On a Slender Margin

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On a Slender Margin (1912)
by Louis Joseph Vance
3971786On a Slender Margin1912Louis Joseph Vance

STORIES of WALL STREET


ON A SLENDER
MARGIN


By By LOUIS JOSEPH VANCE



Copyright by Street & Smith.


THE biggest men in Wall Street—the newspapers' "Napoleons of finance"—are not necessarily in members of the New York Stock Exchange; many an operator whose influence on stock values has made itself felt from Maine to California, has never been nearer the floor of the Exchange than the gallery which hangs some thirty feet or so above that floor.

Young Reverdy—he was always "Young Reverdy" to the Street, even after his father's retirement—was not an Exchange member. Gallinger never could understand why; to him it seemed as though a man who could mold the market to his will, by rights should have some tangible connection with that great machine which makes the market possible.

But he did not complain—Gallinger didn't. He had been a classmate of Young Reverdy, and now he enjoyed the position of that gentleman's confidential broker; wherefore his commissions were not to be sneezed at. Young Reverdy dealt in stocks by the block of ten thousand shares, rather than by hundreds and thousands. Wherefore, also, when Gallinger received Young Reverdy's brief note, apprising him of his return to the speculative arena and asking him to call, Gallinger was glad.

He was thinking that it was a very long time since he had entered his friend's office; and he turned to the left and down the Wall Street corridor of the Syndicate building, presently stopping before a door whose ground-glass panel was modestly and simply lettered:

CLIFFORD REVERDY.

"Gosh!" Gallinger ejaculated; "It's all of a year! My, but tempus does fugit!" And, grinning at his feeble, schoolboy joke, he turned the knob and entered. "Reverdy in?" he inquired of the yellow-haired stenographer. "He sent for me, you know."

She waved a nonchalant, white paw toward the door of Reverdy's a private room.

"Go right in, Mr. Gallinger," she told him, languidly. "He's waitin', you know."

Accordingly, Gallinger went in, closing the door softly behind him. He was thinking hard—trying to recollect what it had been that had deprived the Street of Young Reverdy's influence for all that long year. But so much happens in the year of a Stock Exchange broker that he may be pardoned for forgetting little things like the cause of a friend s absence. "Something about a girl?" Gallinger hazarded a vague guess. "I forget——"

For a moment he stood at the door, waiting. Apparently Young Reverdy had not noticed his arrival. The big man sat in his revolving chair, slewed around from his desk so that he faced the open window, on the sill of which his feet were resting. He seemed lost in reverie, staring dreamily out into the great white well of the building, with his hands clasped behind his head and an unlit cigar clinched between his teeth.

Gallinger's gaze followed Reverdy's carelessly. The wall was broad and garishly white, flooded with the fine gold of late June sunshine; on the farther side it was broken by row upon row of plate-glass windows, blank and characterless, some open to the bland spring airs, others tightly closed.

The one directly opposite Reverdy's, for instance, was wide to the winds, and framed in it, Gallinger saw a woman working at a desk,

"Bynum & Shackleford's office," he thought, abstractedly; and, "Hello, Cliff," said aloud.

Reverdy swung around with a start.

"Howdy, Gallinger!" he cried, his face lighting up with a welcoming smile.

"Anything special on the tapis?" Gallinger wanted to know.

Reverdy smiled, engagingly.

"I should say so," he stated. "I'm so glad to be back that I'm keen for work. Gallinger, I think we'll start a bull movement in Erie, just for a flyer."

For some minutes the two men discussed ways and means, earnestly, Reverdy laying down the law, Gallinger concurring, expostulating or meekly accepting his instructions. His business brain was fully occupied with the weighing of measures toward their common end, with the recording of Reverdy's commands; but subconsciously he did not cease to watch his friend's face, to note the changes that the year had wrought to the man. Particularly he speculated about that pained look in Reverdy's eyes.

"Umm," he thought, in the middle of see argument, "it was a girl. I remember now. Refused him and broke his heart—something of the sort—like a fool woman. Why, there isn't a better man in the world that Cliff Reverdy! Went away to forget her, I suppose. What the dickens was her name now?"

"Well," Reverdy said, finally, "you go ahead and put that through, and we'll make the bear crowd sit up and take notice."

"Right," assented Gallinger, He penciled a memorandum or two on the back of an envelope and put it away, rising from his chair.

"Don't go," Reverdy told him. "Sit down and have a talk. Cigar?"

"Thank you," consented Gallinger. "Trip do you good, Cliff?" he asked, trimming the weed.

