Though Medenham was no turf devotee,
he formed distinctly unfavorable conclusions as to
the financial stability of the bawling bookmakers
near at hand.
“If you wish to do any betting,
Miss Vanrenen,” he said, “give me the
money and I will invest it for you. There is no
hurry. The Derby will not be run till three o’clock.
We have an hour and a half in which to study form.”
For the life of him he could not imitate
the complete annihilation of self practiced by the
well-bred English servant. The American girl
missed the absence of this trait far less than the
other woman, but, by this time, even Mrs. Devar began
to accept Medenham’s good-humored assumption
of equality as part of the day’s amusement.
Cynthia handed him a card. She
had bought three while they were crawling up the hill
behind a break-load of jeering Cockneys.
“What will win the first race?”
she asked. “Father says you men often hear
more than the owners about the real performances of
horses.”
Medenham tried to look knowing.
He thanked his stars for Dale’s information.
“I am told Eyot has a chance,” he said.
“Well, put me a sovereign on
Eyot, please. Are you playing the ponies,
Mrs. Devar?”
That lady, being quick-witted, took
care not to offend Cynthia by pretending not to understand,
though it set Medenham’s teeth on edge to hear
a racehorse called a pony. She opened a gold purse
and produced a coin.
“I don’t mind risking a little,”
she tittered.
Medenham found, however, that she
also had handed him a sovereign, and his conscience
smote him, for he guessed already, with accuracy as
it happened, that she was Miss Vanrenen’s paid
chaperon during the absence of the girl’s father
on the Continent.
“Personally, I am a duffer in
matters connected with the turf,” he explained.
“A friend of mine a chauffeur mentioned
Eyot ”
“Oh, that is all right,”
laughed Cynthia. “I like the color Eau
de Nil and white. Look! There he goes!”
She had good eyes, as well as pretty
ones, else she could not have distinguished the silk
jacket worn by the rider of a horse cantering at that
moment along the cleared course. Crowded coaches,
four rows deep, lined the rails near the judge’s
box, and the gay-hued parasols of their feminine occupants
almost completely blocked the view, a distant one
in any case, owing to the width of the intervening
valley.
Medenham raised no further protest.
He walked to a stand where a press of people betokened
the presence of a popular layer of odds, found that
Eyot’s price was chalked up at five to one, and
backed him for four pounds. He had to push and
elbow his way through a struggling crowd; immediately
after the bet was made, Eyot’s quotation was
reduced by two points in response to signals tick-tacked
from the inclosures. This, of course, argued
a decided following for Dale’s selection, and
these eleventh hour movements in the turf market are
illuminative. Before he got back to the car there
was a mighty shout of “They’re off!”
and he saw Cynthia Vanrenen stand on the seat to watch
the race through her glasses.
Mrs. Devar stood up, too. Both
women were so intent on the troop of horses now streaming
over the crest of the six-furlong course that he was
able to stare his fill without attracting their attention.
“I like Cynthia,” he said
to himself, “though I shall be in a deuce of
a mess if I meet her anywhere after this piece of masquerading.
Not much chance of that, I expect, seeing that Dad
and I go to Scotland early in July. But what
a bore to tumble across Jimmy’s mater! I
hope it is not a case of ‘like mother like son,’
because Jimmy is the limit.”
A strange roar, gathering force and
volume each instant, rose from a hundred thousand
throats. Soon the shout became insistent, and
Cynthia Vanrenen yielded to its magnetism.
“Eyot wins!” she cried
delightedly. “Yes, none of them can catch
him now. Go on, jockey don’t
look round! Oh, if I were your master I’d
give you such a talking to. Ah-h-h! We’ve
won, Mrs. Devar we’ve won! Just
think of it!”
“How much, I wonder?”
Mrs. Devar, though excited, had the calculating habit.
“Five pounds each,” said
Medenham, who had approached unnoticed during the
tumult.
Cynthia’s eyes sparkled.
“Five pounds! Why, I heard
some betting person over there offering only three
to one.”
It was a task beyond his powers to
curb an unruly tongue in the presence of this emancipated
schoolgirl. He met her ebullient mood halfway.
“I have evidently beaten the
market that is, if I get the money.
Horrible thought! I may be welshed!”
He strode back rapidly to the bookmaker’s stand.
“What do you think of our chauffeur
now?” cried Cynthia radiantly, for the winning
of those few sovereigns was a real joy to her, and
the shadow of the welsher had no terrors, since she
did not know what Medenham meant.
“He improves on acquaintance,”
admitted Mrs. Devar, thawing a little under the influence
of a successful tip.
He soon returned, and handed them
six sovereigns apiece.
“My man paid up like a Briton,”
he said cheerfully. “I have no reliable
information as to the next race, so what do you ladies
say if we lunch quietly before we attack the ring
for the Derby?”
There was an awkward pause. The
air of Epsom Downs is stimulating, especially after
one has found the winner of the first race.
“We have not brought anything
to eat,” admitted Cynthia ruefully. “We
ordered some sandwiches before leaving the hotel, and
we mean to stop for tea at some old-world hotel in
Reigate which Mrs. Devar recommends.”
“Unfortunately I was not hungry
at sandwich time,” sighed Mrs. Devar.
“If it comes to that, neither
was I, whereas I have a most unromantic appetite now.
But what can do, as the Babus say in India. I
am rather inclined to doubt the quality of anything
we can buy here.”
Medenham’s face lit up.
“India!” he cried. “Have you
been to India?”
“Yes, have you? My father and I passed
last cold weather there.”
Warned by a sudden expansion of Mrs.
Devar’s prominent eyes, he gave a quick turn
to a dangerous topic, since it was in Calcutta that
the gallant ex-captain of Horton’s Horse had
“borrowed” fifty pounds from him.
Naturally, the lady omitted the telltale prefix to
her son’s rank, but it was unquestionably true
that the British army had dispensed with his services.
“I was only thinking that acquaintance
with the East, Miss Vanrenen, would prepare you for
the mysterious workings of Kismet,” said Medenham
lightly. “When I came across Simmonds this
morning I was bewailing the fact that my respected
aunt had fallen ill and could not accompany me to-day.
May I offer you the luncheon which I provided for
her?”
He withdrew the wicker basket from
its nook beneath the front seat; before his astonished
guests could utter a protest, it was opened, and he
was deftly unpacking the contents.
“But that is your luncheon,”
protested Cynthia, finding it incumbent on her to
say something by way of polite refusal.
“And his aunt’s, my dear.”
In those few words Mrs. Devar conveyed
skepticism as to the aunt and ready acceptance of
the proffered fare; but Medenham paid no heed; he
had discovered that the napkins, cutlery, even the
plates, bore the family crest. The silver, too,
was of a quality that could not fail to evoke comment.
“Well, here goes!” he
growled under his breath. “If I come a purler
it will not be for the first time where women are
concerned.”
He laughed as he produced some lobster
in aspic and a chicken.
“It is jolly useful to have
as a friend a butler in a big house,” he said.
“I didn’t know what Tomkinson had given
me, but these confections look all right.”
Mrs. Devar’s glance dwelt on
the crest the instant she took a plate. She smiled
in her superior way. While Medenham was wrestling
with the cork of a bottle of claret she whispered:
“This is screamingly funny,
Cynthia. I have solved the riddle at last.
Our chauffeur is using his master’s car and his
master’s eatables as well.”
“Don’t care a cent,”
said Cynthia, who found the lobster admirable.
“But if any inquiry is made
and our names are mixed up in it, Mr. Vanrenen may
be angry.”
“Father would be tickled to
death. I shall insist on paying for everything,
of course, and my responsibility ends there. No,
thank you ” this to Medenham who
was offering her a glass of wine. “I drink
water only. Have you any?”
Mrs. Devar took the wine, and Medenham
fished in the basket for the St. Galmier, since Lady
St. Maur cultivated gout with her biliousness.
“Dear me!” she murmured after a sip.
“What is it now?” asked Cynthia.
“Perfect, my dear. Such
a bouquet! I wonder what house it came from,”
and she pondered the crest again, but in vain, for
heraldry is an exact science, and the greater part
of her education had been given by a hard world.
She did not fail, therefore, to notice that three
persons were catered for by the packer of the basket.
An unknown upper housemaid was already suspect, and
now she added mentally “some shop-girl friend.”
The climax was reached when Medenham staged the strawberries.
Cynthia, to whom the good things of the table were
commonplaces, ate them and was thankful, but Mrs. Devar
made another note: “Ten shillings a basket,
at the very least; and three baskets!”
A deep, booming yell from the mob
proclaimed that the second race was in progress.
“I can’t see a thing unless
I am perched on the seat, and if I stand up I shall
upset the crockery,” announced Cynthia.
“But I am not interested yet awhile. If
Grimalkin wins I shall shout myself hoarse.”
“He hasn’t a ghost of a chance,”
said Medenham.
“Oh, but he has. Mr. Deane told my father ”
“But Tomkinson told me,” he interrupted.
“Tomkinson. Is that your butler friend?”
“Yes. He says the King’s horse will
win.”
“Surely the owner of Grimalkin
must know more about the race than a butler?”
“You would not think so, Miss Vanrenen, if you
knew Tomkinson.”
“Where is he butler?” asked Mrs. Devar
suavely.
“I forget for the moment, madam,” replied
Medenham with equal suavity.
The lady waived the retort. She was sure of her
ground now.
“In any case, I imagine that
both Mr. Deane and this Tomkinson may be mistaken.
I am told that a horse trained locally has a splendid
chance let me see yes, here it
is: the Honorable Charles Fenton’s Vendetta.”
It was well that those bulging steel-gray
eyes were bent over the card, or they could not have
failed to catch the flicker of amazement that swept
across Medenham’s sun-browned face when he heard
the name of his cousin. He had not been in England
a full week as yet, and he happened not to have read
a list of probable starters for the Derby. He
had glanced at the programme during breakfast that
morning, but some remark made by the Earl caused him
to lay down the newspaper, and, when next he picked
it up, he became interested in an article on the Cape
to Cairo railway, written by someone who had not the
remotest notion of the difficulties to be surmounted
before that very desirable line can be constructed.
Cynthia, however, was watching him, and she laughed
gleefully.
“Ah, Fitzroy, you hadn’t
heard of Vendetta before,” she cried. “Confess
now your faith in Tomkinson is shaken.”
“Vendetta certainly does sound like war to the
knife,” said he.
“It is twenty to one,”
purred Mrs. Devar complacently. “I shall
risk the five pounds I won on the first race, and
it will be very nice if I receive a hundred.”
“I stick to Old Glory,” announced the
valiant Cynthia.
“The King for me,” declared
Medenham, though he realized, without any knowledge
of the merits of the horses engaged, that the Honorable
Charles was not the sort of man to run a three-year-old
in the Derby merely for the sake of seeing his racing
colors flashing in the sun.
Mrs. Devar kept to her word, and handed
over the five pounds. Cynthia staked seven, the
five she had won and the ten dollars of her original
intent: whereupon Medenham said that he must cross
the course and make these bets in the ring would
the ladies raise any objection to his absence, as
he could not return until after the race? No,
they were quite content to remain in the car, so he
repacked the luncheon basket and left them.
Vendetta won by three lengths.
Medenham had secured twenty-five to
one, and the bookmaker who paid him added the genial
advice: “Put that little lot where the flies
can’t get at it.” The man could afford
to be affable, seeing that the bet was the only one
in his book against the horse’s name. The
King’s horse and Grimalkin were the public favorites,
but both were hopelessly shut in at Tattenham Corner,
and neither showed in the front rank at any stage
of a fast run race. When Medenham climbed the
hill again, hot and uncomfortable in his leather clothing,
Mrs. Devar actually welcomed him with an expansive
smile.
“What odds did you get me?”
she cried, as soon as he was within earshot.
“A hundred and twenty-five pounds
to five, madam,” he said.
“Oh, what luck! You must
keep the odd five pounds, Fitzroy.”
“No, thank you. I hedged
on Vendetta, so I am still winning.”
“But really, I insist.”
He handed her a bundle of notes.
“You will find a hundred and
thirty pounds there,” he said, and she understood
that his refusal to accept her money was final.
She was intensely surprised that he had given her
so much more than she expected, and the first unworthy
thought was succeeded by a second how dared
this impudent chauffeur decline her bounty?
Cynthia pouted at him.
“Your Tomkinson is a fraud,” she said.
“Your Grimalkin was well named,” said
he.
“That remark is very cutting, I suppose, Fitzroy.”
“Oh, no. I merely meant to convey that
a cat is not a racehorse.”
“Poor fellow,” mused Cynthia,
“he is vexed because he lost. I must make
it up to him somehow, but he is such an extraordinary
person, I hardly dare suggest such a thing.”
She began to adjust her veil and dust coat.
“If you are ready, Mrs. Devar,”
she said, “I think we ought to hit the pike
for Brighton.”
Mrs. Devar laughed. Fitzroy evidently
understood, as he had taken his seat and the engine
was humming.
“Americanisms are most fascinating,”
she vowed. “I wish you would use more of
them, Cynthia. I love them.”
Cynthia was slightly ruffled, though
if pressed for a reason she could hardly have given
one.
“Slang is useful occasionally,
but I am trying to cure myself of the habit,”
she said tartly.
“A picturesque phrase is always
pardonable. Oh, is this quite safe? ”
The Mercury, finding an opening, had
shot down the hill with a smooth celerity that alarmed
the older woman. Cynthia leaned back composedly.
“Fitzroy means to reach the
road before the police stop the traffic for the next
race,” she said. Then, after a pause, she
added: “I wish we could keep this car for
the rest of our tour, yet I suppose I ought not to
interfere in the arrangement father made with Simmonds.”
Mrs. Devar frowned. Her momentary
tremor had fled, and she had every cause to regard
with uneasiness the threatened substitution during
the forthcoming ten days, of this quite impossible
Fitzroy for that very chauffeur-like person, Simmonds.
Her acquaintance with Peter Vanrenen and his daughter
was sufficiently intimate to warn her that Cynthia’s
least desire was granted by her indulgent parent; in
fact, Cynthia would have been hopelessly spoilt were
it not for a combination of those happy chances which
seem to conspire at times in the creation of the American
girl at her best. She was devoted to her father,
her nature was bright and cheerful, and she had a
heart that bubbled over with kindliness. Mrs.
Devar chose the right line of attack. She resolved
to appeal to the girl’s sympathies.
“I am afraid it would be a rather
cruel thing to deprive Simmonds of his engagement,”
she said softly. “He has bought a car, I
understand, on the strength of the contract with Mr.
Vanrenen ”
“That doesn’t cut any
ice I mean there would be no ill effect
for Simmonds,” explained Cynthia hurriedly.
“Father will meet us in London at the end of
our run, and Simmonds could come to us then.”
The steel-gray eyes narrowed.
Their owner was compelled to decide quickly.
As opposition was useless, she laughed, with the careless
ease of one who was in no way concerned.
“Don’t you think,”
she said, “that if your father sees this car
Simmonds will be dispensed with somehow?”
Cynthia nodded. The argument was unanswerable.
They were crossing the course at a
walking pace; at that point a sort of passage was
kept clear by the police for the convenience of those
occupants of the stands who wished to visit the paddock.
The owner of Vendetta, having been congratulated by
royalty, was taking some friends to admire the horse
during the rubbing-down process, when his glance suddenly
fell on Medenham. Though amazed, he was not rendered
speechless.
“Well, I’m ”
he began.
But the Mercury possessed a singularly
loud and clear motor-horn, and the voice of the Honorable
Charles was drowned. Still, his gestures were
eloquent. Quite obviously, he was saying to a
man whose arm he caught:
“Did you ever in your life see
anybody more like George than that chauffeur?
Why, damme, it is Medenham!”
So Mrs. Devar lost a golden opportunity.
She knew Fenton by sight, and her shrewd wits must
have set her on the right track had she witnessed
his bewilderment. Being a pretentious person,
however, and not able to afford the up-keep of a motor,
she was enjoying the surprise of two well-dressed
women who recognized her. Then the car leaped
forward again, and she scored a dearly won triumph.
At this crisis Medenham’s scrutiny
of the road map provided by Simmonds for the tour
was well repaid. He turned sharp to the right
past the back of the stands, and was fortunate in finding
enough clear road to render pursuit by his elderly
cousin a vain thing, even if it were thought of.
The Mercury had to cross the caravan zone carefully,
but once Tattenham Corner was reached the way lay open
to Reigate.
Through a land of gorse and heather
they sped until they came to the famous hill.
They ran down in a noiseless flight that caused Cynthia
to experience the sensation of being borne on wings.
“I imagine that aeroplaning
is something like this,” she confided to her
companion.
“If it is, it must be enjoyable.
I don’t suppose, at my time of life, I shall
ever try to navigate the air in one of those frail
contrivances pictured in the newspapers. But I
was nearly tempted to go up in a balloon two years
ago.”
Cynthia stole a glance at Mrs. Devar’s
rotund figure, and laughed. She could not help
it, though she flushed furiously at what she deemed
an involuntary rudeness on her part.
“Oh, it sounds funny, I have
no doubt,” said the other, placidly good-tempered,
“but I really meant it at the moment. You
have met Count Edouard Marigny, I fancy?”
“Yes, in Paris last month. In fact ”
Cynthia hesitated. She had scarcely
recovered from the excitement of the racing and was
not choosing her words quite happily. Mrs. Devar,
still sugary, ended the sentence.
“In fact, it was he who recommended
me to Mr. Vanrenen as your chaperon. Yes, my
dear, Monsieur Marigny and I are old friends.
He and my son are inseparable when Captain Devar is
in Paris. Well, as I was saying, the Count offered
to take me up in his balloon, L’Etoile, and
I was ready to go, but the weather became stormy and
an ascent from the Velo was impossible, or highly
dangerous, at any rate.”
Mrs. Devar cultivated the high-pitched
voice that she regarded as the hall-mark of good breeding,
and, in that silent rush downhill, Medenham could
not avoid hearing each syllable. It was eminently
pleasing to listen to Cynthia’s praise of his
car, and he was wroth with the other woman for wrenching
the girl’s thoughts away so promptly from a
topic dear to his heart. Therein he erred, for
the gods were being kind to him. Little recking
how valuable was the information he had just been
given, he slackened speed somewhat, and leaned back
in the seat.
“We are nearing Reigate now,”
he remarked with half-turned head. “The
town begins on the other side of that tunnel.
Which inn do you wish to stop at for tea?”
“It seems to me that I have
barely ended lunch,” said Cynthia. “Shall
we cut out your old-world Reigate inn, Mrs. Devar,
and take tea at Crawley or Handcross?”
“By all means. How well
you know the names of the towns and villages.
Yet you have never before visited this part of England.”
“We Americans are nothing if
not thorough,” answered the girl. “I
would not be happy if I failed to look up our route
on the map. More than that, I note the name of
each river we cross and try to identify every range
of hills. You must test me and count my mistakes.”
Mrs. Devar spread her hands in a gesture
copied from her French acquaintances.
“My dear, I am the most ignorant
person geographically. I remember how that delightful
Count Edouard laughed when I asked him if the Loire
joined the Seine above or below Paris. It seems
that I was thinking of the Oise all the time.
The Marchioness of Belfort told me of my error afterwards.”
Cynthia laughed merrily, but made no reply.
Medenham bent over the levers and
the car danced on through Reigate. Mrs. Devar
impressed him as a despicable type of tuft-hunter.
His acquaintance with the species was not extensive;
he had read of elderly dowagers who eked out their
slender means by introducing the daughters of rich
Americans to English society, and the thing was not
in itself wholly indefensible; but he felt sure that
Cynthia Vanrenen needed no such social sponsor, while
the mere bracketing of Count Edouard Marigny with
“Jimmy” Devar caused him to regard this
unknown Frenchman with a suspicion that was already
active enough so far as Mrs. Devar was concerned.
And the Marchioness of Belfort, too! A decrepit
old cadger with an infallible system for roulette!
Perhaps his mood communicated itself
to the accelerator. At any rate, the Mercury
seemed to sympathize, and it was a lucky hazard that
kept the glorious stretch of road between Reigate
and Crawley free of police traps on that memorable
Wednesday. The car simply leaped out of Surrey
into Sussex, the undulating parklands on both sides
of the smooth highway appearing to float past in stately
procession, and there was a fine gleam in Cynthia’s
blue eyes when the first check to a splendid run came
in the outskirts of Crawley.
She leaned forward and tapped him on the shoulder.
“Tea here, please,” she
said. Then she added, as if it were an afterthought:
“If you promise to let her rip in that style
after we reach the open country again I shall sit
on the front seat.”
The words were almost whispered into
his ear. Certainly they were not meant to enlighten
Mrs. Devar, and Medenham, turning, found his face
very near the girl’s.
“I’m bribed,” he
answered, and not until both were settled back in
their seats did they realize that either had said anything
unusual.
Medenham, however, took his cup of
tea a la chauffeur, helping himself to bread
and butter from a plate deposited on the bonnet by
a waiting-maid.
When the ladies reappeared from the
interior of a roadside restaurant he was in his place,
ready to start. He did not offer to put them in
the car, adjust their wraps, and close the door.
If Miss Vanrenen liked to keep her promise, that was
her affair, but no action on his part would hint of
prior knowledge that she intended to ride in front.
Nevertheless, he could not repress
a smile when he heard Mrs. Devar’s distinctly
chilly, “Oh, not at all!” in response to
Cynthia’s polite apology for deserting her until
they neared Brighton.
Somehow, the car underwent a subtle
change when the girl took her seat by his side.
From a machine quivering with life and power it became
a triumphal chariot. By sheer perfection of mechanical
energy it had bridged the gulf that lay between the
millionaire’s daughter and the hired man, since
there could be no question that Cynthia Vanrenen placed
Viscount Medenham in no other category. Indeed,
his occasional lapses from the demeanor of a lower
social grade might well have earned him her marked
disfavor, and, as there was no shred of personal vanity
in his character, he gave all the credit to the sentient
creature of steel and iron that was so ready to respond
to his touch.
Swayed by an unconscious telepathy,
the girl almost interpreted his unspoken thought.
She watched his deft manipulation of levers and brakes,
and fancied that his hands dwelt on the steering-wheel
with a caress.
“You have a real lovely automobile,
Fitzroy,” she said, “and I have a sort
of notion that you are devoted to it. May I ask is
it your own car?”
“Yes. I bought it six months
ago. I learnt to drive in France, and, as soon
as I heard of the new American engine, I er couldn’t
rest until I had tried it.”
He was on the point of saying something
wholly different, but managed to twist the second
half of the sentence in time. What would Miss
Vanrenen have thought had he continued: “I
sent my chauffeur to England, and, on receipt of his
report, I had this car shipped within a week?”
There are problems too deep for speculation
when a man is guiding a ton of palpitating metal along
a hedge-lined road at forty miles an hour. This
was one.
Cynthia, knowing nothing of any “new
American engine,” would die rather than confess
her ignorance. Moreover, she was pondering a
problem of her own. If it was not his master’s
car he might be open to a bargain.
“Simmonds is an old friend of
yours, I suppose?” she said.
“Yes, I have known him some
years. We were in South Africa together.”
“In the war, do you mean?”
“Yes.”
“How dreadful! Have you ever killed anybody?”
“Not with petrol, I am happy to state.”
There was an eloquent pause.
Cynthia examined his reply, and discovered that it
covered a good deal of ground. Perhaps, too, it
conveyed the least little bit of a snub. Hence,
her tone stiffened perceptibly.
“I mentioned Simmonds,”
she explained, “because I think my father might
arrange to the satisfaction of all parties,
of course that you should carry through
this present tour, while Simmonds would come into
our service when we return to London.”
Medenham laughed. In its way,
the compliment was graceful and well meant, but the
utter absurdity of his position was now thrust upon
him with overwhelming force.
“I am very much obliged to you,
Miss Vanrenen,” he said, venturing to look once
more into those alluring eyes, so shy, so daring, so
divinely wise and childishly candid. “If
circumstances permitted, there is nothing I would
like better than to take you through this Paradise
of a June England; but it is quite impossible.
Simmonds must bring his car to Bristol, as I positively
cannot be absent from town longer than three days.”
Cynthia did not pout. She nodded
appreciation of the weighty if undescribed business
that called Fitzroy and his Mercury back to London,
but in her heart she mused on the strangeness of things,
and wondered if this smiling land produced many chauffeurs
who lauded it in such phrases.
Up and down Handcross Hill they whirred,
treating that respectable eminence as if it were a
snow bump in the path of a flying toboggan. Medenham
had roamed the South Downs as a boy, and he was able
now to point out Chanctonbury Ring, the Devil’s
Dyke, Ditchling Beacon, and the rest of the round-shouldered
giants that guard the Weald. In the mellow light
of a superlatively fine afternoon the Downs wore their
gayest raiment of blue and purple, red and green decked,
too, with ribands of white roads and ruffs of rose-laden
hedges.
Cynthia forgot many times, and he
hardly ever remembered, that he was a chauffeur, and
the miles, too, were disregarded until the sea sparkled
in their eyes as they emerged from the great gap which
the Devil forebore to use when he planned to swamp
a land of churches by cutting the famous dyke.
Then the girl awoke from a day-dream,
and the car was stopped on the pretense that this
marvelous landscape must be viewed in silence and
at rest. She rejoined Mrs. Devar, and began instantly
to expatiate on the beauties of Sussex, so Medenham
ran slowly down the hill through Patcham and Preston
into Brighton.
And there, sitting in the wide porch
of the Hotel Metropole, was a slim, handsome
Frenchman, who sprang up with all the vivacity of his
race when the Mercury drew up at the foot of the steps,
dusty after its long run, but circumspect as though
it had just quitted the garage.
“Mrs. Devar, Miss Vanrenen!
what a delightful surprise!” cried the stranger
with an accompaniment of wide smiles and hat flourishing.
“Who would have thought of meeting you here?
Voyez, donc, I was moping in solitude
when suddenly the sky opens and you appear.”
“Deae ex machina, in
fact, Monsieur Marigny,” said Cynthia, shaking
hands with this overjoyed gentleman.
Mrs. Devar, not understanding, cackled loudly.
“We’ve had a lovely run
from town, Count Edouard,” she gushed, “and
it is just too awfully nice of you to be in Brighton.
Now, don’t say you have made all sorts
of engagements for the evening.”
“Such as they are they go by
the board, dear lady,” said the gallant Count,
who had good teeth, and showed them in a succession
of grins.
“Ten to-morrow morning, Fitzroy,”
said Cynthia, turning on the steps as she was about
to enter the hotel. He lifted his cap.
“The car will be ready, Miss Vanrenen,”
said he.
He got down, and scowled, yes, actually
scowled, at a porter who was hauling too strongly
at the straps and buckles of the dust-covered trunks.
“Damage the car’s paint
and I’ll raise bigger blisters on yours,”
was what he said to the man. But his thoughts
were of Count Edouard Marigny, and, like the people’s
discussion of the Derby, they took the form of question
and answer.
“When is a coincidence not a
coincidence?” he asked himself.
“When it is prearranged,” was the answer.
Then he drove round to the yard at
the rear of the hotel, where Dale awaited him, for
Medenham would intrust the cleaning of the car to no
other hands.
“You’ve booked my room
at the Grand Hotel and taken my bag there?” he
inquired.
“Yes, my lord.”
“Make these people give you
the key when the door is locked for the night, and
bring the car to my hotel at nine o’clock.”
He hurried away, and Dale looked after him.
“Something must ha’ worried
his lordship,” said the man. “First
time I’ve ever seen him in a bad temper.
An’ what about Eyot? Three to one the paper
says. P’raps he’ll think of it in
the morning.”