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Was it Densham's fancy or had she indeed turned a shade paler. The little be-jewelled hand, which had been resting close to his, suddenly buried itself in the cus.h.i.+ons. Densham, who was watching her closely, was conscious of a hardness about her mouth which he had never noticed before. She was silent some time before she answered him.
"I am sorry," she said, slowly, "but I can tell you scarcely anything about them. I only met him once in India many years ago, and I have not the slightest idea as to who he is or where he came from. I am quite sure that I should not have recollected him last night but for his deformity."
Densham tried very hard to hide his disappointment.
"So you met him in India," he remarked. "Do you know what he was doing there? He was not in the service at all, I suppose."
"I really do not know," she answered, "but I think not. I believe that he is, or was, very wealthy. I remember hearing a few things about him--nothing of much importance. But if Mr. Harcutt is your friend," she added, looking at him fixedly, "you can give him some excellent advice."
"Harcutt is a very decent fellow," Densham said, "and I know that he will be glad of it."
"Tell him to have nothing whatever to do with Mr. Sabin."
Densham looked at her keenly.
"Then you do know something about him," he exclaimed.
She moved her chair back a little to where the light no longer played upon her face, and she answered him without looking up.
"Very little. It was so long ago and my memory is not what it used to be. Never mind that. The advice is good anyhow. If," she continued, looking steadily up at Densham, "if it were not Mr. Harcutt who was interested in these people, if it were any one, Francis, for whose welfare I had a greater care, who was really my friend, I would make that advice, if I could, a thousand times stronger. I would implore him to have nothing whatever to do with this man or any of his creatures."
Densham laughed--not very easily. His disappointment was great, but his interest was stimulated.
"At any rate," he said, "the girl is harmless. She cannot have left school a year."
"A year with that man," she answered, bitterly, "is a liberal education in corruption. Don't misunderstand me. I have no personal grievance against him. We have never come together, thank G.o.d! But there were stories--I cannot remember them now--I do not wish to remember them, but the impression they made still remains. If a little of what people said about him is true he is a prince of wickedness."
"The girl herself----?"
"I know nothing of," she admitted.
Densham determined upon a bold stroke.
"Look here," he said, "do me this favour--you shall never regret it. You and the Princess are intimate, I know: order your carriage and go and see her this afternoon. Ask her what she knows about that girl. Get her to tell you everything. Then let me know. Don't ask me to explain just now--simply remember that we are old friends and that I ask you to do this thing for me."
She rang the bell.
"My victoria at once," she told the servant. Then she turned to Densham. "I will do exactly what you ask," she said. "You can come with me and wait while I see the Princess--if she is at home. You see I am doing for you what I would do for no one else in the world. Don't trouble about thanking me now. Do you mind waiting while I get my things on? I shall only be a minute or two."
Her minute or two was half an hour. Densham waited impatiently. He scarcely knew whether to be satisfied with the result of his mission or not. He had learnt a very little--he was probably going to learn a little more, but he was quite aware that he had not conducted the negotiations with any particular skill, and the bribe which he had offered was a heavy one. He was still uncertain about it when Mrs. Thorpe-Satch.e.l.l reappeared. She had changed her indoor gown for a soft petunia-coloured costume trimmed with sable, and she held out her hands towards him with a delightful smile.
"Celeste is wretchedly awkward with gloves," she said, "so I have left them for you. Do you like my gown?"
"You look charming," he said, bending over his task, "and you know it."
"I always wear my smartest clothes when I am going to see my particular friends," she declared. "They quiz one so! Besides, I do not always have an escort! Come!"
She talked to him gaily on the stairs, as he handed her into the carriage, and all the way to their destination, yet he was conscious all the time of a subtle change in her demeanour towards him. She was a proud little woman, and she had received a shock. Densham was making use of her--Densham, of all men, was making use of her, of all women. He had been perfectly correct in those vague fears of his. She did not believe that he had come to her for his friend's sake. She never doubted but that it was he himself who was interested in this girl, and she looked upon his visit and his request to her as something very nearly approaching brutality. He must be interested in the girl, very deeply interested, or he would never have resorted to such means of gaining information about her. She was suddenly silent and turned a little pale as the carriage turned into the square. Her errand was not a pleasant one to her.
