She was steady enough in a moment, cool and calm, moving about her work

with ice-cold hands and slightly narrowed eyes. To a sort of physical

nausea was succeeding anger, a blind fury of injured pride. He had been in

love with Carlotta and had tired of her. He was bringing her his

warmed-over emotions. She remembered the bitterness of her month's exile,

and its probable cause. Max had stood by her then. Well he might, if he

suspected the truth.

For just a moment she had an illuminating flash of Wilson as he really was,

selfish and self-indulgent, just a trifle too carefully dressed, daring as

to eye and speech, with a carefully calculated daring, frankly

pleasure-loving. She put her hands over her eyes.

The voices in the next room had risen above their whisper.

"Genius has privileges, of course," said the older voice. "He is a very

great surgeon. To-morrow he is to do the Edwardes operation again. I am

glad I am to see him do it."

Sidney still held her hands over her eyes. He WAS a great surgeon: in his

hands he held the keys of life and death. And perhaps he had never cared

for Carlotta: she might have thrown herself at him. He was a man, at the

mercy of any scheming woman.

She tried to summon his image to her aid. But a curious thing happened.

She could not visualize him. Instead, there came, clear and distinct, a

picture of K. Le Moyne in the hall of the little house, reaching one of his

long arms to the chandelier over his head and looking up at her as she

stood on the stairs.




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