"Lots." Reverdy glanced at him sharply. "I'm cured," he stated. Gallinger started.

"Cured? Eh, what? Oh, yes!" He laughed awkwardly, vainly cudgeling his wits, "Who was that girl, anyway?"

Reverdy swung aimlessly in his chair, knitting his fingers.

"Many changes?" he asked, carelessly. "New faces in the Street?"

"Oh, some," Gallinger told him. "Nothing much—everything just about the same."

This was unsatisfactory.

"At least," Reverdy laughed, uneasily, "I see that Bynum & Shackleford have a new stenographer."

Gallinger looked, and, looking, realized.

"Oh, by thunder! Helen Shackleford!" he remembered suddenly. "Why, that's—I suppose so," he ended, lamely. "Old Shackleford's dead, you know," he blurted out.

"What!" Reverdy faced him again.

"Yes—six months ago. Didn't you hear about it? Heart failure, I believe—something of the sort. Left everything to his daughter, I'm told."

"To Helen, eh?" Reverdy's tone was as calm as he could have wished. "And who's Bynum's partner now?" he asked,

"Why—er——" Gallinger stammered—"I wonder if he doesn't recognize her? I don't want to rouse sleeping dogs!" he disclaimed, mentally—"Why—er—some relative of old Shackleford's, I understand," he replied.

And Gallinger was much relieved when Reverdy's opportune fit of musing afforded him the chance to get away without having to answer any more embarrassing questions.

For that matter, Reverdy himself was glad to see the last of Gallinger—for that day, at least. He had learned from him that which he desired to know. And now he wanted to think.

Reverdy did his thinking with his face to the window, his eyes upon Helen Shackleford's unconscious profile.

He was musing soberly, cautiously casting back to the dear days that were dead—dead to them both; and he was testing his heart. To his relief it was behaving itself, like the reliable, steady-going heart it should have been.

On the morning of the third day, however, came the inevitable. Reverdy, hurrying in from the street, with his hat on the back of his head and a cigar in the corner of his mouth, all but trod blindly upon the train of a woman's skirt, as he entered the elevator: "Great heavens!" he muttered, with a swift intuition as the gate clanged. Now there was no escape.

"Seven," he heard her tell the elevator boy; and Reverdy knew that her voice thrilled him through and through. He looked up unhappily, and caught her eye as it was shifted swiftly from him. He bowed—his hat already in his hand—and muttered something indefinite with a tongue gone suddenly hot and dry and thick. She returned the salutation distantly.

Reverdy felt the situation keenly. He knew his face for a mirror of his emotions, and shuddered to think what an onlooker might deduce from his pitiable expression.

And then he knew that he ought to speak. But, what was he to say?

Very suddenly his heart seemed to surge upward, and, for the instant, his tongue clove to the roof of his mouth. The elevator paused in its upward flight, seemed to hesitate a brief second—and dropped like a shot.

His brain was working with incredible swiftness. If she could be supported, held up from the floor of the cage, her injuries might be less then if—— He started toward her, of a mind to catch her up in his arms.

And then the air-cushion device began to work. The car seemed to strike upon an invisible obstacle to its downward flight. It hesitated a second time, bounced giddily upward a few feet, fell again, bounced again, and came to a gradual stop in a diminishing series of dull heaves, resting finally between the second and third floors.

"You're not hurt?" he cried. "Helen?"

"Thank you—no," she gasped, adding more calmly: "Mr. Reverdy."

Their eyes met; they were safe now, And then came the reaction. The girl laughed—a bit hysterically at first, then more calmly. But Reverdy's smile was wan and sickly. He was shaken by a little fit of rage at fate, that had treated him so scurvily; and he turned upon the elevator boy.

"What d'ye mean by this?" he demanded, unreasonably "Let us out at once!"

The attendant eyed him with calm scorn: Reverdy was nobody to him.

"'Tain't my fault," he disclaimed, sullenly. "Youse better take it easy. Mebbe they won't let us down fer haff-n-hour."

"Oh, good Lord!" Reverdy groaned. "He's right," he told the girl. "It's neither his fault nor—mine. I'm sorry."

"Don't be sorry," She smiled bewilderingly upon him. "It can't be helped. Only it's too bad that we are both to be delayed in getting to our offices."

"I—I——" he stammered, becoming aware of her mourning gown and remembering in which memory she wore it. "I heard only day before yesterday of your loss, Miss Shackleford—and I——"

She bowed her head, the merriment dying from her eyes.

