“In diplomacy,” the Baron
remarked blandly, “as also, I believe, in affairs
of commerce, the dinner-table is frequently chosen
as a fitting place for the commencement of delicate
negotiations. For a bargain no!
But when three men take ourselves, for instance have
a matter of some importance to discuss, I can conceive
no better opportunity for the preliminary skirmishing,
shall I say? than the present.”
I raised my glass, and looked thoughtfully
at the pale amber wine bubbling up from the stem.
“From a certain point of view,”
I answered, “I entirely agree with you.
Yet you must remember that the host has always the
advantage.”
“In the present case,”
the Baron said with a smile, “that amounts to
nothing, for you practically gave me my answer before
we sat down to dinner. If I am able to induce
you to change your mind well, so much the
better. If not well, I can have nothing
to complain of.”
“I am glad,” I answered,
“that you appreciate our position. With
regard to the present custody of the child, which
I take it is what you want to discuss with us, our
minds are practically made up. My friend and I
have both agreed that we will continue the charge
of her until she is claimed by someone who is in a
position to do so openly someone, in short,
who has a legal right.”
The Baron nodded gravely.
“An excellent decision,”
he said. “No one could possibly quarrel
with it. Yet it is a privilege to be able to
tell you some facts which may perhaps affect your
point of view. I can explain to you why
this open claim is not made.”
“We are here,” I answered,
“to listen to whatever you may have to say.”
We Allan and I were
dining with the Baron at Claridge’s. An
appointment, which he had begged us to make, had been
changed into a dinner invitation at his earnest request.
There was a likelihood, he told us, of his being summoned
abroad at any moment, and he was particularly anxious
not to leave the hotel pending the arrival of a cablegram.
So far his demeanour had been courtesy and consideration
itself, but under the man’s geniality and almost
excessive bonhomie both Allan and myself were
conscious of a certain nervous impatience, only partially
concealed. Whatever proposal he might have to
make to us, our acceptance of it was without doubt
a matter of great importance to him. The more
we realized this, the more we wondered.
“I only wish,” he said
with emphasis, “that it was within my power to
lay the cards upon the table before you, to tell you
the whole truth. I do not think then that you
would hesitate for a single second. But that
I cannot do. The honour of a great house, Mr.
Greatson, is involved in this matter, into which you
have been so strangely drawn. I must leave blanks
in my story which you must fill in for yourselves,
you and Mr. Mabane. There are things which I
may not dare not tell you.
If I could, you would wonder no longer that those
who desire to take over the charge of the child wish
to do so without publicity, and without any appeal
to the courts.”
“The Archduchess,” I remarked,
“gave me some hint as to the nature of these
difficulties.”
The Baron emptied his glass and called
for another bottle of wine. Then he looked carefully
around him, a quite unnecessary precaution, for our
table was in a remote corner of the room, and there
were very few dining.
“It is no longer,” he
said, “a matter of surmise with us as to who
the child you call Isobel de Sorrens really is.
She is of the House of Waldenburg. She carries
her descent written in her face, a hall-mark no one
could deny. Upon the Archduchess and others of
her great family must rest always the shadow of a
grave stigma so long as the child remains in the hands
of strangers, an alien from her own country. The
Archduchess wishes at once, and quietly, to assume
the charge of her. She is conscious of your services;
she feels that you have probably saved the child from
a fate which it is not easy to contemplate calmly.
She authorizes me, therefore, to treat with you in
the most generous fashion.”
“That is a phrase,” I
remarked, “which I do not altogether understand.”
“Later,” the Baron said,
with a meaning look, “I will make myself clear.
In the meantime, let me recommend this souffle.
Mr. Mabane, you are drinking nothing. Would you
prefer your wine a shade colder?”
“Not for me,” Allan declared.
“I prefer champagne at its natural temperature;
the wine is far too good to have its flavour frozen
out of it. Apropos of what you were saying, Baron,
there is one question which I should like to ask you.
Why was Major Delahaye sent to St. Argueil for Isobel,
and what was he supposed to do with her?”
I do not think that the Baron liked
the question. He hesitated for several moments
before he answered it.
“Major Delahaye was not sent,”
he said. “He went on his own account.
He was the only person who knew the child’s
whereabouts.”
“And what do you suppose his
object was in bringing her away from the convent?”
Allan persisted.
“I do not know,” the Baron
answered. “All I can say is that it pleases
me vastly more to find the child in your keeping than
in his.”
“Was the man who shot him,”
I asked, “concerned in the child’s earlier
history?”
“I cannot place him at all,”
the Baron answered. “I should imagine that
his quarrel with Major Delahaye was a personal one,
and had no bearing upon the child. Few men had
more enemies than Delahaye. One does not wish
to speak ill of the dead, but he was a bully and a
brute all his days.”
