CHAPTER XIV—Continued —16— “That couldn’t be done, Serena,” Quentin said quietly. “I have never had this case. But I'm positive—I don’t believe — I know — Dr. Cud worth isn’t seriously suggesting—” “You may do as you think best. Doctor,” the other doctor said abruptly. “I would have entire faith in anything you saw fit to do. But I personally must decline the responsibility.” “I have nothing to do with it,” Quentin said briefly. Serena turned on him. “Spencer had acute indigestion, and he’s got a bad heart,” she said. “But believe me, if there’s any in vestigation, if there’s one word of talk, you’re in this, too, Quentin Hardisty! I’ll not stand it. I’ll not face a coroner and be questioned, while you are quietly enjoying your self over there on the lawn with your wife, laughing and carrying the children into the house!” “I don't think that’ll happen, Quentin said. But Vicky saw that his face was pale. "I wish you’d called me earlier!” "How do you know what’ll hap pen!” Serena said. "I know. I can tell you! We had a coroner’s Investigation when Gita’s father died. I know what it means! You’ll have to sign that death warrant, Quentin, or I’ll have to drag your name into it. You and I've talked of what we'd do if he died; you can’t 1 deny that, if they put you on oath! Everyone knows what we’ve been to each other; you had a motive for giving me something that would put him to sleep. He told Dr. Cud worth here that I wanted to get rid of him.” “Vic, do you want to stay?” Quentin asked in an undertone, as the breathless voice died to silence. "This isn’t your sort of thing.” "No, Vic won’t go," Serena said at white heat. “You don’t think Vic doesn’t know that you love me, that you’ve been following me, making me presents, writing me letters.” Quentin looked at Vicky, looked away; he spoke quietly. "Vicky knows just how badly I’ve treated her, Serena,” he said. “She's always known, from the be ginning. I’m not trying to wriggle out of that. If you were really fool enough to give Spencer sleeping powders or anything else, I’m in it with you. There’s no question that you can drag my name and my children’s names in the mud, if you want to. You can take those let ters into court—” "Letters saying, 'If it weren’t for Spencer . . Serena inter rupted him. "Letters saying everything,” Quentin said in a low voice, with a level glance at her. "Letters saying everything!” he repeated. “But one thing isn’t true,” he went on slowly. “I’ve never loved but one woman in all my life; never, no matter what I said or wrote or did. I’ve always loved my wife, al ways, always held her in a place by herself!” Vicky went over to him and dropped her hand into his, but he did not glance at her or seem to know that she was there. “How nice!” Serena said. “So I pay the bill alone. How very nice!” “No, you and I’ll both pay!” Quentin said. "And she’ll pay, too. It means disgrace for us all.” There was a sound at the door of the invalid’s room; the amah came out with an agitated face, shaking her head. Serena gave a short ejac ulation and, turning, went across the hall to her own room and went into it and closed the door. The two doctors and Vicky faced the Chinese woman as she came to ward them. Her jargon was unin telligible to Quentin. The promised nurse, hatted, coated, cold, rosy, came upstairs. “Amah says Spencer heard your voice and wants to speak to you, Vicky interpreted. “My God, when I saw her face I thought the poor fellow was gone!” Dr. Cudworth ejaculated. “So did I!” Vicky said. “Do you mean—” Quentin had clutched her arm; his fingers bit into it like a vise, he was almost shouting. “What d’you mean? Isn’t he gone?” “Oh, no; but Quentin, there’s no hope,” Vicky said. “Master say other doctor come now," the amah said in a singsong. “Yes, come in with me, for God’s sake, Hardisty, and see what you think!” Cudworth said, as they all went together to Spencer’s door. Vicky heard Quentin mutter as if he spoke to himself: “We all stand there talking while the poor fellow dies!” Then they were in the sickroom; Vicky watching her husband’s, rath er than the patient’s, face, her own face reflecting the fluctuations of feeling she saw there. “Quentin,” the sick man said, clutching at his hand, all personal feeling fbrgotten in the grips of life and death, "you can