"Thank you," she murmured; "I understand."

There came an awkward, tense silence.

"You have been away?" she asked, graciously helping him to extricate himself from what seemed hopeless embarrassment.

"Yes—Florida—for a year," he floundered. "I've a shooting box in the Everglades, you know, And you?"

"Oh, I've taken up the broker's burden," she told him, lightly. "I am now the office partner of Bynum & Shackleford."

Bynum's partner! Reverdy was fairly staggered. He had not suspected that, even in his wildest imaginings. Bynum's partner: And Bynum was one of the most unscrupulous blackguards in the Street!

In an instant he jad guessed the actual situation. The girl had been thrown upon her own resources with a few beggarly thousands—fifty or sixty at the most; for old John Shackleford, her father, had been himself a man of such admirable probity and endowed with so generous a belief in his fellow man that he had never for an instant dreamed of the smooth rascality of his partner.

And then—oh, it was very easy to see through Bynum's sneaking ways!—coveting her inheritance, the swindler had approached the girl with his specious offer of a continued partnership in the commission business—a partnership between a girl innocent of the wiles of the Street and a scoundrel deep-mired in its filthiest slime! Naturally, in time he would find a way to fleece her of her little patrimony!

Reverdy's soul was faint with disgust at the prospect.

And he looked boldly into her eyes, seeing therein the ineradicable marks of anxiety, of sorrow and of suffering He guessed that even then she might be wakening to a suspicion of Bynum's baseness; and Reverdy's sole thought was concerning the way by which he might aid her, rescue her fortune—if Bynum had left her a shred of that.

"1 didn't know it," he confessed, quickly. "But I'm glad to hear it. The new firm prospers, I trust? Possibly I may be able to throw a little business in your way."

"Why," she began, formulating a courteous refusal, "I'm sure you are very kind, Mr. Reverdy, but——"

But the elevator was on Reverdy's side, that morning. In the middle of her sentence it slid sedately to the bottom of the shaft and the starter opened the gates to release them. They stepped out and into another car, Reverdy tactfully changing the subject; so that she was unable to conclude her declination.

"I suppose I made a damned ass of myself!" he groaned, when he had run the gantlet of the yellow-haired stenographer's fine, rolling eyes, and the office boy's beady, inquisitive start, and was at length alone in his private office.

He glowered moodily across the air shaft.

The girt was at her desk, talking with Bynum. Bynum was leaning over her with exaggerated deference. A fine figure of a man he was—Bynum—a man to fill a woman's eye, Reverdy fancied, for all his smooth, oily ways.

"Poor girl!" he said aloud. "Of course she doesn't imagine——!" He pulled his desk chair savagely out of her radius of vision and plumped himself into it, burying his hot face in his hands. "Ah, Helen, Helen!" cried Young Reverdy.

Thus glooming, Gallinger found him an hour later; and before Gallinger could open his mouth, Reverdy had snapped a question at him.

"What's Bynum up to now, Gallinger? Still at the old dodges?"

Gallinger sat down, astonished at the abruptness of the query, but alive as to what brought it forth.

"Oh, about the same," he said. "Everyone in the Street knows to a moral certainty that Bynum pockets half the money his customers give him, but you can't fasten it on the fellow."

"Thank you," Reverdy muttered, glumly, He looked at his watch: ten o'clock. Bynum was due on the Exchange floor at that minute; Helen would be alone. Reverdy took a sudden resolution, without troubling to vouchsafe an explanation to Gallinger.

"You stay here for a few minutes, will you?" he asked. "I'll be back before long. Just a minute——"

This time he did not falter, but rather with rapid, nervous stride, made his way around the building, into the southern corridor.

Reverdy was heedless as to the manner in which he was to convey this warning to Helen; or how it was likely to be received. He only knew that it must be done, and that instantly. And he burst quite recklessly through the swinging doors of Bynum & Shackleford's customers room, full of his purpose and regardless of all else.

In a moment he caught a glimpse of her as she sat in the firm's private room, her ear to the telephone receiver. So far she had not become aware of his arrival. But now as he started toward the door, she looked up, saw him, and nodded with a little smile. Then, "Can I come in?" he asked.

"Why, certainly, Mr. Reverdy. What can I do tor you?"

It brought him to his senses. To be sure, what plausible excuse had he to offer for the intrusion? "Why—why——" He hesitated. And then, with a rush of thankfulness, he remembered his remark about throwing a little business in the way of Bynum & Shackleford, and became more composed.

