The fine weather which had endured
so long gave way that night. Storm-clouds swept
up from the Atlantic, and England was drenched in
rain when Medenham quitted Charing Cross at 9 p.m.
At the eleventh hour he determined to take Dale with
him, but that belated display of wisdom arose more
from the need he felt of human companionship than
from any sense of the absurdity of going alone to fight
a duel in a foreign land. He had given no thought
during the fleeting hours to the necessity of communicating
with his relatives in case he fell a victim to Marigny’s
rancor, so he devoted himself now to writing a brief
account to the Marquis of Scarland of the causes that
led up to the duel. He concluded with an entreaty
that his brother-in-law should use all means within
his power to close down any inquiry that might result,
and pointed out that in this connection Dale would
prove a valuable ally, since his testimony would make
clear the fact that the contest had taken place in
France, where duels are looked on with a more lenient
eye than in England.
It was difficult to write legibly
in the fast-moving, ill-lighted train, so he completed
the letter on board the steamer, but did not hand
it to Dale until after Calais was reached.
While the steamer was drawing up to
her berth, he saw Count Edouard Marigny among the
few passengers on deck. He had turned his back
on the Frenchman at Charing Cross, but the imperturbable
Count, noticing Dale in the half-light of dawn, believed
that Medenham had brought a fellow-countryman as a
witness. He strolled up, and said affably:
“Is this gentleman your friend?”
“Yes,” said Medenham,
“though not quite in the sense that you mean.
He will accompany me to the hotel, and await my return
there.”
The Frenchman was evidently mystified;
he smiled, but passed no other comment. Dale,
who heard what was said, now wondered more than ever
what lay behind this sudden journey to France.
He had already recognized Marigny as the owner of
the Du Vallon, for he had seen him leaving the Metropole
Hotel at Brighton not many days ago, and had the
best of reasons for regarding him as Viscount Medenham’s
implacable enemy. Why, then, were these two crossing
the Channel in company, going together to some hotel,
and leaving him, Dale, to kick his heels in the small
hours of the morning till it pleased them to pick him
up again?
In justice to the loyal-hearted chauffeur,
plunged quite unknowingly into the crisis of his life,
it must be said that the notion of a duel did not
even occur to his puzzled brain.
Nor was he given much time for speculation.
A carriage awaited the trio at the quay. They
carried no luggage to entail a delay at the Customs,
and they drove off at a rapid pace through silent streets
in a drenched downpour of rain. When they reached
the Hotel de la Plage, neither Medenham nor the Frenchman
alighted, but the former handed Dale a letter.
“I may be detained in France
somewhat longer than I anticipated,” he said
in a matter-of-fact tone. “If that is so,
and you have to return to England without me, hand
this letter to the Marquis of Scarland. Take
great care of it, and keep it in your possession until
you are positively assured that I am unable to go
with you.”
These enigmatical instructions bothered
their hearer far more than any of the strange proceedings
of the night.
“How shall I know, my lord,
whether I am to go back with you or not?” he
asked.
“Oh, of course I shall make
that quite clear,” laughed Medenham. “At
present, all you have to do is to wait here a little
while.”
His careless demeanor dispelled the
first dim shadow of doubt that had arisen in Dale’s
mind. The man was no stranger on the Continent,
having traveled with his employer over the length and
breadth of France and Northern Italy; but the manner
of this visit to the Hotel de la Plage at Calais was
so perplexing that he essayed another question.
“When may I expect you, my lord?” he asked.
Medenham affected to consult his watch.
“Within an hour,” he said;
“perhaps a few minutes more. At any rate,
you can arrange to catch the afternoon boat. Meanwhile,
make yourself comfortable.”
By this time, three men, whom he had
never seen before, came out from the hotel. Apparently,
they were fully prepared for the coming of the visitors
from England. They greeted Count Marigny cordially,
and were introduced to Medenham. Without more
ado, two of them entered the vehicle; the third, hoisting
an umbrella, climbed to the side of the driver, to
whom no orders were given, and the cab rattled rapidly
away over the paving-stones, leaving Dale to gaze
disconsolately after it.
