“I am waiting, madam,” said Mason, quietly.

The young woman passed her hand downward over her face, as though to remove something that was clinging to her.

“If you must know,” she said slowly, “his name is Dalton, Robert Dalton, a member of the law firm of Carpenter, Lomax, & Dalton, of our city. He is said to be an able lawyer. He is the elder Mrs. Van Bartan's legal adviser, but I have no right to tell you all this. It is unjust to him. and unjust to me, and unfair to us all.”

“And he still loves you?” said Mason, with the blunt indifference of a surgeon who thrusts his thumb into a wound.

The young woman threw back her head. “You are brutal,” she cried, “to ask such a question, and I should be a fool, a miserable, contemptible fool if I should answer.”

“But you have answered it, madam,” replied Randolph Mason.

The younger Mrs. Van Bartan covered her face with her hands, and began to sob. The counsellor sat and watched her, as an expert might watch an intricate piece of machinery that he was testing. There was no emotion of any sort visible in his face—nothing at all, except the intense interest of the expert.

Presently Mason leaned back in his chair. The result was evidently satisfactory.

“Is this man married?” he asked.

The woman did not answer. She simply pressed her hands tighter against her face. The counsellor waited for a few moments. Then he repeated: