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"Will you please be sensible?"
"You invite something to the contrary, Bedelia," he ventured.
"Haven't I requested you to--"
"I think of you only as Bedelia," he made haste to explain. "Bedelia will stick to you forever, you see, while Miss Guile is almost ephemeral. It cannot live long, you know, with so many other names eager to take its place. But Bedelia--ah, Bedelia is everlasting."
She laughed joyously, naturally. "You really are quite wonderful, Mr.
Schmidt. Still I must change the subject. I trust the change will not affect your glibness, for it is quite exhilarating. How long do you purpose remaining in Interlaken?"
"That isn't changing the subject," said he. "I shall be here for a week or ten days--or perhaps longer." He put it in the form of a question, after all.
"Indeed? How I envy you. I am sorry to say I shall have to leave in a day or two."
His face fell. "Why?" he demanded, almost indignantly.
"Because I am enjoying myself," she replied.
"I don't quite get your meaning."
"I am having such a good time disobeying my father, Mr. Schmidt, and eluding pursuers. It is only a matter of a day or two before I am discovered here, so I mean to keep on dodging. It is splendid fun."
"Do you think it is quite fair to me?"
"Did I induce you to come here, good sir?"
"You did," said he, with conviction. "Heaven is my witness. I would not have come but for you. I am due at home by this time."
"Are you under any obligations to remain in Interlaken for a week or ten days?"
"Not now," he replied. "Do you mind telling me where you are going to, Miss Guile?"
"First to Vienna, then--well, you cannot guess where. I have decided to go to Edelweiss."
"Edelweiss!" he exclaimed in astonishment. He could hardly believe his ears.
"It is the very last place in the world that my father would think of looking for me. Besides I am curious to see the place. I understand that the great Mr. Blithers is to be there soon, and the stupid Prince who will not be tempted by millions, and it is even possible that the extraordinary Miss Blithers may take it into her head to look the place over before definitely refusing to be its Princess. I may find some amus.e.m.e.nt--or entertainment as an on-looker when the riots begin."
He was staring at her wide-eyed and incredulous. "Do you really mean to say you are going to Graustark?"
"I have thought of doing so. Don't you think it will be amusing to be on the scene when the grand climax occurs? Of course, the Prince will come off his high horse, and the girl will see the folly of her ways, and old Mr. Blithers will run 'rough shod over everybody, and--but, goodness, I can't even speculate on the possibilities."
He was silent. So this was the way the wind blew, eh? There was but one construction to be put upon her decision to visit the Capital of Graustark. She _had_ taken it into her head "to look the place over before definitely refusing to be its Princess!" His first thrill of exultation gave way to a sickening sense of disappointment.
All this time she was regarding him through amused, half-closed eyes.
She had a distinct advantage over him. She knew that he was the Prince of Graustark; she had known it for many days. Perhaps if she had known all the things that were in his cunning brain, she would not have ventured so far into the comedy she was constructing. She would have hesitated--aye, she might have changed her methods completely. But she was in the mood to do and say daring things. She considered her position absolutely secure, and so she could afford to enjoy herself for the time being. There would be an hour of reckoning, no doubt, but she was not troubled by its promise of castigation.
"Poor Prince!" she sighed pityingly. He started. The remark was so unexpected that he almost betrayed himself. It seemed profoundly personal. "He will be in very hot water, I fear."
He regarded her coldly. "And you want to be on hand to see him squirm, I suppose."
She took instant alarm. Was she going too far? His query was somewhat disconcerting.
"To be perfectly frank with you, Mr. Schmidt, I am going to Graustark because no one will ever think of looking for me in such an out-of- the-way place. I am serious now, so you must not laugh at me.
Circ.u.mstances are such that I prefer to seek happiness after a fas.h.i.+on of my own. My parents love me, but they will not understand me. They wish me to marry a man they have picked out for me. I intend to pick out my own man, Mr. Schmidt. You may suspect, from all that you have seen, that I am running away from home, from those who are dearest in all the world to me. You knew that I was carefully watched in Paris. You know that my father fears that I may marry a man distasteful to him, and I suppose to my mother, although she is not so--"
"Are his fears well-founded?" he asked, rudely interrupting her. "Is there a man that he has cause to fear? Are--are you in love with some one, Bedelia?"
"Do not interrupt me. I want you to know that I am not running away from home, that I shall return to it when I see fit, and that I am not in love with the man they suspect. I want you to be just with me.
You are not to blame my father for anything, no matter how absurd his actions may appear to you in the light of the past few days. It is right that he should try to safeguard me. I am wayward but I am not foolish. I shall commit no silly blunder, you may be sure of that.
Now do you understand me better?"
She was very serious, very intense. He laid his hand on hers, and she did not withdraw it. Emboldened, his hand closed upon the dainty fingers and an instant later they were borne to his hot lips.
"You have said that I came here in search of a light adventure," he whispered, holding her hand close to his cheek as he bent nearer to her. "You imply that I am a trifler, a light-o'-love. I want you to understand me better. I came here because I--"
"Stop!" she pleaded. "You must not say it. I am serious--yes, I know that you are serious too. But you must wait. If you were to say it to me now I should have to send you away and--oh, believe me, I do not want to do that. I--I--"
"You love no one else?" he cried, rapturously.
She swayed slightly, as if incapable of resisting the appeal that called her to his heart. Her lips were parted, her eyes glowed luminously even in the shadows, and she scarcely breathed the words:
"I love no one else."
A less n.o.ble nature than his would have seized upon the advantage offered by her sudden weakness. Instead, he drew a long, deep breath, straightened his figure and as he gently released the imprisoned hand, the prince in him spoke.
"You have asked me to wait. I am sure that you know what is in my heart. It will always be there. It will not cut and slash and stab, for it is the most tender thing that has ever come into my life--or yours. It must never be accused of giving pain to you, so I shall obey you--and wait. You are right to avoid the risk of entrusting a single word of hope to me. I am a pa.s.ser-by. My sincerity, my honesty of purpose remain to be proved. Time will serve my cause. I can only ask you to believe in me--to trust me a little more each day--and to let your heart be my judge."
She spoke softly. "I believe in you, I trust you even now, or I would not be here. You are kind to me. Few would have been so generous. We both are pa.s.sers-by. It is too soon for us to judge each other in the full. I must be sure--oh, I must be sure of myself. Can you understand? I must be sure of myself, and I am not sure now. You do not know how much there is at stake, you can not possibly know what it would mean to me if I were to discover that our adventure had no real significance in the end. I know it sounds strange and mysterious, or you would not look so puzzled. But unless I can be sure of one thing--one vital thing--our adventure has failed in every respect. Now, I must go in. No; do not ask me to stay--and let me go alone. I prefer it so. Good night, my comrade."
He stood up and let her pa.s.s. "Good night, my princess," he said, clearly and distinctly. She shot a swift glance into his eyes, smiled faintly, and moved away. His rapt gaze followed her. She entered the door without so much as a glance over her shoulder.
"My princess," he repeated wonderingly, to himself. "Have I kissed the hand of my princess? G.o.d in heaven, is there on earth a princess more perfect than she? Can there be in all this world another so deserving of wors.h.i.+p as she?"
Late at night she sat in her window looking up at the peaceful Jungfrau. A dreamy, ineffably sweet smile lay in her dark eyes. The hand he kissed had lain long against her lips. To herself she had repeated, over and over again, the inward whisper:
"What will my dear, simple old dad say if I marry this man after all?"
In a window not ten feet away, he was staring out into the night, with lowering eyes and troubled heart, and in his mind he was saying:
"What will my people do if I marry this woman after all?"
CHAPTER XX
LOVE IN ABEYANCE