The clouds did not lift until Cynthia
was standing in front of that remarkable Map of the
World which reposes behind oaken doors in the south
aisle of Hereford Cathedral. During the run from
Symon’s Yat, not even a glorious sun could dispel
the vapors of that unfortunate Sunday. Cynthia
had smiled a “Good-morning” when she entered
the car, but beyond one quick glance around to see
if the deputy chauffeur was in attendance which
Medenham took care he should not be she
gave no visible sign of yesterday’s troubles,
though her self-contained manner showed that they
were present in her thoughts.
Mrs. Devar tried to be gracious, and
only succeeded in being stilted, for the shadow of
impending disaster lay black upon her. Medenham’s
only thrill came when Cynthia asked for letters or
telegrams at the Green Dragon, and was told there
were none. Evidently, Peter Vanrenen was not
a man to create a mountain out of a molehill.
Mrs. Leland might be trusted to smooth away difficulties;
perhaps he meant to await her report confidently and
in silence.
But that square of crinkled vellum
on which Richard of Holdingham and Lafford had charted
this strange old world of ours as it appeared during
the thirteenth century helped to blow away the mists.
“I never knew before that the
Garden of Eden was inside the Arctic Circle,”
said the girl, gazing awe-stricken at the symbolic
drawings of the eating of the forbidden fruit and
the expulsion of Adam and Eve from Paradise.
“No later than yesterday I fancied
it might have been situated in the Wye Valley,”
commented Medenham.
The cast was skillful, but the fish
did not rise. Instead, Cynthia bent nearer to
look at Lot’s wife, placed in situ.
“Too bad there is no word about
America,” she said irrelevantly.
“Oh, even at that date the United
States were on the other side. You see, Richard
was a person of intelligence. He anticipated Galileo
by making the earth round, so he would surely get
ahead of Columbus in guessing at a New World.”
They were the only tourists in the
cathedral at that early hour, so the attendant verger
tolerated this flippancy.
“In the left-hand corner,”
he recited, “you see Augustus Cæsar delivering
orders for a survey of the world to the philosophers
Nichodoxus, Theodotus, and Polictitus. Near the
center you have the Labyrinth of Crete, the Pyramids
of Egypt, the House of Bondage, the Jews worshiping
the Golden Calf ”
“Ah, what a pity we left Mrs.
Devar at the post-office how she would
have appreciated this!” murmured Medenham.
Still Cynthia refused to take the fly.
“May we visit the library?”
she asked, dazzling the verger with a smile in her
best manner. “I have heard so much about
the books in chains, and the Four Gospels in Anglo-Saxon
characters. Is the volume really a thousand years
old?”
From the Cathedral they wandered into
the beautiful grounds of the Bishop’s Palace,
where a brass plate, set in a boundary wall, states
in equivocal phrase that “Nell Gwynne, Founder
of Chelsea Hospital, and Mother of the first Duke
of St. Albans,” was born near the spot thus
marked. Each remembered the irresponsible chatter
of Saturday, but neither alluded to it, nor did Medenham
offer to lead Cynthia to Garrick’s birthplace.
Not forty-eight hours, but long years, as measured
by the seeming trivialities that go to make or mar
existence, spanned the interval between Bristol and
Hereford. They chafed against the bonds of steel
that yet sundered them; they resented the silent edict
that aimed at parting them; by a hundred little artifices
each made clear to the other that the coming separation
was distasteful, while an eager interest in the commonplace
supplied sure index of their embarrassment. And
so, almost as a duty, the West Front, the North Porch,
the Close, the Green, the Wye Bridge, were duly snap-shotted
and recorded in a little book that Cynthia carried.
Once, while she was making a note,
Medenham held the camera, and happened to watch her
as she wrote. At the top of a page he saw “Film
6, N: Fitzroy poses as the first Earl of Chepstow.”
Cynthia’s left hand hid the entry just a second
too late.