Densham was left alone in the carriage for nearly an hour. He was impatient, and yet her prolonged absence pleased him. She had found the Princess in, she would bring him the information he desired. He sat gazing idly into the faces of the pa.s.sers-by with his thoughts very far away. How that girl's face had taken hold of his fancy; had excited in some strange way his whole artistic temperament! She was the exquisite embodiment of a new type of girlhood, from which was excluded all that was crude and unpleasing and unfinished. She seemed to him to combine in some mysterious manner all the dainty freshness of youth with the delicate grace and savoir faire of a Frenchwoman of the best period. He scarcely fancied himself in love with her; at any rate if it had been suggested to him he would have denied it. Her beauty had certainly taken a singular hold of him. His imagination was touched. He was immensely attracted, but as to anything serious--well, he would not have admitted it even to himself. Liberty meant so much to him, he had told himself over and over again that, for many years at least, his art must be his sole mistress. Besides, he was no boy to lose his heart, as certainly Wolfenden had done, to a girl with whom he had never even spoken. It was ridiculous, and yet---- A soft voice in his ear suddenly recalled him to the present. Mrs. Thorpe-Satch.e.l.l was standing upon the pavement. The slight pallor had gone from her cheeks and the light had come back to her eyes. He looked at her, irresistibly attracted. She had never appeared more charming.
She stepped into the carriage, and the soft folds of her gown spread themselves out over the cus.h.i.+ons. She drew them on one side to make room for him.
"Come," she said, "let us have one turn in the Park. It is quite early, although I am afraid that I have been a very long time."
He stepped in at once and they drove off. Mrs. Thorpe-Satch.e.l.l laughingly repeated some story which the Princess had just told her. Evidently she was in high spirits. The strained look had gone from her face. Her gaiety was no longer forced.
"You want to know the result of my mission, I suppose," she remarked, pleasantly. "Well, I am afraid you will call it a failure. The moment I mentioned the man's name the Princess stopped me.
"'You mustn't talk to me about that man,' she said. 'Don't ask why, only you must not talk about him.'
"'I don't want to,' I a.s.sured her; 'but the girl.'"
"What did she say about the girl?" Densham asked.
"Well she did tell me something about her," Mrs. Thorpe-Satch.e.l.l said, slowly, "but, unfortunately, it will not help your friend. She only told me when I had promised unconditionally and upon my honour to keep her information a profound secret. So I am sorry, Francis, but even to you----"
"Of course, you must not repeat it," Densham said, hastily. "I would not ask you for the world; but is there not a single sc.r.a.p of information about the man or the girl, who he is, what he is, of what family or nationality the girl is--anything at all which I can take to Harcutt?"
Mrs. Thorpe-Satch.e.l.l looked straight at him with a faint smile at the corners of her lips.
"Yes, there is one thing which you can tell Mr. Harcutt," she said.
Densham drew a little breath. At last, then!
"You can tell him this," Mrs. Thorpe-Satch.e.l.l said, slowly and impressively, "that if it is the girl, as I suppose it is, in whom he is interested, that the very best thing he can do is to forget that he has ever seen her. I cannot tell you who she is or what, although I know. But we are old friends, Francis, and I know that my word will be sufficient for you. You can take this from me as the solemn truth. Your friend had better hope for the love of the Sphinx, or fix his heart upon the statue of Diana, as think of that girl."
Densham was looking straight ahead along the stream of vehicles. His eyes were set, but he saw nothing. He did not doubt her word for a moment. He knew that she had spoken the truth. The atmosphere seemed suddenly grey and sunless. He s.h.i.+vered a little--he was positively chilled. Just for a moment he saw the girl's face, heard the swirl of her skirts as she had pa.s.sed their table and the sound of her voice as she had bent over the great cl.u.s.ter of white roses whose faint perfume reached even to where they were sitting. Then he half closed his eyes. He had come very near making a terrible mistake.
"Thank you," he said. "I will tell Harcutt."
CHAPTER VIII.
A MEETING IN BOND STREET.
Wolfenden returned to his rooms to lunch, intending to go round to see his last night's visitor immediately afterwards. He had scarcely taken off his coat, however, before Selby met him in the hall, a note in his hand.
