Juggernaut - BestLightNovel.com
You’re reading novel Juggernaut Part 23 online at BestLightNovel.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit BestLightNovel.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy
CHAPTER XIV
With one accord they peered up the dim well of the staircase. On the floor above, leaning over the rail, one hand clutching an army revolver, was a dishevelled young man, his hair tousled, his eyes swollen with sleep. He was clad in orange-striped silk pyjamas open at the neck, and even as he scowled darkly on the intruders below he stifled a capacious yawn. Although his face was in shadow there seemed something familiar about him. However, before anything had been said on either side, the belligerence faded from the young man's manner, his att.i.tude altered, and he gave vent to a lazy chuckle, as with his free hand he fastened the top b.u.t.ton of his sleeping attire and smoothed back his hair.
"Good G.o.d, I beg your pardon," he exclaimed. "I'd no idea; I thought it was burglars."
In a flash Esther saw that it was Captain Holliday. Roger also recognised him, and gave a nod, needlessly curt, Esther thought. After all, there was no good being indignant with the man for using profanity a moment ago when he could have had no knowledge that there was a woman present.
"We didn't dream anybody was here," Esther explained quickly. "We came to fetch something I left behind. I had a key, so we let ourselves in."
"Oh, I see! I woke up wondering who the h.e.l.l was roaming about down there. I knew it couldn't be Jacques; he's off for a couple of days.
I just roused up sufficiently to get my gun." He tossed the revolver lightly into the air and caught it again. "I'm hanging out here looking after things while Sartorius is away," he added, running his fingers over his unshaven chin.
"Well, we won't interrupt your siesta any longer," Roger returned, moving towards the front door and drawing Esther with him.
"Siesta! That's a good one. This is my first appearance to-day, old man. I say, if you hold on a minute, I'll shake you up a side-car. I feel inclined for one myself."
"No, thanks."
"No?" and the captain yawned again. "Then cheerio!"
The door slammed behind them, they descended the steps and got into the car without speaking. Esther could not see why her companion appeared to be so much annoyed. She stole a glance at him, and saw that his mouth had taken on a grim line that made him more than ever like his father, while his eyes were bleak and steely. An Englishman might have said that this was the Lancas.h.i.+re coming out in him.
"Think of anyone being able to sleep like that!" she ventured, laughing a little. "Why, it's nearly five o'clock. He must have been up all night."
She had not meant to say exactly that, on account of what was in her secret thoughts, but she was glad to see her friend's severe expression relax a little.
"Ah, that's the advantage of a care-free life," he remarked lightly.
"But doesn't he ever do anything?--any work, I mean?"
"Not that I know of, but I lost track of him after the war and only ran into him again about a year ago."
"He was in the air service, wasn't he?"
"Yes; he was at Marlborough with my brother, and the two of them went into the Flying Corps together as boys of eighteen. Malcolm was killed, and Arthur nearly so--he was in five or six bad smashes. He always had plenty of courage, a fine record for bravery. The old man has never forgotten that, nor the fact that he was Malcolm's friend."
"So that's how you came to know him?" mused Esther reflectively. "I'm glad to find out. He interests me rather."
"Does he, indeed!"
She was gazing thoughtfully at the road ahead, oblivious of the quick, faintly suspicious glance he bent upon her.
"Yes," she said slowly. "Merely, I suppose, because he is a new type for me. He's not in the least what I should ever have considered a lady's man, much too hard and indifferent, and yet I can see that he is extremely attractive."
"So you can see that, can you?"
"Oh, certainly! I can feel his charm myself, in a sort of way."
She failed to add that Holliday was not the style of man she particularly admired, partly because she was too busy thinking of Lady Clifford and the very evident fascination he possessed for her. She did not realise how long she sat absorbed in her speculations, and still less had she any idea that the man beside her was for the second time wondering if she, too, had fallen under the casual Arthur's spell, and reflecting regretfully that he could not well disillusion her without appearing caddish.
"It seems a bit of a come-down for him to be living in this comparative obscurity," he observed, half to himself. "I daresay he's comfortable enough, still, after the Ritzes and the Carltons..."
"I heard him tell the doctor a fortnight ago that he was absolutely stony, so I suppose that accounts for it. He was going to sell his car."
"Oh, I see!"
Indeed, Roger saw more than he would have cared to disclose. He felt nearly sure now of what he had at first only dimly suspected, namely, that Therese had been supplying Arthur with funds. He could comprehend now his stepmother's rage at being summarily cut down, as clearly as he understood the reasons back of Holliday's projected removal to the Argentine. The conclusions he was coming to appeared to him sordid and humiliating. He hoped his father had no suspicion of the truth.
They had reached the Villa Firenze; the car purred up the gravel drive under the curving branches of the acacias.
"I'm glad you asked me to come," Esther said sincerely as she alighted.
"I feel like another person."
"So do I."
He looked at her gravely and for a longer s.p.a.ce than the occasion demanded. Again there was the sense of pleasant confusion within her as she raced up the stairs to her room, a smile played about her lips, her pulse beat quickly. She had forgotten the matter that had been in her thoughts ever since she had entered the doctor's dining-room, but once she had closed her door it came back to her. That cigarette-tip with its scarlet edge uncurled--had her companion a.s.sociated it with anyone in particular? She wondered. Opening her bag, she shook out the tiny hairpin she had picked up off the floor. So few hairpins were used at all these days of s.h.i.+ngled heads ... yet she had recently seen one identical with this. It was Lady Clifford who used it to anchor into position her big wavy lock of hair.
"She was there last night, I am sure of it," Esther said to herself as she threw off her hat and coat. "It was quite safe, Jacques was away.
I'm the only person who knows, and that by the merest accident....
Well, it's just as well for her it isn't some malicious person. She's all right in my hands."
How odd it seemed to think that she, a stranger, should know more about Lady Clifford than her own family! Or perhaps it wasn't so strange after all. One's family was often the last to know things, its ignorance was proverbial. She felt a sudden wave of pity for the old man, lying ill and unsuspecting.
When she slipped back into Sir Charles's room, she found Miss Clifford in a chair by the window, knitting.
"He's just waked up," she said, rising and coming towards her. "You've had a good nap, haven't you, Charlie?"
"Oh, yes, once I managed to get to sleep. Therese would keep coming in and fidgeting around my pillow; she can't seem to let me alone."
"She does so want to be useful, poor child," the old lady made excuse gently. "You can't blame her if she doesn't know much about nursing.
I finally insisted on her going and lying down. I thought she looked very tired, as though she hadn't slept well."
Esther felt annoyed, particularly after what the doctor had said about trying to keep Lady Clifford out of the room.
"I hope I haven't stayed out too long," she said with compunction, glancing at her watch.
"Not a bit of it. You must get fresh air. I hope you'll go often with my nephew; it is good for him too. I'll go and get my tea now. You'll be wanting yours, too, no doubt," and with a kindly pat on Esther's shoulder she quitted the room.
"Is my son coming in after tea, nurse?" inquired the old man feebly.
"Yes, in a few minutes."
"I have something I want to say to him. Will you leave us alone?"
"Of course," she promised, smiling.
Sir Charles closed his eyes, then spoke without opening them: