The presence in Tangier of the King
of Messina and his suite, and the arrival there of
the French noblemen who had volunteered for the expedition,
could not escape the observation of the resident Consuls-General
and of the foreign colony, and dinners, riding and
hunting parties, pig-sticking, and excursions on horseback
into the outlying country were planned for their honor
and daily entertainment. Had the conspirators
held aloof from these, the residents might have asked,
since it was not to enjoy themselves, what was the
purpose of their stay in Tangier; and so, to allay
suspicion as to their real object, different members
of the expedition had been assigned from time to time
to represent the visitors at these festivities.
On the morning following the return of the yacht
from Messina, an invitation to ride to a farmhouse
some miles out of Tangier and to breakfast there had
been sent to the visitors, and the King had directed
the Prince Kalonay, and half of the delegation from
Paris, to accept it in his name.
They were well content to go, and
rode forth gayly and in high spirits, for the word
had been brought them early in the morning that the
expedition was already prepared to move, and that same
evening at midnight the yacht would set sail for Messina.
They were careless as to what fortune waited for
them there. The promise of much excitement,
of fighting and of danger, of possible honor and success,
stirred the hearts of the young men gloriously, and
as they galloped across the plains, or raced each
other from point to point, or halted to jump their
ponies across the many gaping crevices which the sun
had split in the surface of the plain, they filled
the still, warm air with their shouts and laughter.
In the party there were many ladies, and the groups
changed and formed again as they rode forward, spread
out on either side of the caravan-trail and covering
the plain like a skirmish line of cavalry. But
Kalonay kept close at Miss Carson’s stirrup,
whether she walked her pony or sent him flying across
the hard, sunbaked soil.
“I hope you won’t do that
again,” he said, earnestly, as she drew up panting,
with her sailor hat and hair falling to her shoulders.
They had been galloping recklessly over the open
crevices in the soil.
“It’s quite the nastiest
country I ever saw,” he said. “It
looks as though an earthquake had shaken it open and
had forgotten to close it again. Believe me,
it is most unsafe and dangerous. Your pony might
stumble ” He stopped, as though the
possibilities were too serious for words, but the
girl laughed.
“It’s no more dangerous
than riding across our prairie at dusk when you can’t
see the barbed wire. You are the last person
in the world to find fault because a thing is dangerous,”
she added.
They had reached the farm, where they
went to breakfast, and the young Englishman who was
their host was receiving his guests in his garden,
and the servants were passing among them, carrying
cool drinks and powdered sweets and Turkish coffee.
Kalonay gave their ponies to a servant and pointed
with his whip to an arbor that stood at one end of
the garden.
“May we sit down there a moment
until they call us?” he said. “I
have news of much importance and I may
not have another chance,” he begged, looking
at her wistfully. The girl stood motionless;
her eyes were serious, and she measured the distance
down the walk to the arbor as though she saw it beset
with dangers more actual than precipices and twisted
wire. The Prince watched her as though his fate
was being weighed in his presence.
“Very well,” she said
at last, and moved on before him down the garden-path.
The arbor was open to the air with
a low, broad roof of palm-leaves that overhung it
on all sides and left it in deep shadow. Around
it were many strange plants and flowers, some native
to Morocco and some transplanted from their English
home. From where they sat they could see the
other guests moving in and out among the groves of
orange and olive trees and swaying palms, and standing,
outlined against the blue sky, upon the low, flat
roof of the farm-house.
“I have dared to ask you to
be so good as to give me this moment,” the Prince
said humbly, “only because I am going away, and
it may be my last chance to speak with you.
You do not mind? You do not think I presume?”
“No, I do not mind,” said
the girl, smiling. “In my country we do
not think it a terrible offence to talk to a girl
at a garden-party. But you said there was something
of importance you wanted to say to me. You mean
the expedition?”
“Yes,” said Kalonay.
“We start this evening.” The girl
raised her head slightly and stared past him at the
burning white walls and the burning blue sky that
lay outside the circle of shadow in which they sat.
“This evening ” she repeated
to herself.
“We reach there in two days,”
Kalonay continued; “and then we then
we go on until we enter the capital.”
The girl’s head was bent, and
she looked at her hands as they lay in her lap and
frowned at them, they seemed so white and pretty and
useless.
“Yes, you go on,” she
repeated, “and we stay here. You are a
man and able to go on. I know what that means.
And you like it,” she added, with a glance
of mingled admiration and fear. “You are
glad to fight and to risk death and to lead men on
to kill other men.”
Kalonay drew lines in the sand with
his ridingwhip, and did not raise his head.
“I suppose it is because you
are fighting for your home,” the girl continued,
“and to set your country free, and that you can
live with your own people again, and because it is
a holy war. That must be it. Now that it
is really come, I see it all differently. I see
things I had not thought about before. They
frighten me,” she said.
The Prince raised his head and faced
the girl, clasping the end of his whip nervously in
his hand. “If we should win the island
for the King,” he said, “I believe it
will make a great change in me. I shall be able
to go freely then to my home, as you say, to live there
always, to give up the life I have led on the Continent.
It has been a foolish life a dog’s
life and I have no one to blame for it but
myself. I made it worse than it need to have
been. But if we win, I have promised myself
that I will not return to it; and if we fall I shall
not return to it, for the reason that I shall have
been killed. I shall have much power if we win.
When I say much power, I mean much power in Messina,
in that little corner of the world, and I wish to use
it worthily and well. I am afraid I should not
have thought of it,” he went on, naively, as
though he were trying to be quite fair, “had
not Father Paul pointed out to me what I should do,
how I could raise the people and stop the abuses which
made them drive us from the island. The people
must be taxed less heavily, and the money must be spent
for them and not for us, on roads and harbors and
schools, not at the Palace on banquets and fêtes.
These are Father Paul’s ideas, not mine, but
now I make them mine.” He rose and paced
the length of the little arbor, his hands clasped
behind him and his eyes bent on the ground.
“Yes, that is what I mean to do,” he said.
“That is the way I mean to live. And
if we fail, I mean to be among those who are to die
on the fortifications of the capital, so that with
me the Kalonay family will end, and end fighting for
the King, as many of my people have done before me.
There is no other way. For me there shall be
no more idleness nor exile. I must either live
on to help my people, or I must die with them.”
He stopped in his walk and regarded the girl closely.
“You may be thinking, it is easy for him to
promise this, it is easy to speak of what one will
do. I know that. I know that I can point
back at nothing I have done that gives me any right
to ask you to believe me now. But I do ask it,
for if you believe me believe what I say it
makes it easier for me to tell you why after this I
must live worthily. But you know why?
You must know; it is not possible that you do not
know.”
He sat down beside her on the bench,
leaning forward and crushing his hands together on
his knee. “It is because I love you.
Because I love you so that everything which is not
worthy is hateful to me, myself most of all.
It is the only thing that counts. I used to
think I knew what love meant; I used to think love
was a selfish thing that needed love in return, that
it must be fed on love to live, that it needed vows
and tender speeches and caresses, or it would die.
I know now that when one truly cares, he does not
ask whether the other cares or not. It is what
one gives that counts, not what one receives.
You have given me nothing nothing not
a word nor a look; yet since I have known you I have
been more madly happy in just knowing that you live
than I would have been had any other woman in all the
world thrown herself into my arms and said she loved
me above all other men. I am not fit to tell
you this. But to-night I go to try myself, either
never to see you again, or to come back perhaps more
worthy to love you. Think of this when I am
gone. Do not speak to me now. I may have
made you hate me for speaking so, or I may have made
you pity me; so let me go not knowing, just loving
you, worshipping you, and holding you apart and above
all other people. I go to fight for you, do you
understand? Not for our Church, not for my people,
but for you, to live or die for you. And I ask
nothing from you but that you will let me love you
always.”
The Prince bent, and catching up Miss
Carson’s riding-gloves that lay beside her on
the bench, kissed them again and again, and then, rising
quickly, walked out of the arbor into the white sunshine,
and, without turning, mounted his pony and galloped
across the burning desert in the direction of Tangier.
