They were talking of the Prince during
those few minutes before they separated to dress for
dinner. The whole of the house-party, with the
exception of the Prince himself, were gathered around
the great open fireplace at the north end of the hall.
The weather had changed during the afternoon, and
a cold wind had blown in their faces on the homeward
drive. Every one had found comfortable seats here,
watching the huge logs burn, and there seemed to be
a general indisposition to move. A couple of
young men from the neighborhood had joined the house-party,
and the conversation, naturally enough, was chiefly
concerned with the day’s sport. The young
men, Somerfield especially, were inclined to regard
the Prince’s achievement from a somewhat critical
standpoint.
“He rode the race well enough,”
Somerfield admitted, “but the mare is a topper,
and no mistake. He had nothing to do but to sit
tight and let her do the work.”
“Of course, he hadn’t
to finish either,” one of the newcomers, a Captain
Everard Wilmot, remarked. “That’s
where you can tell if a fellow really can ride or
not. Anyhow, his style was rotten. To me
he seemed to sit his horse exactly like a groom.”
“You will, perhaps, not deny
him,” the Duke remarked mildly, “a certain
amount of courage in riding a strange horse of uncertain
temper, over a strange country, in an enterprise which
was entirely new to him.”
“I call it one of the most sporting
things I ever heard of in my life,” Lady Grace
declared warmly.
Somerfield shrugged his shoulders.
“One must admit that he has
pluck,” he remarked critically. “At
the same time I cannot see that a single effort of
this sort entitles a man to be considered a sportsman.
He doesn’t shoot, nor does he ever ride except
when he is on military service. He neither plays
games nor has he the instinct for them. A man
without the instinct for games is a fellow I cannot
understand. He’d never get along in this
country, would he, Wilmot?”
“No, I’m shot if he would!”
that young man replied. “There must be
something wrong about a man who hasn’t any taste
whatever for sport.”
Penelope suddenly intervened intervened,
too, in somewhat startling fashion.
“Charlie,” she said, “you
are talking like a baby! I am ashamed of you!
I am ashamed of you all! You are talking like
narrow-minded, ignorant little squireens.”
Somerfield went slowly white.
He looked across at Penelope, but the angry flash
in his eyes was met by an even brighter light in her
own.
“I will tell you what I think!”
she exclaimed. “I think that you are all
guilty of the most ridiculous presumption in criticising
such a man as the Prince. You would dare you,
Captain Wilmot, and you, Charlie, and you, Mr. Hannaway,”
she added, turning to the third young man, “to
stand there and tell us all in a lordly way that the
Prince is no sportsman, as though that mysterious
phrase disposed of him altogether as a creature inferior
to you and your kind! If only you could realize
the absolute absurdity of any of you attempting to
depreciate a person so immeasurably above you!
Prince Maiyo is a man, not an overgrown boy to go
through life shooting birds, playing games which belong
properly to your schooldays, and hanging round the
stage doors of half the theatres in London. You
are satisfied with your lives and the Prince is satisfied
with his. He belongs to a race whom you do not
understand. Let him alone. Don’t presume
to imagine yourselves his superior because he does
not conform to your pygmy standard of life.”
Penelope was standing now, her slim,
elegant form throbbing with the earnestness of her
words, a spot of angry color burning in her cheeks.
During the moment’s silence which followed, Lady
Grace too rose to her feet and came to her friend’s
side.
“I agree with every word Penelope
has said,” she declared.
The Duchess smiled.
“Come,” she said soothingly,
“we mustn’t take this little affair too
seriously. You are all right, all of you.
Every one must live according to his bringing up.
The Prince, no doubt, is as faithful to his training
and instincts as the young men of our own country.
It is more interesting to compare than to criticise.”
Somerfield, who for a moment had been
too angry to speak, had now recovered himself.
“I think,” he said stiffly,
“that we had better drop the subject. I
had no idea that Miss Morse felt so strongly about
it or I should not have presumed, even here and amongst
ourselves, to criticise a person who holds such a
high place in her esteem. Everard, I’ll
play you a game of billiards before we go upstairs.
There’s just time.”
