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"I'm going to the drug-store to git me some cigars."
Nicky paused on the curb, looking for a cab. He had dismissed his own, hoping to spend a long while with Marie Louise. He saw that he was not likely to pick up a cab in such a side-street, and so he walked on briskly.
He was furious with Marie Louise. He had had hopes of her, and she had fooled him. These Americans were no longer dependable.
And then he heard footsteps on the walk, quick footsteps that spelled hurry. Nicky drew aside to let the speeder pa.s.s; but instead he heard a constabular "Hay!" and his shoulder-blades winced.
It was only Jake Nuddle. Jake had no newspaper to sell, but he had an idea for a collaboration which would bring him some of that easy money the Germans were squandering like drunken sailors.
"You was just talkin' to my sister-in-law," said Jake.
"Ah, you are then the brother of Marie Louise?"
"Yep, and I couldn't help hearin' a little of what pa.s.sed between you."
Jake's slyness had a detective-like air in Nicky's anxious eyes. He warned himself to be on guard. Jake said:
"I'm for Germany unanimous. I think it's a rotten shame for America to go into this war. And some of us Americans are sayin' we won't stand for it. We don't own no Congersmen; we're only the protelarriat, as the feller says; but we're goin' to put this country on the b.u.m, and that's what old Kaiser Bill wants we should do, or I miss my guess, hay?"
Nicky was cautious:
"How do you propose to help the All Highest?"
"Sabotodge."
"You interest me," said Nicky.
They had come to one of the circles that moon the plan of Was.h.i.+ngton.
Nicky motioned Jake to a bench, where they could command the approach and be, like good children, seen and not heard. Jake outlined his plan.
When Nicky Easton had rung Marie Louise's bell he had not imagined how much help Marie Louise would render him in giving him the precious privilege of meeting her unprepossessing brother-in-law; nor had she dreamed what peril she was preparing for Davidge in planning to secure for him and his s.h.i.+pyard the services of this same Jake, as lazy and as amiable as any side-winder rattlesnake that ever basked in the sunlit sand.
BOOK IV
AT THE s.h.i.+PYARD
[Ill.u.s.tration: There was something hallowed and awesome about it all. It had a cathedral majesty.]
CHAPTER I
Davidge despised a man who broke his contracts. He broke one with himself and despised himself. He broke his contract to ignore the existence of Marie Louise. The next time he came to Was.h.i.+ngton he sought her out. He called up the Widdicombe home and learned that she had moved. She had no telephone yet, for it took a vast amount of time to get any but a governmental telephone installed. So he noted her address, and after some hesitation decided to call. If she did not want to see him, her butler could tell him that she was out.
He called. Marie Louise had tried in vain to get in servants who would stay. Abbie talked to them familiarly--and so did Jake. The virtuous ones left because of Jake, and the others left because of Abbie.
So Abbie went to the door when Davidge called. He supposed that the butler was having a day off and the cook was answering the bell. He offered his card to Abbie.
She wiped her hand on her ap.r.o.n and took it, then handed it back to him, saying:
"You'll have to read it. I ain't my specs."
Davidge said, "Please ask Miss Webling if she can see Mr. Davidge."
"You're not Mr. Davidge!" Abbie gasped, remembering the importance Marie Louise gave him.
"Yes," said Davidge, with proper modesty.
"Well, I want to know!"
Abbie wiped her hand again and thrust it forward, seizing his questioning fingers in a practised clench, and saying, "Come right on in and seddown." She haled the befuddled Davidge to a chair and regarded him with beaming eyes. He regarded her with the eyes of astonishment--and the ears, too, for the amazing servant, forever wiping her hands, went to the stairs and shrieked:
"Mamee-eese! Oh, Ma-mee-uz! Mist' Davidge is shere."
Poor Mamise! She had to come down upon such a scene, and without having had any chance to break the news that she had a sister she had to introduce the sister. She had no chance to explain her till a fortunate whiff of burning pastry led Abbie to groan, "My Lord, them pies!" and flee.
If ever Marie Louise had been guilty of sn.o.bbery, she was doing penance for it now. She was too loyal to what her family ought to have been and was not to apologize for Abbie, but she suffered in a social purgatory.
Worse yet, she had to ask Davidge to give her brother-in-law a job.
And Davidge said he would. He said it before he saw Jake. And when he saw him, though he did not like him, he did not guess what treachery the fellow planned. He invited him to come to the s.h.i.+pyard--by train.
He invited Mamise to ride thither in her own car the next day to see his laboratory for s.h.i.+ps, never dreaming that the German menace was already planning its destruction.
Not only in cheap plays and farces do people continue in perplexities that one question and one answer would put an end to. In real life we incessantly dread to ask the answers to conundrums that we cannot solve, and persist in misery for lack of a little frankness.
For many a smiling mile, on the morrow, Davidge rode in a torment. So stout a man, to be fretted by so little a matter! Yet he was unable to bring himself to the point of solving his curiosity. The car had covered forty miles, perhaps, while his thoughts ran back and forth, lacing the road like a dog accompanying a carriage. A mental speedometer would have run up a hundred miles before he made the plunge and popped the subject.
"Mamise is an unusual name," he remarked.
Marie Louise was pleasantly startled by the realization that his long silence had been devoted to her.
"Like it?" she asked.
"You bet." The youthfulness of this embarra.s.sed him and made her laugh. He grew solemn for about eleven hundred yards of road that went up and down and up and down in huge billows. Then he broke out again:
"It's an unusual name."
She laughed patiently. "So I've heard."
The road shot up a swirling hill into an old, cool grove.
"I only knew one other--er--Mamise."