He took the chair at the corner of her desk.

"I want you to buy me some Erie," he said.

"Certainly." Miss Shackleford reached for a memorandum pad; she was all business now, and the crimson was gone from her cheeks.

"How much?"

"Five thousand shares," he told her.

It was a large order for Bynum & Shackleford to handle. Her start of surprise told him that.

"At what price?" she asked, hoping that he had not noticed.

"At the market."

"On margin?"

"Certainly."

"How many points? Three or five?"

It was her first misstep. Deep in the woman's heart was the desire to prove to this man that she was no novice—as she really was—in the ways of the Street; she had made use of the technical jargon with a large but misplaced self-confidence.

But this she did not know—that a reputable house does not accept commissions on less than a ten-point margin. Reverdy made a mental note of her inadvertent expose of Bynum's methods, and replied quietly;

"Better make it ten points. I'll send over my check at once."

"Thank you." She pushed the pad toward him, offering her pencil for his signature to the buying order.

"You'll keep this between ourselves, of course," he said. "I don't mind telling you that there is going to be a bull movement in Erie—about twenty points."

"Why, that is very kind——"

"I'd advise you—If you'll permit me—to get aboard."

"Thank you, Mr. Reverdy, but—but—well, to be frank with you, I am unable to accept the tip." She considered a moment, biting her tongue to keep back the words. But still she wished to show him her mastery of the intricacies of speculation. "I'm pretty well tied up in Ontario Preferred," she volunteered- "We are looking for a ten-point advance."

"Oh!"

Reverdy's tone spoke volumes. In that one brief sentence she had revealed to his trained intelligence the depths of Bynum's duplicity—had assured him of the correctness of his suspicions. Ontario—why, it was dead, so far as legitimate speculation was concerned; the issuing company was practically bankrupt, and the Street knew it; the security was a drug on the market—going begging around thirty. So that was what Bynum had drawn her alight fortunes into! Reverdy thanked the providence that had brought him upon the boards in time to avert this financial ruin that hung menacingly over the head of the woman he loved.

For no longer did the man attempt to deny that he still loved her.

"You disapprove?" she would know, rightly interpreting his exclamation.

"Well—er—Bynum advised you, I suppose?"

"Yes," she nodded.

He leaned toward her, speaking guardedly, though they were practically alone.

"If you'll take my advice, Miss Shackleford, you'll sell your holding of Ontario Preferred at whatever price you can get. Bynum——" He paused, pondering: to what motive would she ascribe what he was about to say to her?

But the girl only smiled upon him, encouragingly. Reverdy's name was a power in the Street; surely he would know of what he spoke. "Bynum——?" she led him on.

Reverdy plunged despairingly into the heart of the black business.

"He—well, you should know it—I suppose no one had informed you—you didn't suspect, of course——"

What, what do you——?" she interrupted.

"Bynum," he said, quickly. "He's a—a blackleg. Honestly, Helen, you should not be associated with the fellow. It isn't your fault, you know, but the man's not—not honest. If he advised you to buy Ontario heavily—I gather that you are deeply involved—he did it with his own interests in mind. You'll lose, as sure as the sun will set this night. But Bynum—he'll win."

"Thank you, Mr. Reverdy," she said frigidly. "I'm sorry that I may not take your advice. I—really—I hardly think you are quite disinterested."

He rose.

"Meaning—?" he prompted, curtly.

"Meaning that you wish to poison my mind against the man who has been like a father to me since—since Daddy——" She almost broke down; the man's heart fairly bled for her; but her words were merciless. "You are not acting honorably. I would not have thought it of you, Mr. Reverdy. You—you are——"

"Thank you," he interrupted, his eyes blazing, "You need say no more."

"I think not," she concurred, amiably. "Naturally, after this we cannot handle your commission, Mr. Reverdy. Good day." She took the buying order he had just signed and shredded it with her white, slender fingers. The fragments fluttered to the floor.

And he went out—with tears of chagrin in his eyes and his temples throbbing like mad. To think that he should love her so, and that she should be so blind, so unjust!

But your Wall Street man has early learned the lesson of self-control. Reverdy's hand was firm on the throttle of his temper, and before he had come to his own door his mind was as firmly made up. Helen Shackleford might be blind and unjust, but Clifford Reverdy was not going to stand by and see her suffer for it—if he could help it.

And he thought he could.

"Gallinger," he greeted that impatient broker, "have you a new clerk in your office—some one about as green as a salad?"