“I couldn’t help seeing
that,” he said innocently. “If you
will give me a print, I shall have it framed and place
it among the other family portraits.”
“I really meant to present you
with an album containing all the pictures which turn
out well,” she said.
“You have not changed your mind, I hope?”
“N no, but there
will be so few. I was rather lazy during the first
two days.”
“You can trust me to fill in
the gaps with exceeding accuracy.”
“Oh, don’t let us talk
as if we would never meet again. The world is
small to motorists.”
“I had the exact contrary in
mind,” he said quickly. “If we parted
to-day, and did not meet for twenty years, each of
us might well be doubtful as to what did or did not
happen last Friday or Saturday. But association
strengthens and confirms such recollections. I
often think that memories held in common are the most
solid foundation of friendship.”
“You don’t believe, then,
in love at first sight,” she ventured.
“Let me be dumb rather than
so misunderstood!” he cried.
Cynthia breathed deeply. She
was profoundly conscious of an escape wholly due to
his forbearance, but she was terrified at finding that
her thankfulness was of a very doubtful quality.
She knew now that this man loved her, and the knowledge
was at once an ecstasy and a torture. And how
wise he was, how considerate, how worthy of the treasure
that her overflowing heart would heap on him!
But it could not be. She dared not face her father,
her relatives, her host of friends, and confess with
proud humility that she had found her mate in some
unknown Englishman, the hired driver of a motor-car.
At any rate, in that moment of exquisite agony, Cynthia
did not know what she might dare when put to the test.
Her lips parted, her eyes glistened, and she turned
aside to gaze blindly at the distant Welsh hills.
“If we don’t hurry,”
she said with the slowness of desperation, “we
shall never complete our programme by nightfall....
And we must not forget that Mrs. Leland awaits us
at Chester.”
“To-night I shall realize the
feelings of Charles the First when he witnessed the
defeat of his troops at the battle of Rowton Moor,”
was Medenham’s savage growl.
Hardly aware of her own words, Cynthia murmured:
“Though defeated, the poor king did not lose
hope.”
“No: the Stuarts’
only virtue was their stubbornness. By the way,
I am a Stuart.”
“Evidently that is why you are
flying from Chester,” she contrived to say with
a little laugh.
“I pin my faith in the Restoration,”
he retorted. “It is a fair parallel.
It took Charles twenty years to reach Rowton Moor,
but the modern clock moves quicker, for I am there
in five days.”
“I am no good at dates ”
she began, but Mrs. Devar discovered them from afar,
and fluttered a telegram. They hastened to her Cynthia
flushed at the thought that she might be recalled to
London which she would not regret, since
a visit to the dentist to-day is better than the toothache
all next week and Medenham steeled himself
against imminent unmasking.
But Mrs. Devar’s main business in life was self.
“I have just heard from James,”
she cooed. “He promised to run up to Shrewsbury
to-day, but finds he cannot spare the time. Count
Edouard told him that Mr. Vanrenen was in town, and
he regrets he was unable to call before he left.”
“Before who left?” demanded Cynthia.
“Your father, dear.”
“Left for where?”
Mrs. Devar screwed her eyes at the pink slip.
“That is all it says. Just ’left’?”
“That doesn’t sound right, anyhow,”
laughed Medenham.
“Oh, but this is too ridiculous!”
and Cynthia’s foot stamped. “I have
never before known my father behave in this Jack-in-the-Box
fashion.”
“Mrs. Leland will clear up the whole mystery,”
volunteered Medenham.
“But what mystery is there?”
purred Mrs. Devar, blinking first at one, then at
the other. She bent over the telegram again.
“James sent this message from
the West Strand at 9.30 a.m. Perhaps he had just
heard of Mr. Vanrenen’s departure,” she
said.
Judging from Cynthia’s occasional
references to her father’s character and associates,
Medenham fancied it was much more likely that the
American railway magnate had merely refused to meet
Captain Devar. But therein he was mistaken.
At the very hour that the three were
settling themselves in the Mercury before taking the
road to Leominster, Mr. Vanrenen, driven by a perturbed
but silent Simmonds, stopped the car on the outskirts
of Whitchurch and asked an intelligent-looking boy
if he had noticed the passing of an automobile numbered
X L 4000.
“I s’pose you mean a motor-car, sir?”
said the boy.
Vanrenen, a tall man, thin, close-lipped,
with high cheekbones, and long nose, a man utterly
unlike his daughter save for the wide-open, all-seeing
eyes, smiled at the naïve correction; with that smile
some enchanter’s wand mirrored Cynthia
in her father’s face. Even Simmonds, who
had seen no semblance of a smile in the features of
the chilly, skeptical man by whom he was dragged out
of bed at an unearthly hour in the morning at Bristol,
witnessed the alchemy, and marveled.
“Yes, sir, rather,” continued
the boy, brimming over with enthusiasm. “The
gentleman went along the Hereford Road, he did, yesterday
mornin’. He kem back, too, wiv a shuffer,
an’ he’s a-stayin’ at the Symon’s
Yat Hotel.”
Peter Vanrenen frowned, and Cynthia
vanished, to be replaced by the Wall Street speculator
who had “made a pyramid in Milwaukees.”
Whence, then, had Cynthia telephoned? Of course,
his alert mind hit on a missed mail as the genesis
of the run to Hereford early on Sunday, but he asked
himself why he had not been told of a changed address.
He could not guess that Cynthia would have mentioned
the fact had she spoken to him, but in the flurry
and surprise of hearing that he was not in the hotel
she forgot to tell the attendant who took her message
that she was at Symon’s Yat and not at Hereford.
“Are you sure about the car?”
he said, rendered somewhat skeptical by the boy’s
overfullness of knowledge.
“Yes, sir. Didn’t
me an’ Dick Davies watch for it all chapel-time?”
“But why? for that car in particular?”
“The gentleman bust his tire,
an’ we watched him mendin’ it, an’
he set us a sum, an’ promised us a bob each
if we did it.”
“Meanwhile he went to Hereford and back?”
“I s’pose so, sir.”
Peter Vanrenen’s attention was
held by that guarded answer, and, being an American,
he was ever ready to absorb information, especially
in matters appertaining to figures.
“What was the sum?” he said.
To his very keen annoyance he found
that he could not determine straight off how long
two men take to mow a field of grass, which one of
them could cut in four days and the other in three.
Indeed, he almost caught himself saying “three
days and a half,” but stopped short of that
folly.
“About a day and three-quarters,”
he essayed, before the silence grew irksome.
“Wrong, sir. Is it worth
a bob?” and the urchin grinned delightfully.
“Yes,” he said.
“A day an’ five-sevenths,
’coss one man can do one quarter in a day, and
t’other man a third, which is seven-twelfths,
leavin’ five-twelfths to be done next day.”
Though the millionaire financier was
nettled, he did not show it, but paid the shilling
with apparent good grace.
“Did you find that out or
was it Dick Davies?” he asked.
“Both of us, sir, wiv’ a foot rule.”
“And how far is the Symon’s Yat Hotel,
measured by that rule?”
“Half a mile, sir, down that there lane.”
While traveling slowly in the narrow way, Simmonds
turned his head.
“It doesn’t follow that
because the boy saw Viscount Medenham yesterday his
lordship is here now, sir,” he said.
“You just do as you are told and pass no remarks,”
snapped Vanrenen.
If the head of the house of Vanrenen
were judged merely by that somewhat unworthy retort
he would not be judged fairly. He was tired physically,
worried mentally; he had been brought from Paris at
an awkward moment; he was naturally devoted to his
daughter; he believed that Medenham was an unmitigated
scamp and Simmonds his tool; and his failure to solve
Medenham’s arithmetical problem still rankled.
These considerations, among others, may be pleaded
in his behalf.