Archie Gordon had not been invited
to join the excursion into the country, nor would
he have accepted it, for he wished to be by himself
that he might review the situation and consider what
lay before him. He sat with his long legs dangling
over the broad rampart which overlooks the harbor
of Tangier. He was whistling meditatively to
himself and beating an accompaniment to the tune with
his heels. At intervals he ceased whistling
while he placed a cigar between his teeth and pulled
upon it thoughtfully, resuming his tune again at the
point where it had been interrupted. Below him
the waves ran up lazily on the level beach and sank
again, dragging the long sea-weed with them, as they
swept against the sharp rocks, and exposed them for
an instant, naked and glistening in the sun.
On either side of him the town stretched to meet
the low, white, sand-hills in a crescent of low, white
houses pierced by green minarets and royal palms.
A warm sun had sent the world to sleep at mid-day,
and an enforced peace hung over the glaring white
town and the sparkling blue sea. Gordon blinked
at the glare, but his eyes showed no signs of drowsiness.
They were, on the contrary, awake to all that passed
on the high road behind him, and on the sandy beach
at his feet, while at the same time his mind was busily
occupied in reviewing what had occurred the day before,
and in adjusting new conditions. At the hotel
he had found that the situation was becoming too complicated,
and that it was impossible to feel sure of the truth
of anything, or of the sincerity of anyone. Since
the luncheon hour the day before he had become a fellow-conspirator
with men who were as objectionable to him in every
way as he knew he was obnoxious to them. But
they had been forced to accept him because, so they
supposed, he had them at the mercy of his own pleasure.
He knew their secret, and in the legitimate pursuit
of his profession he could, if he chose, inform the
island of Messina, with the rest of the world, of
their intention toward it, and bring their expedition
to an end, though he had chosen, as a reward for his
silence, to become one of themselves. Only the
Countess Zara had guessed the truth, that it was Gordon
himself who was at their mercy, and that so long as
the American girl persisted in casting her fortunes
with them her old young friend was only too eager
to make any arrangement with them that would keep
him at her side.
It was a perplexing position, and
Gordon turned it over and over in his mind.
Had it not been that Miss Carson had a part in it he
would have enjoyed the adventure, as an adventure,
keenly. He had no objections to fighting on
the side of rascals, or against rascals. He objected
to them only in the calmer moments of private life;
and as he was of course ignorant that the expedition
was only a make-believe, he felt a certain respect
for his fellow-conspirators as men who were willing
to stake their lives for a chance of better fortune.
But that their bravery was of the kind which would
make them hesitate to rob and deceive a helpless girl
he very much doubted; for he knew that even the bravest
of warriors on their way to battle will requisition
a herd of cattle or stop to loot a temple. The
day before, Gordon had witnessed the brief ceremony
which attended the presentation of the young noblemen
from Paris who had volunteered for the expedition in
all good faith, and he reviewed it and analyzed it
as he sat smoking on the ramparts.
It had been an impressive ceremony,
in spite of the fact that so few had taken part in
it, but the earnestness of the visitors and the enthusiasm
of Kalonay and the priest had made up for the lack
of numbers. The scene had appealed to him as
one of the most dramatic he had witnessed in the pursuit
of a calling in which looking on at real dramas was
the most frequent duty, and he had enjoyed the strange
mixture of ancient terms of address and titles with
the modern manners of the men themselves. It
had interested him to watch Baron Barrat bring out
the ancient crown and jewelled sceptre which had been
the regalia of all the Kings of Messina since the
Crusades and spread them out upon a wicker tea-table,
from which Niccolas had just removed some empty coffee-cups,
half filled with the ends of cigarettes, some yellow-backed
novels, and a copy of the Paris Figaro. It was
also interesting to him to note how the sight of the
little heir-apparent affected both the peasants from
the mountains and the young nobles from the Club
Royale. The former fell upon their knees
with the tears rolling down the furrows in their tanned
cheeks, while the little wise-eyed boy stood clinging
to his nurse’s skirts with one hand and to his
father’s finger with the other, and nodded his
head at them gravely like a toy mandarin.
Then the King had addressed them in
a dignified, earnest, and almost eloquent speech,
and had promised much and prophesied the best of fortunes,
and then, at the last, had turned suddenly toward Miss
Carson, where she stood in the background between her
mother and Father Paul.
