need of acting, and the admiration blazing in his gaze was more than genuine; it was thoroughly spontaneous and involuntary.
The moment was awkward and fraught with suspense for Garrison, as he found himself subjected to the flagrantly unfriendly appraisement of his newly acquired relations.
Aunt Jill had been wilted for a moment only. She looked their visitor over with undisguised contempt.
"Well, I dare say you look respectable and healthy," she said, as if conceding a point with no little reluctance, "but appearances are very deceiving."
"Thank you," said Garrison. He sat down near Dorothy, occupying a small settee.
If Mrs. Robinson was personally pugnacious, her husband harbored far more vicious emotions. Garrison felt this in his manner. The man was looking at him narrowly.
"How much of your time have you spent with your wife since your marriage?" he demanded, without the slightest preliminary introduction to the subject.
Garrison realized at once that Dorothy might have prepared a harmless fiction with which his answers might not correspond. He assumed a calm and deliberation he was far from feeling, as he said:
"I was not aware that I should be obliged to account to anyone save Dorothy for my goings and comings. Up to the present I believe she has been quite well satisfied with my deportment; haven't you, Dorothy?"
"Perfectly," said Dorothy, whose utterance was perhaps a trifle faint. "Can't we all be friends--and talk about----"
"I prefer to talk about this for a moment," interrupted her uncle, still regarding Garrison with the closest scrutiny. "What's your business, anyway, Mr. Fairfax?"
Garrison, adhering to a policy of telling the truth with the greatest possible frequency, and aware that evasion would avail them nothing, waited the fraction of a minute for Dorothy to speak. She was silent. He felt she had not committed herself or him upon the subject.
"I am engaged at present in some insurance business," he said. "It will take me out of town to-night, and keep me away for a somewhat indefinite period."
"H'm!" said Mr. Robinson. "I suppose you'll quit your present employment pretty soon?"
With no possible chance of comprehending the drift of inquiry, Garrison responded:
"Possibly."
"I thought so!" exclaimed the old man, with unconcealed asperity. "Marrying for money is much more remunerative, hey?"
"Oh, uncle!" said Dorothy. Her pain and surprise were quite genuine.
Garrison colored instantly.
He might have been hopelessly floundering in a moment had not a natural indignation risen in his blood.
"Please remember that up to this evening you and I have been absolute strangers," he said, with some heat. "I am not the kind to marry for money. Had I done so I should not continue in my present calling for a very modest compensation."
He felt that Dorothy might misunderstand or even doubt his resolution to go on with her requirements. He added pointedly:
"I have undertaken certain assignments for my present employers which I mean to put through to the end, and no one aware of my motives could charge me with anything sordid."
Dorothy rose, crossed the space between her chair and the small settee where Garrison was seated, took the place at his side, and shyly laid her hand upon his own. It was a natural, wifely thing to do. Garrison recognized her perfect acting. A tingle of strange, lawless joy ran through his veins; nevertheless, he still faced Robinson, for his anger had been no pretense.
There was something in his bearing, when aroused, that invited caution. He was not a man with whom to trifle. Mrs. Robinson, having felt it before, underwent the experience anew.
"Let's not start off with a row," she said. "No one means to offend you, Mr. Fairfax."
"What do you think he'll do?" demanded her husband. "Order us out of the house? It ain't his yet, and he knows it."
Garrison knew nothing concerning the ownership of the house. Mr. Robinson's observation gave him a hint, however, that Dorothy's husband, or Dorothy herself, would presumably own this dwelling soon, but that something had occurred to delay the actual possession.
"I came to see Dorothy, and for no other purpose," he said. "I haven't the slightest desire or intention to offend her relatives."
If Robinson and his wife understood the hint that he would be pleased to see Dorothy alone, they failed to act upon it.
"We'll take your future operations as our guide," said Mr. Robinson significantly. "Protestations cost nothing."
Mrs. Robinson, far more shrewd than her husband, in her way, had begun to realize that Garrison was not a man either to be frightened or bullied.
"I'm sure we shall all be friends," she said. "What's the use of fighting? If, as Mr. Fairfax says, he did not marry Dorothy for money----"
Her husband interrupted. "I don't believe it! Will you tell me, Mr. Fairfax, that when you married my niece you were not aware of her prospects?"
"I knew absolutely nothing of her prospects," said Garrison, who
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