But, if Simmonds, who had stood on
Spion Kop, refused to be browbeaten by a British
earl, he certainly would not grovel before an American
plutocrat. He had endured a good deal since five
o’clock that morning. He told his tale
honestly and fully; he even sympathized with a father’s
distress, though assured in his own mind that it was
wholly unwarranted; he was genuinely sorry on hearing
that Mr. Vanrenen had been searching the many hotels
of Bristol for two hours before he came to the right
one. But to be treated like a serf? no,
not if Simmonds knew it!
The car stopped with a jerk. Out leaped the driver.
“Now you can walk to the hotel,”
he said, though he distinguished the hotel by an utterly
inappropriate adjective.
The more sudden the crisis the more
prepared was Vanrenen that was his noted
characteristic, whether dealing with men or money.
“What has bitten you?” he demanded
calmly.
“You must find somebody else
to do your detective work, that is all,” came
the stolid answer.
“Don’t be a mule.”
“I’m not a mule.
You’re makin’ a d d
row about nothing. Viscount Medenham is a gentleman
to his finger tips, and if you were one you’d
know that he wouldn’t hurt a hair of Miss Vanrenen’s
head, or any lady’s, for that matter.”
“Where my daughter is concerned
I am not a gentleman, or a viscount, or a person who
makes d d rows. I am just a
father a plain, simple father who
thinks more of his girl than of any other object in
this wide world. If I have hurt your feelings
I am sorry. If I am altogether mistaken I’ll
apologize and pay. I’m paying now.
This trip will probably cost me fifty thousand dollars
that I would have scooped in were I in Paris to-morrow.
Your game is to attend to the benzine buzz part of
the contract and leave the rest to me. Shove
ahead, and step lively!”
To his lasting credit, Simmonds obeyed:
but the row had cleared the air; Vanrenen liked the
man, and felt now that his original estimate of his
worth was justified.
At the hotel, of course, he had much
more to learn than he expected. Oddly enough,
the praises showered on “Fitzroy” confirmed
him in the opinion that Cynthia was the victim of
a clever knave, be he titled aristocrat or mere adventurer.
For the first time, too, he began to suspect Mrs.
Devar of complicity in the plot!
A nice kind of chaperon she must be
to let his girl go boating with a chauffeur on the
Wye! And her Sunday’s illness was a palpable
pretense an arranged affair, no doubt, to
permit more boating and dallying in this fairyland
of forest and river. What thanks he owed to that
Frenchman, Marigny!
Indeed, it was easy to hoodwink this
hard-headed man in aught that affected Cynthia.
Count Edouard displayed a good deal of tact when he
called at the Savoy Hotel late the previous night,
but his obvious relief at finding Vanrenen in London
had induced the latter to depart for Bristol by a
midnight train rather than trust wholly to Mrs. Leland’s
leisured strategy.
He did not go straight to Hereford
for the best of reasons. He had told Cynthia
of Mrs. Leland’s coming, and had heard of if
not from her in response to his letter. If he
rushed off now to intercept the motorists at Hereford
he would defeat the very purpose he had in view, which
was to interpose an effectual shield between the scoundrelly
lordling and his prey, while avoiding any risk of hurting
his daughter’s feelings. Moreover, he was
eminently a just man. Hearing from Marigny that
Simmonds, the original cause of all the trouble, was
skulking at Bristol, to Bristol he went. From
that starting-point, with his knowledge of Cynthia’s
probable route, he could surely pick up traces of
the predatory car at most towns through which it passed.
Moreover, he could choose his own time for joining
the party in front, which by this time he was fully
resolved on, either at Chester or farther north.
Transcending these minor features
of a disturbing affair was his self-confessed fear
of Cynthia. In the unfathomed deeps of a father’s
love for such a daughter there is ever an element of
fear. Not for all his wealth would Vanrenen cast
a shadow on the unsullied intimacy of their affection.
Therefore, he would be wary, circumspect, ready to
accept as most credible theories which he would scout
in any other conditions, quick to discern the truth,
slow to point out wherein an inexperienced girl had
erred, but merciless to the fortune-hunter who had
so jeopardized Cynthia’s happiness and his own.
Hence, his appearance at the Symon’s
Yat Hotel seemed to have no more serious import than
a father’s wish to delight his daughter by an
unexpected participation in her holiday. No secret
had been made as to the Mercury’s halting-place
that day. Cynthia herself had written the address
in the hotel register, adding a request that letters,
if any, were to be forwarded to Windermere.
By chance, the smiling landlady’s
curiosity as to “Fitzroy” raised a new
specter.
“He must be a gentleman,”
she said, “because he belongs to the Thames
Rowing Club; he also spoke and acted like one.
Why did he employ an assistant chauffeur? That
is most unusual.”
Vanrenen could only explain that arrangements
for the tour were made during his absence in France,
so he was not fully posted as to details.
“Oh, they did not intend to
remain here on Saturday, but Miss Vanrenen liked the
place, and seemed to be rather taken with the hotel ”
whereat the millionaire nodded his complete agreement “so
Mr. Fitzroy telegraphed for a man named Dale to come
to Hereford. There was some misunderstanding,
however, and Dale only arrived yesterday in the car.
He left by an early train this morning, after doing
the garage work.”
Simmonds, candor itself about Medenham,
had said no word of the Earl of Fairholme or of Dale.
Marigny, of course, was silent as to the Earl, since
it might have ruined his last faint hope of success
had the two perplexed fathers met; Simmonds’s
recent outburst opposed an effectual bar to farther
questioning; so Vanrenen was free to deduce all sorts
of possibilities from the existence of yet another
villainous chauffeur.
Unhappily, he availed himself of the
opportunity to the full. The fair countryside
and the good food of the March counties made little
or no appeal to him thenceforth. He pined to
be in Chester, yet restrained the impulse that urged
a frenzied scurry to the Banks of the Dee, for he
was adamant in his resolve not to seem to have pursued
Cynthia, but rather to have joined her as the outcome
of a mere whim after she had met Mrs. Leland.
The Mercury arrived at Ludlow long
before Vanrenen crossed the Wye Bridge at Hereford.
Medenham stopped the car at “The Feathers,”
that famous magpie among British Inns, where Cynthia
admired and photographed some excellent woodcarving,
and saw an iron-studded front door which has shut
out revellers and the night on each alternate round
of the clock since 1609, if not longer.
If they hurried over luncheon they
were content to dawdle in the picturesque streets,
and Cynthia was reluctant to leave the fine old castle,
in which Milton’s “Masque of Comus”
was first played on Michaelmas night of 1634.
At first, she yielded only to the flood of memories
pent in every American brain when the citizen of the
New World stands in one of these treasure-houses of
history and feels the passing of its dim pageants;
when they stood together in the ruined banqueting
hall, Medenham gave play to his imagination, and strove
to reconstruct a scene once spread before the bright
eyes of a maiden long since dead.
“You will please regard yourself,”
he said, “as the Lady Alice Egerton, daughter
of the Earl of Bridgwater, Lord President of the Marches
of Wales, who, with her two brothers, was benighted
in the Forest of Heywood while riding to Ludlow to
witness her father’s installation in his high
office. Milton was told of her adventures by
Henry Lawes, the musician, and he wrote the ‘Masque
of Comus’ to delight her and her friends.
Have you read ’Comus’?”
“No,” said Cynthia, almost
timidly, for she was beginning to fear this masterful
man whose enthusiasm caught her to his very soul at
such moments.
“Ah, but you shall. It
ranks high among the miracles of English poetry wrought
by Milton. Many a mile from Ludlow have I called
to mind one of its incomparable passages:
A
thousand phantasies
Begin to throng into
my memory
Of calling shapes, and
beckoning shadows dire,
And airy tongues that
syllable men’s names
On sands, and shores,
and desert wildernesses.
And now you, the heroine of the masque,
must try to imagine that you are lost in a wild wood
represented by a carpet spread here, in the center
of the hall. Seated there on a dais, is your father
the Earl, surrounded by his officers and retainers.
Near you are your brothers, Lord Brackley and Thomas
Egerton, so blinded by sprites that they cannot see
you, though keen enough to note the bright eyes and
flushed cheeks of other ladies of high degree bidden
to Ludlow from neighboring shires for the merry-making.
And mark you, this is no rude gathering of unlettered
squires and rough men-at-arms. How is it possible
that an uncultured throng should listen rapturously
to the noblest performance of the kind that exists
in any language, wherein each speech is a majestic
soliloquy, eloquent, sublime, with an uncloying word-music
acclaimed by three centuries?”
The sheer wonder in Cynthia’s
face warned him that this brief excursion into the
pages of Macaulay had better cease, so he focused
his thoughts on the actual representation of the masque
in which he had taken part ten years ago at Fairholme.
“I must ask you to concede that
the lords and ladies, the civic dignitaries and their
wives, for whose amusement Milton spread the pinions
of his genius, were far better equipped to understand
his lyric flights than any similar assemblage that
could be collected haphazard in some modern castle.
They did not pretend they knew. Even
you, Lady Alice, could frame a neat verse in Latin
and cap some pleasant jest with a line from Homer.
When Milton dreamed aloud of bathing in the Elysian
dew of the rainbow, of inhaling the scents of nard
and cassia, ’which the musky wings of the
Zepyhr scatter through the cedared alleys of the Hesperides,’
they followed each turn and swoop of his fancy with
an active sense of its truth and beauty. And
what a brilliant company! How the red flare of
torch and cresset would flicker on the sheen of silk,
the luster of velvet, the polished brightness of morion
and spear. I think I can see those gallant gentlemen
and fine ladies grouped round the players who told
of the strange pranks played by the God of Mirth.
Perhaps that same fair Alice, who supplied the motive
of the masque as well as its leading lady, may be
linked with you by stronger ties than those of mere
feminine grace ”
Cynthia did not blush: she grew
white, but shook her head.
“You cannot tell,” he
said. “‘Comus’ was played in Ludlow
only fourteen years after the landing of the Pilgrim
Fathers in New England, and I would remind you that
we stocked the new nation in the west with some of
the bluest blood in Britain. Even in this hall
there were Puritans whose ascetic tastes disapproved
of Milton’s imageries, of children play-acting,
of the brave show made by the gentry ”
“My mother’s people lived
in Pennsylvania for generations,” she broke
in with a strange wistfulness.
“I knew it,” he cried
in triumph. “Tell me the names of the first-nighters
at the Milton Theater, Ludlow, on that autumn evening
in 1634, and warrant me to find you an authentic ancestor.”
Cynthia bent a puzzled brow at him.
“After this, I shall apply myself
to ‘Comus’ with added comprehension,”
she said. “But you take my breath
away; have you, then, delved so deep in the mine of
English history that you can people ’most every
ruined pile in Britain with the men and women of the
dead years?”
He laughed, and colored a little,
with true British confusion at having been caught
in an extravagant mood.
“There you lay bare the mummer,”
he said. “What clever fellows actors would
be if they grasped the underlying realities of all
the fine words they mouth! No; I quote ‘Comus’
only because on one half-forgotten occasion I played
in it.”
“Where?”
The prompt question took him unaware.
“At Fairholme,” he said.
“Is that another castle?”
“No merely a Georgian residence.”
“I seem to have heard of it somewhere I
can’t remember.”
He remembered quite well was
not Mrs. Devar, student of Burke, sitting in the car
at the castle gate?
“Oh, we must hurry,” he
said shamefacedly. “I have kept you here
too long, for we have yet to
trace
huge forests and unharbour’d heaths,
Infamous hills and sandy
perilous wilds,
before we see Chester and Mrs. Leland.”