Then the vague suspicions in his mind
awoke into activity. For one thing, he had heard
one of the strangers alluded to as “Monsieur
lé Docteur.” For another, the newcomers
carried a curious-looking parcel, or case, of an elongated
shape that suggested unusual contents. Some trick
of memory came to his aid. In an hotel at Lyons
he had watched a valet packing just such an object
with the remainder of his employer’s luggage,
and was told, on inquiry, that it contained foils.
But why foils? ... at four o’clock in the morning?
... in a country where men might still requite an
outrage by an appeal to the law of the jungle?
Hastily drawing from his breast pocket
the letter intrusted to him, he examined the superscription.
It was addressed simply to the Marquis of Scarland,
and must surely be a document of immense significance,
or the young Viscount would not have brought him all
the way from London to act as messenger rather than
intrust it to the post. Each instant Dale’s
ideas became clearer; each instant his heart throbbed
with a deeper anxiety. At last, when the four-wheeler
disappeared from sight round an angle of the rain-soaked
boulevard, he yielded to impulse and ran into the
hotel. French people are early risers, but the
visitors to Calais that morning were astir at an hour
when most of the hotel staff were still sound asleep.
A night porter, however, was awaiting him at the entrance,
and Dale forthwith engaged in a valiant struggle with
the French language in the effort to ascertain, first,
whether the man possessed a bicycle, and, secondly,
whether he would lend it. The Frenchman, of course,
broke into a voluble statement out of all proportion
to the demand, but the production of a British sovereign
seemed to interpret matters satisfactorily, because
a bicycle was promptly produced from a shed in the
rear of the building.
Dale handed the man the sovereign,
jumped on the machine, and rode off rapidly in the
direction taken by the cab. He had no difficulty
in turning the corner round which it had vanished,
but a little farther on he erred in thinking that
it had gone straight ahead, since the driver had really
turned to the right again in order to keep clear of
the fortifications. Dale traveled at such a pace
that the first long stretch of straight road opening
up before his eyes convinced him of his blunder when
no cab was in sight. He raced back, dismounted
at the crossing, examined the road for wheel-marks,
and soon was in the saddle again. He was destined
to be thus bothered three times in all, but, taught
wisdom by his initial mistake, he never passed a crossroad
without searching for the recent tracks of wheels.
The rain helped him wherever the roadway
was macadamized, but the paved routes militaires
with which Calais abounds offered difficulties that
caused many minutes of delay. At last, he found
himself in the open country, scorching along a sandy
road that traversed the low dunes lying between the
town of Calais and Cape Gris Nez. It was not
easy to see far ahead owing to the rain and mist, and
he had covered a mile or more beyond the last of the
scattered villas and cottages which form the eastern
suburb of the port, when he saw the elusive cab drawn
up by the roadside. The horse was steaming as
though it had been driven at a great pace, and the
driver stood near, smoking a cigarette, and protecting
himself from the persistent downpour by an umbrella.
Dale soon reached the man, and said
breathlessly, in his slow French:
“Where are the gentlemen?”
The cabman, who had evidently been
paid to hold his tongue, merely shrugged. Dale,
breathing hard, laid a heavy hand on his shoulder,
whereupon the other answered: “I don’t
know.”
This, of course, was a lie, and the
fact that it was a lie alarmed Dale quite as much
as any of the sinister incidents which had already
befallen. For one thing, there was no house into
which five men could have gone. On each side
of the road were bleak sandhills; to the right was
the sea, gray and lowering beneath a leaden-hued sky
that seemed to weep above a dead earth. Here,
undoubtedly, was the cab, since Dale could swear to
both horse and man. Where, then, were its occupants?
Having to depend upon his wits, he
gave no further heed to the Frenchman, but, fancying
that he saw vestiges of recent footmarks on the right,
or seaward, side of the road, and dragging the bicycle
with him, he climbed to the top of the nearest dune,
as he believed that a view of the sands could be obtained
from that point. He was right. The sea was
at a greater distance than he imagined would be the
case, but a wide strip of firm sand, its wet patches
glistening dully in the half-light, extended to the
water’s edge almost from the base of the hillock
on which he stood.
