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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #50499 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/50499)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Vanishing Point, by Coningsby Dawson
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: The Vanishing Point
-
-Author: Coningsby Dawson
-
-Illustrator: James Montgomery Flagg
-
-Release Date: November 19, 2015 [EBook #50499]
-Last Updated: March 12, 2018
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE VANISHING POINT ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David Widger from page images generously
-provided by the Internet Archive
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-THE VANISHING POINT
-
-By Coningsby Dawson
-
-Author of “The Kingdom Round the Corner,”
-
-“The Garden Without Walls,” etc.
-
-Illustrated By James Montgomery Flagg
-
-New York
-
-MCMXXII
-
-Copyright, 1922, by Cosmopolitan Book Corporation
-
-
-
-[Illustration: 0001]
-
-
-[Illustration: 0008]
-
-
-[Illustration: 0009]
-
-
-“When you gaze up a railroad track,” said Varensky, “there's always
-a point in the infinite distance where, just before they vanish, the
-parallel rails seem, to join. If a train were ever to reach that point
-it would mean death.
-
-“Life's like that--a track along which we travel on the parallel rails
-of possibility and desire. The lure of the idealist is to overtake the
-illusion, where possibility and desire seem to merge, and the safety of
-the journey ends.”
-
-
-
-
-THE VANISHING POINT
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER THE FIRST--THE DISAPPEARANCE OF A PATRIOT
-
-
-I
-
-
-PRINCE ROGOVICH! Prince Rogovich!”
-
-Staring up at the clammy wall of the liner, blanched by searchlights,
-against which the little tug bumped and jostled, Philip Hindwood could
-hear the Prince's name being shouted in staterooms, along decks and
-passageways.
-
-It had been midnight when they had drifted like a gallivanting hotel,
-all portholes ablaze, into the starlit vagueness of Plymouth Harbor. The
-_Ryndam_ did not dock there; she only halted long enough to put off the
-English passengers and to drop the English mail. There had been three
-passengers to land, of whom Hindwood had been the first; the rest were
-disembarking at Boulogne or Rotterdam. They had been met just outside
-the harbor by the tug, and the transshipping of the mail had immediately
-commenced. The last bag had been tossed over the side; the immigration
-officials had completed their inspection. Santa Gorlof, the second
-passenger for England, radiantly smiling above her sables, had come down
-the gangplank. It was for the third passenger that the liner delayed and
-the tug still waited.
-
-“Prince Rogovich! Prince Rogovich!”
-
-The cries were becoming more insistent and impatient. They broke on the
-stillness with the monotony of despair. To judge by the sound, every
-soul aboard the liner had taken up the search, from the firemen in the
-stoke-hole to the Marconi men on the top deck. Even the thud of the
-engines seemed ominous, like the pounding of a heart stifled with
-foreboding. Across the velvety expanse of water, as though they had
-a secret they were trying to communicate, shore lights winked and
-twinkled. They seemed to be signaling the information that, no matter
-how long the search was maintained, Prince Rogovich would not be found
-that night.
-
-
-II
-
-
-Except for this last disturbing incident, it had been a pleasant
-voyage--the most pleasant Philip Hindwood could remember. They had left
-New York in the brilliant clearness of blue September skies. The clear
-blueness had followed them. The slow-going, matronly _Ryndam_ had
-steamed on an even keel through seas as tranquil and reflective as the
-proverbial mill-pond. Her company had been dull, consisting mainly of
-American drummers and Dutch Colonials returning from Java. But he had no
-grounds for complaint; he had chosen her for her dullness. He had wanted
-to lay up a store of rest before plunging into the strenuous excitements
-which were the purpose of his journey.
-
-He had gone aboard her in an unsociable frame of mind, determined to
-talk to nobody; the success of his errand depended on his silence. He
-believed that he was half a year ahead of the times. When his rivals had
-caught up to where he was at present, he would have made himself a world
-power and dictator.
-
-But the dullness of the ship's company had exceeded expectations.
-Because of this he had broken his compact and allowed his privacy to
-be invaded by two vivid personalities. The first had been Prince
-Rogovich--the second, Santa Gorlof.
-
-Prince Rogovich had evidently boarded the ship with precisely the same
-intentions as himself. All his meals had been served in his stateroom;
-it had not been until the evening of the third day that he had appeared
-on deck. He was a man of commanding height, lean of hip and contemptuous
-of eye, with the disquieting, haughty reticence of an inscrutable
-Pharaoh. There was something alluring and oriental about the man, at
-once sinister and charming. Behind his silky black beard he hid a
-face which was deathly white; its pallor was not of ill-health, but
-of passion. It was easy to believe all the rumors about him, both as
-regarded his diabolical cleverness and his sensual cruelty. His enemies
-were legion. Even among his countrymen he could count few friends,
-although he was reckoned their greatest patriot. In Poland he was
-suspected as much as he was admired, and was accused of intriguing
-in order that he might set up a throne for himself. The object of his
-flying visit to America had been to consult financial magnates on the
-advisability of floating an international loan in the interests of
-Poland. There were men the world over and in Russia especially, who
-would have paid a king's ransom for advance information as to what
-answer the financiers had returned.
-
-Though Hindwood would not have claimed as much, he and the Prince were
-two of a kind, equally magnificent in their dreams, equally relentless
-in their means of realization, and equally insatiable in their
-instinct for conquest. Their difference lay in the fact that the Polish
-aristocrat had already attained the goal toward which the self-made
-American was no more than striving.
-
-Their first meeting had happened in the early hours of the morning.
-Hindwood, being unable to sleep, had partly dressed and gone on deck.
-There, in the grayness of the dawn, he had espied a tall figure slowly
-pacing, accompanied by a snow-white Russian wolfhound. It was the
-remarkable grace of the man that had first held him, his faculty for
-stillness, his spectral paleness, his padded tread. But the moment
-he had approached him, the sense of his grace had been obscured by an
-atmosphere of menace. So sinister was his beauty that it had required
-an effort to pass him twice. Secretly Hindwood had observed him. He was
-like his hound, treacherously languid, insolently fastidious, and bred
-to the point of emaciation. But his languor was the disguise of a hidden
-fierceness, which betrayed itself in his red, curved lips and the marble
-coldness of his stare. It was at the third time of passing, when he had
-all but gone by him, that he had heard his name spoken.
-
-“Mr. Hindwood.” Then, as he had turned, “You're the famous railroad
-expert. Am I right? It's fortunate we should have met. I missed you in
-America. So you, too, are among the sleepless!”
-
-Then and there had started the first of those amazing conversations,
-which had held Hindwood fascinated for the remainder of the voyage.
-It had made no difference that in his heart he had almost hated the
-man--hated his ruthlessness, his subtlety, his polished immorality;
-the moment he commenced to talk, he surrendered to his spell. Their
-encounters had taken place for the most part between midnight and
-sunrise. To be his companion was like eavesdropping on the intimate
-counsels of all the cabinets of Europe or like reading your daily paper
-a year before it was published for the rest of mankind. On matters
-which did not concern him the Prince could be brilliantly confessional;
-indiscretion was the bait with which he lured his victims to reveal
-themselves. The secrets which were his own he kept. Never once did he
-drop a hint that would indicate the success or failure of his recent
-mission. The single time that, Santa Gorlof had asked him point-blank,
-his dark eyes had become focusless as opals, and his white face, under
-its silky covering of beard, unnoticing and sphinx-like. It was then
-that Hindwood had recognized the resemblance to Pharaoh in his tyrannic
-immobility and silence.
-
-And Santa Gorlof! There was a woman--mysterious, exotic, well-nigh
-mythical! Compared with her the Prince was an open book. From the start
-she had made no attempt to explain herself, had referred neither to her
-past nor her future, had offered no credentials. She had imposed herself
-on Hind-wood like a goddess who expected to be worshiped. She had swept
-him off his feet, beaten aside his caution, and reached his heart before
-he was aware.
-
-But was it his heart? How often, in the past few days, he had asked
-himself that question! He didn't want to believe that it was his heart.
-He was a man who rode alone; his aloneness was the reason for his
-swiftness. He had been tricked once by a woman. That was when he was
-a boy; now he was a man nearing forty. She had cheated him so cruelly
-that, though she had been dead many years, the bitterness still rankled.
-Behind the beauty of all women his skepticism detected the shallow
-loveliness of the one false woman who had stolen his idealism, that she
-might trample on it.
-
-He did not love Santa. He had assured himself a thousand times that he
-did not love her. She was too dangerous, too incalculable. He had spent
-long hours of wakeful nights in completing the inventory of her bad
-points. And yet, while he had been with her, his veins had run
-fire; while he had been apart from her, all his pleasures had seemed
-tasteless. Who was she? Whence had she come? Whither was she going?
-What had been her business on the _Ryndam_, and what had Prince Rogovich
-known about her? The Prince had known something--something which had
-given him power over her. At a glance from him, her caprice had
-vanished and she had become downcast as a child. He had muttered a few
-unintelligible words, probably in Polish, and her pride had crumbled.
-
-Hindwood was at a loss to account for these signs of a secret
-understanding. It had been he who had introduced them. It had been Santa
-who had confessed to curiosity about the Prince and had begged for the
-introduction. The moment he had made them acquainted, they had seemed to
-become delighted with each other's company--so delighted that there had
-been times when he himself had felt excluded. A half-humorous rivalry
-for Santa's favors had sprung up between the Prince and himself. This
-atmosphere of jealousy had been accentuated by the behavior of the
-wolfhound; Santa's mere approach had been sufficient to rouse him
-into fury. He had become so dangerous that he had had to be sent below
-whenever she was present.
-
-And yet, despite her manifest efforts to hold the Prince enchanted,
-behind his back she had expressed the most vigorous aversion. She had
-spoken of his reputation for treachery and the whispers that went the
-rounds of his heartlessness toward women. During the final days of the
-voyage she had partly atoned for this inconsistency by appealing to
-Hindwood to protect her against the Prince's far too pressing attention.
-She had declared herself to be in some kind of danger--though what
-kind, whether moral or physical, she had left him to conjecture. She
-had rather flattered him by her appeal; nevertheless, he had been
-considerably surprised to observe how little interest she had still
-displayed in protecting herself. During the whole of that last day,
-while they had been approaching the white line of Cornish coast, she had
-scarcely devoted to him a glance or a word; every minute she had spent
-with His Highness, whom she professed to regard with so much terror. She
-had created the impression of employing every trick at her disposal in a
-frantic attempt to secure him as her conquest.
-
-If, as many of the passengers had asserted, the presence of Santa Gorlof
-and the Prince on the same boat had been no accident, then what had been
-the object of their elaborately planned deception? Were they lovers who
-had chosen this secret method of traveling in order to avoid a scandal?
-Or was she one of the many women whom he was reported to have abandoned,
-who had seized the leisure of an Atlantic voyage as an opportunity for
-reinstating herself in his affection?
-
-As Hindwood listened in the darkness to the Prince's name being shouted
-and waited for the tug to cast off, the surmise strengthened into
-certainty that he had been the dupe of a piece of play-acting, the
-purpose of which he could not fathom.
-
-
-III
-
-
-Philip!”
-
-He had been so absorbed in his thoughts that he had not noticed how she
-had stolen up behind him. Without removing his arms from the rail, he
-turned slowly and surveyed her.
-
-An enviable woman! And her age? Perhaps thirty. She was probably a
-Slav--either Russian or Polish. Her face was smooth as marble, high
-cheekboned and golden in complexion. Her eyes were almond-shaped,
-heavy-lidded, and of the palest gray. Her lips were passionate and
-always a little parted, revealing a line of perfect whiteness like a
-streak of snow between the curling edges of two rose-petals. But it was
-her hair that was her glory--abundant as night, blue-black as steel, and
-polished as metal. She wore it simply, gathered back from her forehead
-and caught in a loose knot, low against her neck. There was an air of
-indefinable aristocracy about her; perhaps it was the slightness of her
-figure and the alert composure of her carriage. And then there was a
-touch of the exotic, wistfully sad, yet exceedingly mocking. Like so
-many Slavs, behind the European there lurked a hint of the Asiatic.
-If her eyes had been darker, she might easily have passed for a Hindoo
-princess.
-
-Her fascination, quite apart from her beauty, lay in the fact that she
-was so ravishingly feminine. To be a woman was her proud profession--and
-in this again she was Asiatic. What hours she must have spent over
-pampering her body! She was sleek and groomed as a race-horse.
-Physically she was the last word in feminine perfection. Her string
-of pearls was worth more than most men earn in a lifetime. Her sables
-represented the year's income of a millionaire. There was no item of her
-attire that was not sumptuous and that had not been acquired regardless
-of expense. To have achieved her luxuriance of beauty must have
-dissipated a fortune. Whose fortune? Surely, not hers!
-
-His mind was haunted by misgivings as he watched her. He had so nearly
-allowed himself to care for her. It was only her lightness and
-willful inconsiderateness that had prevented. But now that he had been
-prevented, her employment of his Christian name struck him as singularly
-inappropriate. It made him suspect a trap. It put him in a mood to
-interpret any tenderness on her part as strategy, as a signal that
-something was wanted.
-
-While he eyed her in silence, she drew nearer and leaned across the
-rail. Her shoulder pressed him. He was aware of the tingling sensation
-of her warmth, like a little hand caressing. He caught her fragrance,
-secret and somnolent as the magic of hidden rose-gardens in Damascus.
-
-She spoke. Her voice was deep and foreign; it seemed too deep to be pent
-in so slight a body. It was harsh in many of its tones, as though there
-had been times when it had been parched with thirst. It conjured visions
-of caravans creeping across molten deserts. It was hypnotic, barbaric.
-In listening to it, he lost sight of the exquisite sophistication of her
-appearance. His imagination reclothed her, loosening her hair, veiling
-her face, shrouding her in a robe of gold and saffron, slipping sandals
-on her feet and making her ankles tinkle with many bangles.
-
-“You don't like me any more. Is it not so?” she questioned softly. “My
-master is offended.”
-
-He shook himself irritably, as though he were flinging off the yoke of
-her attraction. “I'm not offended. I was thinking.”
-
-“About what?”
-
-“Prince Rogovich.”
-
-“And why should my master be thinking of Prince Rogovich?”
-
-He leaned still further across the rail in an instinctive effort to
-avoid her. There was seduction in the feigned humility with which she
-addressed him, as though he were a Pasha and she a slave-girl.
-
-“Because,” he said, “it would be indecent for me to be thinking of
-anything else. He may be dead. There's no knowing. This time last night
-I could walk and talk and laugh with him. He was full of plans. He was
-something real that I could touch. To-night he has vanished.”
-
-“Vanished!” She repeated the word with a sigh which was almost of
-contentment.
-
-“I was wondering,” he continued, and then halted. “You were wondering?”
- she prompted.
-
-Drawing himself erect, he faced her. Her bantering tone had roused his
-indignation. Yet, even in his revulsion, he thrilled to the sweetness of
-her luring eyes, glinting at him palely through the shadows.
-
-“He was more your friend, much more your friend, than mine,” he
-reproached her. “There's probably been a tragedy. Yet you don't seem to
-care. One might even believe you were glad.”
-
-“Not glad. Not exactly.” She spoke smilingly, averting her eyes. “But as
-for caring--why should I?”
-
-He laughed quietly. “Yes, why should you? Why should you care what
-happens to any man?”
-
-“But I hated him,” she protested. “He had given me cause to hate him.”
-
-“You had a strange way of showing it. You made yourself most amazingly
-charming. He could never have guessed--no one could ever have guessed
-who watched you with him, that you--”
-
-“Ah, no. Only you and I--we knew. It wasn't our business to let
-everybody guess.”
-
-Suddenly she seemed to divine what was troubling him. Darting out her
-hand, she seized his wrist in a grip of steel. That such strength lay
-hidden in so frail a hand was unexpected. Her attitude instantly changed
-to one of coaxing.
-
-“You're jealous. Don't be jealous. It had to be, and it's ended. In a
-sense it was for your sake that it had to happen.”
-
-Leisurely he freed himself, bending back her fingers and taking pleasure
-in demonstrating that his strength was the greater.
-
-“I've no idea what you're talking about,” he said coldly. “Your feelings
-toward Prince Rogovich are none of my concern. If, by the thing that had
-to happen, you refer to the shameless way in which you made love to him,
-I can not conceive any possible set of circumstances that would make it
-necessary for you to make love for my sake to another man.”
-
-He had turned and was sauntering away from her. She went after him
-breathlessly, arresting him once more with the secret strength of her
-slim, gloved hand.
-
-“To make love to him! I didn't mean that.”
-
-What it was that she had meant, she had no time to tell. The siren of
-the _Ryndam_ burst into an earsplitting blast, impatient, repeated, and
-agonizing. At the signal gangplanks were withdrawn from the tug and run
-back into dark holes in the side of the liner. Ropes were cast off and
-coiled. Engines began to quicken and screws to churn. The narrow channel
-which had separated the two vessels commenced to widen. On the _Ryndam_
-the band struck up. Above its lively clamor the sound of Prince
-Rogovich's name being shouted could still be heard. As Hindwood stared
-up at the floating mammoth, scanning the tiers of faces gaping down,
-even at tills last moment he half expected to see the Prince come
-rushing out. Instead a sight much stranger met his eyes.
-
-The tug was backing away to get sufficient clearance to turn in the
-direction of land. She had not quite cleared herself, when signs
-of frenzied disturbance were noticeable on the promenade deck. The
-musicians were dropping their instruments and fleeing. Passengers were
-glancing across their shoulders and scattering in all directions. In the
-vacant space which their stampede had created, the infuriated head of
-the Prince's wolfhound reared itself. For a couple of seconds he hung
-there poised, glaring down; then suddenly he seemed to descry the object
-he was searching. Steadying himself, he shot straight out into the gulf
-of blackness. In a white streak, like the finger of conscience pointing,
-he fell, just missing the deck of the tug, where Hindwood and his
-companion were standing. He must have struck the side, for as he reached
-the water he sank.
-
-It was over in less time than it takes to tell, but it had seemed to
-Hindwood that as the hound had leaped, his burning gaze had been fixed
-on Santa Gorlof.
-
-
-IV
-
-
-She made no sound while the danger lasted, but the moment the hurtling,
-white body had fallen short, she rushed to the side, peering down into
-the yeasty scum of churned-up blackness. She was speaking rapidly in a
-foreign language, laughing softly with malicious triumph and shaking a
-small, clenched fist at the night. It was thus that a woman at Jezreel
-must have looked, when she painted her face and tired her hair and
-leaned out of her palace window, jeering at the charioteer who had been
-sent to slay her. The passionate eloquence of Santa's gestures thrilled
-as much as it shocked Hindwood; it made her appearance of lavish
-modernity seem a disguise. And yet he admired her more than ever; it was
-her courage he admired. Putting his arm about her roughly, “Enough,” he
-said. “You're coming inside.”
-
-She darted back her head in defiance like a serpent about to strike.
-Then recognition of him dawned in her eyes. She ceased to struggle and
-relaxed against his breast. It was only for a second. Slipping her arm
-submissively into his, “Very well. If you say so,” she whispered.
-
-Guiding her steps across the slippery deck, he pushed open the door of a
-little saloon and entered. The atmosphere was blue with wreaths of smoke
-and heavy with the smell of tobacco. At a table in the center, beneath a
-swinging lamp, the immigration officers were dealing cards and settling
-their debts with pennies. They were too absorbed in their petty gambling
-to notice what was going on about them. In a corner, outside the circle
-of light, he found a trunk and ordered her to sit down. The meekness
-with which she complied flattered his sense of her dependence. He might
-really have been a Pasha and she his slave-girl.
-
-He did not understand her. She cozened and baffled him. People and
-things which he did not understand were apt to rouse his resentment,
-especially when they were women. His distrust of the sex was inherent.
-But as he watched this woman drooping in the shadows, his pity came
-uppermost. She was so alone, so unprotected. The hour was late--long
-past midnight. Her storm of emotion had exhausted her. It was absurd
-that he should have allowed himself to become so jealous. He could never
-have made her his wife. The chances were, she would not have accepted
-him; she belonged to a more modish world. And if she had, she would have
-driven him from his course with her whims and tempests. She would have
-wrecked his career with her greed for wealthy trappings. He and she
-were utterly different. They had nothing in common but their physical
-attraction.
-
-He was seeing things clearly. With each fresh whiff of land, affairs
-were regrouping themselves in their true perspective. He had been the
-shuttlecock of a shipboard flirtation. He had magnified infatuation
-into a grand passion. On many a previous voyage he had been the amused
-spectator of just such profitless expenditures of sentiment. And here
-he was, a victim of the same foolishness! The futility of the ending
-was the adventure's condemnation. Probably she was indulging in similar
-reflections! Within an hour of stepping ashore they would have lost
-sight of each other forever. After so much intimacy and misplaced
-emotion, they would walk out of each other's life without regret. Partly
-out of curiosity, but more out of courtesy, he seated himself beside her
-for what he intended should be their last conversation.
-
-“What happens next?”
-
-She clutched her furs more closely about her. “I don't know.”
-
-“But you must know,” he persisted. “What I meant was, where is your
-destination?”
-
-“London.” Then she added wearily, “You could have discovered by
-examining my labels.”
-
-Her fatigue made him the more determined to be helpful. “I didn't ask
-out of impertinence, but because I thought it would be London. Probably
-there'll be no train to London to-night. If the Prince had been with us,
-they'd have put on a special, but you and I are the only passengers,
-and neither of us is sufficiently important. Besides, after this delay,
-it'll be nearly daylight before we clear the Customs.”
-
-“Then I'll have to sleep in Plymouth.”
-
-“Perhaps you'll be met by friends?”
-
-He had no sooner hazarded the suggestion than an obvious conjecture
-flashed through his mind. The marvel was that it had not flashed
-earlier. _She might be married._ If the conjecture proved correct,
-it would put the final punishing touch of satire to this wild-goose
-romance.
-
-Sweeping him with her pale, derisive eyes, “Friends!” she murmured. “You
-may set your mind at rest. I shall be met by no friends.”
-
-After that there was silence, a silence interrupted at intervals by the
-exclamations of the players as they thumped down their cards and raked
-in their pennies.
-
-For relief he reverted to the subject uppermost in both their minds. “I
-wonder what became of him.”
-
-“I wonder.” Her tone betrayed no interest.
-
-“I've been trying to think back,” he said, “trying to remember when last
-I saw him.”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“I believe I last saw him alive just after----”
-
-She spun round, as though jerked on wires. “Alive! Who suggests that he
-isn't alive?”
-
-“No one. I'm the first. But if he isn't found by to-morrow, the
-suggestion will be on the lips of all the world.”
-
-“I doubt it.”
-
-“You do?” Hindwood smiled. “Men of the Prince's eminence are not
-allowed to vanish without a stir. I'm only hoping that you and I are not
-involved in it. We were the only people with whom he associated on the
-voyage. We're likely to be detained and certain to be questioned. For
-all we know the air's full of Marconi messages about us at this moment.”
-
-Her face had gone white. “About us? What had we to do with it?”
-
-“Nothing. But when a tragedy of this sort occurs, we're all liable to be
-suspected.”
-
-She gazed at him intently. “Then you think there was a tragedy?”
-
-“I feel sure of it. It's my belief that he either fell or was pushed
-overboard. Somewhere out there in the darkness he's bobbing up and down.
-It's almost as though I could see him. I couldn't feel more sure if----”
-
-She shuddered and pressed against him. “You're trying to frighten me.
-I won't be frightened. It's all nonsense what you're saying. Why should
-any one want to push him over?”
-
-“I'm sorry,” he apologized. “I didn't mean to frighten you. Perhaps
-we're wasting our breath and already he's been found.”
-
-“No, but why should any one want to push him over?” she urged.
-
-“I can't answer that. But he wasn't liked. One could be fascinated by
-his personality, but one couldn't like him. Take yourself--weren't you
-telling me a few minutes ago how intensely you hated him?”
-
-She nodded. “He was the sort of man every woman had the right to hate.”
- After a pause she faced him, completely mistress of herself. “When did
-you last see him?”
-
-“I'm not certain.” Hindwood hesitated. “As far as I remember, it was
-after dinner in the lounge. He was giving some instructions about his
-baggage. When did you?”
-
-“After dinner in the lounge.” Her eyes met his and flickered. “It must
-have been shortly after eight, for I spent till ten in my stateroom
-finishing my packing.”
-
-Before she had made an end, he knew that she had lied. Several times
-after dinner he had walked past her stateroom, hoping for a last
-encounter. Her trunks and cases had been piled in the passage, already
-locked and strapped. He had tried to discover from the stewardess her
-whereabouts and had been told that since dining she had not returned. He
-had gone on deck in search of her, hunting everywhere. It must have been
-shortly after ten that he had come across two shadowy figures in the
-bows. They were whispering together. They might have been embracing.
-The man's figure had been too dim for him to identify, but he could have
-sworn that the woman's was hers.
-
-He had reached this point in his piecing together of evidence, when he
-noticed that the card-players were pushing back their chairs.
-
-Santa touched his arm gently. “I think we're there.”
-
-The next moment the soft bump of the tug against the piles confirmed the
-news of their arrival.
-
-
-V
-
-
-It began to look as if all hope of rest would have to be abandoned. At
-the moment of landing the dock had been almost festive. There had been
-a group of railway officials, mildly beaming and fussily important, who
-had approached Hindwood as he stepped ashore, with “Prince Rogovich,
-if we are not mistaken?” There had been another group of newspaper
-reporters who, having addressed him as “Your Highness,” and having
-discovered their error, had promptly turned their backs on him.
-
-There had been a Major in uniform, with a monocle in his eye, who had
-pranced up, tearing off a salute and announcing, “I'm detailed by the
-Foreign Office, your Excellency.”
-
-When they had learned that the Prince had unaccountably avoided
-Plymouth, their atmosphere of geniality faded. The special train, which
-was to have borne him swiftly to London, was promptly canceled. Within
-ten minutes, muttering with disgust, all the world except two porters
-had dribbled off into the night.
-
-In the waiting-room where, pending the inspection of the Customs
-officers, Hindwood and Santa were ordered to remain, their reception was
-no more enlivening. At first, when they had entered, a lunch-counter
-had been spread, gleaming with warmth and light. Before mirrors, girl
-attendants had been self-consciously reviewing their appearance with
-smiles of brightest expectation. Their expectancy had been quickly
-dulled by the news of the Prince's non-arrival. They had scarcely spared
-time to supply the wants of the two travelers before they had started
-to close up. The ticket clerk had copied the girls' example. As he had
-pulled down the shutter of his office he had briefly stated, “No train
-till the eight-thirty in the morning.”
-
-After that they had been left--he and this strange woman--in the drafty
-gloom of the ill-lighted dockstation. The two porters had huddled down
-and snored among the baggage; Santa, closing her eyes, had appeared to
-join them in their slumbers.
-
-At last a solitary Customs officer had arrived. He volunteered no
-explanation for his delay. He was evidently newly risen, half awake,
-and in a mood of suppressed irritation. His examination was perfunctory.
-Having completed his barest duty, he likewise made his exit. It was
-then, when all their troubles seemed ended, that the porters had
-informed them that it was necessary for passengers to see their luggage
-weighed and personally to supervise its being loaded in the van for
-London.
-
-Hindwood turned to his companion. “You're tired. You'd better be off to
-bed. I'll see this through for you.”
-
-Half an hour later, when he had complied with all formalities and was
-free to seek a bed himself, he remembered that he hadn't inquired
-where she would be staying and that he didn't know the name of a hotel.
-Wondering where he should sleep and how he could reach her with the
-receipts for her trunks, he wandered out into the yard of the station.
-The first grayness of dawn was spreading. A chill was in the air. Behind
-the sepulchers of muted houses a cock was crowing. He gazed up and down.
-Near the gate a horse-drawn cab was standing. Its lamp burned dimly,
-on the point of flickering out. The driver sat hunched on the box; the
-horse hung dejectedly between the shafts. They both slumbered immovably.
-
-Crossing the yard, he shook the man's arm. “Hi! Wake up. I want you to
-drive me to a good hotel.” The man came to with a jerk. “A good 'otel!
-That's wot the lady wanted. You must be the gen'leman I wuz told to wait
-for.”
-
-Hindwood nodded. “So you've driven the lady already! Then you'd better
-take me to wherever you took her.”
-
-He had opened the door and was in the act of entering when the horse
-started forward, making him lose his balance. As he stretched out his
-hands to steady himself, what was his surprise to discover that the cab
-was already tenanted!
-
-
-VI
-
-
-I beg your pardon.”
-
-There was no reply to his apology. He repeated it in a tone of more
-elaborate courtesy, “I _beg_ your pardon.”
-
-When he was again greeted with silence, he added: “I thought it was
-empty. I didn't do it on purpose. I hope you're not hurt.”
-
-In the mildewed square of blackness, rank with the smell of stables, he
-held his breath, trying to detect whether sleep would account for the
-taciturnity of the other occupant. He could detect nothing; all lesser
-sounds were drowned in the rattle of their progress. Groping, he felt a
-woman's dress. Hollowing his hand to shade the flame, he struck a match.
-For a brief moment his eyes met hers, opened wide and gazing at him.
-Instantly she leaned forward, pursing her lips. The flame went out.
-
-“What's the meaning of this?” He had been startled and spoke with
-sharpness.
-
-“There was only one cab, so I----” She yawned luxuriously. “So I waited.
-I didn't want to lose you.”
-
-It was his turn to be silent. After a pause, while she gave him a chance
-to reply, she continued: “You'd have been stranded if I'd taken the only
-cab. And then I didn't want to lose you. Not that losing me would have
-meant anything to you--not now. It wouldn't, would it?”
-
-There was no escape. However she chose to accuse him, he would be forced
-to listen. But it couldn't be far to the hotel. Speaking reasonably, he
-attempted to appease her. “I've given you no occasion for supposing----”
-
-She laughed softly. “Don't you think so? On the boat you were burning up
-for me. You were molten--incandescent. Now you're dark and dank--through
-with me.”
-
-She caught her breath. Though he could not see her, he knew that her
-small, clenched fists were pressed against her mouth. Again she was
-speaking.
-
-“Why is it? If you'd only give me a reason! While I've been sitting here
-alone, I've kept asking myself: 'Why is it? Am I less beautiful, less
-kind, less good? Does he think that he's discovered something evil about
-me? What have I done that he should have changed so suddenly?'”
-
-With a cry of pain, she turned. “What have I done? It's just that you
-should tell me. If you'll take me back, I'll be anything for you. I'll
-try so hard to be more beautiful.”
-
-“You couldn't be more beautiful.”
-
-It was said without enthusiasm. The suspicion still possessed him that
-she was play-acting. Last evening she had practiced these same wiles on
-the man who had vanished. Did she intend that he should vanish, too?
-It was horrible that he should ask himself such a question, and yet he
-could not rid his imagination of the snow-white hound, plunging to death
-and pointing at her like the finger of conscience. The happenings of
-that night had been sufficiently dramatic, so why this second rehearsal?
-He was too humble in his self-esteem to believe that his own attractions
-could account for such a storm of passion.
-
-“Santa, you're exaggerating.” He spoke cautiously. “You never belonged
-to me. Until now you've given no hint that you wanted to belong to me.
-On the contrary, you've trifled with me and shown a distinct preference
-for another man. It's preposterous for you to talk about my taking you
-back when I never had you. We've been companions for a handful of hours.
-We've liked being together--at least, I have. But to create such a scene
-is absurd. Nothing warrants it. In the ordinary course of events, our
-liking might strengthen into love--there's no telling. But everything'll
-end right here and now if you force matters. What d'you know about me?
-About you I know even less. If any one were to ask me, I couldn't tell
-him whether you were a Pole or a Persian, or whether you were single,
-divorced, or married. I haven't the least idea of your social standing
-or why, while appearing so prosperous, you travel without a maid and by
-yourself. For all I know----”
-
-“A man needs to know nothing about a woman,” she interrupted, “except
-that he loves her. She might be a thousand things; if he loved her, none
-of them would count. If she were bad, he would hope to make her good
-with his own goodness. Men always expect women to do that; why shouldn't
-a woman expect it of a man? If you loved me--and you did love me--no
-matter how wicked you thought me, even though you believed I'd killed
-some one, you wouldn't care. You'd find some splendid motive and
-persuade yourself that I'd done it for the best.” She broke off. Then
-she added, “Of course, I haven't.”
-
-“Haven't!”
-
-“Haven't killed somebody.”
-
-It was an extraordinary disclaimer--as though it were always within the
-bounds of possibility that nice, conventional women might have killed
-somebody. She had said it as casually as another woman might have said,
-“I don't powder,” or “I don't smoke.”
-
-He scarcely know whether to be shocked or amused. He was loath to take
-her seriously. Behind the thinning darkness he was trying to discover
-her expression, when his calmness was swept away by a new disturbance.
-She had slipped to her knees in the narrow space. By the dim light that
-streaked the panes he could just make out her figure, bowed against him.
-The next moment her tears were falling, and she was kissing his hands.
-
-“You mustn't, Santa.”
-
-He tried to withdraw his hands. She clung to them. Failing in that,
-he attempted to raise her face. She kept it obstinately averted. The
-bumping of the cab on the uneven paving jostled her against him;
-he feared lest inadvertently he might bruise her. The situation
-was grotesque. It stirred both his pity and his anger. If this were
-play-acting, then it was laughter and not sobbing that was shaking her.
-But if her grief were real----
-
-At that thought the shy, lonely tenderness of the man overwhelmed him.
-Here at last was a fellow-creature who needed his affection. She was so
-fragile, so capricious, so rapturous!
-
-“Poor Santa! I didn't mean---- Somehow I've hurt you.”
-
-She didn't speak, but she stayed her sobbing.
-
-“Let me see your face.”
-
-He stooped lower. The scent of her hair was in his nostrils. His
-reluctant arms went about her. Their embrace strengthened.
-
-With a moan she lifted up her face, white and ghostly as the dawn that
-was all about them. In a frenzy of silent longing their lips met.
-
-
-VII
-
-
-With a jerk the cab drew up against the pavement. Tossing the reins on
-the horse's back, the driver was lumbering down. That Santa might have
-time to compose herself, Hindwood leaned quickly out, slamming the door
-behind him.
-
-“Where've you brought us?”
-
-“It's a good 'otel,” the man grumbled, on the defensive, staring at the
-gray cliff of shrouded windows. “It was a good 'otel you wanted. And
-then it's h'opposite the London Station where the train starts in the
-marnin'. It'll give the missis ten minutes extry in bed.”
-
-“The missis!” Hindwood frowned. “If you refer to the lady who's with me,
-she's not my 'missis.'”
-
-The man became sly. Stretching a fat finger along his nose, he edged
-nearer and whispered: “Between you and me that's h'alright. Wot wiv
-drivin' so many gentry from the Contingnong me own morals are almost
-foreign.”
-
-Hindwood turned from him coldly. “You're on the wrong tack. And now how
-does one get into this hotel? Will they admit us at such an hour?”
-
-“H'at h'all hours. H'absolutely h'at h'all hours.”
-
-“If that's the case,” he thrust his head inside the cab, “you stay here,
-Santa. I'll go and find out.”
-
-In a few minutes he was back. “They'll take us. Go inside and wait while
-I settle with the driver.” When he joined her at the desk, he found it
-necessary to make the same explanation that he had already made to
-the cabman. The night-porter had allotted them one room, taking it for
-granted they were married. He had to be informed that two were required.
-
-“D'you want 'em on the same floor and next to each other?”
-
-“On the roof if you like,” Hindwood answered impatiently, “only let us
-get to bed. We're, or rather _I'm_ catching the eight-thirty train to
-London in the morning, and it's nearly daylight now. How about you?” He
-turned to Santa. “What train are you catching?”
-
-“The same as you.”
-
-“Then we might as well breakfast together?”
-
-She nodded.
-
-Turning again to the night-porter, he said, “Put us both down for a call
-at seven.”
-
-The man was leading the way upstairs. As they followed, Santa whispered,
-
-“You see, you were mistaken.”
-
-“How?”
-
-“You threatened that we'd be detained and questioned. You frightened me
-terribly. We weren't.”
-
-“No. We weren't.”
-
-She slipped her arm through his companionably. “I feel so relieved and
-happy. I don't believe there was a tragedy. The Prince changed his mind
-at the last moment; he's landing at Boulogne or Rotterdam. It may even
-have been a strategy to mislead some enemy who was waiting for him here
-in Plymouth.”
-
-“Perhaps. I never thought of that.”
-
-Their rooms were on different floors. The porter showed the way to hers
-first. Now that they had to separate, Hindwood would have given much for
-a private word with her. Discreetly, outside her door, in the presence
-of the night-porter, they parted.
-
-“Then we meet at breakfast,” he reminded her.
-
-“At breakfast,” she assented. “And let's hope that we don't oversleep
-ourselves.”
-
-
-VIII
-
-
-It seemed to him that his head had just touched the pillow when he was
-awakened by his door being pounded. Sitting up in bed, he consulted his
-watch. Seven exactly!
-
-“I'm awake,” he shouted. With that he jumped out of bod to prevent
-himself from drowsing.
-
-His first thought was of her; again he was going to meet her. The
-prospect filled him with excitement, but not with gladness. His dreams
-had been troubled by her; there had been no moment since he had closed
-his eyes that he had been without her. The wildness of that kiss,
-bestowed in the dark by a woman humbling herself, had set his blood on
-fire. It was not right that a man should be kissed like that, and yet he
-longed to reexperience the sensation.
-
-“Any woman could have done it,” he argued. “This isn't love; it's
-nothing peculiar to Santa. Any reasonably beautiful woman could have
-done it by acting the way she acted. I had consoled myself that I was
-immune from women. I was starving, and I didn't know it.”
-
-His sane mind warned him that it would be wise to avoid further
-encounters. She was too alluring for him to withstand. There were too
-many things about her that were unaccountable. There was her frenzied
-display of infatuation for both himself and the Prince, all within the
-space of twelve hours.
-
-He was brushing his hair and viewing his reflection in the shabby
-mirror, when he reached this point. He stopped brushing and regarded his
-reflection intently. What could any woman discover in those features
-to go mad over? It was a hard face, cleanshaven, bony, and powerful,
-roughened by the wind and tanned by the sun. It was the mask of an
-ascetic, which concealed rather than revealed the emotions. And yet once
-it had been sensitive; you could trace that in the kindly blueness of
-the eyes and the faint tenderness of the full-lipped mouth. The hair was
-a rusty brown, growing thin about the temples; the nose was pinched at
-the nostrils with long-endured suffering--the brow furrowed. He smiled
-in amused disapproval and went on with his brushing. Not the face of an
-Apollo! Nothing to rave about!
-
-And yet, despite his looks, here was at least one woman who, for
-whatever reason, was desperate to marry him. On the drive through the
-dawn from the dock to the hotel she had left no doubt of her intentions.
-It inflamed his curiosity. Though he was nearing forty, with the
-exception of that one disastrous affair, women were still for him an
-untried adventure. But in the case of Santa, to indulge his curiosity
-further might lead to penalties. She was liable to repeat last night's
-performance; the journey to London would probably provide her with a
-fitting opportunity. If it did, could he muster the cruelty to refuse
-her?
-
-On one point his mind was made up: he would not marry her. He had no
-time to waste on marriage. With her it would be folly. Moreover, while
-her breaking down of reticences had spurred his eagerness, it had
-forfeited his respect. It had robbed him of his prerogative of conquest.
-It had changed him from the hunter into the hunted. He was all but
-trapped.
-
-“Trapped!”
-
-He was fastening his bag. He pressed the catch into the lock and stood
-up.
-
-“Trapped! Not yet. Not exactly.”
-
-Immediately his mind began to race, devising plans for eluding capture.
-He didn't need to keep his breakfast appointment with her. He could miss
-the eight-thirty and travel to London later. He could slip out unnoticed
-and take up his abode in another hotel. Once he had lost her, he would
-have put himself beyond temptation. She would have no clew to his
-whereabouts, nor he to hers.
-
-As he passed slowly down the stairs, he was still undecided as to how he
-should act. On arriving in the hall, he loitered by the hotel desk, half
-determined to call for his reckoning and make a bolt for it. While he
-dallied, the yearning to see her for a last time swam uppermost. After
-all, he owed something to the only woman who had paid him the compliment
-of loving him. He would not speak to her, would not let her know that he
-was there. He would peep into the room unseen and remember her always as
-waiting for him.
-
-Bag in hand, he strode along the passage to the coffee-room, where
-breakfast was being served. The baize doors were a-swing with scurrying
-waiters. Stooping, he peered through the panes. Pushing the doors
-slightly open, he gazed more steadily. The room was littered with
-ungroomed people, their heads bowed, their elbows flapping, like a flock
-of city sparrows snatching crumbs from beneath the hoofs of passing
-traffic. Nowhere could he espy her, his rarer bird of the dainty
-plumage.
-
-He grew ashamed of his furtiveness. Why should he be afraid of her? She
-shouldn't be disappointed. She should find him gallantly expecting her.
-Resigning his bag to a solicitous bell-boy, he drew himself up to his
-lean western height and entered.
-
-
-IX
-
-
-Seated at a table, lie had watched the swing-doors for a full
-half-hour. He had finished his breakfast. If he were to catch the
-eight-thirty, it was time for him to be moving. He began to flirt with
-the idea of postponing his journey; it was evident she had overslept
-herself.
-
-At the desk, while he settled his account, he had it on the tip of his
-tongue to inquire for her, but he was daunted by the presence of the
-night-porter. The man kept eyeing him with a knowing grin, as though he
-were expecting just such a question.
-
-“I won't gratify him,” Hindwood thought. “The fellow knows too much.
-It's fate, if I miss her.”
-
-He crossed the road to the station. Having secured a seat in a
-first-class smoker, he roamed up and down the platform. Every few
-minutes he consulted his watch as the hands circled nearer to the
-half-hour. He bought papers at the news-stand and returned to buy more
-papers; from there, while not seeming to do so, he could obtain a clear
-view of the hotel. And still there was no sign of her.
-
-When it was almost too late, he threw caution to the winds. At a gait
-between a run and a walk, he recrossed the road and dashed up the hotel
-steps. As he confronted the clerk behind the desk, he was a little
-breathless; he was also aware that the night-porter's grin had widened.
-
-“There's a lady staying here. She was to have traveled with me to
-London. I'm afraid she's not been wakened.”
-
-“A lady!” The clerk looked up with the bored expression of one who was
-impervious to romance. “A lady! Oh, yes.”
-
-“She's a passenger from the _Ryndam_,” he continued. “Her name's Miss
-Gorlof. Send some one to her room to find out at once----”
-
-The night-porter interrupted. Addressing the clerk, he said: “The
-gentleman means the foreign-looking lady wot I told you about--the one
-in all the furs.” Then to Hindwood, “She was called for at six this
-mornin'. A gentleman in goggles, who couldn't speak no English, arrived
-in a tourin' car and drove off with 'er.”
-
-“Drove off with her. But----”
-
-Realizing that too much emotion would make him appear ridiculous, he
-steadied his voice and asked casually, “I suppose she left a note for
-me?”
-
-The clerk glanced across his shoulder at the rack. “Your name's Mr.
-Hindwood, isn't it?” He raised his hand to a pigeonhole lettered “H”.
-“You can see for yourself, sir. There's nothing in it.”
-
-“Then perhaps it was a verbal message. She would be certain to leave me
-her address.”
-
-The clerk turned to the night-porter. “Did she?” The night-porter beamed
-with satisfaction. “She did not.”
-
-He had achieved his dramatic effect.
-
-
-X
-
-
-He was the last passenger to squeeze through the barrier. As he
-scrambled into his carriage, the train was on the point of moving.
-Spreading one of his many papers on his knees, he lit a cigarette. He
-believed he was behaving as though nothing had happened. “That I
-can take it like this proves that she was nothing to me,” he assured
-himself.
-
-Ten minutes later he discovered that he had not read a line and that the
-cigarette had gone out.
-
-“I suppose I'm a bit upset,” he admitted, “though goodness knows why I
-should be. The matter's ended exactly as I wanted.”
-
-But had it? What had he wanted? Does a man ever know what he wants where
-a woman is concerned? He desires most the thing which he most dreads.
-During the voyage he had wanted to win her from Prince Rogovich. On
-the tug he had wanted to forget her. In the cab he had wanted to go on
-kissing her forever. That morning he had wanted to save his freedom.
-On the station, like a maddened schoolboy, his terror had been lest he
-might lose her.
-
-As a result he had lost her. Somewhere through the sunny lanes of Devon
-she was speeding with the gentleman who “couldn't speak no English”
- and wore goggles. In which direction and for what purpose he could not
-guess.
-
-He smiled bitterly. It was a situation which called for mirth. He had
-accused her of having trapped him at a time when she herself had been
-escaping from him. He had complained that her affection was too ardently
-obvious at a moment when she was proving herself most coldly elusive.
-While he had been resenting the way in which he was being hunted, she
-had already abandoned him to hunt to his heart's content.
-
-His reflections were broken in upon by a weakeyed old clergyman seated
-opposite to him in the far corner.
-
-“Excuse me, but I see by your labels that you've just landed. May I ask
-whether your vessel was the _Ryndam_?”
-
-“It was.”
-
-“Then there's an item in the local paper which should interest you. It
-has to do with Prince Rogovich, the great Polish patriot. He was your
-fellow passenger, if I'm not mistaken.”
-
-Hindwood was disinclined for conversation. He made his tone brusk that
-he might discourage further questions. “You're not mistaken, and I guess
-I know what you're going to tell me: that after all the preparations
-made for his reception, the Prince didn't land at Plymouth but, without
-notifying any one, traveled on either to Boulogne or Rotterdam.”
-
-“But that wasn't what I was going to tell you,” the old gentleman
-continued in his benevolent pulpit manner. “Oh, no, I was going to tell
-you something quite different. After the _Ryndam_ left Plymouth, the
-Captain had her searched from stem to stern. Not a trace of the Prince
-could be found.”
-
-“Extraordinary! I suppose the news was received by wireless. Does the
-paper suggest an explanation?”
-
-“None whatsoever. I thought you'd be interested. Perhaps you'd like to
-read for yourself.”
-
-The paper contained the bare fact as the clergyman had stated it. “A
-complete search was made. All his personal belongings were found intact,
-but of the Prince himself not a trace.”
-
-Hindwood closed his eyes and pretended to sleep that he might protect
-himself from further intrusions. He wanted to argue his way through this
-problem and to acquit Santa of any share in what had happened. And yet,
-if an investigation were held and he himself had to tell all he knew,
-things would look black for her. Was that why----?
-
-He tried to crush the ugly thought, but it clamored to be expressed.
-Was that why she had made love to him--that her kiss might seal his lips
-with silence?
-
-The train was slowing down. He opened his eyes. In the cheerfulness of
-sunshine life took on a more normal aspect. Towering above crowded roofs
-of houses, a tall cathedral pricked the blueness of the sky.
-
-“Where are we?”
-
-The clergyman was collecting his bundles. “Exeter--where I alight.”
-
-As soon as he had the carriage to himself, before any one could enter,
-he reached up to the rack and quickly removed the _Ryndam_ labels from
-his bag. Having done that, he stepped to the platform and went in search
-of papers. The torn labels were still in his hand. Surreptitiously he
-dropped them between the train and the platform, some distance lower
-down than his own carriage. He realized the stealth he had employed only
-when Exeter was left behind.
-
-“Ridiculous!” he shrugged his shoulders. “It's getting on my nerves.”
-
-In his most recently acquired batch of papers he found no reference to
-the topic which absorbed him. At the time when the London press had been
-published, the disappearance of the Prince had not been known to the
-world.
-
-Throughout the journey, at every fresh stopping-place, he repeated the
-performance, dashing down platforms in quest of newsboys and purchasing
-copies of every journal on sale. He caught himself continually eyeing
-his bag to make sure that he really had removed all labels. He began
-to feel as if he himself were the criminal. In his intentions he was
-already an accessory after the fact. Whether Santa was innocent or
-guilty, at all costs he had determined to shield her.
-
-Through the late summer afternoon, as he drew nearer to London, his
-suspense began to die. He was getting the later editions now; none of
-them so much as mentioned the affair. In Plymouth and Bristol it had
-probably been of local importance. He took courage to smile. What a
-coward dread can make of an honest man!
-
-Afternoon was fading into the gold of evening when they steamed into
-Paddington. By making haste he could just reach the American Embassy
-before closing time. It was likely that several communications had
-been addressed to him there. He had cabled ahead to the Ritz for a
-reservation. It wouldn't take him far out of his direction to call at
-the Embassy on the way to his hotel.
-
-In the stir and bustle of familiar London, the nightmare of the voyage
-grew vague. He stepped from the carriage like a man awaking. It thrilled
-him with happy surprise to discover the old gray city, plumed with smoke
-and smiling, waiting unchanged beneath his feet to welcome him. The very
-smell of mingled gasoline and horses from the cab-ranks was reassuring.
-Every sight that his eyes encountered made him feel respectable.
-
-“Any luggage, sir?” It was a porter accosting him.
-
-“Yes. Two trunks. At least, I guess they're on this train.”
-
-“Which van, sir?”
-
-“The one from Plymouth.” Then, with conscious bravado, he added: “I'm
-from the _Ryndam_. You'll recognize them by the Holland-American tags.”
-
-The porter had gone to secure a barrow. While Hindwood waited, gazing
-about him idly, his eyes were startled by a news-placard bearing the
-following legend:
-
-
-DISAPPEARANCE OF A PRINCE
-
-
-FOUL PLAY SUSPECTED
-
-
-He swayed, as though he had been struck by a bullet. He glanced round
-feverishly, fearing lest he might espy another placard stating, “Santa
-Gorlof Arrested.” But no--for the moment she was safe. He thanked God
-for the touring-car and the forethought of the foreign gentleman who
-could speak no English.
-
-Quickly he began to readjust his plans. If he went to claim his trunks,
-there was no telling by whom he might be met--newspaper men, detectives,
-officials from the Foreign Office. Moreover, Santa's trunks were in the
-van. When he had explained himself, he might be called upon to account
-for her absence. There was only one thing for him to do: for her sake he
-must get out of England. If he delayed, he might be prevented. It would
-be unwise for him to go to the Ritz; he must spend the night at some
-obscure hotel. The only place to which he might be traced was the
-Embassy; but he would have to risk that--it was of the utmost importance
-that he should pick up his communications.
-
-He was on the point of making good his escape, when the porter trundled
-up with his barrow.
-
-“Hi, mister! Where are you goin'? I'll be needin' you to identify 'em.”
-
-“I know you will.” Hindwood turned on him a face which was flustered.
-“But I've just remembered I have an engagement. I'll send for them
-later. It'll make no difference to you; here's what I should have paid
-you.”
-
-The man, having inspected it carefully, pocketed the half-crown. “It
-won't take long,” he suggested; “me and the barrow's ready. And it won't
-cost you nothink, seein' as how you've paid me.”
-
-“No time.”
-
-Without more ado, he made a dash for the nearest taxi. “As fast as you
-like,” he told the driver; “the faster, the bigger your fare.”
-
-He fled out of the station at a forbidden rate, but after half a mile
-the taxi halted against the curb. Lowering the window, he looked out.
-
-“What's the matter? Something wrong with your engine?”
-
-“We ain't been follered. You can calm down,” the driver assured him
-soothingly. “Wot's wrong is that you ain't told me no address.”
-
-“Stupid of me! The American Embassy.”
-
-At the Embassy, having explained his errand, he was requested to wait.
-Then, rather to his surprise, instead of having his letters handed
-to him, he was shown into a handsome room where, at the far end, a
-gray-haired man was seated, sorting papers behind a large mahogany
-table.
-
-Hindwood crossed the room and held out his hand.
-
-“I'm Philip Hindwood, the railroad expert. I guess you've heard of me.
-I called in case there was some mail for me. I had no intention of
-troubling you personally.”
-
-“I'm glad you've come,” said the gray-haired man gravely. “If you hadn't
-troubled me, I should have had to trouble you. There have been inquiries
-for you. They have to do with a woman who goes by the name of Santa
-Gorlof. The police thought you might know something about her. It seems
-she's wanted.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER THE SECOND--THE RETURN OF SANTA GORLOF
-
-
-I
-
-
-SO Santa was “wanted!” Why she was wanted Hindwood did not dare to
-question. And the police thought he could tell them something! He could,
-but it would be something to put them off her track. After kissing a
-woman, it wasn't likely he'd betray her. She might have committed every
-crime on the calendar; it would make no difference. He had learned his
-code of honor on the outskirts of civilization, where law is more often
-defied than obeyed. By his standards of chivalry, after what had passed
-between them, he had no option but to play the game by her. What did
-they think he knew? Why should they think he knew anything?
-
-He masked his anxiety with seeming unconcern. Without his assistance,
-they could make little headway. He must let fall no hint that would
-suggest a sentimental interest in her fortunes. He would be spied
-on--probably he had been spied on already. For all he knew, the
-clergyman in the train, the porter at Paddington, the taxi-driver who
-had assured him that he wasn't followed, were detectives. Henceforward
-he must live his life normally and in public, doing everything to disarm
-suspicion. Any divergence from his usual habits, such as staying in
-obscure quarters or canceling engagements that he might escape to the
-Continent, would create the impression that he was possessed of guilty
-knowledge. If he had to speak of her, he must refer to her as a charming
-acquaintance and profess horror that such a charge should have been
-brought against her.
-
-Following this line, he left the Embassy with the promise that he would
-consult with the police at their earliest convenience. From there he
-drove to the Ritz, adhering to arrangements made before this sinister
-thing had happened. To avoid being waylaid, he went straight to his
-rooms, having ordered his trunks to be fetched from the station and his
-dinner to be served in his apartment.
-
-The suite allotted him was one which he had occupied on several previous
-occasions. It soothed his ruffled pride to discover that his preferences
-had been remembered. From the front windows he could gaze down
-Piccadilly; from the side he could watch the green park, a lake of jade,
-imprisoned between walls of granite. In the panes facing westward a
-fairy city hung poised, tipped with flame and ensanguined by the sunset.
-
-Leisurely he set to work to bathe and shave, stretching out the ritual
-and reveling in the recovery of his self-respect. Slowly the sunset
-faded. Before he had made an end, the golden September dusk was drifting
-down. In the twilight he stretched himself on the bed, waiting for
-his trunks with his wardrobe to arrive. He felt that he could face the
-police with much more calmness if he was clad in the respectability of
-evening dress.
-
-He must have dozed, for the room was completely dark when he was brought
-to his feet by the sharp ringing of the telephone. As he fumbled for
-the receiver, he thought, “Well, I've a good reason for not seeing them.
-Pajamas aren't dignified.”
-
-Aloud he said: “Yes. Quite correct--Mr. Hind-wood. Yes, the Mr. Hindwood
-who's just landed from the _Ryndam_. You traced me by my trunks! You
-were expecting I'd claim them in person! The man from the Ritz is
-there! That's all right. Thank you for telling me. What was my
-reason?--Certainly not. I was avoiding no one. What did you say you
-were?--A newspaper-man!--I guess not. I've nothing to tell--no. That's
-final.”
-
-He had scarcely hung up when the bell commenced ringing again. The next
-half-hour was spent in refusing to be interviewed by invisible persons.
-It seemed as though every journalist in London were waiting in queue
-to get on to him. Some were suave, some bullying; all were persistent.
-Didn't he know that he owed it to the public to say something? If a list
-of questions was submitted to him, would he make a written statement?
-
-To cut the clamor short, he instructed the hotel operator to allow no
-one to speak with him who would not state his business. For the rest of
-the evening he was “out” to any one who had to do with the press. After
-that the telephone grew quiet.
-
-He switched on the lights. As he did so, he noticed that he was
-trembling with excitement. He was furious. This assault had made
-him aware of the unseen wall of hostility by which he and Santa were
-surrounded. She hadn't a chance; the whole of organized society was
-against her. The odds were brutally unfair. Nothing that she had done
-could warrant such unsportsmanly cruelty. So far it had not been proved
-that she had done anything, yet every one was willing to prejudge her.
-The pursuit was cowardly. Whether he loved her did not matter. It was
-a problem in knight-errantry: to protect her he was willing to risk all
-that he was and had.
-
-The arrival of his trunks gave him something else to think about. When
-he was dressed, he felt ready for every emergency. After all, he was not
-the criminal.
-
-He had his dinner spread against a window from which he could watch the
-arc-lights of Piccadilly strung across the night like a rope of pearls.
-He tried to be persuaded that he was enjoying himself. If the police
-didn't call on him within the hour, he would saunter out to a music-hall
-and rub shoulders with the crowd.
-
-But would he? To what purpose? He would have to go alone, as he always
-went. It would be different if she were with him. The last nine days had
-spoiled him for loneliness; they had taught him the romance of a woman's
-friendship. And yet, not friendship--she had asked for his affection.
-All his life he had craved to give his love to some woman. Until he had
-met Santa, his craving had been denied. No woman had seemed to care.
-Because of that, in spite of success, he had reckoned himself a failure.
-He had attained everything--power, position, wealth--everything except
-his desire. There had been moments on the voyage when it had seemed to
-him that his goal was in sight.
-
-If she were to tap on his door, how would he greet her? If she did, it
-would be like her; she could always be counted on to do the unexpected.
-He told himself that he would ask her no questions. He would not upbraid
-her. He would comfort her in the way that she understood best. When the
-police came to interrogate him, he would place his arm about her and
-answer:
-
-“Gentlemen, if it is Santa Gorlof you are seeking, she is here. I have
-asked her to be my wife.” The scene as he conjured it was worthy
-of Dumas; he was thrilled by the gallantry of his imagination. His
-ponderings were cut short by a sharp rap. He sprang to his feet; it
-almost seemed that his dream was to be realized. The rap was repeated.
-Outside the door a page was standing.
-
-“There's a gentleman downstairs. He won't give his name. He says you
-left word, sir, at the American Embassy, that you would be willing to
-see him.”
-
-“Show him up.”
-
-
-II
-
-
-Leaving the door ajar, he drew a chair to his desk and commenced
-rummaging through a pile of documents. He planned to create the
-impression that he regarded this visit as of small importance. He was
-anxious, even at the risk of appearing vulgar, to be discovered in the
-rôle of an American money-lord, every second of whose time represented
-dollars--the kind of man who was too influential to be bulldozed by the
-police methods of a country whose citizenship he did not share. He urged
-himself into a mood of contempt by recalling the beefy caricatures which
-pass currency in English fiction for veracious portraits of Scotland
-Yard detectives. This fellow would look like a constable off duty. When
-he sat down, he would bulge at the neck and mop his forehead with a
-multicolored handkerchief. He would be awed by elegance into sulky
-stupidity--but would become pompously affable when offered a cigar.
-
-“May I enter?” The door creaked.
-
-“Surely. Come in. But you must excuse me for a moment.” Hindwood spoke
-without turning. He pretended to be sorting the last of his documents.
-The cultured tone of the voice had surprised him. Perhaps, after all,
-his guest might not be a detective.
-
-“Sorry to keep you. Time's valuable. My stay in England is short. There,
-that's finished. What can I do for you?” He pushed back his chair and
-rose to face his guest.
-
-If the man's intonation had surprised him, his appearance amazed him
-still more. He could have passed for the colonel of a crack cavalry
-regiment. His bearing was erect and dapper. His dark lounge suit, with
-the light stripes running through it, was so smartly tailored that one
-was apt to suspect that he was corseted. His hair was white, his cheeks
-tanned, his manner cheerful and commanding. He was of less than medium
-height. With his bristling mustache and pointed imperial he bore a
-distinct resemblance to Lord Roberts of Kandahar.
-
-Hindwood held out his hand with undisguised relief. “Won't you sit down,
-sir? I'm afraid I must have seemed discourteous. The truth is, I was
-expecting some one quite different. The boy didn't announce your name or
-business.”
-
-The stranger accepted his hand with an ironic smile. He did not sit
-down. Instead he asked a question. “Wouldn't it be wise to shut the
-door?” Without waiting for permission, he went to the door and closed
-it. Before he closed it, he glanced out into the passage. Having
-regained the middle of the room, he gazed searchingly about him.
-
-“No one here who can listen?”
-
-Again taking matters into his own hands, he made a swift and thorough
-investigation, peering into the bathroom, stabbing draperies with his
-cane as with a sword, feeling behind clothes in cupboards. He left no
-corner uninspected in which an eavesdropper might be secreted. Last of
-all he approached the window near which Hindwood had dined. For a few
-seconds he stood there, staring down into the well of blackness and
-the mysterious fairyland of shifting lights. Laying aside his hat and
-gloves, but still retaining his cane, he remarked:
-
-“Beautiful! Very beautiful! Exquisite with the witchery of a woman's
-face, which masks a hidden wickedness!”
-
-Hindwood had been regarding him in silence. “I have yet to learn your
-name and business,” he reminded him.
-
-The stranger chuckled. “My name! I have almost forgotten it. I assume
-so many. As for my business, I'm a secret service agent in the employ of
-the British Government.”
-
-“Have you credentials?”
-
-“A letter.”
-
-He produced from his breast pocket an envelope, containing this message,
-typed on American Embassy notepaper, “This will serve to introduce the
-gentleman who is anxious to consult you on the subject of which we spoke
-this afternoon.”
-
-“Satisfactory?”
-
-“Quite. Perhaps now you'll be seated. If you smoke, I can recommend
-these cigars.”
-
-Again the stranger, with unruffled urbanity, betrayed his alert
-independence. “If you have no objection, I prefer my own.”
-
-“As you like.” Hindwood was determined to conduct the interview along
-the lines of social politeness. Selecting a cigar himself, he notched
-the end. “I'm entirely at your disposal. There's little I can tell.
-I suppose the subject on which you're anxious to consult me is what
-happened on the _Ryndam_?”
-
-“Yes and no.” The stranger puffed leisurely for a few moments. “The
-answer is yes, if by 'what happened on the _Ryndam_ you mean Santa
-Gorlof.”
-
-
-III
-
-
-Santa Gorlof?” Hindwood feigned surprise. “A very charming lady!”
-
-The shrewd face puckered in a smile. The gray eyes grew piercing beneath
-the beetling, white brows. “So I've been given to understand. She has a
-way with the men, has our Santa. Even Prince Rogovich, old hand that he
-was, fell for her. I believe that's your expressive phrase in America.
-He fell for her in every sense, especially when she pushed him
-overboard.”
-
-Hindwood frowned. He realized that a cat-and-mouse game had commenced,
-in which he had been allotted the rôle of mouse. He resented the levity
-with which Santa's name had been mentioned. If the man was in earnest,
-the matter was too terrible for jest. Though he had harbored the same
-suspicion, to hear it stated as a fact appalled him. The charge sounded
-dastardly, spoken in that pleasant voice by this courtly English
-gentleman who was old enough to be her father.
-
-With an effort he kept command of his composure. “Of course you're
-joking?”
-
-“Not in the least.”
-
-“Then, in plain American, you're accusing a beautiful and fascinating
-woman of murder.”
-
-“Of what else?”
-
-Hindwood shrugged his shoulders. “Pardon my density. I didn't catch on.
-It was your appearance misled me; you look so much a gentleman.”
-
-“I flatter myself that there are occasions when I am.”
-
-“Then I guess we'll have to reckon this occasion an exception. I might
-remind you that it's a woman you're accusing and that the penalty for
-murder is death. Scarcely a subject to make merry over with a play upon
-words!”
-
-“And you're reminding me,” the stranger added gently, “that, if she's
-a woman, you and I are men. You're trying to tell me that, if my
-supposition is correct, then all that ravishing caprice that we know
-as Santa Gorlof will have to be ruthlessly blotted out. Possibly you're
-picturing, as so many of her victims have pictured before you, the
-wealth of happiness that might be yours if you could win her for
-yourself.”
-
-Hindwood's hand trembled as he flicked his ash. “My dear sir,” he
-drawled, “I'm not twenty. I'm a hard-bitten man of the world. You credit
-me with too much romance. In your profession you're trained to spin
-theories. Please leave me out; stick to your assertion. You come to me,
-accusing a woman of my acquaintance--I can hardly call her a friend--of
-having committed murder. The charge sounds preposterous. Why you should
-come to me at all I can not guess. Before we go further, I have a right
-to ask a question: is this mere conjecture or can you prove it?”
-
-“I can prove it.” The stranger paused, studying the despair his words
-had caused. “I can prove it.” Then he added, “If you'll help.”
-
-“If I'll perjure myself.” Scowling, Hindwood leaped to his feet. “That
-was what you meant. At your time of life I should have thought you could
-have found a less infamous way of gaining your livelihood. There's your
-hat, and there's the door.” The mocking old gentleman went through the
-dumb show of clapping his applause. He settled himself more deeply in
-his chair. When he spoke, it was with the lazy good-humor of a man at
-his club. “You fill me with admiration. Your last attitude was superb.
-I have only one criticism to offer of your play-acting; by letting your
-cigar go out, you betrayed the perturbation you were trying to
-disguise. It's been dead three minutes.” He raised his hand, delaying
-interruption. “Don't be angry. I'm not doubting your momentary
-sincerity. But think back and then own that you also have suspected that
-she's guilty.”
-
-“Never.”
-
-“Humph! Your memory must be faulty. Allow me to prompt you with a few
-facts.”
-
-Then and there, without hesitation or boasting, he detailed to Hindwood
-all his actions, from his departure from the _Ryndam_ to the moment
-when he had arrived at the Embassy. Hindwood listened to the narration
-dumfounded.
-
-“So you see,” he concluded, “if I can tell you so much as this, there
-is probably much more that I could tell. You've been infatuated by a
-she-wolf. What she did to Prince Rogovich, she has done to at least
-a dozen of her admirers. She would have done the same to you. Because
-there have been moments when you thought you loved her, you're unwilling
-to hand her over to justice. You're even willing to risk your own good
-name in her defense. It's sports-manly of you, but she's undeserving
-of your loyalty. When you know the truth, you'll thank your lucky stars
-that I came to-night.”
-
-
-IV
-
-
-Hindwood's face had gone ashen--not through fear for his own safety,
-but for hers. He was determined not to believe a word of what he
-had heard, and yet he was curious to learn. There was such an air of
-complete conviction about the stranger; it was impossible to doubt the
-integrity of his intentions. What he hoped was to discover some flaw in
-his logic. Sinking back into his chair, he stared in silence at the man
-who believed he knew everything.
-
-Remembering that his cigar had gone out, he commenced searching through
-his pockets for a match.
-
-“They're at your elbow,” the stranger informed him. “No, not there. On
-the table. I've upset you more than I intended.”
-
-Again they lapsed into silence.
-
-At last Hindwood said: “I owe you an apology. I've been insulting, but
-the blame is partly yours. You didn't explain yourself; you withheld
-your identity. I was expecting a kind of policeman. But I think you
-understand. Anyhow, I regret my rudeness. Now tell me, who are you?”
-
-“I'm Major Cleasby, formerly of the Indian Army. My main hobby is
-studying the Asiatic.” Hindwood looked up sharply. He remembered the
-impression Santa had made on him, that if her eyes had been darker, she
-could have passed for a Hindoo princess.
-
-“I don't see what studying the Asiatic has to do with the disappearance
-of Prince Rogovich,” he said. “If we're going to arrive anywhere, what
-we need is frankness. I think you ought to understand my side of the
-affair.”
-
-The Major nodded.
-
-“Then, to start with, I'm unmarried--not that I'm a woman-hater, but my
-life has been too packed with important undertakings to leave me much
-time to spare on women. I've been a kind of express, stopping only at
-cities and rushing by all the villages. On the _Ryndam_ I was forced to
-come to rest; it so happened that Santa Gorlof was the village at
-which I halted. The _Ryndam_, as you know, isn't one of these floating
-palaces; she doesn't attract the flashy type of traveler. The company
-on this last voyage was dull--dull to the point of tears. The Prince and
-Santa Gorlof were the two exceptions. I got to know her first and the
-Prince later. It was I who introduced her to him. We were each of us a
-bit stand-offish at first; we drifted together against our wills, in an
-attempt to escape from boredom. Then we began to expect each other, till
-finally--We were two men and a woman, with nothing to distract us;
-it's an old story--the usual thing happened. I suppose you'd call it a
-three-cornered flirtation in which the Prince and I were rivals.
-
-“At first Santa was strictly impartial; toward the end it was the Prince
-she favored. I'm afraid I got huffy, which was distinctly childish, for
-none of us was serious. We were two men and a beautiful woman at loose
-ends, rather dangerously amusing ourselves. At Plymouth, if things had
-terminated normally, we should have come to our senses and gone our
-separate ways. At most we should have said good-by on reaching London.
-In none of our dealings had there been the least hint of anything
-serious--nothing that would suggest a love-affair. Speaking for myself,
-my interest in Santa had been on the wane for several days before we
-landed. I should have parted with her on the dock without compunction,
-if this extraordinary disappearance hadn't occurred. It was that that
-again drew us together. Neither of us was willing to believe the worst;
-we both tried to persuade ourselves that he'd changed his plans at the
-last moment. At the same time we were both a little anxious lest we
-might be bothered with questions and detained. Probably it was to avoid
-any such annoyance that she dodged her breakfast engagement with me and
-escaped so early this morning.”
-
-The Major thrust himself forward, resting his chin on the handle of his
-cane. “That wasn't her reason.”
-
-“You're presuming her guilt. Why wasn't it?”
-
-“You forget the foreigner who wore goggles and pretended he couldn't
-speak English. She couldn't possibly have sent him word. The necessity
-for her escape must have been foreseen and the means prearranged.”
-
-Hindwood puzzled to find some more innocent explanation. “He might have
-been her husband.”
-
-“He wasn't.”
-
-“You speak as though you knew everything.” Then, with a catch in his
-breath, “She isn't arrested?”
-
-“If she were, I shouldn't tell you.”
-
-“Then what makes you so positive that he wasn't her husband?”
-
-The Major drew himself erect, smiling palely. “Because _I_ am her
-husband.”
-
-
-V
-
-
-Hindwood rose and moved over to the window. He felt mentally stifled.
-He leaned out, gazing down into the pool of blackness, along whose
-floor, like the phosphorescence of fishes, lights drifted and darted.
-The sight of so much coolness quieted him. When he turned, the Major had
-not moved a muscle; he was sitting as he had left him, erect and palely
-smiling.
-
-“You'll not be surprised when I tell you, Major Cleasby, that your last
-piece of information completely overwhelms me. You come to me in the
-rôle of a secret service agent, and now you claim to be her husband.”
-
-“I'm both.”
-
-“Do you mean me to understand that you're accumulating the evidence that
-will convict your wife?”
-
-“Convict her and, I regret to say, hang her. Stated baldly, that is my
-purpose.”
-
-Hindwood perched himself on the window ledge and regarded his guest
-intently. He didn't look a monster; he looked in all respects a kindly,
-well-bred gentleman, and yet, if what he had just heard was correct,
-there were few monsters in history who could compare with him. Hindwood
-tried to picture him as Santa's husband. He couldn't. He was thankful
-that he couldn't. For a reason which he did not distress himself to
-analyze, he didn't wish to believe that she had ever had a husband. As
-for the hints about her criminal record and her many lovers, he utterly
-rejected them. Was it likely that a woman so royal and aloof could have
-stooped to the gutter? But if these accusations were not true, what was
-their object? Either it was a case of mistaken identity and there were
-two Santa Gorlofs, or the object was to infuriate him with jealousy so
-that he would blurt out all he knew.
-
-He eyed the Major doubtfully. He wasn't insane. He didn't look a rascal.
-And yet, what husband in his senses----? He began to notice details.
-
-The Major was less old than he had fancied at first; he was more worn
-than aged. Illness or tragedy might have whitened him. It was even
-possible that he had made himself up for the part he was playing. His
-eyes were clear, and his hands virile. With the mustache and imperial
-removed----
-
-“Major Cleasby, you ask me to accept a great deal on your bare word,”
- he said politely. “You come to me with nothing to introduce you but the
-most briefly formal letter. The moment you enter my room, before you'll
-have anything to do with me, you inspect every hiding-place as though
-I were a counterfeiter or an anarchist. You boldly announce to me that
-ever since I landed in England you've had me followed and observed. You
-use the results of your spying as a kind of blackmail to induce me to
-present you with the sort of evidence for which you're searching. You
-trick me into telling you about a shipboard flirtation with a woman whom
-you say you want convicted of murder. No sooner have I told you, than
-you declare that you yourself are married to her. I ought to refuse to
-allow this interview to go further without calling in a lawyer. I don't
-mean to be offensive, but your kaleidoscopic changes put a strain on my
-credulity. I can't believe your story that you're a secret service agent
-endeavoring to get your wife executed. When men tire of matrimony, they
-find less ingenious methods of recovering their bachelorhood.”
-
-The Major smiled with his patient air of affability. “It isn't my
-bachelorhood that I'm trying to recover. It's my----”
-
-“If you don't mind,” Hindwood cut in, “I'd like to finish my say first.
-One of the things that you may not have learned is that I'm here on a
-mission of international dimensions. It concerns more than one of the
-governments of Europe. I can't afford to have my name mixed up in a
-scandal and, what's more, I can bring influences to bear to prevent it
-from being introduced. You may be anything you like; whatever you are
-cuts no ice. I'm through with you and with whatever you may imagine took
-place on the _Ryndam_. You seem to think that I'm concealing a guilty
-knowledge that would enable you to bring this Gorlof woman to trial.
-You're on the wrong tack. I have no such knowledge. The longer you
-stay here, the more you waste my time.” The Major was on the point of
-answering when the telephone rang shrilly. Grateful for a diversion,
-Hindwood crossed the room. As he unhooked the receiver, he glanced
-across his shoulder, “Excuse me.”
-
-“Is this Mr. Hindwood?”
-
-“It is.”
-
-It was the hotel operator asking.
-
-“There's a call for you, sir. It's from some one who's not on a
-newspaper. Will you take it?”
-
-“Certainly.”
-
-There was a pause while the connection was being made; then a foreign
-voice, a woman's, questioned, “Eees thees Meester Hindwood? Eef you
-please, one meenute. A lady wants to talk wiz you.”
-
-Coming across the distance, subdued and earnest, he caught the tones of
-a voice which was instantly familiar.
-
-“Don't be startled. Don't answer me. There's a man with you. Tell him
-nothing. If you ever loved me, even for a second, don't believe a word
-he says.”
-
-She had not been arrested! A wave of joy swept over him. The uncertainty
-as to whether she was arrested had been crushing him.
-
-He waited, hoping she would speak again.
-
-Shattering the spell with a touch of bathos, the operator inquired,
-“Number?”
-
-With that he rang off. As he raised his head, he had the uncomfortable
-sensation that the Major had turned away from watching him.
-
-
-VI
-
-
-So you want to be rid of me!” The Major glanced across his shoulder, at
-the same time making no effort to remove himself.
-
-Hindwood crossed the room thoughtfully and seated himself. “I've made no
-secret of it from the moment you entered.”
-
-The Major laughed genially. “I don't blame you. You think I'm a wronged
-husband trying to get even, or else an unscrupulous detective baiting
-traps with falsehoods. The situation's unpleasant--for you, especially.”
-
-“I'm glad you realize it.”
-
-“I assure you I do. You've given yourself away completely.”
-
-“You think so?”
-
-“I don't think; I know. What you've told me proves beyond a doubt that
-you're possessed of exactly the knowledge that would bring Santa Gorlof
-to trial.”
-
-“You're imaginative.”
-
-“I'm observant. You're wondering what makes me so certain. The
-explanation's simple: I've studied Santa's tactics. Her strategy's the
-same in every instance. When a man suspects her guilt, she does what she
-did to you: seals his mouth with kisses.”
-
-“This is too much.” Hindwood brought his fist down with a bang. “Do you
-go or do I have to force you?”
-
-“This time I'll try one of yours.”
-
-With astounding assurance the Major helped himself to one of Hindwood's
-cigars, which he had previously rejected. Without bravado he lighted
-it and, having ascertained that it was drawing, continued: “If you used
-force, you'd regret it. You'd make certain of the unwelcome publicity
-you're so anxious to avoid; you'd miss a stranger story than any Arabian
-tale that ever was concocted. You think you can still touch bottom; as
-a matter of fact you're already out of sight of land. You sit there
-looking an average, successful American; actually you've become an
-heroic figure, adrift upon an ocean so romantic and uncharted that it
-beats upon the cliffs of every human passion.”
-
-Hindwood shifted uneasily. “So you're a fortuneteller in addition to
-being an ill-used husband and a detective!”
-
-Ignoring his sarcasm, the Major proceeded: “Some time ago you accused me
-of ingenuity in the means I had adopted to recover my bachelorhood. It's
-not my bachelorhood, but my own and my country's honor that, with
-your help, I'm endeavoring to recover. That sounds extravagant? But
-consider--what motive could be sufficiently extravagant to compel a man
-to bend all his energies toward bringing the woman whom he loves to the
-scaffold? Because I say it calmly, you doubt that I love her. What man
-could help loving her? She's the last of a long line of false, fair
-women who've stirred up madness and left behind a trail of ruin.”
-
-Rising wearily, Hindwood turned his back and commenced fingering the
-documents on his desk. “There'll be nothing gained by carrying this
-discussion further.”
-
-With a question the Major recaptured his attention. “Did it ever strike
-you that she's partly Asiatic?”
-
-Hindwood swung round, surprised into truth. “What makes you ask it?”
-
-
-VII
-
-
-Even to myself,” the Major sighed, “the story which I am about to tell
-sounds incredible. My reason for confiding it to a stranger is that,
-when you have heard it, you may dispense with chivalry and become stern
-enough to do your duty. To protect a woman, whatever her age or
-looks, is an instinct as primitive as religion. When she happens to be
-beautiful and the object of your affection, not to protect her is a
-kind of blasphemy. You and I, though you deny it, are both in love
-with Santa. I am her husband, while you are no more than her chance-met
-admirer. Yet you, in her hour of danger, are prepared to shield her with
-your honor, whereas I am among the most relentless of her pursuers.
-
-“The best part of my life has been spent in India. I went there with
-my regiment when I was little more than a boy. The fascination of an
-ancient civilization took possession of my imagination. I became a
-student of it and soon acquired a knowledge of native habits which was
-more fitting to a secret agent than to a soldier. I learned to speak
-many dialects and could pass myself off as an Asiatic with the minimum
-amount of disguise. Instead of frequenting clubs and idling away my
-leisure in the usual round of social futilities which make up the
-average Anglo-Indian's life, I formed the practice of slipping out into
-the night and losing my identity in the teeming, Oriental shadow-world
-by which I was surrounded.
-
-“On one of my wanderings--when or where it is not necessary to
-particularize--I strolled into a temple and saw a young girl dancing. As
-perhaps you know, girls are dedicated to the worship of certain gods and
-goddesses at a very early age. They are for the most part deities who
-symbolize fecundity; the ritual with which they are celebrated is gross.
-The temple girls are chosen for their beauty and are trained by the
-priesthood to perform sensual dances, which are as old as time. They
-are not nuns or priestesses; their social status, if they may be said to
-have any in a land where woman is at best a plaything, approximates to
-that of temple slaves. They are taken from their parents at an age when
-sahibs' children are in nurseries. From the moment they are dedicated,
-their minds and souls are left to stagnate; they are treated like
-performing animals--fed and drilled and degraded that they may employ
-their bodies with the utmost grace.
-
-“This girl, the moment I saw her, impressed me as being the most
-fascinating human creature I had ever set eyes on. I had pressed in with
-the crowd from the evil-smelling, moonlit street. The temple was dim
-with the smoke of swaying censers. Its walls seemed vast with the flash
-of gold and jewels. At the far end, scarcely discernible, a huge god
-squatted, gloating and sinister. From somewhere in the shadows, swelling
-into frenzy, came the pounding of drums and the clash of barbaric music.
-Across the open pavement, between the god and the spectators, a chain of
-girls coiled and twisted like a snake.
-
-“At the time I entered, the dance was nearly ended. It had evidently
-been going on for a long while. One by one the girls were slipping down
-exhausted. There they lay disordered, with their hair twined about them
-and their slim, bronze bodies twitching.
-
-“But one girl danced on, ever quickening her pace, till she alone
-remained. She was like a streak of flame, a will-o'-the-wisp, a spring
-petal blown before the wind: she seemed the symbol of everything that
-is young and pagan. Her childish face was masked in an unchanging smile.
-Her lips were parted; her body gleamed golden among the muted lights.
-She stooped and darted like a lizard across her fallen comrades; with
-one leap she floated through the air, perched for a moment on the knees
-of the god, and vanished into his bosom. Instantly the censers were
-extinguished, and I was carried out into the evil-smelling street by the
-rush of the perspiring crowd.
-
-“From that night it was as though I were bewitched. There was never an
-hour when that drifting blossom of a girl was absent from my mind. I
-idealized her into a nobility that was more than earthly. I flung
-aside all sense of caste and race. I forgot that I was a sahib and over
-thirty, whereas she was a dancing girl and little more than a child. I
-excused my infatuation on the ground of magnanimity, telling myself that
-if I could possess her, I could save her from certain degradation. Above
-all, I wanted to wipe out her houri's smile and to cause the soul to
-appear in her eyes. Every hour that I could spare, I disguised myself as
-a native and haunted the temple. At rare intervals I caught glimpses of
-her. And so six months went by.
-
-“Gradually my desire strengthened into determination. I was insane with
-chivalry--utterly quixotic, as quixotic as you are now. I had raised her
-to such a pinnacle of worship that a liaison was not to be contemplated.
-What I planned was to carry her off and marry her. When you remember
-the gulf which the Anglo-Indian places between himself and the races he
-governs, you can estimate the measure of my madness. Such an act would
-entail resigning from my regiment and inviting social ostracism on every
-hand. It meant ruin, but to my impassioned mind no price seemed too high
-to pay.
-
-“There was an old priest who, unknown to me, had observed my comings and
-goings. One evening he addressed me by name. While I was hesitating as
-to what could be his motive, he volunteered to obtain the girl for me if
-I would reward him with a sufficient bribe.
-
-“Three nights later, as I waited, a door in the temple wall opened, and
-a muffled figure emerged. Without a word, obeying the instructions I had
-received, I turned away, and she followed. Through the sleeping city we
-crept, like a pair of shadows.
-
-“In the European quarter I had secretly rented a bungalow which had long
-been deserted. It stood in a wilderness of overgrown shrubberies; a high
-wall went about it. Not until the rusty gate had closed behind us did I
-dare to acknowledge her presence; then, taking her in my arms, I carried
-her up the path to the unlighted house. We entered. There were just the
-two of us; I had not risked engaging servants. In the darkness I set her
-down and lighted a lamp. As the flame quickened and I knelt beside her,
-she uncovered her face. So far, I had seen her only distantly. It was
-the moment for which I had waited. Her face was white.”
-
-The Major passed his hand across his forehead. His lips tightened. He
-betrayed every sign of a man doing his best to conceal an overpowering
-emotion. He leaned back and gazed up at the ceiling, blowing out a cloud
-of smoke. When he had watched it disperse, he turned to Hindwood with a
-deprecating smile.
-
-“I hope I don't bore you. I'll omit the ardors and ecstasies of my
-love-affair and stick to the bare outline. What I discovered was that
-she was an Eurasian. She was fourteen years of age--a woman by Indian
-standards, but still a child by ours. Her eyes were gray, and her
-complexion was so light that, with any one but an expert, she could have
-passed for a European. There are millions of darkhaired women with her
-coloring to be found in any Latin country. Given the proper manners and
-a European setting, scarcely a soul would have suspected her. Certainly
-no one would dare to voice his suspicions who met her as my wife.
-
-“Her history I pieced together from many conversations. Her father had
-been a tea-planter--an Englishman of good family. Her mother had been
-a Burmese. They both had died in a cholera epidemic; their half-caste
-child had been picked up from the highways and placed in the temple.
-
-“Seeing that I was out to be chivalrous, I made up my mind to do the
-thing thoroughly. I hurried up a furlough that was due me and, taking
-her to France, placed her in a convent. My reason for choosing France
-was that, when she became my wife, there would be fewer chances of
-discovery if she passed as French instead of English. In the south,
-especially in Provence, there are many women of her type descended from
-the Saracens. If you've been to Arles, you must have noticed them. At
-the end of three years, when she was seventeen, I returned, married her,
-and took her back to India. If any one detected the deception, no one
-was bold enough to proclaim it. Every circumstance argued against such
-a surmise. She had forgotten much of the English she had known, and
-pretended to speak only French. I had coached her in her part; she acted
-it to perfection. By no hint or sign did she let the knowledge escape
-her that she could understand a word of any native dialect. So far as I
-am aware, she was accepted at her face value, as a young Provençal whom
-I had courted in her own country.
-
-“For some time my romantic folly brought us nothing but happiness. We
-invented a legend to account for her family, which, through continual
-repetition, we almost came to believe ourselves. No two people were ever
-more in love. Despite our difference in age and the racial gulf which
-divided us, no man and woman ever seemed more wisely mated. Apparently
-whatever shameful knowledge she had acquired in the temple had been
-blotted out by her superimposed refinement. Even to me she betrayed no
-hint of grossness; she appeared to be as sweet and innocent as the girl
-I claimed her to be--the girl I said I had surprised in the passionless
-tranquility of a French convent.
-
-“Her devotion to myself was pathetic--it verged on adoration. She was
-continually contriving new ways of rewarding me for the horrors from
-which I had saved her. To me the ground she trod was sacred. I delighted
-in making myself her slave. We competed with each other in generosity.
-With each of us the other's slightest whim was law. She was unbelievably
-beautiful, the most mysteriously beautiful woman in India. I was more
-than twice her years and the envy of every man who saw her. Her beauty
-seemed only the outshining of her goodness. Save for an accident, I
-should never have known otherwise.
-
-“We had been married two years when she bore me a child. Our dread, when
-we knew that she was to become a mother, was that our offspring might
-reveal the Asiatic strain. We took every precaution to hide the fact, if
-this should happen. But even this was spared us. Our boy was blue-eyed
-and flaxen-haired as any Anglo-Saxon. She worshiped him. He seemed to
-symbolize Heaven's blessing on the lie we practiced. He was never out of
-her sight. In her fear lest he might develop some native characteristic,
-she refused to have an _ayah_ and cared for him entirely. Wherever she
-went, she kept him with her; he slept in our room at night. So perfectly
-had she drilled herself that, up to this point, I can not recall an
-instance in which she had fallen below the level of a well-born
-white woman. It was the finest instinct in her nature that proved her
-undoing--her mother-love that trapped her into the self-revelation which
-produced our tragedy.
-
-“Our child was a sturdy little fellow of nearly two, just beginning to
-run about, when suddenly he died. We had a house-party at the time. His
-mother was playing tennis. While she was playing, he was strangled
-and thrown down a well by a native servant who believed he had been
-slighted. My wife, missing the child, went in search of him in panic and
-caught the native in the act of getting rid of the body. Instantly she
-reverted to what her mother had been before her. Snatching the man's
-knife, she killed him before any of her guests could restrain her. In
-the abandonment of her grief, she became an out and out Burmese woman,
-scattering dust on her hair, beating her breasts, and rending her
-clothes with the wildest lamentations. The fiction of her French origin
-was utterly destroyed. There was no longer any doubt among those who
-witnessed her that I was married to an Eurasian.
-
-“Our position at once became intolerable. A halfcaste is despised the
-world over, but in India especially. That night every servant left. None
-of our friends came near us. We sat alone with our grief in a deserted
-house. As her calmness returned, she grew tragically contrite--not
-contrite from any moral sense, but because she had given away our
-secret. She seemed incapable of appreciating that she had done any wrong
-in depriving justice of its victim. When I tried to explain to her that
-she had committed a crime, she shook her head impatiently, insisting
-that she had done what any mother ought to do under the circumstances.
-When I pressed the subject she became persuaded that I, too, was blaming
-her, and then that I had never properly loved either her or her child.
-And yet I think I never loved her more tenderly than at that moment.
-
-“A week later, after miserable days and nights of suspense, we received
-our sentence. Native sedition was running high. The Government did not
-dare to bring the wife of a British officer to trial. Such a course
-would have proved too damaging to the prestige of Anglo-Indian
-officialdom. I was promised that the scandal would be hushed up and I
-should be given a new employment, if I would agree to ship her out of
-India at once and to see to it that she never returned. What it amounted
-to for me was perpetual separation and for her perpetual banishment.
-
-“I have often tried to arrive at a sane conclusion as to how far I am
-the author of what she has become. Had I shared her banishment there
-can be little doubt that her white blood would have kept control of her
-poisoned heritage. Unfortunately I had a living to earn. Professionally
-I was broken. My savings were inconsiderable. I had her to maintain. I
-was past mid-life and by leaving India would have sacrificed the pension
-that was already in sight. Moreover, I knew of no way of marketing my
-training in any country outside India. So I played safe and bowed
-to authority. I resigned from my regiment and was transferred to the
-department of military intelligence. After knowing the security of
-a home and wife, at past forty I became a secret agent, a spy and a
-wanderer, a friendless and unfriendly man, unsociable and socially
-unacceptable. As for my wife, aged only twenty-one, she was exiled to
-England, a stranger in a gray, chill country, bankrupt in her happiness,
-with no one to defend her, taking with her the temptation of her unusual
-beauty and the treacherous inheritance of her intermingled blood.
-
-“There seemed no justice in the world for either of us. The offending
-cause of our punishment was the protective motherhood which had prompted
-her to slay the killer of our child. But, to use your terse Americanism,
-we were 'up against' blind angers and racial prejudices, which no amount
-of bucking on our part could change. So far as she was concerned, even
-before her life had started, she had been condemned. The initial sin had
-been her parents' when they had allowed themselves to create her. Before
-she had seen daylight, the uncharity of mankind had proclaimed her a
-half-caste and a pariah. From her inherited fate I had tried to
-snatch her when I had bought her from the temple. You may say that my
-recklessness was nothing more than selfishness, pharisaically parading
-as chivalry; in allowing her to bear me a child, I had only reduplicated
-the crime of her parents. Nevertheless, I had tried to rescue her and
-could have succeeded, had not her mother-love ensnared her. She was
-betrayed by the purest instinct in her nature; she was shown no more
-leniency than if it had been the basest. There lay the cruelty that
-rankled. She was judged not by motives, but by results. She would have
-been pardoned and applauded, had she been a full-blooded white woman.
-
-“In spite of all these accumulated injustices, I believe she would have
-retained the strength to go straight had there been any limit to our
-separation. There was none. For all the comfort that I could be to her,
-I might just as well have been dead or divorced from her. I was all that
-remained out of the ruin that had overtaken her, yet the most to which
-she could look forward, save for brief meetings at long intervals, was
-that I would be restored to her in my useless old age, when the glorious
-floodtide of her youth hud receded. You see I am sufficiently unbiased
-to be able to plead her case.”
-
-The Major rose and, going over to the window, stood with his back toward
-Hindwood, gazing out into the night. Some minutes had elapsed, when he
-turned quietly.
-
-“Where had I got to? Ah, yes! To where I had to send her to England! I
-accompanied her to Calcutta to see her safely on the liner. Shall I ever
-forget that journey? It had the gloom of a funeral and the frenzy of
-an elopement. Actually my rôle was that of a policeman deporting a
-miscreant who happened to be his wife. We tried to pack into moments
-the emotions of a lifetime. As background to our love-making was the
-poignant memory of the puzzled child, whom seven years earlier I had
-escorted on the same journey, _en route_ for France, where she was to
-be made over into a sahib's lady. In her wondering attitude toward
-the fortunes that assailed her, she was little changed. She was still
-startlingly unsophisticated--a child-woman, dangerously credulous and
-deceivingly unversed in masculine wiles. I had taught her to be so
-dependent that I dared not imagine how she would do without me. She was
-so artless. She took such pleasure in admiration. Love was so necessary
-to her; it was the breath of her life. Its misuse had been the breath
-and the means of life of her Burmese mother before her.
-
-“Her complete lack of comprehension that I in any way shared her
-sacrifice formed the most distressing part of my ordeal. She assumed
-that she was being exiled by ray choice. She persisted in talking as
-if she could stay, if I would only change my mind. Though she did
-not accuse me in words, she believed that I was ridding myself of her
-because she had disgraced me--that I was pushing her across the horizon,
-where she would be forgotten and out of sight. Up to the last moment
-she pleaded with and coaxed me, as though it were I who was refusing
-to repeal her sentence. The ship cast off, bearing her from me with her
-broken heart and her embittered memories of the newly-dug grave, while I
-turned back to ferret through the gutters of Asia, that I might earn the
-wherewithal to provide for her.
-
-“At first she wrote many times a day; then every day; then regularly to
-catch each outgoing mail. In the whole of England she knew nobody. In
-her anger against British justice she wished to know nobody. She was
-inconsolable, bruised in spirit, and crushed in her pride. After the
-pomp and hubbub of the East, she found London drab and melancholy. From
-her lodgings in Kensington she poured out her soul on paper. Much of
-what she wrote consisted of memories, the tender trifles which a mother
-treasures about her child.
-
-“Gradually, almost imperceptibly, there came a change. A querulous note
-crept in, a questioning of motives. Why had I sent her as far away as
-England? Why had I sent her away at all? If it were true that it was not
-I who had exiled her, why had I not accompanied her? Was it because I
-was tired and ashamed of her? It would have been kinder to have left her
-to dance in the temple. Then a new suspicion grew up, which betrayed an
-evil that I had never traced in her. With whom was I living? Some white
-woman? Was that why I had rid myself of her?
-
-“What answers could I make? It was like arguing with a spiteful child.
-Our misunderstandings were as wide as the distance that separated us.
-She implored and finally demanded that I should join her. The more I
-stated obstacles, the more convinced she became that I was cruel, like
-all the sahibs who were torturing her--the proud sahibs who thought
-nothing of a murdered baby, when it was only the child of a half-caste
-woman.
-
-“From then on her heart hardened, till at last I failed to recognize
-in her any resemblance to the gentle wife who had been so much my
-companion. She wrote vaguely about revenge, a revenge that should
-embrace the whole white race. Contempt should be repaid with despising,
-hatred with blows, blood with blood. Her beauty should be the weapon.
-She seemed to have gone mad. Suddenly her letters ceased. My remittances
-were returned; they had failed to reach her.
-
-“For what follows I have but one explanation. By some species of
-unconscious hypnotism, so long as I had exerted physical influence over
-her, I had had the power to make the European in her predominate. As my
-influence weakened with time and distance, she relapsed into the woman
-she always would have been, if I had not found her: a smiling menace to
-the nobilities of both the races from which she was descended, a
-human jackal following the hunt. That sounds harsh? Then listen to the
-conclusion of my story.
-
-“One day, six months after I had lost touch with her, I was glancing
-through an illustrated weekly when, on turning a page, I found her
-portrait gazing up at me. She was photographed in almost the attitude
-and attire in which I had first caught sight of her in the temple. The
-very setting was similar; behind her the huge god squatted, gloating and
-sinister--on her face was the unchanging houri's smile. On reading the
-text I discovered that she had leaped into instant fame as an exponent
-of Indian dancing. You will remember that in the last two years before
-the war the dance craze was at its height. She had been acclaimed a
-great artist; everything she said, did, and wore was fulsomely praised
-and described. There was no false reticence about either her or her
-admirers; she was frankly advertised as being possessed of the most
-beautiful body in Europe. She had given herself a French name and
-was announced as being of French ancestry. According to her printed
-biography, her father had been an orchid-hunter who had taken her with
-him on all his expeditions. On his last, in India, he had died; she
-had been kidnaped for her beauty and sold into the service of a Hindoo
-temple. From this bondage she had been rescued by an Englishman of title
-who had chivalrously restored her to her family in Marseilles. There was
-much more to the same effect--a jumble of perverted truth and romantic
-lies, precisely the kind of adventurous nonsense which appeals to the
-sensation-seeking public.
-
-“From then on, _via_ the press, I was always getting news of her.
-London, Paris, Berlin, St. Petersburg, each in turn went mad over her.
-She captivated a continent. Kings and emperors commanded her to appear
-before them. Her tours were royal triumphs. Little by little ugly rumors
-began to spread. There was a Parisian banker who, when he had lavished
-his all upon her, committed suicide, leaving his wife and children
-penniless. There was another scandal; it had to do with a Russian
-general who had betrayed his country. At his court-martial he poisoned
-himself when her name was introduced into the evidence. As though a
-conspiracy of silence had broken down, now that she began to be gossiped
-about, scandals gathered thick and fast. Each new one was more infamous
-than the last; out of each she emerged unpitying and smiling. It was
-only her victims who suffered. Her progress was marked by a trail of
-death and ruin. Nevertheless, infatuated by the exquisiteness of her
-body, men fluttered about her unceasingly, like moths, shriveling their
-souls in the flame of her fascination. When the peace of the world was
-violated by the Germans--”
-
-Hindwood leaned forward, tapping the Major's knee. “I can spare you
-your eloquence. The rest of your story is common property. The woman you
-describe stole the Allies' anti-submarine defense plans from her lover.
-He was a British naval officer, temporarily in Paris. She was caught
-red-handed. There was a sentimental agitation in her favor--an attempt
-to argue that as a physical masterpiece of feminine perfection she ought
-to be exempted. It accomplished nothing. She was a German spy, who had
-sold men's lives for profit. She received and deserved no more mercy
-than a rag-picker. After having been encouraged in her sins because
-of her unrivaled loveliness, she was led out at dawn in the woods of
-Vincennes, where the body which had maddened thousands of eyes was
-riddled with bullets.”
-
-The Major's lips were smiling crookedly. “How could she have been
-riddled with bullets,” he questioned, “when you crossed the Atlantic in
-her company?”
-
-Hindwood shrugged his shoulders. “If you insist on propounding
-conundrums, it's up to you to supply the answers.”
-
-“I can supply them. The person executed in the woods of Vincennes was
-not a woman.”
-
-“That's a daring assertion. Who was it?”
-
-“A distinguished French officer, a man who had been crippled in
-defending his country and held the highest awards for gallantry. In
-pre-war days he had been an old flame of hers, whom she had abandoned
-with more than her ordinary callousness. On hearing of her predicament,
-he begged to be allotted the duty of seeing that her sentence was
-properly executed. The reason he gave was that he might clear himself
-of the taint of ever having associated with a traitress. He was put in
-charge of the guard on her last night. Making use of his opportunity, he
-exchanged clothing with her and--”
-
-Hindwood stifled a yawn. “You expect me to believe this?”
-
-The Major mastered his anger. “I expect you to believe nothing. I'm here
-to state facts and to warn you that your friend, who now calls herself
-Santa Gorlof, is the same woman. My appeal to you for assistance
-in bringing her to justice is both personal and patriotic. I am
-her husband; my honor is involved. I am also an Englishman; all her
-intrigues, even this last, in which Prince Rogovich met his fate, are
-aimed against the friends of England--one of whom, I may remind you, is
-your own great nation. All I can say is that each man has his separate
-standard of loyalty. For me, an old soldier, my devotion to my country
-is more important than my compassion for an erring woman.”
-
-Hindwood rose. Uncomfortably, against his will, he had been impressed by
-the stoical dignity of his persistent guest. “You deserve that I should
-be frank with you. Here's the truth--I accept very little of what you've
-told me. Either you've mistaken my traveling companion for another
-woman, or else you've been trying to prejudice me with a fantastic
-story. But even though I accepted your supposed revelation, I should
-refuse to help you. On your own showing, you're endeavoring to bring the
-mother of your child to the scaffold. I should respect you more if you
-left her fate to other hands. Disbelieving you, as I do, I regard
-the introduction of Miss Gorlof's name into the discussion as rank
-impertinence. Your coupling of my name with hers increases the cowardice
-of your discourtesy. If you had convinced me and I were eager to assist
-you, I couldn't. I know nothing about her--our acquaintance was the most
-casual. In all probability I've seen her for the last time; I haven't
-the vaguest notion where she's to be found. If your half-caste vampire
-actually escaped the bullets in the woods of Vincennes, I advise you to
-search for her in another direction. You may take my word for it that if
-Santa Gorlof learns of your activities, you'll find yourself in trouble.
-I reckon myself some judge when it comes to character.”
-
-The Major drew out his silk handkerchief from his breast pocket and
-flicked a speck of dust from his immaculate white spats. With the utmost
-deliberation he recovered his hat and gloves. For a few seconds he gazed
-out of the window thoughtfully; then, turning slowly, he crossed the
-room. With his hand on the door knob, he glanced back solemnly. He
-passed his fingers across his lips and cleared his throat. “When she has
-added you to her list of victims, if she gives you time before she kills
-you, remember that I warned you.”
-
-When Hindwood had recovered sufficiently from his surprise to follow him
-out into the passage, every sign of his unwelcome visitor had vanished.
-
-He had scarcely closed the door and reseated himself, when again there
-came a tapping.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER THE THIRD--HE PLUNGES INTO ROMANCE
-
-
-I
-
-
-HINDWOOD consulted his watch; the hour was nearing midnight. He was
-surprised to discover how the time had flown. The tapping outside his
-door continued. There was nothing hurried about it, nothing impatient.
-On the other hand, there was nothing humble. It was a secret, intimate
-kind of tapping, like the signaling of a woman to her lover. It would
-cease for a minute, so that he began to hope that he was to be left in
-quiet; then it would recommence.
-
-He sat obstinately at bay, almost holding his breath, not daring to
-move lest he should betray that he had noticed. He was determined not
-to admit this new disturber. He had had enough of danger warnings and
-revengeful husbands. The only danger that he greatly dreaded was the
-loss of a second night's rest.
-
-The sound was getting on his nerves. It was so irritatingly discreet
-and importunate. At first he had tried to believe that his caller was a
-hotel employee, but a servant would have taken silence for an answer
-a good five minutes ago. If it had been any one who had a right to be
-there, the tapping would have been bolder. Whoever it was, it was some
-one who had correctly estimated his mood.
-
-_Tap-a-tap, tap-a-tap_. An interval, and then, _tap-a-tap_.
-
-Getting stealthily to his feet, he tiptoed to the threshold and flung
-wide the door.
-
-“I beg your pardon.” He caught her arm as she stumbled back. “I guess I
-startled you.”
-
-“Shish!” She pressed a finger to her lips. “Let me inside, so that I can
-sit down.”
-
-Giving her his arm, he led her to a chair. Having returned and closed
-the door, he surveyed her at his leisure.
-
-She had the appearance of a peasant woman dressed in her Sunday best,
-yet so great was her dignity, she did not seem out of place in her
-surroundings. She was very aged; her figure was shapeless and bowed. Her
-gray hair was cropped like a boy's; she wore spread over it, knotted at
-the throat, a neatly folded kerchief of white linen. She was clad in a
-black gown of the utmost plainness. Nothing distracted attention from
-her face, which was as stoical with endurance as a gladiator's. You
-could almost trace the riverbeds her tears had worn. The fist of fate
-had punched it flat. It was a ruin to which violence had done its worst,
-but had failed to destroy its gentleness. And he had expected Santa.
-Instead of feminine frailty, spurring weak desires, there had come
-this woman, iron of will, broken in body, ravished by years, with her
-tremendous impression of moral strength. As she sat before him, her
-gnarled hands resting on her cane, pushing back the weight of her
-ancient shoulders, she raised to him the dim valiance of her eyes. “What
-can I do for you?” he questioned. “Nothing.” She swung her head from
-side to side with the brooding fierceness of a decrepit lioness. “It is
-you whom I have come to help.”
-
-“I!” he smiled. “I think you are mistaken.”
-
-“I am never mistaken.” She gazed at him intently. “I have come to
-help you to act generously. You have it in your power to save a woman,
-perhaps at the sacrifice of yourself.”
-
-He laughed quietly. “You mean Santa Gorlof. I wonder when I'm to hear
-the last of her. A secret service man has spent the past two hours
-instructing me what I can do for her. You must have met him. He had
-scarcely left when you began to tap. He tried to convince me that if I
-didn't protect myself by giving him information which would lead to her
-arrest, my name would be added to her list of victims. A pleasant
-sort of threat! I'm afraid he found me, as you will probably find me,
-disappointing. I'm not possessed of any incriminating information, and
-I don't place any faith in her list of victims. She struck me as being a
-very gracious and fascinating woman. Beyond that I have no opinion about
-her, either for or against.”
-
-The old head sank further forward; the dim eyes became searching. “Then
-you told him nothing?”
-
-“I knew nothing to tell.”
-
-There followed a deep silence, during which they gazed fixedly at each
-other. She sighed contentedly, nodding her approval. “So you are in love
-with her! That makes things easier. Even to me you lie--to me who am her
-friend!”
-
-“I deny that I am in love with her, but what makes you think so?”
-
-“She thinks so.”
-
-“Then you come directly from her?”
-
-He had been unable to keep back the eagerness from his voice. Instantly
-he realized his indiscretion. Pulling up a chair, he seated himself
-opposite her, that he might lose nothing of her changes of expression.
-
-“You're the second unconventional visitor,” he said, “whom I've received
-this evening. The object of both your visits seems to be the same--to
-associate my name with that of a lady to whom I am comparatively a
-stranger. We may have conversed together a couple of dozen times;
-when we parted, I never expected to hear from her. Within the space
-of twenty-four hours a man who claims to be her husband comes to me
-accusing her of every infamy. No sooner has the door closed behind him
-than you enter, asserting that I am in love with her. You must pardon
-me if I begin to suspect a plot. For all I know, you may be my first
-visitor's accomplice, employing a more disarming method to get me to
-commit myself. You tell me you are Santa Gorlof's friend; you might
-equally well say you are her grandmother--you offer me no proof. If
-she's really in trouble, I'm sorry. But I fail to see any way in which I
-can serve her.”
-
-“If there were no way, I should not have troubled you, especially at
-this late hour. As for her being in danger, she has always been in
-danger. She was born into the world like that. I am old--very old. I
-have no traces of it left, but I, too, was once beautiful.”
-
-The trembling hands fumbled at the white linen kerchief, loosening the
-knot against her neck. “Ah, yes, I was beautiful. But I did not come to
-you to speak of that. My friend, you are good; I saw that the moment I
-entered. I said to myself, 'There is the man who could understand our
-Santa and make her honorable like himself.' The world has given her no
-chance--no, never. The husband who should have cared for her tossed her
-aside like an old shoe when, like all animals robbed of their young, she
-struck out in self-defense. I see you have heard that--how her child
-was murdered and she was sent into exile for taking justice into her own
-hands. Doubtless you have heard much else. She is a woman who would have
-done no harm to any one if she had been allowed to remain a mother. But
-because they scoffed at her motherhood, all her goodness has turned to
-wickedness. Using her body as a decoy, she has slain men of the race
-that persecuted her. Because she could not get her child back, she has
-become an outlaw, making society pay for her loneliness.”
-
-She paused, watching her effect.
-
-Hindwood had not removed his eyes from hers. His face was troubled.
-“I don't think you know what has been told me. The man who introduced
-himself to me as her husband said that she was a half-caste, a temple
-dancing-girl, who to revenge herself had poisoned white men's happiness
-and during the war had become an international spy, working against the
-Allies. He made the assertion that she was responsible for the vanishing
-of Prince Rogovich. If these things are so, how can I, a decent,
-self-respecting man--”
-
-Bending forward, the old lady clutched his hand. “It was decent,
-self-respecting men who made her what she is to-day.”
-
-He released his hand quietly. “You have not denied any of the
-accusations which are brought against her. And yet, remembering her
-face, I can not believe that she is bad. You want me to save her. If
-by that you mean that you want me to pledge myself not to give evidence
-against her, you may tell her from me that I have no evidence.”
-
-“I don't mean that.”
-
-“Then what?”
-
-“I want you to declare to me that you love her. No, listen. There is
-still something in her that is pure. You have made her conscious of it.
-You can undo the wrong that has been done her and make her the woman she
-should be, if you choose.”
-
-Hindwood rose from his seat and paced the room. Suddenly he halted and
-swung round. “How did you know that I desired her? Until you came, I
-scarcely realized it myself. Why should you have appointed yourself to
-tempt me--you, who are so old? Between sane people, what would be the
-use of my telling you that I loved her? Though I refused to believe any
-of the libels against her which even you seem to credit, there are two
-facts which it does not seem possible to escape: that she is married and
-that the police are on her track. I have been warned that when she
-traps men, she commences by appealing to their chivalry. That's what's
-happening now. Do you see where you place me? If she is falsely accused,
-I brand myself a coward by running away from her. If she is guilty,
-I endanger my good name by having any more to do with her. What I
-am waiting to hear you say is that this is a case of mistaken
-identity--that she is willing and able to prove it.”
-
-“Will you help me out of my chair?”
-
-When she was on her feet, she let go his arm and commenced to move
-across the room.
-
-“Where are you going?”
-
-“To give her your message.”
-
-“I've told you nothing.”
-
-“You've told me that you love her.”
-
-She was on the point of leaving. With quiet decision he put his back
-against the door, preventing her from opening it.
-
-“Madam,” he said, “old as you are, you owe me some consideration. Before
-you go, I at least have a right to ask your name.”
-
-She smiled wistfully. The harshness in her face was replaced by a
-glow of tenderness. “Yes, you have the right. I am called 'the Little
-Grandmother.' I am a readjuster of destinies--the champion of the
-down-trodden. I fight for those for whom the world has ceased to care.”
-
-“But what have you to do with Santa?”
-
-“She has been oppressed.”
-
-“And because she has been oppressed, you overlook any crimes she may
-have committed?”
-
-“I am not God, that I should judge. If people's hearts are empty, I
-reckon them my children.”
-
-“Let me ask you one more question. Did Santa tell you that she loved
-me?”
-
-The old head shook sorrowfully. “To act nobly it is not necessary to be
-loved in return. Let me go. Do not try to follow me.”
-
-Standing aside, he opened the door. “And we meet again?”
-
-As she hobbled out, she glanced across her shoulder. In her gesture
-there was the ghostly grace of the proud coquette who was vanishing and
-forgotten. “Will you want to,” she whispered, “to-morrow?”
-
-
-II
-
-
-Now that she was gone he realized that under the hypnotic influence of
-her presence he had revealed far more than he had intended. He should
-never have allowed her to escape him. He should have insisted on
-accompanying her. She had afforded him his only clue to Santa's
-whereabouts.
-
-At all costs he must see Santa. His peace of mind depended on it. The
-thought of her would haunt him. He would never rest until he had arrived
-at the truth. Probably, until he had seen her, he would never be free
-from the mischief-making intrusions of anonymous intriguers. He
-dodged the theory of her guilt, preferring to persuade himself that
-a conspiracy was afoot, the object of which might be blackmail. More
-likely it was a clever move on the part of financial rivals to thwart
-his plans by discrediting him. If he could meet Santa, he would know
-for certain whether she was a decoy or a fellow-victim. Whatever his
-intellect might suspect, his heart resolutely acquitted her.
-
-It was too late to overtake the Little Grandmother, but he was
-determined to do his best to trace her. In the passage he discovered a
-solitary individual collecting boots and shoes, which had been placed
-for cleaning outside the neighboring doors.
-
-“An old lady left my room a few moments ago. She had short hair and a
-white handkerchief tied over her head. No doubt you saw her.”
-
-The man rose from his stooping posture. “An old lady with short hair!
-You say she had a handkerchief tied over it? It doesn't sound like the
-Ritz. No, I did not see her.”
-
-Of the man at the elevator he made the same inquiry, only to be informed
-that several old ladies had been carried up and down.
-
-Descending to the foyer, he presented himself at the desk.
-
-“Isn't it your rule to have all callers announced before they're shown
-in on your guests?”
-
-“Most decidedly.”
-
-“Then how did it happen that an old lady, a rather curious old lady,
-with short hair and a white handkerchief over her head like a shawl, was
-allowed to' find her way into my room?”
-
-“If you'll give me the particulars, I'll have the staff on duty
-questioned.”
-
-As he turned away, he threw back across his shoulder: “I shan't be going
-to bed yet. If you discover anything you might report it.”
-
-Half an hour later he was summoned to the telephone. “About your
-visitor, sir; no one saw her.” Far into the early hours of the morning
-he sat cogitating. What steps ought he to take to protect himself? He
-could place his case in the hands of the police, but if he did, he
-might stir up a hornet's nest. Most certainly he would be compelled
-to postpone his business on the Continent and to prolong his stay in
-England. But more disastrous than personal inconvenience, in going
-to the police he might be the means of putting Santa's enemies on her
-track. They would expect him to make a clean breast of everything; he
-would find difficulty in inventing convincing motives to explain the
-shiftiness of his conduct since landing.
-
-If he could speak to Santa, he would know how to act. If she were really
-implicated in the Rogovich affair, his best way of helping her would be
-to clear out of England. But if she could assure him of her innocence,
-he was prepared to stay and back her to the limit of his capacity.
-Across the jet-black sky the silver moon drifted like a water-lily--a
-parable of Santa, moving immaculately among rumors of darkest misdoings.
-Whatever she had done had not quenched her purity. If she had done the
-worst of which she was accused, her perverted mother-love still clothed
-her with the tatters of a tragic goodness.
-
-He jerked himself irritably back to reality. How could a woman who had
-spread death with her beauty still retain her purity? He had been warned
-that she trapped men by appealing not to their baseness, but to
-their chivalry. What wild-eyed feat of chivalry was this that he was
-performing? It was best to dispense with casuistry. The accumulated
-slanders to which he had listened had spurred his curiosity. They had
-changed a modishly attractive woman into a romantic figure--a figure
-which, if it were not noble, at least possessed the virtue of lonely
-courage.
-
-He would allow himself four days in England. If he had not heard from
-her by then, he would go about his business. Having to this extent set a
-limit to his difficulties, he took himself off to bed.
-
-
-III
-
-
-His first anxiety next morning was to scan the papers. He had all the
-London dailies brought to him and read them before he dressed. For the
-most part they told him nothing new, merely recording, with varying
-degrees of sensationalism, the indisputable fact that Prince Rogovich
-had vanished. One or two hinted at foul play. Several suggested
-accidental drowning. The bulk of them, and among these were the most
-reputable, presumed that the Prince had had private reasons for avoiding
-England and landing at a Continental port _incognito_. Santa Gorlof's
-name was not mentioned. He found nothing to confirm the warnings of last
-night or to alarm himself on her account.
-
-It was later, while eating breakfast with the _Times_ propped up before
-him, that he came across an item which set him viewing what had happened
-from a new angle. He was skipping through a sketch of the Prince's
-career, when he stumbled on the following paragraph: “It will be
-remembered how last summer the Polish women's sense of injustice
-concentrated in a silent protest. For an entire week, day and night,
-never less than a thousand mothers, each carrying a dead child in her
-breast, camped about the Rogovich Palace in Warsaw.”
-
-Glancing back, he read more carefully the information which led up to
-the paragraph: “During the two years following the close of the war,
-Poland, together with most of Central Europe, has suffered intensely
-from famine. Children have contributed by far the largest proportion
-to the toll of death. For much of this, so far as Poland is concerned,
-Prince Rogovich has been held accountable. The national wealth which he
-has squandered on equipping armies might have been spent more profitably
-in purchasing foodstuffs. The trip to America, from which he was
-returning at the time of his mysterious disappearance, is said to have
-had as its object the floating of a loan which would enable his Generals
-to maintain their offensives for at least another twelve months. While
-the land-owning party in Poland, supported by French diplomacy, backed
-him up, his imperialistic policies were bitterly condemned by Polish
-mothers who had to watch their children perishing from starvation in
-order that frontiers might be extended. Already the death-rate was so
-high that it was impossible to supply sufficient coffins. At mid-day the
-main streets of Warsaw were jammed with funerals. Many of these funerals
-consisted of only two persons: a man and woman, themselves weak from
-want of nourishment, staggering under the puny load of a bundle wrapped
-in paper, containing the body of the latest son or daughter to die of
-hunger.” Then followed the brief description of how the thousand Polish
-mothers had camped for a week in protest about the Prince's palace.
-
-Hindwood looked up from his paper, gazing across the flashing gulf
-of sunlight to where the azure sea of distant sky beat against the
-embattled strand of housetops. If Santa had pushed the Prince overboard,
-had that been her motive--that Polish children might no longer die of
-hunger? Perhaps always, if indeed she had killed men, her purpose had
-been to act as the scourge of the enemies of children. The memory of her
-own dead child had urged her. Mistakenly, but none the less valiantly,
-she had constituted herself the avenger of all mothers who had been
-despoiled by masculine callousness.
-
-What round-about journeys he was willing to undertake if only he might
-excuse her! Even though he were compelled to admit her guilt, he was
-determined to adjudge her magnanimous. At any rate, she had not been
-apprehended.
-
-With a lighter heart than he had experienced for some hours, he
-dismissed her from his thoughts and set out to fulfill his round of
-engagements.
-
-It was three o'clock when he returned. Immediately, on entering his room
-he noticed that a sheet of writing-paper had been pinned conspicuously
-to the pillow of his bed. Its evident purpose was to attract his
-attention. On approaching it, he saw that the message which it contained
-was printed in large letters and unsigned. It read:
-
-“_If you wish to see her, follow but do not speak to the widow._”
-
-It didn't make sense. What widow? The “her” whom he could see by
-following the widow referred presumably to Santa. But who had pinned the
-sheet of paper to his pillow? How had this person gained access to his
-rooms? That morning, when he went out, he had locked his door and left
-his key at the hotel desk. He had in his possession confidential papers
-of almost state importance. If their secrets were shared, he might
-just as well pack up and return to America. His sense that he was the
-storm-center of a conspiracy strengthened.
-
-Seizing his hat and gloves, he hurried down-stairs. He had just time
-to lodge a complaint with the management before keeping his next
-appointment.
-
-He had alighted from the elevator and was about to cross the foyer, when
-a woman rose from a chair near by and passed immediately in front of
-him. He jerked himself up with a murmured apology; then noticed that she
-was gowned in the heaviest widow's mourning. A coincidence, he thought,
-and yet not so very extraordinary! He was proceeding on his journey,
-when his eyes chanced to follow her. She had halted uncertainly, as
-though she had forgotten something; by the poise of her head, he
-guessed that behind her veil she was gazing at him. More to satisfy his
-curiosity than as the preface to an adventure, he also halted. Somewhat
-ostentatiously he drew from his pocket the sheet of note-paper which
-he had found pinned to his pillow. Unfolding it, he reread its printed
-message:
-
-“If you wish to see her, follow but do not speak to the widow.”
-
-He looked up. Slowly, almost imperceptibly, the veiled figure nodded. He
-made a step, as if to approach her. Instantly she turned and passed out.
-
-Without further consideration, in his eagerness to see what she would do
-next, he followed.
-
-
-IV
-
-
-He had expected that outside the hotel, in the throng of anonymous
-traffic, she would wait for him. Without giving any further sign that
-she was aware of him, she moved quietly through the fashionable crowd of
-Piccadilly and turned into the sunlit leisure of St. James Street. The
-unconscious gaiety of her way of walking was strangely out of keeping
-with her garments of bereavement. Hindwood's curiosity was piqued. In a
-shamefaced way he was overwhelmingly interested. He felt himself capable
-of a great romance. For the moment he was almost grateful for the
-annoyances that had presented him with so thrilling an opportunity.
-
-What was he meant to do? The message had forbidden him to accost her. He
-had been ordered merely to follow. How long and whither? At the Foreign
-Office a high official was waiting for him, expecting every minute to
-hear him announced. To wander through London after an unknown woman was
-the trick of a gallant or a moonstruck boy. He was neither. He was a man
-of discretion, who aimed at becoming the advisor of statesmen and
-yet his conduct was open to every misinterpretation. He began to
-feel himself a scoundrel. For a man whose emotions had always been
-shepherded, the sensation was exciting and not wholly unpleasant.
-
-If he could only learn something about her! Crossing to the opposite
-pavement, he hurried his pace till he was abreast of her.
-
-She was young. Her figure was slight and upright. She was about the
-same build as Santa, but seemed taller. If she were indeed Santa, this
-impression of added height might be due to the somberness of her attire.
-She was so carefully veiled that even her hair was hidden; there was
-no feature by which he could identify her. He tried another experiment.
-Recrossing the street to a point some distance ahead, he loitered before
-a shop, making a self-conscious pretense of studying its wares. He heard
-the rustle of her crêpe as she drew near him. She went by him so closely
-that she almost touched him. He was conscious of the faint fragrance of
-her perfume. In the window he caught the dim reflection of her figure.
-At the moment that she was immediately behind him, she moved her head in
-a backward gesture, seeming to indicate that he should follow. When
-he turned to obey, she was drifting through the September sunshine,
-completely self-absorbed and unnoticing.
-
-Traveling the yard of St. James Palace, she entered the Mall. There she
-hesitated, giving him time to catch up with her. A taxi was crawling by.
-She hailed it. Addressing the driver, but glancing directly at himself,
-she said in a sweet, distinct voice:
-
-“Victoria Station. The Brighton platform.”
-
-
-V
-
-
-Was she Santa? The voice had sounded different, yet, had his life
-depended on it, he could not have decided. There was only one way of
-finding out--by joining her on the Brighton platform. This would mean
-missing his appointment at the Foreign Office. He was prepared to make
-the sacrifice, but he had no guarantee that the chase would end there.
-It was possible that she would still refuse to satisfy his curiosity and
-compel him to accompany her further. His rôle was that of the incautious
-fly. But who was the master-spinner of this web in which it was intended
-that he should become entangled? Was it the Little Grandmother? He
-had asked her whether they would meet again. In the light of present
-happenings, her answer took on a sinister meaning, “Will you want to
-to-morrow?”
-
-As he stood there in the sunshine of the Mall, with the thud of
-fashionable equipages flashing by, a sullen conviction grew up within
-him that he was becoming afraid. An empty taxi hove in sight. He
-beckoned. Before it had halted, he was standing on the running-board.
-
-“To Victoria Station. The Brighton platform.” The driver took his
-brevity for a sign that a train was to be caught by the narrowest of
-margins. He made such speed that they drew up against the curb just as
-the widow's vehicle was departing. She threw him a furtive glance
-from behind her veil, then turned and moved away as though he were
-the completest stranger. Imitating her discretion, he followed at a
-distance.
-
-Halting before the ticket-office, she produced her purse. He edged
-nearer; it was necessary that he should learn her destination.
-
-“A first-class single to Seafold,” he heard her say.
-
-When his turn came, he repeated her words, adding: “How long before it
-starts?”
-
-“Five minutes,” the clerk told him.
-
-As he gathered up his change, he was surprised to observe how little
-was left out of his pound. He had supposed Seafold would prove to be a
-suburb. By the cost of his ticket he estimated that it must be a journey
-of at least sixty miles. Was it worth the taking? Could he return that
-same evening? He might get stranded. If that happened, he was unprepared
-to spend the night. These considerations were swept aside when he
-noticed that the widow had once more vanished.
-
-Accosting a porter, “The Seafold platform?” he asked breathlessly.
-
-“Same as the one for Brighton.”
-
-“That tells me nothing. There's no luggage. Show me.”
-
-Before he had passed the barrier, he was aware that the train was
-crowded. In third-class compartments passengers were standing. To
-discover any one under these circumstances would be a labor of patience.
-Carriage-doors were being banged and locked. Even at this final moment
-his habitual caution reasserted itself. What else but folly could result
-from an adventure so recklessly undertaken?
-
-The porter caught him by the arm. “'Ere you are, mister. 'Op in. You're
-lucky.”
-
-No sooner had he squeezed himself into the remaining seat than, with a
-groaning jerk, the train started.
-
-
-VI
-
-
-Lucky! The luckiest thing that could have happened to him would have
-been to be left behind. Here he was, following a woman whose face he had
-not seen, to a place which, up to a few moments ago, he had not known
-existed. Even to believe that he was following her required optimism; he
-had no proof that she was on the train. Probably it had been part of her
-strategy to send him scurrying on this fool's errand, in order that her
-accomplices might be undisturbed while they ransacked his rooms in his
-absence.
-
-“I'll make an end of this nonsense,” he told himself, “by alighting at
-the next stopping-place.”
-
-But where was the next stopping-place? He glanced along the double row
-of his fellow-passengers, barricaded behind their papers. He wanted
-to ask his question and watched for an opportunity. At last, losing
-patience, he nudged the man beside him.
-
-“Excuse me, sir; I'm a stranger. I've made a mistake. My ticket's to
-Seafold, wherever that may be, and I--”
-
-With his nose still glued to the page, the man muttered: “That's all
-right. You don't need to worry. It's where you're going.”
-
-“But it isn't all right,” Hindwood contradicted with a shade of
-annoyance. “I don't want to go to Seafold; I want to return to London.
-What I'm trying to ask you is where can I get out?”
-
-“Lewes, if you think it's worth while.”
-
-“Why shouldn't I think it's worth while?”
-
-The paper rustled testily and was raised a few inches higher. “Because
-Lewes is almost at Seafold. It's the junction where you change--the one
-and only stop between here and Brighton.”
-
-Turning away disgustedly, he watched the swiftly changing landscape.
-Everything that met his eyes was beautiful, with a domestic,
-thought-out, underlying tenderness. It had all been planned, that
-was what he felt, by the loving labor of countless generations. In
-a homeless man like himself the sight created a realization of
-forlornness. He had traveled five continents and had planted his
-affections nowhere. It was the same with his human relations. He could
-reckon his acquaintances by the thousand, yet there was no one to whom
-he was indispensably dear. By a mental transition, the implication of
-which he scarcely appreciated, he began to think of Santa.
-
-They were slowing down. He was surprised to discover that an hour had
-gone by. The man at his side folded up his paper. Now that they were
-about to part, he considered it safe to be friendly.
-
-“We're coming into Lewes,” he said with a smile. “The Seafold train will
-be waiting just across the platform. You can't miss it.”
-
-Hindwood thanked him brusquely.
-
-What to do next? If he were fortunate in catching an express, he could
-be in London in time to dine. As he stepped out, he saw the Seafold
-local waiting. What good would it do him to go to Seafold? Yet to quit
-now would be humiliatingly unadventurous. He was moving slowly towards
-the stair, when he was arrested by a voice.
-
-“If you wouldn't mind? It was stupid of me to drop it.”
-
-He turned sharply. She was leaning out of a carriage window which he was
-in the act of passing.
-
-Without giving him time to question, she explained: “My ticket--it
-slipped from my hand. There it is behind you.”
-
-The moment he had stooped and returned it, she withdrew herself. It
-had happened so quickly that he had no chance to guess at the features
-behind the heavy veil. With a promptitude of decision which almost
-deceived himself, as though he had never harbored any other intention,
-he opened the door and clambered into the carriage next to hers.
-
-“That's that,” he thought, smiling tolerantly at his relieved sense of
-satisfaction. And then, “It was no accident. She saw that I was giving
-up the chase. She did it to keep me going. What's her game?”
-
-Whatever her game was, he was well on the road to enlightenment. The
-engine was puffing through a valley, across salt-marshes intersected by
-dykes and sluggish streams, where derelict boats lay sunken in the mud,
-rotting among the wild-flowers. Grazing sheep made the quiet plaintive
-with their cries. Gulls, disturbed by the train's impetuous onrush, rose
-and drifted lazily into the peace that slumbered further inland. Of a
-sudden, with a gesture of exaltation, the gleaming chalk-cliffs of the
-coast leaped into sight and beyond them the dull flash of the Channel.
-
-He was clamorous with excitement. Curiosity beat masterfully on the door
-of the future. He had to find out. Why had he been brought here? What
-had Santa to do with it? Who was the woman in the next compartment?
-
-They had halted several times. Each time he had watched carefully to see
-whether she was eluding him. Again their speed was slackening. They were
-entering a little, sandy town, dotted with red-brick villas, bleached
-by the wind and sun. He caught glimpses between the houses of a battered
-esplanade, of concrete breakwaters partly destroyed, of a pebbly beach
-alternately sucked down and quarrelsomely hurled back by the waves. Over
-all hung the haunting fragrance of salt, and gorse, and wild thyme.
-
-They had come to a standstill. Passengers were climbing out and greeting
-friends. A porter flung wide the door of his carriage, shouting,
-“Seafold! Seafold!”
-
-Having watched her alight, he followed. She was a few paces ahead,
-picking her way daintily through the crowd. Again she was all discretion
-and gave no hint that she had noticed him. Outside the gate, cabmen
-offered themselves for hire. She shook her head denyingly and passed on
-with her tripping step. Not until the station had been left behind did
-he remember that he ought to have inquired at what times the trains
-departed for London. Too late! His immediate business was keeping her in
-sight.
-
-With the unhesitating tread of one familiar with her surroundings, she
-chose what seemed to be the most important street. It was narrow and
-flanked by little, stooping cottages, most of which had been converted
-into shops which cater to the needs of tourists. It was the end of the
-season. A few remaining visitors were sauntering aimlessly up and down.
-Natives, standing in groups, had the appearance of being fishermen. Some
-of them nodded to her respectfully; without halting, she passed them
-with a pleasant word. At the bottom of the street she turned into a
-road, paralleling the sea-front, which led through a waste of turf and
-sand into the wind-swept uplands of the open country. Just where the
-country met the town there stood a lath-and-plaster house, isolated,
-facing seaward, creeper-covered, surrounded by high hedges. It was more
-pretentious than any he had seen as yet. Giving no sign that she was
-aware she was followed, she pushed open the rustic gate, passed up the
-red-tiled path, produced a latch-key, and admitted herself. There, in
-the bare stretch of road, having lured him all the way from London,
-without a single backward glance or any sign that would betray her
-recognition of his presence, she left him.
-
-
-VII
-
-
-Just what I might have expected,” he said aloud.
-
-“Did you speak ter me, mister?”
-
-He swung round to find a freckled, bare-legged urchin gazing up at him.
-
-“I didn't. Who are you?”
-
-“A caddy from them links over there.” He pointed a grubby finger along
-the road to where, half a mile away, the level of the seashore swept up
-into a bold, green headland.
-
-“Then I guess you're the sort of boy I'm looking for. Who lives in this
-house?”
-
-“A Madam Something or other. 'Er name sounds Russian.”
-
-“What does she look like?”
-
-“Dunno. She's a widder and covers 'erself up. Not but what she 'as
-gentlemen friends as visits 'er.”
-
-“You seem a sharp boy. Can you tell me how long she's lived here?”
-
-“Maybe a year; off and on that's ter say. I don't recolleck.”
-
-“Is she by herself?”
-
-“There's an old woman in the garden sometimes as looks a 'undred. She
-wears a white hanky tied round 'er 'ead.”
-
-“I think that's all I want to ask you. Here's something for you. Oh yes,
-do you happen to know about the trains to London?”
-
-“The last one's gorn, mister, if that's what yer means. It's the one
-that our gents at the golf-links aims ter catch.”
-
-“Then I'm out of luck. Good evening, sonny, and thank you for your
-information.”
-
-The bare legs showed no signs of departing; the freckled face still
-gazed up.
-
-“What's interesting you. My way of speaking? I'm American.”
-
-The boy shook his head. “We 'ad Canadian soldiers 'ere during the war;
-they're pretty near Americans.”
-
-“Then what is it?”
-
-“It's that you're the second gent to-day to slip me a shilling for
-telling 'im about this 'ouse. And it's something else.” He sank his
-voice to a whisper. “Don't look round. There's been some one a-peeking
-from be'ind a bedroom winder most of the time as we've been talkin'. I'd
-best be goin'. Good evenin', mister.”
-
-Not to attract attention by loitering, Hindwood set off at a
-businesslike pace down the road toward the headland. As he drew further
-away from the house, he walked more slowly; he was trying to sort out
-his facts. The woman who lived there had a Russian name. Santa Gorlof!
-She dressed like a widow. That would be to disguise herself. The news
-about the gentlemen friends who visited her was quite in keeping with
-the character which the Major had bestowed on her, but not at all
-welcome. She had lived there for a year, off and on. Her companion was
-an old woman, nearly a hundred--the Little Grandmother! But who was
-this man who earlier in the day had bribed the boy that he might obtain
-precisely the same information? He reminded himself that the police were
-hunting for her. The man might be a detective. If justice had already
-run her to earth, Seafold was the last place in which he ought to be
-found. If the boy had been accurate about the trains, there was no
-escape till the morning. Even though he were to hire an automobile, he
-would be placing his visit to Seafold on record. Self-preservation rose
-up rampant. What a fool he'd been to involve himself in so perilous an
-affair!
-
-And yet, once more and for the last time, he longed to see Santa's face.
-Why was it? Was it because her hearsay wickedness fascinated him? It
-was not because he loved her. It was not to gratify morbid curiosity--at
-least not entirely. Perhaps it was because he pitied her and, against
-his will, discovered a certain grandeur in her defiance. She had played
-a lone hand. Like a beast of prey in the jungle, she was surrounded; at
-this moment she must be listening for the stealthy tread of those who
-were encompassing her destruction, yet she had not lost her cunning. She
-was fighting to the end. Probably this time, as when the firing-squad
-waited for her in the woods of Vincennes, she was planning to employ
-a man as her substitute--_himself_. The fact remained that in her
-desperate need, she had appealed to him for help. There was the barest
-chance that she was innocent--a victim of false-appearing circumstances.
-He wanted to judge her for himself by tearing aside the widow's veil and
-gazing on her destroying beauty.
-
-Turning off the road, he struck across the links, climbing toward the
-towering headland. The wind, coming in gusts, rustled the parched gorse
-and brittle fronds of bracken. Behind his back the sun was setting,
-flinging a level bar of gold across the leaden sea. In sudden lulls,
-when the wind ceased blowing, the air pulsated with the rhythmic
-cannonading of waves assaulting the wall of cliffs. When he listened
-intently, he could hear the _ha-ha_ of their cheering and their sullen
-moan as they were beaten back. It was strange to think that two weeks
-ago he had been in New York, intent on nothing but acquiring a fortune.
-Women had not troubled him. Why should he now permit this woman,
-chance-met on ship-board, to divert him--a woman who could never be
-closer to him?
-
-He had reached the summit of the promontory. Etched against the
-sky-line, his figure must be visible for miles. The sun sank lower and
-vanished. Gazing through the clear atmosphere, far below him he could
-discern every detail of the house to which he had been tempted. It
-looked a fitting nest for an old poet. It held no hint of terror. At the
-same time it was strategically well situated for occupants who wished to
-keep an eye on all approaches.
-
-He had been watching for any sign of movement, when a curious thing
-happened. Though no figure appeared, from one of the upper windows a
-white cloth fluttered. He shaded his eyes with his hand. The signal was
-repeated. He tapped his breast and pointed, as much as to say, “Shall I
-come?” The cloth was shaken vigorously. On repeating the experiment,
-he obtained the same result. When he nodded his head in assent, the
-fluttering ended.
-
-So every step of his progress had been observed by some one spying
-through a telescope from behind the curtained windows! The first moment
-he had afforded an opportunity by looking back, the signaling had
-commenced. That so much secrecy should be employed seemed to betoken
-that Santa's case was desperate. That she should have run the risk of
-tempting him down from London must mean that he possessed some peculiar
-facility for rendering her a much needed service.
-
-The imminence of the danger, both to her and to himself, was emphasized
-by this latest precaution. She had not dared to admit him to the house
-or even to acknowledge his presence, until she had made certain that he,
-in his turn, was not followed.
-
-This thought, that he might be followed, filled him with an entirely
-new sensation; it peopled every clump of gorse and bed of bracken
-with possible unseen enemies. The rustling of the wind, the cry of a
-sea-bird, made him turn alertly, scanning with suspicion every hollow
-and mound of the wild, deserted landscape. It seemed unwise to allow his
-actions to announce his intentions too plainly. What his intentions were
-he was not very certain. His immediate inclination was to shake himself
-free from the whole mysterious complication.
-
-Continuing his ramble, he assumed a careless gait, descending the
-further side of the promontory and bearing always slightly inland, so
-that his course might lead back eventually to the road from which he had
-departed. As dusk was gathering, he found himself entering an abandoned
-military camp. The bare hutments, with their dusty windows and padlocked
-doors, stretched away in seeming endless avenues of ghostly silence.
-The Maple Leaf, painted on walls and sign-boards, explained the village
-boy's reference to Canadian soldiers. He had reached the heart of it,
-when he was possessed by the overpowering sensation that human eyes were
-gazing at him. Pulling himself up, he glanced back across his shoulder,
-crooking his arm to ward off a blow. Realizing what he was doing, he
-relaxed and stared deliberately about him. Nothing! No sign of life! Yet
-the certainty remained that human eyes were watching.
-
-“Nerves!” he muttered contemptuously.
-
-It was dark when, leaving the camp, he struck the road. Stars were
-coming out. Far away along the coast the distant lights of a harbor
-blinked and twinkled. He hurried his steps. His mind was made up. He
-would get something to eat in Seafold, discover a garage, hire a car and
-be back in London by midnight. To confirm his will in this decision, he
-began making plans for the morrow.
-
-To enter the town he had to pass the house. As its bulk gathered shape,
-his feet moved more slowly. Long before he came opposite it, he had
-caught the fragrance of the myrtle in its hedges. The windows which
-looked his way were shrouded. He paused for a moment outside the rustic
-gate. He was saying good-by to adventure. He was too old. His season for
-pardonable folly was ended. The prose of life had claimed him.
-
-Prolonging the pretense of temptation, he pushed open the gate. A
-hand touched his--a woman's. The desire to play safe faded. Weakly
-capitulating, he allowed himself to be led up the path and across the
-shadowy threshold. The door of the darkened house closed behind him. She
-was slipping the bolts into place.
-
-
-VIII
-
-
-He listened. He could not see her face--only the blurred outline of her
-figure. Except for the sound of her movements, the silence was unbroken.
-At the end of a passage, leading from the hall, a streak of gold escaped
-along the carpet.
-
-“Santa!”
-
-No answer.
-
-“Santa, why have you brought me?”
-
-Gliding past him down the passage, she darted into the lighted room,
-leaving the door ajar behind her. He followed gropingly. As he entered,
-he was momentarily confused by the sudden change from darkness.
-
-She was addressing him in a small, strained voice. “There's no need to
-be afraid.”
-
-He looked about him, searching for the inspirer of fear. There was no
-one save themselves. Then he noticed how she trembled. She was making
-a brave effort to appear collected, but it was plain that she was wild
-with terror. Her eyes were wide and dilated. She stood on the defensive,
-backed against the fireplace, as though she were expecting violence. Her
-right hand was in advance of her body. It held something which caught
-the glow of the flames--a nickel-plated revolver, cocked and ready for
-immediate action. His reception was so different from anything he had
-anticipated that he stared with an amused expression of inquiry.
-
-At last he asked, “You knew from the start that I thought you were
-Santa?”
-
-Biting her lip to prevent herself from crying, she nodded. Far from
-being Santa, she was fair as any Dane, with China-blue eyes and the
-complexion of a wild rose. He noted the little wisps of curls which made
-a haze of gold about her forehead. She wore turquoise earrings. They
-were her only adornment. She herself was a decoration. She was like a
-statue of the finest porcelain, so flawless that she seemed unreal. Had
-it not been for her widow's mourning, he would have said that she was
-untouched by passionate experience. She had an appearance of provoking
-innocence, which made the paleness of her beauty ardent as a flame.
-
-Speaking quietly, “I'm not easily frightened,” he said; “and you, while
-you keep me covered with that revolver, have no reason to be afraid. Any
-moment you choose you can kill me--you've only to press the trigger.”
-
-Tears of horror sprang into her eyes. “But I don't want to kill you.”
-
-[Illustration: 0136]
-
-“Then why don't you lay it aside?”
-
-“Because--” She gazed at him appealingly.
-
-“Because I'm alone. I may need it to protect myself.”
-
-“From me? No. I should think you can see that.” Was the house really
-empty? He listened. It was possible that some one might steal up from
-behind. He did not dare to turn. His only chance of preventing her from
-shooting him was to keep her engaged in conversation.
-
-“If you feel this way, why did you go to such elaborate pains to force
-me to visit you to-night? You must have known that I didn't want to
-come. It isn't I who have intruded.” He smiled cheerfully. “At the risk
-of appearing rude, I'll be frank with you. When you crossed my path at
-the Ritz, I was on the point of keeping a most important engagement.
-When I followed you out of the hotel, it was because of a message I'd
-found pinned to my pillow, 'Follow the widow.' So it wasn't you in
-particular that I was following; I'd have followed any widow. I
-expected that you'd speak to me as soon as we were in the street. I'd
-no intention of giving up my appointment. You didn't; you led me on,
-further and further, a step at a time. I don't mind telling you that
-when I found myself in the train, I was extremely annoyed. By the time
-I'd arrived at Lewes, I'd fully made up my mind to abandon the chase.
-Then you spoke to me. I'd wasted so much of my afternoon that I didn't
-like being beaten. You'd roused my curiosity. Here in Seafold, you
-dodged me and left me standing in the road like a dummy. That used up
-the fag-end of my patience; I was mad clean through. I didn't care if
-I never saw you again. When you signaled me on the headland, I signaled
-back that I was coming. I wasn't. I was tired of being led on and
-eluded. When you caught me at the gate, I was flirting with temptation,
-but I'd already laid my plans to be back in London by midnight. So you
-see you can scarcely blame me for being here. The shoe's on the other
-foot entirely. You've put me to great inconvenience merely to tell me,
-it would seem, that you don't want to shoot me.”
-
-“I don't.”
-
-“Then why not throw the thing away? You're far more scared of it than I
-am.”
-
-“Because I may have to use it.”
-
-“On whom?”
-
-“You.”
-
-“Why?”
-
-A sweet, slow smile turned up the edges of her mouth. “My orders were to
-keep you here, if once I'd managed to persuade you inside.”
-
-He laughed outright. “You hate having me here, and you'd hate to see me
-go. Isn't that the way the land lies? I'm more or less in the same fix:
-I didn't want to come, and I don't want to stay. The fact remains that
-we're both here. Why not make the best of it? If you'll stop brandishing
-that weapon, I'll feel much more comfortable. I'm not trying to escape.”
-
-“You might.”
-
-For the first time he dared to shift his position. “Don't be alarmed,”
- he warned her. “That's easier. I was stiff. Now, if you'll listen, I've
-a proposal to make. You're treating me like a burglar, which isn't fair.
-You may know, but I've not the least idea how long you intend to hold me
-prisoner. I guess you're waiting for some one else to arrive, but that's
-neither here nor there. Before the third person comes, you may have shot
-me--of course, by accident. Revolvers go off if you keep them too long
-pointed. You know nothing about firearms, and I'm beginning to be rather
-fond of life. Here's what I propose: if you'll put it away, I'll give
-you my parole not to come within two yards of you or to attempt to
-escape. If I want my parole back, you shall have a full five minutes'
-notice.”
-
-“If I thought that I could trust you--”
-
-“You can. Is it a bargain?”
-
-Without answering, placing her weapon on the mantelpiece, she turned
-her back on him. She seemed waiting to hear him advance further into the
-room. He did not stir.
-
-“What is it, Mr. Hindwood?”
-
-“It's that I've just remembered one thing for which our armistice has
-not provided. You'd better pick up your gun again. It's that I haven't
-dined. I wonder whether you'd let me into the village--” He left
-his sentence unended. He suddenly perceived that she was shaken with
-sobbing. In his concern, he forgot his compact as to distance and
-hurried over to her side. She swung round, her face blinded with tears.
-As she stumbled past him, she muttered: “You've beaten me. You're not
-afraid. I couldn't shoot you now if I wanted.”
-
-
-IX
-
-
-Tiptoeing to the threshold, he turned the handle and peeped into the
-passage. As before, everything was in darkness.
-
-He was free to go. There was nothing to stop him--nothing except his
-honor. It was easy to argue that even his honor did not prevent him. He
-had canceled his parole when he had reopened negotiations by telling her
-to pick up her revolver. She had left it behind her on the mantel-shelf.
-He took it in his hand and examined it. It was a repeater. Every chamber
-was loaded. He whistled softly--so she had meant business! Setting the
-hammer at half-cock, he slipped the weapon in his pocket. He was master
-of the situation now.
-
-Why didn't he go? Two hours of steady driving, three at the most, and
-he could be in London. He reminded himself that at this very moment his
-private papers might be in the process of being ransacked. What if they
-were? The possibility left him utterly indifferent. He couldn't save
-them after the lapse of another three hours.
-
-No, the truth was that since his voyage on the _Ryndam_ all the emphases
-of his life were becoming altered. The importance of money and power
-no longer seemed paramount. After nearly forty years of living, he had
-awakened to the fact that it was women who shed a radiance of glamour
-in an otherwise gloomy world. Of all human adventures they were the most
-enthralling and the least certain of rewarding.
-
-It was curiosity that had enticed him into his present entanglements;
-his curiosity had yet to be satisfied. With a revolver in his pocket, he
-felt that he now possessed the means of extracting the right answers to
-his questions. He had suffered mild inconveniences, but so far he
-hadn't done so badly. He had established mysterious relations with two
-beautiful women. One of them was already under the same roof; the other,
-he believed, was momentarily expected. He began to figure himself as a
-poet, a dreamer, a potential storm-center of romance.
-
-“And all because she has blue eyes!” he hinted.
-
-Then he remembered that Santa's eyes were gray, and that up to the last
-half-hour it had been Santa whom he had supposed that he was following.
-
-He gazed about him, making an inspection of the room, trying to guess
-at the characters of its inhabitants. It was square and small. Its walls
-were lined ceiling-high with shelves overloaded with books of a learned
-appearance. A work-basket stood on a mahogany desk with mending,
-scissors, and reels of cotton strewn near it. A piano had been crushed
-into a corner, looking flippantly out of place amid these scholarly
-surroundings. Below the mantelshelf was a rack containing a row of
-pipes. Set about wherever a space allowed were vases of freshly cut
-flowers.
-
-The contradictions of the room suggested that it had once been a man's
-den, but had now been taken over by a woman. This seemed to indicate
-that the owner of the house was actually a widow.
-
-Almost the whole of the wall confronting the door was occupied by a tall
-French window, which opened directly on a lawn. Shrubs grew waist-high
-about it. Instinct told him that this was the likeliest approach for
-the other person, by whose order his kidnaping had been plotted. He felt
-convinced that this person would prove to be a woman, but he was taking
-no chances. With the night behind her, she could spy on him for hours
-without being detected. She might be spying on him now.
-
-Assuming a listless manner, he seated himself to one side of the
-fireplace. Out of the tail of his eye, without seeming to do so, he
-watched the shadowy panes. His right hand was thrust into his pocket,
-gripping the revolver.
-
-After the lapse of some minutes, he heard in the passage the widow's
-returning footsteps. Outside the door she halted, fumbling at the
-handle. Giving up the attempt, she called to him to open. Just as he was
-rising, a face, tense with eagerness, lifted itself out of the bushes,
-peering in on him.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER THE FOURTH--HE BECOMES PART OF THE GAME
-
-
-I
-
-
-THE face hung there against the darkness for a second; then the leaves
-closed over it as it was stealthily withdrawn. In the utterness of his
-astonishment, Hindwood all but gave himself away. It was not the face he
-had expected.
-
-Masking his excitement with a yawn, he turned his back on the window and
-stepped toward the door, opening it sufficiently to thrust his head into
-the passage, but not wide enough to permit the watcher in the bushes to
-learn anything of the person with whom he talked. He found his captress
-standing just beyond the threshold, carrying a tray, which accounted for
-her awkwardness.
-
-“You won't have to dine in the village,” she explained. Then, catching
-his strange expression, “What has happened?”
-
-“Some one was to come to-night,” he whispered: “the person who gave
-orders for my kidnaping. Isn't that so? She was to enter through the
-window from the lawn, while you held me prisoner at the revolver's
-point.”
-
-“Is she here?”
-
-“No, but a man who is her enemy--a Major Cleasby. He's hiding directly
-in her path. He supposed you were she when you tried the door. He showed
-his face. Is there any way in which we can warn her?”
-
-The widow set down her tray. Her eyes met his searchingly. “If the man
-were there, you wouldn't want to save her.”
-
-“Why not? You think I've invented the man in the bushes in order that
-Santa may be scared away? I'm no more afraid of Santa than I was of you.
-Besides, in your absence I've stolen your revolver. Ah, that convinces
-you! The man's her husband and a secret service agent. I can feel his
-eyes in my back. If you don't warn her, she'll be caught. There must
-have been some prearranged signal. What was it?”
-
-Instead of answering, she pressed nearer, glancing fearfully across
-her shoulder into the unlighted hall. Her voice came so faintly that he
-could only just hear her.
-
-“She wouldn't spare us. Why should you and I--? You don't know what she
-intended.”
-
-He smiled grimly. “I can guess. I was to have been her scapegoat for the
-Rogovich murder. She was staging a new version of what happened in the
-woods of Vincennes. Whether she escaped or was brought to trial, I was
-to have been arrested. By that time she would have clothed me with the
-appearance of her guilt. I was to have figured as her lover and the
-Prince's rival. The motive for my crime was to have been jealousy. The
-old story--an innocent man dying in her stead!”
-
-“If you think you know that, why should you, unless you are her lover?”
-
-“Because she's a woman.”
-
-Her hands seized his, coaxing him from the doorway into the darkened
-passage. “For the love of God, go!” she implored. “I give you back your
-parole.”
-
-Drawing her to him, he held her fast. “Don't struggle. He might hear
-you. You decoyed me. You trapped me. Why this change? What makes you so
-concerned for my safety?”
-
-“I didn't know,” she panted, “the kind of man you are.”
-
-“What kind?”
-
-Her heart beat wildly. She lay against him unstirring, her face averted.
-The moment he released her, she burst forth into new pleading.
-
-“For my sake. I beg of you.”
-
-Into the grimness of his smiling there stole a gleam of tenderness. “And
-leave you? I guess not. What's the signal?”
-
-“The piano.”
-
-“Come, then,” he said, “you shall play for me. While you play, if we
-mask our expressions, we can talk of what we choose. Outwardly, to
-deceive the man in the bushes, we must act a part. I'm an old friend.
-I've dropped in unexpectedly. You've provided me with supper. While
-I eat, we chatter and laugh. You sit at the piano and sing for me
-occasionally. When the hour for Santa's arrival is past, I take my
-leave. If you're brave, we can carry the farce through. Are you game?”
-
-For answer she picked up the tray and stepped into the room, smiling
-back at him as he followed.
-
-“I'm your humble servant, as always, Mr. Hind-wood, but I have only two
-hands and they're occupied. If you'll bring up that table--yes, set it
-before the fire. That's right. You must be comfortable, if I'm to sing
-for you.”
-
-
-II
-
-
-She won't come now.”
-
-The words reached him in a sigh. The pale hands fluttered from the
-keyboard. The fair head dropped. Almost instantly she straightened
-herself, banishing her appearance of weariness. “Don't think that I'm
-showing the white feather. It's only that I'm exhausted. She won't come
-now. I'm sure of it.” Then, bending forward with a nervous tremor, “I
-daren't look round. Has he gone?”
-
-Hindwood pushed back his chair from before the hearth. For the moment he
-did not answer. He was striving to restore the spell which the intrusion
-of her fear had broken. Glancing at her sideways, he regarded her
-quietly where she sat at the piano in her widow's garb. Through the
-window at her back he caught a glimpse of the garden, shadowy and
-patched with moonlight. Above the silence he heard the rumble of waves,
-sifting the pebbles on the shore. Who was she, this woman who possessed
-the magic to enchant him? Who had been her husband? What kind of man?
-Had she loved him? How long since he had died? There were so many
-questions.
-
-She had persuaded him into following her, well knowing that he believed
-her to be Santa. She had met his discovery of her impersonation with a
-threat. When the luck was all in her favor, with the panic of a stricken
-conscience she had thrown in her hand. For the past two hours, in this
-cozy room, she had surrounded him with shy intimacies of affection, to
-the end that the unseen spectator, listening outside the panes, might
-be beguiled. Apparently the deception had succeeded; the spectator had
-given no sign. It had succeeded too well for Hindwood. It had roused
-in him the longing that, behind her pretense of friendship, there might
-lurk a genuine emotion of liking. He had tried to forget that the scene
-was stage-set. He had wanted to believe that it was real.
-
-“Has he gone?”
-
-There was a break in her voice.
-
-He pulled himself together. “Do you wish me to make certain?”
-
-Rising, he lounged over to the piano as though to select a sheet from
-the pile of music. In a flash he turned, wrenching wide the doors of the
-French-window, and was across the step in a bound. Nothing rose from the
-shadows to disturb the peace of the night. Stooping by the bushes, he
-made a hurried examination.
-
-“Come,” he called. Then, seeing how she pressed her hands against her
-mouth, “There's no need to fear.”
-
-When she was standing by his side, he explained: “To-morrow you might
-think that I'd tricked you. I want you to see for yourself. Here's where
-he was hiding when he peered in on me. The ground's trampled. The bushes
-are bent back.”
-
-“He may be still here,” she whispered, “in the garden--somewhere.”
-
-Hindwood smiled reassuringly into her upturned face. “He wouldn't do you
-any harm if he were. Remember he's a secret service agent. As a matter
-of fact, he ought to make you feel safe.”
-
-“Safe!” She knotted her hands against her breast. “Shall I ever feel
-safe? Oh, if I could confess--to you, to any one!”
-
-“If it would help----”
-
-Without giving him a chance to finish his sentence, she plucked at his
-sleeve with the eagerness of a child. “Would you?”
-
-“What?”
-
-“Let me?”
-
-
-III
-
-
-They had reentered the room, fastening the window securely behind them.
-When that was done, they had drawn the curtains across the panes.
-She had flung herself into a chair beside the fire and was waiting
-impatiently for him to join her. But he hovered in the center of the
-room, fingering his watch and looking troubled.
-
-“What's delaying you?” she asked without turning.
-
-He slipped his watch into his pocket. “I had no idea it was so late.”
-
-“Does that matter? Till morning there are no trains.”
-
-“I was thinking of hotels.”
-
-“They'll be shut.”
-
-“Precisely. So what am I----?”
-
-“Stay with me,” she said lazily.
-
-The room became profoundly silent. The darkened house seemed to listen.
-Had he plumbed a new depth in this drama of betrayal at the moment
-when he hoped he had discovered loyalty? He had been deceived by women
-before. Had he not allowed Santa to deceive him, he would not have been
-here. He might tell himself that this woman was different. If a man did
-not tell himself that each new woman was different, the mischief of love
-would end.
-
-He caught sight of her flaxen head and became ashamed of his
-reflections. It wasn't possible, if the soul was foul, that the flesh
-should be so fair. She had the wonder of the dawn in her eyes. Nothing
-that she had said or done could belie the frankness of her innocence.
-Standing behind her chair, he gazed down in puzzlement at her
-graciousness.
-
-“There are conventions. We may have met unconventionally, but neither of
-us can afford to ignore them.”
-
-Without looking up, she answered, “If you were as alone as I am, you
-could afford to ignore anything.”
-
-“Perhaps I am.”
-
-“Then you understand.”
-
-“I think I understand.” He spoke gently. “I suppose no man can ever be
-so lonely as a woman, especially as a woman who has lost her happiness,
-but I, too, have been lonely. Everybody has. The cowardice which comes
-of loneliness is responsible for nearly every wickedness. Most thefts,
-and cheatings, and even murders are committed in an effort to gain
-companionship. But you can't elude loneliness by short-cuts. Wherever
-you go, it's with you from birth to death. Brave people make it their
-friend. Cowards let it become their tempter. Loneliness is no excuse for
-wrong-doing, nor even for surrendering to the appearance of it.”
-
-“Preaching?”
-
-“No. Trying to share with you my experience. Until this afternoon, you
-didn't know that I existed. All your life up to the last five minutes,
-you've been able to do without me. Don't be greedy and spoil everything
-before it's started. There's tomorrow.”
-
-“Why wait for to-morrow when I trust you now?”
-
-He stooped lower. She had become irresistibly dear. In a rush he had
-found the clue to her character--her childishness. She couldn't bear to
-postpone the things she wanted.
-
-“Trust me! I wonder! You're the first woman to have the daring to tell
-me. I'm not sure that I feel complimented; at this hour of night one has
-to be a little cold to be trusted like that. But I trust you--which
-is strange after all that's happened. The person I distrust is myself.
-You're beautiful. The most beautiful----”
-
-“Am I more beautiful than Santa?”
-
-He caught the vision of her blue eyes glinting up at him. There was
-nothing roguish in their expression. They were pathetic in their
-earnestness. Her throat was stretched back, white and firm. Her lips
-were vivid and parted. Her question sounded like the ruse of a coquette,
-yet she seemed wholly unaware of her attraction.
-
-He drew himself erect, staring at the wall that he might forbid himself
-the danger of looking at her. His voice came harsh and abrupt. “Your
-confession can keep till morning. One can say and unsay anything. It's
-deeds that can never be unsaid.”
-
-He had reached the door. She spoke dully. “You despise me.” And then,
-“All my life I've waited for to-morrows. Go quickly.”
-
-Glancing across his shoulder he saw her, a mist of gold in a great
-emptiness. Slowly he turned back.
-
-“Can't you guess the reason for my going? I reverence you too much.”
-
-Clutching at his hands, she dragged herself to her feet. “It's
-friendship that I'm asking. What's the use of reverence? Like me a
-little. You'd do more for Santa. Only to like me wouldn't cost you
-much.”
-
-
-IV
-
-
-I should have died if you'd left me.” He was feeling both amused and
-annoyed at his surrender; at the same time he was on the alert for
-developments. She had extinguished the lamps. The sole illumination was
-the firelight. For what reason she had done it, whether as an aid to
-confession or as a discouragement to watchers, she allowed him to guess.
-Whatever the reason, the precaution was wise, but it increased the
-atmosphere of liaison. He had pushed back his chair to the extreme
-corner of the hearth, so that he was scarcely discernible. She sat
-where the glow from the coals beat up into her face. He saw her profile
-against a background of darkness.
-
-“Died!” He pursed his lips in masculine omniscience. “You'd have gone to
-your bed and had a good night's rest.”
-
-“I shouldn't. I was in terror. I used to be afraid only by night; now
-it's both day and night. You're never afraid. You weren't afraid even
-when I----. How do you manage it?”
-
-“By doing things, instead of thinking about the things that can be done
-to me. I've learned that what we fear never happens--fear's a waste of
-time. Fear's imagination playing tricks by pouncing out of cupboards.
-It's the idiot of the intellect, gibbering in the attic after nightfall.
-IPs a coward, spreading cowardice with false alarms. It's a liar and a
-libeller; life's a thousand times kinder than fear would have us paint
-it.”
-
-She sighed happily. “It was kind to me to-night.” He waited for her
-confession to commence. She leaned back, her eyes half shut, watching
-the red landscape in the dancing flames. Time moved gently. Night seemed
-eternal. Her contentment proved contagious. Neither of them spoke.
-Nothing mattered save the comfort of her presence. In a hollow of the
-coals he invented a dream cottage to which he would take her. It had a
-scarlet wood behind it and mountains with ruby-tinted caves. As the fire
-settled, the mirage faded.
-
-“Does it strike you as comic,” he questioned, “that you and I should sit
-here after midnight and that I shouldn't even know what to call you?”
-
-“Varensky. Anna Varensky.”
-
-“Russian?”
-
-She nodded.
-
-“But are you Russian?”
-
-“I'm Ivan Varensky's wife.”
-
-“You say it proudly, as though I ought to know who Ivan Varensky was.”
-
-She turned her head slowly, wondering at him. “There's only one Ivan
-Varensky: the man who wanted to be like Christ.”
-
-Hindwood jerked himself into wakefulness. “I'm afraid I need
-enlightenment. I don't----”
-
-“You do,” she contradicted patiently, “or rather, you will when I've
-helped you to recall him. How hurt he would be, poor Ivan, that a man of
-your standing should so soon have forgotten him! He hoped to make such
-a noise in the world. After Czardom had fallen, he aimed to be a savior,
-healing men with words. But he wanted to be crucified at once. He
-cared more for Calvary than for the road that led up to it. He was an
-emotionalist, impatient of Gethsemane; it was the crown of thorns that
-he coveted. Having only words with which to save humanity, he dashed
-all over Russia in special trains, speechifying at every halting-place,
-foretelling his approaching end. He had no time to waste; he believed
-his days were numbered. His message was always the same, whether he
-was addressing the Duma, armies marching into action, or a handful of
-peasants: he was about to die for Russia. Then suddenly Trotzky
-and Lenine came. They were men who did things; they overthrew his
-government. Worse, still, they refused to fulfill his prophecies;
-instead of executing him, they bundled him into exile. To be forced to
-live, when he had pledged himself to die, was a more cruel crucifixion
-than any he had anticipated. He found himself nailed to the cross of
-ridicule with no one to applaud his sacrifice. He was left with nothing
-to talk about, for the thing he had talked about had not happened. He
-was an idealist, an inspirer, a prophet, but because death had avoided
-him, there was no gospel to write. Having climbed the long road to
-Calvary, he had the tragedy to survive. Don't think I'm belittling him.
-I loved him. It was a proud, but not an easy task to be the wife of a
-man who wanted to be like Christ.”
-
-She collapsed into silence, sitting lost in thought, her arms hanging
-limply by her sides. He wondered what pictures she was seeing in the
-fire--armed men marching, revolution, palaces going up in dame.
-
-Of course he remembered the Varensky she had described--the Varensky
-who, in the darkest hour of the war, had hurled himself like a
-knight-errant to the rescue of the Allies. It was he who was to have
-consolidated Russia, leading its millions in an endless tide to the
-defeat of the enemies of righteousness. It was freedom he had promised;
-freedom to everybody. He had preached that every man was good in
-himself, that the things that made men bad were laws. Therefore he had
-swept all laws aside. He had done away with compulsion, repealed death
-penalties, thrown prisons wide. For a day and night he had held the
-stage, a shining figure, adored by despairing eyes. Then the slaves whom
-he had released from restraints had surged over him. He had vanished,
-trampled beneath ungrateful feet, and Russia had become a mob.
-
-So this was Varensky's wife! He felt awed. The romantic heroism of her
-husband's failure clothed her with a wistful sacredness. Three years ago
-he could not have approached her. He would scarcely have dared to have
-regarded her as a woman. The hysteria of the moment had canonized
-her. Streets through which she drove in Petrograd had been lined with
-kneeling throngs. There had been something medieval in the spontaneity
-of her worship. It had been rumored that she was a bride immaculate;
-that her purity was the secret of her husband's strength. Her face made
-the story credible. It had the virgin innocence of a saint's. And here
-he was allowed to sit beside her, with three years gone, sharing her
-hearth in this obscure place of hiding!
-
-“You were a Russian Joan of Arc,” he declared enthusiastically. “How
-well I remember all the legends one read about you. And Varensky----
-It doesn't matter that he failed; his was the most gallant figure of the
-entire war. When every nation was embittered, he set us an example of
-how not to hate. He refused to kill, when all of us were slaying. He
-had the courage of meekness; in that at least he followed Christ. What
-became of him? There was a report----”
-
-“There have been many reports,” she interrupted sadly. “Lest the latest
-be true, I wear mourning. I wear mourning for him always. Before his
-fall I was his perpetual bride; since his fall I am his perpetual widow.
-He wishes to be dead, so to please him-----”
-
-“Then he's still alive?” Immediately he was conscious of the indecency
-of his disappointment.
-
-She gazed into the darkness with a mild surprise. “I do not know. I
-never know. That's the torture of it. He was always less a man than a
-spirit. I begin to think he can not die.”
-
-“You want him----?”
-
-If she had heard his uncompleted question, she ignored it. With folded
-hands she stared into the red heart of the fire. Behind her, across the
-walls and ceiling as flames leaped and flickered, shadows took fantastic
-shapes. When she spoke, as though she were talking to herself, her words
-came softly.
-
-“He was such a child--so dear, so vain, so intense, so sensitive.
-Why did he marry me, if it was only to resign me? He treated me as he
-treated Russia. We were both waiting for him to take us in his arms.
-But it was always ideals--things one can't embrace--that drew out his
-affections. Had he loved humanity less and individuals more, he
-could have gone so far. There was something monstrous about his
-self-abnegations. Perhaps he denied himself the things for which he did
-not care. He wanted to seem nobler than any one else. Through egotism
-he missed his chance. Had he planned to live, he could have killed his
-enemies and prevented revolution. There was a time when he could have
-crushed both Lenine and Trotzky. But he had to be too noble. 'No,' he
-said, 'if their ideal is more right than mine, it will conquer. Truth
-can not be silenced by slaughter.' It was his inhuman magnanimity that
-defeated him. So Lenine and Trotzky grew strong and crushed him. Because
-he had planned to die, millions are starving, and Russia is in chaos.”
-
-“But he doesn't own it?”
-
-“In his heart--yes. Like a General who has blundered, the vision of lost
-battlefields is forever in his eyes--the forests of white crosses! His
-egotism is gone. He wants to make atonement; to perish seems the only
-way. Any one who would delay him, even though she were a woman who loved
-him, is his enemy. In his remorse he hounds death as other men avoid it.
-He's head of the counterrevolution and goes continually into Russia for
-the overthrow of Bolshevism. Not that he hopes for success, but that he
-may be put against a wall and shot.”
-
-“And always he returns?”
-
-“Always until this last time.”
-
-Her voice sank away in a whisper. He eyed her with misgiving. What was
-it she desired?
-
-“I read something of this. He's been missing for a long time?”
-
-“A long time.”
-
-Coming out of the shadows, so that she could see his face, he drew his
-chair close to hers.
-
-“And what has this to do with your confession?”
-
-
-V
-
-
-She flinched, as though he had made a motion to strike her. “My
-confession! Ah, yes! I forgot.” She tried to smile. Stretching out her
-hand, she touched him in a timid appeal for understanding. Taking it
-between his own he held it fast.
-
-“Like that,” he said, “as though it were a bird that's tired. It
-isn't its own nest, but it's safe and warm; let it rest till it grows
-stronger.”
-
-“You're good,” she faltered. “Most good men are hard.”
-
-“Maybe,” he laughed. “But I'm not good. On the other hand, I don't
-suppose I'm bad. I'm simply a man who's always had to fight, so I know
-what it's like to be up against it. You're up against it at present. You
-can see nothing before you but a high stone wall with no way round it.
-I've been there, and I've found that when you can't get round a wall,
-there's usually a door. What do you say? Shall we look for a door
-together?”
-
-“I have.” She sank her head. “Every day and night in three interminable
-years I've looked for it. I'm like a person lost in a fog, standing
-still, listening, running, falling.”
-
-“Scared to death?”
-
-She nodded.
-
-“Then don't be scared; stop running. Wait for your fear to catch up with
-you. If you face it, it'll shrink to nothing. The feet of a pursuer are
-like an army. What's causing your panic? Varensky? The thought that he
-may not return?”
-
-“No.”
-
-“That he may?”
-
-“No.”
-
-“Then?”
-
-“That he may go on wasting me forever.”
-
-She waited for him to say something. When he remained silent, she bent
-forward staring vacantly into the hearth. “Perhaps I'm a coward and
-unfaithful. Perhaps if he'd been successful---- I know what he thinks of
-me: that I'm a fair-weather wife. But I'm not. If it would help him, I'd
-give my life for him. He doesn't want my life. He doesn't want my body.
-He wants the one thing that I can't give him--that I should believe in
-him. There are people who still believe in him--the Little Grandmother.
-There are others, like Prince Rogovich, who pretended to believe in him
-that he might use him as a cat's-paw. He says good-by to me for the last
-time and vanishes. I wait in retirement for news of his execution. At
-the end of two months, three months, half a year, he comes back. Then
-the rehearsing for his martyrdom commences all afresh. If there were
-anything I could do! But to be wasted for no purpose!”
-
-She turned her head wearily, glancing at him sideways. “You called me
-the Joan of Russia. I was almost. There was a time when not to be loved
-and not to be a mother seemed a small price to pay for sainthood. It was
-my happiness against the happiness of millions. But now----” Her eyes
-filmed over.
-
-“But now------?” he prompted.
-
-She brushed her tears away with pitiful defiance. “I want to be a
-woman--to be everything in some man's life.”
-
-“Perhaps you are in his, but he doesn't show it.”
-
-She seemed to listen for laughter. Then, “No,” she said. “When I try to
-be a woman, I play Satan to him.”
-
-“And that's the wall?”
-
-“Not all of it. There's Santa.”
-
-In the swift march of his emotions he had almost forgotten Santa. As
-though she had been drowning and he had turned back from rescuing her,
-the mention of her name stung him with reproach.
-
-“What of Santa?” he asked in a low voice.
-
-
-VI
-
-
-She's in love with my husband.”
-
-He let go her hand. “Do you mind if I smoke? Perhaps you'll join me?
-No?”
-
-He took his time while he lit his cigarette. Then, speaking slowly, “I
-can't believe all the evil that I've heard about this woman. And yet I
-ought. Every fresh person has told me something increasingly vile.
-To make a case against her, I have only to take all the trouble she's
-caused me. I meet her on a liner and part with her on landing; from that
-moment I have no peace. I'm pestered by strangers accusing and defending
-her. My room is entered by spies. I find an anonymous note pinned to
-my pillow. I'm lured out of London into the heart of the country on
-the pretext that she's in danger and I can help her. You know the rest.
-Until the happenings of tonight, the most probable explanation seemed to
-be that she had taken a secret fancy to me and had turned to me in her
-distress, when she found herself suspected of a crime. That theory won't
-hold water any longer.”
-
-“It might.”
-
-“It couldn't. You tell me she's in love with your husband.”
-
-“Santa can be in love with as many men as serve her purpose. The only
-loyalty to which she's constant is the memory of her dead child.”
-
-He shook himself irritably. “Nothing that you' or any one has told me
-explains her. She left on me an impression of nobility which absolutely
-contradicts all this later information. Until I met you, it almost
-seemed there was a conspiracy on foot to poison my mind. What she is
-said to have done may all be true, but I can't help searching behind
-her actions for a higher motive. You'd clear matters up if you'd tell me
-frankly how it is that you come into the picture.”
-
-“The picture!” She shrank back from him like a timid child.
-
-Controlling himself, he spoke patiently. “Do I need to be explicit? You
-ought to hate her. She's in love with your husband. When, a few hours
-ago, it was a case of warning her of the trap she was walking into, you
-were reluctant to give the signal. 'She wouldn't spare us,' you said;
-'so why should you and I----?' And yet you're her accomplice.
-It was you whom I followed. It was you who, when you'd got me into this
-room, tried to hold me at the revolver's point.”
-
-She buried her face in the hollow of her arm. Her voice came muffled.
-“It was I.”
-
-He waited for her to say more. She made no sound--not even of sobbing.
-
-“It was a dangerous game to play,” he reminded her. “You didn't know
-your man or how he would take it. You must have had some strong motive.
-You might have killed me without even intending. What a risk you
-ran, doing a thing like that singlehanded! For a moment, when I first
-entered, everything was touch and go.”
-
-And still she made no reply.
-
-The fire had burned low. He emptied coals on it. To bridge the
-embarrassment of her silence, he went over to the window, pulling aside
-the curtains, and stood gazing out at the glory of the night. The moon
-rode high. Trees were clumped and motionless. The crooning of waves made
-a continual lullaby.
-
-She was married, and she was wasted. She was not wanted, and she was not
-released. She had a husband who refused to live and could not contrive
-to die. As a substitute for passion she had tried sainthood; it had not
-satisfied.
-
-He let the curtains fall. Turning, he gazed back at the black-garbed
-figure bowed in the half-circle of firelight. Her golden hair had broken
-loose. It poured across her shoulders and gathered at her feet in a
-pool. At the moment she looked more a Magdalene than a saint. And this
-was the woman who had made men brave by her purity--to whom a nation had
-turned in its agony!
-
-A flood of pity swept over him. Poor, narrow shoulders to have borne
-such a burden! Poor, virgin feet to have come so long a journey! Poor,
-mortal hands to have given such a blessing! She had been robbed and cast
-aside.
-
-The cruelty of idealists! She was their victim. What did they attain?
-Idealists slew happiness on the altar of dreams that a future happiness
-might result from it. Though their dreams were mistaken, they lost
-nothing; they snatched their sensation of godlike righteousness. But who
-could restore the happiness of others which their frenzy had destroyed?
-
-If this time Varensky had had the decency to die, she was free. He
-himself could take her. But would she want him? He had no attractions.
-All that he could offer would be to serve her. He couldn't place her
-back on her pinnacle of fame. Instead of crowds, he would be her only
-worshiper. Would that satisfy a woman who had been a saint for a day?
-He could promise her rest and protection. He could take her feet in
-his hands and guide them over rough places. And if she wanted to be a
-woman----
-
-Crossing the room on tiptoe, he stood over her. Sinking to his knee, he
-placed a hand on her shoulder.
-
-“Won't you look up? I'm not here to hurt you. I wouldn't even judge you.
-Life's been hard.”
-
-When she gave no sign, he spoke again.
-
-“I'm a man and a stranger. You're a wife. But you've told me so much.
-You're wounded. You can't go on by yourself.”
-
-She moved. He knew now that she was listening.
-
-“There's that door in the wall we were going to find. Perhaps we've
-found it. Let me be your friend. It would be foolish and wrong for me to
-tell you that I----”
-
-She raised her head. Her hair fell back, and her eyes gazed out at him
-with hungry intensity. “Don't say it,” she implored. “Varensky----”
-
-“But if he's dead? If I can bring you sure proof?”
-
-For answer she pressed his hand against her bosom.
-
-
-VII
-
-
-He seated himself at her feet, his arms clasped about his knees as
-if crouched before a camp-fire. How much meaning had she read into his
-implied confession? He felt happy; happier than ever before in his
-life, and yet, if she were the cause of his happiness, the odds were
-all against him. She had promised him nothing. She could promise him
-nothing. All he knew of her was what she had told him. His elation might
-prove to be no more than an emotion that would fade in the chill light
-of morning.
-
-“It would be foolish and wrong for me to tell you----” The words had
-risen to his lips unpremeditated. He had not realized that he cared for
-her until they were uttered. He had merely felt an immense compassion,
-an overwhelming desire to comfort her. That he should care for her at
-all was preposterous. It was paying her no compliment. Love that was
-worth the having required a more permanent incentive than physical
-beauty. Her mind and her character were a riddle to him. If his passion
-was no passing mood and she were indeed a widow, it would be her mind
-and her character that he might one day marry. He ought to have foreseen
-that something of this sort would be sure to happen between a man and
-woman left alone after midnight.
-
-But the triumphant self whom she had roused in him grinned impudently at
-this cautious moralizing. He gloried in the magnificent unwisdom of his
-indiscretion. He was surprised and delighted at this newly-discovered
-capacity for recklessness. When experience was growing stale, he had
-broken through limitations and found himself gazing on an unguessed
-landscape where adventure commenced afresh. He could still feel the
-softness of her flesh against his hand. That sudden act of tenderness
-had altered all their relations.
-
-He glanced up at her shyly. She, too, was dreaming. Her lips were
-smiling uncertainly; there was a far-away, brooding expression in her
-eyes. The blackness of her mourning merged with the shadows, making her
-seem disembodied; all he could see distinctly was the golden torrent of
-her hair framing the pallor of her face.
-
-“They knelt to you in Petrograd. I don't wonder.”
-
-“Poor people! It did them no good. I never want any one else to do it.”
-
-“But I kneel to you. I crouch at your feet.”
-
-“I would rather be loved than worshiped.” She restrained him gently.
-“Not yet.”
-
-“Then, until I may love, I kneel to you.”
-
-“You ought to find me repellent. No, let me speak. I own to you that I'm
-married, and here I sit with you alone, not knowing whether my husband
-lives or is buried. I must be wicked--more wicked than I guessed. Ivan
-was right; he used to tell me I played Satan to him. These hands, which
-look so soft and white, are cruel. This face, which seems so gentle, is
-a lie. This hair, which makes a pillow for your head, is a snare. One
-good man has already cast me aside. Rather than love me, he preferred
-death. And you are good. How near I came to killing you!” She bent over
-him, taking his face between her hands. “_You!_ Do you understand?” She
-had drawn his head back against her knees. Her lips all but touched him.
-He could feel the fanning of her breath. Her voice came pantingly, as
-though she dreaded her own question: “What can you see in me?”
-
-“Blue eyes, like a glimpse of heaven.”
-
-“Tell me truly.”
-
-“What can I see?” He stared up adoringly. “A woman who's still a child.
-A woman who's been cheated. A woman whose arms are empty. A woman who
-sits outside a tomb, dreaming of life.”
-
-“Not of life,” she corrected softly; “of being allowed to live for a
-man.”
-
-“For me, perhaps?”
-
-She smiled vaguely.
-
-“Without knowing what kind of a man I am?”
-
-“Do you know me?” She sat upright, gazing straight before her. “You
-don't even know why I brought you.”
-
-“Why?”
-
-“It seems strange to tell you now. It seems like a forgotten sadness, so
-forgotten that it might belong to some one else. And yet once it hurt. I
-brought you that I might win back my husband. Don't stiffen. Look up and
-see how I'm smiling. I was never his in your sense. I was an image in
-a niche, whose hands he kissed. I was a mascot, bringing him good luck.
-The woman part of me he postponed superstitiously till his cause should
-be won. It will never be won now.”
-
-“But he warned you before he married you?”
-
-She shook her head. “He made sure of me. At first I was proud to be
-included in his sacrifice. Then failure made it all absurd. I was sorry
-for him. I knew only one way to comfort him. But because he had failed,
-he became the more determined to deny himself. Instead of comforting
-him, I became his tempter. Then Santa----”
-
-Hindwood pulled himself together and bent forward, glowering into the
-fire. “I can't understand all this talk of sacrifice. It sounds so
-confoundedly unpractical. As far as I can make out, your husband's idea
-of virtue was to abstain from everything that makes life worth living.
-He didn't profit any one by abstaining. All he did was to narrow
-himself. If he'd wanted to be an ascetic, why couldn't he have done the
-thing thoroughly and played the game? There was no need to drag you into
-it.”
-
-“There was no need,” she assented quietly, “but to have me and to
-withstand me made him appear more dedicated. He tantalized himself with
-the thought of me and used me as a knife with which to gash himself. I
-was a part of the road to Calvary he was treading in order that Russia
-might be saved. It gratified his pride to make the road spectacular.
-Then, when we were in exile and he was no longer a power, Santa came,
-the ruthless idealist--his very opposite.”
-
-“Ruthless, perhaps! But I shouldn't call her an idealist.”
-
-“She is--an idealist who, to gain her ends, stoops to any baseness.
-She's an avenging angel, beautiful and sinister. She's one of the few
-revolutionaries who knows what she wants; because she knows, she gets
-it. Varensky never knew. His head was in the clouds. He lost sight of
-his purpose in a mist of words.”
-
-“What does she want?” As he asked the question, he glanced back at her
-where she gleamed like a phantom.
-
-“She wants----” There was a pause during which the only sound was the
-struggle of the distant surf. “She wants to make men pay for what they
-do to children. All her crimes---- She's a mother, robbed of her young;
-in her own fierce way, she's taken all the children of the world to her
-breast.”
-
-“But men don't do anything.”
-
-She caught his tone of puzzlement. “Oh yes. Each generation commits
-ferocious sins against the coming generation that can't protect itself.
-It's children who pay for wars and every social injustice. Men live like
-a marauding army, pillaging the land between birth and death. They pass
-on and leave to children the settlement of their reckless debts. Take
-this latest war; five million children in Europe alone are dying
-of starvation at this moment. Santa's marked down the men who are
-responsible for their suffering; silently, one by one, she drugs them
-with her beauty and exacts the penalty.”
-
-“Prince Rogovich?”
-
-“Probably. He was raising funds for a new carnage.”
-
-“But where do I come in? You said that you'd brought me here to help you
-win your husband.”
-
-“She's in love with Ivan. To be loved by Santa is like witnessing the
-signature to one's death warrant. Perhaps she's a Bolshevik agent--the
-only people to whom the Bolsheviks are merciful are children. Perhaps
-she's really in love with him. She plays with him like a cat with a
-mouse.”
-
-“And he?”
-
-“He's indifferent, as he is to every woman. Yet because she's
-treacherous and he wants to die, he takes her with him on many of his
-journeys. I hoped that if I could give you to her, she might spare him.
-That was before I knew you. I was beside myself with suspense. Ivan has
-been gone so long; to do her bidding seemed like giving him his last
-chance of life. She's in danger and in hiding. You're the one person who
-can prove her guilt. I thought that if I put you in her power, I'd place
-her under an obligation, so that----”
-
-“And now?”
-
-She covered her face with her hands. “God forgive me, it's your safety
-that counts--not Ivan's.” He knelt against her, plucking her hands
-aside. “Look at me,” he commanded. “So long as your husband lives, his
-safety comes first. In saving me, you might betray him. If, in snatching
-our happiness, we connived at his death, his shadow would always stand
-between us. I'm still your prisoner; I've not taken back my parole.
-Here's your revolver.” He drew it from his pocket and laid it on her
-knees. “Fulfill your bargain.”
-
-“How?”
-
-“Take me to Santa.”
-
-“But Ivan--already he may be----”
-
-“Until we know, we'll play the game by him.” When she hesitated, he
-added, “I wouldn't be friends with any woman who couldn't be loyal.”
-
-Her hands groped after the revolver and found it. Forcing back her
-tears, she answered, “Nor would I with any man.”
-
-Rising to his feet, he helped her to rise. “Take me to her.”
-
-
-VIII
-
-
-As they stepped into the garden, the first restlessness of morning was
-in the air. The moon had vanished. Stars were going out. Along the low
-level of sea-line dawn cast a sickly shadow. It was as though night were
-an indigo curtain behind which silver forms were moving.
-
-She led the way across the lawn, through a door in the wall, and out on
-the short, crisp turf. She had thrown a cloak about her and pulled the
-hood over her head. It made her look cowled and elfin. It was the hour
-when everything is fantastic.
-
-He had an oppressive sense of unreality, as though this were all a dream
-from which he would shortly rouse. He stood aloof from recent happenings
-and surveyed his share in them in an elderly, derisive fashion. What
-were all these promises that he had been exchanging like a gallant?
-He tried to recall his exact words. To what extent had he committed
-himself? He had crossed the Atlantic that he might multiply his
-fortune--for no other reason. He was neither an idealist nor a
-sentimentalist; he had realized the chance that a bankrupt Europe
-offered and had come to take advantage of it. What would these derelicts
-of the catastrophe think of him if they guessed his real purpose? They
-were willfully, even contemptibly, unpractical; yet their perverted
-unselfishness troubled his conscience. To spend half one's years in
-exile, like the Little Grandmother, might not correct injustice, but at
-least it was a brave protest. To plan to die, like Varensky, because he
-had failed to rescue humanity, was a counsel of despair, but it had its
-gleam of nobility. To assassinate, like Santa, men whose statesmanship
-you did not comprehend was the madness of a zealot, but she at least
-staked her life against theirs. Into none of these undertakings did
-profit enter. It was disquieting to find himself among people so
-determined to convert the world to altruism. The world had been like
-this always; it would be like this to the end. If they were once to
-sense who he was, they would regard him as their enemy. He was walking
-into danger with his eyes wide open. His wisest plan would be to sink
-into the shadows and take the first train back to sanity. To do that he
-would have to leave her.
-
-And why not? What did he owe her? What was she to him? She belonged to
-another man. Waiting for him to die, or to make sure of his death, might
-prove a tedious business--a humiliating one, most certainly. And yet to
-leave her now----
-
-She had been going on ahead--or was it his steps that had been lagging?
-She had halted. As he came up, he felt the firm surface of the road
-beneath his tread.
-
-In the gloom she laid her hand on his arm. “If you've promised too
-much----”
-
-That determined him. “I keep my promises,” he answered shortly.
-
-Walking side by side, they struggled on against the mass of
-all-surrounding vagueness. It seemed like a strong, gray tide pressing
-on their breasts, against which they made no headway.
-
-What was to be the upshot of it? She was guiding him to Santa. His
-lips twisted. It would take more than Santa to inspire him with terror.
-England wasn't the jungle. A man couldn't disappear unnoticed. Supposing
-in the next half-hour Santa were to do away with him, what would she
-gain by it? She would have silenced his testimony in the Rogo-vich
-affair, but she would have added to the evidence. If she were the woman
-she was painted, she would be too wary to do that. No, she would not
-attempt to kill him. Then what was her urgency?
-
-Gradually night was fading. The paleness from the sea was spreading.
-It drove like smoke, in billowy banks of vapor, creeping low along
-the ground. Live things were waking. In separate, plaintive warnings,
-early-risen birds were calling. Across the road ahead rabbits scurried.
-Against the formless vacancy of sky the rounded shoulders of the uplands
-became discernible. He took notice of their direction. She was leading
-him to the abandoned camp.
-
-“Madame Varensky.”
-
-She started. “Not that.”
-
-“I'm sorry. It was the only name I knew to call you. What do they
-usually----?”
-
-“Anna.”
-
-She came close like a child and stood gazing up at him.
-
-He stooped and spoke gently. “You're a wild rose. Once more let me look
-into your eyes. It's so strange that you should care for me.”
-
-“More strange to me,” she said.
-
-He placed his hands on her shoulders. “There's something that I want you
-to remember. If harm comes to either of us, believe always that it was
-only good that I intended.”
-
-“Whatever you brought me would be good,” she murmured.
-
-“I wish it might.” He tumbled the hood back so that he could see her
-hair. “When a man loves a woman who's already married, it doesn't often
-bring happiness. It wouldn't be right that it should. It isn't our fault
-that this has happened, but it will be if we misuse it.”
-
-“We shan't misuse it.”
-
-“There's something else.” He groped after his words. “Before I came to
-you, I'd been foolish. There's no sense in regretting; if I hadn't been
-foolish, we shouldn't have met. I thought that I was following Santa;
-you can guess----”
-
-She inclined her head.
-
-“And there's one thing more. If your husband comes back, promise me
-you'll forget.”
-
-She strained against him, so their lips were nearly touching. “Never.”
- She spoke fiercely. And again, “Never. Though it's years and you
-forget.”
-
-His hands slipped from her shoulders, lower and lower, till his arms
-closed about her. “Rest,” he whispered, “if it's only for a moment,
-poor, tired little bird.”
-
-Through the ghostly twilight of the autumn dawn they entered the
-deserted camp. Before one of the hutments she halted and tapped. She
-tapped again. There was no answer. Cautiously raising the latch,
-she peered into the room. Beckoning to him, she slipped across the
-threshold.
-
-
-IX
-
-
-The hut was empty. The floor was deep in dust. The ceiling was meshed
-with cobwebs. Nailed across the window, just as the soldiers had left
-it, a dingy curtain hung. Striking a match, he held it above his head.
-At the far end he made out signs of occupancy. On a shelf was a loaf of
-bread and near by a pitcher. In a corner, spread on the bare boards for a
-bed, was a wrap. He stooped; it was Santa's cloak of sables.
-
-The match went out. He turned. “How long has she been here?”
-
-“From the time she knew she was suspected.”
-
-“She knew she was suspected at Plymouth. What made her motor all across
-England to this?” He glanced round with pity at the poverty-stricken
-forlornness.
-
-“She wanted to be near.”
-
-“What? It would be better to tell me.”
-
-“To the road out.”
-
-He lit a cigarette and considered. “So there are more people in it,” he
-said at last, “than just the few that I have met! It's an organization.
-I might have guessed. There are the people who helped the little old
-lady to visit me undetected. There are the people who entered my room in
-my absence. There's the foreign gentleman, who couldn't speak English,
-who called for Santa in his car. But if this hut is on the road out, why
-was she delaying?”
-
-“For you, perhaps.”
-
-“But she was risking her freedom every second. Why for me, Anna?”
-
-Before he had given her time to answer, his mind had leaped to a new
-conjecture. “What if she's captured?”
-
-Suddenly the tragedy of this strange woman, temple-dancer,
-revolutionary, avenger of children, became vivid. Her pain stung him as
-though he had suffered it himself. He lived again the hunted hours
-that must have been hers while she had listened in this dusty room. He
-remembered her fascination, the grayness of her eyes, the fastidiousness
-of her dress. What a contrast to these surroundings! How often she must
-have crouched by that window, watching from behind the shabby curtain
-for the approach of the pursuer! The men she had killed did not matter.
-Probably they had deserved their death. His pity was reserved for
-her. She had been the pampered darling of princes. Her whims had been
-commands to lovers who themselves were rulers.
-
-No present had been too costly to purchase the ecstasy of her
-complaisance. Her body had been a jewel, guarded, coveted, irrepeatable
-in its beauty. Crimes had been committed for its possession. And this
-was her end! He heard in memory the hoarse pleading of her voice, trying
-vainly to convince him that love could make her good.
-
-The woman at his side was speaking. “We heard no sound. She was armed.
-If they'd tried to take her, she'd have defended herself.”
-
-His thoughts came back. “Last night. Yes. If they'd taken her in the
-garden. But they might have known she would be armed. Perhaps they
-followed her. If they traced her to this hut, they might have waited
-till she was sleeping----”
-
-She shook her head. “It isn't that. She's grown tired of delaying. She's
-gone by the road out.”
-
-He frowned. “That's the second time you've used the phrase. Can't you
-tell me plainly?”
-
-“If it's not too late, I'll show you.”
-
-She darted out of the hut. When he joined her in the open, she was
-waiting impatiently to secure the door behind him. The moment it was
-fastened, she set off at a run. She raced like a boy, with none of a
-woman's awkwardness. With an occasional backward glance, up the long
-deserted avenue of the camp she fled. At first he was content to follow
-for the pleasure he had in watching her. She was so swift and young.
-She was like a deer in her slenderness. Sudden eagerness had transformed
-her. The hood had slipped back to her shoulders; the wind of her going
-fluttered in her hair.
-
-Outside the camp she bore to the left in a direction leading further
-afield. Over gorse and bracken dew had flung a silver net. The turf was
-a tapestry sewn with jewels. Larks were springing up. The keen fragrance
-of seaweed mingled with the honeyed perfumes of the land.
-
-He caught up with her. “Why?” he panted.
-
-She had no breath to waste in words. Turning on him a flushed and
-laughing face, she pointed ahead.
-
-Just short of the cliff-edge, where the sheer drop began, she sank to
-her knees, clasping her breast. While she recovered, he gazed about
-him. He discovered no sign of the thing she was pursuing. The sea was
-blanketed in mist. Above the blurred horizon, the red eye of the sun
-stared at him. From the foot of the cliff came the lapping of waves. No
-other sound.
-
-She had risen. He was about to speak. She pressed a finger to her lips.
-Taking him by the hand, she led him to the edge.
-
-At first, as he gazed down, he saw only the crumbling face of the chalk.
-Then he made out a winding path descending; it seemed no broader than a
-track that a goat might follow.
-
-“What is it?”
-
-“Listen.”
-
-She dragged excitedly on his arm.
-
-Distinctly, above the lapping of waves, he heard the click of oars
-working in oar-locks. Beneath the fog a vessel was hiding. It had
-dropped a boat which was pulling toward the land.
-
-“The road out,” she whispered.
-
-“But Santa----”
-
-She nodded. “It's not so difficult as it looks. It was used by
-smugglers. We use it----”
-
-She broke off. Oars were being shipped. The prow grounded. There was a
-muttering of men's voices. Some sort of discussion. A pause. Then oars
-were put out again. The rowing recommenced, growing fainter and fainter.
-
-
-X
-
-
-Gone!”
-
-She pressed against him in her gladness.
-
-Seeing the relief in her eyes, he questioned, “What does this mean to
-you, Anna?”
-
-“Safety.”
-
-“Anything else?”
-
-“Freedom, perhaps.”
-
-“You mean you think that Santa had received word of your husband and
-that that was why----?”
-
-“I don't want to think or mean; I only want to feel. It's as though I'd
-been living in a prison and the door had been flung wide. I wasn't one
-of them. They condemned me. In their hearts they despised me. I was too
-weak. I couldn't bear their cross.” She clenched her hands against
-her cheeks till the knuckles showed white. “What's the good of being
-crucified? It's so much better to live and be glad for people.”
-
-“And Santa,” he asked, “where she's going, what will happen to her?”
-
-She raised her face. “Pain. She'll be hounded and hunted. She's getting
-too well known. Prince Rogovich thought he recognized her. She'll be
-always escaping, rushing from hiding to hiding, till one day---- To have
-been loved so much and to be pushed out of life----”
-
-Behind the mist they heard the creak of ropes running over pulleys.
-A gasoline engine was started. For an instant the shadow of a trawler
-loomed through the wall of opaqueness. The tiller was thrust over.
-She vanished. They stood very silently, listening and watching. In
-imagination Hindwood followed the vessel's course. It was not of the
-vessel he was thinking, but of the woman on board her. “To have been
-loved so much and to be pushed out of life----” If he had had the
-chance, what could he have done for her? She had fascinated him; but
-he had not loved her. She was past reclaiming. Love with a woman of
-her kind would have meant passion--nothing more. A fierce flame,
-self-consuming! A slow degrading of an emotion that was fine! Yet he
-was filled with pity and unreasoning remorse. Some day her enemies would
-overtake her--good, respectable men like Major Cleasby; the good men who
-by the injustice of their prejudices had made her what she was.
-
-“It's a chapter ended,” he said quietly.
-
-Slipping his arm through hers, as though she already belonged to him,
-he was turning inland toward the peace of the rolling country, when
-his step was arrested. He caught the sound of labored breathing and
-the rattle of sliding chalk. Hands groped above the edge of the cliff,
-searching for a holding. They were followed by the head and shoulders
-of a man with a face intensely white, in which a pair of pale green
-eyes smoldered. Lower down and out of sight a woman spoke. The voice was
-Santa's.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER THE FIFTH--THE GREEN EYES CAST A SPELL
-
-
-I
-
-
-HINDWOOD stood rooted to the ground. He had thrust Anna behind him. She
-was tugging at his hand with the tenacity of terror. He scarcely dared
-breathe while he watched the green-eyed man dragging himself inch by
-inch to safety. To go to his assistance might cause his death. Any move
-that startled him might fling him back over the precipice. In falling he
-would sweep away the unseen woman who must be clinging to the face of
-the cliff below him.
-
-To Hindwood it seemed that he was present at a fantastic rehearsal of
-the Day of Resurrection. When the last trumpet blew, it would probably
-be precisely in some such fashion that the sea would give up its dead.
-It would happen about sunrise, when mankind was still abed. It would
-commence very quietly, when clouds were hanging low and the first of the
-barnyard cocks were crowing. Without warning, graves would open, and
-all the tired people, who had been so long resting, would begin to stir.
-Like the sound of falling rain, they would patter through the drowsing
-country, searching for their ancient dwellings. At first they would walk
-alone, then in groups, later in crowds. By the time the living looked
-out of their windows there would be no standing room on earth. Across
-seas and oceans the drowned would come swimming. They would wade through
-waves and clamber up cliffs, just as this man was doing.
-
-The vision became so probable that Hindwood glanced behind him to make
-sure that it was not happening. In a shimmering expanse of dew and
-autumn coloring lay the sweet, green landscape of living men, the kindly
-hedgerows, the sheltering valleys, the friendly villages. Everything was
-gentle and unaltered. It was only at this barrier, which the green-eyed
-stranger was struggling to surmount, that the tranquillity ended. At
-its brink eternity commenced, a pulsating oblivion of mist and grayness
-across which the rising sun peered curiously.
-
-The stranger was too occupied with his danger to be aware that he was
-being observed. Clutching at tufts and digging with his fingers, he was
-easing himself out of the abyss. Little by little he was gaining ground
-till at last, pulling his knees clear of the edge, he sprawled exhausted
-on the turf. But it was only for a moment. Twisting about, still lying
-flat, he reached down to his companion. As she appeared, he retreated,
-steadying her efforts and dragging her with him. Side by side they
-collapsed, breathing heavily and staring in dazed defiance at the death
-they had avoided.
-
-Hindwood made a step to approach them. He found himself tethered. Anna
-was gazing up at him, silently imploring. Her hair seemed a mass of
-solid gold, weighing her down. The blue veins in her temples stood out
-beneath her fairness. Her throat was milk-white and stretched back. Her
-lips were parted, revealing the coral of her mouth. It was as though she
-had been caught from behind by an assailant and brutally jerked back.
-With little endearing motions she caressed Hindwood's hand. He tried to
-fathom her necessity; in the presence of her weakness there was nothing
-that he would not have granted.
-
-The man with the green eyes had recovered. In the act of rising he had
-caught sight of them. His jaw had dropped open. If it was possible, his
-complexion had gone a shade whiter. His expression bore testimony to the
-medley of his emotions, the chief of which was astonishment. He made
-an oddly pathetic figure, with his scratched hands and torn clothing,
-crouching in that hunted attitude. He had lost his hat in the ascent.
-His brown hair was lank with perspiration. He was a lean man and
-graceful as a greyhound. Even in his present ungainly posture there was
-a hint of something swift and gallant in his bearing. One forgot that
-he was a vagabond who had eluded formalities and completed an illegal
-landing; he looked more like a champion unhorsed in a tourney. His brow
-was wide and noble, but the top of his head was shaped like a deformity
-and rose into a point like a dunce's cap. His eyes were well-spaced
-and piercing; they penetrated with a sense of power. His mouth was
-thin-lipped and sensitive--too sensitive for a man's. His face was
-narrow and smooth as a girl's. He had a haggard appearance of perpetual
-suffering, which the extremeness of his pallor served to enhance. He
-was indefinably tragic. He might have sat equally well for a portrait of
-Lucifer or of Harlequin overtaken by his folly.
-
-Very wearily he lifted himself from the ground and stumbled toward them.
-As he did so, Santa uttered a nervous cry and turned--after which she
-watched broodingly what happened.
-
-Paying no attention to Hindwood, the man made straight for Anna. Bending
-over her humbly, he whispered unintelligible words. Her terror left her.
-Making no sound, she raised to him eyes eloquent with compassion.
-
-“What did he say?” Hindwood questioned.
-
-She was prepared to reply, when the stranger stayed her with a gesture.
-“I was apologizing in Russian for having returned.”
-
-Hindwood glanced at the ragged edge of the cliff and shrugged his
-shoulders. “An apology's scarcely necessary. You're to be congratulated.
-You seem to have recognized this lady. Who are you?”
-
-The stranger drew himself erect. A grim smile played about his mouth.
-“Ivan Varensky, at your service.”
-
-[Illustration: 0187]
-
-
-II
-
-
-Hindwood stared at him with a frown. He was contrasting this Ivan
-Varensky with the leader of men whose deeds of three years ago had so
-deeply stirred him. One picture stood out ineffaceably. It was of a sea
-of panic-stricken soldiers, patriotism forgotten, arms flung away, in
-wild retreat, and of Ivan Varensky driving forward alone, as though
-he, by his single courage, could turn back the enemy. And this was the
-man--the white knight of Russia, the scape-goat, the magician of words!
-Had he met him three years ago, he would have knelt to him. Now all he
-could do was to frown.
-
-It was necessary to say something. He spoke gruffly. “You've chosen an
-odd method of returning. We had news you were dead.”
-
-“I was,” the green eyes narrowed, “nearly. I'm always nearly dying.
-Isn't that so, Anna? And then I come back. This last time, as you
-observed, I had the discourtesy to forget. I was thinking of Santa.
-Actually I struggled to survive. Believe me, that's unlike me.”
-
-The forbearance of his manner was rebuking. Making an effort to be
-genial, Hindwood held out his hand. “It's a strange way to meet. I've
-long been your admirer. It was a close call--as close as a man could
-have.”
-
-Varensky winced as the powerful grip closed about his fingers. They were
-long and pointed, more like a woman's than a man's. “A close call!” He
-smiled. “You're American? It wasn't--not for me. I could tell you-- But
-perhaps one day, when I've become past history, Anna will do that.”
-
-As he mentioned his wife, he gave her a look at once tender and
-furtive--a look which acknowledged without rancor the truth of the
-situation. She started forward, but his eyes held her. She stopped
-half-way.
-
-“However you return,” she said chokingly, “and however often, you know
-that I'm glad. It's the certainty that I shall lose you--that however
-often you return I shall never have you--”
-
-She bowed her head. From the edge of the cliff, without a trace of
-emotion, the other woman watched her.
-
-Tilting her face with his bruised fingers, Varensky regarded her
-earnestly. “As if I wasn't aware of that!” And then, “Let's be going.”
-
-Side by side, but always separate, they moved across the downs. There
-was no backward glance. Hindwood followed them with his eyes till they
-sank into a hollow. The last he saw was the raw gold of her hair and the
-conical top of his pointed head, growing more distant above the bracken.
-
-
-III
-
-
-And I, too, have to apologize. I failed to keep my appointment.”
-
-He swung round at the mockingly spoken words, to find that Santa had
-stolen up behind him. Until now he had had no time to notice her. His
-anger was so intense that it held him silent. After all that she had
-done and had intended to do to him, she had the effrontery to jest! Did
-she think that he was as much her dupe as the fool who had died for her
-in the woods of Vincennes?
-
-But his anger was short-lived and left him sternly cold. She was
-changed. Her fastidious elegance was a thing of the past. She was
-commonly attired as any fisher-girl. Her cheap blouse was rent at the
-neck; its sleeves were stained and in tatters. Her rough skirt had been
-nearly trodden off. She was tom and disheveled. She had suffered even
-more from her adventure than had Varensky. Her hat lay crushed at her
-feet in the grass. With her wounded hands she “was doing her best to
-twine the thick coils of her hair into place. She stood confessed for
-what she was, a fugitive from justice. The wildness of the landscape
-made a fitting setting. She looked startlingly untamed. She might have
-passed for a peasant Ophelia, except that her gray eyes were calm and
-her manner nonchalant.
-
-“There are a good many things, besides missing your appointment, for
-which you have to apologize.”
-
-“I can explain--”
-
-He cut her short. “Between you and me no explanations are necessary.”
-
-She jerked back her head, flattening her hands against her sides like a
-soldier standing at attention. “Why not?”
-
-He took his time to answer. “Because you're nothing to me.”
-
-Her face went white, then flamed scarlet, as though he had struck
-her with his open palm. “Nothing to you!” She spoke slowly. “I, Santa
-Gorlof, am nothing to you! You're the first man to whom I ever offered
-my heart. I would lie down in the mud that you might walk over me. I'd
-let you beat me like a dog if I might only follow you. I'd starve that
-you might be fed, go thirsty that you might drink, break my body that
-you might not suffer. I would die if it would give you pleasure.” Seeing
-that her rhetoric was having no effect, she sank her voice. “When I
-could have escaped, I waited for you. I risked my freedom for one last
-sight of you.” She clutched at her breast, choking down a sob. “And you
-tell me that I'm nothing to you!”
-
-He was determined to remain unmoved by her emotion. Regarding her
-stonily, he asked: “What right had you to believe that you were anything
-to me?”
-
-She laughed forlornly. “No right at all.”
-
-“If I had ever cared for you,” he continued, “in your present
-predicament it would all be ended.”
-
-She raised her brows contemptuously. “Of course.”
-
-“You see, I've found out the sort of woman you are.”
-
-“What sort?”
-
-“Need I recall?”
-
-He turned away, searching hollows and clumps of bushes for bobbing heads
-of watchers. Her captors might be closing in on her. Her indifference
-to her danger was disconcerting. With eyes still fixed on the distant
-landscape, he revealed his thoughts.
-
-“Your talk of love is paltry. It's tragic farce. You have a husband.
-You're liable to be jailed at any moment.”
-
-He expected she would retort. When she maintained silence, he glanced
-down at his feet, ashamed of what he felt himself compelled to tell her.
-
-“Love! If it were true, and if your affection were desired, you have no
-love to offer. Nothing that is you is yours. Your hours are numbered.
-Your body and your life are forfeit. The man who is your husband is
-leading the hue-and-cry against you. If you think you can persuade me to
-go to the scaffold for you, rid yourself of the thought. There'll be no
-repetition of the woods of Vincennes. The victim in that case was your
-lover; I'm not.” He met her eyes. “You never deceived me for a second.
-From the moment we left the _Ryndam_, I knew who it was had pushed
-Prince Rogovich overboard.”
-
-“If you knew,” she asked quietly, “why didn't you have me arrested?”
-
-“It was none of my business.”
-
-“But you were kind after we'd landed. At the hotel you arranged to
-breakfast with me.”
-
-“I couldn't bring myself to believe you were guilty.”
-
-“And yet, after you had believed, you followed me to Seafold.”
-
-“The detective instinct.” He spoke testily. “Morbid curiosity.”
-
-“No.” She said it wistfully. Her face softened. “You followed me
-because, even against your will, you still cared for me. You pitied me.
-You were chivalrous. You refused to condemn me unheard. You hoped there
-was some mistake. You followed me to make sure.”
-
-“And you've made me sure.” He rapped out the words. “Since you insist
-on the truth, I came to Seafold hoping to find you innocent. If I had I
-should have fought for you. Whereas--”
-
-“Whereas?” she prompted nervously.
-
-“I found you'd done to me what you've done to every other man who ever
-befriended you--betrayed me and had me lured into an ambush where, for
-all I know, you'd given orders for me to be shot.”
-
-“But you weren't.”
-
-“No thanks to you. Your husband was ahead of you, hidden in the bushes,
-waiting for you. If we hadn't given the signal that warned you--”
-
-“But you gave it.” She spoke triumphantly. “I'd trapped you, and yet you
-didn't want me to be caught. To have shown generosity at a moment when
-you thought that I was threatening your life, you must still have been
-fond of me.”
-
-“Thought!” He drew back from her, revolted by her insincerity. “You left
-no room for thought. You were diabolically explicit. You knew that I
-could prove your guilt. You meant to kill me in order that I might be
-silenced.”
-
-Her eyes filled. She stretched out her arms beseechingly. They fell
-hopelessly as he retreated from her.
-
-“Don't misjudge me,” she implored. “I'm a woman who's finished. A woman,
-as you reminded me, whose hours are numbered--my body and my life are
-forfeit. It's true what you said: nothing that I am belongs to me. If
-you like to put it that way, I'm a woman who has nothing to offer. And
-yet I love you--the first man with whom I was ever in love, now when
-it's too late. You don't believe me; you're thinking of the many others.
-Let it pass. I had to see you once more. I couldn't come to you; you
-were surrounded by my enemies. To persuade you to come to me, I had to
-trick you. Until it was safe to visit you, I had to have you held by
-force. I compelled Anna, Madame Varensky to--”
-
-He made an impatient gesture. “Enough! I'm wondering to how many men
-you've made that speech before. I've heard all about your appeals to
-chivalry. If you were a man---- Unfortunately you're not, so I have a
-sentimental compunction about abandoning you. What are your plans? When
-I saw the ship I hoped you had escaped.”
-
-“I had.”
-
-“And you came back! Why?”
-
-“Varensky was landing from the boat that had been sent to take me off.”
- She was laying claim to some obscure nobility, making a final bid for
-his admiration.
-
-“The mist's clearing,” he said brusquely. “In another half-hour you'll
-be visible for miles. If you're seen here, you'll be taken.”
-
-“I won't.”
-
-“You think not?”
-
-She smiled languidly. It was her arch, mysterious way of smiling that
-had first attracted him. “Why don't you go?” she whispered in her
-hoarse, parched voice. “You loathe and despise me. You grudge me every
-moment we're together. I've done what was right; I'm willing to pay the
-penalty. I've earned a rest. I'm tired--you can't guess how tired.”
-
-Now that she wanted him to go, he gazed at her with a new interest.
-If the trackers were hot upon his trail, what would be his sensations?
-Would he be able to be courteous and to talk calmly? Whatever might be
-her crimes, she had courage. What if it were true that by some tortuous
-process of reasoning she did actually believe she had done right? And
-what if it were true that she had intended him no harm, but had only
-attempted to win him by violence? The uneasy doubt took shape in his
-mind that he might have misjudged her. It would be a splendid memory
-to have, if she were wrongly executed--this gleaming morning, the larks
-singing, the blue-patched sky, the valiant sun, the rosy-tinted dew, and
-himself fleeing from the forlornness of a woman! Every man's hand was
-against her. She believed she had done right.
-
-He regarded her less coldly. She was perfect as on the day when all
-Europe had gone wild over her. And this masterpiece of loveliness, which
-had been known as Santa Gorlof, was doomed to be destroyed!
-
-“Go.” She stamped her foot hysterically. “You torture me.”
-
-He faced her obstinately. “What are you proposing? You've some plan in
-mind. Madame Varen-sky called this 'the road out.' Is it possible for
-you to take it?”
-
-“I know a shorter route.”
-
-“You're certain?”
-
-“Please leave me. You must leave me. I'm a woman who has nothing to
-offer. You're a man who has everything to lose.”
-
-He squared his lips. “I don't like the sound of this shorter route. I
-want to know more about it.”
-
-As he made a step toward her, she dodged and broke from him, dashing
-toward the cliff. On the very edge he caught her. She struggled
-dangerously, but he stumbled back with her crushed against him.
-
-“You little fool!”
-
-She lay quiet, her face pressed against his cheek. Then she fell to
-sobbing.
-
-“What difference would it make? Why wouldn't you let me do it?”
-
-
-IV
-
-
-Why wouldn't he? It was the question he himself was asking. He had done
-nothing humane in preventing her. He had merely spared his own feelings.
-If she had succeeded, he would have found himself in an ugly situation.
-He would have been suspected of a crime similar to hers. There would
-have been no evidence to hang him, but he could never have established
-his innocence. He looked down at the woman shuddering in his arms, for
-all the world as though he were her lover. He had been within an ace of
-inheriting her isolation.
-
-“I didn't let you do it--” He hesitated. Then he took the plunge.
-“Because I intend to save you.”
-
-She stirred. She glanced up at him. As her eyes met his, their
-expression of wonder gave way to one of gratitude. She strove to reach
-his lips, but he restrained her.
-
-“Promise me you'll live.”
-
-“If you'll help me.”
-
-How much she implied oy “help me,” he did not stop to question.
-
-“We've no time to lose.” He spoke hurriedly. “Where's the safest place
-of hiding?”
-
-“My old one. A hut----”
-
-“I know,” he interrupted. “I'll go ahead to make sure the way is clear;
-you follow at a distance. Keep me in sight. If I look back, take cover.”
-
-Without more ado, he turned away, retracing his steps to the camp.
-
-He attempted to walk jauntily, like a nature-lover who had risen early
-to enjoy the first freshness of the morning. Here and there he stooped
-to pluck a blackberry. He pulled a sprig of heather for his lapel.
-He flattered himself that, if he were being watched, his conduct was
-artistically normal.
-
-For all his display of carelessness, he advanced warily. There was
-nothing in the billowy expanse of greenness that escaped him. Somewhere
-within a radius of four miles the Major was waiting to make his pounce.
-He might be crouched in the next patch of bracken. He might be lying
-behind the nearest mound. The dapper, gallant-appearing old gentleman,
-who bore such a striking resemblance to Lord Roberts, assumed the terror
-of nemesis in his imagination. He seemed everywhere and nowhere. He
-would pop up, suave and neatly bespatted, at the moment when he was
-least expected.
-
-He gazed straight before him, not daring to look back, but he never lost
-consciousness of the fateful woman following him stealthily as a shadow.
-And always there was the memory of the other woman with the gentle eyes
-and shining hair.
