use for my money than to pay your gambling debts and enlarge the bank accounts of your heartbroken lady-friends.â
âThe brat,â mumbled Frost.
âI beg your pardon?â
âThis mongrel you picked up somewhereâââ
âYouâre drunk,â Alton Humffrey said.
âNot so drunk I canât put two and two together! All your wormy talk about the Humffrey bloodâthe family nameâthe promises you made my motherââ!â
âYou have an obligation, too,â his uncle snapped. âPrincipally, to stop following the life cycle of a sponge. By the way, youâll apologize for the disgusting manner in which youâve just referred to my son.â
âYour son!â shouted Frost. âWhat is he if he isnât a mongrel?â
âGet out.â
âCanât stand the truth, hey? You gave me every reason to expect Iâd be your heir, not some puking littleâââ
âSo help me God, Ronald,â Alton Humffreyâs voice said clearly, âif you donât leave at once Iâll throw you down the stairs.â
There was a silence.
Then Jessie Sherwood heard young Frost say with a nervous laugh, âIâm sorry, Uncle. I guess I am tight. I apologize, of course.â
There was another silence.
âVery well,â Humffrey said. âAnd now I take it youâre about to leave?â
âRight, right,â Ron Frost said.
She heard him stagger up the hall. A few minutes later his footsteps returned and stopped in the study doorway.
âPlease say good-by and thanks to Aunt Sarah for me, Uncle. Under the circumstancesâââ
âI understand.â The Humffrey voice sounded remote.
âWell ⦠so long, Uncle Alton.â
âGood-by, Ronald.â
âIâll be seeing you and Aunt Sarah soon, I hope.â
There was no reply.
Young Frost stumbled down the stairs. Shortly after, Jessie heard his Jaguar roar away.
So the day was intolerable, and she sank into bed thankfully that night, punched her pillow, murmured her nightly prayer, and sought sleep.
At two in the morning she was still seeking.
Nair Island had long ago settled down to silence and to darkness. The rustle of surf that soothed her every night was the only sound she could hear, except for an occasional late guestâs car leaving the Island; but tonight its rhythm seemed to clash with her pulse rate. Everyone in the house was asleep; the two rooms above the garage, where Stallings and Cullum had their quarters, had been dark for hours. Her bedroom was not even hot; a cool breeze had swept in from sea at eleven, and she had had to get up for a quilt.
Then why couldnât she sleep?
It was a nuisance, because usually she fell asleep at will. She had always had the gift of instant relaxation. It was one of her assets as a nurse.
It certainly wasnât the baby. Jessie had been a little concerned about his behavior during the day, but with bedtime he had become his healthy little self again, and he had finished his bottle, bubbled mightily, and fallen asleep like an angel. When she had checked him before turning in, his tiny face was serene and he was breathing with such untroubled lightness that she had actually stooped over his crib. Nor was it an imminent feeding that was keeping her wakeful; little Michael had broken himself of his 2 A.M. bottle ten days before, and he had slept peacefully through every night since.
It was the whole disagreeable day, Jessie decidedâthe fireworks, the general confusion, Mrs. Humffreyâs flapping about, the tension in the household climaxed by the row between uncle and nephew. And perhapsâshe felt her cheeks tingleâperhaps it had something to do with that man Richard Queen.
Jessie had to admit that she had been acting like a moony teenager ever since their meeting on the Humffrey beach. Thinking about a man of sixty-three! Hinting to him about
Janwillem van de Wetering