A Husband by Proxy | Page 5

Jack Steele
a woman, is always there."
"Have you acquainted her with the fact of your marriage?"
"Certainly. She is an English servant. She asks no questions. But I told her my husband is away from town and will be absent almost constantly for the next two or three months."
Garrison slightly elevated his brows, in acknowledgment of the thoroughness of her arrangements.
"I have never attempted much acting--a little at private theatricals," he told her; "but of course we shall both be obliged to play this little domestic comedy with some degree of art."
She seemed prepared for that also, despite the sudden crimson of her cheeks.
"Certainly."
"One more detail," he added. "You have probably found it necessary to withhold certain facts from my knowledge. I trust I shall not be led into awkward blunders. I shall do my best, and for the rest--I beg of you to conduct the affair according to your own requirements and judgment."
The slightly veiled smile in his eyes did not escape her observation. Nevertheless, she accepted his proposal quite as a matter of course.
"Thank you. I am glad you relieved me of the necessity of making some such suggestion. I think that is all--for the present." She stood up, and, fingering her glove, glanced down at the table for a moment. "May I pay, say, two hundred dollars now, as a retainer?"
"I shall be gratified if you will," he answered.
In silence she counted out the money, which she took from a purse in a bag. The bills lay there in a heap.
"When you wish any more, will you please let me know?" she said. "And when I require your services I will wire. Perhaps I'd better take both this office and your house address."
He wrote them both on a card and placed it in her hand.
"Thank you," she murmured. She closed her purse, hesitated a moment, then raised her eyes to his. Quite coldly she added: "Good-afternoon."
"Good-day," answered Garrison.
He opened the door, bowed to her slightly as she passed--then faced about and stared at the money that lay upon his desk.
CHAPTER II
A SECOND EMPLOYMENT
For a moment, when he found himself alone, Garrison stood absolutely motionless beside the door. Slowly he came to the desk again, and slowly he assembled the bills. He rolled them in a neat, tight wad, and held them in his hand.
Word for word and look for look he reviewed the recent dialogue, shaking his head at the end.
He had never been so puzzled in his life.
The situation, his visitor--all of it baffled him utterly. Had not the money remained in his grasp he might have believed he was dreaming.
"She was frightened, and yet she had a most remarkable amount of nerve," he reflected. "She might be an heiress, an actress, or a princess. She may be actually married--and then again she may not; probably not, since two husbands on the scene would be embarrassing."
"She may be playing at any sort of a game, financial, political, or domestic--therefore dangerous, safe, or commonplace, full of intrigue, or a mystery, or the silliest caprice.
"She--oh, Lord--I don't know! She is beautiful--that much is certain. She seems to be honest. Those deep, brown eyes go with innocence--and also with scheming; in which respect they precisely resemble blue eyes, and gray, and all the other feminine colors. And yet she seemed, well, helpless, worried--almost desperate. She must be desperate and helpless."
Again, in fancy, he was looking in her face, and something was stirring in his blood. That was all he really knew. She had stirred him--and he was glad of the meeting--glad he had entered her employment.
He placed the roll of money in his pocket, then looked across his desk at the clean, white letter which the postman had recently delivered.
He took it up, paused again to wonder at the meaning of what had occurred, then tore the envelope and drew forth the contents.
He had barely spread the letter open when a knock on the door startled every thought in his brain.
His first conclusion was that Mrs. Fairfax had returned to repudiate her bargain and ask the surrender of her money. With a smile for any fate, he crossed the room and opened the door.
In the hallway stood a man--a little, sharp-faced, small-eyed, thin-nosed person, with a very white complexion, and a large, smooth-shaved mouth, open as if in a smile that never ceased.
"Garrison?" he said sharply. "Wicks--I'm Wicks."
"Wicks?" said Garrison. "Come in."
Mr. Wicks stepped in with a snap-like alacrity. "Read your letter," he said--"read your letter."
Obediently Garrison perused the missive in hand, typed on the steel-plate stationery of the New York Immutable Life Insurance Company:
"DEAR SIR:
"At the recommendation of our counsel, Mr. Sperry Lochlan, who is still abroad, we desire to secure your services in a professional capacity. Our Mr. Wicks will call upon you this afternoon to explain the nature of
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