A servant in plain black livery brought
a sealed note to our host, and stood respectfully
by his side while he read it. It obviously consisted
of but a few words, yet the Baron continued to hold
it in front of him for nearly a minute. Finally,
he crushed it in his hand, and dismissed the servant.
“There is no answer,”
he said. “I shall wait upon her Highness
in an hour.”
Our dinner was over. Both Mabane
and myself had declined dessert. Our host rose.
“Gentlemen,” he said,
“I have ordered coffee in the smoking-room.
The head-waiter has told me of some wonderful brandy,
and I have some cigars which I am anxious for you
to try. Will you come this way?”
We were the only occupants of the
smoking-room. The Baron appropriated a corner,
and left us to fetch the cigars. Mabane lit a
cigarette and leaned back in an easy-chair.
“It seems to me, Arnold,”
he said, “that you are like the man who found
what he went out for to see. You wanted tragedy and
you came very near it. I do not quite see what
the end of all these things will be. Our host ”
“There is a disappointment in
store for him, I fancy,” I interrupted.
“He is a very faithful servant of the Archduchess,
and he has worked hard for her. From his point
of view his arguments are reasonable enough.
All that he says is plausible and yet one
feels that there is something behind it all.
Allan, I don’t trust one of these people!
I can’t!”
“Nor I,” Allan answered
softly, for the Baron had already entered the room.
He brought with him some wonderful
cabanas, and immediately afterwards coffee and liqueurs
were served. The moment the waiter had disappeared,
he threw off all reserve.
“Come,” he said, “I
am no longer your host. We meet here on equal
terms. I have an offer to make to you which I
think you will find astonishing. The fact is,
her Highness is anxious to run no risk of any resurrection
of a certain scandal. She has commissioned me
to beg your acceptance you and your friend of
these,” he laid down two separate pieces of
paper upon the table. “She wishes to relieve
you as soon as possible to-night, if you can arrange
it of the care of a certain young lady.
There need be no hesitation about your acceptance.
Royalty, as you know, has special privileges so far
as regards bounty, and her Highness appreciates most
heartily the care and kindness which the child has
received at your hands.”
I stared at my piece of paper.
It was a cheque for five thousand pounds. I looked
at Mabane’s. It was a cheque for a like
amount. Then I looked up at the Baron. The
perspiration was standing out upon his forehead.
He was watching us as a man might watch one in whose
hands lay the power of life or death. I resisted
my first impulse, which was simply to tear the cheque
in two. I simply pushed it back across the table.
“Baron,” I said, “if
this is meant as a recompense for any kindness which
we have shown to a friendless child, it is unnecessary
and unacceptable. If it is meant,” I added
more slowly, “for a bribe, it is not enough.”
“Call it what you will,”
he answered quickly. “Name your own price
for the child brought here to-night.”
“No price that you or your mistress
could pay, Baron,” I answered quietly.
“I told you my ultimatum two hours ago.
The child remains with us until she is claimed by
one who has a legal right, and is not afraid to invoke
the law.”
“But I have explained the position,”
the Baron protested. “You must understand
why we cannot bring such a matter as this into the
courts.”
“Your story is ingenious, and,
pardon me, it may be true,” I answered.
“We require proof!”
The Baron’s face was not pleasant to look upon.
“You doubt my word, sir my word,
and the word of the Archduchess?”
I rose to my feet. Mabane followed
my example. I felt that a storm was pending.
“Baron,” I said, “there
are some causes which make strange demands upon the
best of us. A man may lie to save a woman’s
honour, or, if he be a politician, for the good of
his country. I cannot discuss this matter any
further with you. My sole regret is that we ever
discussed it at all. My friend and I must wish
you good-night.”
“By heavens, you shall not go!”
the Baron exclaimed. “What right have you
to the child? None at all! Her Highness wishes
to be generous. It pleases you to flout her generosity.
Mr. Arnold Greatson, you are a fool! Don’t
you see that you are a pigmy, who has stolen through
the back door into the world where great things are
dealt with? You have no place there. You
cannot keep the child away from us. You have no
influence, no money. You are nobody. If you
think ”
Mabane interposed.
“Baron,” he said, “if
you were not still, in a sense, our host, I should
knock you down. As it is, permit me to tell you
that you are talking nonsense.”
The Baron drew a sharp, quick breath.
“You are right,” he said
shortly. “I am a fool to discuss this with
you at all. It is not worth while. The Archduchess,
out of kindness, would have treated you as friends.
You decline! Good! You shall be treated as
you deserve.”
The Baron threw open the door and
bowed us out. The commissionaire helped us on
with our coats and summoned a hansom. We were
just driving off, when a man in a long travelling
coat, who had been standing outside the swing-door
of the hotel, calmly swung himself up into the cab
and motioned to us to make room. I stared at
him in blank amazement.
“Hullo!” I exclaimed. “What ”
“It is I, my friend,”
Mr. Grooten answered calmly. “Tell the man
to drive to your rooms.”