The Earl’s title-borrowing from
Shakespeare was certainly justified by current events,
for Dromio of Ephesus and Dromio of Syracuse, to say
nothing of their masters, were no bad prototypes of
the chief actors in this Bristol comedy.
Simmonds, not knowing who might have
it in mind to investigate the latest defect in his
car, decided it would be wise to disappear until Viscount
Medenham was well quit of Bristol. By arrangement
with Dale, therefore, he picked up the latter soon
after the Mercury was turned over to Medenham’s
hands; in effect, the one chauffeur took the other
on a ’bus-driver’s holiday. Dale was
free until two o’clock. At that hour he
would depart for Hereford and meet his master, with
arrangements made for the night as usual; meanwhile,
the day’s programme included a pleasant little
run to Bath and back.
It was a morning that tempted to the
road, but both men had risen early, and a pint of
bitter seemed to be an almost indispensable preliminary.
From Bristol to Bath is no distance to speak of, so
a slight dallying over the beer led to an exchange
of recent news.
Dale, it will be remembered, was of
sporting bent, and he told Simmonds gleefully of his
successful bet at Epsom.
“Five golden quidlets his lordship
shoved into me fist at Brighton,” he chortled.
“Have you met Smith, who is lookin’ after
the Frenchman’s Du Vallon? No? Well,
he was there, an’ his goggles nearly cracked
when he sawr the money paid two points over
the market price, an’ all.”
“Sometimes one spots a winner
by chanst,” observed Simmonds judicially.
“An’ that reminds me. Last night a
fella tole me there was a good thing at Kempton to-day....
Now, what was it?”
Dale instantly became a lexicon of
weird-sounding words, for the British turf is exceedingly
democratic in its pronunciation of the classical and
foreign names frequently given to racehorses.
His stock of racing lore was eked out by reference
to a local paper; still Simmonds scratched an uncertain
pate.
“Pity, too!” he said at
last. “This chap had it from his nevvy,
who married the sister of a housemaid at Beckhampton.”
Dale whistled. Here was news,
indeed. Beckhampton! the home of “good
things.”
“Is that where it comes from?”
“Yes. Something real hot over a mile.”
“Can’t you think? Let’s
look again at the entries.”
“Wait a bit,” cried Simmonds.
“I’ve got it now. Second horse from
the top of the column in to-morrow’s entries
in yesterday’s Sportsman.”
Dale understood exactly what the other
man meant, and, so long as he understood, the
fact may suffice for the rest of the world.
“Tell you wot,” he suggested
eagerly, “when you’re ready we’ll
just run to the station an’ arsk the bookstall
people for yesterday’s paper.”
The inquiry, the search, the triumphant
discovery, the telegraphing of the “information”
and a sovereign to Tomkinson in Cavendish Square “five
bob each way” for each of the two all
these things took time, and time was very precious
to Dale just then. Unhappily, time is often mute
as to its value, and Bath is really quite close to
Bristol.
The choice secret of the Beckhampton
stable was safely launched in its speculative
element, at any rate and Dale was about
to seat himself beside Simmonds, when an astonished
and somewhat irate old gentleman hooked the handle
of an umbrella into his collar and shouted:
“Confound you, Dale! What
are you doing here, and where is your master?”
Dale’s tanned face grew pale,
his ears and eyes assumed the semblance of a scared
rabbit’s, and the power of speech positively
failed him.
“Do you hear me, Dale?”
cried the Earl, that instant alighted from a cab.
“I am asking you where Viscount Medenham is.
If he has gone to town, why have you remained
in Bristol?”
“But his lordship hasn’t
gone to London, my lord,” stuttered Dale, finding
his voice at last, and far too flustered to collect
his wits, though he realized in a dazed way that it
was his duty to act exactly as Viscount Medenham would
wish him to act in such trying circumstances.
And, indeed, many very clever people
might have found themselves sinking in some such unexpected
quicksand and be not one whit less bemused than the
miserable chauffeur. Morally, he had given the
only possible answer that left open a way of escape,
and he had formed a sufficiently shrewd estimate of
the relations between his master and the remarkably
good-looking young lady whom the said master was serving
with exemplary diligence to fear dire consequences
to himself if he became the direct cause of a broken
idyl. The position was even worse if he fell
back on an artistic lie. The Earl was a dour person
where servants were concerned, and Salome did not demand
John the Baptist’s head on a salver with greater
gusto than the autocrat of Fairholme would insist
on Dale’s dismissal when he discovered the facts.
Talk of the horned dilemma here was an unfortunate
asked to choose which bristle of a porcupine he would
sit upon.
The mere presence of his lordship
in Bristol betokened a social atmosphere charged with
electricity a phase of the problem that
constituted the only clear item in Dale’s seething
brain: it was too much for him; in sudden desperation
he determined to stick to the plain truth.
He had to elect very quickly, for
the peppery-tempered Earl would not brook delay.
“Not gone to London, you say?
Then where the devil has he gone to? A
gentleman at the hotel, a French gentleman, who said
he had met these these persons with whom
my son is gadding about the country, told me that
they had left Bristol this morning for London, because
a car that was expected to meet them here had broken
down.”
Suddenly his lordship, a county magistrate
noted for his sharpness, glanced at Simmonds.
He marched round to the front of the car and saw that
it was registered in London. He waved an accusing
umbrella in air.
“What car is this? Is this
the motor that won’t go? It seems to have
reached Bristol all right? Now, my men, I must
have a candid tale from each of you, or the consequences
may be most disagreeable. You, I presume,”
and he lunged en tierce at Simmonds, “have
an employer of some sort, and I shall make it my business ”
“This is my own car, my lord,”
said Simmonds stiffly. He could be stubborn as
any member of the Upper House when occasion served.
“Your lordship needn’t use any threats.
Just ask me what you like an’ I’ll answer,
if I can.”
Fairholme, by no means a hasty man
in the ordinary affairs of life, and only upset now
by the unforeseen annoyances of an unusually disquieting
mission, realized that he was losing caste. It
was a novel experience to be rebuked by a chauffeur,
but he had the sense to swallow his wrath.
“Perhaps I ought to explain
that I am particularly anxious to see Lord Medenham,”
he said more calmly. “I left London at eight
o’clock this morning, and it is most irritating
to have missed him by a few minutes. I only wish
to be assured as to his whereabouts, and, of course,
I have no reason to believe that any sort of responsibility
for my son’s movements rests with you.”
“That’s all right, my
lord,” said Simmonds. “Viscount Medenham
was very kind to me last Wednesday. I had a first-rate
job, and was on my way to the Savoy Hotel to take
it up, when a van ran into me an’ smashed the
transmission shaft. His lordship met me in Down
Street, an’ offered to run my two ladies to
Epsom an’ along the south coast for a day or
two while I repaired damages. I was to turn up
here an’ here I am but
it suited his arrangements better to go on with the
tour, an’ that is all there is to it. A
bit of a joke, I call it.”
“Yes, my lord, that’s
hit hexactly,” put in Dale, with a nervous eagerness
that demanded the help of not less than two aspirates.
The Earl managed to restrain another outburst.
“Nothing to cavil at so far,”
he said with forced composure. “The only
point that remains is where is Lord Medenham
now?”
“Somewhere between here an’
Gloucester, my lord,” said Simmonds.
“Gloucester that is not on the way
to London!”
No reply; neither man was willing
to bell the cat. Finding Simmonds a tough customer,
Fairholme tackled Dale.
“Come, come, this is rather
absurd,” he cried. “Fancy my son’s
chauffeur jibbing at my questions! Once and for
all, Dale, where shall I find Lord Medenham to-night?”
There was no escape now. Dale
had to blurt out the fatal word:
“Hereford!”
“Are you sure?”
“Yes, my lord. I’m goin’ there
with his lordship’s portmanteaux.”
The head of the Fitzroy clan turned to Simmonds again.
“Will you drive me to Gloucester?” he
asked.
“No, my lord. I’m under contract
to remain in Bristol five days.”
“Very well. Stop in Bristol,
and be d d to you. Is there
any reason why you should not take me to pick up my
son’s belongings? Then Dale and I can go
to Hereford by train. Viscount Medenham is devilish
particular about his linen. If I stick to his
shirts I shall meet him sometime to-day, I suppose.”
Simmonds sought Dale’s counsel
by an underlook, but that hapless sportsman could
offer no suggestion, so the other made the best of
a bad business.
“I’ll do that, of course,
my lord,” he said with alacrity. “Just
grab his lordship’s dressing-case from that
porter and shove it inside,” he went on, eying
Dale fiercely, well knowing that the whole collapse
arose from a cause but too easily traced.
“No, no,” broke in the
Earl, whose magisterial experiences had taught him
the wisdom of keeping witnesses apart, “Dale
comes with me. I want to sift this business thoroughly.
Put the case in front. We can pile the other
luggage on top of it. Now, Dale, jump inside.
Your friend knows where to go, I expect.”
Thus did two bizarre elements intrude
themselves into the natural order of things on that
fine morning in the West of England. The very
shortness of the road between Bristol and Bath apparently
offered an insuperable obstacle to the passage of
Simmonds’s car along it, and some unknown “chap,”
whose “nevvy” had married the sister of
a Beckhampton housemaid, became the predominating
factor in a situation that affected the fortunes of
several notable people.
For his part, Lord Fairholme gave
no further thought to Marigny. It did not even
occur to him it might be advisable to call again at
the College Green Hotel, since Medenham had slept
elsewhere, and Hereford was now the goal. Certainly,
the Frenchman’s good fairy might have pushed
her good offices to excess by permitting him to see,
careering about Bristol with a pair of chauffeurs,
the man whom he believed to be then on the way to
London. But fairies are unreliable creatures,
apt to be off with a hop, skip, and a jump, and, in
any case, Marigny was writing explicit instructions
to Devar, though he would have been far more profitably
employed in lounging outside the hotel.
So everybody was dissatisfied, more
or less, the quaking Dale more, perhaps, than any,
and the person who had absolutely no shadow of care
on his soul was Medenham himself, at that moment guiding
the Mercury along the splendid highway that connects
Bristol with Gloucester taking the run
leisurely, too, lest Cynthia should miss one fleeting
glimpse of the ever-changing beauties of the Severn
estuary.
During one of these adagio movements
by the engine, Cynthia, who had been consulting a
guidebook, leaned forward with a smile on her face.
“What is a lamprey?” she asked.
“A special variety of eel which
has a habit of sticking to stones by its mouth,”
said Medenham. Then he added, after a pause:
“Henry the First was sixty-seven years of age
when he died, so the dish of lampreys was perhaps
blamed unjustly.”
“You have a good memory,” she retorted.
“Oh, is that in your book, Miss
Vanrenen? Well, here is another fact about Gloucester.
Alfred the Great held a Witenagemot there in 896.
Do you know what a Witenagemot is?”
“Yes,” she said, “a smoking concert.”
Mrs. Devar invariably resented these
bits of by-play, since she could no more extract their
meaning than if they were uttered in Choctaw.
“Some very good people live
in Gloucestershire,” she put in. “There
are the ” She began to give
extracts from Burke’s “Landed Gentry,”
whereupon the speedometer index sprang to forty-five,
and a noble fifteenth century tower soon lifted its
stone lacework above the trees and spires of the ancient
city.
Cynthia wished to obtain some photographs
of old inns, so, when they had admired the cathedral,
and shuddered at the memory of Richard the Third who
wrote at Gloucester the order to Brackenbury for the
murder of the princes in the Tower of London and
smiled at Cromwell’s mordant wit in saying that
the place had more churches than godliness when told
of the local proverb, “As sure as God’s
in Gloucester,” Medenham brought them to Northgate
Street, where the New Inn which is nearly
always the most antiquated hostelry in an English
country-town supplied a fine example of
massive timberwork, with courtyard and external galleries.
The light was so perfect that he persuaded
Cynthia to stand in a doorway and let him take a picture.
During the focusing interval, he suggested that the
day’s route should be varied by leaving the coast
road at Westbury and running through the Forest of
Dean, where a secluded hotel in the midst of a real
woodland would be an ideal place for luncheon.
She agreed. Something in his
tone told her that Mrs. Devar’s consent to the
arrangement had better be taken for granted. So
they sped through the blossom-laden lanes of Gloucestershire
to the leafy depths of the Forest, and saw the High
Beeches, and the Old Beech, and the King’s Walk,
and many of the gorgeous vistas that those twin artists
Spring and Summer etched on the wooded undulations
of one of Britain’s most delightful landscapes;
as a fitting sequel to a run through fairyland they
lunched at the Speech House Hotel, where once the skins
of daring trespassers on the King’s preserves
were wont to be nailed on the Court House door by
the Verderers.
It was Cynthia who pointed the moral.
“There is always an ogre’s
cave near the Enchanted Garden,” she said,
“and those were surely ogerish days when men
were flayed alive for hunting the King’s deer.”
It is not to be wondered at if they
dawdled somewhat by the way, when that way led past
Offa’s Dyke, through Chepstow, and Tintern, and
Monmouth, and Symon’s Yat. Indeed, Cynthia’s
moods alternated between wide-eyed enjoyment and sheer
regret, for each romantic ruin and charming countryside
not only aroused her enthusiasm but evoked a longing
to remain riveted to the spot. Yet she would not
be a woman if there were not exceptions to this rule,
as shall be seen in due course.
Mrs. Devar, perchance tempted by the
word “Castle,” quitted the car at Chepstow,
and climbed to the nail-studded oak door of one of
the most perfect examples of a Norman stronghold now
extant. Once committed to the rôle of sightseer,
she was compelled to adhere to it, and before the
fourth court was reached, had she known the story,
she would have sympathized with the pilgrim who did
not boil the peas in his shoes of penance.
Chepstow Castle is a splendid ruin, but its steep
gradients and rough pavements are not fitted for stout
ladies who wear tight boots.
To make matters worse, the feelings
of Cynthia’s chaperon soon became as sore as
her toes. The only feature of Marten’s Tower
that appealed to her was its diabolical ingenuity
in providing opportunities for that interfering chauffeur
to assist, almost to lift, Cynthia from one mass of
fallen masonry to another. Though she knew nothing
of Henry Marten she reviled his memory. She heard
“Fitzroy” telling her wayward charge that
the reformer really hated Charles I. because the King
called him “an ugly rascal” in public,
and directed that he should be turned out of Hyde
Park; the words supplied a cue.
“Pity kings are not as powerful
nowadays,” she snapped. “The presumption
of the lower orders is becoming intolerable.”
“Unfortunately, Marten retaliated
by signing the King’s death warrant,”
said Medenham.
“Of course. What else could
one expect from a person of his class?”
“But Sir Henry Marten was a
celebrated judge, and the son of a baronet, and he
married a rich widow these are not the prevalent
democratic vices,” persisted Medenham.
“You must have sat up half the
night reading the guidebook,” she cried in vexation
at her blunder.
Cynthia laughed so cheerfully that
Mrs. Devar thought she had scored. Medenham left
it at that, and was content. Both he and Cynthia
knew that lack of space forbade indulgence in such
minor details of history on the part of the book’s
compiler.
Another little incident heated Mrs.
Devar to boiling-point. Cynthia more than once
hinted that, if tired, she might wait for them in the
lowermost court, where a fine tree spread its shade
over some benches, but the older woman persisted in
visiting every dungeon and scrambling up every broken
stair. The girl took several photographs, and
had reached the last film in a roll, when the whim
seized her to pose Medenham in front of a Norman arch.
“You look rather like a baron,”
she said gleefully. “I wish I could borrow
some armor and take you in character as the gentleman
who built this castle. By the way, his name was
Fitz-something-or-other. Was he a relation?”
“Fitz Osborne,” said Medenham.
“Ah, yes. Fitzroy means King’s son,
doesn’t it?”
“I er believe so.”
“Well, I can imagine you scowling
out of a vizor. It would suit you admirably.”
“But I might not scowl.”
“Oh, yes, you would. Remember
this morning. Just force yourself to think for
a moment that I am Monsieur ”
She stopped abruptly.
“A little more to the left,
please and turn your face to the sun.
There, that is capital.”
“Why should Fitzroy scowl at
the recollection of Count Edouard?” demanded
Mrs. Devar, her eyes devouring the telltale blush that
suffused the girl’s face and neck.
“Only because the Count wished
to supplant him as our chauffeur,” came the
ready answer.
“I thought Monsieur Marigny’s
offer a very courteous one.”
“Undoubtedly. But as I
had to decide the matter I preferred to travel in
a car that was at my own disposal.”
Mrs. Devar dared not go farther.
She relapsed into a sulky silence. She said not
a word when Cynthia occupied the front seat for the
climb through Chepstow’s High Street, and when
the girl turned to call her attention to the view
from the crest of the famous Wyndcliff she was nodding
asleep!
Cynthia told Medenham, and there was
a touch of regret in her voice.
“Poor dear,” she said
in an undertone, “the Castle was too much for
her, and the fresh air has made her drowsy.”
He glanced quickly over his shoulder,
and instantly made up his mind to broach a project
that he had thought out carefully since his quarrel
with the Frenchman.
“You mean to stay in Hereford
during the whole of to-morrow, Miss Vanrenen?”
he asked.
“Yes. Somehow, I don’t
see myself scampering across the map on the British
Sabbath. Besides, I am all behindhand with my
letters, and my father will be telegraphing something
emphatic if I don’t go beyond ‘Much love’
on a picture postcard.”
“Symon’s Yat is exceptionally
beautiful, and there is a capital little hotel there.
The Wye runs past the front door, the boating is superb,
and there will be a brilliant moon after dinner.”
“And the answer is?”
“That we could run into Hereford
before breakfast, leaving you plenty of time to attend
the morning service at the cathedral.”
Cynthia did not look at him or she
would have seen that he was rather baronial in aspect
just then. Sad to relate, they were speeding down
the Wyndcliff gorge without giving it the undisturbed
notice it merited.
“I have a kind of notion that
Mrs. Devar wouldn’t catch on to the boating
proposition,” she said thoughtfully.
“Perhaps not, but the river
takes a wide bend there, and she could see us from
the hotel veranda all the time.”
“Guess it can’t be fixed up, anyhow,”
she sighed.
Twice had she lapsed into the idioms
of her native land. What, then, was the matter
with Cynthia that she had forgotten her self-imposed
resolution to speak only in that purer English which
is quite as highly appreciated in New York as in London?
It was Saturday afternoon, and they
overtook and passed a break-load of beanfeasters going
to Tintern. There is no mob so cruelly sarcastic
as the British, and it may be that the revelers in
the break envied the dusty chauffeur his pretty companion.
At any rate, they greeted the passing of the car with
jeers and cat-calls, and awoke Mrs. Devar. It
is a weakness of human nature to endeavor to conceal
the fact that you have been asleep when you are supposed
to be awake, so she leaned forward now, and asked
nonchalantly:
“Are we near Hereford?”
“No,” said Cynthia.
“We have a long way to go yet.” She
paused. “Are you really very tired?”
she added, as an afterthought.
“Yes, dear. The air is positively overpowering.”
There was another pause.
“Ah, well,” sighed the
girl, “we shall have a nice long rest when we
stop for tea at at what is the
name of the place?”
“Symon’s Yat.”
Medenham’s voice was husky.
Truth to tell, he was rather beside himself.
He had played for a high stake and had nearly won.
Even now the issue hung on a word, a mere whiff of
volition: and if he knew exactly how much depended
on that swing of the balance he might have been startled
into a more earnest plea, and spoiled everything.
“But that will throw us late
in arriving at Hereford,” said Mrs. Devar.
“Does it really matter?
We shall be there all day to-morrow.”
“No, it is of no consequence,
though Count Edouard said he would meet us there.”
“And I refused to pledge myself
to any arrangement. In fact, I would much prefer
that his Countship should scorch on to Liverpool or
Manchester, or wherever he happens to be going.”
“Oh, Cynthia! And he going
out of his way to be so friendly and agreeable!”
“Well, perhaps that was an unkind
thing to say. What I mean is that we must feel
ourselves at liberty to depart from a cut-and-dried
schedule. Half the charm of wandering through
England in an automobile is in one’s freedom
from timetables.”
Back dropped Mrs. Devar, and Medenham
recovered sufficient self-control to point out to
Cynthia her first glimpse of the gray walls that vie
with Fountains Abbey and Rievaulx for pride of place
as the most beautiful ruin in England.
