It was a time of stress and even of
temptation for Sir Terence. Honour and pride
demanded that he should keep the appointment made with
Samoval; common sense urged him at all costs to avoid
it. His frame of mind, you see, was not at all
enviable. At moments he would consider his position
as adjutant-general, the enactment against duelling,
the irregularity of the meeting arranged, and, consequently,
the danger in which he stood on every score; at others
he could think of nothing but the unpardonable affront
that had been offered him and the venomously insulting
manner in which it had been offered, and his rage welled
up to blot out every consideration other than that
of punishing Samoval.
For two days and a night he was a
sort of shuttlecock tossed between these alternating
moods, and he was still the same when he paced the
quadrangle with bowed head and hands clasped behind
him awaiting Samoval at a few minutes before twelve
of the following night. The windows that looked
down from the four sides of that enclosed garden were
all in darkness. The members of the household
had withdrawn over an hour ago and were asleep by
now. The official quarters were closed. The
rising moon had just mounted above the eastern wing
and its white light fell upon the upper half of the
façade of the residential site. The quadrangle
itself remained plunged in gloom.
Sir Terence, pacing there, was considering
the only definite conclusion he had reached.
If there were no way even now of avoiding this duel,
at least it must remain secret. Therefore it
could not take place here in the enclosed garden of
his own quarters, as he had so rashly consented.
It should be fought upon neutral ground, where the
presence of the body of the slain would not call for
explanations by the survivor.
From distant Lisbon on the still air
came softly the chimes of midnight, and immediately
there was a sharp rap upon the little door set in
one of the massive gates that closed the archway.
Sir Terence went to open the wicket,
and Samoval stepped quickly over the sill. He
was wrapped in a dark cloak, a broad-brimmed hat obscured
his face. Sir Terence closed the door again.
The two men bowed to each other in silence, and as
Samoval’s cloak fell open he produced a pair
of duelling-swords swathed together in a skin of leather.
“You are very punctual, sir,” said O’Moy.
“I hope I shall never be so
discourteous as to keep an opponent waiting.
It is a thing of which I have never yet been guilty,”
replied Samoval, with deadly smoothness in that reminder
of his victorious past. He stepped forward and
looked about the quadrangle. “I am afraid
the moon will occasion us some delay,” he said.
“It were perhaps better to wait some five or
ten minutes, by then the light in here should have
improved.”
“We can avoid the delay by stepping
out into the open,” said Sir Terence. “Indeed
it is what I had to suggest in any case. There
are inconveniences here which you may have overlooked.”
But Samoval, who had purposes to serve
of which this duel was but a preliminary, was of a
very different mind.
“We are quite private here,
your household being abed,” he answered, “whilst
outside one can never be sure even at this hour of
avoiding witnesses and interruption. Then, again,
the turf is smooth as a table on that patch of lawn,
and the ground well known to both of us; that, I can
assure you, is a very necessary condition in the dark
and one not to be found haphazard in the open.”
“But there is yet another consideration,
sir. I prefer that we engage on neutral ground,
so that the survivor shall not be called upon for
explanations that might be demanded if we fought here.”
Even in the gloom Sir Terence caught
the flash of Samoval’s white teeth as he smiled.
“You trouble yourself unnecessarily
on my account,” was the smoothly ironic answer.
“No one has seen me come, and no one is likely
to see me depart.”
“You may be sure that no one
shall, by God,” snapped O’Moy, stung by
the sly insolence of the other’s assurance.
“Shall we get to work, then?” Samoval
invited.
“If you’re set on dying
here, I suppose I must be after humouring you, and
make the best of it. As soon as you please, then.”
O’Moy was very fierce.
They stepped to the patch of lawn
in the middle of the quadrangle, and there Samoval
threw off altogether his cloak and hat. He was
closely dressed in black, which in that light rendered
him almost invisible. Sir Terence, less practised
and less calculating in these matters, wore an undress
uniform, the red coat of which showed greyish.
Samoval observed this rather with contempt than with
satisfaction in the advantage it afforded him.
Then he removed the swathing from the swords, and,
crossing them, presented the hilts to Sir Terence.