do something for me, can’t you? For God’s sake get me out of this, operate, do any thing! That ass there,” he whis pered, with a flickering glance at that agitated Cud worth, “tells me I’m washed up. There's something you can do?” Quentin spoke urgently, definite ly: “Vic, get to a telephone and tell Anna to come over right away with that big package that’s on my desk; it's from Lengfeld’s—she can’t miss it. Rush it! And just as soon as you’ve done that, get the amah to get plenty of hot water, boiling wa ter. I suppose there's a table here, a long table, flat—” “You think so, Doctor?" faltered the other doctor. “I know so!” Quentin shouted, suddenly mad with impatience. “Just lie quiet there, Spencer,” he added to the patient, “and we’ll get you out of this if we can.” "I’ve got an even break? Spen cer asked. “Not quite so good. We won’t know quite what chance you’ve got until we’ve gone a little further. Ah, here's our nurse. We want a surgi cal bath here, nurse, as fast as you can manage t; we’ve no time to waste.” Vicky ran downstairs, ran upstairs for sheets; Serena was not in evi dence, and nobody asked for her. The nurse suggested a rubber sheet, and Anna panting in with the big bundle, was sent flying back to the Hardistys’ for one. Presently there was nothing for Vicky to do except sit on a chair in the hall and wait— and think—and wait. Quentin came out with a nurse’s white apron tied on him back to front and asked for soda, just plain kitchen soda. “And you might as well go home, Vic; this’ll take it out of you.” “No, I’ll wait. Quent, has he a chance?” "I’m afraid not, but we’ll try. They're putting him under now; we’ll know in an hour.” “She couldn’t”—Vicky glanced at the closed door of Serena’s room— “She wouldn’t have done it!” she whispered. “ I don’t know. But it s not for him I’m fighting, Vic,” Quentin said. “It’s for ail of us. It’s touch and go now; if he lives, we live, and if he dies, I may have gotten you into something you’ll never get out of, my dear.” “You’ll bo in it, too!” "I’ll be in it, too. Oh, she couldn’t get me in as an accomplice,” Quen tin said. “But she could do enough to ruin us all. We’d have to go away, Vic.” “We’d go away.” “And the story would follow us, and follow the children. That’s all A’ve done to you!” Quentin said. “The woman—the amah—has pro duced a bottle, half full, that would kill ten men. Our one hope is that it was about a ten-times dose, and in lemonade. Lemon is the only anti-acid that touches it! If any thing saves him, that’ll save him— that is, if we get to the kidney in time.” “You will!” Vicky said, with her faithful eyes on his and her world rocking about her and her lips white. “You nelieve in God, don’t you?” Quent asked, almost absentminded ly “I do.” “Then—while I’m in there, you pray, Vic.” He kissed her without smiling, without seeming even to see her; released her from his arms. “My God, you are a tower of strength to me,” he said. “You are a rock of help! Pray for every thing we’ve got, while I’m in there— the kids and the home—everything! I always thought — I always thought,” Quentin muttered, turn ing away, “that I’d like my boys to be proud of their father. My kids.” He went into the sickroom, and Vicky waited. There was a big Spanish cjiair in the upper hall of the Morrison place, and she sat in it and clasped her hands to keep them still and prayed. A Navajo blanket, richly striped with yellow and black and scarlet, had been hanging over the black iron railing of the stairway; she wrapped it about her; the night was bitterly cold CHAPTER XV Silence and night and vigil. Un seen somewhere a clock struck the hours and the half-hours; outside in the dark a rising wind whined un easily, and now and then a broken branch skittered on the tiling of the roof. In the upper hallways of the Morrison house one lamp burned softly, steadily; from the half-open door that led into Spen cer’s room came sounds: Low voices, the creaking of a bed and the clinking of ice, and once a sort of bubbling groan that made Vicky’s heart stop for a moment in terror. She prayed, trying not to think, drowsed, awakened with a start to And that it was not all a strange dream. She really was here in the Morrison house in the middle of the night, Quentin was behind that bed room door, bringing