After lunch the Secretary returned
to the Legation and made out his report to his Minister,
concerning the treaty. He had looked up the word
“parlous” in the dictionary, and found
that it meant, “whimsical, tricky,” a
sinister interpretation he felt, when connected with
anything diplomatic; moreover the Foreign Office was
distressingly uninformed on the subject, another reason
for suspicion. Yet, as far as he knew only
the mere formalities of settlement remained, the ratification
by vote of his home Government the exchange
of protocols and behold it was accomplished much
to the credit of his Minister and the satisfaction
of all concerned. Doubtless the visit was nothing
more than a bit of routine work, and his private affairs
seeming for the time more important, he dismissed
it from his mind as not worthy of serious consideration
and compiled an elaborate report of three pages, not
forgetting to mention the arrival of the Chief Clerk’s
lunch, as matter which might legitimately be used
to fill up space. This done, he was about to
leave the office in order to meet his appointment with
Kent-Lauriston, when John, the genial functionary of
the Legation, beamed upon him from the door, presenting
him a visiting card, and informing him that a lady
was waiting in the ante-room.
“An’ she’s that
’ansome, sir, it would do your eyes good to see
’er.”
The Secretary answered somewhat testily
that his eyes were in excellent condition as it was,
and that the lady did not deserve to be seen at all
for coming so much after office-hours, and delaying
him just as he was about to keep an appointment then
his eyes happened to fall on the card and his tone
changed at once.
“Madame Darcy!” he exclaimed.
“Why, what can have brought her to see me! John,
show the lady in at once, and say my time
is quite at her service.”
A glance at his fair chaperon of the
night before, as she entered the room, told him that
she was in great trouble, and he sprang forward to
take both her hands in his, with a warmth of greeting
which he would have found it hard to justify, except
on an occasion of such evident sorrow.
“Inez Madame Darcy,”
he said, leading her to his most comfortable arm-chair “this
is indeed a pleasure but do not tell me
that you are in distress.”
“I am in very great trouble.”
“Anything that I can do to serve
you I need hardly say,” he murmured,
and paused, fascinated by this picture of lovely grief.
“I was prompted to come to you,”
she replied, “by your kindness of last evening,
for I knew you had seen and understood, and were still
my friend, and also my national representative in
a foreign land, to ask your aid for a poor country-woman
who is in danger of being deprived of her freedom,
if not of her reason.”
“But surely you are not speaking of yourself!”
“Yes, of myself.”
The young diplomat said nothing for
a moment or two, he was arranging his ideas adjusting
them to this new and interesting phase of his experience
with Madame Darcy.
As a Secretary of Legation is generally
the father confessor of his compatriots he
had ceased to be surprised at anything. People
may deceive their physician, their lawyer, or the
partner of their joys and sorrows; but to their country’s
representative in a strange land they unburden their
hearts.
“Tell me,” he said finally,
breaking the silence, “just what your trouble
is.”
“I need sympathy and help.”
“The first you have already,”
he replied with a special reserve in his manner, for
he felt somehow that it was hardly fair that she should
bring herself to his notice again, when he had almost
made up his mind to marry a lady of whom all his friends
disapproved. Indeed, in the last few minutes
the force of Kingsland’s remarks had made themselves
felt very strongly, and he especially exerted himself
to be brusque, feeling in an odd kind of way that
he owed it to Miss Fitzgerald. So putting on
his most official tone he added, “to help you,
Madame Darcy, I must understand your case clearly.”
“Don’t call me by that
name give me my own as you once
did. My husband’s a brute.”
“Quite so, undoubtedly; but
unfortunately that does not change your name.”
“Would you mind shutting the
door?” she replied somewhat irrelevantly.
They were, as has been said, in the Secretary’s
private office, a dreary room, its furniture, three
chairs, a desk and a bookcase full of forbidding legal
volumes, its walls littered with maps, and its one
window looking out on the unloveliness of a London
business street.
As he returned to his seat, after executing her request, she began abruptly:
“You’re not a South American.”
“No, my father was a Northerner,
but, as you know, he owned large sugar plantations
in your country, and if training and sympathy can make
me a South American, I am one.”
“You’re a Protestant.”
“Yes, so are you.”
“It is my mother’s faith,
and though I was brought up in a convent at New Orleans,
I’ve not forsaken it. I feel easier in speaking
to you on that account.”
“You may rest assured, my dear,
that what you say to me will go no farther. ’Tis
my business to keep secrets.”
“Two years ago,” she began
abruptly, plunging into her story, “after our after
you left home, an Englishman, a soldier returning from
the East incapacitated by a fever, and travelling
for his health, craved a night’s rest at my
father’s house. As you know, in a country
like ours, where decent inns are few and far between,
travellers are always welcome. It was the hot
season, we pressed him to stay for a day or two, he
accepted, and a return of the fever made him our guest
for months. He needed constant nursing I I
was the only white woman on the plantation.”
“I see,” said Stanley.
“You nursed him, he recovered, was grateful,
paid you homage.”
“Remember I was brought up in
a convent. I was so alone and so unhappy.
He told me you had married. I believed him trusted
him.
“Quite so. His name was Darcy. He
is a liar.”
“He is my husband.”
“A gentleman I suppose?”
“The world accords him that title,” she
replied coldly.
“I understand He’s a man of
means?”