-
-He reached the camp. It looked lonely as a graveyard. Rows of hutments,
-bleached to a bluish whiteness, gleamed in the morning sunshine. The
-downs curled above it like an emerald wave on the point of breaking.
-
-Passing along the bare avenue of silent dwellings he pushed open the
-door of Santa's place of refuge. Tiptoeing across the dusty floor, he
-knelt by the window, peering out.
-
-Seconds ticked into minutes. Ten minutes elapsed, twenty, half an hour.
-There was no sign of life. He strove to calm his fears. If she had been
-caught, it simplified matters. But such arguments failed to pacify him.
-He pictured her as he had seen her on the _Ryndam_--a splendid animal,
-proud, fastidious, mildly contemptuous; and then as he had seen her that
-morning, broken, desperate, defiant.
-
-Out there in the happy sunshine they might be carrying her away. They
-would drag her through the public streets as a criminal. They would lock
-her in a cell. They would hale her to a court to be gaped at. They would
-paw over her private life. They would pry into the intimacies of her
-love-affairs. Nothing that was hers would be sacred. Then, when
-the sport grew tedious, an old man, turned moralist by reason of
-decrepitude, would don a black cap and intrust her to the mercy of
-Almighty God.
-
-He staged her arrest as though he had seen it happen. He had strolled
-straight through her pursuers' ambush. They had let him pass. Directly
-she had appeared, they had risen out of the brush. Twisting her arms
-behind her, they had snapped handcuffs on her slender wrists. She had
-struggled, sinking to the ground, faint with terror. They had jerked her
-to her feet, half carrying her, pushing her forward.
-
-He raged impotently. What brutes men were! Nothing that she had done
-to his sex was bad enough. He thrust the vision from him. Each time it
-returned.
-
-The door creaked. He leaped as if he had been shot. She pressed a finger
-to her lips. Coming close, so that he could feel the rise and fall of
-her bosom, “He's here,” she whispered.
-
-
-V
-
-
-Who?”
-
-She was puzzled by his stupidity. Then, “You know,” she murmured. “He
-saw me in the distance and started to run toward me. I dropped to my
-knees and circled, approaching the hut from the back.”
-
-“But he couldn't have recognized you.”
-
-“He's on my track.”
-
-“Alone?”
-
-“I saw no one else.”
-
-Hindwood's forehead wrinkled as he reckoned the cost. “If he comes
-alone, we can deal with him.”
-
-“You mean--?” She did not finish her sentence.
-
-He smiled sternly, thinking how far he had drifted from his moorings.
-“Scarcely. What made you ask?”
-
-“He's my husband.” Her answer was enigmatic.
-
-They held their breath. She was clinging to him. There had been no
-sound, nothing that could have warned them. Pushing her from him, he
-stole toward the window. Not fifty yards away, rigid like a hound
-at fault, stood the Major. Slowly, scarcely turning his head, he was
-running his eye along the double line of hutments. There was nothing in
-his expression that would tell what he had found. As though he sensed
-that he was watched, he started forward at a rambling pace. He tried
-no doors. He peered through no panes. His bearing was that of a mildly
-interested tourist who had stumbled on the camp by accident. He passed
-out of sight inoffensively, idly slashing at the grass.
-
-It was some time before either of them dared to whisper. Then Hindwood
-straightened himself and drew back.
-
-“He's gone.”
-
-“To return,” she said tragically.
-
-“If he returns alone, what of it?”
-
-“He may catch me.”
-
-“That doesn't follow. We may catch him instead.”
-
-Her eyes grew long and narrow like a cat's. “What would we do with him?”
- she asked softly.
-
-He regarded her warily. “He told me he loved you,” he said irrelevantly.
-
-“Love wouldn't stand in his way--nothing personal. For what he holds to
-be right, he'd mutilate himself. He'd kill the thing he loved best.” She
-sank her voice. “We all would.”
-
-“All--” He paused and began again. “With idealists like the Major,
-yourself and Varensky, human relations don't count. That was what you
-were trying to tell me, wasn't it? To achieve individual ideals, you'd
-sacrifice your own and everybody's happiness.”
-
-Her expression became wooden as an idol's.
-
-“You'd sacrifice mine, for instance?”
-
-When she refused to answer, he made his inquiry more intrusive.
-
-“My life, perhaps? No obligation of loyalty or gratitude would hinder
-you? Be honest.”
-
-He recognized the struggle which his words had occasioned. Her sleepy
-look had vanished. She believed he was preparing to desert her. She
-was mustering the courage to invent a falsehood. Already her hands were
-lying. They were wandering over him, patting and caressing. He clasped
-them in his own, holding her at arm's length. Her eyes met his; they
-grew steady and absorbed him.
-
-“Even though you were all I had, if your life caused suffering to
-children, I would kill you.”
-
-He laughed at her solemnity over having told the truth.
-
-“With you it's children; with the Major it's patriotism; with Varensky
-it's freedom. With me it's nothing. I follow no will-o'-the-wisp--which
-is lucky for you. You're terribly tired; get some rest while you can.
-I'll watch. I'm no idealist; you can trust me.”
-
-
-VI
-
-
-She had wrapped herself in her sable cloak and curled herself on the
-floor in the corner remotest from the window. When he judged she was
-sleeping, he stole to her side and stood gazing down. Her rags were
-hidden. Except for the weary disorder of her hair, she was almost the
-fashionable beauty of his Atlantic voyage.
-
-He looked closer. Fatigue had uncovered something hidden in her
-countenance, traces of lost girlhood. Her body seemed smaller, her
-features less decided. The mask of intrigue had fallen. He caught a
-glimpse of the slim, pathetic child whom the Major had discovered,
-swaying like lilac-bloom in the perfumed dusk of the Hindoo temple.
-
-Her feet peeped out from beneath the costly fur. Such doll's feet--so
-little to have come so long a journey! Her ankles were cut by the climb
-up the cliff. Her shoes were broken. As though the curtain had gone up
-in the theater of his brain, her feet began to act their story. He
-saw them tiny and brown, pattering about the shaded bungalow where the
-English tea-planter had lived with her Burmese mother. He saw them
-lost and wandering along the roads of India. He saw them in the temple,
-flashing like a swallow's flight across mosaic pavements. He
-followed all their progress, as they carried her through triumphs and
-bereavements to this moment.
-
-She sighed and moved languidly. The robe fell back, revealing her hands.
-They were grazed and wounded.
-
-Pouring water on his handkerchief from the pitcher, he bathed them
-gently. Just as he had finished, she opened her eyes.
-
-“You won't leave me?”
-
-“You'll find me sitting here,” he assured her, “just like this when you
-waken.”
-
-Smiling faintly, she drowsed off obediently as a child.
-
-All day she lay huddled in the corner, oblivious and spent with
-exhaustion. This must be the first long sleep she had snatched for
-several days and nights. Crouched beside the window, he guarded her.
-The Major might return. Varensky might send help. He himself could do
-nothing till after nightfall. The only food was the broken loaf of bread
-on the shelf beside the pitcher. He did not dare to touch it; when she
-woke, she would be hungry. The downs poured in a steady blaze of
-light. A fly drummed against the panes. On distant hillsides sheep were
-grazing; he envied them their freedom.
-
-He could go if he liked. As the monotony dragged on, the temptation
-strengthened. He was under no obligation to make himself an outlaw. If
-he were to slip away, he would not rouse her. Within the hour he could
-be speeding up to London. Once there he would be of importance--the one
-man, at least in some statesmen's estimate, who could solve the European
-situation. For this woman he was sacrificing the happiness of millions.
-The fleshpots of Egypt could be his for the claiming. If he stayed and
-she were arrested, he would be held as her accomplice. Self-interest and
-altruism urged him to escape. He owed nothing to her. Women had always
-been for him an enemy country, forbidden and enticing. They had been
-what darkest Africa was to the explorer, a forest-world of treacherous
-loveliness. In imagination he had always been approaching their borders,
-fascinated by the gleam of uplifted faces. But like Varensky, whose life
-was a constant challenging of terror, in this one matter he had been
-cowardly. Since the first false woman of his early manhood--?
-
-Why was it, this sudden clamor to possess the thing which all his years
-he had avoided? Was it because he felt the rising tide of loneliness
-and knew that the years were gaining on him? All this autumn day, as the
-silver clearness of morning faded into the deep gold of afternoon, he
-sat motionless, considering. Up to now he had maintained his pride,
-flattering himself that it was he who was doing the refusing. He had
-told himself arrogantly that he would succeed first--succeed immensely;
-after that he could have any woman for the asking. But could he? He was
-losing his faculty for sharing. Merely to marry a woman was not to win
-her. The illusion of ecstasy!
-
-He glanced over to the corner where she lay sleeping. She was the symbol
-of the feminine half of the world whom he had disregarded. It was she
-who had roused him, with her parched voice and instinctive passion.
-
-He studied her--her golden face, her cruel lips, her thin, sweet
-profile. He noticed the delicate firmness of her arms, the fineness of
-her throat, the tenderness of her molding. At every point she made him
-aware of his incompleteness.
-
-Across the downs, like a fisherman drawing in his nets, the sun was
-setting. The hut was vague with dusk. Like the crescent of a young moon,
-Santa had wakened and was rising.
-
-
-VII
-
-
-You promised to save me.”
-
-“I will if I can.”
-
-She knotted her hands in mental anguish.
-
-“You must. Any moment he may return. Have you thought of nothing?”
-
-Leaning across his shoulder she lifted the ragged curtain, peering out
-at the fading landscape; as she gazed, her face stiffened and her eyes
-became fixed in a leaden stare. Not more than thirty yards distant,
-with his back toward them, the Major was standing. He had followed their
-trail still closer.
-
-“We can't escape,” she panted. “He'll be there all night, to-morrow,
-forever.”
-
-“We can. Stop here and trust me.”
-
-Rising stealthily, leaving the door ajar behind him, he slipped out
-of the hut. In the twilight he halted, breathing in the sweet evening
-fragrance. Without further secrecy, he strode toward the Major.
-
-“Good evening. I've been expecting you.”
-
-At the first word the Major spun round, alertly on the defensive.
-
-“I have your prisoner,” he continued. “I found I had no taste for being
-added to her list of victims. I'll be glad if you'll take her off my
-hands. She's in there.” He jerked his thumb across his shoulder.
-
-The Major eyed him fiercely. “How d'you mean, you were expecting me?”
-
-Hindwood laughed. “I caught sight of you last night in Varensky's garden
-and this morning on the downs. I didn't let you know, because there were
-things I was anxious to investigate.”
-
-“For instance?”
-
-“The purpose of her game.”
-
-“And you've satisfied yourself?”
-
-“At the risk of my life--yes. When you warned me against being romantic,
-I thought you were merely jealous. Fortunately or unfortunately,
-whichever way you like to put it, I know now that everything you told me
-was correct.”
-
-“Humph!”
-
-The Major twirled his mustaches thoughtfully.
-
-In the last of the daylight he looked like a lean, white cat.
-
-His coolness began to wear on Hindwood's nerves. “I suppose your men are
-hidden. Let's make an end.”
-
-“I have no men.” The Major spoke slowly. “You forget that this woman is
-my wife. I wished to spare her as much as possible by making the arrest
-myself!” His eyes narrowed shrewdly. “How did you manage to secure her?”
-
-“Luck. She had an accident. It's too long a story. She can't get away.
-I'm through; I've done my share.”
-
-As he turned to go, the older man stretched out a delaying hand. His
-iron discipline wavered. “It's not a cheerful task. If you'll be so good
-as to stay--”
-
-“If you feel like that--”
-
-“I daren't allow myself to feel. It's something I owe my country.”
-
-As though afraid that he would weaken, the Major set out at a run across
-the turf. Outside the hut he waited. As Hindwood caught up with him, he
-whispered:
-
-“Two men against one woman! For an old soldier it isn't gallant.”
-
-He was on the point of entering, when he felt himself flung violently
-forward. Hindwood's arm was crooked about his throat, shutting off his
-breath. Bursting into the hut, he was hurled to the floor and found
-himself struggling in the darkness. He was being pressed down and down.
-A voice spoke, the accents of which a minute ago had been friendly.
-
-“Close the door. Get something to bind him. Anything that will hold.
-Tear strips off your dress.”
-
-
-VIII
-
-
-It was over. The Major had been trussed and gagged. He had been
-handcuffed with his own manacles. His revolver had been removed and
-his pockets searched. He leaned propped against the wall like a jointed
-doll, his body making an exact right angle with his legs. The angry
-vigilance of his eyes was his only sign of life. There was no means
-of making a light, even if it had been safe to employ it. Now that the
-fight was ended, they sat staring into the gloom, anonymous as three
-shadows.
-
-It was Hindwood who broke the silence. “I've been guilty of an outrage,
-Major; I guess that's what you'd like to tell me. But you gave me no
-choice. Where I come from, women and children are held sacred. It was up
-to some man to protect her.”
-
-He paused instinctively, as though he expected a reply. He looked to
-Santa where she crouched, motionless and scarcely discernible, in her
-corner. What were they thinking, this husband and wife, so brutally
-reunited? His sense of discomfort urged him to continue.
-
-“Don't run off with the idea that I approve of what she's done. And I'm
-not in love with her. If she were a man, I don't suppose I'd raise a
-finger to save her. But she's a woman: inconsistently, that makes all
-the difference. I couldn't stand for seeing her dragged away to the kind
-of shame--”
-
-Again he paused. The lack of response was maddening. Scrambling to his
-feet, he bent over the Major.
-
-“To be frank, now that I've got you, I don't know what to do with you.
-If you'll promise to keep quiet, I'll remove the gag.”
-
-“No.” Santa had not stirred. In the darkness she was little more than
-a voice. “Let me speak while he's forced to listen. Put him where I can
-see him.”
-
-Taking his prisoner by the shoulders, Hindwood dragged him to the
-window. With a jerk he tore the ragged curtain from its nails. The downs
-were a sea of purple dusk. The moon hung like a lantern in an unruffled
-sky. Against the square of glass, the Major's face showed hawk-like.
-
-“You've changed.” She spoke softly. “Do you remember when last we
-parted? On the docks at Calcutta. It hurt. Since then we've both gone
-down the ladder. For both of us it was the end of goodness. I must have
-known it. I waved till long after you were out of sight; then I wept
-till my heart was shriveled up. How long I've waited to tell you what
-you've made me suffer! You made me feel that I'd never been your wife,
-only a half-caste plaything. But you'd put a white soul into my body.
-It was a greater wickedness than anything I have done. Now that I'm
-what you've made me, father of my dead child, you seek me out to be my
-judge.”
-
-Her hoarse voice died away. Like the protest of an uneasy conscience,
-the Major's handcuffs clinked together.
-
-“You think that you're just,” she began again. “You come of a race which
-admires justice. Ah, but justice is not kindness! You knew what I was
-when you brought me from the temple--a wanton slave-girl. What had I
-learned of righteousness? It wasn't for my virtue that you bought me. It
-was for my pomegranate lips, my golden body, my little, caressing hands.
-Afterward, as an incentive to desire, it pleased you to bring the soul
-into my eyes. You made me long to be perfect. You seemed so strong and
-wise; I wanted to be like you. Without you I was afraid. You were my
-God. I felt brave when I touched you.”
-
-Her voice sank. “After the little one came, I was no longer frightened.
-He was so nearly white. He was yours and mine. My blood seemed cleansed.
-I saw the world through the innocence of his eyes. The evil of the East
-ceased to call to me. But when he was killed and you put me from you----
-Murderer of a woman's faith,” she addressed the silent face, “the soul
-in me was dying.”
-
-She rocked in the shadows. “My crimes are yours, and you came to condemn
-me. You robbed me of everything but my body. My heart was famished; to
-feed it, I sold my beauty at a price. At first, for men's money; then,
-for their honor; at last, for their lives.” She had risen. “You wonder
-why for their lives? They were men like you, outwardly just, who
-destroyed belief in goodness. Because of men like you women's hearts are
-broken and children go naked.”
-
-Hindwood leaped to his feet, blocking her path. She leaned past him,
-staring down into the bandaged face.
-
-“Oh, husband without pity, god whom I worshipped, I burn in hell because
-of your justice.”
-
-Slipping to her knees, she came into the square of light. “Am I not
-beautiful? Is there another like me? Would it not have been happier to
-have been kind? See what you have spoiled.”
-
-
-IX
-
-
-There was the rustling of footsteps in the grass outside. Letting in a
-flood of moonlight, the door was pushed gently open.
-
-“May we enter?”
-
-Without waiting for a reply, a man padded noiselessly across the
-threshold. By his peaked head and the litheness of his body, Hindwood
-recognized him as Varensky. Behind him, with the mildness of attendant
-angels, Anna and the Little Grandmother followed. Just inside the room
-he halted.
-
-“What's this?”
-
-The bound face in the square of window had riveted his attention.
-
-“Her husband.”
-
-“But why--?”
-
-Hindwood spoke again. “He had come to take her to be hanged.”
-
-The pale face smiled contemptuously. “Hanging's only a way of dying. Was
-that any reason for making him suffer?”
-
-Without further argument, taking command of the situation, he stepped
-quickly to the Major's side. Stooping, he cut the bonds and removed the
-gag.
-
-“You're free--free to go where you like and to get us all into trouble.
-We shall be here for at least an hour, so you'll have time. I landed
-without permission in your England this morning. That's a cause for
-police interference. My name's Ivan Varensky.”
-
-The Major rose painfully, blinking at the lean, green-eyed stranger
-as though he had discovered in him a jester. “There are still the
-handcuffs,” he muttered.
-
-When the handcuffs had been knocked off, Varen-sky repeated, “You're
-free to go.”
-
-The Major shook himself and resumed his strutting air, like a brave old
-rooster who had all but had his neck wrung. “If it makes no difference,
-I'll stay.”
-
-With his left eye shut and his head on one side, Varensky regarded him
-comically. “No difference! It may. You're a secret service agent; I'm
-a revolutionary. You uphold laws; I defy them. You're the servant of
-force; I hate every form of compulsion. What difference it makes depends
-on yourself--whether you propose to stay as a spy or as a man of honor.”
-
-“As a sportsman who abides by the rules of the game.”
-
-Varensky shrugged his narrow shoulders. “As a sportsman who hunts
-women?” He turned tenderly to Santa. “You're famished. We'll cover up
-the window and make a light.”
-
-When candles which they had brought had been kindled and the meal
-spread, Santa and Hindwood sat down on the floor, facing each other.
-While they ate there was dead silence. Hindwood kept catching glimpses
-of her eyes. What was to be the end of her? Her expression was stunned.
-They both knew what this silence betokened: when the meal was over, her
-fate was to be decided. He was aware of each separate personality, as
-though each were making an effort to explain itself. What was to be
-hoped for from the verdict of such a jury? Every one in the hut, except
-Anna and himself, was a fanatic. He did not try to see their faces; all
-he saw was their hands as they ministered to him. The hands of Varensky,
-half clown's, half martyr's. The wrinkled hands of the old noblewoman,
-worn with service, who had lived with outcasts and spent her years in
-exile. The hands of Anna, guilty with yearning.
-
-Varensky spoke without looking up. It was as though he were carrying on
-a conversation already started. “We can't restore life, so what right
-have we to destroy it? To be merciful--that's the only way.”
-
-His green eyes sought the Major's. “We could have killed you
-to-night--but we didn't. Have you wondered why? By letting you go, we've
-put ourselves in your power. To-morrow you can drag us all to jail.
-You're a hard man. You exact an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth.
-You came here to-night to exact a life. If we had judged you by your own
-standards, we should have been justified in giving you no quarter. If
-we had, what good would it have done? You'd only have been dead. And if
-you'd managed to capture Santa, what good would that have done? To have
-had her executed wouldn't have made her a better woman.”
-
-He reached out and took her unwilling hand, bending back the fingers one
-by one. “They're beautiful. See how cleverly they work. There's not a
-scientist living can reproduce their mechanism. No one knows how they
-grew to be like that.”
-
-His tone became tender. “Santa's been bad. She's been treacherous and
-cruel: a faithless wife and a menace. Merely to punish her wouldn't undo
-her evil. Only she can do that.”
-
-For the first time the Major spoke. “At what are you driving?”
-
-Varensky made no attempt to answer him. He seemed not to have heard. He
-sat cross-legged on the floor, folding and unfolding Santa's fingers,
-while his grotesque shadow squatted on the wall behind him. He looked
-like a kindly, embarrassed boy, trying to say something to the sulky
-girl so that it should not sound too wounding.
-
-“I wonder whether Santa's husband ever saw a woman when she was dead.
-There's no light in her eyes. She can't say that she's sorry. Last
-week I saw hundreds in the ditches about Kiev. They weren't lovely. We
-mustn't let our Santa become like that.”
-
-He turned to the Major with a slow smile. “Must we? You wouldn't like to
-think of the woman you had loved--”
-
-The Major took a step into the room and stood biting his lips, glooming
-down at Varensky.
-
-“You and I, sir, view our duty from hostile standpoints. I care for this
-woman infinitely more than you can ever care. But I care still more for
-my country. She's betrayed it a score of times. Shall I, because I am
-her husband, stand by and allow her to betray it? Had I accomplished the
-purpose that brought me here to-night, my heart would have been broken.
-To have put handcuffs on her wrists and to have sworn away her life, do
-you think it would have cost me nothing? The very judge who sentenced
-her would have shunned me.”
-
-The Little Grandmother looked up. She spoke gruffly. “And what would
-have been the use of your suffering? Society would have been revenged.
-It would have washed its hands, like Pontius Pilate. It would have
-smiled smugly, believing she was wrong and it was right. It would have
-gone on its way, manufacturing more criminals like her. The old evils
-that have made her what she is would have continued, while she--” She
-snapped her fingers furiously. “Like the women in the ditches about
-Kiev.”
-
-When the room had grown silent, Varensky covered the Major with his
-mocking stare.
-
-“You must excuse our Little Grandmother. She feels these things
-intensely. More than half her years have been spent in prison.”
-
-The Major pulled himself together. “She needs no excusing. What is it
-that you want of me?”
-
-
-X
-
-
-Santa's life. It's of no use to you.” He smiled in the midst of his
-earnestness. “I'm a boy begging for a broken watch. You were going to
-throw it away. I have dreams that I could repair it.”
-
-The Major twitched irritably. “And you talk like a boy. How can I give
-you what doesn't belong to me? At every port in Europe the police are
-watching. For me to forgive her wouldn't help. It isn't against me that
-she's offended; it's against the laws of civilization.”
-
-“I know.” Varensky nodded soothingly. “You're only one of the many
-agents of social vengeance. What I ought to have asked you was to give
-me the part of her life that does belong to you. She's in your clutches.
-Let her escape. Keep silent and drop your pursuit.”
-
-“And if I do?”
-
-Varensky tucked his legs closer under him and bent forward. “Perhaps I
-could turn her into a saint.” A note of passionate pleading crept into
-his voice. “She loves children. It was how her wickedness started. She
-was blind and mistaken, and all her crimes were committed for children.
-A woman who loves children must be good. She's done abominable things.
-She could become magnificent if she would do good with an equal
-violence.”
-
-The Major glanced at the subject of these prophecies, sitting in their
-midst, rebelliously silent. He said wearily: “Mere words! You offer me
-no proof!”
-
-The white face seemed to grow till it filled the room. The green eyes
-glowed like emeralds. They were uncanny and hypnotic. Language came in a
-torrent. “It isn't her body--it's her soul. If she were to die now, what
-would happen to her? I tried to save the soul of a nation. Let me do
-for Santa what I couldn't do for Russia--prove that mercy restores where
-punishment destroys. There's been too much killing. The world grows
-worse instead of better. It's been going on for ages, this hanging and
-guillotining and bludgeoning. It's reformed nothing. It's the might is
-right of the jungle, the justice of apes and cavemen. Revenge, whether
-it's carried out by tooth and claw or by law-courts and armies, never
-heals anything; it always leaves a bruise. The face of Europe is bruised
-beyond recovery by our last display of justice. Its fields are rotten
-with corpses. Shall we add one more to the many--a woman's?”
-
-He paused, trembling like a leaf. When the Major only frowned, he sank
-back exhausted.
-
-“If you'd seen what I've seen--” His head sagged stupidly. “If you'd
-seen what I've seen--miles of men, all slaughtered; women dead of
-starvation, children hunting in packs like wolves. And all because
-there's no mercy. If you'd seen, you couldn't kill anything.”
-
-The candles ceased to gutter. Shadows huddled motionless. The very
-silence seemed accused.
-
-Hindwood rose. He could endure the tension no longer. “I know nothing
-about her soul and not much about her guilt. All I know is that she's
-a woman at the end of her tether who's been handed one of the rawest of
-raw deals. That the world's been hard on her won't excuse her. We
-can't alter the world over night. If she's caught, as she may be at any
-moment, it'll be all up with her. I don't care what she's done or how
-much I lose by it, I'm not going to stand by and see her taken.”
-
-The Major swung round. “Nor am I. But how to avoid it?”
-
-Hindwood showed his suspicion of this sudden conversion. “Tell me,”
- he answered cautiously, “have you handed in any reports, I mean
-officially--about my knowledge of Santa?”
-
-“Beyond the fact that you crossed on the same boat with her, you've not
-been mentioned.”
-
-“And there's no one in your service, besides yourself, who has the least
-idea of her whereabouts?”
-
-“No one.”
-
-“Then it can be managed.”
-
-He was dimly conscious of the pale expectancy of the faces lifted up to
-him. He felt that he was on the edge of a whirlpool into which he was
-being slowly dragged. Even at this last moment he made an effort to
-resist it. Then it seemed to him that in the heart of its eddies he saw
-a woman. She grew distinct; her face was Anna's.
-
-“Let me explain,” he said. “I'm neither humanitarian nor idealist. I
-have no fantastic hopes of turning sinners into saints. I'm head of a
-group of American financiers, and I'm in Europe to employ its starving
-peoples. Don't misunderstand me. The result of my mission may be
-philanthropic, but its purpose is to make a profit. Since the war
-Europe's become a bargain-counter where everything's exposed for
-sale--everything except food. I can supply food. With food I can
-purchase, for a fraction of their value, railroads, factories, labor. I
-tell you this so that you may not doubt me when I say that I have it in
-my power to protect her. Once out of England, no escaping criminal could
-find a safer place of refuge than in my company. I have influence with
-all governments; with food I can stop revolution. None of them dares
-suspect me. I propose that I should take Santa with me. I travel
-on diplomatic passports; with me she'll have no trouble in crossing
-frontiers.”
-
-The silence that greeted his offer lengthened. At a loss to account for
-it, he glanced from face to face.
-
-“Have I offended?”
-
-It was Santa who replied. Leaping up in their midst, tattered and
-disheveled, she threatened them like dogs whom she would beat aside.
-
-“Beasts!” A sob caught her breath. “Is it impossible even for you, who
-call yourselves my friends, to believe any good of me? I swear before
-heaven he has no love for me.”
-
-
-XI
-
-
-Back in London he lost no time in completing arrangements for
-departure. Every boat that left for France without him lessened Santa's
-chance of safety. And yet, though he worked frantically, canceling
-appointments and clearing up correspondence, he couldn't bring home to
-himself the reality of the situation. The hut on the downs and all that
-had happened there seemed something that he had read or imagined. Only
-the face of Anna stood out in memory, clear-cut and actual. It seemed
-impossible to believe that he, Philip Hindwood, was in league with
-revolutionaries. That he was in league was proved to him when he set
-about procuring the passport and visés necessary for Santa to accompany
-him. By the time he obtained them, he had abused confidence and perjured
-himself beyond hope of pardon. They were made out in the name of “Edith
-Jones, spinster; American-born subject; aged thirty years; confidential
-secretary to Philip Hindwood, whom she is accompanying.” All her permits
-were marked _Special_ and _Diplomatic_. It wasn't until the bustle was
-over and he was seated in the train for Dover, that the true proportions
-of his entanglement dawned on him.
-
-At Dover she was to meet him. That had been the understanding. From
-then on, day in, day out, he would never be without her. No matter what
-strange country he traversed, she would sit beside him, reminding him of
-his complicity in her crimes. He would have to talk with her, eat
-with her, pretend to consult with her, just as if she were what he had
-claimed her to be--his confidential secretary. Would she have the sense
-to act discreetly? Would she expect him to make love to her? He glowered
-out of the window at the fleeting landscape. Any folly was possible to a
-woman with her record.
-
-What made him most furious was the easy way in which he had allowed her
-to twist him round her fingers. It was the woods of Vincennes all over
-again. He was going into disordered countries, where governments were
-toppling and anarchy was rife. When she felt herself beyond the reach of
-danger, what was to prevent her from getting rid of him? Russia, if he
-got so far, was the kind of nightmare in which anything might happen. In
-Russia murder was one of the fine arts. He remembered Anna's suspicion
-that Santa was a Bolshevist agent. It added nothing to his comfort.
-
-He had given way to idealism. It was the madness of a moment. It was
-listening to Varensky that had worked the mischief. Varensky had said
-something about idealism. What was it? That idealism was the vanishing
-point--the last outpost between Man and Eternity. His words came back.
-
-“When you gaze up a railroad track, there's always a point in the
-infinite distance where, just before they vanish, the parallel rails
-seem to join. If a train were ever to reach that point, it would mean
-death. Life's like that--a track along which we travel on the parallel
-rails of possibility and desire. The lure of the idealist is to overtake
-the illusion, where possibility and desire seem to merge, and the safety
-of the journey ends.”
-
-For him the safety of the journey had ended the moment it had started.
-If Varensky had meant anything by the vanishing point, he had meant that
-death is the unconscious goal of all idealists. Hind-wood shrugged his
-shoulders. It seemed highly probable when you took Santa with you on
-your travels.
-
-The smell of the sea was in the air. They were slowing down, grinding
-their way to the docks through the town of Dover.
-
-He didn't want to see her. He would make no effort to find her. She
-might have been prevented from joining him--perhaps arrested.
-
-After the train had halted, he took his time. No one whom he recognized
-was on the platform. Directing a porter to attend to his baggage, he
-went quickly to the embarkation office to get his permit for going
-aboard. As he was entering, he felt his arm touched timidly, and turned.
-
-“I'm here.”
-
-“I see you are.”
-
-“Didn't you expect me?”
-
-He made an effort to act courteously. “Of course. There are formalities
-to be gone through. You'd better stick close to me. Don't attract
-attention. Let me do the talking.”
-
-They fell into line behind a queue of passengers, winding slowly toward
-a table where officials were receiving and inspecting passports. He
-stood well in front of her, doing his best to hide her. When his turn
-came and the official held out his hand, he presented her passport with
-his own perfunctorily.
-
-“Mine and my secretary's.”
-
-The official was on the point of returning them, when a stockily-built
-man leaned across his shoulder and whispered something. Both of them
-looked up, staring hard at Santa.
-
-“Which is Miss Jones?” the official asked.
-
-“This lady at my side.”
-
-“So you're Miss Jones, an American citizen?”
-
-Before she could reply, Hindwood had interposed. “I've already told you
-she's Miss Jones. If you'll look, you'll see that her passport's marked
-_Diplomatic_ as well as mine.”
-
-The two men consulted together in lowered tones. Then the passport was
-O.K.'d and restored.
-
-Picking it up, together with the embarkation permits, Hindwood strolled
-leisurely towards the gangplank. Directly they were on board he hurried
-Santa to her cabin and shut the door.
-
-“You'll stay here till we sight France. I'm giving no one else the
-opportunity for suspecting a likeness.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER THE SIXTH--THE ESCAPE
-
-
-I
-
-
-THE steamer had no sooner reached Calais than a new cause for alarm
-presented itself. During the channel crossing Hindwood had been keyed up
-to the last point of tension. Every moment he had expected to be tapped
-on the shoulder and informed that his secretary's identity had been
-discovered. He had spent most of his time surreptitiously mounting guard
-in the neighborhood of Santa's cabin. If the same man chanced to pass
-him twice, he had at once jumped to the conclusion that he was being
-shadowed.
-
-The hesitancy at Dover over O.K.'ing Santa's passport had robbed him
-of whatever sense of security he had possessed. It had compelled him
-to acknowledge the ruin that faced him, should he be exposed while
-engineering the flight of so notorious a criminal. As the Major had
-warned him, she was being sought by the police of every country.
-
-If the worst should happen, he would find no apologists. It would be
-useless for him to plead a chivalrous motive. She had been the lodestar
-of masculine passions too often. Though he managed to escape a prison
-sentence, he would emerge from the catastrophe broken in character--a
-paltry creature, half knave, half fool, who had gambled away his
-integrity and made himself a laughing stock. Already in imagination he
-was reading the scare headlines which would advertise his shame to the
-world. He would be regarded as a malefactor--hustled behind bars and
-herded for trial with blackmailers and pickpockets.
-
-Dogged by these persistent dreads, when the ship was inside Calais
-harbor he rapped on her door and having heard her bid him enter, slipped
-across the threshold, announcing tersely:
-
-“We're there.”
-
-Since she joined him, he had held no conversation with her. She made
-no attempt to break through his silence. Rising obediently, while she
-adjusted her hat, she watched him in the mirror with the eyes of a
-reproachful dog. Without sign or sound, as he turned away impatiently,
-she followed. No sooner did they appear on deck than the new cause for
-alarm started.
-
-A handsome and distinguished-looking foreigner began taking immediate
-notice of her. He was so quick to pick her out in the throng that it
-seemed he must have been watching for her. Whoever and whatever he was,
-he was manifestly a man of breeding--the kind of man who might have
-been her companion in the old, wild days of her triumphant folly. He was
-about thirty-five, tall, dark, finely-built, and of military bearing.
-He had a closely-trimmed mustache, bold, black eyes, and a Latin type
-of countenance. That was all that Hindwood permitted himself to observe;
-changing his position promptly, he shut Santa out from the stranger's
-line of vision. But the man was not to be balked. With an air of
-complete unconcern, he fell into line immediately behind them, treading
-closely on their heels as they passed up the gangplank. On the way
-to the Customs he managed to get ahead, so that he could glance back
-several times at Santa.
-
-After their baggage had been inspected it was necessary for them to file
-through a stuffy room where passports were examined. It was here that
-Hindwood was fully prepared to be caught. The officials at Dover had
-probably cabled a warning; the inquisitive stranger might prove to
-be their emissary. Quite the contrary occurred. The French official,
-catching sight of the magic words _Diplomatic_ and _Special_,
-scrutinized no further and returned the papers with a courteous apology.
-Making the most of his luck, Hindwood hurried Santa out onto the
-platform, down the long train labeled Stuttgart, Warsaw, etc., and into
-the _wagons-lits_ which went express to Vienna.
-
-Before leaving London he had reserved two separate compartments in the
-name of “Philip Hindwood and party.” Now that he claimed them, he found
-to his annoyance that they were adjoining and connected by a private
-door. It was an indiscretion that he had not intended. Having seen Santa
-safely settled, he set off to superintend the placing on board of their
-bags.
-
-He was gone perhaps five minutes. As he reentered the corridor of his
-section, the first sight that met his eyes was the handsome stranger
-engaged in earnest talk with the _wagon-lits_ conductor. Some money
-passed. Next thing the stranger's belongings were being transferred
-from lower down the train to the compartment on the further side from
-Santa's. Hindwood entered his own compartment, shaded the windows that
-looked out on the corridor and made fast his door.
-
-What was the game? Was this a fresh example of Santa's irresistible
-charm? And if it was, was he to be subjected to this kind of
-impertinence throughout the entire journey? Or was the man a secret
-service agent in the employ of some foreign Government, who, believing
-he had recognized her, was keeping her in sight till she should have
-crossed the frontier into his own country, where he would have power to
-arrest her?
-
-In his anger he tried to blame Santa; she must have unconsciously
-exercised her talent for attraction. Strangers didn't follow women
-unless----
-
-But he had to own himself unjust. She was dressed with the utmost
-plainness, in a tailored costume, minus furs or any lavishness. There
-was nothing to complain of in her deportment. It was as modest as
-could have been expected had she really been “Edith Jones, aged thirty,
-American-born citizen, confidential secretary.” The fault lay in
-something beyond her control--her beauty. It refused to be subdued.
-It shone out the more conspicuously in the absence of adornment. It
-constituted itself an unforeseen embarrassment, if not a menace. The
-further he traveled into continental countries, the less he would be
-believed when he stated that she was Miss Jones and no more than his
-secretary. Already more people than the obtrusive stranger had stared
-at her. She had only to appear to make herself the focus of attention.
-Sooner or later, to-day, to-morrow, a month hence, some one would catch
-sight of her who had known her in the past. She had been feted in
-too many cities, her portrait had been too widely published, for her
-features not to be remembered. These distressing reflections were cut
-short by the shrill tootings of tin horns which announce the departure
-of a train in France. When Calais had been left behind and they were
-rushing past stripped orchards and harvested fields, he unlatched the
-dividing door. She was sitting lost in thought, staring out of the
-window with a wistful expression.
-
-“Come into my compartment. I'd like to talk.”
-
-The jerk with which she turned betrayed the strain under which she
-was laboring. He watched the undulating grace with which she rose, the
-calculated delicacy of her every movement. Though she had dressed in
-rags, nothing could have disguised her.
-
-When he had closed the door, she remained standing.
-
-“Please sit down,” he said with cold politeness. “We're safe for the
-moment. As you see, I've lowered the blinds. No one can spy on us.
-You've noticed him?”
-
-Drawing off her gloves, she smoothed them out mechanically, maintaining
-her silence.
-
-“Tell me,” he urged, “what do you make of him?”
-
-“Nothing.” Her voice was flat and toneless. “Wherever I go, it's always
-the same. You ought to know--on the _Ryndam_ you were like it.”
-
-He passed over the implied accusation. “Then you don't think he's
-a----?”
-
-“I've not troubled to think.” She glanced drearily aside. “Men are
-brutes. If you'd left me alone on the cliff--I wish you had. It would
-have been all ended.”
-
-She said it without spite--almost without reproach. In the presence of
-her melancholy, he recovered something of his compassion.
-
-“But I didn't leave you, and nothing's gained by recrimination. The
-point is this fellow next door. What's his purpose? How are we going to
-manage him?”
-
-“Easily. Fling me to him as you'd toss a dog a bone. You'll be rid of
-your share of the danger.”
-
-“I don't want to be rid of you.” He passed his hand across his forehead,
-mastering his impatience.
-
-“I don't pretend I shan't be glad----”
-
-“To be quit of me,” she prompted.
-
-“To be relieved of the risk of you,” he corrected. “But not until I've
-fulfilled my promise.”
-
-She smiled. “You promised you'd save me. I can't be saved. Varensky's
-talk about redeeming me was visionary. I was born to be what I am.”
-
-He relaxed and sat forward, exerting himself to make the conversation
-less unfriendly. “Of course I know why you speak this way: it's because
-of my recent treatment of you. We were nearly found out at Dover;
-the anxiety of it's getting on my nerves. I promised to give you your
-chance; my promise stands. The least I can ask of you as a sportswoman
-is to play up to me.”
-
-Her whole demeanor changed. The golden face flashed. “I will.”
-
-“Then if this man is only an impudent admirer, how are we to shake him?
-It's my business for the present to protect you. If this is the sort
-of thing that always happens, it's possible that it'll occur again. I
-daren't resent his conduct. Ordinarily I should know what to do with
-him. How is the repetition of the annoyance to be avoided?”
-
-A slow flush mounted from her throat to her cheeks. “You won't take my
-suggestion, so I don't think I'll make it.”
-
-“Let's have it.”
-
-Not looking at him, she muttered: “He'll try to scrape acquaintance.
-When he does, introduce me to him as your wife.”
-
-“But to do that----”
-
-He fell silent. He was thinking of Anna. For the first time he was
-conscious of his aloneness with this woman.
-
-Not wishing to wound her, he procrastinated.
-
-“To do that might only add to our complications.”
-
-“It might.” Her gray eyes struggled to meet his gaze. “It isn't likely.
-He won't believe you.”
-
-“Then what would be gained?”
-
-“You'd have told him, without insult, that he wasn't wanted.”
-
-He glanced out of the window at the rushing landscape. At last he spoke.
-“If there's no other way----”
-
-She rested her thin, fine hand on his gently. “You're generous. If the
-day ever comes when you despise yourself as I despise myself to-day,
-remember that once you were able to make a wicked woman believe in
-goodness--to make her long with all her heart to be like you.” Her eyes
-became misty. “At this moment I'm not far from redemption.”
-
-Lunch was announced. He gave orders to have it served in his
-compartment. While they ate, he outlined to her his plans. He had asked
-her how long she expected to be with him.
-
-Her reply was discomfortingly vague. “As long as you can endure me.”
-
-“Inside of two months,” he told her, “I think I can promise you
-immunity. At present, according to information, Central Europe's
-starving. With winter comes the crisis. I've forseen that. For some time
-I've been shipping food to Holland. It's lying there in warehouses in
-immense quantities. I have an entire fleet secretly at work, plying back
-and forth across the Atlantic. When the famine becomes too acute, I'm
-prepared to strike my bargain. I'll take railroads and concessions in
-exchange for bread. Other upstarts have carved out kingdoms with armies;
-I intend to conquer mine with food. There never was a war or any social
-uprising that wasn't caused by an empty stomach. Within three hours
-of my terms having been accepted, my trains will be streaming out of
-Holland. Where they halt, the flames of revolution will be quenched. If
-I haven't miscalculated, I shall be unofficial President of the United
-States of Europe.” He paused to watch his effect. “I've nominated
-myself,” he smiled.
-
-His smile was unreturned. She was regarding him with an expression of
-horror. Their rôles seemed reversed. It was evident that to her way of
-thinking it was he who had become the criminal and she who was looking
-down on him from a higher moral level.
-
-“But they're starving.” Her voice shook passionately. “If you have these
-stores, why don't you feed them? They're dying. So many of them are
-children!”
-
-“You don't understand.” He tried to make his tones reasonable. “I've
-invested all my fortune in the venture. I'm a business man. In business
-one man's calamity is another's opportunity. The same is true of
-nations.”
-
-Seeing that she still looked grieved, he patted her shoulder. “Don't
-worry. We'll rustle through. Your life will be spared.”
-
-“I wasn't thinking of my life.” She spoke contemptuously.
-
-“Then of what?”
-
-“Of the women dead of hunger in the ditches about Kiev.”
-
-As she rose to leave, she glanced back from the doorway. “There was
-a message I had to deliver to you. Varensky's setting out on his last
-journey. He hopes to see you in Budapest. He told me to say, 'Soon you
-can have her.'”
-
-
-II
-
-
-Thrusting its war-scarred head into the clouds, Amiens had been left
-behind: they were skirting the old battle-line. Though seasons had come
-and vanished, memories of tragedy were still apparent. Shell-torn walls
-had been patched, but the patches served to emphasize the ruin. One
-could trace in the landscape crumbling trench-systems and the rusty red
-of entangled wire. Here and there, in gleaming plots, white crosses grew
-in humble clusters. In fancy he pictured the hosts who had died. The
-unprofitable patience of their sacrifice! Had they known what was to be
-the result, would they have gone to their death so gladly? The result of
-their idealism was hunger. He recalled his awkward phrase--the world's
-hunger had proved to be his opportunity. Santa's horror disturbed his
-memory. He was inclined to go to her and explain. Everything had to be
-purchased by labor. Anything one possessed was the wage of labor. To
-give things away did harm. It wasn't business. It set a premium on
-laziness. Even to give food to a starving nation did harm; it made that
-nation a pauper. The most primitive of all laws was that bread should
-be earned by the sweat of the brow--that if a man did not toil, neither
-should he eat. The only righteous way to feed starving people was to set
-them to work. So his thoughts ran on, building up the argument.
-
-But he did not go to her. It was Varensky's message that deterred him:
-“He told me to say, 'Soon you can have her.'” Did Santa know what was
-meant--that the message referred to Anna? She must know. What difference
-would this make to her? She also loved, and she was a panther-woman.
-
-The countryside grew blurred with dusk. The stiff, white crosses faded
-out of sight. Forgetting his danger, he fell asleep, wondering whether
-Anna would be with her husband at Budapest.
-
-
-III
-
-
-When he awoke, he was in total darkness. Glancing through the window,
-he discovered that the world outside was weakly lit with straggling rows
-of street-lamps. They seemed to be marching in the same direction as
-the train; in the far distance they rushed together, making night hollow
-with their flare. His first thought was of Santa; a thousand things
-might have happened.
-
-As he groped at the handle of the dividing door, he caught the sound of
-laughter.
-
-“May I enter?”
-
-The Santa whom his eyes encountered was no longer the fugitive from
-justice. She was mysteriously changed. There was animation in her
-countenance and seduction in her voice. She was again the enchantress
-of men, reckless and tender, who had all but captured his heart on the
-Atlantic voyage. He looked to see what had caused this transformation.
-Lolling in the entrance was the handsome stranger.
-
-Before Hindwood could speak, she was addressing him gaily. “So you've
-wakened! I didn't like to disturb you. You've almost made me miss my
-dinner. If you're ready now----”
-
-The stranger interrupted. “I've not dined. But I have my place reserved.
-If there should prove to be no room, perhaps you would flatter me by
-occupying my place instead.”
-
-Santa shook her head graciously. “It's good of you, but my husband and I
-will take our chance.”
-
-She was the only one whom her claim that Hind-wood was her husband left
-undisturbed. The two men glared at each other in astonishment. It was
-the stranger who recovered first.
-
-“If I had known that this lady was your wife, I should have asked your
-permission before I made my offer. I shall be very happy if you will
-permit me to do you both this service. I ought to introduce myself.”
-
-He fumbled in his pocketbook and produced a card on which was engraved,
-“Captain Serge Lajos, Hungarian Royal Hussars.”
-
-“My name is Hindwood--Philip Hindwood.” Hindwood returned the compliment
-surlily. “I agree with my wife; we both prefer that you retain your
-place and that we be allowed to take our chance.”
-
-Santa rose eagerly to prevent the giving of further offense. Her smile
-was for the Captain. “We waste time talking. You'll join us, Captain?
-We'll take our chance together.”
-
-Without risking a reply, she led the way, Hindwood following and the
-Captain coming last. There was no opportunity for speech in the swaying
-corridor. When the dining-car was reached, they were shown immediately
-to a vacant table.
-
-At first they sat in silence, watching how the lights flashing by the
-panes were strengthening into a golden blur.
-
-“Where are we?”
-
-It was Hindwood who had decided to be amiable.
-
-“Entering Paris.”
-
-“So late as that!” He consulted his watch. “We go through without
-changing, they told us.”
-
-“There's no change till Vienna.”
-
-The Captain's answers were mechanical. He seemed to be brushing aside a
-presence that annoyed him. His puzzled eyes were fixed on Santa.
-
-Suppressing his irritation, Hindwood made another effort at
-friendliness. “I didn't notice you till we were getting into Calais. I
-guess we must have traveled together from London.”
-
-Captain Lajos, if that really was his name, seemed to be thinking
-of something else. He let some seconds elapse. When he spoke, it was
-without looking up. “I noticed you from the first. I can prove it.
-Your wife didn't join you till Dover.” Then he seemed to repent of his
-intrusive rudeness and changed the subject. “I was glad to see the last
-of London. I'd been sent to meet some one who failed to arrive. It was
-all in the papers. You probably know as much about the circumstances as
-I do. The person was Prince Rogovich.”
-
-Santa's face went white. Her lips became set in an artificial smile.
-Beneath the table her hand clutched Hindwood's. For all that, it was she
-who took up the challenge.
-
-“We've not been reading the papers lately.” Above the clatter of the
-wheels, her trembling voice was scarcely audible. “My husband and I
-have been very busy and---- But your friend, why was he so unkind as to
-disappoint you?”
-
-The Captain had turned to her as though greedy for her sympathy. His
-dark, bold eyes drank up her face.
-
-“He wasn't unkind. He was----” He shrugged his shoulders and spread
-abroad his hands. “Until something is proved, I suppose the best way to
-express it would be to say that he was unavoidably delayed. He left
-New York on a liner and disappeared on the evening that he should have
-landed.”
-
-Hindwood bent forward, attempting to divert attention from Santa. He
-tapped the Captain's hand.
-
-“Excuse me for intruding on a conversation which you evidently intend
-to include only my wife, but there are no points of call on an Atlantic
-voyage. If your friend started from New York and the ship was not lost,
-how could he have been delayed?”
-
-“How? That's the question.”
-
-The Captain's hostility was unmistakable, and yet the odd thing was that
-it exempted Santa.
-
-While the first course was being served, Hindwood racked his brains to
-discover the motive which lay behind the Captain's attitude. Was he a
-police-agent, amusing himself and biding his time? Was he doubtful of
-Santa's identity and cultivating her acquaintance as a means of making
-certain? Was he merely a disappointed male, infuriated at finding a
-husband in possession?
-
-Santa was speaking again. She had made good use of the respite to
-compose herself. “It must have been terribly anxious for you waiting.
-I suppose you were there to meet him at the port where he ought to have
-arrived?”
-
-Hindwood held his breath. She was practically asking the man whether he
-had been one of the welcoming group of officials on that night when the
-_Ryndam_ had reached Plymouth. If he had been, he must have seen them.
-He must remember them. He might even know their biographical details,
-their business, and that they were not married. At all events, if that
-were the case, it would explain the keenness of his interest.
-
-“No, I wasn't at Plymouth.”
-
-They both shot upright in their chairs and sat rigid. For a moment they
-had no doubt that the Captain had declared his hand.
-
-Then he postponed the crisis by adding, “You see, my friend, as you call
-him, was traveling by the Holland-American Line, so Plymouth was where
-he should have landed. We had a special train arranged to hurry him to
-London. The first warning I received of the disaster was at Paddington,
-when I was informed that the special train had been canceled.”
-
-“Then it was a disaster?”
-
-Santa asked the question in an awed tone which, under the circumstances,
-was not altogether feigned. Getting a grip on herself, she leaned across
-the table, making her eyes large and tender. “We're fellow-travelers,
-chance-met. My husband and I are Americans; when we part from you,
-it's almost certain we shall never meet again. I'm not seeking your
-confidence, but you're worried. If it would help you to tell----”
-
-The Captain shook his head gravely. He appeared to be worshiping her
-in everything save words, though it was possible that his adoration was
-mockery. “There's nothing to tell. Not yet. I wish there were. There may
-be something at Paris. The English police are working. They promised to
-keep in touch with me by telegram.”
-
-With amazing daring Santa persisted, “But what do you suppose happened?”
-
-Before answering the Captain arranged his knife and fork neatly on his
-plate. He looked up sharply like a bird of prey. “Murder. To your dainty
-ears that must sound shocking. I have reasons for this belief which, for
-the present, I'm not at liberty to share.”
-
-During the pause that followed Hindwood was on tenterhooks lest, with
-her next question, she should betray herself. To prevent her, he flung
-himself into the gap.
-
-“I agree with you,” he said with weighty dullness. “I agree with
-you that some sort of accident strikes one as extremely likely. You
-mentioned that a special had been chartered to bring your friend to
-London. That would indicate that he was a person of consequence.”
-
-“He was.”
-
-The words sounded like an epitaph. They were spoken with the impatience
-of a door being banged.
-
-Turning to Santa, the Captain was on the point of saying something
-further, when the waiter approached with the information that at the
-next stop the dining-car would be cut off. They became aware that they
-were the only diners left. The train was slowing down. The noise of its
-progress had changed to a hollow rumbling, which told them that a bridge
-was being crossed. Shifting their gaze, they discovered Paris, sparkling
-like a pile of jewels strewn in the lap of night. Below them in slow
-coils, mysterious with luminous reflections, wound the Seine. Hindwood's
-instant thought was that somewhere out there beneath the darkness, the
-woods of Vincennes were hiding.
-
-Having paid their bill, they commenced the return journey through
-corridors dense with eager passengers. Before their section had been
-reached, the train was in the station. At the first open door, the
-Captain sprang to the platform and was lost.
-
-“Where's he gone?” Santa whispered.
-
-Hindwood glanced at her palely. “To get his telegram. To get----”
-
-Seizing her arm, he hurried her back to his compartment, where behind
-locked doors they could spend in private whatever of freedom remained.
-
-
-IV
-
-
-The jig's up.”
-
-Hoping that he was creating an impression of calmness, he lit a
-cigarette. She raised her face to his with a softness in her eyes that
-he had never noticed.
-
-“If it is,” she pleaded, clutching at his hands, “swear you hadn't the
-least idea who I really am. Disown me. Act as though my arrest had come
-to you as an utter shock.”
-
-He seated himself beside her. “But, my dear Santa, that wouldn't help
-you.”
-
-“Help me! Of course not,” she agreed with rapid vehemence. “If I'm
-caught, I'm beyond helping. It's of you I'm thinking--you, with your
-generosity and your splendid plans. If I dragged you down, as I dragged
-down all the others, my heart would break. I never meant you any harm.
-You do believe me?”
-
-“I do now.”
-
-“Say you know that I've loved you,” she urged. And, when he hesitated,
-“Quickly. Time's running short. Let me hear you say just once, 'Santa, I
-know that you've loved me.'”
