And now a word to preface the story
of Max’s adventures as set forth by himself from
the time he wrote the famous letter to me.
Headstrong and wilful as he undoubtedly
was, Max was the possessor of a habit which would
not be supposed to agree in any way with his other
characteristics. In our school days, prompted
by a tutor who was method and preciseness in itself,
we had been induced to cultivate the habit of keeping
a diary. My own fits of application had their
limits, and in consequence the record of my own daily
life died a natural death within a week of its commencement.
Max, however, must either have looked at it in another
light, or have been composed of entirely different
material. Having set his hand to it, his dogged
determination insisted upon his carrying it through;
in consequence, the habit grew upon him, and, fortunately
for the story I have to tell, it lasted until the day
of his death. It is from the last two volumes
of this concise, and I might even add remarkable,
history that I take the record as it is set down in
the following pages. It will be observed that
I have put it in the form of a narrative, told by
myself, adding explanations where necessary, but in
the main preserving the whole in as complete a form
as it was originally written. How Max left the
Princess Ottilie in the park after his ill-starred
interview with her and rode away has already been told.
A few other details, however, may prove of interest.
As soon as he arrived, it would appear that Felix
offered him refreshment, but he declined it, saying
that he was in a hurry to catch a train to Hampshire.
Seating himself at my writing-table he took a sheet
of notepaper and composed the letter which was destined,
a few hours afterwards, to cause me so much unhappiness.
“Thank heaven, that’s done,” he
said to himself, as he rose to his feet and placed
the envelope, which he secured with his private seal,
in a conspicuous position upon the table. “Paul
will be certain to see it directly he returns.”
Then having rung the bell for Felix, he bade him send
some one to call a cab. Telling him to inform
Theodore, his valet, that he would receive his orders
from myself, he went down to it, sprang in, and bade
the man drive him with all speed to Waterloo.
He had barely time to take his ticket, to see that
the luggage he himself had packed and sent on ahead
earlier in the day had started for Bristol, and then
to catch the train. Indeed, the starting bell
had already sounded as he crossed the platform.
“This won’t do at all,”
Max said to himself, when they had rolled out of the
station, and he had time to look round the luxurious
compartment in which he was seated. “If
I am going out into the world to win my way I should
not be riding first class. I must travel third
and save my money as much as possible. On the
other side, wherever that may be, it will have to
be corduroys instead of tweeds, and (here he took
his cigar-case from his pocket and selected a weed)
a clay pipe, I suppose, in place of the mess’
extra special Laranagas.” The train was
an express, stopping only at Basingstoke and Eastleigh.
At the latter place he alighted, and taking a cab
in the station yard bade the man drive him as quickly
as possible to Rendlehurst. It was nearly half-past
six by the time he reached the house, where Anton,
the head of my father’s household, received
him at the door.
“Anton,” he said, “I
must see my father and mother at once. Where are
they?”
“Her Majesty is in the boudoir,”
the old man replied, in measured tones that contrasted
forcibly with the other’s excited state.
“His Majesty has but lately returned from a
walk, and is now in his study. I will acquaint
him with your Royal Highness’s arrival.”
What transpired at that meeting is
not set forth in the diary. It is sufficient,
however, that in something less than half an hour he
had said good-bye to them, though he did not know
it, for ever, and was back in his cab en route,
so it was popularly supposed, for Eastleigh. At
the Foresham cross-roads he stopped the driver.
“Pull up,” he said. “It is
a beautiful evening, and as I have plenty of time,
I think I will walk the remainder of the distance.”
He paid his fare and, in order to avert suspicion,
strolled slowly along the road the cab was following.
When the man had turned the corner and was out of sight,
he retraced his steps and set off at a brisk pace
in the opposite direction. The evening was close
and sultry, and signs of thunder were in the air.
The roads and hedges were white with dust, and by
the time he had reached the small station for which
he was making, he was coated with a fine white powder.
Interrogating the station-master, whom he found upon
the platform, he inquired what time the next train
was due for Salisbury.
“There is not one for nearly
an hour, sir,” the man replied. “It
leaves here at half-past eight and reaches Salisbury
at 9.25.”
“That’s a pity,”
said Max, who saw that he would not be able to get
on to Bristol that night. “However, as
it can’t be helped, I must wait for it.
I am much obliged to you.”
The station-master, as a matter of
form, compared his watch with the clock in the little
waiting-room, then glanced up and down the line, and
finally disappeared into his cottage, leaving Max to
his own devices. The latter examined the various
railway advertisements on the notice board, criticised
the name of the station arranged in white flints on
a neatly-kept bank beside the platform, and then decided
that he felt hungry after his walk. Fifty yards
or so further along the road was a small inn, and
toward this he made his way. Entering the bar,
which was unoccupied, he inquired of the buxom landlady
if she could supply him with a meal.