Captain Wilmot hesitated. He
was a peace-loving man, and, after all, Penelope and
his friend were engaged.
“Perhaps Miss Morse ” he began.
Penelope turned upon him.
“I should like you all to understand,”
she declared, “that every word I said came from
my heart, and that I would say it again, and more,
with the same provocation.”
There was a finality about Penelope’s
words which left no room for further discussion.
The little group was broken up. She and Lady Grace
went to their rooms together.
“Penelope, you’re a dear!”
the latter said, as they mounted the stairs.
“I am afraid you’ve made Charlie very angry,
though.”
“I hope I have,” Penelope
answered. “I meant to make him angry.
I think that such self-sufficiency is absolutely stifling.
It makes me sometimes almost loathe young Englishmen
of his class.”
“And you don’t dislike
the Prince so much nowadays?” Lady Grace remarked
with transparent indifference.
“No!” Penelope answered.
“That is finished. I misunderstood him at
first. It was entirely my own fault. I was
prejudiced, and I hated to feel that I was in the
wrong. I do not see how any one could dislike
him unless they were enemies of his country.
Then I fancy that they might have cause.”
Lady Grace sighed.
“To tell you the truth, Penelope,”
she said, “I almost wish that he were not quite
so devotedly attached to his country.”
Penelope was silent. They had
reached Lady Grace’s room now, and were standing
together on the hearthrug in front of the fire.
“I am afraid he is like that,”
Penelope said gently. “He seems to have
none of the ordinary weaknesses of men. I, too,
wish sometimes that he were a little different.
One would like to think of him, for his own sake,
as being happy some day. He reminds me somehow
of the men who build and build, toiling always through
youth unto old age. There seems no limit to their
strength, nor any respite. They build a palace
which those who come after them must inhabit.”
Once more Lady Grace sighed.
She was looking into the heart of the fire. Penelope
took her hands.
“It is hard sometimes, dear,”
she said, “to realize that a thing is impossible,
that it is absolutely out of our reach. Yet it
is better to bring one’s mind to it than to
suffer all the days.”
Lady Grace looked up. At that
moment she was more than pretty. Her eyes were
soft and bright, the color had flooded her cheeks.
“But I don’t see why
it should be impossible, Penelope,” she protested.
“We are equals in every way. Alliances between
our two countries are greatly to be desired.
I have heard my father say so, and Mr. Haviland.
The trouble is, Pen,” she added with trembling
lips, “that he does not care for me.”
“You cannot tell,” Penelope
answered. “He has never shown any signs
of caring for any woman. Remember, though, that
he would want you to live in Japan.”
“I’d live in Thibet if
he asked me to,” Lady Grace declared, raising
her handkerchief to her eyes, “but he never will.
He doesn’t care. He doesn’t understand.
I am very foolish, Penelope.”
Penelope kissed her gently.
“Dear,” she said, “you are not the
only foolish woman in the world."...
Conversation amongst the younger members
of the house-party at Devenham Castle was a little
disjointed that evening. Perhaps Penelope, who
came down in a wonderful black velveteen gown, with
a bunch of scarlet roses in her corsage, was the only
one who seemed successfully to ignore the passage
of arms which had taken place so short a while ago.
She talked pleasantly to Somerfield, who tried to
be dignified and succeeded only in remaining sulky.
Chance had placed her at some distance from the Prince,
to whom Lady Grace was talking with a subdued softness
in her manner which puzzled Captain Wilmot, her neighbor
on the other side.
“I saw you with all the evening
papers as usual, Bransome,” the Prime Minister
remarked during the service of dinner. “Was
there any news?”
“Nothing much,” the Foreign
Secretary replied. “Consuls are down another
point and the Daily Comet says that you are like a
drowning man clinging to the raft of your majority.
Excellent cartoon of you, by the bye. You shall
see it after dinner.”
“Thank you,” the Prime
Minister said. “Was there anything about
you in the same paper by any chance?”
“Nothing particularly abusive,”
Sir Edward answered blandly. “By the bye,
the police declare that they have a definite clue this
time, and are going to arrest the murderer of Hamilton
Fynes and poor dicky Vanderpole tonight or tomorrow.”
