“Do you still pin your faith to the man in the
street?”
It was Mr. Steel who stood at Rachel’s
elbow, repeating his question word for word; but he
did not repeat it in the same tone. There was
an earnest note in the lowered voice, an unspoken
appeal to her to admit the truth and be done with
proud pretence. And indeed the pride had gone
out of Rachel at sight of him; a delicious sense of
safety filled her heart instead. She was as one
drowning, and here was a strong swimmer come to her
rescue in the nick of time. What did it matter
who or what he was? She felt that he was strong
to save. Yet, as the nearly drowned do struggle
with their saviours, so Rachel must fence instinctively
with hers.
“I never did pin my faith to him,” said
she.
“Yet see the risk that you are
running! If he turns round-if any one
of them turns round and recognizes you-listen
to that!”
It was only the second window, but
a third and a fourth followed like shots from the
same revolver. Rachel winced.
“For God’s sake, come away!” he
whispered, sternly.
And Rachel did come a few yards before
a flicker of her spirit called a halt.
“Why should I run away?”
she demanded, in sudden tears of mortification and
of weakness combined. “I am innocent-so
why should I?”
“Because they don’t like
innocent people; and there appear to be no police
in these parts; and if you fall into their hands-well,
it would be better for you if you had been found guilty
and were safe and sound in Newgate now!”
That was exactly what Rachel had felt
herself; she took a few steps more, but still with
reluctance and irresolution; and once round the nearest
corner, and out of that hateful street for ever, she
turned to her companion in unconcealed despair.
“But what am I to do?”
she cried. “But where am I to turn?”
“Mrs. Minchin,” said Steel,
“can you not really trust me yet?”
He stood before her under a street
lamp, handsome still, upright for all his years, strong
as fate itself, and surely kinder than any fate which
Rachel Minchin had yet met with in the course of her
short but checkered life. And yet-and
yet-she trusted and distrusted him too!
“I can and I cannot,”
she sighed; and even with the words one reason occurred
to her. “You have followed me, you see,
after all!”
“I admit it,” he replied,
“and without a particle of shame. My dear
lady, I was not going to lose sight of you to-night!”
“And why not?”
“Because I foresaw what might
happen, and may happen still! Nay, madam, it
will, if you continue to let your pride sit upon your
common sense. Do you hear them now? That
means the police, and when they’re dispersed
they’ll come this way to King’s Road.
Any moment they may be upon us. And there’s
a hansom dropped from heaven!”
He raised his umbrella, the bell tinkled,
the two red eyes dilated and widened in the night,
then with a clatter the horse was pulled up beside
the curb, and Steel spread his hand before the muddy
wheel.
“Be sensible,” he whispered,
“and jump in! In a hansom you can see where
you are going; in a hansom you can speak to the driver
or attract the attention of any decent person on the
sidewalk. Ah! you will trust me so far at last-I
thank you from my heart!”
“Where to, sir?” asked the cabman through
the roof.
And Rachel listened with languid curiosity;
but that was all. She had put herself in this
man’s hands; resistance was at an end, and a
reckless indifference to her fate the new attitude
of a soul as utterly overtaxed and exhausted as its
tired tenement of clay.
“Brook Street,” said Steel,
after a moment’s pause-“and
double-quick for a double fare. We shall be there
in a quarter of an hour,” he added reassuringly
as the trap-door slammed, “and you will find
everything ready for you, beginning with something
to eat. I, at all events, anticipated the verdict;
if you don’t believe me, you will when we get
there, for they have been ready for you all day.
Do you know Claridge’s Hotel, by the way?”
“Only by name,” said Rachel, wearily.
“I’m glad to hear it,”
pursued Mr. Steel, “for I think you will be
pleased. It is not like the ordinary run of hotels.
Your rooms are your castle-regular self-contained
flat-and you needn’t see another soul
if you don’t like. I am staying in the
hotel myself, for example, but you shall not set eyes
on me for a week unless you wish to.”
“But I don’t understand,”
began Rachel, roused a little from her apathy.
She was not suffered to proceed.
“Nor are you to attempt to do
so,” said her companion, “until to-morrow
morning. If you feel equal to it then, I shall
crave an audience, and you shall hear what I have
got to say. But first, let me beg of you, an
adequate supper and a good night’s rest!”
“One thing is certain,”
said Rachel, half to herself: “they can’t
know who I am, or they never would have taken me in.
And no luggage!”
“That they are prepared for,”
returned Steel; “and in your rooms you will
find a maid who is also prepared and equipped for your
emergency. As to their not knowing who you are
at the hotel, there you are right; they do not know;
it would have been inexpedient to tell them.”
“Then at least,” said
Rachel, “I ought to know who I am supposed to
be.”
And she smiled, for interest and curiosity
were awakened within her, with the momentary effect
of stimulants; but Mr. Steel sat silent at her side.
The cab was tinkling up Park Lane. The great park
on the left, the great houses on the right, the darkness
on the one hand, the lights on the other, had all
the fascination of sharp contrasts-that
very fascination which was Mr. Steel’s.
Rachel already discovered it in his face, and divined
it in his character, without admitting to herself that
there was any fascination at all. Yet otherwise
she would have dropped rather than have done what
she was doing now. The man had cast a spell upon
her; and for the present she did feel safe in his hands.
But with that unmistakable sense of immediate security
there mingled a subtler premonition of ultimate danger,
to which Rachel had felt alive from the first.
