Arcadia House, while it certainly
stood in need of the repairer’s hand, was by
no means uninhabitable, a fact which spoke well for
the honesty of its old-time builders. Its oak
beams, fastened together with tree-nails instead of
iron spikes, were still sound, and its brick walls,
unusually massive in construction, were without a crack.
Most important of all, the roof, shingled with the
best cypress, remained water-tight, and so protected
the interior from the ruinous effects of moisture.
In outward appearance, however, Arcadia House had sadly
degenerated. The stucco that originally covered
the outer walls had fallen away here and there, leaving
unsightly patches to vex the eye, and in many of the
windows the glazing had been destroyed either wholly
or in part.
Some years before Quinton Edge had
taken possession of this abandoned Eden. The
summers in the city were usually warm, and the Doomsmen
were in the habit of seeking the upper stories of
the tall buildings for relief, just as in the twentieth
century people went to the mountains for the heated
term. Quinton Edge, having accidentally discovered
Arcadia House recognized its advantages as a summer
residence, and he had his own reasons for desiring
the privacy that its secluded situation afforded.
He was satisfied with putting three or four of the
rooms into livable condition, and as for the rest it
was only necessary to repair the wall surrounding
the grounds and stock the storehouses with fuel and
provisions to make of Arcadia House the proverbial
castle. That it was his castle was his
own affair, and he had taken care that only the fewest
possible number should be in the secret. Old Kurt
and a couple of negro slave women made up the ordinary
domestic staff of the establishment, and until the
advent of Esmay and Nanna, some three months before,
Arcadia House had received no visitors. And he
would be a foolish man who called upon Quinton Edge
without an invitation.
Esmay, after parting from Constans,
paused a moment at the side entrance of the house.
She wanted to look back, but a stronger instinct forbade
it; she opened the door and passed into the hall.
It was a broad, low-ceilinged apartment,
and served as a common living-room to the master of
Arcadia House and his guests. A few embers burned
on the hearth, and a solitary candle set in a wall-sconce
strove with its feeble glimmer against the full tide
of silver moonshine that poured in through the uncurtained
windows facing on the river. Quinton Edge himself
was sitting at the corner of the fireplace smoking
a red-clay pipe with a reed stem. He rose as
Esmay entered, detaining her with a gesture as she
would have passed him.
“One moment, if you will.”
The girl stopped and waited for him
to continue. He considered a moment, looking
her over coolly. And indeed she made an attractive
picture as she stood there, the firelight glinting
redly in her tawny eyes and her cheeks incarnadined
with excitement. Quinton Edge told himself that
he had made no mistake. Then he spoke:
“You have waited most patiently
for me to announce my intentions. Let me see;
it is nearly three months since you came to Arcadia
House?”
The girl made no reply. Alert
and keeping herself well in hand, she would force
him to the first move. And Quinton Edge realized
that he would have to make it.
“It won’t be any news
to you that there are several people who would be
glad to be informed of your whereabouts. There’s
Boris, for one, and young Ulick we spoke
of them some time ago.”
“But to no purpose, sir; you remember that.”
“Perfectly. Still, in three
months a woman may change her mind many times.”
“But only for her own satisfaction.”
“Then it is hopeless to expect a decision from
you?”
“Evidently.”
“In that case it may become necessary for me
to act for you.”
“Oh!”
The exclamation told its own story,
and the girl in her vexation bit the lip that had
betrayed her. Quinton Edge smiled.
“Don’t distress yourself,”
he said, smoothly. “I am only giving you
the warning that courtesy entitles you to receive.”
Esmay reflected. Whatever his
intentions concerning her, she could not be the worse
off for knowing them. So she went on, steadily:
“Since you have already decided
upon my future, argument would be useless. But
perhaps I may assume that you have acted with some
small regard for my interests.”
“Not the least in the world,”
returned Quinton Edge, and Esmay smiled involuntarily
at frankness so unblushing. Whereupon and curiously
enough, Quinton Edge became suddenly of a great gravity,
the flippancy of his accustomed manner falling from
him as a cloak drops unnoticed from a man’s
shoulders. He rose to his feet, strode to a window,
and stood there for perhaps a minute looking out upon
the moonlit waters of the Lesser river. When
he turned again to the girl there were lines of hardness
about his mouth that she had never noticed before.
Yet, in speaking, his voice was soft, almost hesitating.
“Why should I tell you of these
things, and then again why not? We are both children
of the Doomsmen, and the matter concerns us nearly.
Not equally, of course, but listen and draw your own
conclusions.”
