“Ye-es,” came in a whisper from Mrs. La Rue’s white lips, and Margery went on:
“You must then have always known his whereabouts. When we lived in Paris, and father was alive you knew that Mr. Hetherton was there in the city, too; and did you ever see him?”
“Never—never! He would have spurned me like a dog,” Mrs. La Rue answered, energetically, and Margery continued:
“But you knew he was there, and when Queenie came to me that day when I wore her scarlet cloak and she my faded plaid, you knew who she was, and did not speak?”
“Yes, I knew who she was, and did not speak,” moaned Mrs. La Rue, and Margery went on:
“And when I was at school with her, and her father paid the bills, and when I visited her at the chateau, you knew, and did not tell me. But did you tell my father? Did he know who Queenie was?—know of Mr. Hetherton?”
“No, he did not,” Mrs. La Rue replied, “nor was it necessary. I was a faithful wife to him, and there was no need for him to know.”
“Mother,” Margery began, after a moment’s pause, “why did you wish to hide from Queenie who you were? I have a right to know. I am your daughter, and if there has been any wrong I can share it with you. I would rather know the exact truth than think the horrible things I may think, if you do not tell me. Why did you take another name than your own, and why did you not reveal your self to Queenie, but leave her to grope in the dark for what she so much wished to find? Tell me. I insist upon knowing.”
Driven to the last extremity, and forgetting herself in her distress, Mrs. La Rue replied:
“I had sworn not to do it; had taken a solemn vow never to let Queenie know who I was.”