The adjutant took one and the Count retained the other,
which he tested, thrashing the air with it so that
it hummed like a whip. That done, however, he
did not immediately fall on.
“In a few minutes the moon will
be more obliging,” he suggested. “If
you would prefer to wait ”
But it occurred to Sir Terence that
in the gloom the advantage might lie slightly with
himself, since the other’s superior sword-play
would perhaps be partly neutralised. He cast
a last look round at the dark windows.
“I find it light enough,” he answered.
Samoval’s reply was instantaneous.
“On guard, then,” he cried, and on the
words, without giving Sir Terence so much as time to
comply with the invitation, he whirled his point straight
and deadly at the greyish outline of his opponent’s
body. But a ray of moonlight caught the blade
and its livid flash gave Sir Terence warning of the
thrust so treacherously delivered. He saved himself
by leaping backwards just saved himself
with not an inch to spare and threw up his
blade to meet the thrust.
“Ye murderous villain,”
he snarled under his breath, as steel ground on steel,
and he flung forward to the attack.
But from the gloom came a little laugh
to answer him, and his angry lunge was foiled by an
enveloping movement that ended in a ripost. With
that they settled down to it, Sir Terence in a rage
upon which that assassin stroke had been fresh fuel;
the Count cool and unhurried, delaying until the moonlight
should have crept a little farther, so as to enable
him to make quite sure that his stroke when delivered
should be final.
Meanwhile he pressed Sir Terence towards
the side where the moonlight would strike first, until
they were fighting close under the windows of the
residential wing, Sir Terence with his back to them,
Samoval facing them. It was Fate that placed
them so, the Fate that watched over Sir Terence even
now when he felt his strength failing him, his sword
arm turning to lead under the strain of an unwonted
exercise. He knew himself beaten, realised the
dexterous ease, the masterly economy of vigour and
the deadly sureness of his opponent’s play.
He knew that he was at the mercy of Samoval; he was
even beginning to wonder why the Count should delay
to make an end of a situation of which he was so completely
master. And then, quite suddenly, even as he was
returning thanks that he had taken the precaution
of putting all his affairs in order, something happened.
A light showed; it flared up suddenly,
to be as suddenly extinguished, and it had its source
in the window of Lady O’Moy’s dressing-room,
which Samoval was facing.
That flash drawing off the Count’s
eyes for one instant, and leaving them blinded for
another, had revealed him clearly at the same time
to Sir Terence. Sir Terence’s blade darted
in, driven by all that was left of his spent strength,
and Samoval, his eyes unseeing, in that moment had
fumbled widely and failed to find the other’s
steel until he felt it sinking through his body, searing
him from breast to back.
His arms sank to his sides quite nervelessly.
He uttered a faint exclamation of astonishment, almost
instantly interrupted by a cough. He swayed there
a moment, the cough increasing until it choked him.
Then, suddenly limp, he pitched forward upon his face,
and lay clawing and twitching at Sir Terence’s
feet.
Sir Terence himself, scarcely realising
what had taken place, for the whole thing had happened
within the time of a couple of heart-beats, stood
quite still, amazed and awed, in a half-crouching attitude,
looking down at the body of the fallen man. And
then from above, ringing upon the deathly stillness,
he caught a sibilant whisper:
“What was that? ’Sh!”
He stepped back softly, and flattened
himself instinctively against the wall; thence profoundly
intrigued and vaguely alarmed on several scores he
peered up at the windows of his wife’s room whence
the sound had come, whence the sudden light had come
which as he now realised had
given him the victory in that unequal contest.
Looking up at the balcony in whose shadow he stood
concealed, he saw two figures there his
wife’s and another’s and at
the same time he caught sight of something black that
dangled from the narrow balcony, and peered more closely
to discover a rope ladder.
He felt his skin roughening, bristling
like a dog’s; he was conscious of being cold
from head to foot, as if the flow of his blood had
been suddenly arrested; and a sense of sickness overcame
him. And then to turn that horrible doubt of
his into still more horrible certainty came a man’s
voice, subdued, yet not so subdued but that he recognised
it for Ned Tremayne’s.
“There’s some one lying
there. I can make out the figure.”
“Don’t go down! For
pity’s sake, come back. Come back and wait,
Ned. If any one should come and find you we shall
be ruined.”
