She came in swiftly, stirring the
sultry stillness of the studio with a little breeze
from her gown, faintly fragrant.
“Garry, dear!-”
She gave him both her hands and looked at him; and
he saw the pink tint of excitement in her cheeks and
her dark eyes brilliant.
“Thessa, this is charming of you -”
“No! I came -”
She cast a swift glance around her, beheld Westmore,
gave him one hand as he came forward.
“How do you do?” she said,
almost breathlessly, plainly controlling some inward
excitement.
But Westmore retained her hand and
laid the other over it.
“You said you’d come to the Ritz -”
“I’m sorry.... I have been-bothered-with
matters-affairs -”
“You are bothered now,”
he said. “If you have something to say to
Garry, I’ll go about my business.... Only
I’m sorry it’s not your business, too.”
He released her hand and reached for
the door-knob: her dark eyes were resting on
him with a strained, intent expression. On impulse
she thrust out her arm and closed the door, which
he had begun to open.
“Please-Mr. Westmore....
I do want to see you. I’m trying to think
clearly-” She turned and looked at
Barres.
“Is it serious?” he said in a low voice.
“I-suppose so.... Garry, I wish
to-to come here ... and stay.”
“What!”
She nodded.
“Is it all right?”
“All right,” he replied
pleasantly, bewildered and almost inclined to laugh.
She said in a low, tense voice.
“I’m really in trouble,
Garry. I told you once that the word was not
in my vocabulary.... I’ve had to include
it.”
“I’m so sorry! Tell me all about -”
He checked himself: she turned
to Westmore-a deeper flush came into her
cheeks-then she said gravely:
“I scarcely know Mr. Westmore,
but if he is like you, Garry-your sort-perhaps
he -”
“He’d do anything for
you, Thessa, if you’ll let him. Have you
confidence in me?”
“You know I have.”
“Then you can have the same
confidence in Jim. I suggest it because I have
a hazy idea what your trouble is. And if you came
to ask advice, then I think that you’ll get
double value if you include Jim Westmore in your confidence.”
She stood silent and with heightened
colour for a moment, then her expression became humorous,
and, partly turning, she put out her gloved hand behind
her and took hold of Westmore’s sleeve.
It was at once an appeal and an impulsive admission
of her confidence in this young man whom she had liked
from the beginning, and who must be trustworthy because
he was the friend of Garret Barres.
“I’m scared half to death,”
she remarked, without a quaver in her voice, but her
smile had now become forced, and a quick, uneven little
sigh escaped her as she passed her arms through Barres’
and Westmore’s, and, moving across the carpet
between them, suffered herself to be installed among
the Chinese cushions upon the lounge by the open window.
In her distractingly pretty summer
hat and gown, and with her white gloves and gold-mesh
purse in her lap-her fresh, engaging face
and daintily rounded figure-Thessalie Dunois
seemed no more mature, no more experienced in worldly
wisdom, than the charming young girls one passes on
Fifth Avenue on a golden morning in early spring.
But Westmore, looking into her dark
eyes, divined, perhaps, something less inexperienced,
less happy in their lovely, haunted depths. And,
troubled by he knew not what, he waited in silence
for her to speak.
Barres said to her:
“You are being annoyed, Thessa,
dear. I gather that much from what has already
happened. Can Jim and I do anything?”
“I don’t know....
It’s come to a point where I-I’m
afraid-to be alone.”
Her gaze fell; she sat brooding for
a few moments, then, with a quick intake of breath:
“It humiliates me to come to
you. Would you believe that of me, Garry, that
it has come to a point where I am actually afraid to
be alone? I thought I had plenty of what the
world calls courage.”
“You have!”
“I had. I don’t
know what’s become of it-what has
happened to me.... I don’t want to tell
you more than I have to -”
“Tell us as much as you think
necessary,” said Barres, watching her.
“Thank you.... Well, then,
some years ago I earned the enmity of a man.
And, through him, a European Government blacklisted
me. It was a terrible thing. I did not fully
appreciate what it meant at the time.”
She turned to Westmore in her pretty, impulsive way:
“This European Government, of which I speak,
believes me to be the agent of another foreign government-believes
that I betrayed its interests. This man whom
I offended, to punish me and to cover his own treachery,
furnished evidence which would have convicted me of
treachery and espionage.”
The excited colour began to dye her
cheeks again; she stretched out one arm in appeal
to Westmore:
“Please believe me! I am
no spy. I never was. I was too young, too
stupid, too innocent in such matters to know what this
man was about-that he had very cleverly
implicated me in this abhorrent matter. Do you
believe me, Mr. Westmore?”
“Of course I do!” he said
with a fervour not, perhaps, necessary. “If
you’ll be kind enough to point out that gentleman -”
“Wait, Jim,” interposed
Barres, nodding to Thessalie to proceed.
She had been looking at Westmore,
apparently much interested in his ardour, but she
came to herself when Barres interrupted, and sat silent
again as though searching her mind concerning what
further she might say. Slowly the forced smile
curved her lips again. She said:
“I don’t know just what
that enraged European Government might have done to
me had I been arrested, because I ran away ... and
came here.... But the man whom I offended discovered
where I was and never for a day even have his agents
ceased to watch me, annoy me -”
There was a quick break in her voice;
she set her lips in silence until the moment’s
emotion had passed, then, turning to Westmore with
winning dignity: “I am a dancer and singer-an
entertainer of sorts, by profession. I -”
“Tell Westmore a little more, Thessa,”
said Barres.
“If you think it necessary.”
“I’ll tell him. Miss
Dunois was the most celebrated entertainer in Europe
when this happened. Since she came here the man
she has mentioned has, somehow, managed to interfere
and spoil every business arrangement which she has
attempted.” He looked at Thessa. “I
don’t know whether, if Thessalie had cared to
use the name under which she was known all over Europe -”
“I didn’t dare, Garry.
I thought that, if some manager would only give me
a chance I could make a new name for myself. But
wherever I went I was dogged, and every arrangement
was spoiled.... I had my jewels.... You
remember some of them, Garry. I gave those away-I
think I told you why. But I had other jewels-unset
diamonds given to my mother by Prince Haledine.
Well, I sold them and invested the money.... And
my income is all I have-quite a tiny income,
Mr. Westmore, but enough. Only I could have done
very well here, I think, if I had not been interfered
with.”
“Thessa,” said Barres,
“why not tell us both a little more? We’re
devoted to you.”
The girl lifted her dark eyes, and
unconsciously they were turned to Westmore. And
in that young man’s vigorous, virile personality
perhaps she recognised something refreshing, subtlely
compelling, for, still looking at him, she began to
speak quite naturally of things which had long been
locked within her lonely heart:
“I was scarcely more than a
child when General Count Klingenkampf killed my father.
The Grand Duke Cyril hushed it up.
“I had several thousand roubles.
I had-trouble with the Grand Duke....
He annoyed me ... as some men annoy a woman....
And when I put him in his place he insulted the memory
of my mother because she was a Georgian.... I
slapped his face with a whip.... And then I had
to run away.”
She drew a quick, uneven breath, smiling
at Westmore from whose intent gaze her own dark eyes
never wandered.
“My father had been a French
officer before he took service in Russia,” she
said. “I was educated in Alsace and then
in England. Then my father sent for me and I
returned to St. Peters-I mean Petrograd.
And because I loved dancing my father obtained permission
for me to study at the Imperial school. Also,
I had it in me to sing, and I had excellent instruction.
“And because I did such things
in my own way, sometimes my father permitted me to
entertain at the gay gatherings patronised by the
Grand Duke Cyril.”
She smiled in reminiscence, and her
gaze became remote for a moment. Then, coming
back, she lifted her eyes once more to Westmore’s:
“I ran away from Cyril and went
to Constantinople, where Von-der-Goltz Pasha
and others whom I had met at the Grand Duke’s
parties, when little more than a child, were stationed.