“Every cause has its Joan of
Arc, or its Maria Theresa,” he cried, looking
steadfastly at Miss Carson. “No cause has
succeeded without some good woman to aid it.
To help us, my friends, we have a daughter of the
people, as was Joan of Arc, and a queen, as was Maria
Theresa, for she comes from that country where every
woman is a queen in her own right, and where the love
of liberty is inherent.” The King took
a quick step backward, and taking Miss Carson’s
hand drew her forward beside him and placed her facing
his audience, while the girl made vain efforts to
withdraw her hand. “This is she,”
he said earnestly, “the true daughter of the
Church who has made it possible for us to return to
our own again. It is due to her that the King
of Messina shall sit once more on his throne; it is
through her generosity alone that the churches will
rise from their ruins and that you will once again
hear the Angelus ring across the fields at sunset.
Remember her, my friends and cousins, pray for her
as a saint upon earth, and fight gloriously to help
her to success!”
Gordon had restrained himself with
difficulty while this scene was being enacted; he
could not bear the thought of the King touching the
girl’s hand. He struggled to prevent himself
from crying out at the false position into which he
had dragged her; and yet there was something so admirably
sincere in the King’s words, something so courteous
and manly, that it robbed his words of all the theatrical
effect they held, and his tribute to the girl filled
even Gordon with an emotion which on the part of the
young nobles found expression in cheer upon cheer.
Gordon recalled these cheers and the
looks of wondering admiration which had been turned
upon Miss Carson, and he grew so hot at the recollection
that he struck the wall beside him savagely with his
clinched fist, and damned the obstinacy of his young
and beautiful friend with a sincerity and vigor that
was the highest expression of his interest in her
behalf.
He threw his cigar into the rampart
at his feet and dropped back into the high road.
It was deserted at the time, except for the presence
of a tall, slightly built stranger, who advanced toward
him from the city gates. The man was dressed
in garments of European fashion and carried himself
like a soldier, and Gordon put him down at a glance
as one of the volunteers from Paris. The stranger
was walking leisurely, stopping to gaze at the feluccas
in the bay, and then turning to look up at the fortress
on the hill. He seemed to have no purpose in
his walk except the interest of a tourist, and as
he drew up even with Gordon he raised his helmet politely
and, greeting him in English, asked if he were on
the right road to the Bashaw’s Palace.
Gordon pointed to where the white walls of the palace
rose above the other white walls about it.
“That is it,” he said.
“All the roads lead to it. You keep going
up hill.”
“Thank you,” said the
stranger. “I see I have taken a long way.”
He put his white umbrella in the sand, and, removing
his helmet, mopped his forehead with his handkerchief.
“It is a curious old town, Tangier,”
he said, affably, “but too many hills, is it
not so? Algiers I like better. There is
more life.”
“Yes, Algiers is almost as good
as the boulevards,” Gordon assented, “if
you like the boulevards. I prefer this place
because it is unspoiled. But, as you say, there
is not much to do here.”
The stranger’s eyes fell upon
the Hotel Grande Bretagne, which stood a quarter of
a mile away from them on the beach.
“That is the Hotel Bretagne,
is it not?” he asked. Gordon answered him
with a nod.
“The King Louis of Messina,
so the chasseur at the hotel tells me, is stopping
there en suite,” the stranger added, with an
interrogative air of one who volunteers an interesting
fact, and who asks if it is true at the same moment.
“I can’t say, I’m
sure,” Gordon replied. “I only arrived
here yesterday.”
The stranger bowed his head in recognition
of this piece of personal information, and, putting
on his helmet, picked up his umbrella as though to
continue his stroll. As he did so his eyes wandered
over the harbor and were arrested with apparent interest
by the yacht, which lay a conspicuous object on the
blue water. He pointed at it with his umbrella.
“One of your English men-of-war
is in the harbor, I see. She is very pretty,
but not large; not so large as many,” he said.
Gordon turned his head obligingly
and gazed at the yacht with polite interest.
“Is that a man-of-war? I thought it was
a yacht,” he said. “I’m not
familiar with the English war-vessels. I am an
American.”
