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"I see," said the detective.
They came downstairs, and the detective made it known that he would re-visit the drawing-room. Inspector Keeble followed them. In that room Audrey remarked:
"And now I hope you're satisfied."
Mr. Hurley merely said:
"Will you please ring for Aguilar?"
Audrey complied. But she had to ring three times before the gardener's footsteps were heard on the uncarpeted stone floor of the hall.
"Aguilar," Mr. Hurley demanded. "Where is the key of the tank-room?"
Audrey sank into a chair, knowing profoundly that all was lost.
"It's at Mrs. Spatt's at Frinton," replied Aguilar glibly. "Mistress lets her have that room to store some boat-gear in. I expected she'd ha' been over before this to get it out. But the yachting season seems to start later and later every year these times."
Audrey gazed at the man as at a miracle-worker.
"Well, I think that's all," said Mr. Hurley.
"No, it isn't," Audrey corrected him. "You've got all my keys in your pocket--except one."
When the police had gone Audrey said to Aguilar in the hall:
"Aguilar, how on earth did you----"
But she was in such a state of emotion at the realisation of dangers affronted and past that she could not finish.
"I'm sorry I was so long answering the bell, m'm," replied Aguilar strangely. "But I'd put my list slippers on--them as your father made me wear when I come into the house, mornings, to change the plants, and I thought it better to put my boots on again before I come.... Shall I put the keys back in the doors, madam?"
So saying he touched his front hair, after his manner, and took the keys and retired. Audrey was as full of fear as of grat.i.tude. Aguilar daunted her.
CHAPTER x.x.xV
THE THIRD SORT OF WOMAN
"It was quite true what I told the detective. So I suppose you've finished with me for evermore!" Audrey burst out recklessly, as soon as she and Madame Piriac were alone together. The supreme moment had come, and she tried to grasp it like a nettle. Her adventurous rashness was, she admitted, undeniable. She had spoken the truth to the police officer about her ident.i.ty and her spinsterhood because with unusual wisdom she judged that fibs or even prevarication on such a subject to such an audience might entangle her in far more serious difficulties later on. Moreover, with Inspector Keeble present, she could not successfully have gone very far from the truth. It was a pity that Madame Piriac had witnessed the scene, for really, when Audrey came to face it, the deception which she had practised upon Madame Piriac was of a monstrous and inexcusable kind. And now that Madame Piriac knew the facts, many other people would have to know the facts--including probably Mr. Gilman. The prospect of explanations was terrible. In vain Audrey said to herself that the thing was naught, that she had acted within her rights, and that anyhow she had long ago ceased to be diffident and shy!... She was intimidated by her own enormities. And she also thought: "How could I have been silly enough to tell that silly tale about the Spatts? More complications. And poor dear Inspector Keeble will be so shocked."
After a short pause Madame Piriac replied, in a grave but kind tone:
"Why would you that I should have finished with you for ever? You had the right to call yourself by any name you wished, and to wear any ring-that pleased your caprice. It is the affair of n.o.body but yourself."
"Oh! I'm so glad you take it like that," said Audrey with eager relief.
"That's just what _I_ thought all along!"
"But it _is_ your affair!" Madame Piriac finished, with a peculiar inflection of her well-controlled voice. "I mean," she added, "you cannot afford to neglect it."
"No--of course not," Audrey agreed, rather dashed, and with a vague new apprehension. "Naturally I shall tell you everything, darling. I had my reasons. I----"
"The princ.i.p.al question is, darling," Madame Piriac stopped her. "What are you going to do now? Ought we not to return to the yacht?"
"But I must look after Jane Foley!" cried Audrey. "I can't leave her here."
"And why not? She has Miss Ingate."
"Yes, worse luck for her! Winnie would make the most dreadful mess of things if she wasn't stopped. If Winnie was right out of it, and Jane Foley had only herself and Aguilar to count on, there might be a chance. But not else."
"It is by pure hazard that you are here. n.o.body expected you. What would this young girl Mees Foley have done if you had not been here?"
"It's no good wasting time about that, darling, because I _am_ here, don't you see?" Audrey straightened her shoulders and put her hands behind her back.
"My little one," said Madame Piriac with a certain solemnity. "You remember our conversation in my boudoir. I then told you that you would find yourself in a riot within a month, if you continued your course. Was I right? Happily you have escaped from that horrible complication. Go no farther. Listen to me. You were not created for these adventures. It is impossible that you should be happy in them."
"But look at Jane Foley," said Audrey eagerly. "Is she not happy? Did you ever see anybody as happy as Jane? I never did."
"That is not happiness," replied Madame Piriac. "That is exaltation. It is morbid. I do not say that it is not right for her. I do not say that she is not justified, and that that which she represents is not justified. But I say that a role such as hers is not your role. To commence, she does not interest herself in men. For her there are no men in the world--there are only political enemies. Do you think I do not know the type? We have it, _chez nous_. It is full of admirable qualities--but it is not your type.
For you, darling, the world is inhabited princ.i.p.ally by men, and the time will come--perhaps soon--when for you it will be inhabited princ.i.p.ally by one man. If you remain obdurate, there must inevitably arrive a quarrel between that man and these--these riotous adventures."
"No man that I could possibly care for," Audrey retorted, "would ever object to me having an active interest in--er--politics."
"I agree, darling," said Madame Piriac. "He would not object. It is you who would object. The quarrel would occur within your own heart. There are two sorts of women--individualists and fanatics. It was always so. I am a woman, and I know what I'm saying. So do you. Well, you belong to the first sort of woman."
"I don't," Audrey protested. Nevertheless she recollected her thoughts on the previous night, near the binnacle and Mr. Gilman, about the indispensability of a man and about the futility of the state of not owning and possessing a man. The memory of these thoughts only rendered her more obstinate.
"But you will not have the courage to tell me that you are a fanatic?"
"No."
"Then what?"
"There is a third sort of woman."
"Darling, believe me, there is not."
"There's going to be, anyhow!" said Audrey with decision, and in English.
"And I won't leave Jane Foley in the lurch, either!... Now I'll just run up and have a talk with her, if you don't mind waiting a minute or two."
"But what are you going to do?" Madame Piriac demanded.
"Well," said Audrey. "It is obvious that there is only one safe thing to do. I shall take Jane on board the yacht. We shall sail off, and she'll be safe."
"On the yacht!" repeated Madame Piriac, truly astounded. "But my poor oncle will never agree. You do not know him. You do not know how peculiar he is.
Never will he agree! Besides----"