“It all depends, sir, what you
want,” the latter replied, shaking her curls
coquettishly at him; “if you’d like ham
and eggs we can manage that, or maybe a bloater if
so be you’d relish it, but I don’t know
that I can do better for you at this time o’
night, at any rate.”
Max decided in favour of the former,
and a quarter of an hour later might have been observed
in the landlady’s own private parlour, seated
before a steaming dish of ham and eggs, which he was
devouring with an appetite that was the outcome of
a four-mile walk. I have seen that landlady since,
and have tried to make her understand who her guest
was.
“Lor’ bless you, sir,”
she said for though I told her about Max,
she had not the least notion of my identity “I
don’t know anything about his being a prince,
but what I do know is, that he ate his ham and eggs
hearty enough for a king, as I told my old man afterwards.”
His meal disposed of, Max paid the
bill, and returned to the station to await the arrival
of his train. The sun was sinking behind the trees
on the other side of the cutting, and the whole heavens
were suffused with crimson light. A belated cuckoo
was wishing the world good-night in the far distance,
and the tinkling of bells on the harness of a waggoner’s
team was wafted to him like faintest music upon the
still evening air. As he strolled up and down
the platform, his thoughts involuntarily returned
to the Princess. He wondered whether she were
thinking of him, and how long it would be before he
would be able to school himself to forget her.
The first sign that heralded the train’s
approach was the arrival of a hobbledehoy rustic of
about sixteen on the platform. He carried in one
hand a bundle, tied up in a red pocket-handkerchief,
and in the other a ground-ash stick, with which he
beat his leg to the tune of a music-hall melody that
had been popular in London some six months before.
As Max passed him on his way to the booking-office
to take his ticket, he civilly wished him good-evening.
When the train entered the station, he followed the
lad to a third-class compartment, and seated himself
opposite him. They were the only two occupants
of the carriage, and Max was in the humour for conversation.
He felt as if he had been alone in the world for countless
years, and for some reason the boy’s broad Hampshire
dialect was soothing to his ears. The lad was
on his way to a new situation, so he informed his
companion, a farm on the outskirts of the village
of Dean. It was his first absence from home, and
Max noticed that an ominous snuffle followed his statement
of the fact. To the elder man there was something
engaging about this encounter. They were both
stepping out of their old into a new world, in order
to gain experience, and were equally anxious, yet
equally loth to say farewell to their old surroundings.
“I knew it was coming for a
long time, sir,” said the boy in a burst of
confidence. “Father always had a sort of
feeling that he wanted me to go along o’ Mr.
Simpkins, but, somehow, mother didn’t kind o’
fancy it. Not but that I can do my work, sir.
I bain’t afraid of work not a bit
of it. It’s the going away from home and
mother, that’s the worst of it. But there,
it will seem kind of strange at first, sir, I don’t
doubt; but bless you, I reckon somehow it will come
right in the end. Anyways, I am going to do my
best to make it.”
For many a long day that homely speech
was destined to live in Max’s memory. It
was an augury for the future; at any rate, he determined
to regard it as such. When they reached Dean,
and the boy had made his preparations to alight, Max
held out his hand.
“Good-bye,” he said.
“I hope you may prosper in your undertaking.
Like you, I, too, am starting out into the world to
gain experience. I have wished you good luck;
won’t you do the same for me?”
The boy shyly took the hand held out
to him, and, as he did so, he said: “God
speed ye, sir, and thank ye kindly for the way you’ve
let me talk to you. It’s done me a world
o’ good.”
A second later he was gone, and the
train was on its way once more. In something
under twenty minutes they had reached Salisbury, where
Max discovered, as he had quite made up his mind he
would do, that the last train for Bristol had departed.
In consequence, he would be compelled to wait in Salisbury
until morning for another. The disappointment
was a severe one, for he had hoped to reach his destination
before the night was over. In his present state,
rapid travelling was exactly what he wanted; to feel
he was dashing through the country, drawing nearer
his goal with every mile, was like an antidote to
pain, it prevented him from thinking. Now there
was nothing for it but to find an hotel and to wait
for morning.
As he made his way out of the station
and down into the town, he thought of the last time
he had visited that ancient city. Then he had
been the favoured guest of a well-known nobleman in
the neighbourhood, and his arrival had been the signal
for quite a respectable crowd to gather in the station
yard to see the Crown Prince of Pannonia. Flags
had decorated the streets, and the civic authorities
had offered him a hearty welcome in their council-house.