all his skill, every ounce of strength and knowl edge and inspiration that he could muster to the saving of Spencer Morrison’s life, and Serena was in her bedroom only a few feet away somehow living through the hours that would decide whether or not she would be tried on a charge of murder. What was she doing? Vicky won dered. She had swept away from the group hours earlier, had closed her bedroom door upon whatever she was experiencing, suffering. Furious with fear, the accusing eyes of both doctors upon her, their flat refusals to perjure themselves in protecting her still ringing in her astounded ears, and Spencer strug gling in death throes of her causing, she had angrily withdrawn. Had she flung herself down on her bed and fallen into dreamless sleep? Vic wondered. “But I’m just magnifying the whole thing into an absolute buga boo!” Victoria told herself. “It won’t happen that way! Spencer will die of an operation, Quentin can sign a certificate about that, anyway, and Cudworth won’t talk, he’s got his own professional repu tation to protect, he doesn’t want to be mixed into any murder trial! She’ll go away, and this time next year we’ll be worrying about some thing else!” She could reassure herself for a moment; then the solitude and si lence of the night began to work "I’ve Got an Even Break?" Spencer Asked. their spell again, and Victoria felt with a sort of desperation that if Quentin didn’t come out of that room pretty soon . . . The amah appeared presently, looking like a little old mahogany carving in a black-and-white cotton coat. “Fix room for nurse,” she whis pered, and Vicky was glad to go with her to the spare room, help her in the warming human business of making beds and arranging tow els. He wasn’t dead yet, anywayl Before they had finished, Quentin and Dr. Cudworth joined them. Quentin looked exhausted; his hair was tumbled, and his operating gown, one of Miss Pierce’s aprons put on backward, was spattered with red. He took off the apron. “Excuse my appearance, Vic,” he said, sitting down panting. “My Lord, but that was quick work!” “How is he?” Vicky asked. But even before she asked it, the blood had come back to her heart and she had had time to feel an al most frightening first ecstasy of hope. "He’s doing remarkable,’’ Dr. Cudworth said. “And he can thank your good husband here. You are, in my opinion, a genius. Dr. Har disty.” “Oh, Quent, there isn’t really a chance?” “Magnificent constitution, and his own feeling will help," Quentin still ghastly pale and breathing hard, said to the other doctor. And then to Vicky, “Everything is as good as it can be; better, I would say. He opened his eyes and looked at me; it didn’t take him five minutes to get his bearings.” Vicky sat down in a winged chair and put her hands over her eyes and began to cry, and Quentin, leaning over to pat her on the back, laughed with tears in his own eyes. “I’m ash-sh-shamed of myself!” she stammered, looking up to smile through wet lashes. “But—but it saves us all! It saves us all, Quen tin. I’ve been sitting out there alone, thinking and thinking.” “Did she come out at all?" the local doctor asked in the pause. “Mrs. Morrison?” “She’s probably packing,” Quen tin said. “I imagine she’ll get out right away. It would be the best thing all round if she did.” “Oh, but Quentin, the relief!” Vicky’s eyes shone like stars; it was too good to be true, too good tr be true! “If you hadn’t come back from the hospital!" she said with a shudder. "If you’d stlD been in Germany! Quentin, will there have to be an investigation now, will there be any talk of poison?” "I don’t think so," Quentin said somewhat uncertainly, looking at his colleague. The other doctor re peated the phrase more decidedly. "I’m extremely glad to wash my hands of the whole thing,” Dr. Cud worth said. "He’s warned now, and I think we might give the nurse a hint; it seems to me we might—” “I am going to talk to both, nurses; I’ve had this girl telephone for another,” Quentin said, and once again Vicky thought that he was two men; the Quentin who was the children's adored "Dad,” easy and quiet and quite willing to take their word for anything, to listen to them, to learn from them, and this other Quentin, who held life and death in his big square hands. "It would be better to get