“There are clouds in the political
sky, and our little ship of state is in danger of
going upon the rocks, coincident with the death of
Dom Gillian, its old-time helmsman. And that
contingency in the natural course of events cannot
be long delayed.
“Now there are two nominal heirs Boris
and Ulick. Each deems himself the chosen successor
to his great-grandfather, and each is incompetent
to play the part. In the past the reins of power
have been held by the man who stands between them.
I am that third man.”
“As everybody knows now.”
“No; and for the simple reason
that there are few to care who rules so long as the
figure-head remains a presentable one. But let
me continue.
“Dom Gillian will formally nominate
one of his grandsons as his heir. It makes no
difference whether Boris or Ulick succeeds the
outcome must be the same. Both have personal
followings, and that of the disappointed one will
form a minority insignificant in numerical strength,
but capable of being kneaded by strong hands into
a compact mass.”
“A revolution, then?”
“By no means. I accept
the situation as it is and simply turn it to my own
advantage as third man. This makes
it necessary that the disappointed one should become
my absolute property. Now I hold the price that
he will demand for the surrender of his rights and
freedom nothing less than yourself.”
“I shall not affect to be surprised,”
said the girl, coolly. “But are you quite
sure that I am valued at so high a figure? It
would be mortifying for you to go into the market
and find that your currency had depreciated on your
hands.”
“I am not afraid,” he
answered. “The passion with Boris and Ulick
alike is genuine enough, albeit of somewhat different
sort. As you care for neither, it should be a
matter of indifference whose property you become.”
The blood burned redly under the girl’s
brown skin. “No one but a woman could know
how unforgivable is that insult,” she said.
Then, with a suddenly conceived appeal to the man
himself:
“But why a bargain at all?
You have the strength, the courage, the brains why
chaffer when you have but to strike once to win all?
You stand between Boris and Ulick; crush them both
in a single embrace and take their birthright of power.”
“Bah!” said the Doomsman,
contemptuously. “Do you think that the mere
possession of the wolf-skin is the object of the hunt?
It is the game that amuses me and not the final distribution
of the stakes. The game, I say, and it happens
to suit my humor to play it in this particular way.
You are simply a piece on the board, and I may win
with you or lose with you, or conclude to throw you
back in the box without playing you at all just
as it pleases me.”
“The means are at least nobler
than the end,” retorted the girl. “A
lofty ambition, truly, to stand behind a screen and
pull the strings of a puppet, who in turn lords it
over a handful of rick burners and cattle reivers.
Even my uncle Hugolin, Councillor Primus of Croye,
cuts a better figure when, clad in his state robe
of silver-fox fur, he presides over his parliament
of shopkeepers.”
“Granted,” returned Quinton
Edge, “but one and all dance together when I
choose to pipe. Is it such a contemptible thing
to rule a small world, if, indeed, it be the world?
I take all that there is to be taken. Could Alexander
or Cæsar do more?”
“I am beginning to comprehend,”
she said, slowly. “An ambition that confessedly
overleaps all bounds is at least not an ignoble one.”
He turned and searched her eyes.
“You will play the game with me?”
“No.”
“Yet a moment ago you were considering it the
possibility, I mean.”
“For the moment yes.
After three months of Arcadia House dulness almost
any amusement would seem worth while. But, frankly
speaking, it is the nature of the risk that appalls
me. I cannot afford to lose my stake nor even
to adventure it.”
“To speak plainly?”
“Well, then, you contribute
to the common capital but one thing your
brains. Later on, if the play goes against us,
you may have to throw on the table your liberty, and,
in the last extremity, your life. But that is
the utmost limit of your losses. I, on the contrary,
must contribute myself to the hazard, and no man understands
what that means to a woman.”
“How long is it since the woman
has understood?” he asked, mockingly, but Esmay
was silent.
“Well, then, if I cannot have
you with me I want you actively against me the
more balls in the air, the better sport for the juggler.
And at least we understand each other.”
“There is just the one question perhaps
an obvious one.”
“Yes.”
“Boris or Ulick? For of
course you know which of them is to be the old Dom’s
heir.”
“I do.”
“I am to be informed of my purchaser’s
name after the bargaining is over?
And only then?”
“Since you choose to put it in that way yes.”
Neither chose to break the silence
that fell between them, and Esmay, catching up her
skirt, turned to go.
“Good-night,” she said,
but Quinton Edge did not answer. Apparently he
had forgotten her very existence; he sat with feet
out-stretched to the fire, his eyes fixed upon the
curl of blue smoke that hung above his pipe bowl.
