Professor Braddock was usually the
most methodical of men, and timed his life by the
clock and the almanac. He rose at seven, summer
and winter, to partake of a hearty breakfast, which
served him until dinner came at five thirty.
Braddock dined at this unusual hour save
when there was company as he did not eat
any luncheon and scorned the very idea of afternoon
tea. Two meals a day, he maintained, was enough
for any man who led a sedentary life, as too much
food was apt to clog the wheels of the intellect.
He usually worked in his museum if the indulgence
of his hobby could be called work from
nine until four, after which hour he took a short
walk in the garden or through the village. On
finishing his dinner he would glance over some scientific
publication, or perhaps, by way of recreation, play
a game or two of patience; but at seven he invariably
retired into his own rooms to renew work. Retirement
to bed took place at midnight, so it can be guessed
that the Professor got through an enormous quantity
of work during the year. A more methodical man,
or a more industrious man did not exist.
But on occasions even this enthusiast
wearied of his hobby, and of the year’s routine.
A longing to see brother scientists of his own way
of thinking would seize him, and he would abruptly
depart for London, to occupy quiet lodgings, and indulge
in intercourse with his fellow-men. Braddock
rarely gave early intimation of his urban nostalgia.
At breakfast he would suddenly announce that the fit
took him to go to London, and he would drive to Jessum
along with Cockatoo to catch the ten o’clock
train to London. Sometimes he sent the Kanaka
back; at other times he would take him to town; but
whether Cockatoo remained or departed, the museum
was always locked up lest it should be profaned by
the servants of the house. As a matter of fact,
Braddock need not have been afraid, for Lucy knowing
her step-father’s whims and violent temper took
care that the sanctity of the place should remain
inviolate.
Sometimes the Professor came back
in a couple of days; at times his absence would extend
to a week; and on two or three occasions he remained
absent for a fortnight. But whenever he returned,
he said very little about his doings to Lucy, perhaps
deeming that dry scientific details would not appeal
to a lively young lady. As soon as he was established
in his museum again, life at the Pyramids would resume
its usual routine, until Braddock again felt the want
of a change. The wonder was, considering the
nature of his work, and the closeness of his application,
that he did not more often indulge in these Bohemian
wanderings.
Lucy, therefore, was not astonished
when, on the morning after her visit to Mrs. Jasher,
the Professor announced in his usual abrupt way that
he intended to go to London, but would leave Cockatoo
in charge of his precious collection. She was
somewhat disturbed, however, as, wishing to forward
the widow’s matrimonial aims, she had invited
her to dinner for the ensuing night. This she
told her step-father, and, rather to her surprise,
he expressed himself sorry that he could not remain.
“Mrs. Jasher,” said Braddock
hastily, drinking his coffee, “is a very sensible
woman, who knows when to be silent.”
“She is also a good housekeeper,
I believe,” hinted Miss Kendal demurely.
“Eh, what? Well? Why
do you say that?” snapped Braddock sharply.
Lucy fenced.
“Mrs. Jasher admires you, father.”
Braddock grunted, but did not seem
displeased, since even a scientist possessing the
usual vanity of the male is not inaccessible to flattery.
“Did Mrs. Jasher tell you this?” he inquired,
smiling complacently.
“Not in so many words.
Still, I am a woman, and can guess how much another
woman leaves unsaid.” Lucy paused, then
added significantly: “I do not think that
she is so very old, and you must admit that she is
wonderfully well preserved.”
“Like a mummy,” remarked
the Professor absently; then pushed back his chair
to add briskly: “What does all this mean,
you minx? I know that the woman is all right
so far as a woman can be: but her confounded age
and her looks and her unexpressed admiration.
What are these to an old man like myself?”
“Father,” said Lucy earnestly,
“when I marry Archie I shall, in all probability,
leave Gartley for London.”
“I know I know.
Bless me, child, do you think that I have not thought
of that? If you were only wise, which you are
not, you would marry Random and remain at the Fort.”
“Sir Frank has other fish to
fry, father. And even if I did remain at the
Fort as his wife, I still could not look after you.”
“Humph! I am beginning
to see what you are driving at. But I can’t
forget your mother, my dear. She was a good wife
to me.”