I entertained at the German Embassy, and at the Yildiz
Palace.... I was successful. And my success
brought me opportunities-of the wrong kind.
Do you understand?”
Westmore nodded.
“So,” she continued, with
a slight movement of disdain, “I didn’t
quite see how I was to get to Paris all alone and begin
a serious career. And one evening I entertained
at the German Embassy-tell me, do you know
Constantinople?”
“No.”
“Well, it is nothing except
a vast mass of gossip and intrigue. One breakfasts
on rumours, lunches on secrets, and dines on scandals.
And my maid told me enough that day to make certain
matters quite clear to me.
“And so I entertained at the
Embassy.... Afterward it was no surprise when
his Excellency whispered to me that an honest career
was assured me if I chose, and that I might be honestly
launched in Paris without paying the price which I
would not pay.
“Later I was not surprised,
either, when Ferez Bey, a friend of my father, and
a man I had known since childhood, presented me to-to -”
She glanced at Barres; he nodded; she concluded to
name the man: “-the Count d’Eblis,
a Senator of France, and owner of the newspaper called
Le Mot d’Ordre.”
After a silence she stole another
glance at Barres; a smile hovered on her lips.
He, also, smiled; for he, too, was thinking of that
moonlit way they travelled together on a night in
June so long ago.
Her glance asked:
“Is it necessary to tell Mr. Westmore this?”
He shook his head very slightly.
“Well,” she went on, her
eyes reverting again to Westmore, “the Count
d’Eblis, it appeared, had fallen in love with
me at first sight.... In the beginning he misunderstood
me.... When he realised that I would endure no
nonsense from any man he proved to be sufficiently
infatuated with me to offer me marriage.”
She shrugged:
“At that age one man resembled
another to me. Marriage was a convention, a desirable
business arrangement. The Count was in a position
to launch me into a career. Careers begin in Paris.
And I knew enough to realise that a girl has to pay
in one way or another for such an opportunity.
So I said that I would marry him if I came to care
enough for him. Which merely meant that if he
were ordinarily polite and considerate and companionable
I would ultimately become his wife.
“That was the arrangement.
And it caused much trouble. Because I was a-”
she smiled at Barres, “-a success
from the first moment. And d’Eblis immediately
began to be abominably jealous and unreasonable.
Again and again he broke his promise and tried to interfere
with my career. He annoyed me constantly by coming
to my hotel at inopportune moments; he made silly
scenes if I ventured to have any friends or if I spoke
twice to the same man; he distrusted me-he
and Ferez Bey, who had taken service with him.
Together they humiliated me, made my life miserable
by their distrust.
“I warned d’Eblis that
his absurd jealousy and unkindness would not advance
him in my interest. And for a while he seemed
to become more reasonable. In fact, he apparently
became sane again, and I had even consented to our
betrothal, when, by accident, I discovered that he
and Ferez were having me followed everywhere I went.
And that very night was to have been a gay one-a
party in honour of our betrothal-the night
I discovered what he and Ferez had been doing to me.
“I was so hurt, so incensed,
that-” She cast an involuntary glance
at Barres; he made a slight movement of negation,
and she concluded her sentence calmly: “-I
quarrelled with d’Eblis.... There was a
very dreadful scene. And it transpired that he
had sold a preponderating interest in Le Mot d’Ordre
to Ferez Bey, who was operating the paper in German
interests through orders directly from Berlin.
And d’Eblis thought I knew this and that I meant
to threaten him, perhaps blackmail him, to shield
some mythical lover with whom, he declared, I had
become involved, and who was betraying him to the British
Ambassador.”
She drew a deep, long breath:
“Is it necessary for me to say
that there was not a particle of truth in his hysterical
accusations?-that I was utterly astounded?