Thus hoarsely whispering, vibrating
with terror, the voice of his wife reached O’Moy,
to confirm him the unsuspecting blind cuckold that
Samoval had dubbed him to his face, for which Samoval warning
the guilty pair with his last breath even as he had
earlier so mockingly warned Sir Terence had
coughed up his soul on the turf of that enclosed garden.
Crouching there for a moment longer,
a man bereft of movement and of reason, stood O’Moy,
conscious only of pain, in an agony of mind and heart
that at one and the same time froze his blood and drew
the sweat from his brow.
Then he was for stepping out into
the open, and, giving flow to the rage and surging
violence that followed, calling down the man who had
dishonoured him and slaying him there under the eyes
of that trull who had brought him to this shame.
But he controlled the impulse, or else Satan controlled
it for him. That way, whispered the Tempter, was
too straight and simple. He must think.
He must have time to readjust his mind to the horrible
circumstances so suddenly revealed.
Very soft and silently, keeping well
within the shadow of the wall, he sidled to the door
which he had left ajar. Soundlessly he pushed
it open, passed in and as soundlessly closed it again.
For a moment he stood leaning heavily against its
timbers, his breath coming in short panting sobs.
Then he steadied himself and turning, made his way
down the corridor to the little study which had been
fitted up for him in the residential wing, and where
sometimes he worked at night. He had been writing
there that evening ever since dinner, and he had quitted
the room only to go to his assignation with Samoval,
leaving the lamp burning on his open desk.
He opened the door, but before passing
in he paused a moment, straining his ears to listen
for sounds overhead. His eyes, glancing up and
down, were arrested by a thin blade of light under
a door at the end of the corridor. It was the
door of the butler’s pantry, and the line of
light announced that Mullins had not yet gone to bed.
At once Sir Terence understood that, knowing him to
be at work, the old servant had himself remained below
in case his master should want anything before retiring.
Continuing to move without noise,
Sir Terence entered his study, closed the door and
crossed to his desk. Wearily he dropped into the
chair that stood before it, his face drawn and ghastly,
his smouldering eyes staring vacantly ahead.
On the desk before him lay the letters that he had
spent the past hours in writing one to his
wife; another to Tremayne; another to his brother
in Ireland; and several others connected with his
official duties, making provision for their uninterrupted
continuance in the event of his not surviving the
encounter.
Now it happened that amongst the latter
there was one that was destined hereafter to play
a considerable part; it was a note for the Commissary-General
upon a matter that demanded immediate attention, and
the only one of all those letters that need now survive.
It was marked “Most Urgent,” and had been
left by him for delivery first thing in the morning.
He pulled open a drawer and swept into it all the letters
he had written save that one.
He locked that drawer; then unlocked
another, and took thence a case of pistols. With
shaking hands he lifted out one of the weapons to examine
it, and all the while, of course, his thoughts were
upon his wife and Tremayne. He was considering
how well-founded had been his every twinge of jealousy;
how wasted, how senseless the reactions of shame that
had followed them; how insensate his trust in Tremayne’s
honesty, and, above all, with what crafty, treacherous
subtlety Tremayne had drawn a red herring across the
trail of his suspicions by pretending to an unutterable
passion for Sylvia Armytage. It was perhaps that
piece of duplicity, worthy, he thought, of the Iscariot
himself, that galled Sir Terence now most sorely;
that and the memory of his own silly credulity.
He had been such a ready dupe. How those two together
must have laughed at him! Oh, Tremayne had been
very subtle! He had been the friend, the quasi-brother,
parading his affection for the Butler family to excuse
the familiarities with Lady O’Moy which he had
permitted himself under Sir Terence’s very eyes.
O’Moy thought of them as he had seen them in
the garden on the night of Redondo’s ball, remembered
the air of transparent honesty by which that damned
hypocrite when discovered had deflected his just resentment.
Oh, there was no doubt that the treacherous
blackguard had been subtle. But by
God! subtlety should be repaid with subtlety!
He would deal with Tremayne as cruelly as Tremayne
had dealt with him; and his wanton wife, too, should
be repaid in kind. He beheld the way clear, in
a flash of wicked inspiration. He put back the
pistol, slapped down the lid of the box and replaced
it in its drawer.