Certainly those old Cistercians knew
how and where to build their monasteries. They
had the true sense of beauty, whether in site or design,
and at Tintern they chose the loveliest nook of a lovely
valley. Cynthia silently feasted her vision on
each new panorama revealed by the winding road, and
ever the gray Abbey grew more distinct, more ornate,
more completely the architectural gem of an entrancing
landscape.
But disillusion was at hand.
Rounding the last bend of the descent,
the Mercury purred into the midst of a collection
of horsed vehicles and frayed motors. By some
unhappy chance the whole countryside seemed to have
chosen Tintern as a rendezvous that Saturday.
The patrons of a neighboring hotel overflowed into
the roadway; the brooding peace of the dead-and-gone
monks had fled before this invasion; instead of memories
of mitered abbots and cowled friars there were the
realities of loud-voiced grooms and porkpie-eating
excursionists.
“Please drive on,” whispered
Cynthia. “I must see Tintern another time.”
Although Medenham hoped to consume
a precious hour or more in showing her the noble church,
the cloisters, the chapter-house, the monks’
parlor, and the rest of the stone records of a quiet
monastic life, he realized to the full how utterly
incongruous were the enthusiastic trippers with their
surroundings. The car threaded their ranks gingerly,
and was soon running free along the tree-shaded road
to Monmouth.
Happily, that delightful old town
was sufficiently familiar to him in earlier days that
he was now able to supplement the general knowledge
of its past gleaned already by the girl’s reading.
He halted in front of the Welsh Gate on Monnow Bridge,
and told her that although the venerable curiosity
dates back to 1270 it is nevertheless the last defensive
work in Britain in which serious preparations were
made for civil war, as it was expected that the Chartists
would march from Newport to attack Monmouth Jail in
1839.
“Six hundred years,” mused
Cynthia aloud. “If there are sermons in
stones what a history is pent in these!”
“And how greatly it would differ
from the accepted versions,” laughed Medenham.
“Do we never know the truth, then?”
“Oh, yes, if we are actually
mixed up in some affair of worldwide importance, but
that is precisely the reason why the actors remain
dumb.”
Oddly enough, this was the first of
Medenham’s utterances that Mrs. Devar approved
of.
“Evidently you have moved in
high society, Fitzroy,” she chimed in.
“Yes, madam,” he said.
“More than once, when in a hurry, I have run
madly through Mayfair.”
“Oh, nonsense!” she cried,
resenting the studied civility of the “madam”
and ruffled by the quip, “you speak of Mayfair,
yet I don’t suppose you really know where it
is.”
“I shall never forget where
Down Street is, I assure you,” he said cheerfully.
“And pray, why Down Street in particular?”
“Because that is where I met
Simmonds, last Wednesday, and arranged to take on
his job.”
“In your mind, then, it figures
as broken-down-street,” cooed Cynthia.
After that the Mercury crossed the
Monnow, and Mrs. Devar muttered something about the
mistake one made when one encouraged servants to be
too familiar. But Cynthia was not to be repressed.
She was bubbling over with high spirits, and amused
herself by telling Medenham that Henry V. was born
at Monmouth and afterwards won the battle of Agincourt “scraps
of history not generally known,” she confided
to him.
From the back of the car Mrs. Devar
watched them with a hawklike intentness that showed
how thoroughly those “forty winks” snatched
while in the Wyndcliff had restored her flagging energies.
Though it was absurd to suppose that Cynthia Vanrenen,
daughter of a millionaire, a girl dowered with all
that happy fortune had to give, would so far forget
her social position as to flirt with the chauffeur
of a hired car, this experienced marriage-broker did
not fail to realize what a stumbling-block the dreadful
person was in the path of Count Edouard Marigny.
