzled Stacy. But Mrs. Barker, who, perhaps, knew her husband better, said in an altered voice:--

”But HOW can you, dear?”

”If I'm short a thousand or two I'll ask your father.”

Mrs. Barker was silent. ”Father's so very much harried now, George. Why don't you simply throw the whole thing up?”

”But I've given my word to your cousin Henry.”

”Yes, but only your WORD. There was no written agreement. And you couldn't even hold him to it.”

Barker opened his frank eyes in astonishment. Her own cousin, too! And they were Stacy's very words!

”Besides,” added Mrs. Barker audaciously, ”he could get rid of it elsewhere. He had another offer, but he thought yours the best. So don't be silly.”

By this time they had reached their rooms. Barker, apparently dismissing the subject from his mind with characteristic buoyancy, turned into the bedroom and walked smilingly towards a small crib which stood in the corner. ”Why, he's gone!” he said in some dismay.

”Well,” said Mrs. Barker a little impatiently, ”you didn't expect me to take him into the public parlor, where I was seeing visitors, did you?

I sent him out with the nurse into the lower hall to play with the other children.”

A shade momentarily pa.s.sed over Barker's face. He always looked forward to meeting the child when he came back. He had a belief, based on no grounds whatever, that the little creature understood him. And he had a father's doubt of the wholesomeness of other people's children who were born into the world indiscriminately and not under the exceptional conditions of his own. ”I'll go and fetch him,” he said.

”You haven't told me anything about your interview; what you did and what your good friend Stacy said,” said Mrs. Barker, dropping languidly into a chair. ”And really if you are simply running away again after that child, I might just as well have asked Captain Heath to stay longer.”

”Oh, as to Stacy,” said Barker, dropping beside her and taking her hand; ”well, dear, he was awfully busy, you know, and shut up in the innermost office like the agate in one of the j.a.panese nests of boxes. But,” he continued, brightening up, ”just the same dear old Jim Stacy of Heavy Tree Hill, when I first knew you. Lord! dear, how it all came back to me! That day I proposed to you in the belief that I was unexpectedly rich and even bought a claim for the boys on the strength of it, and how I came back to them to find that they had made a big strike on the very claim. Lord! I remember how I was so afraid to tell them about you--and how they guessed it--that dear old Stacy one of the first.”

”Yes,” said Mrs. Barker, ”and I hope your friend Stacy remembered that but for ME, when you found out that you were not rich, you'd have given up the claim, but that I really deceived my own father to make you keep it. I've often worried over that, George,” she said pensively, turning a diamond bracelet around her pretty wrist, ”although I never said anything about it.”

”But, Kitty darling,” said Barker, grasping his wife's hand, ”I gave my note for it; you know you said that was bargain enough, and I had better wait until the note was due, and until I found I couldn't pay, before I gave up the claim. It was very clever of you, and the boys all said so, too. But you never deceived your father, dear,” he said, looking at her gravely, ”for I should have told him everything.”

”Of course, if you look at it in that way,” said his wife languidly, ”it's nothing; only I think it ought to be remembered when people go about saying papa ruined you with his hotel schemes.”

”Who dares say that?” said Barker indignantly.

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