At first, his anxious eyes strained
through the haze in vain, until some circling seagulls
caught his attention, and then he discerned some vague
forms silhouetted against a brighter belt of the sea
to the northeast.
Three of the figures were black and
motionless, but two gave an eerie suggestion of whiteness
and movement. Abandoning the bicycle, and hardly
realizing why he should be so perturbed, Dale ran forward.
Twice he stumbled and fell amidst the stringy heath
grass, but he was up again in a frenzy of haste, and
soon was near enough to the group of men to see that
Medenham and Marigny, bare-headed and in their shirt
sleeves, were fighting with swords.
Dale’s eyes were now half-blinded
with perspiration, for he had ridden fast through
the mud from Calais, and this final run through yielding
sand and clinging sedge was exhausting to one who seldom
walked as many furlongs as he had covered miles that
morning. But even in his panic of distress he
fancied that his master was pressing the Frenchman
severely. It was no child’s play, this battle
with cold steel. The slender, venomous-looking
blades whirled and stabbed with a fearsome vehemence,
and the sharp rasp of each riposte and parry rang
out with a horrible suggestiveness in the moist air.
And then, as he lumbered heavily on, Dale thought
he saw something that turned him sick with terror.
Almost halting, he swept a hasty hand across his eyes then
he was sure.
Medenham, with arm extended in a feint
in tierce, was bearing so heavily on his opponent’s
rapier that his right foot slipped, and he stumbled
badly. At once Marigny struck with the deadly
quickness and certainty of a cobra. His weapon
pierced Medenham’s breast high up on the right
side. The stroke was so true and furious that
the Englishman, already unbalanced, was driven on
to his back on the sand. Marigny wrenched the
blade free, and stooped with obvious intent to plunge
it again through his opponent’s body. A
warning shout from each of the three spectators withheld
him. He scowled vindictively, but dared not make
that second mortal thrust. These French gentlemen
whom he had summoned from Paris were bound by a rigid
code of honor that would infallibly have caused him
to be branded as a murderer had he completed matters
to his satisfaction. Nevertheless, he bent and
peered closely into Medenham’s face, gray now
as the sand on which he was lying.
“I think it will serve,”
he muttered to himself. “May the devil take
him, but I thought he would get the better of me!”
He turned away with an affectation
of coolness which he was far from feeling, while the
doctor knelt to examine Medenham’s injury.
He saw someone running towards him, but believed it
must be one of the witnesses, and his eyes fell to
the stained blade in his hand.
“I rather forgot myself ”
he began.
But the excuse was stopped short by
a blow on the angle of the jaw that stretched him
by Medenham’s side and apparently as lifeless.
Assuredly, Dale was not versed in
the punctilio of the duel, but he knew how and where
to hit with a fist that was hard as one of his own
spanners. He put weight and passion into that
punch, and scarcely understood how effective it was
until he found himself struggling in the grasp of
two excited Frenchmen. He cursed both them and
Marigny fluently, and vowed the most horrible vengeance
on all three, but soon calmed himself sufficiently
to see that Count Edouard could not stir, and his
perturbed wits then sought to learn the extent of his
master’s injury. Still he swore at Marigny.
“Damn you!” he cried hoarsely,
“you would have stabbed him as he was lying
there if these pals of yours hadn’t stopped you!”
At last, recovering some degree of
self-possession, he assisted the astounded and rather
frightened Frenchmen to carry Medenham to the waiting
carriage. One, who spoke English, asked him to
help in rendering a like service to Marigny, but he
refused with an oath, and the others dared not press
him, he looked so fierce and threatening.
“Is he dead?” he asked the doctor brokenly.