"Wha-at?" Gallinger was astounded. "What the devil are you driving at, Cliff?"

"I say"—impatiently—"have you a youngster in your office that the Street doesn't know for your man?"

Gallinger subdued his surprise, considered, mentally reviewing his office force, and announced:

"Well, there's little Walcott."

"He'll do." Reverdy sat down at his desk and scribbled a check, which he handed his confidential broker,

"You get that cashed and give the money to Walcott. Have him go to Bynum & Shackleford's today—the sooner the better—and buy one hundred shares of Ontario Preferred on a five-point margin, for his own account. Don't let him use my name or yours."

"But," expostulated Gallinger, "he'll have to be introduced in order to open an account."

"Not with Bynum & Shackleford, Gallinger. Did you hear me say 'five point margin?' With a firm that'll take a five-point margin, ready cash will prove the best introduction in the world. You understand? Send Wolcott there at once."

"Well, all right," Gallinger agreed dubiously. "But it seems to me you might tell a chap what you're driving at."

"I'm driving at Bynum," Reverdy announced grimly. "And I'm going to drive him out of the Street. Look here."

He sat down and talked seriously with Gallinger for the matter of ten minutes or so.

Gallinger left Reverdy's office wearing a large, cherubic smile.

Reverdy's instructions were implicitly obeyed.

At one o'clock Reverdy in his office received a telephone message from Gallinger on the floor of the Exchange.

"Bynum has left the floor," Gallinger reported.

Reverdy smiled mysteriously into the transmitter,

"Get Walcott and come right up, quick's you can," he told Gallinger.

"Howdy, Gallinger!" he cried, heartily a few moments later. "Come right in. This is Mr. Walcott, I presume? I'm glad to meet you."

"Thank you, Mr. Reverdy, sir," he stammered, in an ecstacy of confusion.

"You're ready?" Reverdy questioned Gallinger with his eyes, receiving an affirmative nod in reply. "You know what you are to do, I presume, Mr. Walcott?"

"Yes, sir; Mr. Gallinger has been telling me just what I'm to say."

"Good. You go ahead, then. Gallinger and I will follow."

In such order, two minutes later they entered the customers' room of the firm of Bynum & Shackleford.

Reverdy was at once impressed with the conviction that he had timed this visit with extreme nicety.

It was almost empty of clients; there were but one or two loiterers in the cushioned armchairs before the big quotation board; and even they seemed hardly at ease. The few clerks were gathered in a whispering group behind the cashier's grating. Gallinger turned to Reverdy,

"You were right, all right," he commented.

Reverdy merely smiled.

Walcott had crossed to the cashier's window.

"Mr. Bynum?" he inquired of one of the clerks. A jerk of the thumb toward the closed door was his answer. He looked to Gallinger for support.

"Go on—knock," said Gallinger.

Walcott knocked, A guarded, intense murmur of conversation within ceased abruptly,

"What?" some one cried out from behind the partition. "Who's that? What d'ye want?"

"That's Bynum," said Gallinger to Reverdy.

Walcott raised his hand to knock again, without replying, but before his knuckles touched the panels of the door it was opened from within, and Bynum looked out angrily.

"What the devil do you want?" he stormed angrily, "I gave orders——"

"Want to see you," put in Walcott, cheerfully. "Hold on! Won't detain you a minute."

Bynum recognized him at last.

"Oh, Mr. Walcott," he exclaimed in his most soothing manner. "If you'll excuse me, just a second——"

"How about my Ontario?" interrupted Walcott.

"Why—er—I regret—the fall in the price obliged me to sell you out, not half an hour ago. If you had only been here to put up more margin—"

"Too thin," commented Gallinger, audibly.

Bynum looked quickly toward the speaker. He saw Reverdy also, and a puzzled expression crossed his handsome face.

"What does this mean, Mr. Walcott?" he inquired, querulously.

Walcott quietly inserted his foot behind the half-open door and the jamb.

"Want to talk to you," he replied, tersely. "Better let us in, so that we won't be overheard."

Bynum attempted to close the door.

"But I don't understand——" he began.

At that moment Helen Shackleford's face showed over his shoulder. Reverdy caught at his breath—a little, pained gasp.

"Oh, Clifford!" she cried, impulsively. "I am so glad!"

And with that singing tn his heart, there was no holding Young Reverdy. He was on the threshold in two steps, pushing little Walcott before him.

"Let me in, sir!" he told Bynum, sternly.

