Anna passed her hand through Norgate’s
arm and led him forcibly away from the shop window
before which they had been standing.
“My mind is absolutely made
up,” she declared firmly. “I adore
shopping, I love Bond Street, and I rather like you,
but I will have no more trifles, as you call them.
If you do not obey, I shall gaze into the next tobacconist’s
window we pass, and go in and buy you all sorts of
unsmokable and unusable things. And, oh, dear,
here is the Count! I feel like a child who has
played truant from school. What will he do to
me, Francis?”
“Don’t worry, dear,”
Norgate laughed. “We’re coming to
the end of this tutelage, you know.”
Count Lanyoki, who had stopped his
motor-car, came across the street towards them.
He was, as usual, irreproachably attired. He wore
white gaiters, patent shoes, and a grey, tall hat.
His black hair, a little thin at the forehead, was
brushed smoothly back. His moustache, also black
but streaked with grey, was twisted upwards. He
had, as always, the air of having just left the hands
of his valet.
“Dear Baroness,” he exclaimed,
as he accosted her, “London has been searched
for you! At the Embassy my staff are reduced to
despair. Telephones, notes, telegrams, and personal
calls have been in vain. Since lunch-time yesterday
it seemed to us that you must have found some other
sphere in which to dwell.”
“Perhaps I have,” Anna
laughed. “I am so sorry to have given you
all this trouble, but yesterday-well, let
me introduce, if I may, my husband, Mr. Francis Norgate.
We were married by special license yesterday afternoon.”
The Count’s amazement was obvious.
Diplomatist though he was, it was several seconds
before he could collect himself and rise to the situation.
He broke off at last, however, in the midst of a string
of interjections and realised his duties.
“My dear Baroness,” he
said, “my dear lady, let me wish you every happiness.
And you, sir,” he added, turning to Norgate,
“you must have, without a doubt, my most hearty
congratulations. There! That is said.
And now to more serious matters. Baroness, have
you not always considered yourself the ward of the
Emperor?”
She nodded.
“His Majesty has been very kind
to me,” she admitted. “At the same
time, I feel that I owe more to myself than I do to
him. His first essay at interfering in my affairs
was scarcely a happy one, was it?”
“Perhaps not,” the Count
replied. “And yet, think what you have done!
You have married an Englishman!”
“I thought English people were
quite popular in Vienna,” Anna reminded him.
The Count hesitated. “That,”
he declared, “is scarcely the question.
What troubles me most is that forty-eight hours ago
I brought you a dispatch from the Emperor.”
“You brought,” Anna pointed
out, “what really amounted to an order to return
at once to Vienna. Well, you see, I have disobeyed
it.”
They were standing at the corner of
Clifford Street, and the Count, with a little gesture,
led the way into the less crowded thoroughfare.
“Dear Baroness,” he continued,
as they walked slowly along, “I am placed now
in a most extraordinary position. The Emperor’s
telegram was of serious import. It cannot be
that you mean to disobey his summons?”
“Well, I really couldn’t
put off being married, could I,” Anna protested,
“especially when my husband had just got the
special license. Besides, I do not wish to return
to Vienna just now.”
The Count glanced at Norgate and appeared
to deliberate for a moment.
“The state of affairs in the
East,” he said, “is such that it is certainly
wiser for every one just now to be within the borders
of their own country.”
“You believe that things are
serious?” Anna enquired. “You believe,
then, that real trouble is at hand?”
“I fear so,” the Count
acknowledged. “It appears to us that Servia
has a secret understanding with Russia, or she would
not have ventured upon such an attitude as she is
now adopting towards us. If that be so, the possibilities
of trouble are immense, almost boundless. That
is why, Baroness, the Emperor has sent for you.
That is why I think you should not hesitate to at
once obey his summons.”
Anna looked up at her companion, her
eyes wide open, a little smile parting her lips.
“But, Count,” she exclaimed,
“you seem to forget! A few days ago, all
that you say to me was reasonable enough, but to-day
there is a great difference, is there not? I
have married an Englishman. Henceforth this is
my country.”
There was a moment’s silence.
The Count seemed dumbfounded. He stared at Anna
as though unable to grasp the meaning of her words.
“Forgive me, Baroness!”
he begged. “I cannot for the moment realise
the significance of this thing. Do you mean me
to understand that you consider yourself now an Englishwoman?”
“I do indeed,” she assented.
“There are many ties which still bind me to
Austria-ties, Count,” she proceeded,
looking him in the face, “of which I shall be
mindful. Yet I am not any longer the Baroness
von Haase. I am Mrs. Francis Norgate, and I have
promised to obey my husband in all manner of ridiculous
things. At the same time, may I add something
which will, perhaps, help you to accept the position
with more philosophy? My husband is a friend
of Herr Selingman’s.”