For once in her life, “Wiggy”
Devar forced herself to think clearly. She saw
that “Fitzroy” was a man who might prove
exceedingly dangerous where a girl’s susceptible
heart was concerned. He had the address and semblance
of a gentleman; he seemed to be able to talk some jargon
of history and literature and art that appealed mightily
to Cynthia; worst of all, he had undoubtedly ascertained,
by some means wholly beyond her ken, that she and
the Frenchman were in league. She was quite in
the dark as to the cause of her son’s extraordinary
behavior the previous evening, but she was beginning
to suspect that this meddlesome Fitzroy had contrived,
somehow or other, to banish Captain Devar as he had
outwitted Marigny on the Mendips. Talented schemer
that she was, she did not believe for a moment that
Simmonds had told the truth at Bristol. She argued,
with cold logic, that the man would not risk the loss
of an excellent commission by bringing from London
a car so hopelessly out of repair that it could not
be made available under four or five days. But
her increasing alarm centered chiefly in Cynthia’s
attitude. If, by her allusion to a “cut-and-dried
schedule,” the girl implied a design to depart
from the tour planned in London, then the Count’s
wooing became a most uncertain thing, since it was
manifestly out of the question that he should continue
to waylay them at stopping-places chosen haphazard
during each day’s run.
So Mrs. Devar noted with a malignant
eye each friendly glance exchanged by the couple in
front, and listened to the snatches of their talk
with a malevolence that was fanned to fury by their
obvious heedlessness of her presence. She felt
that the crisis called for decisive action. There
was only one person alive to whose judgment Cynthia
Vanrenen would bow, and Mrs. Devar began seriously
to consider the advisability of writing to Peter Vanrenen.
If any lingering doubt remained in
her mind as to the soundness of this view, it was
dispelled soon after they reached Symon’s Yat.
She was sitting in the inclosed veranda of a cozy
hotel perched on the right bank of the Wye when Cynthia
suddenly leaped up, teacup in hand, and looked down
at the river.
“There are the duckiest little
yachts I have ever seen skimming about on that stretch
of water,” she cried over her shoulder.
“The mere sight of them makes me taste all the
dust I have swallowed between here and London.
Don’t you think it would be real cute to remain
here to-night and run into Hereford to-morrow after
an early cup of tea?”
Cynthia need not have taken the trouble
to avert her scarlet face from Mrs. Devar’s
inquisitive eyes; indeed, Mrs. Devar herself was glad
that her quick-witted and perhaps quick-tempered young
friend had not surprised the wry smile that twisted
her own lips.
“Just as you please, Cynthia,” said she
amiably.
Then the girl resolutely crushed the
absurd emotion that led her to shirk her companion’s
scrutiny: she was so taken aback by this unexpected
complaisance in a quarter where she was prepared for
opposition that she turned and laid a grateful hand
on the other woman’s arm.
“Now that is perfectly sweet
of you,” she said softly. “I would
just love to see that river by moonlight, and and I
fancied you were a bit weary of the road. It
wouldn’t matter if the country were not so wonderful,
but when one has to screw one’s head round quickly
or one misses a castle or a prize landscape, a hundred
miles of that sort of thing becomes a strain.”
“This seems to be quite a restful
place,” agreed Mrs. Devar. “Have
you er told Fitzroy of the proposed
alteration in our arrangements?”
Cynthia grew interested in the yachts again.
“No,” she said, “I’ve not
mentioned it to him yet.”
A maid-servant entered, and Cynthia
inquired if the hotel could provide three rooms for
her party.
The girl, a pretty Celt of the fair-haired
type, said she was sure there was accommodation.
“Then,” said Cynthia,
with what she felt to be a thoroughly self-possessed
air, “please ask my chauffeur if he would like
another cup of tea, and tell him to house the car
and have our boxes sent in, as we shall stay here
till half-past eight to-morrow morning.”
Mrs. Devar’s letter to Peter
Vanrenen forthwith entered the category of things
that must be done at the earliest opportunity.
She wrote it before dinner, taking a full hour in
the privacy of her room to compose its few carefully
considered sentences. She posted it, too, and
was confirmed in her estimate of its very real importance
when she saw a muslined Cynthia saunter out and join
“Fitzroy,” who happened to be standing
on a tiny landing-stage near a boathouse.
Yet, so strangely constituted is human
nature of the Devar variety, she would have given
half the money she possessed if she could have recalled
that letter an hour later. But His Majesty’s
mails are inexorable as fate. A twopence-ha’penny
stamp had linked Symon’s Yat and Paris, and
not all Mrs. Devar’s world-worn ingenuity could
sunder that link.