And this was the keenest stimulus of all.
What was his intention, and what his
object? To draw back was to find out neither;
and to say the truth, even if she had not been friendless
and forlorn, Rachel would have been very sorry to draw
back now.
The raw air in her face had greatly
revived her; the sights and lights of the town were
still new and dear to her; she had come back to the
world with a vengeance, to a world of incident and
interest, with an adventure ready waiting to take
her out of her past self!
But it was only her companion’s
silence which enabled Rachel to realize her strange
fortune at this stage, and she had to put her question
point-blank before she obtained any answer at all.
“If you insist upon hearing
all the little details to-night,” said Steele,
with a good-humored shrug, “well, I suppose you
must hear them; but I hope you will not insist.
I have had to make provisions which you may very possibly
resent, but I thought it would be time enough for us
to quarrel about them in the morning. To-night
you need rest and sustenance, but no excitement; of
that God knows you have had enough! No one will
come near you but the maid of whom I spoke; no questions
will be put to you; everything is arranged. But
to-morrow, if you feel equal to it, you shall hear
all about me, and form your own cool judgment of my
behavior towards you. Meanwhile won’t you
trust me-implicitly-until then?”
“I do,” said Rachel, “and I will-until
to-morrow.”
“Then there are one or two things
that I can promise you,” said Steel, with the
heartiness of a man who has gained his point.
“You will not be compromised in any sort or
kind of way; your self-respect shall not suffer; nothing
shall vex or trouble you, if I can help it, while you
remain at this hotel. And this I guarantee-whether
you like it or not-unless you tell them,
not a single soul in the place shall have the faintest
inkling as to who you are. Now, only keep your
why and wherefore till to-morrow,” he concluded
cheerily, “and I can promise you almost every
satisfaction. But here we are at the hotel.”
He thrust his umbrella outside, pointing
to a portico and courtyard on the right; and in another
moment Rachel was receiving the bows of powdered footmen
in crimson plush, while Steel, hat in hand, his white
hair gleaming in the electric light, led the way to
the lift.
Rachel’s recollection of that
night was ever afterwards disjointed and involved
as that of any dream; but there were certain features
that she never forgot. There was the beautiful
suite of rooms, filled with flowers that must have
cost a small fortune at that time of year, and in
one of them a table tastefully laid. Rachel remembered
the dazzle of silver and the glare of napery, the
hot plates, the sparkling wine, the hot-house fruit,
and the deep embarrassment of sitting down to all this
in solitary state. Mr. Steel had but peeped in
to see that all was in accordance with his orders;
thereafter not even a waiter was allowed to enter,
but only Rachel’s attendant, to whose charge
she had been committed; a gentle and assiduous creature,
quiet of foot and quick of hand, who spoke seldom
but in a soothing voice, and with the delicate and
pretty accent of the French-Swiss.
Rachel used to wonder whether she
had shocked this mannerly young woman by eating very
ravenously; she remembered a nervous desire to be done
with that solitary repast, and to get to bed.
Yet when she was there, in the sweetest and whitest
of fine linen, with a hot bottle at her feet, and
a fire burning so brightly in the room that the brass
bedstead seemed here and there red-hot, then the sound
sleep that she sorely needed seemed further off than
ever, for always she dreamt she was in prison and
condemned to die, till at length she feared to close
her eyes. But nothing had been forgotten; and
Rachel’s last memory of that eventful day, and
not less eventful night, was of a mild, foreign face
bending over her with a medicine-glass and a gentle
word.
And the same good face and the same
soft voice were waiting for her when she awoke after
many hours; the fire still burned brightly, also the
electric-light, though the blind was up and the window
filled with a dull November sky. It was a delicious
awakening, recollection was so slow to come.
Rachel might have been ill for days. She experienced
the peace that is left by illness of sufficient gravity.
But all she ailed was a slight headache, quickly removed
by an inimitable cup of tea, that fortified her against
the perplexing memories which now came swarming to
her mind. This morning, however, enlightenment
was due, and meanwhile Rachel received a hint, though
a puzzling one, from the Swiss maid, as to the new
identity which had been thrust upon her for the time
being in lieu of her own.
“It was very sad for madame
to lose all her things,” cooed the girl, as
she busied herself about the room.
“It was irritating,” Rachel
owned, beginning to wonder how much the other knew.
“But it was better than losing
your life, madame!” the girl added with
a smile.
And now Rachel lay silent. Could
this amiable young woman know all? In one way
Rachel rather hoped it was the case; it would be something
to have received so much kindness and attention, even
though bought and paid for, from one of her own sex
who knew all there was to know, and yet did not shrink
from her. But the young woman’s next words
dismissed this idea.
“When so many poor people were
drowned!” said she. And the mystification
increased.
Presently there was a knock at the
outer door, which the maid answered, returning with
Mr. Steele’s card.
“Is he there?” asked Rachel, hastily.
“No, madame, but one
of the servants is waiting for an answer. I think
there is something written on the back, madame.”
Rachel read the harmless request on
the back of the card; nothing could have been better
calculated to turn away suspicion of one sort or another,
and there was obvious design in the absence of an envelope.
But Rachel was not yet in the secret, and she was
determined not to wait an hour longer than she need.
“What is the time, please?”
“I will see, madame.”
The girl glided out and in.
“Well?”
“A quarter to ten, madame.”
“Then order my breakfast for
a quarter past, and let Mr. Steele be told that I
shall be delighted to see him at eleven o’clock.”