Jennie Barton had refused to listen to Captain Welford\'s accusation of treachery against her lover but the seed of suspicion had been planted. It grew with such rapidity her peace of mind was utterly destroyed.
In vain she put the ugly thought aside.
"It\'s impossible!" she murmured a hundred times only to come back to the idea that would not down.
Night after night she tossed on her pillow unable to sleep. The longer she faced the problem of Socola\'s character and antecedents the more probable became the truth of Dick\'s suspicions. She had made his present position in the State Department possible.
Again her love rose in rebellion. "It\'s a lie—a lie!" she sobbed. "I won\'t believe it. Dick\'s crazy jealousy\'s at the bottom of it all—"
Why had Socola buried himself in the Department of State so completely since the scene with Dick? His calls had been brief. Their relations had been strained in spite of her honest effort to put them back on the old footing.
He gave as his excuse for not calling oftener the enormous pressure of work which the crisis of the invasion of Pennsylvania had brought to his office. The excuse was valid. But perfect love would find a way. It should need no excuse.
There was something wrong. She realized it now with increasing agony. Unable to endure the strain she sent for Socola.
Their meeting was awkward. She made no effort to apologize or smooth things over. Her attitude was instinctive. She gave her feelings full rein.
She fixed on him a steady searching gaze.
"It\'s useless for me to try to pretend, my love. There\'s something wrong between us."
"Your mind has been poisoned," was the quick, serious answer. "Thoughts are things. They have the power to kill or give life. A poisonous idea has been planted in your soul. It\'s killing your love for me. I feel it—and I\'m helpless."
"You can cast it out," she answered tenderly.
"How?"
"Tell me frankly and honestly the whole story of your life—"
"You believe me an impostor?"
"I love you—"
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