He rose, took up the letter to the
Commissary-general, stepped briskly to the door and
pulled it open.
“Mullins!” he called sharply. “Are
you there? Mullins?”
Came the sound of a scraping chair,
and instantly that door at the end of the corridor
was thrown open, and Mullins stood silhouetted against
the light behind him. A moment he stood there,
then came forward.
“You called, Sir Terence?”
“Yes.” Sir Terence’s
voice was miraculously calm. His back was to the
light and his face in shadow, so that its drawn, haggard
look was not perceptible to the butler. “I
am going to bed. But first I want you to step
across to the sergeant of the guard with this letter
for the Commissary-General. Tell him that it
is of the utmost importance, and ask him to arrange
to have it taken into Lisbon first thing in the morning.”
Mullins bowed, venerable as an archdeacon
in aspect and bearing, as he received the letter from
his master: “Certainly, Sir Terence.”
As he departed Sir Terence turned
and slowly paced back to his desk, leaving the door
open. His eyes had narrowed; there was a cruel,
an almost evil smile on his lips. Of the generous,
good-humoured nature imprinted upon his face every
sign had vanished. His countenance was a mask
of ferocity restrained by intelligence, cold and calculating.
Oh, he would pay the score that lay
between himself and those two who had betrayed him.
They should receive treachery for treachery, mockery
for mockery, and for dishonour death. They had
deemed him an old fool! What was the expression
that Samoval had used Pantaloon in the comedy?
Well, well! He had been Pantaloon in the comedy
so far. But now they should find him Pantaloon
in the tragedy nay, not Pantaloon at all,
but Polichinelle, the sinister jester, the cynical
clown, who laughs in murdering. And in anguished
silence should they bear the punishment he would mete
out to them, or else in no less anguished speech themselves
proclaim their own dastardy to the world.
His wife he beheld now in a new light.
It was out of vanity and greed that she had married
him, because of the position in the world that he
could give her. Having done so, at least she might
have kept faith; she might have been honest, and abided
by the bargain. If she had not done so, it was
because honesty was beyond her shallow nature.
He should have seen before what he now saw so clearly.
He should have known her for a lovely, empty husk;
a silly, fluttering butterfly; a toy; a thing of vanities,
emotions, and nothing else.
Thus Sir Terence, cursing the day
when he had mated with a fool. Thus Sir Terence
whilst he stood there waiting for the outcry from Mullins
that should proclaim the discovery of the body, and
afford him a pretext for having the house searched
for the slayer. Nor had he long to wait.
“Sir Terence! Sir Terence!
For God’s sake, Sir Terence!” he heard
the voice of his old servant. Came the loud crash
of the door thrust back until it struck the wall and
quick steps along the passage.
Sir Terence stepped out to meet him.
“Why, what the devil ”
he was beginning in his bluff, normal tones, when
the servant, showing a white, scared face, cut him
short.
“A terrible thing, Sir Terence!
Oh, the saints protect us, a dreadful thing!
This way, sir! There’s a man killed Count
Samoval, I think it is!”
“What? Where?”
“Out yonder, in the quadrangle, sir.”
“But ” Sir
Terence checked. “Count Samoval, did ye
say? Impossible!” and he went out quickly,
followed by the butler.
In the quadrangle he checked.
In the few minutes that were sped since he had left
the place the moon had overtopped the roof of the opposite
wing, so that full upon the enclosed garden fell now
its white light, illumining and revealing.
There lay the black still form of
Samoval supine, his white face staring up into the
heavens, and beside him knelt Tremayne, whilst in the
balcony above leaned her ladyship. The rope ladder,
Sir Terence’s swift glance observed, had disappeared.
He halted in his advance, standing
at gaze a moment. He had hardly expected so much.
He had conceived the plan of causing the house to
be searched immediately upon Mullins’s discovery
of the body. But Tremayne’s rashness in
adventuring down in this fashion spared him even that
necessity. True, it set up other difficulties.
But he was not sure that the matter would not be infinitely
more interesting thus.
He stepped forward, and came to a
standstill beside the two his dead enemy
and his living one.