But my amazement became anger and then sheer terror
when I learned from his own lips that he had cunningly
involved me in his transactions with Ferez and with
Berlin. So cunningly, so cleverly, so seriously
had he managed to compromise me as a German agent
that he had a mass of evidence against me sufficient
to have had me court-martialled and shot had it been
in time of war.
“To me the situation seemed
hopeless. I never would be believed by the French
Government. Horror of arrest overwhelmed me.
In a panic I took my unset jewels and fled to Belgium.
And then I came here.”
She paused, trembling a little at
the memory of it all. Then:
“The agents of d’Eblis
and Ferez discovered me and have given me no peace.
I do not appeal to the police because that would stir
up secret agents of the French Government. But
it has come now to a place where-where
I don’t know what to do.... And so-being
afraid at last-I am here to-to
ask-advice -”
She waited to control her voice, then
opened her gold-mesh bag and drew from it a letter.
“Three weeks ago I received
this,” she said. “I ignored it.
Two weeks ago, as I opened the door of my room to
go out, a shot was fired at me, and I heard somebody
running down stairs.... I was badly scared.
But I went out and did my shopping, and then I went
to the writing room of a hotel and wrote to Garry....
Somebody watching me must have seen me write it, because
an attempt was made to steal the letter. A man
wearing a handkerchief over his face tried to snatch
it out of the hands of Dulcie Soane. But he got
only half of the letter.
“And when I got home that same
evening I found that my room had been ransacked....
That was why I did not go to meet you at the Ritz;
I was too upset. Besides, I was busy moving my
quarters.... But it was no use. Last night
I was awakened by hearing somebody working at the lock
of my bedroom. And I sat up till morning with
a pistol in my hand.... And-I don’t
think I had better live entirely alone-until
it is safer. Do you, Garry?”
“I should think not!”
said Westmore, turning red with anger.
“Did you wish us to see that letter?”
asked Barres.
She handed it to him. It was
typewritten; and he read it aloud, leisurely and very
distinctly, pausing now and then to give full weight
to some particularly significant and sinister sentence:
“MADEMOISELLE:
“For two years and more it has been
repeatedly intimated to you that your presence in
America is not desirable to certain people, except
under certain conditions, which conditions you refuse
to consider.
“You have impudently ignored these
intimations.
“Now, you are beginning to meddle.
Therefore, this warning is sent
to you: Mind your business and
cease your meddling!
“Moreover, you are invited to leave
the United States at your
early convenience.
“France, England, Russia, and Italy
are closed to you. Without doubt you understand
that. Also, doubtless you have no desire to venture
into Germany, Austria, Bulgaria, or Turkey. Scandinavia
remains open to you, and practically no other country
except Spain, because we do not permit you to go
to Mexico or to Central or South America. Do
you comprehend? We do not permit it.
“Therefore, hold your tongue and
control your furor scribendi
while in New York. And make arrangements
to take the next Danish
steamer for Christiania.
“This is a friendly warning.
For if you are still here in the United States two
weeks after you have received this letter, other measures
will be taken in your regard which will effectually
dispose of your troublesome presence.
“The necessity which forces us to
radical action in this affair is
regrettable, but entirely your own fault.
“You have, from time to time during
the last two years, received from us overtures of
an amicable nature. You have been approached
with discretion and have been offered every necessary
guarantee to cover an understanding with us.
“You have treated our advances with
frivolity and contempt. And
what have you gained by your defiance?
“Our patience and good nature has
reached its limits. We shall ask
nothing further of you; we deliver you
our orders hereafter. And
our orders are to leave New York immediately.
“Yet, even now, at the eleventh
hour, it may not be too late for us to come to some
understanding if you change your attitude entirely
and show a proper willingness to negotiate with us
in all good faith.
“But that must be accomplished within
the two weeks’ grace given
you before you depart.
“You know how to proceed. If
you try to play us false you had
better not have been born. If you
deal honestly with us your
troubles are over.
“This is final.
“THE WATCHER.”