“He has nothing but his pay.”
“And you but that
question is unnecessary. Senor De Costa’s
name and estates are well known and you
are his only child.”
“Yes, you’re right,”
she burst out. “It’s my money, my
cursed money! Why do men call it a blessing!
Oh, if I could trust him, I’d give him every
penny of it. But I cannot, it’s the one
hold I have on him, and because I will not beggar
myself to supply means for his extravagances he dares
“Not personal violence, surely?”
“To put me away somewhere in
a retreat, he calls it. That means a madhouse.”
“My dear Madame Darcy!”
“Call me Inez De Costa, I will
not have that name of Darcy, I hate it.”
“My dear Inez, then; your fears
are groundless; they can’t put sane people in
madhouses any longer in England, except in cheap fiction it’s
against the law.”
“It’s very easy for you
to sit there and talk of law. You, who are protected
by your office, but for me, for a poor woman whose
liberty is threatened!”
“I assure you that you’re
in no such danger as you apprehend.”
“But if I were put away, you would help me?”
“You shall suffer no injustice
that we can prevent. You may return home and
rest easy on that score.”
“I shall never return to that man.”
“Why not return to your father?”
“Would that I could!”
she exclaimed, her eyes brimming with tears. “But
how can I, with no money and no friends?”
I thought you said ”
began the Secretary, but his interruption was lost
in the flow of her eloquence.
“I’ve not a penny.
I can cash no cheque that’s not made to his order,
and to come to you I must degrade myself by borrowing
a sovereign from my maid. I’ve travelled
third-class!”
The Secretary smiled at the ante-climax, saying:
“Many people of large means travel third-class
habitually.”
“But not a De Costa,”
she broke in, and then continued her narration with
renewed ardour.
“I’ve no roof to shelter
me to-night. No where to go. No clothes except
what I wear. No money but those few shillings;
but I would rather starve and die in the streets than
go back to him. I’m rich. I’ve
powerful friends. You can’t have the heart
to turn away from me. Have you forgotten the
old friendship? You must do something something to save me ” and in the passion,
of her southern nature she threw herself at his feet,
and burst into an agony of tears.
Stanley assisted her to rise, got
her a glass of water, and had cause, for the second
time in that interview, to thank his stars that love
had already shot another shaft, because if it were
not for Belle, his official position, and the fact
that the Senora had one husband already well it
was a relief to be forced to tell her that legations
were not charitable institutions, and that much as
he might desire to aid her, neither he nor his colleagues
could interfere in her private affairs.
“Then you refuse to assist me you
leave me to my fate!” she cried, starting up,
a red flush of anger mantling her cheek.
“Not at all,” he hastened
to say. “On the contrary, I’m going
to help you all I know how. I can’t interfere
myself, but I can refer you to a friend of mine, whom
you can thoroughly trust, and who’s in a position
to aid you in the matter.”
“And his name?”
“His name is Peter Sanks, the
lawyer of the Legation, a gentleman, truly as well
as technically. A countryman of yours who has
practised both here and at home, and who always feels
a keen interest in the affairs of his compatriots.
He has chambers in the Middle Temple. I’ll
give you his address on my card.”
“You’re most kind Ill throw myself without delay on the
clemency of this Senor
“Sanks.”
“Madre de Dios! What a name!”
“I dare say he was Don Pedro
Sanchez at home, but that would hardly go here.
I’ve written him a line on my visiting card,
requesting him to do everything he can for you, and,
of course, I need hardly say to you, as a friend,
not as an official, that my time and service are entirely
devoted to your interests. There is nothing that
I possess which you may not command.”
“And for me, you do this?” she asked,
looking up wistfully in his face.
He took her two little hands in his,
and bending over, kissed the tips of their fingers.
“I cannot express the gratitude,” she
began.
Dont, he said, cutting short her profuse thanks. Its nothing, I
assure you. Here is my card to Sanks. Better go to him at once, or
you may miss him. Its nearly three oclock. And feeling that it
was unsafe to trust himself longer in her presence, he touched the bell, saying
to the confidential clerk who answered it:
“The door, John.”
A moment later she was gone, leaving
only the subtle perfume of her presence in the room.
Stanley threw himself moodily into the nearest chair.
It was too bad that this bewitching woman should be
married to a brute. It was too bad that he couldn’t
do more to help her, and it was yes, it
really was too bad, that she should have come again
into his life just at the present moment. She
was so exactly like what he had fancied the ideal
woman he was to marry ought to be. But she wasn’t
a bit like Belle, and the reflection was decidedly
disturbing. And now, he supposed, she would get
a divorce, and oh, pshaw! it wasn’t
his affair anyway, and he was late for his appointment
with Kent-Lauriston.
He rang his office bell sharply, picking up his hat and gloves as he did so,
and saying to the messenger who answered his summons:
Give this report to his Excellency, John, and let me have some visiting
cards, will you
No, no, not any official ones. Some with my private
address on.”
“Very sorry Sir, but they’re
all out. I ordered some more day before yesterday,
Sir. They should have come by now.”
“Just my luck, why didn’t you attend to
them earlier?”
“Isn’t there one on your
desk, Sir. I’m sure I saw one lying there
this morning.”
Why, yes, so there was. And he turned hastily back, only to exclaim
after a moments hopeless rummaging:
“Confound it! I must have given it to Senora
De Costa!”