“Ah, indeed!” commented
the affable stranger. “I am French myself,
but I think she is a man-of-war. I saw her guns
when I passed on the steamer from Gibraltar.”
Gordon knew that the steamer did not
pass within half a mile of where the yacht lay at
anchor, but he considered it might be possible to see
her decks with the aid of a glass.
“You may be right,” he
answered, indifferently. As he turned his eyes
from the boat he saw a woman, dressed in white, and
carrying a parasol, leave the gardens of the Hotel
Bretagne, and come toward them along the beach.
The Frenchman, following the direction of his eyes,
saw her also, and regarded her instantly with such
evident concern that Gordon, who had recognized her
even at that distance as the Countess Zara, felt assured
that his inquisitor held, as he had already suspected,
more than a tourist’s interest in Tangier.
“Well, I will wish you a good-morning,”
said the Frenchman, hurriedly.
“Good-morning,” Gordon
replied, and taking a cigar from his case, he seated
himself again upon the rampart. As he walked
away the stranger glanced back over his shoulder,
but Gordon was apparently absorbed in watching the
waves below him, and had lost all interest in his chance
acquaintance. But he watched both the woman and
the Frenchman as they advanced slowly from opposite
directions and drew nearer together, and he was not
altogether surprised, when the in man was within twenty
feet of her, to see her start and stand still, and
then, with the indecision of a hunted animal, move
uncertainly, and then turn and run in the direction
of the hotel. Something the man apparently called
after her caused her to stop, and Gordon observed
them now with undisguised interest as they stood conversing
together, oblivious of the conspicuous mark they made
on the broad white beach under the brilliant sun.
“I wonder what he’s up
to now?” Gordon mused. “He was trying
to pump me, that’s evident, and he certainly
recognized the lady, and she apparently did not want
to recognize him. I wonder if he is a rejected
lover, or another conspirator. This is a most
amusing place, nothing but plots and counterplots
and Hello!” he exclaimed aloud.
The man had moved quickly past Madame Zara, and had
started toward the hotel, and Zara had held out her
hand to him, as though to entreat him to remain.
But he did not stop, and she had taken a few uncertain
steps after him, and had then, much to the American’s
dismay, fallen limply on her back on the soft sand.
She was not a hundred yards distant from where he
sat, and in an instant he had slipped from the wall,
and dropped on his hands and knees on the beach below.
When Gordon reached her the Frenchman had returned,
and was supporting her head on his knee and covering
her head with her parasol.
“The lady has fainted!”
he exclaimed, eagerly. His manner was no longer
one of idle indolence. He was wide awake now
and visibly excited.
“The sun has been too much for
her,” he said. “It is most dangerous
walking about at this time of day.”
Gordon ran down the beach and scooped
up some water in his helmet, and dipping his handkerchief
in it bathed her temples and cheek. He had time
to note that she was a very beautiful girl, and the
pallor of her face gave it a touch of gentleness that
he had not seen there before.
“I will go to the hotel and
bring assistance, said the stranger, uneasily, as
the woman showed signs of regaining consciousness.
“No,” said Gordon, “you’ll
stay where you are and shade her with her umbrella.
She’ll be all right in a minute.”
The girl opened her eyes, and looking
up saw Gordon bending over her. She regarded
him for a moment and made an effort to rise, and in
her endeavor to do so her eyes met those of the Frenchman,
and with a sharp moan she shut them again and threw
herself from Gordon’s knee to the sand.
“Give me that umbrella,”
said Gordon, “and go stand over there out of
the way.”
The man rose from his knee without
showing any resentment and walked some little distance
away, where he stood with his arms folded, looking
out to sea. He seemed much too occupied with
something of personal interest to concern himself
with a woman’s fainting-spell. The girl
lifted herself slowly to her elbow, and then, before
Gordon could assist her, rose with a quick, graceful
movement and stood erect upon her feet. She
placed a detaining hand for an instant on the American’s
arm.
