Pye had interpreted his employer’s
face correctly, and Lane had not boasted unduly.
On Wednesday evening I received a letter appointing
me to the position of doctor, and at the same time
informing me of my remuneration. This was well
enough, as it chanced; though not on too liberal a
scale, it was yet sufficient to meet my wants, and
mentally I cast myself adrift from Wapping with a
psalm of thankfulness. The Sea Queen was
to sail on Friday, and so I had little time left; yet
by a lucky chance I was enabled to dispose of my practice
“on the nail,” to use a convenient colloquialism,
and, with that adventitious sum of money, equipped
and fortified myself for my voyage. I paid two
preliminary visits to the yacht, but found no one of
importance on board, and it was not until the actual
afternoon of our departure that I made the acquaintance
of any more of my shipmates.
We warped out of the docks, and dropped
down the river unexpectedly, the captain on his bridge
at intervals, and the pilot all the time, and at ten
o’clock we reached Gravesend, where we anchored
in the stream. It was blowing hard of a cold
night, and the wind was peppered with sleet; a depressing
proem to our unknown voyage. We swung at anchor
there until Mr. Morland came aboard with his friends,
and we left on the turn of the tide about midnight.
I did not see Mr. Morland arrive, as I was busy in
the forecastle with a man who had met with a trivial
accident. It was Lane who informed me that the
“butterflies were come” and we might spread
our wings. Lane I had encountered for a few minutes
in the afternoon, when he smilingly saluted me.
“Well, what price me?”
and hurried off ere I could answer him or thank him,
as this form of salutation seemed to require.
But he had more leisure at supper, to which he invited
me in his cabin.
“We chaps have the benefit of
a pleasure yacht, doctor,” said he, winking,
“and you bet I’m not purser for nothing.
Blame me if I sup with that crew until they shake
down a bit. Barraclough’s all right, and
a gentleman, but I can’t stand Legrand or Holgate.”
“I’ve met Mr. Holgate,
and thought him intelligent,” I ventured.
Lane emitted scorn. “Intelligent!
He’s a bladder of peas, and thinks himself a
monarch. Precious little swank about him, if he
can help it. He’s fly enough there.
Well, a tot won’t hurt us now. I can tell
you I’ve been hustled.” He had recourse
to a decanter of whisky. “This is the real
stuff. I took care of that. Legrand can do
on two-bob vitriol for all I care. He don’t
know the difference. Well, the boss’s aboard
and his crowd, and we’re off, and here’s
fortune, doctor.”
The toast was irreproachable, and
I put down my glass and reverted to his phrase.
“His crowd?”
“Yes, his sister and the other
lady rippers both. I saw
them when they came aboard at Hamburg.”
“And now can you tell me where we’re going?”
I asked.
“I don’t know,”
said Lane carelessly. “I hope we’re
running out of this beastly weather that’s
all.”
“I merely engaged for twelve months,”
I put in.
“Same here, and that’s
good enough,” said Lane. “I’ll
ask the old man to-morrow if his prickles don’t
stand up too thick. Here she goes, doctor.”
When I left the purser I turned in,
for the night was shrewd and discomfortable enough
to bar romantic thoughts on leaving the English coast.
Besides, we were bound down channel, and should keep
company with our native cliffs the whole of the next
day. It would be time to wave a farewell when
we passed the Lizard.
The quarters in the Sea Queen
were roomy. I was berthed aft with the other
officers, and Mr. Morland’s rooms and the cabins
of the two ladies were on the upper deck, ample in
appearance from the outside, and no doubt furnished
luxuriously. The guests had the run of a fine
saloon also, on the lower deck, as well as a music-gallery
which ran round it, and there was a boudoir, as I
heard, attached to the ladies’ compartments,
as well as a private room to Mr. Morland’s.
Breakfast was mainly interesting as introducing me
practically for the first time to my companions.
We were then abreast of the Isle of Wight, and were
keeping well away towards France. The chief officer
I now, to my astonishment, discovered to be a man
of title. Sir John Barraclough was a tall, loose-limbed,
good-looking man of thirty something, with a blue
eye, and a casual manner. He nodded at me amiably
and continued his talk with Legrand, the second officer,
who was dark and high-coloured, with a restless expression
of face. Lane threw a jocular greeting across
the table to me, and I shook hands cordially with Holgate,
whom I now saw for the first time since I had come
aboard. Presently Barraclough turned to me.