Esmay went up to the room on the second
floor which she shared with her sister. Nanna
was already in bed and asleep, but she started up as
Esmay entered, like a dog that has been listening
in its dreams for its master’s footsteps.
“Are you coming to bed?” she asked, drowsily,
and fell back among the pillows without even waiting
for the answer.
Esmay, unconscious of the cold, remained
seated at the window looking out upon the river, her
mind busy with the ultimatum which had just been presented
to it. That it was an ultimatum, she could not
doubt; Quinton Edge had been in deadly earnest in
confronting her with her fate a double-faced
one, as she thought, with a little shiver. She
could not avoid seeing it, no matter which way she
turned.
A waning moon in a clouding sky.
Even as she looked the two faces seemed to start out
from the uncertain shadows Boris, the Butcher involuntarily,
she shrank back from the window never that!
Ulick? Yes, she had been fond
of Ulick; they had been comrades and friends for so
long as she could remember. But Ulick in this
new light ah, that was different again.
Strangely enough she found herself contemplating this
last possibility even more fearfully than she had the
first. If the “Butcher” but laid a
finger upon her, surely her arm was strong enough
to drive the dagger home. But if it were Ulick,
what could she do but turn the weapon against her
own breast.
Plan and counterplan, and the argument
invariably came back to where it began she
must call upon Constans for the aid which he had promised
to place at her disposal. Hardly two hours had
passed since they had made the compact, and now she
was come to ask for its fulfilment. What would
he think of her? How interpret a precipitancy
so foreign to the cool assurance of her bearing in
the garden? She frowned; the instinct that urges
a woman to any folly short of the supreme blunder of
unveiling herself to masculine eyes took possession
of her. But only for a moment, for again the
imminence of the peril in which she stood broke over
her like a wave. There was but one thing to do;
the signal must be set this very night. The returning
expedition from the south might even now be encamped
at the High Bridge, and if Constans could help her
at all it must be at once.
Without waiting to parley further
with herself, Esmay went to the door opening into
the hall and looked out. The hour must be close
upon midnight; the house was quiet and dark.
A piece of white cloth had been the
signal agreed upon, and a fluttering handkerchief
should answer the purpose well enough without being
too conspicuous to alien eyes. Nanna still slept,
and Esmay, slipping into the hallway, stood listening
for a moment. Then she went on boldly; the moon
was still high, and she would not need a light.
It had been arranged that the signal
should be displayed from the southwestern window of
the cupola crowning the main roof. But the stairs
to the third story and attic were in a wing; to reach
them she must traverse a long corridor which led past
the apartments occupied by Quinton Edge. Esmay
noticed a gleam of yellow light upon the threshold
of his half-closed door as she passed it on winged
feet, but there was nothing extraordinary in that it
often burned there throughout the entire night.
But he was talking to somebody; she could hear distinctly
the opposition of the two voices. Who could it
be? for none of the servants ever entered these rooms,
and she had never known of any stranger being invited
thither. She stopped and listened for a moment
or two. But she could make out nothing distinctly,
and then she flushed hotly to think that she had been
tempted to eavesdropping. Let her be satisfied
in knowing that Quinton Edge was in his room and busily
engaged; at least, he would not disturb her.
The upper stories of the house had
not been occupied for many years, and it took all
the girl’s courage to carry her through the shadow-haunted
garret and up the ladder leading to the cupola proper.
But she accomplished the task of putting the signal-cloth
in position, and, still shaking with cold and excitement,
began to retrace her steps.
At the entrance to Quinton Edge’s
room she stopped again, not out of curiosity, but
as though yielding to the pressure of an invisible
hand. The door still stood ajar, but there was
no sound of voices. Again it was the invisible
hand that seemed to draw the door away, permitting
the girl to look within. An empty room, save
for the figure that sat at the table, his head buried
in his hands, the whole attitude one of intense weariness
and dejection. Even as she stood there he looked
up, and she saw his face mirrored in the glass that
hung suspended from the opposite wall. It was
Quinton Edge’s face, indisputably; but could
she ever have imagined that such capacity of pain
lay behind the mask she knew so well? The dark
eyes seemed to seize and hold her fast; then she realized
that they saw nothing beyond their own mirrored reflection.
Again the head sank forward into the hollowed hands,
and only the slow heave of the shoulders made certain
that it was a living man who sat there in the silence.
Noiselessly closing the door, Esmay
regained her room and, all clothed as she was, crept
into bed. Nanna stirred sleepily and put out a
protecting arm. How blessed the comfort of that
strong, warm clasp!