“Thank you very much,”
she said. “I am afraid I have been imprudent
in going out into the sun.” Her eyes were
fixed upon the Frenchman, who stood moodily staring
at the sea and tearing one of his finger-nails with
his teeth. He seemed utterly oblivious of their
presence. The girl held out her hand for the
parasol she had dropped and took it from Gordon with
a bow.
“May I walk back with you to
your hotel?” he asked. “Unless this
gentleman ”
“Thank you,” the girl
said, in tones which the Frenchman could have easily
overheard had he been listening. “I am
quite able to go alone now; it is only a step.”
She was still regarding the Frenchman
closely; but as he was obviously unconscious of them
she moved so that Gordon hid her from him, and in
an entirely different voice she said, speaking rapidly,
“You are Mr. Gordon, the American
who joined us last night. That man is a spy
from Messina. He is Renauld, the Commander-in-Chief
of their army. He must be gotten away from here
at once. It is a matter for a man to attend
to. Will you do it?”
“How do you know this?”
Gordon asked. “How do you know he is General
Renauld? I want to be certain.”
The girl tossed her head impatiently.
“He was pointed out to me at
Messina. I saw him there in command at a review.
He has just spoken to me that was what
frightened me into that fainting-spell. I didn’t
think I was so weak,” she said, shaking her
head. “He offered me a bribe to inform
him of our plans. I tell you he is a spy.”
“That’s all right,”
said Gordon, reassuringly; “you go back to the
hotel now and send those guards here on a run.
I’ll make a charge against him and have him
locked up until after we sail to-night. Hurry,
please; I’ll stay here.”
Gordon felt a pleasurable glow of
excitement. It was his nature to throw himself
into everything he did and to at once become a partisan.
It was a quality which made his writings attractive
to the reader, and an object of concern to his editor.
At the very word “spy,” and at this first
hint of opposition to the cause in which he had but
just enlisted, he thrilled as though it had always
been his own, and he regarded the Frenchman with a
personal dislike as sudden as it was unfounded.
The Frenchman had turned and was walking
in the direction of the city gate. His eyes
were bent on the sandy beach which stretched before
him, and he made his way utterly unmindful of the waves
that stole up to his feet and left little pools of
water in his path. Gordon beckoned impatiently
to the two soldiers who came running toward him at
the hotel, and moved forward to meet them the sooner.
He took one of them by the wrist and pointed with
his other hand at the retreating figure of the Frenchman.
“That man,” he said, “is
one of the King’s enemies. The King is
in danger while that man is here. Your duty
is to protect the King, so he gives this foreigner
into your charge.”
The soldier nodded his head in assent.
“The King himself sent us,” he replied.
“You will place him in the Civil
Prison,” Gordon continued, “until the
King is safe on his yacht, and you will not allow him
to send for the French Consul-General. If he
sees the Consul-General he will tell him a great many
lies about you, and a great war-ship will come and
your Bashaw will be forced to pay the foreigners much
money. I will go with you and tell this man
in his own tongue what you are going to do with him.”
They walked hurriedly after the Frenchman,
and when they had overtaken him Gordon halted and
bowed.
“One moment, please,”
he said. “These soldiers have an order
for your arrest. I speak the language, and if
you have anything to say to them I will interpret
for you.”
The Frenchman stared from Gordon to
the guards and then laughed incredulously but with
no great confidence. He had much to say, but
he demanded to know first why he should be arrested.
“The lady you insulted,”
Gordon answered, gravely, “happened, unfortunately
for you, to be one of the King’s guests.
She has complained to him, and he has sent these
soldiers to put you where you cannot trouble her again.
You see, sir, you cannot annoy women with impunity
even in this barbarous country.”
“Insult her! I did not
insult her,” the man retorted. “That
is not the reason I am arrested.”
“You annoyed her so much that
she fainted. I saw you,” said Gordon,
backing away with the evident purpose of abandoning
the foreigner to his guards.
“She has lied,” the man
cried, “either to the King or to me. I
do not know which, but I am here to find out.
That is why I came to Tangier, and I intend to learn
the truth.”
“You’ve begun rather badly,”
Gordon answered, as he still retreated. “In
the Civil Prison your field of investigation will be
limited.”
The Frenchman took a hasty step toward
him, shrugging off the hand one of the soldiers had
placed on his shoulder.
