‘It was – it was about the care I gave, or didn’t give, the baby. I feel awfully to have to say it, but George did not think I did my full duty by the child. He said there was no need of its crying so; that if I gave it the proper attention it would not keep the neighbours and himself awake half the night. And I – I got angry and insisted that I did the best I could; that the child was naturally fretful and that if he wasn’t satisfied with my way of looking after it, he might try his. All of which was very wrong and unreasonable on my part, as witness the awful punishment which followed.’
‘And what made you get up and leave him?’
‘The growl he gave me in reply. When I heard that, I bounded out of bed and said I was going to the spare room to sleep; and if the baby cried he might just try what he could do himself to stop it.’
‘And he answered?’
‘This, just this – I shall never forget his words as long as I live – “If you go, you need not expect me to let you in again no matter what happens.”’
‘He said that?’
‘And locked the door after me. You see I could not tell all that.’
‘It might have been better if you had. It was such a natural quarrel and so unprovocative of actual tragedy.’
Mrs Hammond was silent. It was not difficult to see that she had no very keen regrets for her husband personally. But then he was not a very estimable man nor in any respect her equal.
‘You were not happy with him,’ Violet ventured to remark.
‘I was not a fully contented woman. But for all that he had no cause to complain of me except for the reason I have mentioned. I was not a very intelligent mother. But if the baby were living now – O, if he were living now – with what devotion I should care for him.’
She was on her feet, her arms were raised, her face impassioned with feeling. Violet, gazing at her, heaved a little sigh. It was perhaps in keeping with the situation, perhaps extraneous to it, but whatever its source, it marked a change in her manner. With no further check upon her sympathy, she said very softly:
‘It is well with the child.’
The mother stiffened, swayed, and then burst into wild weeping.
‘But not with me,’ she cried, ‘not with me. I am desolate and bereft. I have not even a home in which to hide my grief and no prospect of one.’
‘But,’ interposed Violet, ‘surely your husband left you something? You cannot be quite penniless?’
‘My husband left nothing,’ was the answer, uttered without bitterness, but with all the hardness of fact. ‘He had debts. I shall pay those debts. When these and other necessary expenses are liquidated, there will be but little left. He made no secret of the fact that he lived close up to his means. That is why he was induced to take on a life insurance. Not a friend of his but knows his improvidence. I – I have not even jewels. I have only my determination and an absolute conviction as to the real nature of my husband’s death.’
‘What is the name of the man you secretly believe to have shot your husband from the trellis?’
Mrs Hammond told her.
It was a new one to Violet. She said so and then asked:
‘What else can you tell me about him?’
‘Nothing, but that he is a very dark man and has a club-foot.’
‘Oh, what a mistake you’ve made.’
‘Mistake? Yes, I acknowledge that.’
‘I mean in not giving this last bit of information at once to the police. A man can be identified by such a defect. Even his footsteps can be traced. He might have been found that very day. Now, what have we to go upon?’
‘You are right, but not expecting to have any difficulty about the insurance money I thought it would be generous in me to keep still. Besides, this is only surmise on my part. I feel certain that my husband was shot by another hand than his own, but I know of no way of proving it. Do you?’
Then Violet talked seriously with her, explaining how their only hope lay in the discovery of a second bullet in the room which had already been ransacked for this very purpose and without the shadow of a result.
A tea, a musicale, and an evening dance kept Violet Strange in a whirl for the remainder of the day. No brighter eye nor more contagious wit lent brilliance to these occasions, but with the passing of the midnight hour no one who had seen her in the blaze of electric lights would have recognized this favoured child of fortune in the earnest figure sitting in the obscurity of an up-town apartment, studying the walls, the ceilings, and the floors by the dim light of a lowered gas-jet. Violet Strange in society was a very different person from Violet Strange under the tension of her secret and peculiar work.
She had told them at home that she was going to spend the night with a friend; but only her old coachman knew who that friend was. Therefore a very natural sense of guilt mingled with her emotions at finding herself alone on a scene whose gruesome mystery she could solve only by identifying herself with the place and the man who had perished there.
Dismissing from her mind all thought of self, she strove to think as he thought, and act as he acted on the night when he found himself (a man of but little courage) left in this room with an ailing child.
At odds with himself, his wife, and possibly with the child screaming away in its crib, what would