The Count glanced quickly towards
Norgate. There was some relief in his face-a
great deal of distrust, however.
“Baroness,” he said, “my
advice to you, for your own good entirely, is, with
all respect to your husband, that you shorten your
honeymoon and pay your respects to the Emperor.
I think that you owe it to him. I think that
you owe it to your country.”
Anna for a moment was grave again.
“Just at present,” she
pronounced, “I realise one debt only, and that
is to my husband. I will come to the Embassy
to-morrow and discuss these matters with you, Count,
but whether my husband accompanies me or not, I have
now no secrets from him.”
“The position, then,”
the Count declared, “is intolerable. May
I ask whether you altogether realise, Baroness; what
this means? The Emperor is your guardian.
All your estates are subject to his jurisdiction.
It is his command that you return to Vienna.”
Anna laughed again. She passed
her fingers through Norgate’s arm.
“You see,” she explained,
as they stood for a moment at the corner of the street,
“I have a new emperor now, and he will not let
me go.”
Selingman frowned a little as he recognised
his visitor. Nevertheless, he rose respectfully
to his feet and himself placed a chair by the side
of his desk.
“My dear Count!” he exclaimed.
“I am very glad to see you, but this is an unusual
visit. I would have met you somewhere, or come
to the Embassy. Have we not agreed that it was
well for Herr Selingman, the crockery manufacturer-”
“That is all very well, Selingman,”
the Count interrupted, “but this morning I have
had a shock. It was necessary for me to talk with
you at once. In Bond Street I met the Baroness
von Haase. For twenty-four hours London has been
ransacked in vain for her. This you may not know,
but I will now tell you. She has been our trusted
agent, the trusted agent of the Emperor, in many recent
instances. She has carried secrets in her brain,
messages to different countries. There is little
that she does not know. The last twenty-four
hours, as I say, I have sought for her. The Emperor
requires her presence in Vienna. I meet her in
Bond Street this morning and she introduces to me
her husband, an English husband, Mr. Francis Norgate!”
He drew back a little, with outstretched
hands. Selingman’s face, however, remained
expressionless.
“Married already!” he
commented. “Well, that is rather a surprise.”
“A surprise? To be frank,
it terrifies me!” the Count cried. “Heaven
knows what that woman could tell an Englishman, if
she chose! And her manner-I did not
like it. The only reassuring thing about it was
that she told me that her husband was one of your
men.”
“Quite true,” Selingman
assented. “He is. It is only recently
that he came to us, but I do not mind telling you
that during the last few weeks no one has done such
good work. He is the very man we needed.”
“You have trusted him?”
“I trust or I do not trust,”
Selingman replied. “That you know.
I have employed this young man in very useful work.
I cannot blindfold him. He knows.”
“Then I fear treachery,” the Count declared.
“Have you any reason for saying that?”
Selingman asked.
The Count lit a cigarette with trembling fingers.
“Listen,” he said, “always,
my friend, you undervalue a little the English race.
You undervalue their intelligence, their patriotism,
their poise towards the serious matters of life.
I know nothing of Mr. Francis Norgate save what I
saw this morning. He is one of that type of Englishmen,
clean-bred, well-born, full of reserve, taciturn, yet,
I would swear, honourable. I know the type, and
I do not believe in such a man being your servant.”
The shadow of anxiety crossed Selingman’s face.
“Have you any reason for saying this?”
he repeated.
“No reason save the instinct
which is above reason,” the Count replied quickly.
“I know that if the Baroness and he put their
heads together, we may be under the shadow of catastrophe.”
Selingman sat with folded arms for several moments.
“Count,” he said at last,
“I appreciate your point of view. You have,
I confess, disturbed me. Yet of this young man
I have little fear. I did not approach him by
any vulgar means. I took, as they say here, the
bull by the horns. I appealed to his patriotism.”
“To what?” the Count demanded incredulously.
“To his patriotism,” Selingman
repeated. “I showed him the decadence of
his country, decadence visible through all her institutions,
through her political tendencies, through her young
men of all classes. I convinced him that what
the country needed was a bitter tonic, a kind but
chastening hand. I convinced him of this.
He believes that he betrays his country for her ultimate
good. As I told you before, he has brought me
information which is simply invaluable. He has
a position and connections which are unique.”
The Count drew his chair a little nearer.
“You say that he has done you
great service,” he said. “Well, you
must admit for yourself that the day is too near now
for much more to be expected. Could you not somehow
guard against his resolution breaking down at the
last moment? Think what it may mean to him-the
sound of his national anthem at a critical moment,
the clash of arms in the distance, the call of France
across the Channel. A week-even half
a week’s extra preparation might make much difference.”
Selingman sat for a short time, deep
in thought. Then he drew out a box of pale-looking
German cigars and lit one.
“Count,” he announced
solemnly, “I take off my hat to you. Leave
the matter in my hands.”