“Glad to see you, doctor,”
he said in an indifferent manner. “Hope
it’s goin’ to be a fine cruise.”
I had just echoed his wish formally
when the captain made his appearance from the deck.
Captain Day was a most fastidious-looking man, with
a brown Vandyke beard and a flow of good manners.
Seeing me and Holgate there as the only strangers,
he singled us out at once with quite the right degree
of friendliness.
“Glad to make your acquaintance,
Dr. Phillimore. This your first voyage?
I hope we’ll make a happy family.”
But having thus condescended briefly,
he relapsed into silence and shortly afterwards left
us.
“There’s too much condemned
R.N.R. about the old man,” confided Lane as
we went on deck, “but he’s all right.”
It was on deck that I met with my
surprise, for the first person my eyes fell on was
no other than Pye, the little lawyer’s clerk.
“I never expected to see you here,” I
told him.
“Well, you see, I did expect
to see you,” he replied in his self-satisfied
little way. “I’m here to represent
Mr. Morland for the time being.”
“Oh,” said I, “then
you can tell us all where we are bound for, for no
one seems to know.”
He considered a little. “I
shall be able to tell you shortly, I have no doubt,”
he said at last. “At present Mr. Morland
alone knows. Perhaps even he doesn’t,”
he added with his smile.
“I don’t like that little
buffer,” declared Lane grumpily as we walked
on. “He is too fussy and by-your-leave-please
for me. Made me get out all my books yesterday,
as if I were an office-boy.”
“He feels responsible, I suppose,” I ventured.
“Well, who’s responsible
if I’m not?” demanded the purser hotly.
“I’ve been at sea fifteen years, and this
brat hasn’t so much as been sick in the Marguerite,
I’ll lay. Let him look after his own books.
I’m all right.”
It was quite manifest that Lane was
decided in his likes and dislikes, as his unreasonable
objection to the second officer had already discovered
to me. The passengers were not visible during
the morning, but in the afternoon I received a message
calling me to Mr. Morland’s cabin. I found
him seated before a bureau with a docket of papers
before him, and he was civil and abrupt.
“Is there anything you can recommend
for sea-sickness, Dr. Phillimore?” he asked
bluntly.
I told him of several remedies which
had been tried, and mentioned cocaine as probably
the best, adding that I had little faith in any of
them. He thought a moment.
“Prepare me some cocaine,”
he said, and with a bow intimated that he had done
with me.
It was civil as I have said, but it
was also abrupt. He had the air of a martinet
and the expression of a schoolmaster who set his pupil
a task. But I made up the doses forthwith and
let him have them.
Later I saw two figures walking upon
the hurricane promenade, one of which I easily made
out as Mr. Morland, and the other was a woman heavily
cloaked in fur. A strong breeze was beating up
channel, and as they stood and faced it the woman
put her hand to her hat. But for the most part
they walked to and fro, sometimes in conversation,
but often in silence. Once, at eight bells, I
noticed, from my point of observation, the woman stop,
lean across the railing, and point towards the coast
of France, which was fast fading into the gathering
mists. She seemed to speak, her face turned level
with her shoulders towards the man. He put out
a hand and snapped his fingers, and they presently
resumed their promenade. The sun had gone down,
and darkness was settling on us; the Sea Queen
ploughed steadily westward, her lights springing out
one by one, and the figures on the hurricane deck were
presently merged in shadow. As I leaned over the
stern, reflecting, and contemplating now the dull
wash of the water about the screw, I was conscious
of some one’s approach.
“Well, doctor,” said the
cheerful voice of Pye, “have you had a good
look at our passengers?”
“Mr. Pye,” said I, pleasantly
enough, “I am a man of moods. And I have
lived long in silence and routine as no doubt you yourself
also. I find occupation even in my own thoughts.”
“You are well equipped for the
sea,” he rejoined. “I’m not
sure about myself. You see, I’m a Londoner,
and I shall miss those peopled spaces. Here there’s
nothing but” he waved his
hand.
“At all events. I see you’re
a respectable sailor,” I said, “which,
apparently, others are not.” His silence
seemed to inquire of me. “I gave Mr. Morland
a prescription for sea-sickness this afternoon.”
“That would be for one of the
ladies,” he made answer; “he is evidently
firm on his legs, and and his companion.
I suppose I may tell you that his companion is his
sister,” he said after a pause.