Now a thick drizzle was falling as he walked along
the muddy street, and the only welcome he received
was the curse of a tipsy man who reeled and almost
fell against him. When he had discovered a convenient
hostelry he engaged a room, and afterwards strolled
about the town. At last he found himself standing
before the ancient cathedral, in what is perhaps the
most peaceful and beautiful close in all the length
and breadth of England. The graceful spire towered
hundreds of feet into the moonlit sky, and as he watched
it the clock struck ten, slowly and solemnly, as if
it were aware of the important part it was playing
in the passage of time. At the same moment I
was alighting from my train at Southampton Docks, whither
I had gone in search of him. Small wonder was
it, since he was in Salisbury, that I could not find
him.
Next morning, shortly before five
o’clock, he rose and continued his journey,
catching a London train at Westbury, reaching Bath
at eight o’clock, and Bristol thirty-five minutes
later. Before leaving the station he secured
the luggage he had sent on ahead, and then once more
departed in quest of an hotel. This accomplished,
he was at liberty to go in search of a vessel.
From the collection of advertisements in the coffee-room,
it would appear that there was no place on the face
of the habitable globe that could not be reached from
that port. He could find nothing, however, to
suit him. The United States did not appeal sufficiently
to his sense of the romantic; South Africa had another
and still more vital objection; Canada was impossible,
for the simple reason that he had already visited
it, and was exceedingly well known there. He
wanted to find a vessel on which there would be no
possible chance of his being recognised, and for this
reason also the big liners were unsuitable. Leaving
the hotel, he went into the town, scanned the wharves,
and entered into conversation with men who had their
dealings in great waters. At last, and quite
by chance, he happened upon the very vessel he wanted.
She was the Diamintina, a steamer of some three
thousand tons, engaged in the South American trade.
Her steam was already up, and, as Max was informed,
she was to sail that afternoon for Rio de Janeiro.
He inquired the name of the agents, and as soon as
he had discovered their address, set off in search
of the office post-haste. The clerk who did him
the honour to inquire his business informed him that
he was quite right in supposing that she would sail
that afternoon, and went even so far as to add that
she had sufficient accommodation for half a dozen
passengers, four of which were already booked.
The chance seemed too good to be lost. Brazil
was the country he had always had a desire to visit;
now he paid the money demanded of him and received
his ticket in exchange. An hour later he had made
his way on board and the voyage to South America had
commenced. Max stood at the port bulwarks as
the vessel steamed slowly down the river, and watched
the shore slip past with what was almost a feeling
of wonderment at his position. At last he might
consider himself freed from his past life. He
had a hundred pounds in the belt that was safely clasped
round his waist, ten pounds in his pocket, and when
that was gone he would have nothing to depend upon,
save his health and his determination to succeed.
By nightfall they were out in more open water, and
a brisk sea was running. Fortunately, Max was
an excellent sailor, and enjoyed rather than disliked
the active motion of the steamer. To his surprise,
when the dinner-bell rang at six o’clock, he,
the captain, and one solitary passenger were all who
sat down to table. They were the only three to
sit down at subsequent meals during the voyage.
The captain was inclined to be agreeable, and Max’s
fellow saloon passenger was the Senor Francisco Moreas,
and he was, by his own account, an old resident in
Brazil. Be that as it may, and I am certainly
not in a position to contradict it, he had seen more
of the world than the average man. His age must
have been between forty and forty-five; his appearance
was that of a typical Spaniard, debilitated partly
by fever and partly by his own excesses; he was tall
but sparely built, boasted keen, hawk-like eyes, a
nose that at first glance reminded one of the same
bird’s beak, a small and carefully-trimmed moustache,
and last, but not least, exceedingly small hands and
feet, of which he was inordinately proud. The
fingers of the former, which were dirty, were invariably
ornamented with rings.
The captain, who, as I have already
said, had laid himself out to be agreeable to Max,
found an occasion to invite him to the chart-room
alone. Once there he spoke his mind freely and
to the point.
“I want to give you a hint,
Mr. Mortimer,” he said, for that was the name
Max had assumed. “I must put you on your
guard against our friend Moreas.”
“I am exceedingly obliged to
you for the trouble you are taking,” Max returned,
as he seated himself on the chart locker. “What
has he done that you should warn me against him?”
The captain sank his voice a little as he replied.