Nonplused, Bynum gave way; for the moment his wits deserted him, and in that moment Gallinger also had entered and put his shoulders to the door. Then Bynum began to have an inkling of what was in the wind.

"By what right," he blustered furiously at Reverdy, "do you intrude?"

Reverdy's astonished stare was very convincing.

"Why," he said, ingenuously, "Miss Shackleford wished to see me, so I just came in." But promptly he dropped his bantering tone.

"We came to see you, primarily, about Mr. Walcott's Ontario, Bynum," he said, coldly. "Mr. Walcott wants his money back."

Bynum sneered. "Oh, so does!" he snarled, "Well, I don't know by what right——"

"Oh, yes, you do. You say you sold him out at twenty-five, I believe. Well, now, to whom did you sell Walcott's one hundred shares of Ontario?"

Bynum started toward the door. "None of your infernal business!" he cried. "I refuse to submit to this inquisition."

Gallinger's broad shoulders, however, were firm against the panels. "I wouldn't refuse" he put in. "If a customer demands the name of the broker of the other side of the transaction, you're bound to give it, you know. Now, who——?"

"Belden & Tausig."

"That's a lie" said Reverdy, shortly. "You haven't turned a share of Ontario on the floor in the last two weeks, and you know it, Bynum. You've pocketed Walcott's money, here, just as you are trying to pocket Miss Shackleford's. I can prove what I say by your clearing-house sheets, and you don't dare deny it. Come, now, you may as well own up and take your medicine, if you don't want to get into worse trouble."

Reverdy turned to the girl at his side.

"How much did he induce you to put into the Ontario deal, Helen?" he asked.

"Fifty thousand dollars, all told," she faltered. "He had just informed me that we are both wiped out—insolvent. Of course, I believed him, but—but, Clifford, are you sure—sure?"

"Bynum's sure," he laughed. "Aren't you, Bynum? Come: What have you done with the money? It's deposited to your account somewhere, we know. Where?"

The man scowled from one face to the other, pondering escape. Presently, with a gesture of disgust, he gave it up. He was fairly trapped, at last; there was no way out of it, and he was very well aware of the fact.

"What are you going to do with me?" he counter-questioned.

"Nothing, provided you make restitution," Reverdy assured him pleasantly. "You draw two checks, one for fifty thousand and one for five hundred, respectively, to Miss Shackleford's and Walcott's orders, and you can do what you please with yourself—after we have had the checks certified, of course."

"Oh, well——!" he snapped at length. "I agree."

He sat down at the desk, taking a check book from his pocket, and jabbing the pen viciously into the inkstand. Galllnger's plump sides shook with silent merriment,

"Miss Shackleford and I," Reverdy proclaimed, with a beaming confidence that proved to be justified, "will have the checks certified, Gallinger. If they are all right, we'll 'phone you, and you can let Mr. Bynum go about his business. Helen"—unconsciously his tone softened—"I've a cab waiting. You'll come with me, of course?"

By way of answer, she looked at him—a passing glance, hardly caught ere a memory, that nevertheless served to set Reverdy's blood bounding in his veins. And she reached blindly for her hat.

Reverdy dashed out of the bank, beaming a large satisfaction at the whole wide world.

"It's all right—certified," he almost shouted at the girl. She nestled back against the cushions with a little, halting sigh. Reverdy gave the cabman her address and climbed in.

At first she had drawn a little away from him, half fearfully, glancing at him from under her up-curled lashes. But Reverdy did not attempt to force the issue. Though his life's happiness hung in the balance, still he thought he knew——

"I—I don't know how I am to thank you, Cliff—Clifford," he heard her say.

"I haven't asked for thanks," he returned. "I believe it's hardly necessary tor me to state what I would ask."

"N-no," she breathed.

He saw her hand stealing timidly across the cushion toward his own. In an instant he was very happy. After a long pause, "But why did you send me away?" he would know, imperatively.

He could feel her trembling in the pressure of her fingers. "It—it was all a mistake, dear," she said at length. "I did not know, until you were gone, how much I lo——"

"Hush!" he cried, gravely. "Not now, not here, sweetheart," he pleaded. "Why, don't you know that all the world's on tiptoe, holding its breath to hear you say just that?"

This work is in the public domain in the United States because it was published before January 1, 1929.


The longest-living author of this work died in 1933, so this work is in the public domain in countries and areas where the copyright term is the author's life plus 90 years or less. This work may be in the public domain in countries and areas with longer native copyright terms that apply the rule of the shorter term to foreign works.

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