“Well, yes,” I replied
drily, for his precautions jarred on me. “For
I suppose we shall discover the mystery in the course
of the next twelve months.”
“Mystery!” he repeated
musingly. “I suppose I am by training somewhat
circumspect. It’s difficult to get out of
it. But there’s no mystery. Mr. and
Miss Morland have brought a friend with them.”
“If there’s no mystery,” I said,
“the friend?”
“I have not heard her name,”
he replied, “or at least, if I have, I have
forgotten. It is a friend of Miss Morland’s.
I believe she is a French lady.”
The dusk had enclosed us, but through
it I perceived some one hurriedly approaching.
“Is it the doctor?” said the steward’s
voice, and I answered in the affirmative.
“You’re wanted at once,
sir. Mr. Morland has sent for you.”
I moved off quickly, and had got half-way
down the deck when a woman came forward noiselessly
through the gloom.
“Dr. Phillimore,” she
said, “I want you to see to Mlle. Chateray
at once. She is very ill.”
I entered the state rooms without
further question, hurried down the handsome corridor,
and under Miss Morland’s guidance found the cabin.
Certain constitutions are peculiarly affected by the
sea, and it is even undertaking a risk for some people
to travel on that element. Clearly it was, as
Pye hinted, for the French lady that my prescription
had been required. Outside the cabin in the corridor
I encountered Mr. Morland, who exhibited a troubled
face unusual to one of such apparent equanimity.
But he said nothing, only looked at his sister and
turned away.
Inside I found a blue chamber, roomy
and well lighted by electricity, an elegant broad
bed affixed to the one wall, and upon it, stretched
in the most wonderful deshabille, my patient.
Mlle. Chateray was of middle height, of a pleasant
fulness, and dark of feature. She had large eyes
that, as I entered, were roaming in a restless way
about the room, and her voice was lifted sharply abusive
of her maid, a mild Frenchwoman who stood by her.
“She is in a state of collapse,
Dr. Phillimore,” said my guide’s voice
in my ear.
I knew better than that. It was
hysteria, or I had never seen hysteria, and the mal-de-mer
had been merely provocative. I took her hand
without ceremony, and, wheeling on me her lustrous
eyes, she broke out in torrential French.
She would die if she remained there.
They were beasts to keep her there. Why was she
not put ashore at Havre? Havre was a port, as
every one knew, and there were ports not only in England.
I had a kind face and would do as she bade me....
Very well, then, let her be put ashore. She began
to tear at her elaborate dressing-gown, and I was afraid
of one of those outbreaks which are known as crises
des nerfs. I took her hands firmly.
“You shall be put ashore as
you wish,” I said, “and in the meantime,
while the yacht is going about, you will drink what
I give you. It will comfort you.”
She gazed into my eyes, ceasing to
struggle, and then said more quietly: “Yes yes,
give it me quick.”
It was a case for bromide, and I turned
away at once to go to my surgery.
“You will lie exactly as you
are, mademoiselle,” I said peremptorily, “until
I return.”
I left the cabin and descended, and
I think I was not gone more than ten minutes.
When Mlle. Chateray had taken the draught, I turned
to her maid: “She will be quieter now,”
I said. “Let me know if anything further
develops,” and I moved towards the door.
Miss Morland stood in my way.
For the first time I observed her.
Her cloak had fallen from her, leaving her fine figure
in the full illumination of the light. Her head
was set well back above the eloquent lines of a strong
throat and the square shoulders underneath. The
lace over her bosom stirred with her breathing, and
to my fancy at the moment she was as a statue into
which life was flowing suddenly. I saw this before
I met her gaze, and the calm beauty of that confirmed
my fancy. She moved then and opened the door
for me.
“You have promised she shall
be landed?” she said in a low voice.
“Madam, I would promise anything
in such a case,” I answered.
A faint smile passed over her face,
for we were now outside the cabin and in the ladies’
boudoir.
“You can promise relief, then,
I understand?” she queried.
“She will probably be all right
to-night, though I cannot say the hysteria will not
recur,” I replied.
An expression flitted over her face,
but whether it was of pity or annoyance I could not
have said.
“My brother will not put the yacht about,”
she said.
“I’m not going to ask him,” I rejoined.
“I thank you, doctor,” said she simply,
“and so will he.”
“It is my business,” I responded indifferently.