“Still,” said Lucy coaxingly,
and becoming more and more the champion of Mrs. Jasher,
“you cannot manage this large house by yourself.
I do not like to leave you in the hands of servants
when I marry. Mrs. Jasher is very domesticated
and ”
“And would make a good housekeeper.
No, no, I don’t want to give you another mother,
child.”
“There is no danger of that,
even if I did not marry,” rejoined Lucy stiffly.
“A girl can have only one mother.”
“And a man apparently can have
two wives,” said Braddock with dry humor.
“Humph!” he pinched his plump
chin “it’s not a bad idea.
But of course I can’t fall in love at my age.”
“I don’t think that Mrs.
Jasher asks for impossibilities.”
The Professor rose briskly.
“I’ll think over it,” said he.
“Meanwhile, I am going to London.”
“When will you be back, father?”
“I can’t say. Don’t
ask silly questions. I dislike being bound to
time. I may be a week, and I may be only a few
days. Things can go on here as usual, but if
Hope comes to see you, ask Mrs. Jasher in, to play
chaperon.”
Lucy consented to this suggestion,
and Braddock went away to prepare for his departure.
To get him off the premises was like launching a ship,
as the entire household was at his swift heels, packing
boxes, strapping rugs, cutting sandwiches, helping
him on with his overcoat and assisting him into the
trap, which had been hastily sent for to the Warrior
Inn. All the time Braddock talked and scolded
and gave directions and left instructions, until every
one was quite bewildered. Lucy and the servants
all sighed with relief when they saw the trap disappear
round the end of the road in the direction of Jessum.
In addition to being a famous archaeologist, the Professor
was assuredly a great nuisance to those who had to
do with his whims and fancies.
For the next two or three days Lucy
enjoyed herself in a quiet way with Archie. In
spite of the lateness of the season, the weather was
still fine, and the artist took the opportunity of
the pale sunshine to sketch a great deal of the marsh
scenery. Lucy attended him as a rule when he
went abroad, and sometimes Mrs. Jasher, voluble and
merry, would come along with them to play the part
of chaperon. But the girl noticed that Mrs. Jasher’s
merriment was forced at times, and in the searching
morning light she appeared to be quite old. Wrinkles
showed themselves on her plump face and weary lines
appeared round her mouth. Also, she was absent-minded
while the lovers chattered, and, when spoken to, would
return to the present moment with a start. As
the widow was now well off as regards money, and as
her scheme to marry Braddock was well on the way to
success for Lucy had duly reported the Professor’s
attitude it was difficult to understand
why Mrs. Jasher should look so worried. One day
Lucy spoke to her on the subject. Random had strolled
across the marshes to look at Hope sketch, and the
two men chatted together, while Miss Kendal led the
little widow to one side.
“There is nothing the matter, I hope,”
said Lucy gently.
“No. Why do you say that?” asked
Mrs. Jasher, flushing.
“You have been looking worried for the last
few days.”
“I have a few troubles,”
sighed the widow “troubles connected
with the estate of my late brother. The lawyers
are very disagreeable and make all sorts of difficulties
to swell their costs. Then, strangely enough,
I am beginning to feel my brother’s death more
than I thought I should have done. You see that
I am in mourning, dear. After what you said the
other day I felt that it was wrong for me not to wear
mourning. Of course my poor brother and I were
almost strangers. All the same, as he has left
me money and was my only relative, I think it right
to show some grief. I am a lonely woman, my dear.”
“When my father comes back you will no longer
be lonely,” said Lucy.
“I hope not. I feel that
I want a man to look after me. I told you that
I desired to marry the Professor for his possible title
and in order to form a salon and have some amusement
and power. But also I want a companion for my
old age. There is no denying,” added Mrs.
Jasher with another sigh, “that I am growing
old in spite of all the care I take. I am grateful
for your friendship, dear. At one time I thought
that you did not like me.”
“Oh, I think we get on very
well together,” said Lucy somewhat evasively,
for she did not want to say that she would make the
widow an intimate friend, “and, as you know,
I am quite pleased that you should marry my step-father.”
