Mrs. Devar ate her soup in petrified
silence. Among the diners were at least two peers
and a countess, all of whom she knew slightly; at no
other time during the last twenty years would she have
missed such an opportunity of impressing the company
in general and her companion in particular by waddling
from table to table and greeting these acquaintances
with shrill volubility.
But to-night she was beginning to
be alarmed. Her youthful protegee was carrying
democratic training too far; it was quite possible
that a request to modify an unconventional freedom
of manner where Fitzroy was concerned would meet with
a blank refusal. That threatened a real difficulty
in the near future, and she was much perturbed by being
called on to decide instantly on a definite course
of action. Too strong a line might have worse
consequences than a laissez faire attitude.
As matters stood, the girl was eminently plastic, her
naturally gentle disposition inducing respect for the
opinions and wishes of an older and more experienced
woman, yet there was a fearlessness, a frank candor
of thought, in Cynthia’s character that awed
and perplexed Mrs. Devar, in whom the unending struggle
to keep afloat in the swift and relentless torrent
of social existence had atrophied every sense save
that of self-preservation. An open rupture, such
as she feared might take place if she asserted her
shadowy authority, was not to be dreamed of.
What was to be done? Small wonder, then, that
she should tackle her fish vindictively.
“Are you angry because Fitzroy
is occupying the same hotel as ourselves?” asked
Cynthia at last.
The girl had amused herself by watching
the small coteries of stiff and starched Britons scattered
throughout the room; she was endeavoring to classify
the traveled and the untraveled by varying degrees
of frigidity. As it happened, she was wholly wrong
in her rough analysis. The Englishman who has
wandered over the map is, if anything, more self-contained
than his stay-at-home brother. He is often a
stranger in his own land, and the dozen most reserved
men present that evening were probably known by name
and deed throughout the widest bounds of the empire.
But, though eyes and brain were busy,
she could not help noticing Mrs. Devar’s taciturn
mood. That a born gossip, a retailer of personal
reminiscences confined exclusively to “the best
people,” should eat stolidly for five consecutive
minutes, seemed somewhat of a miracle, and Cynthia,
as was her habit, came straight to the point.
Mrs. Devar managed to smile, pouting
her lips in wry mockery of the suggestion that a chauffeur’s
affairs should cause her any uneasiness whatsoever.
“I was really thinking of our
tour,” she lied glibly. “I am so sorry
you missed seeing Salisbury Cathedral. Why was
the route altered?”
“Because Fitzroy remarked that
the cathedral would always remain at Salisbury, whereas
a perfect June day in the New Forest does not come
once in a blue moon when one really wants it.”
“For a person of his class he
appears to say that sort of thing rather well.”
Cynthia’s arched eyebrows were raised a little.
“Why do you invariably insist
on the class distinction?” she cried. “I
have always been taught that in England the barrier
of rank is being broken down more and more every day.
Your society is the easiest in the world to enter.
You tolerate people in the highest circles who would
certainly suffer from cold feet if they showed up too
prominently in New York or Philadelphia; isn’t
it rather out of fashion to be so exclusive?”
“Our aristocracy has such an
assured position that it can afford to unbend,”
quoted the other.
“Oh, is that it? I heard
my father say the other day that it has often made
him tired to see the way in which some of your titled
nonentities grovel before a Lithuanian Jew who is
a power on the Rand. But unbending is a different
thing to groveling, perhaps?”
Mrs. Devar sighed, yet she gave a
moment’s scrutiny to a wine-list brought by
the head waiter.
“A small bottle of 61, please,”
she said in an undertone.
Then she sighed again, deprecating
the Vanrenen directness.
“Unfortunately, my dear, few
of our set can avoid altogether the worship of the
golden calf.”
Cynthia thrust an obstinate chin into the argument.
“People will do things for bread
and butter that they would shy at if independent,”
she said. “I can understand the calf proposition
much more easily than the snobbishness that would
forbid a gentleman like Fitzroy from eating a meal
in the same apartment as his employers, simply because
he earns money by driving an automobile.”
In her earnestness, Cynthia had gone
just a little beyond the bounds of fair comment, and
Mrs. Devar was quick to seize the advantage thus offered.
“From some points of view, Fitzroy
and I are in the same boat,” she said quietly.
“Still, I cannot agree that it is snobbish to
regard a groom or a coachman as a social inferior.
I have been told that there are several broken-down
gentlemen driving omnibuses in London, but that is
no reason why one should ask one of them to dinner,
even though his taste in wine might be beyond dispute.”