She had spoken with distance, even
coldly, and with the air of condescension. There
was no necessity to thank me at all, and certainly
not in that way.
Bidding her good evening, I went down
again, and as I went a problem which had vaguely bothered
me during my administrations recurred, now more insistently.
There was something familiar in Mlle. Chateray’s
face. What was it?
I spent some time in the surgery,
and later joined the officers at dinner. Captain
Day wore a short dinner-jacket like my own, but the
others had made no attempt to dress. Perhaps that
was the reason why the captain devoted his attention
to me. His voice was that of a cultivated man,
and he seemed to converse on the same level of cultivation.
He made a figure apart from the rest of the company,
to which little Pye was now joined, and as I looked
down and across the table (from which only Holgate
was absent on duty) their marvellous unlikeness to
him struck me. Even Sir John Barraclough and Lane
seemed by comparison more or less of a piece, though
the first officer ignored the purser quite markedly.
Captain Day, I discovered, had some taste in letters,
and as that also had been my consolation in my exile
in Wapping, I think we drew nearer on a common hobby.
I visited my patient about nine o’clock, and
found her sleeping. As she lay asleep, I was
again haunted by the likeness to some one I had seen
before; but I was unable to trace it to its source
nor did I trouble my head in the matter, since resemblances
are so frequently accidental and baffling.
Pye had invited me to his room earlier
in the day, and I went straight to him from the deck
cabin. To find Holgate there was not unpleasing,
as it seemed in a way to recall what I almost began
to consider old times the time that was
in the “Three Tuns.” Pye mixed
the toddy, and we smoked more or less at our ease.
I spoke of my patient, in answer to a question, as
one suffering from sea-sickness.
“What’s she like?” inquired Holgate.
“I should say handsome,”
I rejoined. “I understood from Mr. Pye that
she is French.”
“I think I heard so,” said Pye, “but
you could tell.”
“Well, she spoke French,” I said with
a smile.
Pye’s smile seemed to commend
my reticence, but Holgate, ignoring the obvious retort
on me, pursued a different subject.
“Upon my soul, I envy people
like those millionaires. Here am I working like
a navvy for a bare living, never been able to marry;
Pye probably in the same case; and you, doctor?”
“No; I’m a bachelor,” I answered.
“Well, take us three no
doubt in our different walks every bit as capable
as Mr. Morland on his Wall Street, or wherever it is.
It isn’t a righteous distribution of this world’s
goods.”
“It is odd,” said I, speaking
my thoughts, “how you came to take up this life.”
“The sort of blunder,”
said Holgate, “that is made in three cases out
of four. I hankered after it in my teens, and
once out of them it was too late. Who is going
to adapt a youth of twenty-one, without capital, to
a commercial life, or a legal life, or a medical life?
There is no changing the dice. When the hands
are dealt you must abide by them.”
“Yes, we are all waifs,”
said I sententiously, not being greatly interested
in the argument.
“When I came back from my last
voyage,” pursued Holgate, “I was in Paris
for a bit, and went into the Comedie one night, and
I never heard the rest of Holgate’s
reminiscence, for the word regarding the theatre suddenly
sent a message to my memory and lighted it up instantaneously.
I said aloud, and with some excitement,
“Trebizond!”
Holgate ceased talking, and Pye removed his cigarette
hastily.
“What, may we venture to ask, is Trebizond?”
he said presently.
I smiled foolishly. “Oh,
it is only that I have made a discovery,” I
said, “a small discovery.”
Again there was silence.
“Perhaps we are worthy to hear it,” suggested
Holgate equably.
Pye still held his cigarette between
his fingers and looked at me out of his gold-rimmed
glasses.
“Oh, nothing much,” said
I, and glanced at my watch. “I’m sorry,
I must see my patient safe for the night. I’ll
look in again.”
I left them and went upstairs, knocking
on the boudoir door. Miss Morland opened it.
“Mlle. Chateray is still sleeping,” she
said formally.
“I will leave a dose with her
maid,” I replied, “so that if it be necessary
it may be given in the night.”
“You will, of course, be in
attendance if required,” she said coldly.
I bowed.
“I am paid for it, madam,”
I answered, though I must confess to a hostile feeling
within my heart.
“I think, then, that is all,”
she said, and I took my dismissal at the hands of
the arrogant beauty with an internal conflict of anger
and admiration.
I did not return to Pye, but went
to my own cabin in an irritable condition. It
ought not to have mattered to me that the sister of
a millionaire, my employer, should treat me more or
less as a lackey; but it did. I threw myself
on my bunk and took down a book at random from my
little shelf. Out of its pages tumbled an evening
news-sheet which I now remembered to have bought of
a screaming boy as I hurried into the dock gates on
the previous afternoon. I had not had time to
look at it in my various preoccupations, but, after
all, it was the last news of my native land I should
have for some time, and so I opened it and began the
perusal.
It was one of those half-penny journals
which seem to combine the maximum of vulgarity with
a minimum of news. But I passed over the blatant
racing items and murder trials with less than my customary
distaste, and was rambling leisurely through the columns
when I was arrested by a paragraph and sat up briskly.
It was the tail that interested me.
“... It is stated that
Prince Frederic is in London. The name of the
lady who has so infatuated him is Mlle. Yvonne
Trebizond, the well-known prima donna.”
I had recalled the name Trebizond
during Holgate’s talk, and it seemed strange
now that this second discovery should fall so coincidently.
The face of Mlle. Chateray had taken me back,
by a sudden gust of memory, to certain pleasant days
in Paris before I was banished to the East End.
I had frequented the theatres and the concert-rooms,
and I remembered the vivacious singer, a true comedienne,
with her pack of tricks and her remarkable individuality.
Mlle. Chateray, then, was no other than Yvonne Trebizond, and
I looked down at the paper and read
another sentence, which, ere that illumination, had
had no significance, but now was pregnant with it.
“The prince has the full support
and sympathy of his sister, Princess Alix.”
I rose abruptly. I can keep my
own counsel as well as a lawyer’s clerk, but
I saw no reason in the world for it now. I had
left my glass untouched and my cigar unlit in Pye’s
cabin. I went back forthwith to finish both.
The pair were still seated as if expecting me.
“Patient all right, doctor?” inquired
Holgate.
I nodded. “Mr. Pye,”
I said, “I find my discovery has amplified itself.
When I was here it was of small dimensions. Now
it has grown to the proportions of a well,
a balloon,” I ended.
Both men gazed at me steadily.
“Out with it, man,” urged the third officer.
“I have your permission?” I asked the
lawyer’s clerk, smiling.
“When you have told me what
it is, I will tell you,” said he, gravely jocose.
I put the paper in Holgate’s
hands, and pointed to the paragraph. He read
it slowly aloud and then looked up.
“Well?” he asked.
“I am going to tell you something
which you know,” I said, addressing Pye.
“The lady in the deck cabin is Mlle. Trebizond.”
Holgate started. “Good
Heavens!” he exclaimed, but Pye was quite silent,
only keeping his eyes on me.
“I recognized her, but couldn’t
name her,” I went on. “Now it has
come back to me.”
“Which means, of course,”
said Pye unemotionally, “that Mr. Morland is
“The Prince,” said Holgate with a heavy
breath.
Pye resumed his cigarette. “With
all these sensations, my dear Holgate,” he remarked,
“I have forgotten my duty. Perhaps you will
help yourself.”
Holgate did so. “Good Heavens!”
he said again, and then, “I suppose, if you’re
right, that we carry Cæsar and his fortunes.
He has got off with the lady and the plunder.”
“The plunder!” I echoed.
He indicated the paragraph, and I
read now another sentence which I had overlooked.
“The prince has expressed his
intention, according to rumour, of marrying as he
chooses, and as he inherits more than a million pounds
from his mother, he is in a position to snap his fingers
at the Empress. In that case, no doubt, he would
follow precedent, and take rank as an ordinary subject.”
I looked up at Holgate.
“We carry Cæsar and his fortune,”
he said with a smiling emphasis on the singular, and
then he waved his arm melodramatically. “And
to think we are all paupers!” and grinned at
me.
“It is inequitable,” said
I lightly; “it’s an unjust distribution
of this world’s goods,” echoing therein
his own remark earlier in the evening.
Pye sat still, with an inexpressive
face. His admirable silence, however, now ceased.
“So we shall have this gossip
all over the ship to-morrow.”
“No,” said I curtly, for
the suggestion annoyed me. “It is nothing
to me. I told you because you knew. And
I told Mr. Holgate” I paused.
“Because I’m your chum,” said the
third officer.
I did not contradict him. I had
spoken really out of the excitement of my discovery.
Certainly I had not spoken because Holgate was my chum.