"From the young lady, my lord," he announced. "My wife has just sent it round."
Wolfenden tore the envelope open and read it.
"Thursday morning.
"DEAR LORD WOLFENDEN,--Of course I made a mistake in coming to you last night. I am very sorry indeed--more sorry than you will ever know. A woman does not forget these things readily, and the lesson you have taught me it will not be difficult for me to remember all my life. I cannot consent to remain your debtor, and I am leaving here at once. I shall have gone long before you receive this note. Do not try to find me. I shall not want for friends if I choose to seek them. Apart from this, I do not want to see you again. I mean it, and I trust to your honour to respect my wishes. I think that I may at least ask you to grant me this for the sake of those days at Deringham, which it is now my fervent wish to utterly forget.--I am, yours sincerely, "BLANCHE MERTON."
"The young lady, my lord," Selby remarked, "left early this morning. She expressed herself as altogether satisfied with the attention she had received, but she had decided to make other arrangements."
Wolfenden nodded, and walked into his dining-room with the note crushed up in his hand.
"For the sake of those days at Deringham," he repeated softly to himself. Was the girl a fool, or only an adventuress? It was true that there had been something like a very mild flirtation between them at Deringham, but it had been altogether harmless, and certainly more of her seeking than his. They had met in the grounds once or twice and walked together; he had talked to her a little after dinner, feeling a certain sympathy for her isolation, and perhaps a little admiration for her undoubted prettiness; yet all the time he had had a slightly uneasy feeling with regard to her. Her ingenuousness had become a matter of doubt to him. It was so now more than ever, yet he could not understand her going away like this and the tone of her note. So far as he was concerned, it was the most satisfactory thing that could have happened. It relieved him of a responsibility which he scarcely knew how to deal with. In the face of her dismissal from Deringham, any a.s.sistance which she might have accepted from him would naturally have been open to misapprehension. But that she should have gone away and have written to him in such a strain was directly contrary to his antic.i.p.ations. Unless she was really hurt and disappointed by his reception of her, he could not see what she had to gain by it. He was puzzled a little, but his thoughts were too deeply engrossed elsewhere for him to take her disappearance very seriously. By the time he had finished lunch he had come to the conclusion that what had happened was for the best, and that he would take her at her word.
He left his rooms again about three o'clock, and at precisely the hour at which Densham had rung the bell of Mrs. Thorpe-Satch.e.l.l's house in Mayfair he experienced a very great piece of good fortune.
Coming out of Scott's, where more from habit than necessity he had turned in to have his hat ironed, he came face to face, a few yards up Bond Street, with the two people whom, more than any one else in the world, he had desired to meet. They were walking together, the girl talking, the man listening with an air of half-amused deference. Suddenly she broke off and welcomed Wolfenden with a delightful smile of recognition. The man looked up quickly. Wolfenden was standing before them on the pavement, hat in hand, his pleasure at this unexpected meeting very plainly evidenced in his face. Mr. Sabin's greeting, if devoid of any special cordiality, was courteous and even genial. Wolfenden never quite knew whence he got the impression, which certainly came to him with all the strength and absoluteness of an original inspiration, that this encounter was not altogether pleasant to him.
"How strange that we should meet you!" the girl said. "Do you know that this is the first walk that I have ever had in London?"
She spoke rather softly and rather slowly. Her voice possessed a sibilant and musical intonation; there was perhaps the faintest suggestion of an accent. As she stood there smiling upon him in a deep blue gown, trimmed with a silvery fur, in the making of which no English dressmaker had been concerned, Wolfenden's subjection was absolute and complete. He was aware that his answer was a little flurried. He was less at his ease than he could have wished. Afterwards he thought of a hundred things he would have liked to have said, but the surprise of seeing them so suddenly had cost him a little of his usual self-possession. Mr. Sabin took up the conversation.
"My infirmity," he said, glancing downwards, "makes walking, especially on stone pavements, rather a painful undertaking. However, London is one of those cities which can only be seen on foot, and my niece has all the curiosity of her age."
She laughed out frankly. She wore no veil, and a tinge of colour had found its way into her cheeks, relieving that delicate but not unhealthy pallor, which to Densham had seemed so exquisite.