-
-“Santa, I know----”
-
-“You wouldn't kiss me?” She asked the question scarcely above her
-breath. “There've been so many who paid to kiss me. You wouldn't give me
-the best, that would be the last?”
-
-When his lips touched hers, she smiled.
-
-“They may come now.”
-
-Minutes dragged by like hours. Every sound was magnified into something
-monstrous. A dozen times they imagined they heard police clearing the
-corridor, preparatory to bursting in the door. What they heard was only
-newly-arrived passengers and porters disposing of their baggage. At last
-suspense became its own anesthetic.
-
-“Did he tell you his destination?” Hindwood whispered.
-
-Not daring to speak, she shook her head.
-
-“Why did you get into conversation with him?” Her lips scarcely moved.
-He had to listen acutely.
-
-“I didn't. He pretended to have mistaken his compartment. I was crying.
-He saw.”
-
-“Why were you crying?”
-
-“Because of you.”
-
-“And you told him?”
-
-“Not exactly.”
-
-“What did he say? I heard you laughing when I entered. How did he
-commence?”
-
-“He said I was too beautiful to be unhappy--it's the way every man
-starts. Then he said that he'd recognized me, just as though he'd been
-looking for me always. And then he tortured me by wondering whether our
-paths had ever crossed.”
-
-“And you answered?”
-
-“Never--unless he'd seen me in America.” Hindwood fell silent. Without
-warning he leaped to his feet. Before he could escape, she was clinging
-to him.
-
-“Don't leave me to face them.”
-
-“I'm not.” He freed himself from her grasp. “If I've guessed right, you
-won't have to face them.” With that he was gone.
-
-A quarter of an hour elapsed: he had not returned. Nothing that she
-dreaded had happened. With a lurch the train jerked forward. Farewells
-were being shouted. Station-lamps streamed past, the scarcer lights
-of freight-yards, then at last the glow-worm warmth of a city under
-darkness.
-
-The door opened. She rose trembling, steadying herself against the wall.
-When she saw who it was, she sank back. “Tell me.”
-
-“We were on the wrong track.” He spoke leisurely. “Captain Lajos wasn't
-lying. I followed him. He met his man with the telegram. He suspects us
-so little that he showed it to me. It read, 'No further developments.'”
-
-“Thank God.” She pressed her handkerchief to her lips. And then, “Why
-should he have shown it to you? It was to put us off our guard.”
-
-He sat down in the seat opposite. “I think not. He's changed his
-tactics. He's made up his mind to be friendly. It's you he's after, but
-in a different fashion. He thinks he's in love with you.”
-
-“But he threatened----”
-
-“No. It was our own guilty conscience. Here's how I figure it out. He
-probably has seen you before. He can't remember where. It may have been
-in the days when you were dancing. It was the vague recollection of you
-that piqued his curiosity and got him staring. When he found you alone
-and crying, he thought he'd stumbled on an adventure. My entering upset
-his calculations. I became for him the cruel husband; he hated me on
-the spot. My dear Santa, our meeting with him is the luckiest thing that
-could have happened.”
-
-Dabbing her eyes, she tried to laugh. “I don't see it.”
-
-“It's as plain as a pike-staff.” He bent forward, lowering his voice.
-“He was mixed up with Prince Rogovich. He's one of the people who's
-hunting for you. In his company you won't be suspected. He'll get you
-across all the frontiers.”
-
-She was still reluctantly incredulous. “But the things he said at
-dinner. He played with us like a cat.”
-
-“He wasn't playing with us.” Hindwood became eager in his determination
-to convince her. “He was playing into our hands. He knows all the things
-that we want to know. Every move the police make is telegraphed to him.
-It was the frankness with which he let us into his secrets that was so
-alarming.”
-
-“Then how must we act?”
-
-“The way we have been acting. Until it's safe to be rid of him, we must
-keep him believing that we're married, and none too happily. I'm afraid
-it's up to you to keep him lulled by pretending----”
-
-“Don't;” she closed her eyes. “It's like going back to the ugly past.”
-
-“It's beastly, I know.” He spoke seriously. “But what else----? Any
-moment he may recall where last he saw you. Sleep over it. We can decide
-in the morning.”
-
-
-V
-
-
-All night he had been haunted by the oppressive sense that, if he did
-not watch, something terrible would, happen. It was shortly after dawn
-when he rose. Stepping into the corridor he found that he had the train
-to himself. It seemed as depopulated as an early morning house and,
-despite the clamor of its going, as silent. He placed himself near
-Santa's door and stood staring out at the misty landscape streaking past
-like a trail of smoke. It was here that Santa found him when she slipped
-from her compartment.
-
-He turned quickly. “He's not up yet.” Then, noticing her pallor and the
-shadows under her eyes, “You haven't slept?”
-
-“Not much.”
-
-“Making your decision, I suppose?”
-
-She bit her lip nervously. “I shall have to pretend---- It'll only be
-pretending. You'll understand?”
-
-“It won't last long,” he comforted her. “If we've been running on time,
-we must be in Alsace-Lorraine already. Within the next few hours we'll
-be out of France and into Germany. You'll feel safer there, won't you?”
-
-What he was really asking was whether it wasn't true that during the war
-she'd been a German spy.
-
-“Shall I?” was all she answered.
-
-They fell silent. Without mentioning it, each guessed the motive which
-had occasioned the other's early rising. They dared not let the Captain
-out of their sight. While they could not see him, they had no peace of
-mind. Whereas yesterday his companionship had seemed to spell death,
-to-day it spelt protection. Yesterday they had done everything to elude
-him; to-day it would probably be he who would do the avoiding. It was
-essential that they should have won his confidence before they arrived
-on German soil. There was little time to lose. He had not appeared when
-the first sitting for breakfast was announced.
-
-In the restaurant car they dawdled over their meal and sat on long after
-it was ended. They had even begun to discuss the possibility of his
-having left the train during the night, when with an eagerness kindred
-to their own he entered. Hindwood waved to him.
-
-“I'm afraid we've finished. But won't you seat yourself at our table?
-I've no doubt my wife will join you in a cup of coffee. While you
-breakfast, if it's not objectionable, I'll smoke a cigarette.”
-
-Captain Lajos beamed like a pleased boy. If one wasn't prejudiced in his
-disfavor, it was possible to find him likable. “I shall be delighted,”
- he said in an embarrassed tone. “Journeys are tedious nowadays. Once
-every one who counted was gay and prosperous; one was never at a loss
-to find a friend. To-day, in this bankrupt world, the only travelers are
-money-lenders and pawn-brokers.” He laughed. “I may as well confess: I
-didn't think you were up yet--that's what made me late. I was so tired
-of my own society that I was waiting for you.”
-
-As he said, “I was waiting for you,” his eyes flashed on Santa.
-
-It was she who spoke. “I fancy we've been just as bored with ourselves
-and even more eager to meet you. What you told us last night sounded so
-mysterious and romantic. I could hardly sleep for thinking about it. To
-have a Prince for one's friend and to travel so far to welcome him, only
-to find----” She clasped her hands childishly. “Life can be so drab--how
-drab, a man of your kind can never know. American husbands, no matter
-what they possess, take a pride in always working.”
-
-He disappointed her curiosity with a crooked smile. “Whether you're a
-Prince or a millionaire, there's nothing romantic about being murdered.”
- Then her allurement kindled the longing in his eyes. “You're wanting me
-to confide the secrets that I warned you I couldn't share. Surely you
-must know something of Prince Rogovich?”
-
-“No. Truly.” She returned his searching gaze with apparent frankness.
-
-Hindwood jogged her elbow. “My dear, I've remembered. When we sailed
-there was a Prince Rogovich in the States, doing his best to raise a
-loan--I think it was for Poland. It was rumored that the money was to be
-squandered on military adventures. I guess he didn't find many takers.
-You're in the Hungarian Hussars, Captain, but you must excuse me for
-stating that on our side of the Atlantic we've seen all we want of
-armies.”
-
-Santa clicked her tongue impatiently. “That's all very well, but it
-doesn't explain why the Prince----”
-
-“It might,” Hindwood insisted mildly. “Discouraged men often commit
-suicide. He was coming home. He'd failed in his object----”
-
-“He hadn't.” The Captain glanced quickly behind him to see whether any
-one could have heard him. He continued in a voice that was little above
-a whisper, “Only a few of us knew. He was coming home in triumph.”
-
-Leaning across the table with suppressed excitement, Santa made the
-appeal of pretty women throughout the ages. “I wish you'd trust me.”
-
-Hindwood pushed back his chair. “It's time for a cigar. Perhaps you'll
-join me later. If you'll excuse me----”
-
-They paid him scant attention. The last he saw of them they were gazing
-enraptured into each other's eyes.
-
-
-VI
-
-
-It was well over an hour since he had returned to his compartment. He
-had left his door wide, so that he could inspect every one who passed
-along the corridor. They couldn't have slipped by without his noticing.
-He was becoming almost as distrustful of Santa as he was of the
-stranger. Already the rôle of unwanted husband was growing irksome. The
-thing that baffled him most was her morbid curiosity. It was revolting
-to think of her, with her disarming air of refinement, encouraging
-her admirer to conjecture the details of a crime which she herself had
-committed. But how had she committed it? He himself did not know. He had
-just begun to contrive the scene in his mind when they entered. Her face
-was lit with a new intensity. At a glance he was aware that whatever she
-had learned had quickened her emotions. The Captain followed grudgingly,
-like a dog hanging back on a chain.
-
-“Captain Lajos has been telling me,” she commenced. “But we'd better
-have the door closed. He's been telling me things that you ought to
-know. He's so concerned for my sake that he's offered to repeat them.”
-
-The Captain seated himself opposite to Hind-wood and regarded him
-gravely. “The things that I've been telling your wife are not my
-secrets. I must ask you to give me your solemn promise.”
-
-“You may take that for granted.”
-
-“And there's one other point. I didn't offer to repeat them; it was Mrs.
-Hindwood who urged me. I'm making this plain because I don't want you to
-think I'm offering you my advice uninvited.”
-
-Hindwood lit a fresh cigar, fortifying himself against whatever shock
-was pending. “I give you full credit for your motives.”
-
-“Then let me ask you a question. Have you noticed that there are
-scarcely any women on this train?”
-
-“I believe you're right. But until you mentioned it I hadn't noticed.”
-
-“Well, if you'll watch, you'll see that I'm correct. There are women
-and children in plenty on trains moving westward. But on trains moving
-eastward, where we're going--no.”
-
-Hindwood watched the man intently, wondering at what he was driving.
-
-“Would you be surprised,” he continued, “if I were to tell you that one
-of the chief reasons for the women's absence is this affair of Prince
-Rogo-vich?”
-
-“You rather harp on Prince Rogovich, don't you?” Hindwood flicked his
-ash. “After a time one ceases to be surprised at anything. But aren't
-you presuming too much in insisting on his having been murdered? All
-that's known by your own account is that he's vanished. In any case,
-what can he possibly have to do with the scarcity of women on trains
-running eastward?”
-
-“Everything.” The Captain's face darkened with earnestness. “What I'm
-trying to tell you is that you're taking your wife into danger. Every
-man who can afford it, in the countries to which you're going, is
-hurrying his women-folk to France, England, Spain, America--anywhere
-westward for safety. They can feel the storm rising, the deluge of
-catastrophe that can't be held back much longer. When it bursts, it'll
-tear everything established from its moorings and sweep across Europe in
-a wave of savagery.”
-
-“And this deluge that you speak of--what had Prince Rogovich to do with
-it?”
-
-“He was keeping it from bursting.”
-
-Hindwood smiled. “Alone?”
-
-“No man's single strength could accomplish that. He was one of the most
-powerful of the resisting forces. When society's tottering, it's the
-little added strain that upsets the equilibrium. Remember how the last
-war started, with an obscure assassination.”
-
-Hindwood crossed his knees and dug himself back into the cushions. “Your
-information, to say the least of it, is strangely melodramatic. If I
-understand you aright, you're urging me to discontinue my journey. Can't
-you be more explicit?”
-
-“I can.” The Captain betrayed a hint of temper. “I suppose I shall have
-to if I'm to convince you. The stability of the whole of Central and
-Eastern Europe has been upset by the repartitioning of the Peace Treaty.
-The situation as it exists to-day is intolerable. The ruin which the war
-commenced has been completed by the pacification. The old social order
-has been overthrown; in its place we have a dozen rash experiments. In
-Russia, instead of the Czar, we have Bolshevism. In what was once the
-Austro-Hungarian Empire we have a series of Republics, which are nothing
-more than old racial hatreds entrenched behind newly created frontiers.
-In Poland, which was prisoner to three nations for two centuries,
-we have a released convict, vengeful with a sense of past injustice.
-Instead of reconstruction, we have disorganization. Trade is at a
-standstill. Money is valueless. Confidence is gone. Poverty has made a
-clean sweep of class distinctions. Mob-rule has usurped the rights of
-authority. Like a lean wolf, famine gallops through the desolation in
-ever widening circles.”
-
-“But Prince Rogovich?” Hindwood recalled him. “What had he to do with
-it?”
-
-“He was the leader of the monarchist party in Europe--the organizer of
-a secret movement to set up again the thrones which war has toppled.
-Incidentally he was to have established a new throne for himself
-in Poland. Behind him he had the landowning classes and the old
-aristocracy, which the new regime of haphazard democracy has beggared.
-He was biding his time till the crisis should become sufficiently acute
-for him to strike his blow. He had his armies ready. All he lacked was
-munitions. The floating of the loan in America completed his program.”
-
-“But you said that the fact that he was returning in triumph was known
-only to a few. If only a few knew it, why should his death have caused
-this sudden exodus of women on trains running westward?”
-
-“For two reasons: because he was the recognized strong man of the buffer
-states which lie between Russian anarchy and civilization; and because
-the crisis of starvation, for which he had been waiting, is now in
-sight. While Bolshevism was making its drives against Poland, Central
-Europe was compelled to hold together. Now that Bolshevism is crumbling,
-that compulsion is relaxed. All the way from Siberia to the frontiers of
-Germany millions are perishing from lack of food. Presently the Russian
-millions will commence to march westward to the lands of plenty.
-They'll march like Death, swinging his scythe. They'll sweep on like a
-pestilence. They'll lope like gaunt wolves, savage and relentless. The
-starving peoples of Central Europe, who would once have resisted them,
-will join them. Prince Rogovich, had he lived, could have prevented
-them.”
-
-“How?” It was Santa.
-
-“He would have declared a new war, with the return to monarchy as his
-battle-cry. He had his nucleus armies in readiness; they would have
-sprung from their hiding-places overnight. There would have been a
-tremendous rally to him as the only man unscrupulous enough to handle
-the situation. He would have made his bargain with the Allies.”
-
-“And then?”
-
-“He would have trained his guns on the lean hordes of Russia and would
-have blown them back across their borders.”
-
-Again Santa spoke. Her voice came low and haltingly. “He would have made
-the world pass through the fires of Moloch for a second time. The person
-who murdered him must have known it.”
-
-Hindwood turned to her. There was a startled expression in his eyes. He
-was quite certain she had known it. He was seeing the real Santa for
-the first time. She was a Charlotte Corday, who had dipped her hands in
-blood that she might prevent a more colossal crime.
-
-“I begin to see,” he muttered.
-
-The Captain took the words as addressed to himself. “I'm glad you do.
-It must be obvious to you now that where you're going is no place for
-a woman. If you'll accept my advice, you'll turn back at the next
-stopping-place.”
-
-“Impossible.” Hindwood recalled himself to the part he was playing.
-“You're a soldier; you'd be ashamed to run away at the first hint of
-danger. In a sense I also am a soldier, a soldier of business. I, too,
-have my marching orders and my duty.”
-
-“Then if you won't turn back yourself, send Mrs. Hindwood back.” The
-man's voice shook. “You're taking her to almost certain death. She's too
-beautiful--I beg it of you.”
-
-To his amazement Hindwood found himself liking the stranger. “My wife's
-beauty has no bearing on the problem. We're exceedingly grateful to you,
-Captain Lajos; but to act on your warning--it's out of the question.”
-
-The Captain shot him a dark look, then let his gaze rest on Santa. When
-she kept her eyes averted, he pretended to lose interest in the subject.
-The train was slowing down. He cleared the pane with his glove.
-
-“It's the frontier.”
-
-Hindwood rose and hurriedly commenced to gather together his belongings.
-Sitting perfectly still with an air of quiet criticism, the Captain
-watched him. When the last bag had been strapped and made ready for
-removal, “Why are you doing that?” he inquired.
-
-“The German Customs. I suppose we'll have to get out and go through the
-old jog-trot of being inspected.”
-
-“You don't need to; you can have it done here. Excuse me, if I seem
-officious. I was immediately behind you at Calais and couldn't help
-noticing that your passports are the same as mine--diplomatic. The
-advantage of a diplomatic passport in crossing frontiers is that the
-officials have to come to you.”
-
-“I didn't know. If that's the case--”
-
-He resumed his seat with a sickening sensation. The Captain's presence
-was stifling him. He longed to escape, if it were only for five minutes.
-He felt choked with lies. It seemed impossible that the Captain should
-not be aware of the atmosphere of falsehood.
-
-Passengers were already filing down the corridor and being herded by
-soldiers on the platform. As carriages were emptied, doors were locked
-and sealed. Evidently nothing was to be left to chance; while the
-passengers were held prisoners in the waiting-rooms, the train was to
-be searched from end to end. To a guilty conscience there was something
-exceedingly intimidating about this military display of thoroughness.
-
-The _wagon-lits_ conductor looked into the compartment. Seeing the three
-of them seated there, he burst into a frantic protest. Captain Lajos
-annihilated him with the ferocity of his explanation. When the conductor
-had retreated, the Captain turned to Hindwood.
-
-“Like most of your compatriots, I see you're not strong on languages. If
-I can be of use to you, I'll act as your interpreter.”
-
-“My wife is--” Then he remembered that he knew nothing of Santa's
-linguistic attainments. “You're very thoughtful of our comfort,” he
-substituted.
-
-Guttural voices sounded. Two crop-headed ex-drill-sergeants presented
-themselves. Without waste of words they rasped out a peremptory order.
-
-“They want to see your passports,” the Captain interpreted.
-
-While the passports were being examined, there was silence. Again
-questions were asked and again the Captain interpreted.
-
-“Are you carrying fire-arms?”
-
-“Have you any contraband?”
-
-“Do you intend to stay in Germany?”
-
-There was a pause. The passports were folded and on the point of being
-returned when another unintelligible conversation started.
-
-The Captain smiled. “They're punctilious. As a matter of form, they want
-to hear you assert that you're the Philip Hindwood to whom this passport
-was issued.”
-
-“Most certainly. They can prove that by comparing my face with the
-attached photograph.”
-
-The Captain turned to Santa with the utmost suavity. “And that you're
-the Edith Jones, Mr. Hindwood's secretary.”
-
-Having exploded his bomb, he rose. For a moment he seemed to hesitate as
-to whether he should expose them. Then, making a stiff bow, he murmured,
-“That's all.”
-
-Directly he had departed, Hindwood locked the door behind him. “He shall
-ferret out no more of our secrets.”
-
-From then on, they traveled in a state of siege. Several times they
-thought they heard a tapping. Whether it was the Captain's, they did not
-allow themselves to discover. They opened to no one whom they had not
-summoned.
-
-
-VII
-
-
-Soon after the train restarted, Santa rested her hand on his arm. “You
-think better of me now. I'm so tired, I should cry if you spoke to me.
-Let me sleep on your couch. I'm afraid to be alone.”
-
-He covered her with his rug and did his best to make her comfortable.
-She was utterly exhausted. In a few minutes her eyes closed and she was
-breathing gently.
-
-Several hours elapsed. She was still sleeping. He was glad not to have
-to talk. His mind was filled with a tremendous picture: “There was a
-certain rich man, which was clothed in purple and fine linen, and fared
-sumptuously every day. And there was a certain beggar named Lazarus,
-which was laid at his gate full of sores.”
-
-He saw the world that he was leaving, self-satisfied, callous,
-well-nourished. He saw the world to which he was going, out of which he
-had planned to make a profit--a world picked clean by the crime of
-war and peopled by living skeletons. When its pain had passed
-beyond endurance, the outcast world would attack the world which was
-comfortable. It would come crawling like a beggar to a rich man's door.
-When it found the door barred, it would go mad. It had nothing to lose
-by violence. With its bare hands it would storm the dwelling.
-
-How would the comfortable world defend itself? The Captain said with
-cannon. From a safe distance it would blow the empty bellies into
-nothingness. But bread was cheaper than high explosives. Why not fill
-the empty bellies instead of shattering them?
-
-He recalled the fields round Amiens, starred with miniature forests of
-stiff, protesting crosses. Why had those crosses been planted if it had
-not been to teach the living world to share?
-
-A barricade of bread could prevent further bloodshed. It always could
-have prevented it. The gray tide of wolf-men could be halted by a
-barricade of bread. Strange that no one had ever thought of it! There
-had never been a war that a barricade of bread could not have halted.
-Back and forth across the Atlantic his food-ships were plying. In
-Holland his warehouses were bulging--
-
-He glanced at the sleeping face of Santa--sweet and sad as an avenging
-angel's. Her solution of injustice was simple: to slay the wrong-doer
-before he could do his wrong. It was her own suffering that had taught
-her this cruel mercy. If she, a half-caste, disinherited at birth, could
-so risk her soul's salvation for humanity--
-
-He drew himself up sharply. He was turning visionary. At this rate he
-would end as a second Varensky. All his plans for capturing power would
-be thwarted. He had seen nothing as yet that would corroborate the
-Captain's disastrous prophecies.
-
-At Stuttgart he watched the Captain receive another telegram. If the man
-had lied to him, what was his purpose? How much did he know? How much
-did he infer? Had his discovery that they were not married been an
-accident or had he led up to it by strategy? When Vienna was reached, it
-would be necessary to throw' him off their track.
-
-They were winding through blue valleys of the Bavarian Tyrol, steeped
-in the contentment of autumnal sunshine. Like eagles' nests, built high
-above pine-forests, he caught glimpses of _chalets_ perched on narrow
-ledges. Here and there they passed villages, mere clusters of dolls'
-houses, childish and make-believe as memories of fairyland. He began to
-smile at his mood of pessimism. Were Santa to waken, she would refute
-the Captain's bogey stories. He bent over her, tempted to rouse her. At
-last he shook her shoulder.
-
-“Santa, don't be frightened. I want to ask you a question. What the
-Captain said wasn't true?”
-
-She gazed up at him bewildered, dreams still in her eyes; then turned
-her face drowsily back to the pillow. “What wasn't true? I don't
-understand.”
-
-“The part about Prince Rogovich and blowing those starving wretches back
-with cannon.”
-
-She settled herself wearily. “I'm so terribly tired. I don't want to be
-reminded.” And then, “It was why I killed him; so that he shouldn't.”
-
-
-VIII
-
-
-Darkness had long since gathered when they crossed the starvation-line
-into Austria. Perhaps it was no more than imagination, but he
-immediately became conscious of a vague depression. Glancing through
-the misty panes, he espied no signs of life--only bare fields, pollarded
-trees like gallows, and the sullen profiles of shrouded houses. No
-trains flashed by, going in the opposite direction. Wayside stations
-were shuttered. Night was a stagnant tank. In the all-pervading silence
-the sound of their own going was the only clamor.
-
-It was not until they were nearing Vienna that any lights broke
-the monotony of the blackness--even these, like lanterns of lonely
-grave-diggers, were faint and rare. Shadowy apartment-houses and rotting
-factories looked less like habitations than monstrous sepulchers. It
-was difficult to believe that this pulseless carcass had once been the
-Bacchante among modern metropolises--that even at this moment memories
-of its rhythm were setting the feet of happier streets to music. He
-caught the vision of other cities after nightfall; New York, a tall
-white virgin, sheathed in jewels; London, a grimy smith, striking sparks
-from a giant anvil; Paris, a wanton goddess, smiling through the dusk,
-her face lit up by fire-fly constellations. How impossible it would be
-to approach any one of them without becoming aware of its presence! Yet
-a man might easily travel through Vienna without suspecting that it lay
-cowering behind the darkness.
-
-It was after midnight when the train halted in the empty cathedral of
-the Bahnhof. Directly the doors were opened, lean men poured into
-the compartments, whining for the privilege of handling the baggage.
-Hindwood delayed until he had allowed the Captain sufficient time to
-make his exit, then he thought it safe to assist Santa to the platform.
-Once again, despite the lateness of the hour, it was necessary to go
-through tedious formalities. The question asked most pressingly, as at
-the German frontier, was whether they were possessed of fire-arms.
-
-At last they were free to go in search of beds. As they stepped into
-the station-yard, they got their first glimpse of Austria's destitution.
-Huddled against the walls was a collection of human derelicts which
-seemed more in keeping with Dante's “Inferno” than the city which had
-set the world waltzing to _The Merry Widow_. They were of all conditions
-and ages, from grandparents to toddling children, from artisans to
-aristocrats. In the scant light they lifted up greenish faces which
-snarled, while their extended hands demanded charity. The police beat
-them back, like huntsmen separating hounds from their quarry. They
-retreated whimpering into the shadows.
-
-From the line of worn-out vehicles which were waiting, Hindwood selected
-a creaking taxi. Having seen Santa seat herself, he ordered the man to
-drive to the Hotel Bristol.
-
-“Pretty awful,” he groaned, as he sank back against the musty cushions.
-
-She stifled a sob. “It was nothing. It's worse than that.”
-
-He spoke again. “I didn't see the Captain. I think we're rid of him.”
-
-“I wouldn't be optimistic.”
-
-Down the long, deserted Mariahilfer Strasse they bumped and rattled. It
-was ungarnished and forbidding as an empty house. The few people whom
-they met scuffled out of sight at sound of intrusion, looking less like
-human beings than vermin. Over all there hung a sense of evil, as though
-a crime lay undiscovered behind the silence.
-
-As they turned into the Ring, which circles the inner city, Santa woke
-into animation. Leaning from the window, she pointed. “Do you see that
-huge pile like a palace, with all the statues and the steps going up to
-it? That's the Opera House. I danced there once at the command of the
-Emperor.”
-
-“Then you're known here?” He clutched her hand.
-
-She shook her head sadly. “I was the toast of Europe then. Whereas
-to-day---- It makes a difference.”
-
-In the Kârtner-Ring they drew up before a blazing entrance. Laughing
-people were passing in and out, women muffled in costly wraps,
-accompanied by men in evening-attire.
-
-“What's this?” The change was so sudden that it shook his sense of
-reality. “This doesn't look like--”
-
-She placed her lips close to his ear as she alighted.
-
-“It looks like asking for revolution. 'After me, the deluge'--you
-remember? The men aren't Austrians. They're foreign vultures here to
-snatch bargains--human bargains as well. But the women--”
-
-Inside the doors of the hotel every reminder of famine had been blotted
-out. Its white marble halls and stairways were richly carpeted. Its
-furnishings in gilt and satin had been carried out with the utmost
-lavishness. The costal of its chandeliers glittered with a dazzling
-intensity. From the restaurant drifted the wild gayety of a gipsy
-orchestra, enfever-ing the atmosphere with the yearning of elusive
-romance. Whispering to the beat of the music came the glide of dancing
-footsteps. Flunkeys with powdered heads, tricked out in plush breeches
-like marionettes, hurried to and fro on all-absorbing errands.
-
-After Santa had been shown to her ornate room, he stepped out into the
-gloomy street to assure himself. It was all true, in spite of the lie
-which he had witnessed. The pinched faces were still there, and the
-enfeebled bodies crawling through the shadows.
-
-As he reentered the white glare which shone from the hotel, he glanced
-back with a sense of impending ruin. For a second time his mind was
-filled with a tremendous picture: “And there was a certain rich man and
-a beggar named Lazarus, which was laid at his gate, desiring to be fed.
-Moreover, the dogs came and licked his sores.”
-
-He caught the vision of his food-ships piling up stores in Holland. At
-the thought, as he crept between the sheets in his comfortable bed, he
-sickened.
-
-
-IX
-
-
-He had returned from a disturbing interview with the Austrian ministers
-responsible for considering his proposals. He was passing the hotel
-desk, when it occurred to him that some one might have left a message.
-On inquiry two were handed out to him, one a telegram, the other a
-letter. Ripping open the telegram, a glance told him it was in German
-and had been dispatched from Budapest. He had slipped it into his
-pocket, thinking, “I'll have to get Santa to translate that,” when he
-unfolded it again to see by whom it had been sent. The sender's name was
-a single word, “Anna.”
-
-His heart gave a bound. She was near to him! He could see her again
-within a handful of hours. For a moment nothing else seemed to
-matter--neither Santa's safety, nor the agony of hunger by which he
-was surrounded. His blood ran hot with yearning. How had she reached
-Budapest so quickly? What was her object? To have accomplished the
-journey she must have set out from England ahead of him or else have
-left on the same day, traveling by the alternative route via Belgium.
-While he had been journeying in the company of Santa, going through the
-mummery of pretending he was married, Anna had been paralleling his
-footsteps. Was Varensky with her? But if she were alone...
-
-Mechanically, as he entered the elevator, he slit the flap of the
-letter. It had evidently been left personally, for it bore no postmark
-and was hastily scrawled on the stationery of the hotel. The hand was
-unknown to him. The note read:
-
-“_Yesterday you avoided me. I have told her everything. I am more sure
-than ever you ought to send her back. I must leave you now for a little
-while. When we meet again, I hope it will be as friends_.
-
-“_Lajos_.”
-
-At last they had got rid of him! But what was it he had told her? And
-what made him so sure that they would meet again? The man wrote as if he
-were confident that he could lay his hands on them at any moment.
-
-Stepping out of the elevator, Hindwood made directly for Santa's room.
-He recalled it vaguely as he had seen it the night before, with its
-Empire furniture, painted cupids, silken hangings, and tall mirrors--its
-knowing air of having been the illicit nest of innumerable short-lived
-love-affairs. Its gaudy luxury, so glaringly in contrast with the
-embittered need of the outside world, had stirred his anger. In reply
-to his knock, her hoarse voice bade him enter. Before he was across the
-threshold, he was aware of the intoxicating fragrance of roses.
-
-Just inside the room, frowning with bewilderment, he halted. There were
-stacks of them--sheaves of them everywhere. They were scattered on the
-floor. They were arranged in vases. They lay strewn about in boxes. They
-were of all shades and varieties.
-
-“What's the meaning?”
-
-She beckoned to him to join her at the tall window against which she was
-standing.
-
-“We missed this last night.” She pointed.
-
-Following her direction, he saw that the window looked down obliquely
-on the imposing architecture of the Opera House. The mellow October
-sunlight drifted softly across gray roofs and fell in an orange splash
-into the deep fissure of the street below. Along the pavements the
-tide of traffic wandered nervelessly. On a neighboring ledge, two plump
-pigeons were engaged in an ardent courtship.
-
-“What did we miss? I see nothing.”
-
-Then he noticed the panting of her bosom and that her expression was
-tender with tremulous emotion.
-
-Drawing her fine fingers across her eyes, she shuddered. “Stupid of me!
-I forgot; they would bring back nothing to you--the scent of the roses
-and then the Opera House, looking the same as ever. I've been dreaming
-of other mornings, when I woke after nights of triumph. Perhaps it was
-this room that set me remembering. It's not the first time I've slept in
-it.” As she caught his eyes reading her memories, she flushed guiltily.
-“Yes, in those days I was never lonely.”
-
-“But the roses!” he reminded her impatiently. “How did you get them? At
-the price things cost in Vienna, some one must have spent a fortune.”
-
-She placed a hand on his arm appealingly. “Don't begrudge me. He must
-have known. I think he did it for my burial.”
-
-Her words sent a chill through him. He shifted his weight uncomfortably.
-“We're in too tight a corner to waste energy on sentiment. If we're
-going to make a fight for it, we've got to keep our heads clear. Who
-gave them to you?”
-
-She pressed her forehead against the warm pane. The gold of the world
-outside cast a sheen of gold on her profile. Her unwanted loveliness
-hurt him. It reproached him. It recalled to him the ache of his old
-desire in the days before he had known that he could have her. And now
-that he could have her for the asking....
-
-“Captain Lajos gave them to me. They've been arriving ever since we
-parted. He waited till you'd gone; then he came to me. He came to tell
-me why he'd followed me. He was persuaded I was your mistress. This
-morning he did something noble--very noble for a man of his sort to a
-woman of mine; he begged me to become his wife.”
-
-“Without knowing anything about you? He must be mad.”
-
-“Don't say that.” She closed her eyes painfully. “I shan't trouble you
-or any one much longer. I shall soon be so still. When one's sure of
-that, it's good to be loved just once again, even though--” She turned
-slowly and faced him. “I don't need to tell you who it is that I love
-truly. This man--he's nothing. No man ever will---- You see I've lived
-for men and admiration--for things like--” She pointed to the roses.
-“It's new to me to be neglected. So it's comforting to know that a man
-can still desire me, even though I'd rather kill myself than go with
-him.”
-
-He broke the silence that had settled between them. “You mustn't talk
-like this. You've years of life before you. I'll get you away safely.”
-
-She smiled. “No.” Then she changed the subject. “What happened to you?”
-
-“You mean at my conference?” He seated himself beside her
-dressing-table. “The worst that could have happened--nothing. Some
-change has taken place for which I can't account. When I sent my
-suggestions from America, they were hailed with enthusiasm. I was a
-saviour--everything that's splendid and extravagant. But now---- The
-Government's paralyzed. It isn't a Government; it's a passenger. 'You've
-let us starve too long. It doesn't matter now--' that's what I was told
-this morning. The ministers with whom I consulted spoke as if they were
-sitting on the edge of a volcano, waiting to be blown up. They're so
-sure that an eruption's inevitable that they don't consider it worth
-while to make an effort to save themselves. I couldn't rouse them. When
-I pressed them for the cause of their lethargy, they prophesied a new
-war, in very much the same words as Captain Lajos--a war in which the
-well-fed are to be pillaged by the starving.”
-
-“But did you tell them that you could ship food into Austria at once?”
-
-“I told them. I assured them that I could put Austria back on her feet
-in twelve months. I offered to provision her and to supply coal for her
-factories, if they'd give me control of the railroads and a per capita
-percentage on the total increase of national industry. 'Provision us
-with pleasure' was their attitude; 'we'll raise no official objection.'
-'Very kind of you,' I replied; 'but where do I come in. I'm no
-philanthropist.'” He brought his fist down with a bang on the
-dressing-table. “There's a nigger in the wood-pile. Upon my soul, I
-believe those fellows are determined that I shan't prevent their nation
-from dying. If I shipped them the food as a gift, they'd burn it.”
-
-She came over from the window and stood gazing down at him. “You're
-right. They would if they dared. Can't you guess?”
-
-“I can't. Their currency's hardly worth the paper it's printed on.
-People are dropping dead in the streets--I saw them. Their gaols are
-packed with children turned criminals through hunger. There'll be no
-crops next year; the grain's consumed that should have been saved for
-the sowing. They've butchered all their live-stock. The brains of the
-country are in exile. The intellectual classes have been wiped out. And
-here I come with my offer to save them, and they reject it. Without the
-help of some outside force like myself, things can only go from bad to
-worse.”
-
-“Precisely.”
-
-He glanced up, irritated by the promptitude of her agreement.
-“Precisely! Why do you say that?”
-
-“It's what they want--things to go from bad to worse. The worse things
-get, the more certain they are of revolution. They're afraid your food
-would postpone it.”
-
-“Afraid! Why on earth?”
-
-“Because they hope to snatch more out of the catastrophe of revolution
-than you can offer them. These ministers with whom you've been dealing
-are the tools of the exiled monarchists. They belong to the party in all
-countries which made the last war possible and all wars before it.
-What do they care for the people? They never have cared. Let the brutes
-starve,' they say, 'if it suits our purpose. We can always breed more.'
-They regard the people as their serfs, to be fooled with patriotism when
-danger threatens and to be kept in chains to toil for them when peace
-has been restored. If the people go hungry long enough, they'll reason
-that the loss of their kings is the cause. They'll rise up and recall
-them. They'll start to die for them afresh. It'll happen in all the
-outcast countries. In the wholesale scramble, it'll be every nation for
-itself. The strong will struggle to expand their frontiers, and the
-weak will go to the wall. The deluge of blood--” She sank to her knees,
-seizing his hands imploringly. “If you'll sacrifice your stores of food,
-you can stop it.”
-
-“But if I do that, without guaranties, I'm bankrupt. I get nothing.”
-
-“You'll get more than I got when, to accomplish the same purpose, I
-murdered Prince Rogovich. I'll get the scaffold. You'll earn the thanks
-of humanity. You'll go down to the ages....”
-
-He could see only the wide greyness of her eyes, pleading, coercing,
-unbalancing his judgment.
-
-He jumped to his feet, shaking off their spell. “I'm no dreamer--no
-Varensky,” he said gruffly. “I have to make a profit.” Then, defending
-himself from her unspoken accusation, “We're only guessing. We have
-no facts. There are other famished countries--Hungary and Poland. What
-Austria refuses, they may accept.” He dug his hand into his pocket.
-“That reminds me. Here's a telegram from Budapest. I can't understand
-it. It's in German.”
-
-She was crouched on the floor. As he stooped to give it to her, she
-caught sight of the signature.
-
-“From Anna. Varensky must be with her. Then the crisis is nearer than I
-thought.”
-
-“Read it. Tell me what it says,” he urged.
-
-She looked up palely, wilted with disappointment. “'_Come at once. I
-need you_.' That's all.”
-
-“Does she give no address?”
-
-“She wouldn't risk it. I know where to find her.”
-
-“Then we'll start--”
-
-“But what about--?”
-
-He did not hear her. The blood was hammering in his temples. He left her
-forgotten, seated among her roses. The music of a wild exultation was
-maddening his heart.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER THE SEVENTH--THE CAPTURE
-
-
-I
-
-
-SO Anna had turned to him out of all the world!
-
-She had felt so sure of him that she had not even stated the reason for
-her urgency--only “_Come at once. I need you_.” That she should have
-relied so implicitly on his compliance put him on his honor not to
-disappoint her. She must have known that her telegram would find him
-involved in important business. The earliest she could have counted
-on seeing him must have been to-morrow. He was determined, if it were
-humanly possible, to exceed her best expectations; he would see her
-to-night. Having phoned for the hotel porter to be sent to him, he
-immediately commenced to pack. He recalled the message that Santa had
-delivered him: “Varensky's setting out on his last journey. He told
-me to say, 'Soon you can have her.'” Did Anna's telegram mean that
-Varensky's final journey was ended?
-
-He was throwing his belongings together when the porter entered.
-
-“You wanted me, sir?”
-
-“Yes. What's the first train--the fastest to Budapest?”
-
-“The first, if it's still running, starts from the Nord-Bahnhof within
-the hour. But--”
-
-“Then order me a taxi. I'll be ready in ten minutes. Have my bill made
-up. Send some one to my secretary's room to fetch down her baggage.”
-
-“Certainly. But--”
-
-Hindwood glanced at the man coldly. “I'm in too much of a hurry for
-conversation.”
-
-A little later, as he was pocketing his change, having settled his
-account, the cashier addressed him.
-
-He shook his head. “Don't understand.” Then, catching sight of Santa,
-he beckoned. “The fellow's trying to say something. Find out what's
-troubling him.”
-
-The cashier repeated more earnestly the words that he had previously
-uttered.
-
-“He wants to know whether you really think you can leave Vienna,” Santa
-translated.
-
-“What's to prevent?” Then he caught her arm, lowering his voice.
-“Perhaps they're on to you.”
-
-The Kârtner-Ring was extraordinarily deserted. Against the curb a
-wheezing taxi was standing--the only one in sight. Its engine was
-running. The bags had been piled on the front seat beside the driver,
-evidently very much to his annoyance; he was doing his best to
-tumble them back on to the pavement. The hotel porter was vigorously
-restraining him. An altercation was in progress which threatened any
-minute to develop into a fight.
-
-“What's the matter?”
-
-The porter replied across his shoulder, still holding the bags in place.
-“He doesn't want to drive you.”
-
-“Tell him I'll give him five times the legal fare.”
-
-When the offer had been translated, the man seemed mollified.
-
-The porter opened the door. “Quietly. Jump in before he changes his
-mind. He promises to do his best.”
-
-“His best! I should think so.”
-
-As the cab moved off, Hindwood missed the porter's parting words. He
-turned to Santa. “Do they always come this hold-up game with foreigners
-in Vienna?”
-
-“It isn't a hold-up game. He didn't want to drive us. He was afraid.
-Something's wrong. Look how empty the streets are. Didn't you see how
-white and scared every one was in the hotel? The cashier would have told
-us; you wouldn't even let me listen to him.”
-
-“Jealous!” he thought. “It'll be awkward having to take care of both her
-and Anna.”
-
-They had driven for ten minutes in silence when Santa spoke again. “It's
-a queer way he's taking us.”
-
-“How queer?”
-
-“So round-about.”
-
-“As long as he keeps going, we don't need to worry.”
-
-“But why should he turn up all the side-streets?”
-
-“I don't know. It'll be time to grow nervous when he stops.”
-
-At that moment he stopped, but it was only for a second. Spinning his
-cab about, he spurted off in a new direction. Glancing from the window
-as he turned, they saw that the main thoroughfare ahead was blocked by
-what appeared to be a procession. Street after street he tried, working
-round in a circle, never getting any nearer. At last, growing desperate,
-he took the plunge, tooting his horn and forcing his way through the
-outskirts of the seething mob. By the time Hindwood had ordered him
-to turn back it was too late; for a hundred yards behind them, from
-pavement to pavement, the thoroughfare was packed with pedestrians and
-vehicles, all headed in the one direction. To get out and walk, even
-if they had been willing to sacrifice their baggage, was out of the
-question. The crowd in front was more dense than the crowd behind. The
-air was full of shrieks of fainting women and the shiver of plate-glass
-as shop-windows gave way under the pressure. To escape the crush, which
-was momentarily increasing, people were clambering to the roof of the
-taxi and standing thick along the running-boards.
-
-Santa was speaking in a torrent to the strangers clinging to the doors.
-
-“Can't you stop long enough to tell me what's happening?” Hindwood
-interrupted.
-
-She apologized. “I forgot for the moment that you can't speak German.
-They're as puzzled as we are. All they know is that they're doing what
-every one else is doing. They don't know the cause. The same thing's
-happening at every station. A panic's struck Vienna--a foreboding of
-disaster. It's a case of nerves. In some places looting has started.
-Every one's escaping--the entire population. It's anything to get
-westward to France, Switzerland, Germany, away from this nightmare of
-starvation. They're storming the trains in the Bahnhof, trying to compel
-the engineers to--”
-
-Turning from him, she commenced to ply more questions in her hurried
-flow of German.
-
-It was all clear now--the porter's hesitancy, the cashier's earnestness,
-the driver's reluctance. They had been trying to prevent him from
-hurrying a woman into danger. He had been too obsessed by the thought of
-reaching Anna even to pay attention. For confirmation of what Santa
-had told him, he had only to glance at the surrounding throng. The lean
-multitude was absurdly prepared for its futile exodus. Irrespective of
-class, every individual was burdened with whatever he or she had had
-time to rescue of the household goods. They carried bundles beneath
-their arms and sacks on their backs. Everything on wheels had been
-commandeered. Some pushed perambulators, piled high with ill-assorted
-belongings; others had harnessed themselves to carts. None of them
-could have considered whether his or her presence would be allowed in a
-happier country. Obviously over night the half of Vienna could not have
-procured the necessary permits to travel.
-
-On the outskirts those who were most desperate, because furthest from
-the station, had begun to charge. Hindwood watched the stampede--how
-terror was transforming forlorn human beings into animals. They were
-of all kinds and sorts, mechanics, waiters, slum-dwellers, merchants,
-shop-girls,' demi-mondaines, with here and there a sprinkling of
-patrician faces from the palaces of the bankrupt aristocracy. There
-were lonely men and women, but for the most part they were grouped
-in families, the children dragging at their mother's skirts and
-the youngest in the father's arms. They pushed, jostled and fought,
-trampling the weak in their frenzy to get forward.
-
-Suddenly the madness of self-preservation froze with horror. At the
-end of the street, far up the pale river of gray faces, horsemen were
-advancing, standing tall in their stirrups, smiting with their swords.
-Santa flung herself to the floor. “Down. Keep down. The children--oh, my
-God!”
-
-Like a volley of hail, bullets commenced to patter. They whipped the
-street from end to end, hissing in their flight and thudding as they
-found their target. The taxi tossed and rocked like a rowboat in a
-mill-race. The mob had given way; like water from a burst dam, it
-roared between the tall, confining houses. It swept backwards weeping,
-bleeding, desperate, exhausted, wilder in its retreat than it had been
-in its advance. Behind it came the cavalry, riding it down, firing and
-stabbing. In five minutes nothing was in sight, save upset vehicles,
-scattered belongings, dead lying awkwardly in the October sunshine and
-wounded crawling weakly in search of refuge.
-
-Reaching through the shattered window, Hindwood tapped the driver's
-shoulder. “Drive on.”
-
-At the touch the man crumpled. There was a crimson blot in the center of
-his forehead.
-
-Santa sat up, staring furiously. “If you'd not refused them bread--”
-
-“I didn't.”
-
-“You did. You were only willing to sell.”
-
-Her eyes were blazing. Her hands were clenched. Her tears fell slowly.
-In the terrific silence which followed so much clamor, the street itself
-seemed to accuse him. Picking up their bags, he led the way to the
-station. Scenes such as the one he had witnessed might be happening in
-Budapest. There was no time to be lost.
-
-“Find out whether it's possible to send a wire.”
-
-“Where to?” she asked suspiciously.
-
-“To Amsterdam.”
-
-“What for?”
-
-“Do you need to ask?”
-
-After a hurried conversation with a scared official, she turned. “If
-it's to do with food, they'll accept it. The lines may be cut at any
-moment.”
-
-He dashed off his telegram. “_Crisis sooner than expected. Without delay
-start food-trains under armed guard for Budapest and Vienna_.”
-
-It might spell bankruptcy for him--the ruin of all his plans. He
-rebelled against the improvidence of philanthropy, yet dimly he
-discerned the proportions of his chance. If he would, he could teach
-the world how wars could be stopped. As he watched the message being
-dispatched, he wondered why he had sent it. Was he frightened by the
-sight of bloodshed, or angered, like Varensky, by an unjust display of
-force? Or had he sent it because this maelstrom of human agony swirled
-between him and the woman he loved, and food might prove to be the only
-means by which she could be rescued? He sought to explain his actions by
-business motives: if his food trains were actually on the spot, he could
-strike a better bargain with tottering governments.
-
-
-II
-
-
-The express for Budapest was several hours late. When at last it got
-under way, it carried few passengers. It was plunging straight into the
-heart of the danger, from which all the world which possessed the price
-of a fare was escaping.
-
-Santa listened to and reported on the conversation of fellow-travelers.
-They were Hungarian officers returning to their regiments, to whom a
-fight spelt opportunity; they were husbands and fathers, careless of
-their own safety in their dread of what might be happening to their
-families; they were merchants and men of wealth, anxious to be at hand
-for the defense of their possessions. As the talk went on, the greatness
-of the risk grew increasingly obvious; it bred an atmosphere of
-free-masonry. Strangers accosted each other, exchanging views on the
-hazards; they crowded about the entrance of any compartment where a
-speaker seemed possessed of accurate information. Most of what was said
-was no more than conjecture; much of it was utterly contradictory. One
-man asserted that the Bolsheviks were attacking all along the Russian
-front; another that Bolshevism had collapsed and the peasants were
-massacring. Another knew for certain that throughout Central Europe the
-Reds were rising; yet another that the Monarchists had sprung to arms
-and were marching. Every rumor or invention was accepted with equal
-credulity. Anything was possible. No one knew for certain either the
-magnitude or the cause of the rumored disaster. Only one fact seemed
-indisputable: somewhere further eastward had occurred a catastrophe of
-shattering proportions--a catastrophe in the tragedy of which each one
-of them would shortly be involved.
-
-Hindwood turned away from the babel of voices to the autumn landscape
-gliding past the windows. It consisted as far as eye could stretch of
-unboundaried, level fields, gridironed by straight, military roads,
-marked by avenues of pollarded trees, intersecting always at right
-angles. The fields were neglected. They told their own story of seed
-consumed, which should have been saved for sowing, and of cattle
-slaughtered. Over everything, despite the brilliant blueness of the sky,
-there hung an atmosphere of melancholy. Down white-penciled highways
-little groups were trekking, always in the one direction. They appeared
-crushed and harmless, more like insects, scarcely human. They limped
-forlornly, dragging carts and carrying children. They were the
-advance-guard of the army of starvation. Hindwood remembered the
-Captain's prophecy. “They'll march to the lands of plenty like Death
-swinging his scythe, like a pestilence, like gaunt wolves.”
-
-At the frontier, where the train crossed from Austria into Hungary, he
-gained his first lesson in the resistlessness of necessity. There
-had been an unequal battle, in which only one side had been armed. It
-appeared that the Austrian guards had tried to turn back the Hungarian
-fugitives. They had fired their rifles till their ammunition was
-exhausted; then they had sickened of the slaughter. Opposition had made
-no difference; the tide of fugitives had still pressed on. Misery had
-proved more potent than explosives; it had made death, if not desirable,
-at least negligible. Its meek persistence had conquered. The Austrian
-soldiery had revolted against their officers and stood with grounded
-arms, watching the stream of poverty trickling through the barrier of
-corpses.
-
-“Like water finding its own level,” Hindwood thought. It would be like
-this the world over, if something were not done at once to check it. The
-outcast nations lay one behind the other, like terraced avalanches, in
-an ascending scale of destitution--behind the Austrians the Hungarians,
-behind the Hungarians the Poles, behind the Poles the Russians, each a
-degree more agonized in its privation. Now that the movement had started
-it would go on, sliding, filtering, settling, until the peoples of
-the earth had regained an economic level. The Dives nations, which had
-refused to share, would try to hold the Lazarus nations at bay by force.
-They would spray them with cannon. They would charge them with bayonets.
-They would bomb them, gas them, dig labyrinths of trenches. In the
-end, as had happened here, though the pariah portion of humanity was
-weaponless, the meek persistency of its misery would conquer. Careless
-of oblivion, it would press on. He alone could give the Dives nations
-a seventh hour chance; at the price of his financial ruin, he could
-prevent the deluge of famine from spreading by damming it with a wall of
-bread.
-
-Darkness had fallen. The carriages were unlighted. The train was moving
-cautiously, jerking, stopping, starting, like a live thing scenting
-carnage. Scattered through the night camp-fires were burning. In the
-gloom conversation dragged on wearily with reiterated guesses.
-
-He felt his hand clasped.
-
-“What is it?” he whispered. “Frightened? You won't be caught now. You're
-as safe as the rest of us. No one'll have time to remember you.”
-
-“I wasn't thinking of myself.”
-
-“Then--?”
-
-“Of you--that perhaps you were born for such a time as this.”
-
-“Ah!” He drew his breath. The echo of his own thought! “And perhaps you,
-too,” he suggested.
-
-She twisted herself, leaning her breast against his arm. Glancing down
-through the darkness, he caught the tenderness in her eyes and the
-gleaming smoothness of her cheek and throat.
-
-“I wish I could believe it,” she said softly; “to stand beside you,
-making you strong.... You could never love me; but to stand beside you,
-when you rescue the world, that would mean redemption.”
-
-“When I rescue the world!” He laughed quietly. “I'm no Varensky. I came
-here to make money.”
-
-She swept aside his cynicism. “You were born for this moment. And I, an
-outcast woman whom the world has hunted, will help you. Perhaps I
-shall give my life for you.” She spoke exultantly. “I, whom you have
-rejected.”
-
-“You exaggerate. Things may not be as bad as they appear. What we've
-seen may be no more than a local disturbance.”
-
-She refused to argue. “Be kind to me while we're together.”
-
-On the outskirts of Budapest they came to a halt. The air was tainted
-with a nauseating odor. Standing on a siding was a long line of
-freight-cars in process of being shunted. By the light of lanterns swung
-by men on the tracks, it was possible to see that the freight-cars were
-inhabited. Figures hung out of them thin as skeletons, entirely naked or
-clad in flapping rags. The passengers of the express had crowded to the
-windows, pointing, commenting, gesticulating.
-
-Hindwood turned to Santa. “What is it?”
-
-She answered bitterly. “The death train.”
-
-“But the people aren't dead.”
-
-“Not yet. They're families ruined by the war and by the peace. Some
-of them saw their homes burned by the Cossacks; others had their farms
-stolen to pay the Allies' debts. They're nobody's business. When you've
-reached the end of your tether in Hungary, you join the death train and
-die by inches. You have no food, no sanitation. Wherever you halt, you
-spread contagion. When things have grown too bad in one place, you're
-dragged to another.” She swallowed down a sob. “The train's full of
-children--and you tell me that you came here to make money.”
-
-On arrival at Budapest they found the station picketed by soldiers. They
-were immediately conducted under an armed guard to an office where the
-purpose of their journey was investigated. When Hindwood had explained
-their errand--that it had to do with the food-supply--he was treated
-with courtesy and given his choice of hotels. Santa chose the Ritz. A
-military order was made out for their rooms. A safe-conduct was handed
-them. A rickety conveyance, with a lean horse between the shafts, was
-allotted to them. They were launched into a city quenched of lights,
-with a soldier seated beside the driver for protection.
-
-The wide avenues down which they drove were deserted. They were still
-unaware of what had happened. They had not dared to ask, lest any slip
-of the tongue might lead to trouble. There were no signs of revolution
-in the thoroughfares. They were hushed and reverent as the aisles of
-a cathedral. Every few hundred yards a mounted gendarme rode out to
-challenge them; then, seeing the soldier on the box, backed into the
-shadows. Only one disquieting incident occurred. The uneasiness which it
-caused was due to guilty memories rather than to any actual menace. As
-they were turning towards the Danube, they heard a sharp trotting behind
-them. A closed brougham swept past, drawn by a pair of high-stepping
-horses. The equipage was one which must formerly have belonged to the
-Royal Palace; it was the ghost of a forgotten splendor. Hindwood rose in
-his seat to watch it vanish. Then he saw something that made him
-catch his breath. Running between its wheels was a snow-white Russian
-wolfhound.
-
-Santa heard his commotion. “What's the excitement?”
-
-“Nothing.”
-
-By the time she had raised herself to follow his glance, the hint of
-peril was gone. The next moment they were drawing up at the hotel.
-
-
-III
-
-
-Again as the door swung to behind them, they were greeted by sounds of
-merriment and dancing, only here the abandon was wilder than at Vienna.
-Hindwood saw at a glance that this was no assemblage of alien hucksters,
-drawn from all the world to gather bargains. As regards the men, they
-were devil-may-care and smart, of the same type as Captain Lajos--the
-sort who would follow the game to the last throw of the dice. Many of
-them had made no attempt to disguise their profession; they were clad in
-gorgeous uniforms of Hungarian regiments long since ordered disbanded
-by the Allies. Their breasts were ablaze with Imperial decorations. They
-strode the marble floors with the clink of spurs and the rattling of
-swords. While they drugged the midnight hours with laughter and debauch,
-their faces were feverish with listening expectancy--the expectancy of
-an event for which they waited.
-
-The women looked like captives of a raid. Some hung back timidly; some
-were bold with wine; all were weary and pinched with hunger. Like the
-men, they seemed only to be acting a part. In the midst of recklessness
-they would give way to distaste, as though remorseful of this way of
-combating starvation.
-
-With the stench of the death train still in his nostrils, Hindwood
-stared at the spectacle in pity and disgust. “Fiddling while Rome is
-burning,” he muttered.
-
-His elbow was jogged by a black-coated individual with the appeasing
-manners of a tailor.
-
-“I understand English. What is it you desire?”
-
-Hindwood swung round. “So much the better. I want what one usually wants
-at a hotel--accommodation.”
-
-The man rubbed his hands. “Sorry, sir. We're full up. Every room, in
-fact every lounge is taken.”
-
-“You'll have to find something. I have a military order.”
-
-Having read it the man returned the slip of paper. “That's different.
-You're here on Government business--for the same purpose as these other
-gentlemen, I take it?”
-
-Hindwood replied non-committally. “Yes, on Government business.”
-
-“In that case I'll give you a room in the basement--a servant's, my
-last. It's all I have to offer.”
-
-“But two rooms are necessary. I have my secretary with me--this lady.”
-
-The man shrugged his shoulders. “To demand the impossible is useless.
-To-morrow--who knows? If things happen, I may be able to give you more
-rooms than you require. For the present...”
-
-Seeing that nothing was to be gained by arguing, Hindwood consented to
-the arrangement.
-
-“The room will be my secretary's. If you'll lend me blankets, I'll find
-a place in the passage.”
-
-The room proved to be poor in the extreme--nothing but four bare walls
-and an iron cot. When he had turned the key he tiptoed over to Santa.
-
-“What's this monstrous thing for which they're waiting--this something
-that may happen to-morrow?”
-
-She placed her hands in his, as though she felt the need of protection.
-Her golden face was tragic. “War.”
-
-His common sense revolted. Though everything seemed to prove her guess
-correct, he refused to accept it. “War! It can't be. What would any one
-gain by it? It was war that produced all this hideous mess--the death
-train and all that. Besides, how can people fight who can scarcely
-crawl? They have one foot in the grave already. Ten well-fed men could
-defeat a battalion. Whatever's in the wind, it isn't war. To launch a
-war requires money.”
-
-“With you it's always money. To launch this kind of a war requires
-nothing but despair.”
-
-Stepping back from him tempestuously, she flung herself full length on
-the cot. Her face was hidden, buried in the pillow. While she lay
-there tense, the sound of dance-music, advancing and retreating, tapped
-dreamily against the walls. It spoke to him of romance, of a woman he
-could love, and of passion snatched perilously before life ended, in a
-mysterious city after nightfall.
-
-She had raised herself and was regarding him feverishly. Her red lips
-were parted as with thirst.
-
-“I know you so well,” she was saying softly; “I know you because I love
-you. You refuse to believe it's war because you wouldn't be able to sell
-and bargain. But it is war--the sort of war we saw at the frontier:
-a war in which weaponless millions will march to the overthrow of
-embattled thousands.”
-
-“You're unjust.” He spoke patiently. “I'm unwilling to believe it's war
-because I can't see any reason for it.”
-
-“Any reason!” Her eyes became twin storms. “Would you require a reason
-if you'd seen your children die for lack of bread? You'd perish gladly,
-if you could first tear the throat out of one person who was too well
-nourished.”
-
-He went and stood beside her, stooping over her, placing his hand
-against her forehead. “You're burning. You've been through too much. Get
-some rest. To-morrow we'll find Anna and perhaps Var-ensky; it's more
-than likely they'll be able to tell us.” He paused. “I know what makes
-you so relentless; it's your own dead child--”
-
-Her arms shot up, dragging him down and nestling his face against her
-breast. “Oh, my man, it's not that. It's that I'm jealous for you--so
-afraid you may deceive yourself and miss your chance.” He stumbled back
-from the temptation of her yielding body and the comfort of her fragrant
-warmth.
-
-“My chance is yours; we may both have been born for this moment.”
-
-Long after he had stretched himself outside her door, he felt that in
-the austerity of the four bare walls she still crouched watching from
-her bed.
-
-
-IV
-
-
-He slept restlessly. The music and the dancing rarely halted. Once when
-he roused, it was with the suffocating sense that a man was bending
-over him, fumbling at the handle of Santa's door. As he sat up, he was
-convinced that the man looked back just before he vanished around the
-corner.
-
-When he finally wakened, it was in the chill of dawn. He was surrounded
-by a ghostly stillness. Rising softly, he slipped down the passage and
-out into the public rooms of the hotel. It was as though a wizard had
-waved his wand. The merry-makers lay strewn about carelessly, wherever
-sleep had overtaken them. In the pale light of morning, robbed of
-animation, their faces showed waxlike and wan. Swords, which had
-clattered martially, sprawled grotesquely by crumpled bodies. Uniforms
-looked tarnished, dresses shabby. Girls, with their lips parted and
-their hair disordered, lay with heads stretched back in their lovers'
-arms. Over all was spread the weariness of folly.
-
-Tiptoeing from group to group, he searched for the man who had tried
-Santa's door. Nowhere could he find him. Returning to her room, he
-tapped lightly. He was afraid to make more noise in that atmosphere of
-menace. Receiving no answer, he pushed the door stealthily and peered
-across the threshold. He had feared lest he might find her gone; there
-she lay curled up in her cot, her hair poured across her pillow, her
-face cushioned against her hollowed arm. Gray light falling from a
-narrow window clothed her with a lonely pathos. Bending over her, he
-shook her shoulder. “Santa.”
-
-She sat up with a start.
-
-“Has it happened?”
-
-“Not yet. They're sleeping like the dead.”
-
-“Then why--?”
-
-“There's someone who knows us here. He tried your door. It makes me
-think we're watched. We can slip out now and hunt up Varensky. If we
-wait till later, we'll be followed.”
-
-Her pupils dilated, obscuring the grayness of her eyes; they became
-black pools, mirroring her terror. “To be caught with Varensky would
-mean death.” He seated himself on the edge of her cot. “I didn't think
-you knew what fear was. Don't be frightened. I'll protect you.”
-
-“Dear!” All of a sudden she had become intensely calm. “Did you think I
-was afraid for myself? Before many days, perhaps before to-day is out,
-it'll be you who'll need protecting. I beg you, don't go near Varensky.”
-
-“But--”
-
-“Let me go myself,” she implored. When he glanced away without replying,
-she rushed on impetuously. “Some one's got to take risks. I don't count.
-Your life must be spared.”
-
-With an effort he brought his gaze back. “There's Anna.”
-
-Instead of the explosion he had expected, her voice became gravely
-tender. “I forgot. You care for her as I care for you. I'm sorry.”
-
-Her feet slipped to the floor; he saw them marble white against the
-bare, scrubbed boards--beautiful as hands, the feet of a dancer. As he
-retreated, she smiled bravely, “You shan't wait long.”
-
-
-V
-
-
-So far as they were aware, no one had noticed their departure. The
-deep breathing of the motley throng had been like the beat of a muffled
-engine. Even the night-porter, who should have been on guard, had
-collapsed across his desk with his face buried in his arms.
-
-They had stepped out of the hotel into a pulseless street where mists
-from the Danube hung like cobwebs. Hindwood could not rid himself of the
-suspicion that they were followed. He glanced back repeatedly, drawing
-Santa sharply into doorways in attempt after attempt to trap the
-tracker. If a tracker there was, he never revealed himself. At last
-Hindwood realized that precautions were profitless. The cessation of
-their own footsteps gave ample warning. A pursuer had only to halt when
-they halted, to escape detection behind the fog.
-
-They scarcely dared talk, and then only in brief whispers. It puzzled
-him how she could keep her direction. It was like tunneling a passage
-through chalk, which crumbled, yielded, and caved in as one went
-forward. The whole world dripped sullenly--unseen gutters, unseen trees,
-treacherous pavements. And there was always the drifting whiteness,
-pricking one's eyes as with little darts.
-
-She had gone too far and turned back, feeling her way along the wall.
-Before a large double-door she paused and knocked. She rapped three
-times peculiarly before a grill was slipped back and a question asked.
-The answer which she gave appeared to be the countersign. A smaller door
-in the doubledoor was opened and they entered.
-
-The person who had admitted them was a new type to Hindwood: flat
-featured, fair-headed, blue-eyed, clad in a loose khaki shirt, which
-bulged like a blouse, and in a pair of baggy breeches which were tucked
-into high-boots, roomy as pouches. But it was the expression of the man
-that was most impressive--his brooding appearance of enormous patience.
-Santa spoke rapidly in a language which was neither German nor French.
-The man nodded and led the way across a gloomy courtyard, up stairs
-rotten with decay, into a stone corridor lined with stout forbidding
-doors.
-
-“Is it a prison?” Hindwood whispered.
-
-“Little better. It's a barracks inhabited by the brains of outcast
-Russia--students, for the most part, male and female, who have escaped
-from the Red Terror. Russia has no use for brains at present. Brains are
-too dangerous. Wherever the Bolshevist finds them, he blows them out.
-Many of these exiles are survivors of Denikin's and Kolchak's armies.
-Having tried to save their country with rifles, they're now preparing
-themselves to rescue her with knowledge. They're learning to be doctors,
-engineers and lawyers, so that they may become the soul of the Russia
-of the future. Meanwhile they live anyhow, sleep anywhere and starve
-abominably. They're not wanted in Hungary or in any European country.
-They're suspected and hounded. The only reason they've been allotted
-this mildewed dwelling is in order that they may be watched.”
-
-The guide had thrown open a door and stood signing to them, trying to
-catch their attention.
-
-It was a grim sight that met their eyes, similar to the one they had
-left behind at the hotel only a thousand times more sordid. The windows
-were locked and heavily barred. The air was poisonous. The room was
-stripped of furnishings. On bare boards innumerable human beings,
-without a shred of bedding, sprawled, drugged with sleep, herded
-together in indecent proximity. There was scarcely space to walk between
-them. They were of both sexes. Here and there a child lay folded in a
-parent's arms. The men were of all ages, but for the most part young and
-still in the tattered uniforms of their defeated armies. The women were
-scarcely distinguishable from the men. Their heads were cropped. They
-wore odd garments of mixed masculine and feminine attire, such as could
-be purchased for next to nothing at any rag-shop. Some retained the
-soldier-garb of the Battalions of Death. As Hindwood gazed across the
-pool of mud-colored faces, “Heaven help us, if this is the soul of the
-future Russia!” he thought.
-
-Suddenly his interest shifted. In the corner remotest from the door,
-his eye had caught the shining of golden tresses. Their owner's face
-was turned away from him; they seemed to weigh her down and were piled
-beneath her head in a cushion. On her left lay an aged peasant woman; on
-her right a man with a death-white face and a head that was peaked like
-a dunce's cap. The guide was already stooping over the man, touching
-him with a strange reverence. The man sat up. His green eyes opened.
-Hindwood experienced the same sensation of discomfort he had felt, when
-he had first seen them peering at him above the edge of the cliff at
-Seafold.
-
-Varensky had risen. With his peculiarly catlike motion, he was picking a
-path towards them. He held out his hand.
-
-“It was brave of you to come.” And then to Santa, “Of you, too. But of
-you it was expected.”
-
-Hindwood bristled like a dog. He was distrustful of romantic attitudes.
-“Let's get down to facts. You know as well as I do that it wasn't any
-lofty motive that brought me.”
-
-“No?” The eye-brows arched themselves comically. “Then what?”
-
-“Your wife's message.”
-
-“Ah! I understand. She didn't tell me. You see, she thinks I'm going to
-get myself killed at last; probably she wants you to help stop me. Not
-that I'm of the least use to her--don't think that. But she's the soul
-of honor. My death would mean her freedom; because of that she'd do
-anything in her power to prevent--”
-
-Hindwood drew himself erect. “These are matters which it's not decent
-for us to discuss.”
-
-The narrow shoulders flew up into a shrug. “Why on earth not? When
-things are so, there can be nothing indecent in being frank about them.
-Is it less indecent for you to love my wife than for me to tell that
-I know you love her? There'd be no sense in your loving her unless you
-both hoped--I won't finish what I was going to say; your feelings are
-so sensitive.” He rested his hand not unkindly on Hindwood's arm. “Don't
-you realize, my dear fellow, that you're to be congratulated? This
-happening which means catastrophe for countless millions, for you and
-Anna spells opportunity. Be honest. You would not have risked visiting
-me, if you had not realized that.”
-
-Hindwood sought for spitefulness in Varensky's tones. All he found was
-the surge of a quiet happiness.
-
-“One would think that I wanted you to die!” he exclaimed blankly.
-
-“Well, don't you? Why shouldn't you?” Varen-sky smiled sadly. “If I
-could love Anna or any other woman the way you do---- But no--to me such
-affections have been denied. I love people only in crowds, by tens of
-thousands and by nations; in my heart there's no room for more human
-passions. I'm God's instrument; the hour of my testing is at hand. These
-mildewed walls inclose my Gethsemane.”
-
-He flung his arms apart grotesquely; they formed with his body the shape
-of a cross. The fire of fanaticism blazed in his eyes. “To-morrow I
-shall be crucified.” He drew a shuddering breath.
-
-“A born actor!” was Hindwood's silent comment--“An egoist who craves the
-lime-light.”
-
-And yet, to his chagrin, he found himself impressed. He was so deeply
-stirred that he dared not trust himself to speak for a moment; when he
-did, it was with calculated coldness.
-
-“You think only of yourself. It's not you alone; even those of us who
-make no claim to be God's instruments, stand more than a sporting
-chance of being crucified, as you call it. There are Santa and Anna, for
-instance; there's the collection of wretched down-and-outs gathered in
-this building; there are the scarecrows I saw in the death train; there
-are all the teeming swarms of human lice crawling westward along a
-thousand roads. In the presence of an agony so widespread, I can't
-muster a tear for your individual tragedy. It's no time for theatrics.”
-
-For an instant Varensky's gaunt face quivered. Making an effort, with an
-air of mocking courtliness he mastered his injured pride.
-
-“I was mistaken and I ask your pardon. We all have our plans to make
-ahead. I supposed you were here to ascertain approximately the hour at
-which I proposed to---- Shall we say, depart?”
-
-“You were badly mistaken,” Hindwood cut in contemptuously. “I'm here
-to find out if there's any possible way in which we can save the
-situation.”
-
-“We!”
-
-Varensky stared. He became rigid as though he were carved from marble.
-“We!” he repeated haughtily.
-
-While Hindwood was searching for a clue to his amazement, his next words
-supplied it.
-
-“I thought it was I who was to save the world.”
-
-“Splendid! You have a plan?”
-
-Varensky's eyes filmed over. “Yes. But if I were to tell you, you
-wouldn't understand.” Coming out of the clouds, he placed his hand
-tolerantly on Hind-wood's shoulder. “Splendid, you said. So you want me
-to have a plan? Let's sit down and talk more quietly. These people are
-tired--in sleep they forget. So you also have ambitions to become a
-saviour?”
-
-It was like the night in the hut all over again, when they had talked of
-Santa's redemption. There he sat, this discredited dictator, half-saint,
-half-charlatan, his knees drawn sharply up to his chin, his white face
-peering over them. The stale air sighed with the breathing of sleepers.
-A child whimpered and was hugged closer to the breast. In the far corner
-lay the desired woman. Gazing eagerly into both their eyes was the
-oriental countenance of the other woman, for whom neither of them cared.
-
-“A saviour! No. I have no ambitions in that direction. But I have a
-scheme,” Hindwood admitted.
-
-“What is it?”
-
-“Bread. I came to sell bread for trade-concessions. In Austria I found
-the Government unwilling to purchase. This morning, when I consult with
-Hungarian officials, I may be met with the same refusal. What's the
-game? Why should men in control of hungry nations refuse my help?
-For six months they've been urging me to come to them. Something's
-happened--the signs of it are everywhere. Trains running westward are
-packed with women. The last sight we had of Vienna was a street-riot and
-people brutally shot down. And again at the frontier there were piles of
-dead--not only men: women and children who had been butchered to prevent
-them from escaping. Budapest's under military law. By some error, Santa
-and I on arrival were mistaken for conspirators in an army plot. We're
-billeted at what appears to be its headquarters--a place jammed with
-carousing officers of supposedly disbanded regiments. What's in the air?
-What is this dreadful news which some people rejoice over, from which
-others flee in panic, but which no one dares to mention? If you can tell
-me, I shall know how to act.”
-
-“If I can tell you--! Suppose I were to tell you the worst, how would
-you act then?”
-
-“That depends. I'm no more unselfish than anybody else. At a pinch I
-could forget my own interests and ruin myself for the public welfare.
-Here's how I stand. I have enough food at my command to keep Europe for
-several weeks from actual starvation. If the crisis is genuine, that
-ought to give time for the conscience of the civilized world to be
-aroused. But even if the world's conscience should prove too sluggish, I
-still have a personal fortune which would keep hunger at bay for
-several months. I'm no philanthropist--I should make myself penniless
-reluctantly. I'm in no sense your rival for the honors of Calvary. My
-mission in Europe is to sell at a profit. So if you can do better----”
-
-“What you're telling me,” Varensky interrupted, “is that, if by personal
-sacrifice you could avert a world disaster, you'd be willing to give
-something for nothing.”
-
-“Precisely. But I must first be convinced that the circumstances warrant
-it.”
-
-“There's one point you've overlooked.” Varen-sky's green eyes narrowed.
-“Up to the moment you entered this room, I was fully persuaded that I
-was the man on whom the privilege of paying the price must fall. I'd
-coveted the privilege. All my life I'd worked for it. If you rob me of
-it, have you reckoned the cost?”
-
-“In money?”
-
-“In something more valuable. If I live, you can never be Anna's
-husband.”
-
-Hindwood hated the man for his subtlety. He was being deliberately
-tempted. He threw a glance toward the sleeping woman in the corner whose
-fate, as well as his own, he was deciding. Close to him, drawing nearer,
-he saw the pleading eyes of Santa. He gave his answer.
-
-“I may be the man who was born for this moment. Play fair by me; tell
-me what's happened.” Varensky rocked himself slowly back and forth.
-Suddenly he came to rest.
-
-“I'm the thing that's happened. I'm responsible for everything. I've
-never learnt to let bad alone; in trying to make things better, I make
-them worse. It was my hand that shot down the crowd at Vienna. It was
-I who butchered the women and children at the frontier. I'm the force
-which drives behind the human lice who crawl westward along a thousand
-roads. You think me mad; but listen. Every freedom gained entails a new
-bondage. I helped to free Russia from the Czar; in so doing, I prepared
-the way for Bolshevism. I've fought Bolshevism with my dreams, my
-happiness, with everything I possess. Bolshevism is overthrown. What
-have I produced? Chaos.”
-
-“Overthrown! Then that's the meaning of it.” Santa had half risen.
-
-Varensky turned his death-white face on her, chilling her enthusiasm.
-“It's collapsed like a pack of cards. With it have vanished the last
-of the restraints. Every Russian's his own master now to choose his own
-ditch in which to perish. We've destroyed a vision that turned out to
-be a nightmare, but we've set up nothing in its stead. We, who are
-idealists, have worked the final disillusion. We've made two hundred
-millions hopeless. They're fleeing from the emptiness. The contagion of
-their despair is spreading. You saw its results in Vienna. It runs
-ahead of them; they're already on the march. They've broken into Poland.
-They're drawing nearer. How to stop them----?”
-
-Hindwood's lips had squared themselves. “I can stop them. My food-trains
-will be here by tomorrow. What hungry men need is not political
-programs, but bread.” Then he added thoughtfully, “I can stop them, if
-I'm not prevented. There's some one who's playing a different game; he's
-some one who wants the world to starve. That's what Austria's refusal
-meant; that's the meaning of these secret signs of rejoicing. He's
-bigger than any nation. Who is he?”
-
-Varensky shook his head. “There was a man.” He looked knowingly at
-Santa. “He was drowned.”
-
-Hindwood jumped to his feet as though there was no time to be lost. “I'm
-going to find out. I have an appointment with the Governor of Hungary.
-If he rejects my offer, I shall demand----”
-
-“And if he refuses----?”
-
-“I shall play my winning-card. Don't ask me what it is. But if I play
-it, I shall need your help. You've talked of crucifixion: I may provide
-you with the chance. How many of these----?” He pointed to the sleeping
-outcasts.
-
-Varensky's eyes were shining. “I've four hundred: three hundred veterans
-of Denikin's and Kolchak's armies and a hundred girl-soldiers of the
-Battalions of Death.”
-
-“Have them warned.”
-
-As he turned on his heel, he saw that Anna had wakened. She cried out
-after him. He dared not face her. Leaping down the stairs, he went at a
-run across the courtyard. It was only when the door into the street had
-closed behind him, that he realized that Santa was panting at his elbow.
-
-
-VI
-
-
-Mists were clearing. The sun had emerged fiery above a mountain-range
-of clouds. As they hurried in search of their hotel, they caught
-glimpses of the Danube, spanned by many bridges, and on the further bank
-the palace-crowned heights of Buda. The ancient city looked imperially
-beautiful. There was a touch of the East about it, a lavishness and
-rose-tinted whiteness. Its quays and pavements shone wet, as though
-they had been daubed with lacquer. It seemed incredible that behind its
-gold-splashed walls the ghosts of hunger gathered.
-
-During their absence from the Ritz, a transformation had been effected.
-All signs of disorder had been banished. In place of the untimely
-Bacchanalians, stiff-bosomed waiters stood guard over neat tables with
-a solicitous air which was bewilderingly normal. Even the breakfast menu
-gave the lie to starvation.
-
-They took their seats in silence, eating without interest whatever was
-set before them. Hindwood's sensations were those of a man who has given
-way to his emotions at a theatre. It was as though the lights had
-gone up, shaming him in public. There had been nothing to warrant his
-surrender to sentiment. He totaled up the accumulated incentives: he
-had witnessed a street-riot, people slain at the frontier, the hideous
-contrast between the death train and dancing--and last of all Varensky.
-But these things in themselves constituted no argument; the cause that
-lay behind them was still conjectural. As for Varensky, whatever he had
-said was unreliable. His wish was parent to his thought. He was a man
-born to stir up turbulences, which he considered it his mission to
-pacify. He was dangerous as a forest-fire: one spark of his wild
-idealism made the whole world lurid. In the breath of adversity he
-became a sheet of flame, destructive and self-destroying. His goal was
-the vanishing-point, in the No Man's Land between desire and things
-attainable.
-
-Hindwood writhed at remembering the ease with which his judgment had
-been unseated. In his weakness he had given a promise, which it would
-be folly to fulfill and dishonorable to withdraw. He glanced across at
-Santa. How was she taking this return to normality?
-
-She met his eyes with passionate adoration. “It was god-like of you.”
-
-He pretended ignorance. “What?”
-
-“Your self-denial. You've given up everything--Anna, ambition,
-money--all the things you worship.”
-
-He assumed a judicial expression. “Perhaps not. It mayn't be necessary.”
-
-“But it will.”
-
-“If it is,” he said, “I shall stick to my contract. But I've reason to
-believe we've exaggerated.”
-
-“Would to God we had!”
-
-Her fervor disturbed him. He leaned across the table. “You don't mean
-to tell me you accept this bogey story about starving millions marching?
-There's a sense of security this morning. Surely you must have felt it?”
-
-She shook her head. “We've had a meal--that's all. Within a mile from
-here I could show you a hospital where five hundred babies sit shivering
-like monkeys. They're wrapped in paper; they've never known what it was
-not to be hungry from the day they were born. I could take you to the
-workmen's quarter, where naked men and women would squirm at your
-feet like dogs; they're too weak to walk. I could lead you past the
-bread-lines, already forming----”
-
-He stayed her by covering her hand. “I'm not denying it. When countries
-make wars they have to pay penalties.”
-
-The storm that was brewing betrayed itself in her eyes. “What are you
-denying?”
-
-“Don't let's make a scene,” he urged. “My promise holds if I find that
-circumstances warrant it. In a little while I'm seeing the Governor of
-Hungary; after that I'll be sure. While I'm gone, I have one request to
-make of you: keep your room and talk to nobody.”
-
-She rose from the table in suppressed defiance.
-
-“Why?”
-
-“For your own safety. It was lucky I slept across your threshold last
-night. Your door was tried.”
-
-Her smile accused him. “By whom?”
-
-“If I'm not mistaken, by the man who afterwards tracked us through the
-fog.”
-
-She turned away as though she were finished with him. When she found
-that he was following, she delivered a parting shot. “You told me this
-to frighten me. Did you think you could make me your accomplice in
-cowardice?”
-
-
-VII
-
-
-So these were the rewards of knight-errantry! In his anger he was
-glad to be rid of her. He was free at last. She'd been nothing but an
-embarrassment. If she were to attempt a reconciliation, he would turn
-his back on her. It wasn't likely that he'd put his neck into the same
-noose twice.
-
-Little by little from resenting her, he began to suspect her. Had she
-been using him as a cat's-paw in a deeper game? Every man with whom she
-had ever associated, she had destroyed; could she be expected, to show
-more mercy to a man by whom she had been rejected? Her husband's words
-came back: “When she has added you to her list of victims, if she gives
-you time before she kills you, remember that I warned you.”
-
-Everything to do with her became distorted when interpreted in the light
-of treachery. The pathos of her unrequited affection had been a mask;
-her humanitarianism had been a cloak for her designs. When he retraced
-his relations with her, it seemed glaringly probable that from the start
-she had been the agent of his financial rivals, placed by them on board
-the _Ryndam_ with the definite intention of accomplishing his ruin.
-Except for her final error in tactics, she would have attained her
-object. He had escaped by the narrowest of margins.
-
-But the other people who had come upon the scene, where did they stand?
-Were they her puppets, jumping whichever way she pulled the wires,
-or were they her active co-conspirators? Varensky and the Little
-Grandmother were undoubtedly her puppets; she employed their enthusiasms
-to serve her purposes. Anna was her victim--a woman wronged and cheated,
-infinitely dear to him and tragic. It was Captain Lajos who troubled
-him. The more he thought about him, the more certain he became that the
-Captain and Santa were hand in glove. The farce which they had enacted
-on the train had been prearranged with a view to intimidating him. His
-most unnerving information, concerning the menace of starving millions,
-had come from the Captain. And there was a further fact, which had been
-disquieting him all morning: it was Captain Lajos who had tried Santa's
-door last night.
-
-What did they think to gain by their plotting? Having pondered the
-conundrum, he decided that their object was to thwart his schemes for
-grasping world-power, and that the means they had chosen were to compel
-him to give for nothing the hoards of food which he had intended that
-Europe should buy.
-
-Well aware that this theory was far from covering all the facts, he was
-still feeling his way through a quagmire of surmise, when a visitor was
-announced. In the foyer he found an officer, resplendently uniformed,
-waiting to escort him to his audience at the Royal Palace. He
-was whizzed away in a handsome car. As he traveled, his companion
-entertained him with anecdotes, grimly humorous, of Bela Kun's reign of
-terror.
-
-“Experiments of that sort soon disprove themselves,” he said cheerfully.
-“We live through them and go on again.”
-
-“And your country is going on again?” Hindwood inquired.
-
-“Emphatically. Signs of revival are already apparent.”
-
-“But what about Russia? How's revival possible without security?”
-
-The officer laughed carelessly. “I catch your meaning; you've heard this
-latest about Bolshevism's downfall. In our part of the world we pay
-no heed to rumors; they're inventions of political opportunists or of
-gamblers in the international exchange. Even if this latest is true,
-it's the best thing that could have happened.”
-
-Hindwood twisted in his seat that he might lose nothing of his
-companion's expression. “The best thing in the long run--that's granted.
-But meanwhile, because of the breakdown in organization, over a hundred
-million Russians are likely to die.”
-
-Again the officer laughed, stretching his long legs. “The fittest will
-survive. One has to die somehow. The last war was fought because the
-world was too crowded. Famine's nature's cure for overpopulation.”
-
-The remark sounded singularly ill-timed, coming from a man whose country
-was also starving. Hindwood frowned. “A heartless cure and, thank
-goodness, not the only one.”
-
-“Not more heartless than civilized society's, which encourages armed
-nations to strangle each other with every filthy invention of science.
-When you forbid Nature to correct matters in her own way, sooner or
-later you find yourself with a war on your hands. The matter's very
-simple: so many mouths to fill and so many rations. When the mouths are
-in excess of the rations, some one has to go short. The people who are
-selected to go short can either drop in their tracks or fight. If they
-fight and win, the result's the same--some one else has to go without.
-The adjustment's automatic.”
-
-“The thought of death,” Hindwood suggested quietly, “especially of other
-people's death, doesn't seem to trouble you.”
-
-“That's natural. Killing and dying are my trade.”
-
-Brutal as was the point of view, after Santa's sentimental fallacies,
-there was something honest and direct about these bald assertions.
-
-Hindwood spoke again. “What applies to Russia, applies equally to
-Hungary. My errand at the Palace is to offer sufficient food to keep
-your country alive. According to your theory, I'm interfering with
-Nature's laws. I'm doing something economically immoral. I ought to
-leave you to your fate.”
-
-To his amazement he was met with a polite concurrence. “That's how I
-regard it.”
-
-It was impossible to credit the man's sincerity. Hindwood glanced aside,
-irritated and shocked. He was seeking a motive for such disinterested
-frankness. There was nothing more to say.
-
-He had been so much absorbed in the conversation that he had not noticed
-their direction. They were skimming high above the Danube, crossing a
-bridge that spanned the sunlit gulf in giant strides. Behind lay Pest,
-modern as a second Paris; in front lay Buda, ancient and scarcely
-Christian, still bearing the marks of its Turkish occupation. On
-reaching the further bank, the ascent to the Palace begun to climb.
-
-It was just as they were reaching the top that Hindwood was for a second
-time startled by the ghost of memory. Peering down on him from the
-ramparts, with its head between its paws, was a snow-white Russian
-wolf-hound. The next moment they had passed beneath an arch, between
-saluting sentries, and had halted in the Palace-yard.
-
-
-VIII
-
-
-The Yard was an immobile sea of faces. As far as eye could reach,
-soldiers were drawn up in close formation. It was clear that this was
-no ceremonial parade. The men were in full marching order; their
-field-kitchens were smoking in the background. They had the look of
-troops equipped for action, expecting to take the offensive at any
-moment. This much he saw as he was hurried into the Palace, before the
-great doors clanged behind him.
-
-He found himself on the threshold of a magnificence that he had not
-imagined existed. Everywhere his eyes rested, they encountered riches
-accumulated through the centuries. Pictures and tapestries gazed down on
-him from the walls, chronicling the glory of the bygone Hapsburgs. Suits
-of mail, gold-inlaid and gem-studded, stood like knights of old, leaning
-on their swords. He followed his escort up a marble staircase, along
-endless corridors, from which doors opened into silent apartments,
-giving yet fresh vistas of royal splendors.
-
-At last, in the far distance, the passage was blocked by a gigantic
-figure that might have escaped from Grand Opera; it stood so stiff
-and motionless that he mistook it for a wax-work. It was garbed as a
-halberdier, in parti-colored hose and shining armor. Only when the eyes
-moved did he realize that he was gazing at one of the Palace-guards.
-When the password had been given, they were allowed to slip behind
-a curtain. In the ante-room he was told to wait. His escort vanished
-through the inner-doors. A moment later the doors reopened and his
-escort beckoned.
-
-He was aware of a blaze of light, lofty walls, tall windows, a
-tapestried room ornately furnished and a treacherously polished expanse
-of floor. A man was rising from behind an ormolu table. He was a man
-utterly simple and modern--the last man one would have expected to find
-in the pomp of medieval surroundings. His face was clean-shaven, bluff
-and wind-tanned. In his navy-blue suit he looked more like a yachtsman
-than the Governor of a State.
-
-He was approaching with his hand outstretched. “I couldn't do less than
-receive you,” he was saying.
-
-The words, though spoken pleasantly, sounded like a dismissal.
-
-“Perhaps your Excellency has forgotten the purpose of my errand?”
-
-“Not in the least. Let's sit down; we can talk more informally. The
-trouble is that you've come too late. Crises as acute as ours have a
-knack of settling themselves.”
-
-Hindwood accepted a cigarette that was proffered. He took his time
-while he lit it. “Your solution is mustering in the Palace-yard. My
-food-supplies are no longer needed. Is that what you intend me to
-understand?”
-
-“Exactly.”
-
-“Your Excellency spoke just now of crises settling themselves. Did you
-mean that so many of your countrymen have died that at last there's
-sufficient food to go round?”
-
-“Far from it. Our shortage is greater than ever.”
-
-“I judged as much.” Hindwood tapped his ash casually. “I only arrived
-last night, but in the time I've been in Budapest I've seen the
-death-train, the bread-lines, the utter destitution. I've reason to
-believe that Bolshevism has collapsed and that millions of outcast
-Russians are marching. They're moving westward.”
-
-He paused, himself skeptical of the preposterous assertion he was about
-to make. Then he remembered the words he had learnt from Captain Lajos
-and repeated them like a lesson.
-
-“They're sweeping westward like a pestilence. They're loping like gaunt
-wolves. They're drawing nearer, like Death swinging his scythe. Poland
-will go down before them first. Its famished people will join them. Your
-turn will come next. The march will never halt till the empty bellies
-have been filled. They can't be filled till the whole of Europe has
-been swamped by revolution, unless----” He paused again, waiting for
-encouragement. When the steady gray eyes still regarded him attentively,
-he continued, “Unless I fill them.”
-
-“Or unless,” said his Excellency like a man commenting on the weather,
-“I destroy them.”
-
-There was a deep quiet. So Varensky had been a true prophet. It was the
-end of the world they were discussing--the end of truth, justice, mercy,
-everything that was kind.
-
-Across the silence a bugle-call spurted like a stream of blood.
-
-“You see my position?” his Excellency resumed reasonably. “If I buy from
-you, I prolong the agony; worse still, I run my country further into
-debt. If I give the call to arms, many of us will die; but it's better
-to die fighting than from hunger. Besides, in the topsy-turvydom of war,
-who knows, we may find ourselves arrayed on the winning side.” Hindwood
-was too stunned to think quickly. He was still refusing to believe the
-worst. “I miss your point. Would your Excellency mind explaining?”
-
-“My point's simple enough. The condition of Hungary and of the whole of
-Central Europe is due to two causes: the first that we made a world-war;
-the second that we lost it. The victors had a right to exact a penalty,
-but look at what they've done. We were exhausted; nevertheless, if
-they'd told us what we owed them, we'd have paid them. Instead of
-that, they cloaked revenge with idealism. They constituted themselves
-evangelists, fore-ordained to reform us. With their gospel of
-self-determination, they gave every racial hostility within our borders
-a voice. They carved us up into bickering factions, which they called
-nations, and bestowed on them the power to make themselves annoying
-behind new frontiers. They dipped their hands into our national
-resources and made gifts to their favorites. Transylvania was our
-granary; it went to Rumania. Bohemia was our coal-supply; the Czechs
-have it, Hungary is no longer self-supporting. We have our factories,
-but no fuel to run them; our skilled workmen, but no means of employing
-them. On every side we're fenced in by mushroom democracies drawing
-sustenance from what was once our body. The wrong they have done us
-is the motive of their hate. We European countries fall into three
-categories: the robbers, the receivers of stolen goods and the pillaged.
-There's no intercourse between us; confidence is at an end. Our currency
-has become worthless as the paper on which it's printed. There's no flow
-of trade. We each have too much of one commodity and none whatsoever of
-others--too many factories here, too much wheat there, too much coal in
-another place. We're rival storekeepers, overstocked in certain lines,
-who refuse to take down our shutters. If we could forget our quarrels
-and club together, we'd have all the means of life. We deserve our
-fate, you'll say. But no--it was the Allies' surgeons who carved us into
-impotence and on top of that imposed indemnities. We have nothing to
-eat, so we prefer to fight.”
-
-“But what do you gain by it?”
-
-His Excellency smiled. “Everything or nothing. We can't be worse off.
-The Russian menace may prove to be our salvation. The Red Terror has
-vanished; the Famine Terror has taken its place. If the starving hordes
-pouring westwards aren't halted, civilization will be blotted out by
-savagery. And who's to halt them? Not the Allies. Their common people
-are rebellious; they know that in the last war they were as much cheated
-and exploited as any of the enemy whom they routed. And not their
-politicians and profiteers; they're too bloated with their spoils. It's
-the story of Rome repeating itself. The obesity which follows victory
-has conquered the conquerors. Their fighting days are ended; they'll
-have to hire mercenaries. The only mercenaries available are the nations
-they have trampled. Hungary holds herself for hire at a price.”
-
-“What price?”
-
-“The restoration of her old frontiers.”
-
-Hindwood spoke eagerly. “No one shall die. We've had enough of dying. I
-have a better solution--bread. My food-trains should be arriving tonight
-or to-morrow. I wired for them before I left Vienna. I'll build a wall
-of bread from the Black Sea to the Baltic.”
-
-“And who'll pay you?”
-
-“No one.”
-
-The answer had been totally unexpected. His Excellency glanced sharply
-across his shoulder as though seeking advice. Hindwood followed his
-direction and saw to his amazement that the tapestry, hanging behind the
-ormolu table, was agitated. Throughout the interview an unseen audience
-had been present. His Excellency turned back.
-
-“You shall neither give nor sell. I may admire your humanity, but in
-Hungary I forbid you to build what you so picturesquely call your wall
-of bread. Austria, as I know, has already refused you; in Poland you
-will receive the same answer. Things have advanced too far for there
-to be any harm in telling you; moreover, I owe it to you to be frank.
-I represent a class which the democracy of the Allies has totally
-disinherited--the class of the landed gentry and the old nobility.
-However matters might improve in our respective countries, our lot would
-be in no way benefited. The Peace of the Allies uprooted aristocracy
-and planted in its stead a raw Republicanism. The estates of men like
-myself, whether Austrian, Polish, Russian or Hungarian, have been in
-our families for centuries. They were grants from Kings for loyalty
-and services. Now that our Kings have been sent into exile, our entire
-status is in jeopardy. Our rank and privileges have become a jest.
-To-morrow or the next day, where it has not happened already, we shall
-join our Kings in banishment; our wealth will be confiscated. The excuse
-of a new war is the chance of European Monarchists. Banded together, we
-may snatch back our authority and set up the thrones which the Allies
-have toppled. So long as the people starve, they will follow us.
-Monarchy is the symbol of their lost contentment; they'll fight for
-it if we make its restoration their battle-cry. But if once we were to
-allow you to give them bread----”
-
-Hindwood sprang to his feet. The time had come to play his winning-card.
-“They would lay down their arms,” he cried triumphantly. “They shall lay
-them down. By to-morrow they shall be fed.”
-
-Again the tapestry rustled. For a moment it seemed that some one was
-about to disclose himself. Then all grew quiet.
-
-“I have given you your answer,” said his Excellency.
-
-Hindwood laughed. “And I can force your hand. I shall appeal to the
-people over your head.”
-
-Without further ceremony, he swung round on his heel and departed.
-
-On regaining the hotel he went in search of Santa. She was not there.
-He betook himself to her room to await her coming. One hour, two hours
-slipped by. He began to be anxious. In the appearance of the room there
-was nothing to distress him; all her belongings were intact. When he
-made inquiries of the hotel staff, they professed entire ignorance of
-her whereabouts.
-
-Apart from the concern he felt for her safety, she was utterly essential
-to his plans. It was necessary that he should get in touch with
-Varensky; without Varensky and his four hundred veterans he was
-helpless. When his food-trains arrived, he would need them. He made
-repeated efforts to rediscover the mildewed barracks; every time he
-missed his direction. For fear of spies, he did not dare to ask; he
-remembered Santa's warning, that to be seen with Varensky meant death.
-Day faded. Darkness fell. She had not returned.
-
-It was nearing midnight when word reached him that the first of his
-trains was in the freight-yard. It had been given the right of way from
-Holland and had been rushed straight through under an armed guard. He
-was powerless to turn the information to account. Wearied with anxiety,
-he had begun to prepare for bed, when, without knocking, the door was
-burst open. Captain Lajos entered. His face was haggard. He was fierce
-and breathless.
-
-“You've heard?”
-
-“I've heard nothing.”
-
-“She's been captured.”
-
-“By whom?”
-
-“Prince Rogovich.”
-
-Hindwood clapped his hand to his forehead. Either he or this man was
-mad.
-
-“It's impossible. Rogovich is dead.”
-
-“And I tell you he's at the Palace. He was there behind the tapestry
-this morning. She's with him now and he's torturing her.”
-
-“Then why are you here, if you care for her so much?”
-
-“That you may help me rescue her.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER THE EIGHTH--THE VANISHING POINT
-
-
-I
-
-
-SPURRED into haste by the Captain's air of calamity. Hindwood had
-commenced to dress. During the few minutes that it took him to hurry
-into his clothes he thought furiously: with the result that by the time
-he was clad for departure, he seated himself obstinately on the edge
-of the bed. Meanwhile, in the belief that he was being followed, the
-Captain had led the way into the passage. He had now returned and stood
-filling the doorway, a turbulent figure in his gorgeous uniform of the
-Royal Hussars.
-
-“There's no time to lose.” he rapped out.
-
-Hindwood eyed him calmly. “If you were sent to execute me, you can do it
-here as conveniently as anywhere else.”
-
-The sheer amazement which greeted this accusation seemed to disprove its
-accuracy. The Captain answered scornfully:
-
-“What devil of contrariness has put that thought into your head? If my
-errand were known, it would be I who would be executed. She's in love
-with you--that's why I sought you. It's the fact that you're my rival in
-her affections that makes you the one man in Budapest whom I can trust.
-There'll be bloodshed----”
-
-“Go slower,” Hindwood interrupted. “Put yourself in my place. You know
-too much--far more than seems healthy. You know that this morning when I
-was with the Governor, there was an unseen listener behind the tapestry.
-You assert, that he was a man whom all the world believes to be dead. If
-you'll think back to our journey from Calais, you'll remember that
-the reason for his having been murdered formed your chief topic of
-conversation. Seeing that you know so much, you're probably aware that
-my interview with the Governor ended in a threat. To make that threat
-effective, the cooperation of the woman whom you first supposed to be
-my wife and afterwards discovered to be my secretary is absolutely
-necessary. On my return from the Palace she had vanished. Here again,
-you pretend to know more than I do; at close on midnight you come
-bursting into my room, demanding that I accompany you to her rescue.”
-
-The Captain stared dully. “Every second counts. What is it that you wish
-me to tell?”
-
-“Why you've hung on my trail from Calais until now.”
-
-“Eh!” His expression became embarrassed; then he raised his head with a
-fearless gesture. “I see what you're driving at. I acknowledge that my
-movements are open to misinterpretation. But I didn't follow you; it
-was she whom I followed. As I told you in our first conversation, I was
-returning from England where I'd been sent by my Government to intercept
-Prince Rogovich with important despatches. The moment I clapped my
-eyes on your traveling companion, I recognized in her a startling
-resemblance; it was to a woman I had adored. She was far beyond me--the
-mistress of archdukes and for a brief while of an emperor. The nearest
-I ever came to touching her was when I was swept by her train at Court
-functions.” He paused dramatically. “During the war she was shot by the
-enemies of my country. Infamous things were said of her. If they were
-true, they would make no difference to my love. No difference, do you
-understand?” Again he paused. “What else?”
-
-Hindwood narrowed his eyes. “Each time I've met you, you've harped on
-the same theme--Prince Rogovich. Up to now I've not thought it necessary
-to tell you: I knew this Prince Rogovich. Besides myself, there was
-probably only one other person who spoke with him before his end. What
-makes you so certain that it was a man, presumed to have been drowned
-in the English Channel, who spied on me this morning from behind the
-tapestry?”
-
-“I was beside him. I'm his bodyguard--if you like, his secretary. I've
-just come from him. Can you have stronger proof than that?” Suddenly
-the Captain's patience broke down. “How many more questions? God knows
-what's happening.”
-
-Hindwood had risen. “There are several. Why did he disappear?”
-
-“He has not said.”
-
-“What makes you require my help to rescue her?”
-
-“He may kill me. It's not likely he'll kill both of us.”
-
-“What's his motive?” Hindwood spoke more slowly. All his suspicion was
-emphasized in his words. “What's his motive for kidnaping this woman who
-resembles----”
-
-“How can I tell?” The Captain was desperate. “We talk and talk while
-time passes. I suppose his interest is the same in this woman as in all
-women. Perhaps he was the discarded lover of that other woman, and, like
-myself, has noticed the resemblance.”
-
-Hindwood picked up his hat. “I'm coming.”
-
-“Are you armed?”
-
-“Not in your sense. I shall fight with a different sort of weapon.”
-
-
-II
-
-
-At the door a closed vehicle was standing. To Hindwood it seemed the
-one that had flashed by him on the previous evening. He glanced between
-the wheels; there was no Russian wolf-hound. Even before he was seated,
-the lash had been laid across the horses' backs. The next moment they
-were galloping down the gloomy street. Leaning from the window, the
-Captain was urging the coachman to drive faster.
-
-When the pace had settled to a rapid trot, Hind-wood broke the silence.
-
-“You're an Hungarian officer; Prince Rogovich is a Polish statesman.
-You tell me you're his secretary. What's a Polish statesman doing in the
-Royal Palace, directing Hungary's affairs?”
-
-“It isn't Hungary's affairs that he's directing; it's the campaign
-against Democracy. The present crisis has made Budapest the jumping-off
-point for the offensive which the Monarchists have been waiting to
-launch. The Monarchists are men of every country, who have sunk their
-nationalities and made a common cause.”
-
-“And you--are you a Monarchist?”
-
-His reply came muffled. “I was. To-night I'm a traitor.”
-
-The horses, thrown sharply back on their haunches, swerved toward the
-pavement; the carriage jerked to a halt. Almost brushing the wheels in
-the narrow street, a column of soldiers shuffled past. Their rifles
-were slung at all angles. Their shoulders were bowed beneath their
-heavy packs. They crawled weakly, more like stragglers retreating than
-storm-troops advancing. Even in the darkness their bones showed pointed
-and their faces lean with famine.
-
-“Reservists,” the Captain explained shortly. “Mobilization has begun.”
-
-Hindwood strained through the gloom, touching his arm excitedly.
-“Starving men being sent to kill men who are more starving. You've
-spoken of a woman you adored--a woman who was shot for hideous
-treacheries. Her treacheries were committed to prevent just such crimes
-as that. Don't interrupt me--not yet. You've expected me to believe an
-impossible story: that a man can return from the dead. If I were to tell
-you an equally improbable story, what difference would it make to your
-love? If I were to tell you that the resemblance was not mistaken
-and that the woman at the Palace is the same as she who was reported
-executed in the woods of Vincennes?”
-
-The last of the column had slouched into the blackness. The horses leapt
-forward impatiently.
-
-The question was repeated. “What difference?”
-
-The Captain's voice burst from him. “God forgive me--none.”
-
-Neither of them dared to trust the other. Their respite was growing
-shorter. They had crossed the bridge above the Danube. In a moment the
-ascent to the Palace would commence. It was Hindwood who decided on
-boldness. If he were walking into an ambush, he could not make matters
-worse.
-
-He said, “Weapons will be useless. Only to kill the Prince won't save
-her. If we manage to escape from the Palace, the streets are full of
-armed men. We should only rescue her to die with her. I have a plan.
-Do you know the barracks of the Russian refugees? If I were to write a
-note, would you guarantee to have it delivered?”
-
-By the light of matches held by the Captain, he scrawled rapidly. The
-last sentence read, “If you have not heard from me again by 2 A. M.,
-consider that the worst has happened and carry out these instructions.”
- He addressed the note to, “_The Husband of Anna_.”
-
-“Have it entrusted to a man who cannot read English.” The Captain
-extinguished the final match.
-
-“I shall send it by the driver of this carriage.”
-
-
-III
-
-
-They had alighted some distance short of the gateway where the sentries
-would be on guard. The message for Varensky had been handed over. The
-horses had been wheeled about; save for their trotting growing fainter
-down the slope, the night was without a sound. The moon shone fitfully.
-Stars were obscured. The city out of which they had climbed lay
-pulseless in an unillumined pit of blackness. The Palace, piled high
-above them, loomed sepulchral.
-
-The Captain groped his way beneath the wall of the ramparts, searching
-for something which at last he found. It pushed inwards at his touch.
-The door closed behind them.
-
-In the intenser darkness Hindwood stretched out his hands. They
-encountered the rough surface of clammy masonry. He was in some sort of
-a tunnel. The floor sloped gradually upwards. The atmosphere smelt dank.
-He spoke. Getting no answer, he held his breath. Going away from him he
-heard the stealthy hurrying of the Captain's footfall. Rather than be
-left, perhaps to be forgotten, he started forward at a blundering run.
-He came to steps. He was prepared to be attacked. It might be here that
-he would be hurled back. He climbed them almost on all fours, steadying
-himself with his hands. It seemed to him that he had been ascending for
-hours, when he heard footsteps returning. A match was struck; he saw the
-Captain staring down at him.
-
-“We're in time.” The match went out.
-
-“Catch hold of me. Tread softly.”
-
-They passed through another door. The air was growing warmer. It was
-evident that they were traversing a secret passage which wound within
-the Palace walls. At a turn they heard a muttering of voices. The
-Captain whispered, “Do nothing till I give the word.”
-
-They approached more cautiously to where a needle of light stabbed the
-darkness. Hindwood caught the fragrance of tobacco smoke. As he stooped
-to the spy-hole, a purring voice commenced speaking almost at his elbow,
-“My dear lady, you're mine--a fact which you don't seem to realize. I
-have only to press this button, which summons my attendants; I can snuff
-out your life with as little effort as I flick this ash.”
-
-He found himself peering into a room, furnished with oriental
-lavishness. He had a confused glimpse of beaten brass-work, shaded
-lamps, low tables, cushions piled about in place of chairs. It was a
-blaze of color. At the far end was a gilded throne and bound to it was
-Santa. Her hands were tightly corded. Her ankles were lashed so that she
-could not stir. Her face was pale as ivory. Only her eyes seemed alive;
-they flashed indomitably. Pacing up and down, never shifting his gaze
-from hers, was the black-bearded man who had disappeared from the
-_Ryndam_.
-
-She spoke defiantly. “Summon your attendants. Do you think I fear
-death?”