With that the bubble was pricked,
and staid Ludlow became a busy market-town again,
its streets blocked by the barrows of hucksters and
farmers’ carts, its converging roads thronged
with cattle. At Shrewsbury Medenham was vouchsafed
a gleam of frosty humor by Mrs. Devar’s anxiety
lest her son might have obeyed her earlier injunctions,
and kept tryst at “The Raven” after all.
That trivial diversion soon passed. He hoped
that Cynthia would share the front seat with him in
the final run to Chester; but she remained tucked up
in the tonneau, and the dread that kept her there was
bitter-sweet to him, since it betrayed her increasing
lack of confidence in herself.
The rendezvous was at the Grosvenor
Hotel, and Medenham had made up his mind how to act
long before the red towers of Chester Cathedral glowed
above the city’s haze in the fire of a magnificent
sunset. Dale was waiting on the pavement when
the Mercury drew up at the galleried entrance to the
hotel.
Medenham leaped down.
“Good-by, Miss Vanrenen,”
he said, holding out his hand. “I can catch
an early train to town by hurrying away at once.
This is Dale, who will take my place. He is thoroughly
reliable, and an even more careful driver than I am.”
“Are you really going like
that?” faltered Cynthia, and her face blanched
at the suddenness of it.
“Yes. I shall have the
pleasure of seeing you in London when you return.”
Their hands met in a firm clasp.
Mrs. Devar, too flustered at first to gasp more than
an “Oh!” of astonishment, leaned forward
and shook his hand with marked cordiality.
“You must tell Dale to take
great care of us,” she said, knowingly.
“I think he realizes the exceeding
trust I repose in him,” he said, but the accompanying
smile was meant for Cynthia, and she read into it
a farewell that presaged many things.
He disappeared without another word.
When a slim, elegantly-gowned lady had hastened to
the door from the drawing-room, whence she was summoned
by a page, she found two dust-covered figures in the
act of alighting from a well-appointed car. Her
next glance was at the solemn jowl of the chauffeur.
“Cynthia, my darling girl!”
she cried, with arms thrown wide.
There could be no doubting the heartiness
of the greeting, and in that motherly embrace Cynthia
felt a repose, a security, that she had been willfully
skeptical of during many weary hours. But polite
usage called for an introduction, and Mrs. Leland
and Mrs. Devar eyed each other warily, with the smiles
of convention.
Mrs. Leland glanced at Dale.
“And who is this?” she
asked, seizing the opportunity to settle a point that
was perplexing her strangely.
“Our chauffeur,” said
Cynthia, and a glint of fun showed through the wanness
of her cheeks.
“But not not ”
Even smooth-tongued Mrs. Leland was at a loss.
“Not Fitzroy, who left us a
minute ago. This man’s name is Dale.
One wonders, though, how you knew why you
doubted,” cried Cynthia in sharp discernment.
“Pray why did Fitzroy leave
you a minute ago?” was all that the other woman
could find to say.
“He had to return to London.
But, there it is I who ought to ask questions.
Let us go inside. I want to get some of the grit
out of my eyes and hair; then I shall become an absolute
mark of interrogation so I warn you.
Of course, I am delighted to see you; but queer things
have happened, and I am pining to have them cleared
up. When did you see father last? Is he still
in London?”
Mrs. Leland answered, with freer speech
now, but in her heart she was saddened by Medenham’s
duplicity. Six months earlier he and the Earl
had dined at the villa she was occupying at San Remo
for the winter. She then took a great liking
to him on account of his shy and reticent but singularly
pleasing manners. She was prepared to laugh at
the present escapade when she had discussed it with
him that night. Now he had fled, doubtless through
fear. That was bad. That looked ugly and
mean. Most certainly Peter Vanrenen had acted
rightly in bringing her post-haste from Trouville.
She must use all her skill if mischief were to be
avoided.