“I have known him for a good
many years. He is a notorious gambler, and, as
far as my observation goes, I can say that I have seen
him win a good deal oftener than he loses. When
I say that he is a dead shot with a revolver, and
that he is not above calling a man out and putting
a bullet into him before breakfast, you will understand
that I’ve gone out of my way to tell you something
that might land me in difficulties if he came to know
of it.”
“I am obliged to you,”
said Max. “You may be quite sure I shall
respect your confidence. I will be on my guard
for the future.”
“I’m glad to hear it,”
the captain replied and added: “I’ve
noticed that you’ve been playing cards with
him lately.”
Max admitted the soft impeachment.
He might have added that he had lost more than he
cared to remember. He felt certain in his own
mind, however, that Moreas had obtained the money
honestly, and in common fairness he felt compelled
to say so to the captain.
“I don’t doubt it,”
the other answered. “He is not such a fool
as to try anything else while it is possible for him
to get it by straightforward play. But if you
must play with him I should advise you to keep your
eyes and wits open. It is not in my interest to
say so, for if you find him out you will come to quarrelling,
and then possibly to blows, and at that point it will
be my duty to step in. But I don’t want
to have to do it. As a rule, we carry very few
passengers on this boat, but I can tell you that I
have seen some funny scenes on board her now and again,
and Moreas has figured conspicuously in more than
one of them.”
As it transpired, the captain’s
warning reached Max just in time. Another day
and it might have been too late. The incident
I am about to relate took place on a warm morning.
They were nearing the Equator, and Max was stretched
on the poop skylight, reading, when Moreas made his
appearance. The latter offered him an excellent
cigar, and after they had been smoking for a time
proposed a game of écarte. Max, who, I regret
to say, was an inveterate gambler, immediately assented,
not, however, without thinking of the captain’s
warning. His companion immediately produced a
pack of cards. The steward, on being appealed
to, brought a small folding table from below, whereupon
the game commenced. For some time they played
with varying success, then Max, contrary to custom,
began to win. They doubled the stakes and played
again. Once more Max won. They played another
hand, still with the same result. An ominous
look flashed into Moreas’ eyes, but it was gone
again as quickly.
“I am glad to see that your
luck has turned at last, Senor,” he said, with
a suspicion of a sneer about his lips.
“Fortune must smile some time
or other,” retorted Max coolly. “It
would be hard indeed if I were always to have the
same luck that I’ve had of late. It is
your deal, I fancy.”
Moreas accordingly dealt, and they
played the next hand. Suddenly Max laid down
his cards, back uppermost, and leant across the table.
“Forgive me, Senor,” he
said, “but I feel sure there is some little
mistake. We have played two rounds, and I see
that you still have four cards in your hand.”
The remainder of the pack was lying
at the Spaniard’s elbow, and Max noticed a suspicious
movement of the other’s sleeve a few seconds
before. Had he not spoken when he did, the other
would have rid himself of one of his cards without
delay.
“Carambo! so I have,”
he said, with a well-simulated astonishment. “I
must offer you ten thousand apologies, Senor, for having
unwittingly made such a mistake. I do not know
how it occurred.”
As he said this he fixed his beady
eyes upon Max’s face, as though to give him
warning that if he had anything to say on the subject
it had better be of a conciliatory nature.
“I feel sure of that,”
Max answered good-humouredly, for he had not the least
intention of quarrelling with him. He only wanted
to let the other see that he was quite aware of his
man[oe]uvres, and that they must not be attempted
in the future. “Are you tired or shall we
play another hand?”
“I think a little rest, Senor,
would be acceptable,” Moreas responded.
“It is so hot under this awning. I will
ask you for my revenge another time.”
With that he rose and lit a fresh
cigar. Going to the companion hatch, he called
to the steward to bring a couple of bottles of beer
and some glasses on deck. When these arrived,
he insisted that Max and the captain, who had just
arrived on the poop, should join him. To all
appearances he was as calm and as friendly as usual,
but there was still a gleam in his eyes that spoke
for the smouldering fire in the brain behind.
“It is too hot,” he said,
spreading his arms abroad. “How shall we
amuse ourselves? We have read, we have played,
and now we have drunk beer. What else is there
for us to do?”
Then, as if an idea had struck him, he continued:
“I wonder if our good friend,
the captain, here, would permit us to have some pistol
practice. There would be no danger, believe me,
if we shoot over the stern.”
Max understood what was in his mind.
Though he had pretended to do so, the other had not
forgotten the incident of the cards, and now he was
going to give him, in case he should be inclined to
spread the report abroad, an exhibition of his powers
with the pistol. It was a hint delicately administered.
