But her smile was like the mixing of all smiles, a baby's, a woman-of-

the-world, a grieved child's, and a spirit who had put aside all moral

purpose. Perhaps, like mixed drinks it was for that reason but the more

intoxicating. And because she did not hide her charms and was lavish

with her smiles, there were more poor victims about her little feet

than about any other woman at the shore that summer. Men talked about

her in the smoking rooms and billiard rooms and compared her to vamps

of other seasons, and decided she had left them all in the shade. She

was a perfect production of the modern age, more perfect than others

because she knew how to do the boldest things with that cherubic air

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that bereft sin of its natural ugliness and made it beautiful and

delicious, as if degradation had suddenly become an exalted thing, like

some of the old rites in a Pagan Temple, and she a lovely priestess.

And when each new folly was over there was she with her innocent baby

air, and her pure childlike face that looked dreamily out from its

frame of little girl hair, and seemed not to have been soiled at all.

And so men who played her games lost their sense of sin and fell that

much lower than those who sin and know it and are afraid to look

themselves in the face. When a man loses his sense of shame, of being

among the pigs, he is in a far country indeed.

But Opal Verrons sauntering forth to the Hotel piazza in company with

three of her quondam admirers suddenly lost her luxurious air of

nestling content. The hotel clerk handed her two telegrams as she

passed the desk. She tore them open carelessly, but her eyes grew wide

with horror as she read.

Percy Emerson had been arrested. He had run over a woman and a baby and

both were in a hospital in a critical condition. He would be held

without bail until it was seen whether they lived.

She drew in her breath with a frightened gasp and bit at her red lip

with her little sharp teeth. A pretty child with floating curls and

dainty apparel ran laughing across her way, its hand outstretched to a

tiny white dog that was dancing after her, and Opal gave a sharp cry

and tore the telegram into small bits. But when she opened the second

message her face paled under its delicate rouge as she read: "Mortimer

McMarter killed in an accident when his car collided with a truck. His

body lies at Saybrook Inn. We find your address on his person, with a

request to let you know if anything happens to him. What do you wish

done with the body?"