There could be no mistaking the meaning
of the words, for his red-shot eyes glared fixedly
at the limp body of his master. The other shook
his head, but pointed in the direction of Calais, as
though to suggest that the sooner the injured man
was taken to some place where his wound could be properly
attended to, the better would be the faint chance
of life that remained. By this time the seconds
were approaching, and Marigny had seemingly recovered
to a slight extent from the knockout blow which he
had received so unexpectedly.
The doctor, who was the only self-collected
person present, pointed to the bicycle.
“Hotel,” he said emphatically. “Go
hotel quick!”
Dale was minded not to desert his
master, but the anxiety in the doctor’s face
warned him that the request ought to be obeyed.
If the spark of vitality still flickering in Medenham’s
body was to be preserved not a moment should be lost
in preparing a room for his reception.
Gulping down his anguish, Dale mounted
and made off. At a distant bend in the road he
turned his head and looked back along that dismal
heath. All five were packed in the cab, and the
coachman was urging the unwilling horse into a trot.
And what of Cynthia?
The break in the weather was the one
thing needed to put an abrupt end to all pretense
of enjoyment so far as the Windermere tourists were
concerned. Strained relations existed from the
moment Vanrenen arrived at Chester. For the first
time in her life, Cynthia thought that her father
was not acting with the open-eyed justice which she
expected from him, and for the first time in his life
Peter Vanrenen harbored an uneasy suspicion that his
daughter had not been quite candid with him.
It was impossible, of course, in the close intimacy
of long hours spent together in a touring car, that
there should not be many references to Fitzroy and
the Mercury. They were inevitable as the milestones,
and Vanrenen, who was just as prone as other men to
look at facts through his own spectacles, failed to
understand how an intelligent girl like his daughter
could remain in constant association with Viscount
Medenham for five days, and yet not discover his identity.
More than once, indeed, notwithstanding
the caution exercised by the others engaged
now in a tacit conspiracy to dispel memories of a
foolish entanglement from the girl’s mind the
identification of Fitzroy with the young Viscount
trembled on the very lip of discovery. Thus,
on Friday, when they had motored to Grasmere, and had
gathered before lunch in the lounge of the delightfully
old-fashioned Rothay Hotel, Vanrenen happened to pick
up an illustrated paper, containing a page of pictures
of the Scarland short-horns.
Now, being a busy man, he gave little
heed to the terminological convolutions of names among
the British aristocracy. He had not the slightest
notion that the Marquis of Scarland’s wife was
Medenham’s sister, and, with the quick interest
of the stock-breeder, he pointed out to Mrs. Leland
an animal that resembled one of his own pedigree bulls,
at present waxing fat on the Montana ranch. For
the moment Mrs. Leland herself had forgotten the relationship
between the two men.
“I met the Marquis last year
at San Remo,” she said heedlessly. “Anyone
more unlike a British peer you could not imagine.
If I remember rightly, he is a blunt, farmer-like
person, but his wife is very charming. By the
way, who was she?”
Such a question could not pass Mrs. Devar unanswered.
“Lady Betty Fitzroy,” she chirped instantly.
Cynthia, who was looking through the
window at the square-towered little church, throned
midst the somber yews which shelter the graves of
Wordsworth and his kin, caught the odd conjunction
of names “Betty” and “Fitzroy.”
“Who is that you are speaking
of, father?” she asked, though with a listless
air that Medenham had never seen during any minute
of those five happy days.
“The Marquis of Scarland the
man from whom I bought some cattle a few years ago,”
he said, trusting to the directness of the reply to
carry it through unchallenged.
Cynthia’s brows puckered in a reflective frown.
“That is odd,” she murmured.
“What is odd?” asked her
father, while Mrs. Leland bent over the periodical
to hide a smile of embarrassment.
“Oh, just a curious way of running
in grooves people have in this country. They
call towns after men and men after towns.”
She was about to add that Fitzroy
had told her of a sister Betty who was married to
a man named Scarland, a breeder of pedigree stock,
but checked the impulse. For some reason known
best to her father, he did not seem to wish any mention
to be made of the vanished chauffeur, but she did
not gauge the true extent of his readiness to drop
the subject on that occasion.
Mrs. Leland looked up, caught his
eye with a smile, and asked how many miles it was
to Thirlmere. Cynthia’s thoughts brooded
again on poets and lonely graves, and the danger passed.
Mrs. Devar, in these days, had recovered
her complacency. The letter she wrote from Symon’s
Yat had reached Vanrenen from Paris, and its hearty
disapproval of Fitzroy helped to re-establish his good
opinion of her. She heard constantly, too, from
Marigny and her son. Both agreed that the comet-like
flight of Medenham across their horizon was rapidly
losing its significance. Still, she was not quite
happy. Mrs. Leland’s advent had thrust
her into the background, for the American widow was
rich, good-looking, and cultured, and the flow of small
talk between the newcomer and Cynthia left her as
hopelessly out of range as used to be the case when
that domineering Medenham would lean back in the car
and say things beyond her comprehension, or murmur
them to Cynthia if she happened to be sitting by his
side.
Luncheon had ended, but the clouds
which had been gathering over the lake country during
the morning suddenly poured a deluge over a thirsty
land. Thirlmere and Ullswater and the rest of
the glories of Westmoreland that lay beyond the pass
of Dunmail Raise were swallowed up in a fog of rain.
Simmonds, questioned by the millionaire, admitted
that a weather-beaten native had prophesied “a
week of it,” more or less.
Four Britons might have sat down and
played Bridge stolidly, but three of this quartette
were Americans, and within two hours of the change
in the elements, they were seated in the London-bound
train at Windermere Station.
Not one of them was really displeased
because of this rapid alteration in their plans.
Cynthia was ill at ease; Mrs. Leland wished to rejoin
her guests at Trouville; Vanrenen, who was anxious
to complete certain business negotiations in Paris,
believed that a complete change of scene and new interests
in life would speedily bring Cynthia back to her own
cheery self; while Mrs. Devar, though the abandonment
of the tour meant reversion to a cheap boarding-house,
was not sorry that it had come to an end. In
London, she would be more in her element, and, at
any rate, she was beginning to feel cramped through
sitting three in a row in Simmonds’s car, after
the luxurious comfort of two in the tonneau of the
Mercury.
So it came to pass that on Friday
evening, while Medenham was driving from Cavendish
Square to Charing Cross, Cynthia was crossing London
on a converging line from St. Pancras to the Savoy
Hotel. Strange, indeed, was the play of Fate’s
shuttle that it should have so nearly reunited the
unseen threads of their destinies! Again, a trifling
circumstance conspired to detain Vanrenen in London.
One of his business associates in Paris, rendered
impatient by the failure of the great man to return
as quickly as he had promised, arrived in England
by the afternoon service from the Gare du
Nord, and was actually standing in the foyer
of the hotel when Vanrenen entered with the others.
As a result of this meeting, the journey to Paris arranged
for Saturday was postponed till Sunday, and on this
trivial base was destined to be built a very remarkable
edifice.
It chanced that Mrs. Leland, too,
decided to have a day in London, and she and Cynthia
went out early. They returned to lunch at the
hotel, and the girl, pleading lack of appetite, slipped
out alone to buy a copy of Milton’s poems.
From the book-seller’s she wandered into the
Embankment Gardens.
She was a dutiful daughter, and had
resolved to obey without question her father’s
stern command not to enter again into communication
with a man of whom he so strongly disapproved.
But she was not content, for all that, and the dripping
trees and rain-sodden flowers seemed now to accord
with her distraught mood. The fine, though not
bright, interval that had tempted her forth soon gave
way to another shower, and she ran for shelter into
the Charing Cross Station of the Metropolitan Railway.
She stood in one of the doorways looking out disconsolately
over the river, when a taxicab drove up and deposited
its occupant at the station. Then some unbidden
impulse led her to hail the driver.
“Take me to Cavendish Square,” she said.
“What number, miss?” he asked.
“No number. Just drive
slowly round the square and return to the Savoy Hotel.”