"I think shopping is delightful. Is it not?" she exclaimed.
Wolfenden was absolutely sure of it. He was, indeed, needlessly emphatic. Mr. Sabin smiled faintly.
"I am glad to have met you again, Lord Wolfenden," he said, "if only to thank you for your aid last night. I was anxious to get away before any fuss was made, or I would have expressed my grat.i.tude at the time in a more seemly fas.h.i.+on."
"I hope," Wolfenden said, "that you will not think it necessary to say anything more about it. I did what any one in my place would have done without a moment's hesitation."
"I am not quite so sure of that," Mr. Sabin said. "But by the bye, can you tell me what became of the fellow? Did any one go after him?"
"There was some sort of pursuit, I believe," Wolfenden said slowly, "but he was not caught."
"I am glad to hear it," Mr. Sabin said.
Wolfenden looked at him in some surprise. He could not make up his mind whether it was his duty to disclose the name of the man who had made this strange attempt.
"Your a.s.sailant was, I suppose, a stranger to you?" he said slowly.
Mr. Sabin shook his head.
"By no means. I recognised him directly. So, I believe, did you."
Wolfenden was honestly amazed.
"He was your guest, I believe," Mr. Sabin continued, "until I entered the room. I saw him leave, and I was half-prepared for something of the sort."
"He was my guest, it is true, but none the less, he was a stranger to me," Wolfenden explained. "He brought a letter from my cousin, who seems to have considered him a decent sort of fellow."
"There is," Mr. Sabin said dryly, "nothing whatever the matter with him, except that he is mad."
"On the whole, I cannot say that I am surprised to hear it," Wolfenden remarked; "but I certainly think that, considering the form his madness takes, you ought to protect yourself in some way."
Mr. Sabin shrugged his shoulders contemptuously.
"He can never hurt me. I carry a talisman which is proof against any attempt that he can make; but none the less, I must confess that your aid last night was very welcome."
"I was very pleased to be of any service," Wolfenden said, "especially," he added, glancing toward Mr. Sabin's niece, "since it has given me the pleasure of your acquaintance."
A little thrill pa.s.sed through him. Her delicately-curved lips were quivering as though with amus.e.m.e.nt, and her eyes had fallen; she had blushed slightly at that unwitting, ardent look of his. Mr. Sabin's cold voice recalled him to himself.
"I believe," he said, "that I overheard your name correctly. It is Wolfenden, is it not?"
Wolfenden a.s.sented.
"I am sorry that I haven't a card," he said. "That is my name."
Mr. Sabin looked at him curiously.
"Wolfenden is, I believe, the family name of the Deringhams? May I ask, are you any relation to Admiral Lord Deringham?"
Wolfenden was suddenly grave.
"Yes," he answered; "he is my father. Did you ever meet him?"
Mr. Sabin shook his head.
"No, I have heard of him abroad; also, I believe, of the Countess of Deringham, your mother. It is many years ago. I trust that I have not inadvertently----"
"Not at all," Wolfenden declared. "My father is still alive, although he is in very delicate health. I wonder, would you and your niece do me the honour of having some tea with me? It is Ladies' Day at the 'Geranium Club,' and I should be delighted to take you there if you would allow me."
Mr. Sabin shook his head.
Wolfenden had the satisfaction of seeing the girl look disappointed.
"We are very much obliged to you," Mr. Sabin said, "but I have an appointment which is already overdue. You must not mind, Helene, if we ride the rest of the way."
He turned and hailed a pa.s.sing hansom, which drew up immediately at the kerb by their side. Mr. Sabin handed his niece in, and stood for a moment on the pavement with Wolfenden.
"I hope that we may meet again before long, Lord Wolfenden," he said. "In the meantime let me a.s.sure you once more of my sincere grat.i.tude."
The girl leaned forward over the ap.r.o.n of the cab.
"And may I not add mine too?" she said. "I almost wish that we were not going to the 'Milan' again to-night. I am afraid that I shall be nervous."
She looked straight at Wolfenden. He was ridiculously happy.
"I can promise," he said, "that no harm shall come to Mr. Sabin to-night, at any rate. I shall be at the 'Milan' myself, and I will keep a very close look out."