Cynthia had already regretted her
impulsive outburst. Her vein of romance was imbedded
in a rock of good sense, and she took the implied
reproof penitently.
“I am afraid my sympathies rather
ran away with my manners,” she said. “Please
forgive me. I really didn’t mean to charge
you with being a snob. The absurdity of the statement
carries its own refutation. I spoke in general
terms, and I am willing to admit that I was wrong in
asking the man to come here to-night. But the
incident happened quite naturally. He mentioned
the fact that he often stayed in the hotel as a boy ”
“Very probably,” agreed
Mrs. Devar cheerfully. “We are all subject
to ups and downs. For my part, I was speaking
a la chaperon, my sole thought being to safeguard
you from the disagreeable busy-bodies who misconstrue
one’s motives. And now, let us talk of something
more amusing. You see that woman in old rose
brocade she is sitting with a bald-headed
man at the third table on your left. Well, that
is the Countess of Porthcawl, and the man with her
is Roger Ducrot, the banker. Porthcawl is a most
complaisant husband. He never comes within a
thousand miles of Millicent. She is awfully nice;
clever, and witty, and the rest of it quite
a man’s woman. We are sure to meet her in
the lounge after dinner and I will introduce you.”
Cynthia said she would be delighted.
Reading between the lines of Mrs. Devar’s description,
it was not easy to comprehend the distinction that
forbade friendship with Fitzroy while offering it with
Millicent, Countess of Porthcawl. But the girl
was resolved not to open a new rift. In her heart
she longed for the day that would reunite her to her
father; meanwhile, Mrs. Devar must be dealt with gently.
Despite its tame ending, this unctuous
discussion on social ethics led to wholly unforeseen
results.
The allusion to a possible pier at
Bournemouth meant more than Mrs. Devar imagined, but
Cynthia resisted the allurements of another entrancing
evening, went early to her room, and wrote duty letters
for a couple of hours. The excuse served to cut
short her share of the Countess’s brilliant
conversation, though Mr. Ducrot tried to make himself
very agreeable when he heard the name of Vanrenen.
Medenham, standing in the hall, suddenly
came face to face with Lady Porthcawl, who was endowed
with an unerring eye for minute shades of distinction
in the evening dress garments of the opposite sex.
Her correspondence consisted largely of picture postcards,
and she had just purchased some stamps from the hall
porter when she saw Medenham take a telegram from
the rack where it had been reposing since the afternoon.
It was, she knew, addressed to “Viscount Medenham.”
That, and her recollection of his father, banished
doubt.
“George!” she cried, with
a charming air of having found the one man whom she
was longing to meet, “don’t say I’ve
grown so old that you have forgotten me!”
He started, rather more violently
than might be looked for in a shikari whose nerves
had been tested in many a ticklish encounter with
other members of the cat tribe. In fact, he had
just been disturbed by coming across the unexpected
telegram, wherein Simmonds assured his lordship that
the rejuvenated car would arrive at the College Green
Hotel, Bristol, on Friday evening. At the very
moment that he realized the imminence of Cynthia’s
disappearance into the void it was doubly disconcerting
to be hailed by a woman who knew his world so intimately
that it would be folly to smile vacantly at her presumed
mistake.
Some glint of annoyance must have
leaped to his eyes, for the lively countess glanced
around with a mimic fright that testified to her skill
as an actress.
“Good gracious!” she whispered,
“have I given you away? I couldn’t
guess you were here under a nom de voyage now,
could I? when that telegram has been staring
at everybody for hours.”
“You have misinterpreted my
amazement, Lady Porthcawl,” he said, spurred
into self-possession by the hint at an intrigue.
“I could not believe that time would turn back
even for a pretty woman. You look younger than
ever, though I have not seen you for ”
“Oh, hush!” she cried.
“Don’t spoil your nice speech by counting
years. When did you arrive in England? Are
you alone really? You’ve grown
quite a man in your jungles. Will you come to
the lounge? I want ever so much to have a long
talk with you. Mr. Ducrot is there the
financier, you know but I have left him
safely anchored alongside Maud Devar a
soft-furred old pussie who is clawing me now behind
my back, I am sure. Have you ever met her?
Wiggy Devar she was christened in Monte, because an
excited German leaned over her at the tables one night
and things happened to her coiffure. And to show
you how broad-minded I am, I’ll get her to bring
downstairs the sweetest and daintiest American ingenue
you’d find between here and Chicago, even if
you went by way of Paris. Cynthia Vanrenen is
her name, daughter of the Vanrenen. He
made, not a pile, but a pyramid, out of Milwaukees.
She is it a pukka Gibson girl, quite
ducky, with the dearest bit of an accent, and Mamma
Devar is gadding around with her in a mo-car.
Do come!”
Medenham was able to pick and choose
where he listed in answering this hail of words.
“I’m awfully sorry,”
he said, “but the telegram I have just received
affects all my plans. I must hurry away this instant.
When will you be in town? Then I shall call,
praying meanwhile that there may be no Ducrots or
Devars there to blight a glorious gossip. If you
bring me up to date as to affairs in Park Lane I’ll
reciprocate about the giddy equator. How or
perhaps I ought to say where is Porthcawl?”
“In China,” snapped her
ladyship, fully alive to Medenham’s polite evasion
of her blandishments.
“By gad,” he laughed,
“that is a long way from Bournemouth. Well,
good-bye. Keep me a date in Clarges Street.”
“Clarges Street is off the map,”
she said coldly. “It’s South Belgravia,
verging on Pimlico, nowadays. That is why Porthcawl
is in China ... and it explains Ducrot, too.”
An unconscious bitterness crept into
the smooth voice; Medenham, who hated confidences
from the butterfly type of woman, nevertheless pitied
her.
“Tell me where you live and
I’ll come round and hear all about it,”
he said sympathetically.
She gave him an address, and suddenly
smiled on him with a yearning tenderness. She
watched his tall figure as he strode down the hill
towards the town to keep an imaginary appointment.
“He used to be a nice boy,”
she sighed, “and now he is a man.... Heigh-ho,
you’re a back number, Millie, dear!”
But she was her own bright self when
she returned to the bald-headed Ducrot and the bewigged
Mrs. Devar.
“What a small world it is!”
she vowed. “I ran across Medenham in the
hall.”
The banker’s shining forehead
wrinkled in a reflective frown.
“Medenham?” he said.
“Fairholme’s eldest son.”
Mrs. Devar chortled.
“Such fun!” she said.
“Our chauffeur calls himself George Augustus
Fitzroy.”
“How odd!” agreed Countess Millicent.
“You people speak in riddles. Who or what
is odd?” asked Ducrot.
“Oh, don’t worry, but
listen to that adorable waltz.” Ducrot’s
polished dome compared badly with the bronzed skin
of the nice boy who had grown to be a man, so her
ladyship’s rebellious tongue sought safety in
silence, since she could not afford to quarrel with
him.
It is certainly true that the gods
make mad those whom they mean to destroy. Never
was woman nearer to a momentous discovery than Mrs.
Devar at that instant, but her active brain was plotting
how best to develop a desirable acquaintance in Roger
Ducrot, financier, and she missed utterly the astounding
possibility that Viscount Medenham and George Augustus
Fitzroy might be one and the same person.
In any other conditions Millicent
Porthcawl’s sharp wits could scarcely have failed
to ferret out the truth. Even if Cynthia were
present it was almost a foregone conclusion that the
girl would have told how Fitzroy joined her.
The luncheon provided for a missing aunt, the crest
on the silver and linen, the style of the Mercury,
a chance allusion to this somewhat remarkable chauffeur’s
knowledge of the South Downs and of Bournemouth, would
surely have put her ladyship on the right track.
From sheer enjoyment of an absurd situation she would
have caused Fitzroy to be summoned then and there,
if only to see Wiggy Devar’s crestfallen face
on learning that she had entertained a viscount unawares.
But the violins were singing the Valse
Bleu, and Cynthia was upstairs, longing for an excuse
to venture forth into the night, and three people,
at least, in the crowded lounge were thinking of anything
but the amazing oddity that had puzzled Ducrot, who
did not con his Burke.
Medenham, of course, realized that
he had been vouchsafed another narrow escape.
What the morrow might bring forth he neither knew nor
cared. The one disconcerting fact that already
shaped itself in the mists of the coming day was Simmonds
tearing breathlessly along the Bath Road during the
all too brief hours between morn and evening.
It is not to be wondered at if he
read Cynthia’s thoughts. There is a language
without code or symbol known to all young men and maidens a
language that pierces stout walls and leaps wide valleys and
that unlettered tongue whispered the hope that the
girl might saunter towards the pier. He turned
forthwith into the public gardens, and quickened his
pace. Arrived at the pier, he glanced up at the
hotel. Of girls there were many on cliff and
roadway, girls summer-like in attire, girls slender
of waist and airy of tread, but no Cynthia. He
went on the pier, and met more than one pair of bright
eyes, but not Cynthia’s.
Then he made off in a fume to Dale’s
lodging, secured a linen dust-coat which the man happened
to have with him, returned to the hotel, and hurried
unseen to his room, an easy matter in the Royal Bath,
where many staircases twine deviously to the upper
floors, and brilliantly decorated walls dazzle the
stranger.
He counted on the exigencies of Lady
Porthcawl’s toilette stopping a too early appearance
in the morning, and he was right.
At ten o’clock, when Cynthia
and Mrs. Devar came out, the men lounging near the
porch were too interested in the girl and the car to
bestow a glance on the chauffeur. Ducrot was
there, bland and massive in a golf suit. He pestered
Cynthia with inquiries as to the exact dates when
her father would be in London, and Medenham did not
hesitate to cut short the banker’s awkward gallantries
by throwing the Mercury into her stride with a whirl.
“By Jove, Ducrot,” said
someone, “your pretty friend’s car jumped
off like a gee-gee under the starting gate.”
“If that chauffeur of hers was
mine, I’d boot him,” was the wrathful
reply.
“Why? What’s he done?”
“He strikes me as an impudent puppy.”
“Anyhow, he can swing a motor.
See that!” for the Mercury had executed a corkscrew
movement between several vehicles with the sinuous
grace of a greyhound.
Now it was Mrs. Devar, and not Cynthia,
who leaned forward and said pleasantly:
“You seem to be in a hurry to
leave Bournemouth, Fitzroy.”
“I am not enamored of bricks
and mortar on a fine morning,” he answered.
“Well, I have full confidence
in you, but don’t embroil us with the police.
We have a good deal to see to-day, I understand.”
Then he heard the strenuous voice addressing Cynthia.
“Millicent Porthcawl says that
Glastonbury is heavenly, and Wells a peaceful dream.
I visited Cheddar once, some years ago, but it rained,
and I felt like a watery cheese.”
Lady Porthcawl’s commendation
ought to have sanctified Glastonbury and Wells Mrs.
Devar’s blue-moldy joke might even have won a
smile but Cynthia was preoccupied; strange
that she, too, should be musing of Simmonds and a
hurrying car, for Medenham had told her that the transfer
would take place at Bristol.
She was only twenty-two, and her very
extensive knowledge of the world had been obtained
by three years of travel and constant association
with her father. But her lines had always been
cast in pleasant places. She had no need to deny
herself any of the delights that life has to offer
to youth and good health and unlimited means.
The discovery that friendship called for discretion
came now almost as a shock. It seemed to be a
stupid social law that barred the way when she wished
to enjoy the company of a well-favored man whom fate
had placed at her disposal for three whole days.
Herself a blue-blooded American, descendant of old
Dutch and New England families, she was quite able
to discriminate between reality and sham. Mrs.
Devar, she was sure, was a pinchbeck aristocrat; Count
Edouard Marigny might have sprung from many generations
of French gentlemen, but her paid chauffeur was his
superior in every respect save one since,
to all appearance, Marigny was rich and Fitzroy was
poor.
Curiously enough, the man whose alert
shoulders and well-poised head were ever in view as
the car hummed joyously through the pine woods had
taken on something of the mere mechanic in aspect since
donning that serviceable linen coat. The garment
was weather-stained. It bore records of over-lubrication,
of struggles with stiff outer covers, of rain and
mud that bird-lime type of mud peculiar
to French military roads in the Alpes Maritimes while
a zealous detective might have found traces of the
black and greasy deposit that collects on the door
handles and side rails of P. L. M. railway carriages.
Medenham borrowed it because of the intolerable heat
of the leather jacket. Its distinctive character
became visible when he viewed it in the June sunshine,
and he wore it as a substitute for sackcloth, since
he, no less than Cynthia, recognized that a dangerous
acquaintance was drawing to an end. So Dale’s
coat imposed a shield, as it were, between the two,
but the man drove with little heed to the witching
scenery that Dorset unfolded at each turn of the road,
and the woman sat distrait, almost downcast.
Mrs. Devar was smugly complacent.
Difficulties that loomed large overnight were now
vague shadows. When the Mercury stopped in front
of a comfortable inn at Yeovil it was she, and not
Cynthia, who suggested a social departure.
“This seems to be the only place
in the town where luncheon is provided. You had
better leave the car in charge of a stableman, and
join us, Fitzroy,” she said graciously.