“Excellent!” the Duke
declared. “It would have been a perfect
disgrace to our police system to have left two such
crimes undetected. Our respected friend at the
Home Office will have a little peace now.”
“How about me?” Bransome
grumbled. “Haven’t I been worried
to death, too?”
The Prince, who had just finished
describing to Lady Grace a typical landscape of his
country, turned toward Bransome.
“I think that I heard you say
something about a discovery in connection with those
wonderful murder cases,” he said. “Has
any one actually been arrested?”
“My paper was an early edition,”
Bransome answered, “but it spoke of a sensational
denouement within the next few hours. I should
imagine that it is all over by now. At the same
time it’s absurd how the Press give these things
away. It seems that some fellow who was bicycling
saw a man get in and out of poor Dicky’s taxi
and is quite prepared to swear to him.”
“Has he not been rather a long
time in coming forward with his evidence?” the
Prince remarked. “I do not remember to have
seen any mention of such a person in the papers before.”
“He watched so well,”
Bransome answered, “and was so startled that
he was knocked down and run over. The detective
in charge of the case found him in a hospital.”
“These things always come out
sooner or later,” the Prime Minister remarked.
“As a matter of fact, I am inclined to think
that our police wait too long before they make an
arrest. They play with their victim so deliberately
that sometimes he slips through their fingers.
Very often, too, they let a man go who would give
himself away from sheer fright if he felt the touch
of a policeman upon his shoulder.”
“As a nation,” Bransome
remarked, helping himself to the entree, “we
handle life amongst ourselves with perpetual kid gloves.
We are always afraid of molesting the liberty of the
subject. A trifle more brutality sometimes would
make for strength. We are like a dentist whose
work suffers because he is afraid of hurting his patient.”
Somerfield was watching his fiancee curiously.
“Are you really very pale tonight,
Penelope,” he asked, “or is it those red
flowers which have drawn all the color from your cheeks?”
“I believe that I am pale,”
Penelope answered. “I am always pale when
I wear black and when people have disagreed with me.
As a matter of fact, I am trying to make the Prince
feel homesick. Tell me,” she asked him
across the round table, “don’t you think
that I remind you a little tonight of the women of
your country?”
The Prince returned her gaze as though,
indeed, something were passing between them of greater
significance than that half-bantering question.
“Indeed,” he said, “I
think that you do. You remind me of my country
itself of the things that wait for me across
the ocean.”
The Prince’s servant had entered
the dining room and whispered in the ear of the butler
who was superintending the service of dinner.
The latter came over at once to the Prince.
“Your Highness,” he said,
“some one is on the telephone, speaking from
London. They ask if you could spare half a minute.”
The Prince rose with an interrogative
glance at his hostess, and the Duchess smilingly motioned
him to go. Even after he had left the room, when
he was altogether unobserved, his composed demeanor
showed no signs of any change. He took up the
receiver almost blithely. It was Soto, his secretary,
who spoke to him.
“Highness,” he said, “the
man Jacks with a policeman is here in the hall at
the present moment. He asks permission to search
this house.”
“For what purpose?” the Prince asked.
“To discover some person whom
he believes to be in hiding here,” the secretary
answered. “He explains that in any ordinary
case he would have applied for what they call a search
warrant. Owing to your Highness’ position,
however, he has attended here, hoping for your gracious
consent without having made any formal application.”
“I must think!” the Prince
answered. “Tell me, Soto. You are sure
that the English doctor has had no opportunity of
communicating with any one?”
“He has had no opportunity,”
was the firm reply. “If your Highness says
the word, he shall pass.”
“Let him alone,” the Prince
answered. “Refuse this man Jacks permission
to search my house during my absence. Tell him
that I shall be there at three o’clock tomorrow
afternoon and that at that hour he is welcome to return.”
“It shall be done, Highness,” was the
answer.
The Prince set down the receiver upon
the instrument and stood for a moment deep in thought.
It was a strange country, this, a strange
end which it seemed that he must prepare to face.
He felt like the man who had gone out to shoot lions
and returning with great spoil had died of the bite
of a poisonous ant!