“So pleasant to think that you
look at my ambition in that light,” said Mrs.
Jasher, patting the girl’s arm. “When
does the Professor return?”
“I cannot say. He refused
to fix a date. But he usually remains away for
a fortnight. I expect him back in that time, but
he may come much earlier. He will come back when
the fancy takes him.”
“I shall alter all that, when
we are married,” muttered Mrs. Jasher with a
frown. “He must be taught to be less selfish.”
“I fear you will never improve
him in that respect,” said Lucy dryly, and rejoined
the gentlemen in time to hear Random mention the name
of Don Pedro de Gayangos.
“What is that, Sir Frank?” she asked.
Random turned toward her with his pleasant smile.
“My Spanish friend, whom I met at Genoa, is
coming here to-morrow.”
“With his daughter?” questioned Mrs. Jasher
roguishly.
“Of course,” replied the
young soldier, coloring. “Donna Inez is
quite devoted to her father and never leaves him.”
“She will one day, I expect,”
said Hope innocently, for his eyes were on his sketch
and not on Random’s face, “when the husband
of her choice comes along.”
“Perhaps he has come along already,” tittered
Mrs. Jasher significantly.
Lucy took pity on Random’s confusion.
“Where will they stay?”
“At the Warrior Inn. I
have engaged the best rooms in the place. I fancy
they will be comfortable there, as Mrs. Humber, the
landlady, is a good housekeeper and an excellent cook.
And I don’t think Don Pedro is hard to please.”
“A Spaniard, you say,” remarked Archie
idly. “Does he speak English?”
“Admirably so does the daughter.”
“But why does a Spaniard come
to so out-of-the-way a place?” asked Mrs. Jasher,
after a pause.
“I thought I told you the other
day, when we spoke of the matter,” answered
Sir Frank with surprise. “Don Pedro has
come here to interview Professor Braddock about that
missing mummy.”
Hope looked up sharply.
“What does he know about the mummy?”
“Nothing so far as I know, save
that he came to Europe with the intention of purchasing
it, and found himself forestalled by Professor Braddock.
Don Pedro told me no more than that.”
“Humph!” murmured Hope
to himself. “Don Pedro will be disappointed
when he learns that the mummy is missing.”
Random did not catch the words and
was about to ask him what he had said, when two tall
figures, conducted by a shorter one, were seen moving
on the white road which led to the Fort.
“Strangers!” said Mrs.
Jasher, putting up her lorgnette, which she used for
effect, although she had remarkably keen sight.
“How do you know?” asked Lucy carelessly.
“My dear, look how oddly the man is dressed.”
“I can’t tell at this
distance,” said Lucy, “and if you can,
Mrs. Jasher I really do not see why you require glasses.”
Mrs. Jasher laughed at the compliment
to her sight, and colored through her rouge at the
reproof to her vanity. Meanwhile, the smaller
figure, which was that of a village lad leading a
tall gentleman and a slender lady, pointed toward
the group round Hope’s easel. Shortly, the
boy ran back up to the village road, and the gentleman
came along the pathway with the lady. Random,
who had been looking at them intently, suddenly started,
having at length recognized them.
“Don Pedro and his daughter,”
he said in an astonished voice, and sprang forward
to welcome the unexpected visitors.
“Now, my dear,” whispered
the widow in Lucy’s ear, “we shall see
the kind of woman Sir Frank prefers to you.”
“Well, as Sir Frank has seen
the kind of man I prefer to him,” retorted Lucy,
“that makes us quite equal.”
“I am glad these new-comers
talk English,” said Hope, who had risen to his
feet. “I know nothing of Spanish.”
“They are not Spanish, but Peruvian,”
said Mrs. Jasher.
“The language is the same, more
or less. Confound it! here is Random bringing
them here. I wish he would take them to the Fort.
There’s no more work for the next hour, I suppose,”
and Hope, rather annoyed, began to pack his artistic
traps.
On a nearer view, Don Pedro proved
to be a tall, lean, dry man, not unlike Dore’s
conception of Don Quixote. He must have had Indian
blood in his veins, judging from his very dark eyes,
his stiff, lank hair, worn somewhat long, and his
high cheek-bones. Also, although he was arrayed
in puritanic black, his barbaric love of color betrayed
itself in a red tie and in a scarlet handkerchief
which was twisted loosely round a soft slouch hat,
It was the hat and the brilliant red of tie and handkerchief
which had caught Mrs. Jasher’s eye at so great
a distance, and which had led her to pronounce the
man a stranger, for Mrs. Jasher well knew that no
Englishman would affect such vivid tints. All
the same, in spite of this eccentricity, Don Pedro
looked a thorough Castilian gentleman, and bowed gravely
when presented to the ladies by Random.
“Mrs. Jasher, Miss Kendal, permit
me to present Don Pedro de Gayangos.”
“I am charmed,” said the
Peruvian, bowing, hat in hand, “and in turn,
allow me, ladies, to introduce my daughter, Donna Inez
de Gayangos.”
Archie was also presented to the Don
and to the young lady, after which Lucy and Mrs. Jasher,
while not appearing to look, made a thorough examination
of the lady with whom Random was in love. No doubt
Donna Inez was making an examination on her own account,
and with the cleverness of the sex the three women,
while chatting affably, learned all that there was
to be learned from the outward appearance of each
other in three minutes. Miss Kendal could not
deny but what Donna Inez was very beautiful, and frankly
admitted inwardly, of course her
own inferiority. She was merely pretty, whereas
the Peruvian lady was truly handsome and quite majestic
in appearance.
Yet about Donna Inez there was the
same indefinite barbaric look as characterized her
father. Her face was lovely, dark and proud in
expression, but there was an aloofness about it which
puzzled the English girl. Donna Inez might have
belonged to a race populating another planet of the
solar system. She had large black, melting eyes,
a straight Greek nose and perfect mouth, a well-rounded
chin and magnificent hair, dark and glossy as the
wing of the raven, which was arranged in the latest
Parisian style of coiffure. Also, her gown as
the two women guessed in an instant was
from Paris. She was perfectly gloved and booted,
and even if she betrayed somehow a barbaric taste for
color in the dull ruddy hue of her dress, which was
subdued with black braid, yet she looked quite a well-bred
woman. All the same, her whole appearance gave
an observant onlooker the idea that she would be more
at home in a scanty robe and glittering with rudely
wrought ornaments of gold. Perhaps Peru, where
she came from, suggested the comparison, but Lucy’s
thoughts flew back to an account of the Virgins of
the Sun, which the Professor had once described.
It occurred to her, perhaps wrongly, that in Donna
Inez she beheld one who in former days would have been
the bride of some gorgeous Inca.
“I fear you will find England
dull after the sunshine of Lima,” said Lucy,
having ended a swift examination.
Donna Inez shivered a trifle and glanced
around at the gray misty air through which the pale
sunshine struggled with difficulty.
“I certainly prefer the tropics
to this,” she said in musical English, “but
my father has come down here on business, and until
it is concluded we shall remain in this place.”
“Then we must make things as
bright as possible for you,” said Mrs. Jasher
cheerfully, and desperately anxious to learn more of
the new-comers. “You must come to see me,
Donna Inez yonder is my cottage.”
“Thank you, madame: you are very good.”
Meanwhile Don Pedro was talking to the two young men.
“Yes, I did arrive here earlier
than I expected,” he was remarking, “but
I have to return to Lima shortly, and I wish to get
my business with Professor Braddock finished as speedily
as possible.”
“I am sorry,” said Lucy politely, “but
my father is absent.”
“And when will he return, Miss Kendal?”
“I can scarcely say in a week or
a fortnight.”
Don Pedro made a gesture of annoyance.
“It is a pity, as I am so very
pressed for time. Still, I must remain until
the Professor returns. I am so anxious to hear
if the mummy has been found.”
“It is not found yet,” said Hope quickly,
“and never will be.”
Don Pedro looked at him quietly.
“It must be found,” said
he. “I have come all the way from Lima to
obtain it. When you hear my story you will not
be surprised at my desire to regain the mummy.”
“Regain it?” echoed Hope and Random in
one breath.
Don Pedro nodded.
“The mummy was stolen from my father,”
he said.