“I don’t know that I ought
to allow it,” said the captain doubtfully; “but
seeing that we have no ladies aboard, and that you
promise to fire over the stern, we will risk it.
Don’t shoot each other, and don’t keep
it up too long, that’s all I ask.”
Moreas gave his promise and immediately
disappeared below, to appear a few moments later,
carrying in his hand a revolver, a piece of string,
and a dozen medium-sized apples. Reaching the
deck, he made one of the apples fast by the string
to the wire rope that carried the awning. When
this was done it hung midway between the awning and
the taffrail, and afforded an excellent target.
“Have you done much shooting
with the revolver?” Moreas inquired of Max,
as he returned from placing the fruit in position.
“A little,” the other replied.
“In that case shall we say thirty paces?”
“Whatever you like,” said Max.
The distance was accordingly measured,
and a chalk line drawn upon the deck.
“Shall we bet on the shot,”
remarked Moreas, taking a box of cartridges from his
pocket and carefully filling the chambers of the revolver.
“Why not?” answered Max,
still with the same imperturbability. “What
shall it be? Name the sum.”
“Let it be whatever you please,”
returned his polite adversary. “Since we
are loaded with English gold shall we say half a sovereign?”
“Half a sovereign will suit
me admirably,” the other replied. “Perhaps
you will commence?”
Nothing loath, Moreas toed the line,
and, when he had examined the revolver to make sure
that it was in working order, fired. The bullet
hit the apple dividing it as neatly as if it had been
cut with a knife.
“Bravo!” said Max. “I owe you
half a sovereign.”
The Spaniard handed him the revolver,
and he, in his turn, took his place at the line.
As boys, Max and I had been keen pistol shots, and
I was quite prepared when I reached this part of his
narrative to find that he had imitated Moreas’
example and destroyed the target. To my surprise,
however, he chronicled a miss.
“I owe you a sovereign,”
he said, handing the revolver to his adversary.
“You will come to it directly,”
the other replied patronisingly.
Once more Moreas toed the line and
fired. He missed his mark, however, by some inches.
An oath in Spanish escaped his lips as he handed the
revolver to Max. The latter had recovered his
presence of mind by this time, and when he pulled
the trigger the ball pierced the apple in the centre.
“A good shot,” said one
of the men behind him, and Moreas, who, though he
deemed it a fluke, felt compelled to agree.
“We are equal now,” said Max quietly.
Again Moreas fired, but this time
he hit the apple on its side, causing it to swing
backwards and forwards like a pendulum. One cartridge
still remained in the revolver. Max waited until
the target was ready, then fired and again hit his
mark. The shot was a good one, and this time
there was no question of chance about it. Moreas
changed colour as far as it was possible to do, and
began to think that his exhibition was scarcely likely
to serve the purpose for which it was intended.
Once more the revolver was charged, and out of the
six shots fired Max struck the apple three times and
Moreas twice. Whether it was the salutary lesson
he had received, or whether it was because, as he informed
him later, he had taken a great liking to Max, I cannot
say; the fact remains, however, that from that moment
they agreed most amicably together. That he was
aware Max did not trust him very far did not appear
to detract from their friendliness. On the other
hand, it may have added a spice to it, somewhat as
bitters at times improve a glass of sherry. One
day he asked Max point-blank what he intended doing
when he reached his destination.
“Up to the present I have settled
nothing,” Max replied. “I am leaving
it to chance to decide.”
“It’s not a bad idea,”
Moreas answered. “Brazil is a great place
for chance. Your life is one long gamble from
the time you set foot ashore until they put
you under ground.”
“The picture you draw is not
a very cheerful one,” remarked Max; “particularly
for the confiding emigrant.”
“Oh, you need not be afraid,”
said Moreas confidently. “A man who can
shoot as you do will always be able to keep his head
above water. And now I am going to make you a
little offer, which it may possibly be worth your
while some day to accept. My advice to you is
to try your luck first in your own fashion, and if
you don’t succeed, just come to me and see what
I can do for you. Will you agree to this proposal?”
“It’s extremely kind of
you to take so much interest in me,” Max returned,
“and of course I agree. I should be foolish
if I did not. But where and how am I to find
you in the event of my being compelled to accept your
offer?”
“That is easily arranged.
I will give you my address before I leave the vessel.”
Then he added, with pardonable vanity, “It is
scarcely necessary, however; I believe I am fairly
well known in Rio.”
Next day he handed Max his card, on
which his name and address was set forth with many
flourishes.
“At least,” said Max to
himself as he stowed it away in a safe place, “there
is something here to fall back upon.”