He eyed her curiously, but made no
comment. Soon she was speeding up Regent Street,
bent on gratifying the truly curious whim of seeing
what manner of residence it was that Fitzroy occupied
in London. Fate had failed in her weaving during
the previous evening, but on the present occasion
she combined warp and weft without any error.
The cab was crawling past the Fairholme
mansion, and Cynthia’s astonished eyes were
regarding its style and general air of magnificence
with some degree of heart-sinking for it
did then seem to be true that Mrs. Devar’s original
estimate of Fitzroy was correct when a
man sprang out of another taxi in front of the door,
and glanced at her while in the very act of running
up the steps. Recognition was mutual. Dale
muttered under his breath a wholly unjustifiable assumption
as to his future state, halted dubiously, and then
signaled to Cynthia’s driver to stop. He
strode towards her across the road, and thrust his
head through the open window.
“Of course, miss,” he
said roughly, “you don’t know what has
happened?”
“No,” she said, too greatly
surprised to resent his strange manner.
“Well,” he growled, “somebody’s
been nearly killed on your account, that’s all.”
“Somebody,” she repeated, and her lips
went white.
“Yes, you ought to guess well
enough who it is. He and that rotten Frenchman
fought a duel this morning on the sands near Calais,
and Marinny as good as murdered him.”
Dale’s heart was sore against
her as the cause of his master’s plight, but
even in his own distress he was quick to see the shrinking
terror in the girl’s eyes.
“Are you speaking of Mr. Fitzroy?”
she demanded. “Are you telling the truth?
Oh, for Heaven’s sake, man, tell me what you
mean.”
“I mean what I say, miss,”
said he more softly. “I have left him almost
at death’s door in an hotel at Calais. That
damned Frenchman ... I beg your pardon, miss,
but I can’t contain myself when I think of him ran
a sword through him this morning, and would have killed
him outright if he hadn’t been stopped by some
other gentlemen. And now, there he is, a-lying
in the hotel, with a doctor and a nurse trying to
coax the life back into him, while I had to scurry
back here to tell his people.”
Some women might have shrieked and
fainted not so Cynthia. At that instant
there was one thing to be done, and one only.
She saw the open road, and took it without faltering
or thought as to the future.
“When is the next train to Calais?” she
asked.
“At nine o’clock to-night, miss.”
“Oh, God!” she wailed under her breath.
Dale’s voice grew even more sympathetic.
“Was you a-thinking of going to him, miss?”
he asked.
“Would that I could fly there,” she moaned.
He scratched the back of his ear,
for it was by such means that Dale sought inspiration.
“Dash it all!” he cried.
“I wish I had seen you half an hour earlier.
There is a train that leaves Charing Cross at twenty
minutes past two. It goes by way of Folkestone
and Boulogne, and from Boulogne one can get easy to
Calais. Anyhow, what’s the use of talkin’ it
is too late.”
Cynthia glanced at her watch.
It was just twenty-five minutes to three.
“How far is Folkestone?”
was the immediate demand generated by her practical
American brain.
“Seventy-two miles,” said
the chauffeur, who knew his roads out of London.
“And what time does the boat leave?”
A light irradiated his face, and he swore volubly.
“We can do it!” he shouted. “By
the Lord, we can do it! Are you game?”
Game? The light that leaped to
her eyes was sufficient answer. He tore open
the door of the cab, roaring to the driver:
“Round that corner to the right quick then
into the mews at the back!”
Within two minutes the Mercury was
attracting the attention of the police as it whirled
through the traffic towards Westminster Bridge.
Dale’s face was set like a block of granite.
He had risked a good deal in leaving his master at
the point of death at Calais; he was now risking more,
far more, in rushing back to Calais again without having
discharged the duty which had dragged him from that
master’s bedside. But he thought he had
secured the best physician London could bring to the
sufferer’s aid, and the belief sustained him
in an action that was almost heroic. He was a
simple-minded fellow, with a marked taste for speed
in both animals and machinery, but he had hit on one
well-defined trait in human nature when he decided
that if a man is dying for the sake of a woman the
presence of that woman may cure when all else will
fail.