“How can you ask?” the girl moaned.
Bending forward, an elbow on the table, she worked her hands together until their knuckles shone white through the skin—but not as white as the face from which her eyes sought his with a look of dumb horror, dazed, pitiful, imploring.
“You’re not deceiving me? But no—why should you?” she faltered. “But how terrible, how unspeakably awful! …”
“I’m sorry,” Lanyard mumbled—“I’d have held my tongue if I hadn’t thought you knew—”
“You thought I knew—and didn’t lift a finger to save the man?” She jumped up with a blazing face. “Oh, how could you?”
“No—not that—I never thought that. But, meeting you then and there, so opportunely—I couldn’t ignore the coincidence; and when you admitted you were running away from your father, considering all the circumstances, I was surely justified in thinking it was realization, in part at least, of what had happened that was driving you away.”
She shook her head slowly, her indignation ebbing as quickly as it had risen. “I understand,” she said; “you had some excuse, but you were mistaken. I ran away—yes—but not because of that. I never dreamed …”
She fell silent, sitting with bowed head and twisting her hands together in a manner he found it painful to watch.
“But please,” he implored, “don’t take it so much to heart, Miss Bannon. If you knew nothing, you couldn’t have prevented it.”
“No,” she said brokenly—“I could have done nothing … But I didn’t know. It isn’t that—it’s the horror and pity of it. And that you could think—!”
“But I didn’t!” he protested—“truly I did not. And for what I did think, for the injustice I did do you, believe me, I’m truly sorry.”
“You were quite justified,” she said—“not only by circumstantial evidence but to a degree in fact. You must know … now I must tell you …”
“Nothing you don’t wish to!” he interrupted. “The fact that I practically kidnapped you under pretence of doing you a service, and suspected you of being in the pay of that Pack, gives me no title to your confidence.”
“Can I blame you for thinking what you did?” She went on slowly, without looking up—gaze steadfast to her interlaced fingers: “Now for my own sake I want you to know what otherwise, perhaps, I shouldn’t have told you—not yet, at all events. I’m no more Bannon’s daughter than you’re his son. Our names sound alike—people frequently make the same mistake. My name is Shannon—Lucy Shannon. Mr. Bannon called me Lucia because he knew I didn’t like it, to tease me; for the same reason he always kept up the pretence that I was his daughter when people misunderstood.”
“But—if that is so—then what—?”
“Why—it’s very simple.” Still she didn’t look up. “I’m a trained nurse. Mr. Bannon is consumptive—so far gone, it’s a wonder he didn’t die years ago: for months I’ve been haunted by the thought that it’s only the evil in him keeps him alive. It wasn’t long after I took the assignment to nurse him that I found out something about him. … He’d had a haemorrhage at his desk; and while he lay in coma, and I was waiting for the doctor, I happened to notice one of the papers he’d been working over when he fell. And then, just as I began to appreciate the sort of man I was employed by, he came to, and saw—and knew. I found him watching me with those dreadful eyes of his, and though he was unable to speak, knew my life wasn’t safe if ever I breathed a word of what I had read. I would have left him then, but he was too cunning for me, and when in time I found a chance to escape—I was afraid I’d not live long if ever I left him. He went about it deliberately; to keep me frightened, and though he never mentioned the matter directly, let me know plainly, in a hundred ways, what his power was and what would happen if I whispered a word of what I knew. It’s nearly a year now—nearly a year of endless terror and …”
Her voice fell; she was trembling with the recrudescent suffering of that yearlong servitude. And for a little Lanyard felt too profoundly moved to trust himself to speak; he stood aghast, staring down at this woman, so intrinsically and gently feminine, so strangely strong and courageous; and vaguely envisaging what anguish must have been hers in enforced association with a creature of Bannon’s ruthless stamp, he was rent with compassion and swore to himself he’d stand by her and see her through and free and happy if he died for it—or ended in the Santé!
“Poor child!” he heard himself murmuring—“poor child!”
“Don’t pity me!” she insisted, still with face averted. “I don’t deserve it. If I had the spirit of a mouse, I’d have defied him; it needed only courage enough to say one word to the police—”
“But who is he, then?” Lanyard demanded. “What is he, I mean?”
“I hardly know how to tell you. And I hardly dare: I feel as if these walls would betray me if I did. … But to me he’s the incarnation of all things evil. …” She shook herself with a nervous laugh. “But why be silly about it? I don’t really know what or who he is: I only suspect and believe that he is a man whose life is devoted to planning evil and ordering its execution through his lieutenants. When the papers at home speak of ‘The Man Higher Up’ they mean Archer Bannon, though they don’t know it—or else I’m merely a hysterical woman exaggerating the impressions of a morbid imagination. … And that’s all I know of him that matters.”
“But why, if you
