It was a flushed and somewhat breathless
Cynthia who ran into the quiet country hotel at an
hour when the Licensing Laws of Britain have ordained
that quiet country hotels shall be closed. But
even the laws of the Mèdes and Persians, which
altered not, must have bulged a little at times under
the pressure of circumstances. The daughter of
an American millionaire could not be reported as “missing”
without a buzz of commotion being aroused in that
secluded valley. As a matter of fact, no one
in the house dreamed of going to bed until her disappearance
was accounted for, one way or the other.
Mrs. Devar, now really woebegone,
screamed shrilly at sight of her. The lady’s
nerves were in a parlous condition “on
a raw edge” was her own phrase and
the relief of seeing her errant charge again was so
great that the shriek merged into a sob.
“Oh, my dear, my dear!”
she wept, “what a shock you have given me!
I thought you were gone!”
“Not so bad as that,”
was the contrite answer. Cynthia interpreted
“gone” as meaning “dead,” and
naturally read into the other woman’s anxiety
her own knowledge of the disaster to the boat.
“We had a bit of an upset that is
all and the bread always flops to the floor
buttered side down, doesn’t it? So we had
to struggle ashore on the wrong bank. It couldn’t
be helped that is, the accident couldn’t but
I ought not to have been on the river at such a late
hour. Do forgive me, dear Mrs. Devar!”
By this time the girl’s left
arm was around her friend’s portly form; in
her intense eagerness to assuage Mrs. Devar’s
agitation she began to stroke her hair with the disengaged
hand. A deeply sympathetic landlady, a number
of servants, and most of the feminine guests in the
hotel all the men were down on the quay had
gathered to murmur their congratulations; but Mrs.
Devar, dismayed by Cynthia’s action, which might
have brought about a catastrophe, revived with phenomenal
suddenness.
“My dear child,” she cried,
extricating herself from the encircling arm, “do
let me look at you! I want to make sure that you
are not injured. The boat upset, you say.
Why, your clothes must be wringing wet!”
Cynthia laughed. She had guessed
why her chaperon wished to keep her literally at arm’s
length. She spread her skirts with a quick gesture
that relieved an awkward situation.
“Not a drop on my clothes,”
she said gleefully. “The water just touched
the soles of my boots, but before you could say ’Jack
Robinson’ Fitzroy had whisked me out of the skiff and
landed me on dry land.”
“You were in shallow water,
then?” put in the smiling proprietress.
“Oh no, fairly deep. Fitzroy
was up to his waist in the stream.”
“And the boat upset?” came the amazed
chorus.
“I didn’t quite mean that.
What actually happened was this. I discovered
that the hour was rather late, and Fitzroy was rowing
down stream at a great pace when some sunken thing,
a tree-root he thinks, caught the side of the boat
and started a plank. I was so taken by surprise
that I should have sat right there and gone to the
bottom with the boat, but Fitzroy jumped overboard
straight away and hiked me out.”
Ready-tongued Cynthia was beginning
to find detailed explanation rather difficult, and
her speech reverted to the picturesque idioms of her
native land. It was the happiest ruse she could
have adopted. Everyone laughed at the notion
of being “hiked out.” None of her
hearers knew quite what it meant, yet it covered the
requisite ground, which was more than might have been
achieved by explicit English.
“Where did the accident take
place?” asked the landlady.
Cynthia was vague on this point, but
when she told how the return journey was made, the
pretty Welsh waitress hit on a theory.
“In-deed to goot-ness, miss,”
she cried, “you wass be-tween the Garren River
an’ Huntsham Bridge. It iss a bad place,
so it iss, however. Me an’ my young man
wass shoaled there once, we wass.”
Cynthia felt that her face and neck
had grown positively scarlet, and she could have kissed
the well-disposed landlady for entering on a voluble
disquisition as to the tricks played by the Wye on
those unaware of its peculiarities, especially at
night. A general conversation broke out, but
Mrs. Devar, rapidly regaining her spirits after enduring
long hours of the horrible obsession that Medenham
had run off with her heiress, noted that telltale
blush. At present her object was to assist rather
than embarrass, so with a fine air of motherly solicitude
she asked:
“Where did you leave Fitzroy?”
“He saw preparations being made
to send boats in search of us, and he went to stop
them. Oh, here he is!”
Medenham entered, and the impulsive
Mrs. Devar ran to meet him. Though he had been
in the river again only five minutes earlier, the walk
up a dust-laden path had covered his sopping boots
with mud, and in the not very powerful light of the
hall, where a score or more of anxious people were
collected, it was difficult to notice that his clothes
were wet. But “Wiggy” Devar did not
care now whether or not the story told by Cynthia
was true. With reaction from the nightmare that
had possessed her since ten o’clock came a sharp
appreciation of the extraordinarily favorable turn
taken by events so far as she was concerned.
If a French count were to be supplanted by an English
viscount, what better opportunity of approving the
change could present itself?
“Mr. Fitzroy,” she said
in her shrill voice, “I can never thank you
sufficiently for the courage and resource you displayed
in rescuing Miss Vanrenen. You have acted most
nobly. I am only saying now what Mr. Vanrenen
will say when his daughter and I tell him of your
magnificent behavior.”
He reddened and tried to smile, though
wishing most heartily that these heroics, if unavoidable,
had been kept for some other time and place.
He could not believe that Cynthia had exalted a not
very serious incident into a “rescue,”
yet she might be vexed if he cheapened his own services.
In any event, it was doubtful whether she would wish
her father to hear of the escapade until she told him
herself at the close of the tour.
“I am sure Miss Vanrenen felt
safe while in my care,” was all he dared to
say, but Cynthia promptly understood his perplexity
and came to his aid.
“Mrs. Devar thinks far more
of our adventure than we do,” she broke in.
“Our chief difficulty lay in finding the road.
The only time I felt worried was when you crossed
the river to retrieve the ferryboat. But surely
I have caused enough excitement for to-night.
You ought to take some hot lemonade and go to bed.”
A man who had walked up the hill from
the boathouse with Medenham laughed and slapped him
on the shoulder.
“Come along, old chap!”
he cried. “You certainly want a hot draught
of some sort, and you must not hang about in those
wet clothes.”
“Yes,” purred Mrs. Devar,
“don’t run the risk of catching cold,
Fitzroy. It would spoil everything if you
were laid up.”
Her gracious manner almost deceived
Medenham. During his years of wandering he had
come across unexpected good qualities in men from
whom he looked for naught but evil was it
the same with women? He hoped so. Perhaps
this scheming marriage-broker had shed her worldly
scales under the stress of emotion.
“You need have no fear that
the car will not be waiting for you in the morning,
Mrs. Devar,” he said, smiling frankly into her
steel-gray eyes. “Did you say half-past
nine, Miss Vanrenen?” he asked, turning to snatch
one last look at Cynthia.
“Yes. Good-night and thank you.”
She offered her hand to him before
them all. The touch of her cool fingers was infinitely
sweet, but when he strove to surprise some hint of
her thought in those twin pools of limpid light that
were wont to gaze at him so fearlessly he failed,
for all the daring had fled from Cynthia, and he knew how
Heaven and lovers alone can tell that her
heart was beating with a fright she had not felt when
he staggered under the relentless pressure of the
river while holding her in his arms.
To the lookers-on the girl’s
outstretched hand was a token of gratitude; to Medenham
it carried an acknowledgment of that equality which
should reign between those who love. His head
swam in a sudden vertigo of delight, and he hurried
away without uttering a word. There were some,
perhaps, who wondered; others who saw in his brusqueness
nothing more than the confusion of an inferior overwhelmed
by the kindly condescension of a young and charming
mistress; but the one who did fully and truly interpret
the secret springs of his action went suddenly white
to the lips, and her voice was curiously low and strained
as she turned to Mrs. Devar.
“Come, dear,” she murmured,
“I am tired, it would seem; and you, you must
be quite worn out with anxiety.”
“My darling child,” gushed
Mrs. Devar, “I should have been nearly dead
if I had not known that Fitzroy was with you, but he
is one of those men who inspire confidence. I
refused to admit even to myself that anything of evil
consequence could happen to you while he was present.
How fortunate we were that day in town ”
The man who had suggested that the
hotel pharmacist could dispense hot drinks other than
lemonade nudged an acquaintance.
“Our chauffeur friend has a
rippin’ nice job,” he whispered.
“Wouldn’t mind taking his billet myself it
’ud be a change from everlastin’ goff.
Hello! Where is he? I meant to ”
Medenham had gone, striding away up
the hillside in a very frenzy of happiness. Four
days, and Cynthia as good as won! Was it possible,
then, that the disguised prince of the fairytale could
be a reality that such romances might still
be found in this gray old world? Four days!
He could not be deeper in love with Cynthia had he
known her four years, or forty, and he was certain
now that he had really loved her before he had been
in her company four minutes.
But these rhapsodies were
cut short by his arrival at the hotel garage, with
the displeasing discovery that no one named Dale had
reached Symon’s Yat that evening, while the stolid
fact stared him in the face that his cherished Mercury
demanded several hours of hard-working attentions
if it were to glisten and hum in its usual perfection
next morning.
“Queer thing,” he said,
thinking aloud rather than addressing the stableman
who had given this disconcerting news. “I
have never before known him fail; and I wired to Hereford
early enough.”
“Oh, he’s in Hereford, is he?” inquired
the man.
“He ought not to be, but he is, I fear.”
“Then it’ll be him who axed for ye on
the telephone?”
“When?”
“It ’ud be somewheres
about a quarter or half past eight. Lizzie tole
me after the old leddy kem up to see if you’d
taken the car out.”
Medenham’s wits were alert enough now.
“I don’t fully understand,”
he said. “What old lady, and why did she
come?”
“That’s wot bothered me,”
was the reply. “Everybody knew that the
young leddy an’ you were on the Wye: ’deed
to goodness, some of us thought you were in it.
Anyways, it was long after ten when she ”
“You mean Mrs. Devar, I suppose the
older lady of the two who arrived in my car?”
“Yes, that’s her.
She wanted to be sure the car wasn’t gone, and
nothing would suit her but the key must be brought
from the orfis an’ the coach-house door unlocked
so’s she could see it with her own eyes.
Well, Lizzie sez to me, ’That’s funny,
it is, because she watched they two goin’ on
the river, and was in the box a long time telephonin’
to a shuffer called Dale, at Hereford.’
Thinks I, ’It’s funnier that the shuffer
who’s here should be expectin’ a chap named
Dale,’ but I said nothink. I never does
to wimmen. Lord luv yer, they’ll twist a
tale twenty ways for Sundays to suit their own pupposes
afterwards.”
Lightning struck from a cloudless
sky a second time that night at Symon’s Yat,
and in its gleam was revealed the duplicity of Mrs.
Devar. Medenham could not guess the double significance
of Dale’s message and failure to appear, but
he was under no delusion now as to the cause of those
honeyed words. Dale had been indiscreet, had
probably blurted out his employer’s title, and
Mrs. Devar knew at last who the chauffeur was whose
interference had baffled her plans.
He laughed bitterly, but did not pursue
the inquiry any further.
“Can you clean coachwork and
brass?” he asked, stooping to unlock the toolbox.
The stableman shuffled uneasily from
one foot to the other. The hour was past midnight,
and the alarm raised at the hotel had already robbed
him of two hours’ sleep.
“Hosses is more in my line,” he answered
gruffly.
“But if I give you half a sovereign
perhaps you will not mind helping me. I shall
attend to the engine myself.”
“’Arf a suv-rin did you
say, mister?” came the panting question.
“Yes. Be quick! Off
with your coat, and get busy. A man who can groom
a horse properly ought to be able to use a rubber and
hose.”
By two o’clock the Mercury was
shining above and below. Thoroughly weary, yet
well satisfied with the day’s record, Medenham
went to bed. He was up at seven, and meant to
talk severely to Dale after breakfast; then he found,
by consulting a directory, that the small hotel where
his man had arranged to stay did not possess a telephone.
It was annoying, but he had the consolation of knowing
that an hour’s slow run would bring him to Hereford
and reunite him with his sorely-needed baggage.
He was giving a few finishing touches to the car’s
toilette, when the Welsh waiting-maid hurried to the
garage; Miss Vanrenen wanted him at once.
She awaited him in the veranda of
the hotel, which fronted the southeast. A shower
of June roses, pink and crimson and white, bespangled
the sloping roof and hid the square posts that supported
it, and a flood of vivid sunshine irradiated Cynthia
as she leaned over the low rail of the balcony and
smiled a greeting. She presented a picture that
was a triumph of unconscious art, and her beauty affected
Medenham more than a deep draught of the strongest
wine ever vinted by man. Yesterday she was a
charming girl, radiantly good-looking, and likely
to attract attention even in circles where pretty
women were plentiful as blackberries in a September
thicket, but to-day, in Medenham’s eyes, she
was a woodland sprite, an ethereal creature cast in
no mortal mold. So enthralled was he by the vision
that he failed to note her attire. She wore the
muslin dress of the previous night, and this, in itself,
might have prepared him for what was to come.
“Good-morning, Mr. Fitzroy,”
she said, with a fine attempt at re-establishing those
friendly relations which might reasonably exist between
the owner of a motor-car and its hirer, “how
are you after your strenuous labors of yesterday?
I have heard all about you. Fancy remaining out
of bed till two o’clock! Couldn’t
that precious car of yours be cleaned this morning,
and by someone else?”
He found his tongue at that.
“Mercury obeys none but Jupiter,” he said.
Her eyes met his fairly, and she laughed.
“That is the first conceited
thing I have heard you say,” she cried, “and,
by Jove, aren’t you flying high?”
“Jupiter assumed disguises,”
he reminded her. “Once, when he peered
into an Olympian grove, he saw Io, and took the form
of a youth so that he might talk with her. He
found her so lovable that he passed many a pleasant
hour in her company wandering on the banks of the
classic stream that flowed through the wood, and in
those hours he was not Jupiter but a boy, a boy very
much in love. Every man has, or ought to have,
something of Jupiter, a good deal of the boy, in his
make-up.”
He turned and looked at the Wye and
its tree-shaded banks. Then he faced Cynthia
again, and his hands rested on the barrier that divided
them. For one mad instant he thought of vaulting
it, and Cynthia read his thought; she drew back in
a panic. A less infatuated wooer than Medenham
might have noted that she seemed to fear interruption
more than any too impulsive action on his part.
“I sent for you to tell you
that Mrs. Devar is ill,” she said in a flurry
of words. “I am afraid she suffered more
from the fright than I imagined last night. Anyhow,
she has asked me to let her remain here to-day.
You won’t mind, I am sure, though it must be
a bother not to have your luggage. Can’t
you run in to Hereford and get it? I am quite
content to rest in this pretty place and write letters.”
“I do honestly believe that
Mrs. Devar is more frightened than ill,” he
said.
“Oh, she isn’t making
a fuss about it. Indeed, she was willing to go
to Hereford this afternoon if I particularly wanted
to attend service at the cathedral. I did, as
a matter of fact, but it would be real mean to insist
on it after scaring the poor thing into a nervous
headache.”
“The affair arranges itself
admirably,” he said. “At most cathedrals
there is an anthem, followed by a sermon by some eminent
preacher, about three o’clock. Write your
letters this morning, or, better still, climb to the
top of the Yat and see the glorious view from the
top. Come back for lunch at one, and ”
“I’ll see what Mrs. Devar
thinks of it,” broke in Cynthia, whose cheeks
were borrowing tints from the red roses and the white
with astonishing fluctuations of color. She ran
off, more like Io, the sylph, than ever, and Medenham
stood there in a brown study.
“This sort of thing can’t
go on,” he argued with himself. “At
any minute now I shall be taking her in my arms and
kissing her, and that will not be fair to Cynthia,
who is proud and queenly, and who will strive against
the dictates of her own heart because it is not seemly
that she should wed her father’s paid servant.
So I must tell her, to-day perhaps during
the run home from Hereford, perhaps to-night.
But, dash it all! that will break up our tour.
One ought to consider the world we live in; Cynthia
will be one of its leaders, and it will never do to
have people saying that Viscount Medenham became engaged
to Cynthia Vanrenen while acting as the lady’s
chauffeur during a thousand-mile run through the West
of England and Wales. Now, what am I to
do?”
The answer came from a bedroom window
that overlooked the veranda.
“Mr. Fitzroy!”
He knew as he looked up that Cynthia
dared not face him again, for her voice was too exquisitely
subtle in its modulations not to betray its owner’s
disappointment before she uttered another word.
“I am very sorry,” she
said rapidly, “but I feel I ought not to leave
Mrs. Devar until she is better, so I mean to remain
indoors all day. I shall not require the car
before nine o’clock to-morrow. If you
like to visit Hereford, go at any time that suits
your convenience.”
She seemed to regret the curtness
of her speech, though indeed she was raging inwardly
because of certain barbed shafts planted in her breast
by Mrs. Devar’s faint protests, and tried to
mitigate the blow she had inflicted by adding, with
a valiant smile:
“For this occasion only, Jupiter
must content himself with Mercury as a companion.”
“If I had Jove’s power ”
he began wrathfully.
“If you were Cynthia Vanrenen,
you would do exactly what she is doing,” she
cried, and fled from the window.
It is not to be denied that he extracted
some cold comfort from that last cryptic remark.
Cynthia wanted to come, but Mrs. Devar had evidently
burked the excursion. Why? Because Cynthia’s
escort would be Viscount Medenham and not Arthur Simmonds,
orthodox and highly respectable chauffeur. But
Mrs. Devar plainly declared herself on the side of
Viscount Medenham last night. Why, then, did she
stop a short journey by motor, with the laudable objective
of hearing an anthem and a sermon in a cathedral,
when overnight she permitted the far less defensible
trip on the river with the hated Fitzroy? It needed
no great penetration to solve this puzzle. Mrs.
Devar was afraid of some development that might happen
if the girl visited Hereford that day. She counted
on Medenham being chained to Symon’s Yat while
Cynthia was there consequently she had
heard something from Dale that rendered it eminently
necessary that neither he nor Cynthia should be seen
in Hereford on the Sunday. Probably, too, she
did not anticipate that Cynthia would don the haircloth
of self-discipline and avoid him during the whole
of the day, since that was what the girl meant by her
allusion to Monday’s starting-time.
Perhaps, using a woman’s privilege,
she might change her mind towards sunset; meanwhile,
it behooved him to visit Hereford and pry into things
there.
Nevertheless, he was a wise lover.
Cynthia might dismiss him graciously to follow his
own behests, but it might not please her if she discovered
that he had taken her permission too literally.
He entered the hotel and wrote a letter:
“My dear Miss Vanrenen ”
no pretense of “Madam” or other social
formula, but a plain and large “My dear,”
with the name appended as a concession to the humbug
of life, even in regard to the woman he loved “I
am going to Hereford, but shall return here for luncheon.
Mrs. Devar’s illness is not likely to be lasting,
and the view from the Yat is, if possible, better
in the afternoon than in the morning. In addition
to my obvious need of a clean collar, I believe that
our presence in Hereford to-day is not desired.
Why? I shall make it my business to find out.
Yours ever sincerely ”
Then he reached a high and stout stone
wall of difficulty. Was he to fall back on the
subterfuge of “George Augustus Fitzroy,”
which, of course, was his proper signature in law?
He disliked this veil of concealment more and more
each instant, but it was manifestly out of the question
that he should sign himself “Medenham,”
or “George,” while he had fought several
pitched battles at Harrow with classmates who pined
to label him “Augustus,” abbreviated.
So, greatly daring, he wrote: “Mercury’s
Guv’nor,” trusting to luck whether or not
Cynthia’s classical lore would remind her that
Mercury was the son of Jupiter.
He reread this effusion twice, and
was satisfied with it as the herald of others.
“My dear” sounded well; the intimacy of
“our presence” was not overdone; while
“yours ever sincerely” was excellent.
He wondered if Cynthia would analyze it word for word
in that fashion. Well, some day he might ask
her. For the present he sealed the letter with
a sigh and gave it to a waiter for safe delivery;
he fancied, but could not be quite sure, that a good
deal of unnecessary play with the motor’s Gabriel
horn five minutes later brought a slender muslined
figure to a window of the then distant hotel.
From Symon’s Yat to Hereford
is about fifteen miles, and Medenham drew out of the
narrow lane leading from the river to Whitchurch about
a quarter-past nine. Thenceforth a straight and
good road lay clear before him, and he meant to break
the law as to speed limit by traveling at the fastest
rate compatible with his own safety and that of other
road-users. It was no disgrace to the Mercury
car, therefore, when a dull report and a sudden effort
of the steering-wheel to swerve to the right betokened
the collapse of an inner tube on the off side.
From the motorist’s point of view it was difficult
to understand the cause of the mishap. The whole
four tires were new so recently as the previous Monday,
and Medenham was far too deeply absorbed in his own
affairs to grasp the essential fact that Fate was still
taking an intelligent interest in him.
Of course, he did not hurry over the
work as though his life depended on it. Even
when the cover was replaced and the tire pumped to
the proper degree of air-pressure he lit a cigarette
and had a look at the magneto before restarting the
engine. Two small boys had appeared from space,
and he amused himself by asking them to reckon how
long it would take two men to mow a field of grass
which one of the men could mow in three days and the
other in four. He promised a reward of sixpence
if the correct answer were forthcoming in a minute,
and raised it to a shilling during the next minute.
This stimulated their wits to suggest “a day
and three-quarters” instead of the first frantic
effort of “three days and a half.”
“No,” said he. “Think
it over, ponder it with ardor, and if you have the
right answer ready when I pass this way again about
midday I’ll give you a shilling each.”
There is no saying what sum he would
have given those urchins if some magician had spoken
by their mouths and bade him hasten to Hereford with
all the zest of all the horses pent beneath the Mercury’s
bonnet. But he left the boys ciphering on a gate
with a bit of lead pencil which he lent them, and
pulled up at the door of the Green Dragon Hotel in
Hereford just five minutes after the Sunday morning
express to London had snatched a fuming and indignant
Earl of Fairholme from off the platform of the Great
Western railway station.
“Whose car?” inquired a hall-porter.
“Mine,” said Medenham, rather surprised
by the question.
“Sorry, sir. I thought
you might be the party Lord Fairholme was expecting.”
“Did you say ’Lord Fairholme’?”
Medenham spoke with the slow accents
of sheer astonishment, and the man hastened to explain.
“Yes, sir. His lordship
has been a-damnin’ everybody since two o’clock
yesterday afternoon because a Miss Vanrenen, who had
ordered rooms here, didn’t turn up. She’s
on a motor tour through England, so I thought ”
“You have made no mistake.
But are you quite sure that the Earl of Fairholme
asked for Miss Vanrenen?”
“Not exactly that, sir, but
he seemed to be uncommon vexed when we could give
him no news of her.”
“Where is his lordship now?”
“Gone to London, sir, by the
10.5. He damned me for the last time half an
hour ago.”
“Oh, did he?”
Medenham glanced at his watch, twisted
himself free of the wheel, leaped to the pavement,
and tapped one of the hall-porter’s gold épaulettes
impressively.
“I am forced to believe that
you are speaking the truth,” he said. “Now,
tell me all about it, there’s a good fellow.
I am a bit rattled, because, don’t you see,
Lord Fairholme is my father, and he is the last man
on earth whom I would have expected to meet in Hereford
to-day. During the less exciting intervals in
his speech did you find out why he came here?”
“Perhaps the manageress may
be able to tell you something, sir. Beg pardon,
but may I ask your name?”
“Medenham.”
The man tickled the back of his ear
in doubt, since he was aware that an Earl’s
son usually has a courtesy title.
“Lord Medenham?” he hazarded.
“Viscount.”
“I thought, perhaps, you might
have been a gentleman named Fitzroy, my lord,”
he said.
“Well, I am that, too.
If you feel that I ought to be presented to the manageress
in state, kindly announce me as George Augustus Fitzroy,
Viscount Medenham, of Medenham Hall, Downshire, and
91 Cavendish Square, London.”
The hall-porter’s eyes twinkled.
“I didn’t mean that, my
lord, but there’s a chauffeur, name of Dale ”
“Ah, what of him?”
“He knows all
about it, my lord, and he’s hiding in a hayloft
down the stable yard at this minnit, because your
lordship’s father threatened to give him in
charge for stealing a couple of your portmanteaux.”
“Tell me he thieved successfully
and I shall fork out handsomely.”
The man grinned. He was shrewd
enough to realize that, no matter what mystery lay
behind all this, the aid of the police would not be
requisitioned.
“I believe ”
he began. Then he made off, with a cry of “Wait
just a few seconds, my lord. I’ll bring
Dale.”
And Dale appeared, picking bits of
hay off his uniform, and striving vainly to compose
his features into their customary expression of a
stolid alertness that hears nothing but his master’s
orders, sees nothing that does not concern his duties.
He gave one sharp glance at the car, and his face
grew chauffeurish, but the look of hang-dog despair
returned when he met Medenham’s eyes.
“I couldn’t get away to
save me life, my lord,” he grumbled. “It
was a fair cop at Bristol, an’ no mistake.
His lordship swooped down on me an’ Simmonds
at the station, so wot could I do?”
Medenham laughed.
“I don’t blame you, Dale.
You could not have been more nonplussed than I at
this moment. Will you kindly remember that I know
nothing whatever of the Earl’s appearance either
at Bristol or Hereford ”
“Gord’s trewth! Didn’t
they tell you I telephoned, my lord?”
Dale would not have spoken in that
fashion were he not quite woebegone and down-hearted;
and not without reason, for the Earl had dismissed
him with contumely not once but a dozen times.
Medenham saw that his retainer would be more muddled
than ever if he realized that Mrs. Devar had intercepted
the telephone message, so he slurred over that element
of the affair, and Dale quickly enlightened him as
to the course taken by events after the departure
of the Mercury’s tourists from Bristol.
The Earl, too, had referred to Lady
St. Maur’s correspondent at Bournemouth, and
Medenham could fill in blanks in the story quite easily,
but the allusions to Marigny were less comprehensible.
Dale’s distress arose chiefly
from the Earl’s vows of vengeance when he discovered
that his son’s baggage had been spirited away
during the breakfast hour that morning, but Medenham
reassured him.
“Don’t bother your head
about that,” he said. “I’ll
telegraph and write to my father a full explanation
to-day. You have obeyed my orders, and he must
blame me, not you, if they ran counter to his.
Take charge of the car while I change my clothes and
make a few inquiries. To save any further mix-up,
you had better come with me to Symon’s Yat.”
Within five minutes he ascertained
that Count Edouard Marigny had occupied a room in
the Mitre Hotel, just across the street, since the
previous afternoon. More than that, the Frenchman
was traveling to London by the same train as the Earl.
Then Medenham felt really angry. It was inconceivable
that his father should have allowed himself to be
drawn into a pitiful intrigue by such doubtful agents
as Marigny and the Countess of Porthcawl.
“I’ll write,” he
vowed, “and in pretty stiff terms, too, but I’m
jiggered if I’ll wire. The old chap should
have shown more confidence in me. Why on earth
didn’t he announce his visit to Bristol?
Jolly good job he left Hereford to-day before I arrived there
might have been ructions. Good Lord! He
evidently takes Cynthia for an adventuress!”
Yet, in spite of the chance of ructions,
it would have been far better had Medenham not missed
his father that morning. He was too dutiful a
son, the Earl was too fair-minded a parent, that they
should not be able to meet and discuss matters without
heat. By noon they would have reached Symon’s
Yat; before lunch was ended the older man would have
been Cynthia’s most outspoken admirer. As
it was well, as it was there
used to be a belief in the Middle Ages that the Evil
One’s favorite nook lay amid the deepest shadow
of a cathedral, and modern fact is ofttimes curiously
akin to medieval romance.