“Are you the Prince Kalonay,
sir?” he demanded. “But surely not,”
he added.
“No, I am not the Prince,”
Gordon answered. “I bid you good-morning,
sir.”
“Then you are on the other side,”
the man called after him eagerly, with a tone of great
relief. “I have been right from the very
first. I see it plainly. It is a double
plot, and you are one of that woman’s dupes.
Listen to me I beg of you, listen to me I
have a story to tell.”
Gordon paused and looked back at the
man over his shoulder, doubtfully.
“It’s like the Arabian
Nights,” he said, with a puzzled smile.
“There was once a rich merchant of Bagdad and
the Sultan was going to execute him, but they put
off the execution until he could tell them the story
of the Beautiful Countess and the French Envoy.
I am sorry,” he added, shaking his head, “but
I cannot listen now. I must not be seen talking
to you at all, and everyone can see us here.”
They were as conspicuous figures on
the flat surface of the beach as two palms in a desert,
and Gordon was most anxious to escape, for he was
conscious that he could be observed from every point
in the town. A hundred yards away, on the terrace
of the hotel, he saw the King, Madame Zara, Barrat,
and Erhaupt standing together watching them.
“If the American leaves him
now, we are safe,” the King was saying.
He spoke in a whisper, as though he feared that even
at that distance Gordon and the Frenchman could overhear
his words. “But if he remains with him
he will find out the truth, and that means ruin.
He will ruin us.”
“Look, he is coming this way,”
Zara answered. “He is leaving him.
The danger is past.”
The Frenchman raised his eyes and
saw the four figures grouped closely together on the
terrace.
“See, what did I tell you?”
he cried. “She is with the King now.
It is a plot within a plot, and I believe you know
it,” he added, furiously. “You are
one of these brave blackmailers yourself that
is why you will not let me speak.”
“Blackmailers!” said
Gordon. “Confound your impudence, what
the devil do you mean by that?”
But the Frenchman was staring angrily
at the distant group on the terrace, and Gordon turned
his eyes in the same direction. Something he
saw in the strained and eager attitude of the four
conspirators moved him to a sudden determination.
“That will do, you must go,”
he commanded, pointing with his arm toward the city
gate; and before the Frenchman could reply, he gave
an order to the guards, and they seized the foreigner
roughly by either arm and hurried him away.
“Thank God!” exclaimed
the King, piously. “They have separated,
and the boy thinks he is rendering us great service.
Well, and so he is, the young fool.”
The group on the piazza remained motionless,
watching Gordon as he leisurely lit a cigar and stood
looking out at the harbor until the Frenchman had
disappeared inside the city wall. Then he turned
and walked slowly after him.
“I do not like that. I
do not like his following him,” said Barrat,
suspiciously.
“That is nothing,” answered
the King. “He is going to play the spy
and see that the man is safely in jail. Then
he will return and report to us. We must congratulate
him warmly. He follows at a discreet distance,
you observe, and keeps himself well out of sight.
The boy knows better than to compromise himself by
being seen in conversation with the man. Of
course, if Renauld is set free we must say we had no
part in his arrest, that the American made the arrest
on his own authority. What a convenient tool
the young man is. Why, his coming really frightened
us at first, and now now we make a cat’s-paw
of him.” The King laughed merrily.
“We undervalue ourselves sometimes, do we not?”
“He is a nice boy,” said
Zara. “I feel rather sorry for him.
He looked so anxious and distressed when I was so
silly as to faint on the beach just now. He
handled me as tenderly as a woman would have done not
that women have generally handled me tenderly,”
she added.
“I was thinking the simile was
rather misplaced,” said the King.
Gordon passed the city wall and heard
the gates swing to behind him. The Frenchman
and his two captors were just ahead, toiling heavily
up the steep and narrow street. Gordon threw
his cigar from him and ran leaping over the huge cobbles
to the Frenchman’s side and touched him on the
shoulder.
“We are out of sight of the
hotel, now, General,” he said. He pointed
to the dark, cool recesses of a coffee-shop and held
back the rug that hung before it. “Come
in here,” he said, “and tell me that story.”