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"It _is_ all right," insisted the younger man. "You'll be aboard the same steamer with her as far as Aden, to keep an eye on me, y'know."
"On you?"
"You'd better. My word, Tom! don't you realize? If you--er--put it off, I'm bound to try for myself. Can't help it!"
"Think you've got a show, do you?" rallied Blake.
"I fancied I had as much chance as any one, before all this occurred. I at least should have been in the running, had it not been for the wreck--and you."
Blake stood for several moments, with his head down-bent and eyes fixed upon the ground. When he looked up and spoke, his face was grave and his voice deep and low.
"It's all of a piece, Jimmy. I don't blame you. Fact is, it's all the better. I've had all the advantage here. She and I've been living in the Cave Age, and I've proved myself an A-1 cave-man, if I do say it myself. It may be hard for her to get the right perspective of things, even after she's back in her own environment. Understand?"
"I take it, you mean she has seen the display of your strongest and best qualities, in circ.u.mstances that did not call for such non-essentials as mere polish--drawing room culture."
"You mean, for all that counts most with ninety-nine per cent of your cla.s.s and hers," rejoined Blake. "And there's the craving, too. I'll have to fight that out before I'll be fit to let her do anything. Think I don't know the difference between us? No! I'm going to go the limit, Jimmy. I can't do less, and be square to her. So I give you full leave.
You're free to play your hand for all there is in it. I'll stay here--"
"No--no! I'll not hear of it, Tom!"
"Yes, you will. I'll stay here, and you'll see her clear through to America--to Chicago--right to her papa's house and in through the door.
Understand? I don't make a single condition. You're to try your best to win; and if you do, why--don't you see?--it'll show that this which she thinks is the real thing is all a mistake."
"My word, old man! you'd not give her up without a fight? That wouldn't be like you!"
"It all depends. I won't if it's true she loves me--G.o.d! no! I'd go through h.e.l.l-fire for her!"
"If I know you, Tom, you'll suffer that and more, should the event prove she is mistaken as to the nature of her present feeling."
"What of it?" muttered Blake, with a look that told the other the uselessness of persuasion. "Think I'd let her marry me, long as there's a shadow of a chance of her being mistaken?"
"Very well, then," replied his friend. "You've said your say. Now I'll say mine. I can ease the tedium of Miss Leslie's trip up the coast; and I stand ready to do so--on two conditions. In the first place; you're to come aboard and stay aboard. After I find a chaperon for her at Aden, you're to go on home with me, to visit at Ruthby."
"Excuse _me!_" said Blake. "I can see myself parading around your ancestral stone-heap with your ducal dad!"
"You not only can, but will," rejoined the earl. "Come now. You'll be allowed to write that note at Port Mozambique, and keep in covert till Miss Leslie is safe off the s.h.i.+p. But you'll do the rest--you'll not stay here. Another thing--you have my word for it now--I shall endeavor no more than yourself to win her, until after she has returned to her home in the States."
"Lord, Jimmy! that's square--to me, I mean. But how about her?"
"No fear," rea.s.sured the Englishman. "She's received everywhere. She's been presented--at Court, y'know. If she stays over on this side a bit, there'll be dozens of 'em dancing attendance on her. Come, now; it's all settled."
"Well, I don't know," hesitated Blake.
"I tell you, you'll sail with us, else I shall leave her at Port Mozambique and come back for you."
"Um-m--if you take it that hard! But are you sure you can keep her satisfied till we put in there?"
"Trust me for that. If she becomes apprehensive, I'll put it that you'd rather be married in port, by the American consul."
"That's no lie. Say, what's the use of waiting till dark? You said there's a stewardess aboard. Jenny will sure be below with her until--until she's ready for the ceremony."
"Quite true, yes. Then it's all settled. At Port Mozambique, your note; you bunk forward, under cover, till Aden; then home with me for a visit; neither of us see her beyond Aden until we follow her to the States."
"Since you insist--yes, it's a go, Jimmy!" agreed Blake. He turned to hasten away along the gorge, past the baobab. "I'll be back soon. Got to pull down that flag."
Lord James followed, and saw him ascend to the cliff crest on the right, up a withered, leafless tree. The trunk had been burned through at the base in such manner that the top had fallen over against the edge of the rocky wall. A pile of stones offered an easy means of reaching the lower branches. The earl climbed up into the top, and watched his friend run forward over the broken ledges of the ridge.
The bamboo flagstaff was wrenched from its supports and lowered amidst a wild commotion of the nesting sea birds. Blake came back at a jog-trot, regardless of the fierce heat of the sun. In his arms were gathered the tattered folds of the signal flag.
"That's one thing I'm going to take away," he said, in response to the other's look of inquiry. "She sewed that leopard-skin dress all by herself, with a thorn for needle, so we could have her skirt for the flag."
"Fancy!" murmured the Englishman. "With a thorn, you say!"
Blake nodded, and followed him down the tree-ladder and back along the cleft to the baobab. There he paused to take down his archery outfit.
"Guess I'll keep these, too, as souvenirs," he remarked. He pointed to the blackened strips of flesh on the curing racks. "May I ask Lord Avondale to stay to dinner?"
"Very kind, I'm sure. But I've a previous engagement," declined his lords.h.i.+p.
"Now, now, Jeems. Needn't turn up your aristocratic nose at first-cla.s.s jerked antelope. Ought to 've been with us the first three days. Great _menu_--raw fish, cocoanuts, more cocoanuts, and then, just when we were whetting our teeth for a nice fat snake or an _entree_ of caterpillars, I landed that old papa leopard. Managed to haggle some of the india rubber off his bones. Tough!--but it was filling. All the same, we didn't wear out any more teeth on him after we got up the cleft and found the cubs. They were tender as spring lambs."
"And Miss Genevieve went through all that!"
"Yes. Told you she's the grittiest little girl ever--and a lady! My G.o.d, when I think of it all! . . . Well, she's come through it alive.
What's more, she's not going to suffer any bad consequences from it, not if I can help it! Come on. Got your heirloom rag?"
"Safe--inside pocket."
"All right, then. Come on. You don't think I'm aching to hang 'round this cursed hole, do you?--now that she's gone!"
He flung his bow and quiver over his shoulder, thrust the signal flag into the skin pouch, and turned to go.
Lord James stepped before him, with hand outstretched.
"One moment, Tom! Here's for home and America--a fair field, and best man wins!"
"It's a go!" cried Blake, gripping the proffered hand. "May she get the one that'll make her happiest!"
CHAPTER IV
THE EARL AND THE OTHERS
Miss Dolores Gantry shook the snow from her furs, and with the graceful a.s.surance of a yacht running aslant a craft-swarming harbor, cut into the crowd that surged through the Union Station. She brought up in an empty corner of the iron fence, close beside the exit gate through which pa.s.sengers were hurrying from the last train that had arrived.
Her velvety black eyes flashed an eager glance at the out-pouring stream, perceived a Mackinaw jacket, and turned to make swift comparison of the depot clock and the tiny bracelet watch on her slender wrist.