him into a hospital, of course, but we can’t move him now. You say Serena hasn’t shown up at all?" he asked Victoria,when they were all out in the hall again. "Not a sound." "Will you wake her up? I’m going to take a look at Spencer. Amah here will let the nurse go down for some coffee. I’ve got to talk to Serena.” Victoria crossed the upper hall, turned the knob of Serena’s door, and spoke from the threshold: "Serena!” There was complete darkness within. Serena’s apartment was on the western side of the house, and the first dim grayness of dawn that had struck into the kitchen, and that was now timidly attacking the eastern world, had made no en trance here. There was black night beyond Serena's window, and in the room vague, darker shadows. Vicky groped inside the door cas ing. found a switch, and inundated the place with soft, rosy light. Everything was orderly enough. Vicky had seen these pink taffeta fittings before, the pink-brocaded walls, the long-legged doll and Man darin lamps, the black worsted dog with the beady eyes. But there was in the silence here now something indefinably frightening. Her heart beat fast with terror. Serena, still wearing the pale lav ender dressing gown in which Vicky had first seen her last night, was lying flat across the unopened bed. The delicate pink taffeta covers still were spread in their daytime posi tion, and flowed over the dais in thick rich flouncing and folds. At the top of the low wide bed, a half circle of finely pleated silk rose like a moon. Beside the pillows were the night tattle and the pink lamps, the pink-and-white tele phone, the book in a tooled vellum cover that Serena had been read ing. "Serena! Spencer's better. They think he will live. Quentin wants to speak to you!” Silence. The room’s mistress lay as she might have lain in a moment of sleep. She was lying on her back, her beautiful hair loosened and falling in a cascade over her shoulder, one arm hanging relaxed over the edge of the bed. Vicky’s heart suddenly rose into her throat, and she felt her knees weaken. She dared not turn her back on this room. Instead she backed slowly away, heard the men emerg ing from Spencer's room; turned to show them an ashen face and to clutch at Quentin’s arm. "Oh, Quentin, she’s only asleep, I guess, but don’t go in there! Don’t. She’s lying on her bed—she didn’t go to bed—I spoke to her and she didn’t stir.” "What’s the matter, Vicky?” Quentin asked, surprised, weary. "What did she say? Has she faint ed?” He went toward Serena’s door. Vicky, with a little gasp of fright, followed along beside him. Again she looked at the rosy beauty of Serena’s room: the pink lights on delicate pink silk, the litter of beautiful luxurious nothings with which Serena had surrounded her* s a rabbit-skin rug, silver frames and vases, tortoise - shell fitting mounted in gold for the desk at which Serena wrote only love notes. "Wait a minute!” Quentin said sharply. He went to the bed, touched the figure lying there; gripped the unresponsive shoulder with a big hand and shook it. "Se rena!” he said. And then, turning to Vicky and the other doctor: "Look here!” "What is it?” Cudworth asked, advancing into the room. "Dead!” Quentin said. “Oh, no, Quent!” Vicky was cling ing to his arm. "Oh, no! Who would do it, who would do it?” "She’s done it herself, eh?" Cud worth asked. He stooped and picked from the floor something that glit tered brightly in the soft light. "Ye didn’t care for that investigation, did ye, my lady?” the old man queried, staring down at the dead woman with a shrewd light in his eyes. "Suicide!” Vicky whispered. "Yes; she did it herself,” Quen tin muttered. "Look there!” (TO BE CONTINUED) Statue to Morgan Horse The Morgan horse was developed in New England. In 1921 a statue of Justin Morgan, the progenitor of this race, was erected on the U. S. Morgan Horse Farm at Middlebury, Vt., on the 100th anniversary of the death of this famous horse. This farm of 400 acres was given to the Department of Agriculture in 1907, to be used for developing the best Morgan blood. Ask Me Another ■ A Quiz With Answers Offering Information on Various Subjects 1. How many submarine cables are there in the world? 2. What people were the first to use forks? 3. 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