“Thank you, madam,” said
Medenham, rousing himself from a reverie, “I
prefer to remain here. The hotel people will look
after my slight wants, as I dislike the notion of
anyone tampering with the engine while I am absent.”
“Is it so delicate, then?”
asked Cynthia, with a smile that he hardly understood,
since he could not know how thoroughly he had routed
Mrs. Devar’s theories of the previous night.
“No, far from it. But its
very simplicity challenges examination, and an inquisitive
clodhopper can effect more damage in a minute than
I can repair in an hour.”
His gruff tone was music in Mrs. Devar’s
ears. She actually sighed her relief, but explained
the lapse instantly.
“I do hope there is something
nice to eat,” she said. “This wonderful
air makes one dreadfully hungry. When our tour
is ended, Cynthia, I shall have to bant for months.”
The fare was excellent. Under
its stimulating influence Miss Vanrenen forgot her
vapors and elected for the front seat during the run
to Glastonbury. Medenham thawed, too. By
chance their talk turned to wayside flowers, and he
let the Mercury creep through a high-banked lane,
all ablaze with wild roses and honeysuckle, while he
pointed out the blue field scabious, the pink and
cream meadow-sweet, the samphire, the milk-wort and
the columbine, the campions in the cornland, and the
yellow vetchling that ran up the hillside towards
one of the wooded “islands” peculiar to
the center of Somerset.
Cynthia listened, and, if she marveled,
betrayed no hint of surprise that a chauffeur should
have such a store of the woodman’s craft.
Medenham, aware only of a rapt audience of one, threw
disguise to the breeze created by the car when the
pace quickened. He told of the Glastonbury Thorn,
and how it was brought to the west country by no less
a gardener than Joseph of Arimathea, and how St. Patrick
was born in the Isle of Avallon, so called because
its apple-orchards bore golden fruit, and how the
very name of Glastonbury is derived from the crystal
water that hemmed the isle
“Please let me intrude one little
question,” murmured the girl. “I am
very ignorant of some things. What has ‘Avallon’
got to do with ’apples’?”
“Ha!” cried Medenham,
warming to his subject and retarding speed again,
“that opens up a wide field. In Celtic mythology
Avallon is Ynys yr Afallon, the Island of Apples.
It is the Land of the Blessed, where Morgana holds
her court. Great heroes like King Arthur and Ogier
lé Dane were carried there after death, and, as
apples were the only first-rate fruit known to the
northern nations, a place where they grew in luscious
abundance came to be regarded as the soul-kingdom.
Merlin says that fairyland is full of apple trees ”
“I believe it is,” cried
Cynthia, nudging his arm and pointing to an orchard
in full bloom.
Mrs. Devar could hear little and understand
less of what they were saying; but the nudge was eloquent;
her steel-blue eyes narrowed, and she thrust her face
between them.
“We mustn’t dawdle on
the road, Fitzroy. Bristol is still a long way
off, and we have so much to see Glastonbury,
Wells, Cheddar.”
Though Cynthia was vexed by the interruption
she did not show it. Indeed, she was aware of
her companion’s strange reiteration of the towns
to be visited, since Mrs. Devar had already admitted
a special weakness in geography, and during the trip
from Brighton to Bournemouth was quite unable to name
a town, a county, or a landmark. But the queer
thought of a moment was dispelled by sight of the ruins
of St. Dunstan’s monastery appearing above a
low wall. In front of the broken arches and tottering
walls grew some apple trees so old and worn that no
blossom decked their gnarled branches. Unbidden
tears glistened in the girl’s eyes.
“If I lived here I would plant
a new orchard,” she said tremulously. “I
think Guinevere would like it, and you say she is buried
with her king in St. Joseph’s Chapel.”
Medenham had suddenly grown stern
again. He glanced at her, and then made great
business with brakes and levers, for Mrs. Devar was
still inquisitive.
“There is a fine old Pilgrims’
Inn, the George, in the main street,” he said
jerkily. “I propose to stop there; the entrance
to the Abbey is exactly opposite. In the George
they will show you a room in which Henry the Eighth
slept, and I would recommend you to get a guide for
half an hour at least.”
“Must we walk?” demanded Mrs. Devar plaintively.
“Yes, if you wish to see anything.
But one could throw a stone over the chief show places,
they are so close together.”
So Cynthia was shown the Alfred Jewel,
and Celtic dice-boxes carefully loaded for the despoiling
of Roman legionaries or an unwary Phoenician, and
heard the story of the Holy Grail from the lips of
an ancient who lent credence to the legend by his venerable
appearance. Mixed up with the imposing ruins and
the glory of St. Joseph’s Chapel was a visit
to the butcher’s at the corner of the street,
where the veteran proudly exhibited a duck with four
feet. He then called Cynthia’s attention
to the carved panels of the George Hotel, and pointed
out a fine window, bayed on each successive story.
She had almost forgotten the wretched duck when he
mentioned a two-headed calf which was on view at a
neighboring dairy.
Mrs. Devar showed signs of interest,
so Cynthia tipped the old man hurriedly, and ran to
the car.
“I shall come here some
other time,” she gasped, and it thrilled her
to believe that Fitzroy understood, though he had heard
no word of quadruped fowl or bicipital monster.
At Wells Medenham pitied her.
He bribed a policeman to guard the Mercury, and when
Mrs. Devar saw that more walking was expected of her
she elected to sit in the tonneau and admire the west
front of the cathedral.
“Lady Porthcawl tells me it
is a masterpiece,” she chirped shrilly, “so
I want to take it in at my leisure.”
Once more, therefore, did Medenham
allow himself a half hour of real abandonment.
He warned Cynthia that she must not endeavor to appreciate
the architecture; with the hauteur of conscious genius,
Wells refuses to allow anyone to absorb its true grandeur
until it has been seen many times and in all lights.
So he hied her to the exquisite Lady
Chapel, and to the Chapter-House Stairs, and to Peter
Lightfoot’s quaint old clock in the transept.
Then, by some alchemy worked on a lodgekeeper, he led
her to the gardens of the Bishop’s palace, and
showed her the real Glastonbury Thorn, and even persuaded
one of the swans in the moat to ring the bell attached
to the wall whereby each morning for many a year the
royal birds have obtained their breakfast.
There is no lovelier garden in England
than that of Wells Palace, and Cynthia was so rapt
in it that even Medenham had to pull out his watch
and remind her of dusty roads leading to far-off Bristol.
Mrs. Devar looked so sour when they
came from an inspection of one of the seven wells
to which the town owes its name that Cynthia weakened
and sat by her side. Thereupon Medenham made amends
for lost time by exceeding the speed limit along every
inch of the run to Cheddar.
Of course he had to crawl through
the narrow streets of the little town, above which
the bare crests of the Mendips give such slight promise
of the glorious gorge that cuts through their massiveness
from south to north. Even at the very lip of
the magnificent canyon the outlook is deceptive.
Perhaps it is that the eye is caught by the flaring
advertisements of the stalactite caves, or that baser
emotions are awakened by the sight of cozy tea-gardens of
one in particular, where a cascade tumbles headlong
from the black rocks, and a tree-shaded lawn offers
rest and coolness after hours passed in the hot sun.
Be that as it may, “tea”
had a welcome sound, and Medenham, who had lunched
on bread and beer and pickles, was glad to halt at
the entrance of the inn that boasted a waterfall in
its grounds.
The road was narrow, and packed with
chars-a-bancs awaiting their hordes of noisy
trippers. Some of the men were tipsy, and Medenham
feared for the Mercury’s paint. To the left
of the hotel lay a spacious yard that looked inviting.
He backed in there when the ladies had alighted, and
ran alongside an automobile on which “Paris”
and “speed” were written in characters
legible to the motorist.
A chauffeur was lounging against the
stable wall and smoking.
“Hello,” said Medenham
affably, “what sort of car is that?”
“A 59 Du Vallon,” was
the answer. Then the man’s face lit up with
curiosity.
“Yours is a New Mercury, isn’t
it?” he cried. “Was that car at Brighton
on Wednesday night?”
“Yes,” growled Medenham;
he knew what to expect, and his face was grim beneath
the tan.
“But you were not driving it,” said the
other.
“A chap named Dale was in charge then.”
“Oh, is that it? You’ve brought two
ladies here just now?”
“Yes.”
“Good! My guv’nor’s
on the lookout for ’em. He didn’t
tell me so, but he made sure they hadn’t passed
this way when we turned up.”
“And when was that?” asked
Medenham, feeling unaccountably sick at heart.
“Soon after lunch. Ran
here from Bristol. There’s a bad bit of
road over the Mendips, but the rest is fine.
I s’pose we’ll all be hiking back there
to-night?”
“Most probably,” agreed
Medenham, who said least when he was most disturbed;
at that moment he could cheerfully have wrung Count
Edouard Marigny’s neck.