-
-“I know you don't, dear lady. That's why I've invented a more subtle
-revenge. If I were an ordinary man, I should detest the very sight of
-you; whereas, so magnanimous am I, that your attempt to murder me
-has added a novel piquancy to your fascination. I have been too much
-loved--too spontaneously, too adoringly. You afford me a contrast. I
-intend to keep you caged like a lioness. The hatred in your eyes will
-spur my affection. Always, even when I caress you, I shall have to be
-on my guard. Our courtship will be a perpetual adventure. The goal of
-desire will be forever out of grasp, yet forever within handstretch.”
-
-He stroked his black beard thoughtfully. “With you I shall never know
-satiety. This continual hoping will keep me young. You, my dear, will
-be my secret source of romance. Every day I shall take you down, as one
-takes down a volume, and turn your latest pages which I alone may scan.”
-
-She strained at her bonds. “It will be no romance.”
-
-He smiled with terrifying quietness.
-
-“Your value to me,” he continued in his purring voice, “is that you've
-cost me so much. Ugh! Every time I look at you I remember how it felt
-when I sank and sank. When I rose above the waves, I saw your lights,
-streaking like a golden snake into the blackness. I struck out after you
-hopelessly. I shouted. Then I found myself alone, with no one to
-take pity on me and not one chance in a million of being rescued. The
-millionth chance arrived.” He stooped at her feet, kissing her tortured
-hands. “And here we are met, under these auspicious circumstances,
-carrying on this pleasant conversation. What were you doing while I
-was drowning? Making love beneath the stars to your infatuated
-American--leaning on his arm, perhaps, warmly wrapped in your sables?
-And I was so cold! Did you give me a thought, I wonder?”
-
-She stared past him like a woman frozen. “Let me know the worst.”
-
-Tapping her cheek with pretended kindness, he resumed his pacing.
-
-“Why the worst? Is that flattering, when I've spoken of our courtship?
-We're well matched in wickedness, if in nothing else. You're wanted for
-the scaffold, whereas I should have been hung long ago if I'd received
-my deserts. I'd be interested to know what you'd do, if you were in my
-place. How much mercy would you show me? You must own that merely to
-kill a person who has tried to drown you is too brief a punishment. The
-punishment I've planned for you is one that'll make you pray every hour
-for extinction. For a woman who has dispensed annihilation so lavishly
-I can think of nothing more just than that, when her own life has become
-intolerable, she should be refused the boon of death.”
-
-She spoke humbly. “There's nothing too bad that you can do to me. But
-I'm not the woman who tried to murder you. I'm changed. I've learnt
-something. I learnt it from a man.”
-
-He bowed towards her mockingly. “Your American?”
-
-“My American, who can never be mine. I've learnt that even when we don't
-acknowledge Him, there's a God in the world who acts through us. It was
-He who saved me from the woods of Vincennes. It was He who prevented you
-from drowning. He had some purpose--a divine moment for which He waited.
-That purpose has yet to be accomplished. Who are you or I----?”
-
-“I can tell you who you are,” he snapped: “a dancing-woman, with a price
-upon your head. As for myself,” his pale face flooded with a strangely
-Satanic beauty, “it would puzzle the wisest man to say who I am.
-To-night I am Prince Rogovich; tomorrow I may be Emperor. My puppets are
-mustering. By dawn they'll be marching. They're hungry; victory to them
-means bread.”
-
-“But if one were to feed them--?”
-
-“Your American again!” He gazed down on her, showing his white teeth
-and laughing. “What faith you have in the man! If your American is God's
-unaccomplished purpose, then God and all His angels are thwarted. The
-messenger I have sent to execute him will not fail; he has good reason
-to hate him. He's his rival for your affections. You were the bribe I
-offered him. You may rest assured the Captain's work will be done well.
-His turn comes next.”
-
-Jerking back her head, he stooped lower, drinking in her despair.
-“Millionth chances come once, if then. Yours came at Vincennes. Cease
-hoping. Your American is----”
-
-“It's a lie.”
-
-Hindwood felt himself flung violently back. The wall turned inwards.
-There was a report--then silence.
-
-
-IV
-
-
-The Prince had pitched forward with his head in Santa's lap. His hands
-were clawing at her gown. As he struggled, he stiffened and slid back,
-till he lay across her feet, grinning up at her. The Captain, his
-revolver still smoking in his hand, threw himself to his knees, feeling
-for his victim's heart. He spoke dully.
-
-“The dream of Monarchy is ended.”
-
-The quietness was broken by a distant clamor. Momentarily it gathered
-volume and drew nearer.
-
-Throughout the Palace, which had seemed so wrapt in sleep, feet
-were running. From the Palace-yard rose the clatter of arms and the
-impatience of orders being shouted. On the door of the chamber an
-importunate tapping had commenced.
-
-Hindwood looked up in the midst of freeing Santa. “They'll beat in the
-panels. Find out what they want.”
-
-The Captain dragged himself to the door which he did not dare to open. A
-rapid exchange of Hungarian followed. As Santa tottered to her feet with
-the last cord severed, the Captain tiptoed back.
-
-“Escape by the passage. The shot was heard. They insist on seeing Prince
-Rogovich.”
-
-“To be butchered in the streets! I guess not.” Hindwood shook his head.
-“Escape does not lie in that direction. They shall see _him_. In ten
-minutes. At the window. Tell them.”
-
-The Captain stood aghast, pointing down at the glazing eyes of the man
-he had murdered. “They can't.”
-
-“I say they can.”
-
-The answer was delivered. The tapping ceased abruptly.
-
-“Hang on to your nerves.” Hindwood crouched above the body, dragging it
-into a sitting posture. “We've exactly ten minutes to make it look like
-a man who hopes to become an emperor. The peace of the world may depend
-on it.” He turned to the Captain. “You who were his bodyguard, how would
-he have dressed if his ambition had been granted?”
-
-Too pale for speech, the Captain moved towards a chest; with trembling
-hands he drew forth a purple robe, ermine-lined and gold-woven with
-mythical beasts of heraldry. Dipping deeper, he laid beside it a scepter
-and an iron crown of twisted laurels.
-
-Hindwood smiled grimly. “So the scene had been rehearsed! How do these
-things go? You must help me put them on him.”
-
-When the Prince had been arrayed, “Now the throne,” he ordered. “It'll
-take the three of us to move it.”
-
-The gilded throne had been hauled from its alcove, so as to face the
-window. The dead man, in the tinsel of his dreams, had been seated on
-it. He was bound, to prevent him from lolling--bound with the cords with
-which he himself had secured Santa. His gold-encrusted robe was spread
-about him. Across his knees, with his right hand resting on it, was the
-scepter. On his head was the iron crown of laurels.
-
-“The lamps! Place them at his feet. Switch on all the lights, then
-vanish.”
-
-The curtains were flung back. A dazzling shaft pierced the outer
-darkness. There was a breathless silence as of worship; a superstitious
-rustling; a deafening acclamation, which echoed and roared about the
-Palace-yard.
-
-[Illustration: 0338]
-
-It continued unabated for a full five minutes. It sagged and sank. Again
-it mounted. Then it paused expectant. It was for all the world like a
-triumph at the opera, when a singer only bows and an encore is demanded.
-It recommenced. This time there was a note of anger.
-
-The dead man grinned down at the applauding mob. He gave no sign to
-these men, prepared to die for him. Slowly it seemed to dawn on them
-that he did not care--that he had never cared for their wounds and
-hunger; that for men of his sort they were only beasts; that it made no
-difference whether they were conquered or victorious; he would sit there
-as all the kings and emperors before him, secure and immobile, sneering
-at their sacrifices and coining their sufferings into profit.
-
-They found contempt in his vacant stare; cruelty in his marble hands
-that clutched the scepter. Gesticulating and cursing, they hurled
-reproaches at him. They trampled the officers who tried to quell them.
-Shots were exchanged. Pandemonium was commencing.
-
-Hindwood consulted his watch. It lacked but a few minutes till two
-o'clock. If he could hold the garrison in confusion, Varensky would have
-time to seize his chance.
-
-He turned to the Captain behind the curtain where they watched. “What is
-it they want?”
-
-“It was some acknowledgment at first; then a speech; now it's bread.
-Can't you hear them, 'Bread! Bread! Or we do not march.'”
-
-At that moment the hammering on the outer door re-started. Hindwood
-seized the Captain's arm. “You must speak to them; they wouldn't
-understand me. You're in uniform. There's Santa. If you don't all is
-lost.”
-
-“What shall I tell them?”
-
-“Anything. Speak to them as the mouthpiece of Prince Rogovich. Say
-there's food in the freight-yards--two train-loads of it--and more
-arriving; that soon the warehouses of Budapest will be bulging.”
-
-The Captain stepped forward, an heroic figure. Just as he appeared in
-the oblong of the window--whether it was the sight of his uniform that
-provoked the storm was not certain--a volley of bullets shattered the
-glass. He clapped his hand to his forehead. There was a second volley.
-The room was plunged in darkness. Hindwood darted forward. The pounding
-on the outer-door grew frantic. In the Palace-yard there was the silence
-of horror.
-
-Released by the knife of flying lead, the body of the Prince had doubled
-forward, as though to peer down at the man who had betrayed him. The
-Captain was beyond all help.
-
-As Hindwood leapt back in search of Santa, the door went down with a
-crash. In a second the darkness was filled to overflowing--halberdiers,
-Palace servants, wild-eyed officials. In the confusion he caught her
-hand and escaped unnoticed through the pressing throng. As they hurried
-through salons hung with priceless treasures, looting had started. The
-first of the mob were ruthlessly at work. At the foot of the marble
-staircase he glanced at his watch. “It's exactly two o'clock,” he
-murmured.
-
-
-V
-
-
-They had passed beneath the gateway where sentries should have
-challenged. Their posts were deserted. As they struck the road,
-descending beneath the ramparts, Santa questioned, “Why did you say,
-'It's exactly two o'clock'?”
-
-“Because of a note I sent Varensky.” He changed the subject. “How were
-you captured?”
-
-She hesitated. “It was after we'd quarreled. I was afraid I'd lost you.
-A messenger arrived, saying you were with the Governor and wanted me. It
-was a lie; the person who wanted me was Prince Rogovich.”
-
-“Then Lajos betrayed you?”
-
-“No. He knew nothing of what happened on the _Ryndam_. He was infatuated
-with me and must have talked.” She clutched his arm. “You're putting me
-off. You said so strangely, 'It's exactly two o'clock.' What was in your
-note to Varensky?” For answer he halted and pointed.
-
-Far below in the gulf of blackness, where a moment ago there had seemed
-to be nothing, life had begun to quicken. In the flash of multitudinous
-street-lamps, a city was being born. It kindled in vivid strokes, like
-veins of fire etched on the pavement of the night. As though an artist
-were completing his design, ten thousand windows opened their pin-point
-eyes, filling in blank spaces with rapid specks of gold. Seen from such
-a height, the effect was in miniature. The very sounds which rose up
-were little. At first they were no more than a sustained humming, as
-when a hive is about to swarm. They swelled to a melodious muttering.
-Then, with a rush of ecstasy, the storm of joy broke; the air pulsated
-with the maddening clash of chimes.
-
-She was clinging to him. “What is it? Is it the thing for which we've
-hoped?”
-
-He glanced back across his shoulder at the huge pile, towering on the
-rock above him. Those madmen up there, destroying and pillaging, had
-they time to hear it? The Palace was glowing like a furnace. As he
-watched, a column of flame shot tall towards the sky.
-
-Seizing her hand, he broke into a run, making all the haste he could
-down the steep decline. Behind them the flames crept like serpents,
-licking the clouds and mounting higher. The heat was like the breath of
-a pursuer. Night had become vivid as day. There was no concealment. The
-crest of the ramparts was a gigantic torch. The Danube far below was
-stained red as wine. Their very shadows were lurid. And still the bells
-across the river pealed out their joy.
-
-There was a galloping. Riderless horses, broken loose from the stables,
-thundered by. Then an automobile, driven by a man with a seared and
-wounded face. Others followed. The crowd on foot, fleeing from its
-handiwork, was not far behind. As an empty car, with an officer at the
-wheel, slowed down at a hairpin bend, Santa and he leapt aboard.
-
-The danger was outdistanced. They had crossed the Danube. They were
-scarcely likely now to be implicated in what had happened to Prince
-Rogo-vich. But they were still at the mercy of their reckless driver. In
-his panic he had not once looked around; he was unaware that he carried
-passengers. Hindwood knew very clearly where he wanted to go; it was
-probably the last place to which he would be taken. The streets of Pest
-near the river were solitary, but somewhere the mob was gathering. It
-might prove awkward to be found in the company of a uniformed Monarchist
-who was escaping.
-
-Having formulated his plan, he whispered it to Santa. “While I tackle
-him, you grasp the wheel.” Leaning forward, he flung his arm about
-the man's neck, jerking him backwards. The car swerved and mounted the
-pavement. Santa turned it into the road again. Taken by surprise, the
-man offered small resistance; the struggle was short. Hindwood toppled
-him out, climbed into the front seat and took his place.
-
-“The station. Where is it?” he asked breathlessly. She glanced at
-him with a revival of her old suspicion. “We're not leaving. Why the
-station?” He could have laughed. “Still the old, distrustful Santa!
-Little fool--the food-trains.”
-
-The first streets which they traversed were deserted; yet lamps were
-lighted and the air was clamorous with belfry-music. As they drew
-further into the city, they shot past groups and isolated individuals,
-crawling in the same direction. For the most part they were the kind of
-persons Santa had offered to show him that morning--people in rags or
-entirely stark, who hobbled from weakness or dragged themselves on all
-fours like dogs. It was as though the dead were rising from their graves
-to follow the Pied Piper of the Resurrection.
-
-They came to a square, where soldiers had been concentrated. Their
-packs and rifles littered the open space; the soldiers themselves had
-vanished.
-
-The traffic grew dense. It was all on foot. Hind-wood turned to Santa,
-“We shall make better time if we leave the car.”
-
-As they mingled with the crowd, he had a nightmare sensation of
-unreality. He had never rubbed shoulders with so many human beings
-so nearly naked. They themselves seemed to regard their conditions as
-normal. It was he who was odd. Their legs were mere poles; their arms
-laths. Their heads were misshapen like deflated footballs. With panting
-persistence they padded forward, too frail to be anything but orderly.
-The air was full of an earthy fragrance. Their bodies were clammy to the
-touch. He could push them aside like shadows. The hair was brittle as
-withered moss.
-
-It was the fashionable quarter of Budapest. Great arc-lights shone down
-on this flowing river of gray flesh. Behind plate-glass windows
-luxuries were displayed for the temptation of the bargain-snatching
-foreigner--feathers and furs, jewels and laces. Past them, with eyes
-enfevered by starvation, stole the noiseless populace. There was a woman
-whose sole clothing was a rag about her neck; she continued to live in
-Hindwood's imagination long after the sight of her was gone. And still,
-with thunderous merriment, the bells above the city pealed on.
-
-At a turn they came to the station. Further progress was blocked.
-Exerting his strength against the weakness of the mob, Hindwood edged
-his way forward. When he could go no farther, he swung round on Santa.
-“Tell them that I own the food-trains and that I'm going to get them
-bread.”
-
-She had no sooner uttered her translation than a lane was cleared. As
-he passed, he was aware that parched lips stooped to kiss his hands,
-his garments, the very ground that he trod. He shuddered. The indecent
-self-abasement of such necessity inflamed his indignation. Ahead a
-cordon was drawn across the road. It was composed of Russian refugees.
-He recognized them by their baggy blouses and by the short-haired women
-of the Battalions of Death. From the tail of a wagon an orator was
-speechifying. His head was peaked like a dunce's cap. Beside him stood a
-woman, white as a lily with hair the color of raw gold.
-
-Hindwood caught Santa's arm. “For heaven's sake, what's he saying?”
-
-“What he always says on such occasions. He's preaching his gospel of
-non-resistance and promising to die for them.”
-
-“Who cares for whom he dies, when bellies are empty and bodies are
-naked? Tell them I'll clothe them and give them bread.”
-
-As she translated what he had said, a cry went up which drowned
-Varensky. He found himself in the open space, clambering up to the wagon
-and dragging Santa up beside him. There was a deep silence.
-
-“Tell them,” he commanded, “that starvation is ended. I'll feed them
-on one condition: that they refuse to fight. Tell them I'll drive the
-Russian menace back without a single shot being fired. Tell them that
-I promise, on my honor as an American, to feed them all. Though
-food-trains are exhausted to-night, more will arrive to-morrow. More and
-more.”
-
-He paused, blinded with emotion at sight of the forest of thin hands
-strained up to him. Shooting out his fist tremendously, he threatened.
-“And tell them that I won't feed a jack one of them, if there's another
-man, woman or child slaughtered, or a hint of rioting.”
-
-
-VI
-
-
-He had kept his word; as far as Hungary was concerned, every living
-soul had been nourished. For seven days and nights, sleeping only at odd
-intervals, he had sat in the barracks of the Russian refugees with the
-map of Europe staring down on him from the wall. Wherever a food-train
-had been despatched, the place had been marked by a little red flag. He
-had had a wireless-apparatus installed; from that bare room, heavy with
-mildew, he had sent out his S. O. S. calls to humanity. He had begged,
-threatened, argued, commanded until at last he knew that he had won
-his cause. What he did not know was that his own example had proved
-more convincing than many words. The simple drama of his personal
-conversion--that he should be giving what he had come to sell--had
-stirred men's consciences. It had given him the right to talk. Where
-once troops would have been hurried, food was being pushed forward.
-It was an experiment alarmingly novel; but his phrase caught on,
-“The Barricade of Bread.” It had been flashed across five continents.
-Wherever the printed word had power, it had kindled men's imaginations.
-By a world war-wrecked, confronted by yet another war, it had been
-hailed as the strategy that would end all wars.
-
-Loaf by loaf, sack by sack the barricade was rising. Those little red
-flags, pinned on the map, marked its progress. It was deepening and
-spreading in a flanking movement, just as formerly army corps had massed
-for offensives. Soon the barricade would be complete; it would stretch
-in an unbroken line from the Dardanelles to the Baltic. There would be
-fighting, probably to the east of Poland, where the Monarchists were
-marching in a forlorn attempt to defeat the famished hordes. That could
-not be prevented. But by the time the outcasts struck his main defense,
-he would be in a position to halt them.
-
-It was only now, when the situation was in hand, that he had leisure
-to realize what he had been doing. He was filled with depression in his
-hour of triumph. It was long past midnight. He felt gray and spent. The
-barracks were as quiet as a morgue. He wondered why; they had been so
-crowded with derelicts of valiant armies, men and girls, who, having
-failed to save Russia with the rifle, had been preparing to rescue her
-with knowledge. Then he recalled. He had sent them all away. They
-had been the new kind of soldier, by whose sacrifice his ideal had
-conquered. He saw again their uplifted faces, as he had summoned them
-one by one and ordered them on their perilous journeys. Wherever a red
-flag was pinned on the map, one of those derelicts was in command. The
-“Little Grandmother,” she had been the last. Beside himself and his
-wireless operators, there could be no one left except Varensky, Santa
-and Anna.
-
-He glanced at the window. It was a square of jet. During the early
-days and nights it had framed a heart of fire, where the Palace had
-smouldered on the heights of Buda. Like a subsided volcano, the Palace
-had burned itself out. It was as though the fury of his life were ended.
-He bowed his head in his arms, striving to reconjure what had happened.
-
-Flitting about the room, with his strangely catlike tread, Varensky had
-been forever entering and exiting. He had been his second self, silent
-and agile, anticipating his plans without a word spoken. It was Varensky
-who had marshaled his exiled compatriots and placed their services at
-his disposal. It was Varensky who had warned him of the strategic points
-where the barricade must be strengthened. It had been always Varensky
-to whom he had turned for advice and courage when things were darkest.
-Without Varensky he could have accomplished nothing. And yet it was
-Varensky whom he had dethroned. This should have been his moment. He had
-shouted him down, snatched control from him and earned the credit.
-The self-effacement of one whom he had despised as an egoist made him
-humble. In a rush of tenderness he discovered that he loved him. The
-peaked head was forgotten, and the face scared white as if it had seen a
-ghost. The timidity of his appearance no longer counted; the thing
-that mattered was the spirit, resolute and shining as a sword, that hid
-within the scabbard of the grotesque body.
-
-And now that he remembered, there had been grief in his green eyes--the
-grief of a man who had been cheated. Once again Varensky had drawn him
-near to Calvary; the chance to die had been stolen from him.
-
-And Anna--he could not guess how she felt or what she thought. In all
-those seven days and nights it seemed as though she had never looked at
-him. She had moved about him like a nun, ministering to his wants with
-her gaze averted. Vaguely he was aware that to him she was not what she
-appeared to others. The old legend had been revived; again, as in St.
-Petersburg after the fall of Czardom, wherever she passed people knelt.
-To him she was no saint; his desire was too human.
-
-Watching the three of them with sphinxlike wisdom, there had been Santa,
-her womanhood clamorous and ignored. What had she made of it? Had she
-found material for humor in their temporary heroism?
-
-And so he came back to his first question--what had he been doing? In
-constructing the barricade of bread, he had been preventing Varensky
-from dying; in preventing Varensky from dying, he had been raising a
-barricade between himself and Anna. Having bankrupted his pocket, he had
-bankrupted his heart. In spite of warnings, he had gone in search of the
-vanishing point, where the parallel rails of possibility and desire seem
-to join--the point at which, to quote Varensky's words, “The safety of
-the journey ends.” It was the goal of every man who wrecks himself in
-the hope that he may save a world.
-
-How long had he been sitting there brooding? He was cold. The square
-of window had turned from jet to gray. Furtively he glanced behind him.
-Anna was gazing down on him.
-
-
-VII
-
-
-She was dressed for a journey, muffled in furs. Her left hand was
-gloved; her right extended. His heart turned coward. Surely he had
-earned his reward. He commenced to rise, pushing back his chair. The
-steady blueness of her eyes held him.
-
-“Good-by,” she said. “I should have left without saying good-by, if I
-had not known I could trust you.”
-
-“But you can trust me. It's because you can trust me that you must
-stay.”
-
-“I can't stay.”
-
-“Why not?”
-
-“We made a bargain. Do you remember? That until we were free, we would
-play the game by him--that we would even guard him against himself.
-You told me once, 'I wouldn't be friends with a woman who couldn't be
-loyal.' I'm trying to be loyal.” She caught her breath. “He's gone.”
-
-“Varensky?”
-
-She nodded.
-
-“Where?”
-
-“To die for us.”
-
-In the silence that followed, the heat of his temptation vanished. He
-felt accused by the quixotic magnanimity of this strange creature, half
-prophet, half charlatan, whose wife he had coveted.
-
-“Once I'd have been glad that he should die,” he confessed slowly,
-“but not now. Food has done far more than his sacrifice could have
-accomplished. Why should he be determined to die now?”
-
-She trusted herself to come closer, standing over him and giving him her
-hand.
-
-“Perhaps for our sakes. Perhaps for his own. Perhaps in the hope that
-his appearance may put a stop to what's left of the fighting. There was
-a wireless last night which he kept to himself. It said that skirmishing
-was developing between the Poles and the Russian refugees in the No
-Man's Land beyond Kovel. It was after he had read it that he went out.
-I waited for him to return--when I guessed. We've all misjudged him.
-Perhaps we're still misjudging him. Who can say why he's gone? There's
-nothing gained by attributing motives. He wants to give his life. He's
-promised he would so often; always he's been thwarted. He owes it to his
-honor. Kovel may be the world's last battle--his final chance.”
-
-In the bare room the dawn was spreading. Hind-wood rose from his chair,
-stretching his cramped body and gazing at the map with its safe red line
-of flags.
-
-“Our work is ended,” he said quietly. “Within the next few hours
-stronger men will be here to take control--a commission of the best
-brains, picked from all the nations. God chose us to be His stopgap.”
- He paused. “After having been His instruments in averting a
-world-catastrophe to speak of things personal seems paltry. And yet my
-love for you fills all my thoughts. I leave Budapest a bankrupt. I shall
-have to start life afresh. Your love is literally my sole possession and
-I have no right to it.”
-
-She was backing towards the door, retreating from him. He stepped over
-to the window, widening the distance that separated them.
-
-“Do you feel more secure now? You needn't fear me,” he reproached her.
-“Was it because I spoke of our love? We have no reason to be ashamed of
-it. We've played fair. How could we do less when Varensky has played so
-fair by us? It's for our sakes he's gone, that he may free us.” Then,
-“You're setting out alone on a journey. Would you mind telling me its
-object?”
-
-“You know. To prevent him. To catch up with him. To bring him back.”
-
-“And if he refuses?”
-
-“To die with him.”
-
-He smiled whimsically. “The vanishing point! For you, with your high
-standard of honor, if you were to overtake it, your problem would be
-solved. But suppose the vanishing point eludes you. Suppose your husband
-agrees to live, have you thought of that? It means that you and I will
-never----”
-
-With an imploring gesture she cut him short. “It means that you and I
-will never learn to despise each other. It means that I shall always
-remember you at your greatest, as I've seen you in the last seven days,
-self-sacrificing, brave and noble--so self-forgetting that you could
-even forget the woman you adored.”
-
-He sank his head. In the gray square of window he looked old and
-haggard. “It's true, and yet it's incredible: if we were to allow him to
-die, we should despise each other. In the long years----” He glanced up.
-“Though you were willing to let him and I won you, do you think I would
-want you? Not that way. I'd want you so little that I'm coming with you
-to help you to prevent him.”
-
-
-VIII
-
-
-Long lines of neglected tillage! Deserted farms! Broken fences! A gray
-expanse of sky! Knots of peasants trekking always westward! Panting
-cattle, nearing the exhaustion point! Creaking carts! Dawn growing
-whiter; day growing golden; sunlight fading; night becoming flecked with
-stars! Always the rhythm of the engine, the plunging into the distance,
-the impatient urgency to thrust forward!
-
-It had been useless to think of traveling by trains; the railways were
-too congested. Moreover, they had strongly suspected that he had set
-out by car. If the No Man's Land beyond Kovel were his destination,
-then Cracow would lie midway on his journey. Cracow was one of the
-strong-points in the barricade, where a clump of red flags was flying.
-All the traffic was escaping from the danger. If he had chosen that
-route, there would be definite news of him. Any one traveling towards
-the danger could not help but be remarked.
-
-As they inquired of fugitives, they discovered that two cars were ahead
-of them. The first contained a madman, with eyes green as emeralds and a
-face white and set as a mask; the second, a dark-haired woman, beautiful
-as a fallen angel. The woman seemed to be in pursuit of the man. They
-were, perhaps, thirty miles apart. They had thundered by into the
-imperiled future as though the self-same devil rode behind them.
-
-What could be Santa's purpose? Anna and he argued the point, sometimes
-aloud, more often in their unuttered thoughts. All their old doubts
-concerning her rose up rampant. Was she a Bolshevist agent, hurrying
-back to sell the last of her secrets? Was her purpose to save or to
-betray Varensky?
-
-What had she ever wanted from him? Had she found a quality in his
-self-destroying idealism that had called forth her pitying worship? In
-her own dark way had she enshrined him in a mysterious corner of her
-heart? Had she recognized in him a childlike weakness that had compelled
-her protection? Had he stood in the twilight of her life for a door that
-might open into ultimate redemption?
-
-Or was it loneliness that had made her follow him--the sure knowledge
-that everything was ended? In those seven days, whilst they had made
-history together, had she seen something that had tortured her? That she
-was not wanted, as he was not wanted? Was it despair that had beckoned
-her into the chaos through which he hurried to destruction?
-
-When they reached Cracow it was to find the city deserted. The streets
-by which they entered were deathly silent; the doors wide open; the
-pavements strewn with furniture which owners had lacked time to rescue.
-Here and there were carts which had collapsed, and thin horses which
-had died in harness. Even cats and dogs had departed. Terror peered from
-behind the blankness of windows. It was like a city pillaged.
-
-Whatever optimisms they had entertained, they knew for certain now that
-war had started. Out of sight, across gray wastes to the eastward, gray
-ranks of skeletons, armed with nothing but disease, were approaching.
-The dread they inspired was so great that outcasts, only a shade less
-starving, had stampeded before them.
-
-At a turn they came to the railroad. Here their eyes met a different
-spectacle. From a freight-train on a siding men, white to the eyes with
-dust, were rolling barrels. They were volunteers recruited from the
-safer nations--the first of the new kind of army. They were piling flour
-where once they would have been stacking shells. Hindwood recognized the
-barrels' markings. His sense of tragedy lightened. Laughing down into
-his companion's eyes, he shouted, “Mine! Look, Anna. Mine that I meant
-to sell!”
-
-A short-haired girl, in the tattered uniform of the Battalion of Death,
-was in charge. Coming up to the car, she saluted smartly. Yes, she had
-seen Varensky. It was three hours since he had passed. He had filled up
-with water and gasolene, gasolene having arrived on the supply-train.
-He had left for Brest-Litovsk, stating that his object was to gain a
-respite for the barricade-builders. He proposed to put himself at the
-head of the famine-march and to check the rapidity of its advance. After
-his departure, the other had panted up--the dark-haired woman--only an
-hour behind him.
-
-Wasting no time in conversation, Hindwood imitated Varensky's example.
-He was dazed for want of sleep--almost nodding. But the man he had to
-save was ahead of him. Having filled his tanks and made sure of his
-engine, he started forward.
-
-They were throbbing through empty streets again, when a strange sound
-thrilled the silence--a trumpet-call, which rang out sharply across the
-housetops and broke off suddenly.
-
-Had they come? He slowed down, prepared to wheel about.
-
-Seeing what was in his thoughts, Anna rested her hand on his arm
-reassuringly.
-
-“It's from the tower of St. Mary's. How often I've heard it! Ah, there
-it is again!” Gazing up and bending forward, she listened. Then she
-spoke, as though addressing some one who walked above the city, “Brave
-fellow! Though they've all deserted, you've stayed on.”
-
-“To whom are you talking?”
-
-She explained quickly. Centuries ago the Church of St. Mary's had been
-an outpost of Christendom, used as a watch-tower against the invading
-Tartar; a soldier had been kept continually stationed there to give
-warning on a trumpet of the first approach of danger. In the fourteenth
-century, whilst arousing the city, the trumpeter had been struck in the
-throat by an arrow. His call had faltered, rallied and sunk. With his
-dying breath he had sounded a final blast, which had broken off short.
-The broken call had saved Cracow. Ever since, to commemorate his
-faithfulness, there had never been an hour, day or night, when his
-broken trumpet-call, ending abruptly in an abyss of silence, had not
-been sounded from the tower.
-
-Hindwood leant across the wheel, staring dreamily before him. “It might
-have been his voice--Varen-sky's. He's like that--a dying trumpeter,
-sounding a last warning. I almost believe in him. It's too late----”
-
-“It may not be,” she whispered.
-
-Night was falling. Straining his eyes to keep awake, he drove
-impetuously on, forcing a path through the opposing shadows.
-
-
-IX
-
-
-How they had arrived it would have puzzled him to tell. He had vague
-memories of sunsets and dawns; of times when sleep had drugged him; of
-unrefreshed awakenings.
-
-They had reached Brest-Litovsk, the city fatal to the Russians, which
-the Czar had always superstitiously avoided. Like Cracow, it was
-deserted. Unlike Cracow, it was a pile of ruins. Seven times in seven
-years it had been bombarded and captured. Beneath an iron sky, it
-listened for the tramp of the latest conqueror.
-
-Hindwood drew forth his map. It was over a hundred versts to Kovel; he
-doubted whether his gasolene would take him. There was nowhere where he
-could replenish his supply. Before him lay a No Man's Land from which
-everything had perished--behind a silence from which everything had
-escaped. To continue his pursuit was folly. There was no promise of
-success to allure him; of Varensky and Santa he had lost all trace.
-He glanced at his drowsing companion; he had pledged his word to her.
-Reluctantly he climbed into his seat and started forward.
-
-The suicidal stupidity of war--that was the thought that absorbed him.
-Every sight that his eyes encountered emphasized its madness. Yet beyond
-the horizon, where distance seemed to terminate, men were killing one
-another. He understood at last Varensky's passion to die. When all else
-had failed, to offer one's body was the only protest.
-
-The landscape was growing featureless. Rivers had overflowed. The labor
-of centuries was sinking beneath morass. Villages and post-houses had
-been destroyed; woods torn by shell-fire. Stationed along the route,
-like buoys guarding a channel, black and white verst-poles gleamed
-monotonously. On either side stretched a never-ending graveyard, marked
-by rough crosses or inverted rifles. Down this pitiless straight road
-had marched the seven invasions--Russian, German, Polish, Bolshevist,
-each with a dream of glory in its eyes. With the victory lost and the
-dream forgotten, they moldered companionably.
-
-It was half-way to Kovel that he first noticed what was happening;
-behind scrub and fallen trees it had probably been happening for some
-time. It was a gray wolf, grown bold, which first drew his attention.
-Like a dog, seeking its master, it came trotting down the road. After
-that they came in packs--not only wolves, but every other kind of
-untamed animal. It was as though they were fleeing before a drive--the
-tremendous drive of a famished nation. In their dread they seemed to
-have postponed their right to prey. Hunter and quarry journeyed side by
-side, their enmities in abeyance in their common terror of the enmity
-which stalked behind.
-
-Hindwood had grown used to the spectacle, when suddenly he was startled
-by another sight--a child. A child so matted and neglected, that he
-scarcely recognized him as human. His feet were swathed in balls
-of rags. He limped painfully, walking among the animals and staring
-straight before him. At shortening intervals others followed, till at
-last they came in crowds.
-
-Beyond Kovel, where commences the crumbling trench-system in which the
-vanished Russo-German armies remained locked for so many years, he came
-across his first trace of Varensky--an abandoned car with a broken axle.
-Varensky must be on foot, not far ahead. He had passed another mile when
-his own car halted; the gasolene had given out. With the ceasing of the
-engine he caught another sound--the popping of rifle-fire. It dawned on
-him that the trenches of the dead battlefield were again inhabited. He
-had been driving straight into the heart of the fighting.
-
-The firing was drawing nearer. The Monarchists were falling back. A
-bullet whizzed over his head and pinged into a mass of rusted wire.
-
-All that followed happened in a flash. He had seized Anna and rushed
-with her to cover. From where he watched, he could see soldiers
-retreating, and the tops of steel helmets bobbing above the trenches. Of
-the advancing host he could see nothing.
-
-Suddenly from behind a mound, a man with a peaked head sprang up. He
-was dressed as a civilian. He commenced to run up the road towards
-the enemy, waving something white. Immediately, from another place of
-hiding, a woman leapt up and followed. It was as though on the instant
-truce had been declared; a tranquillity of amazement settled down.
-
-As he reached what appeared to be No Man's Land, he drew himself erect,
-with expanded chest, and commenced to sweep his arms in the gestures
-of oratory. It was dumb show; it was impossible to hear what was being
-said. While he was speaking, the woman caught up with him and flung
-herself upon him, making a shield of her body.
-
-Curiosity satisfied, both sides fired. The man and woman crumpled.
-Fighting recommenced.
-
-
-THE END
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Vanishing Point, by Coningsby Dawson
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: The Vanishing Point
-
-Author: Coningsby Dawson
-
-Illustrator: James Montgomery Flagg
-
-Release Date: November 19, 2015 [EBook #50499]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE VANISHING POINT ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David Widger from page images generously
-provided by the Internet Archive
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-THE VANISHING POINT
-
-By Coningsby Dawson
-
-Author of "The Kingdom Round the Corner,"
-
-"The Garden Without Walls," etc.
-
-Illustrated By James Montgomery Flagg
-
-New York
-
-MCMXXII
-
-Copyright, 1922, by Cosmopolitan Book Corporation
-
-
-
-[Illustration: 0001]
-
-
-[Illustration: 0008]
-
-
-[Illustration: 0009]
-
-
-"When you gaze up a railroad track," said Varensky, "there's always
-a point in the infinite distance where, just before they vanish, the
-parallel rails seem, to join. If a train were ever to reach that point
-it would mean death.
-
-"Life's like that--a track along which we travel on the parallel rails
-of possibility and desire. The lure of the idealist is to overtake the
-illusion, where possibility and desire seem to merge, and the safety of
-the journey ends."
-
-
-
-
-THE VANISHING POINT
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER THE FIRST--THE DISAPPEARANCE OF A PATRIOT
-
-
-I
-
-
-PRINCE ROGOVICH! Prince Rogovich!"
-
-Staring up at the clammy wall of the liner, blanched by searchlights,
-against which the little tug bumped and jostled, Philip Hindwood could
-hear the Prince's name being shouted in staterooms, along decks and
-passageways.
-
-It had been midnight when they had drifted like a gallivanting hotel,
-all portholes ablaze, into the starlit vagueness of Plymouth Harbor. The
-_Ryndam_ did not dock there; she only halted long enough to put off the
-English passengers and to drop the English mail. There had been three
-passengers to land, of whom Hindwood had been the first; the rest were
-disembarking at Boulogne or Rotterdam. They had been met just outside
-the harbor by the tug, and the transshipping of the mail had immediately
-commenced. The last bag had been tossed over the side; the immigration
-officials had completed their inspection. Santa Gorlof, the second
-passenger for England, radiantly smiling above her sables, had come down
-the gangplank. It was for the third passenger that the liner delayed and
-the tug still waited.
-
-"Prince Rogovich! Prince Rogovich!"
-
-The cries were becoming more insistent and impatient. They broke on the
-stillness with the monotony of despair. To judge by the sound, every
-soul aboard the liner had taken up the search, from the firemen in the
-stoke-hole to the Marconi men on the top deck. Even the thud of the
-engines seemed ominous, like the pounding of a heart stifled with
-foreboding. Across the velvety expanse of water, as though they had
-a secret they were trying to communicate, shore lights winked and
-twinkled. They seemed to be signaling the information that, no matter
-how long the search was maintained, Prince Rogovich would not be found
-that night.
-
-
-II
-
-
-Except for this last disturbing incident, it had been a pleasant
-voyage--the most pleasant Philip Hindwood could remember. They had left
-New York in the brilliant clearness of blue September skies. The clear
-blueness had followed them. The slow-going, matronly _Ryndam_ had
-steamed on an even keel through seas as tranquil and reflective as the
-proverbial mill-pond. Her company had been dull, consisting mainly of
-American drummers and Dutch Colonials returning from Java. But he had no
-grounds for complaint; he had chosen her for her dullness. He had wanted
-to lay up a store of rest before plunging into the strenuous excitements
-which were the purpose of his journey.
-
-He had gone aboard her in an unsociable frame of mind, determined to
-talk to nobody; the success of his errand depended on his silence. He
-believed that he was half a year ahead of the times. When his rivals had
-caught up to where he was at present, he would have made himself a world
-power and dictator.
-
-But the dullness of the ship's company had exceeded expectations.
-Because of this he had broken his compact and allowed his privacy to
-be invaded by two vivid personalities. The first had been Prince
-Rogovich--the second, Santa Gorlof.
-
-Prince Rogovich had evidently boarded the ship with precisely the same
-intentions as himself. All his meals had been served in his stateroom;
-it had not been until the evening of the third day that he had appeared
-on deck. He was a man of commanding height, lean of hip and contemptuous
-of eye, with the disquieting, haughty reticence of an inscrutable
-Pharaoh. There was something alluring and oriental about the man, at
-once sinister and charming. Behind his silky black beard he hid a
-face which was deathly white; its pallor was not of ill-health, but
-of passion. It was easy to believe all the rumors about him, both as
-regarded his diabolical cleverness and his sensual cruelty. His enemies
-were legion. Even among his countrymen he could count few friends,
-although he was reckoned their greatest patriot. In Poland he was
-suspected as much as he was admired, and was accused of intriguing
-in order that he might set up a throne for himself. The object of his
-flying visit to America had been to consult financial magnates on the
-advisability of floating an international loan in the interests of
-Poland. There were men the world over and in Russia especially, who
-would have paid a king's ransom for advance information as to what
-answer the financiers had returned.
-
-Though Hindwood would not have claimed as much, he and the Prince were
-two of a kind, equally magnificent in their dreams, equally relentless
-in their means of realization, and equally insatiable in their
-instinct for conquest. Their difference lay in the fact that the Polish
-aristocrat had already attained the goal toward which the self-made
-American was no more than striving.
-
-Their first meeting had happened in the early hours of the morning.
-Hindwood, being unable to sleep, had partly dressed and gone on deck.
-There, in the grayness of the dawn, he had espied a tall figure slowly
-pacing, accompanied by a snow-white Russian wolfhound. It was the
-remarkable grace of the man that had first held him, his faculty for
-stillness, his spectral paleness, his padded tread. But the moment
-he had approached him, the sense of his grace had been obscured by an
-atmosphere of menace. So sinister was his beauty that it had required
-an effort to pass him twice. Secretly Hindwood had observed him. He was
-like his hound, treacherously languid, insolently fastidious, and bred
-to the point of emaciation. But his languor was the disguise of a hidden
-fierceness, which betrayed itself in his red, curved lips and the marble
-coldness of his stare. It was at the third time of passing, when he had
-all but gone by him, that he had heard his name spoken.
-
-"Mr. Hindwood." Then, as he had turned, "You're the famous railroad
-expert. Am I right? It's fortunate we should have met. I missed you in
-America. So you, too, are among the sleepless!"
-
-Then and there had started the first of those amazing conversations,
-which had held Hindwood fascinated for the remainder of the voyage.
-It had made no difference that in his heart he had almost hated the
-man--hated his ruthlessness, his subtlety, his polished immorality;
-the moment he commenced to talk, he surrendered to his spell. Their
-encounters had taken place for the most part between midnight and
-sunrise. To be his companion was like eavesdropping on the intimate
-counsels of all the cabinets of Europe or like reading your daily paper
-a year before it was published for the rest of mankind. On matters
-which did not concern him the Prince could be brilliantly confessional;
-indiscretion was the bait with which he lured his victims to reveal
-themselves. The secrets which were his own he kept. Never once did he
-drop a hint that would indicate the success or failure of his recent
-mission. The single time that, Santa Gorlof had asked him point-blank,
-his dark eyes had become focusless as opals, and his white face, under
-its silky covering of beard, unnoticing and sphinx-like. It was then
-that Hindwood had recognized the resemblance to Pharaoh in his tyrannic
-immobility and silence.
-
-And Santa Gorlof! There was a woman--mysterious, exotic, well-nigh
-mythical! Compared with her the Prince was an open book. From the start
-she had made no attempt to explain herself, had referred neither to her
-past nor her future, had offered no credentials. She had imposed herself
-on Hind-wood like a goddess who expected to be worshiped. She had swept
-him off his feet, beaten aside his caution, and reached his heart before
-he was aware.
-
-But was it his heart? How often, in the past few days, he had asked
-himself that question! He didn't want to believe that it was his heart.
-He was a man who rode alone; his aloneness was the reason for his
-swiftness. He had been tricked once by a woman. That was when he was
-a boy; now he was a man nearing forty. She had cheated him so cruelly
-that, though she had been dead many years, the bitterness still rankled.
-Behind the beauty of all women his skepticism detected the shallow
-loveliness of the one false woman who had stolen his idealism, that she
-might trample on it.
-
-He did not love Santa. He had assured himself a thousand times that he
-did not love her. She was too dangerous, too incalculable. He had spent
-long hours of wakeful nights in completing the inventory of her bad
-points. And yet, while he had been with her, his veins had run
-fire; while he had been apart from her, all his pleasures had seemed
-tasteless. Who was she? Whence had she come? Whither was she going?
-What had been her business on the _Ryndam_, and what had Prince Rogovich
-known about her? The Prince had known something--something which had
-given him power over her. At a glance from him, her caprice had
-vanished and she had become downcast as a child. He had muttered a few
-unintelligible words, probably in Polish, and her pride had crumbled.
-
-Hindwood was at a loss to account for these signs of a secret
-understanding. It had been he who had introduced them. It had been Santa
-who had confessed to curiosity about the Prince and had begged for the
-introduction. The moment he had made them acquainted, they had seemed to
-become delighted with each other's company--so delighted that there had
-been times when he himself had felt excluded. A half-humorous rivalry
-for Santa's favors had sprung up between the Prince and himself. This
-atmosphere of jealousy had been accentuated by the behavior of the
-wolfhound; Santa's mere approach had been sufficient to rouse him
-into fury. He had become so dangerous that he had had to be sent below
-whenever she was present.
-
-And yet, despite her manifest efforts to hold the Prince enchanted,
-behind his back she had expressed the most vigorous aversion. She had
-spoken of his reputation for treachery and the whispers that went the
-rounds of his heartlessness toward women. During the final days of the
-voyage she had partly atoned for this inconsistency by appealing to
-Hindwood to protect her against the Prince's far too pressing attention.
-She had declared herself to be in some kind of danger--though what
-kind, whether moral or physical, she had left him to conjecture. She
-had rather flattered him by her appeal; nevertheless, he had been
-considerably surprised to observe how little interest she had still
-displayed in protecting herself. During the whole of that last day,
-while they had been approaching the white line of Cornish coast, she had
-scarcely devoted to him a glance or a word; every minute she had spent
-with His Highness, whom she professed to regard with so much terror. She
-had created the impression of employing every trick at her disposal in a
-frantic attempt to secure him as her conquest.
-
-If, as many of the passengers had asserted, the presence of Santa Gorlof
-and the Prince on the same boat had been no accident, then what had been
-the object of their elaborately planned deception? Were they lovers who
-had chosen this secret method of traveling in order to avoid a scandal?
-Or was she one of the many women whom he was reported to have abandoned,
-who had seized the leisure of an Atlantic voyage as an opportunity for
-reinstating herself in his affection?
-
-As Hindwood listened in the darkness to the Prince's name being shouted
-and waited for the tug to cast off, the surmise strengthened into
-certainty that he had been the dupe of a piece of play-acting, the
-purpose of which he could not fathom.
-
-
-III
-
-
-Philip!"
-
-He had been so absorbed in his thoughts that he had not noticed how she
-had stolen up behind him. Without removing his arms from the rail, he
-turned slowly and surveyed her.
-
-An enviable woman! And her age? Perhaps thirty. She was probably a
-Slav--either Russian or Polish. Her face was smooth as marble, high
-cheekboned and golden in complexion. Her eyes were almond-shaped,
-heavy-lidded, and of the palest gray. Her lips were passionate and
-always a little parted, revealing a line of perfect whiteness like a
-streak of snow between the curling edges of two rose-petals. But it was
-her hair that was her glory--abundant as night, blue-black as steel, and
-polished as metal. She wore it simply, gathered back from her forehead
-and caught in a loose knot, low against her neck. There was an air of
-indefinable aristocracy about her; perhaps it was the slightness of her
-figure and the alert composure of her carriage. And then there was a
-touch of the exotic, wistfully sad, yet exceedingly mocking. Like so
-many Slavs, behind the European there lurked a hint of the Asiatic.
-If her eyes had been darker, she might easily have passed for a Hindoo
-princess.
-
-Her fascination, quite apart from her beauty, lay in the fact that she
-was so ravishingly feminine. To be a woman was her proud profession--and
-in this again she was Asiatic. What hours she must have spent over
-pampering her body! She was sleek and groomed as a race-horse.
-Physically she was the last word in feminine perfection. Her string
-of pearls was worth more than most men earn in a lifetime. Her sables
-represented the year's income of a millionaire. There was no item of her
-attire that was not sumptuous and that had not been acquired regardless
-of expense. To have achieved her luxuriance of beauty must have
-dissipated a fortune. Whose fortune? Surely, not hers!
-
-His mind was haunted by misgivings as he watched her. He had so nearly
-allowed himself to care for her. It was only her lightness and
-willful inconsiderateness that had prevented. But now that he had been
-prevented, her employment of his Christian name struck him as singularly
-inappropriate. It made him suspect a trap. It put him in a mood to
-interpret any tenderness on her part as strategy, as a signal that
-something was wanted.
-
-While he eyed her in silence, she drew nearer and leaned across the
-rail. Her shoulder pressed him. He was aware of the tingling sensation
-of her warmth, like a little hand caressing. He caught her fragrance,
-secret and somnolent as the magic of hidden rose-gardens in Damascus.
-
-She spoke. Her voice was deep and foreign; it seemed too deep to be pent
-in so slight a body. It was harsh in many of its tones, as though there
-had been times when it had been parched with thirst. It conjured visions
-of caravans creeping across molten deserts. It was hypnotic, barbaric.
-In listening to it, he lost sight of the exquisite sophistication of her
-appearance. His imagination reclothed her, loosening her hair, veiling
-her face, shrouding her in a robe of gold and saffron, slipping sandals
-on her feet and making her ankles tinkle with many bangles.
-
-"You don't like me any more. Is it not so?" she questioned softly. "My
-master is offended."
-
-He shook himself irritably, as though he were flinging off the yoke of
-her attraction. "I'm not offended. I was thinking."
-
-"About what?"
-
-"Prince Rogovich."
-
-"And why should my master be thinking of Prince Rogovich?"
-
-He leaned still further across the rail in an instinctive effort to
-avoid her. There was seduction in the feigned humility with which she
-addressed him, as though he were a Pasha and she a slave-girl.
-
-"Because," he said, "it would be indecent for me to be thinking of
-anything else. He may be dead. There's no knowing. This time last night
-I could walk and talk and laugh with him. He was full of plans. He was
-something real that I could touch. To-night he has vanished."
-
-"Vanished!" She repeated the word with a sigh which was almost of
-contentment.
-
-"I was wondering," he continued, and then halted. "You were wondering?"
-she prompted.
-
-Drawing himself erect, he faced her. Her bantering tone had roused his
-indignation. Yet, even in his revulsion, he thrilled to the sweetness of
-her luring eyes, glinting at him palely through the shadows.
-
-"He was more your friend, much more your friend, than mine," he
-reproached her. "There's probably been a tragedy. Yet you don't seem to
-care. One might even believe you were glad."
-
-"Not glad. Not exactly." She spoke smilingly, averting her eyes. "But as
-for caring--why should I?"
-
-He laughed quietly. "Yes, why should you? Why should you care what
-happens to any man?"
-
-"But I hated him," she protested. "He had given me cause to hate him."
-
-"You had a strange way of showing it. You made yourself most amazingly
-charming. He could never have guessed--no one could ever have guessed
-who watched you with him, that you--"
-
-"Ah, no. Only you and I--we knew. It wasn't our business to let
-everybody guess."
-
-Suddenly she seemed to divine what was troubling him. Darting out her
-hand, she seized his wrist in a grip of steel. That such strength lay
-hidden in so frail a hand was unexpected. Her attitude instantly changed
-to one of coaxing.
-
-"You're jealous. Don't be jealous. It had to be, and it's ended. In a
-sense it was for your sake that it had to happen."
-
-Leisurely he freed himself, bending back her fingers and taking pleasure
-in demonstrating that his strength was the greater.
-
-"I've no idea what you're talking about," he said coldly. "Your feelings
-toward Prince Rogovich are none of my concern. If, by the thing that had
-to happen, you refer to the shameless way in which you made love to him,
-I can not conceive any possible set of circumstances that would make it
-necessary for you to make love for my sake to another man."
-
-He had turned and was sauntering away from her. She went after him
-breathlessly, arresting him once more with the secret strength of her
-slim, gloved hand.
-
-"To make love to him! I didn't mean that."
-
-What it was that she had meant, she had no time to tell. The siren of
-the _Ryndam_ burst into an earsplitting blast, impatient, repeated, and
-agonizing. At the signal gangplanks were withdrawn from the tug and run
-back into dark holes in the side of the liner. Ropes were cast off and
-coiled. Engines began to quicken and screws to churn. The narrow channel
-which had separated the two vessels commenced to widen. On the _Ryndam_
-the band struck up. Above its lively clamor the sound of Prince
-Rogovich's name being shouted could still be heard. As Hindwood stared
-up at the floating mammoth, scanning the tiers of faces gaping down,
-even at tills last moment he half expected to see the Prince come
-rushing out. Instead a sight much stranger met his eyes.
-
-The tug was backing away to get sufficient clearance to turn in the
-direction of land. She had not quite cleared herself, when signs
-of frenzied disturbance were noticeable on the promenade deck. The
-musicians were dropping their instruments and fleeing. Passengers were
-glancing across their shoulders and scattering in all directions. In the
-vacant space which their stampede had created, the infuriated head of
-the Prince's wolfhound reared itself. For a couple of seconds he hung
-there poised, glaring down; then suddenly he seemed to descry the object
-he was searching. Steadying himself, he shot straight out into the gulf
-of blackness. In a white streak, like the finger of conscience pointing,
-he fell, just missing the deck of the tug, where Hindwood and his
-companion were standing. He must have struck the side, for as he reached
-the water he sank.
-
-It was over in less time than it takes to tell, but it had seemed to
-Hindwood that as the hound had leaped, his burning gaze had been fixed
-on Santa Gorlof.
-
-
-IV
-
-
-She made no sound while the danger lasted, but the moment the hurtling,
-white body had fallen short, she rushed to the side, peering down into
-the yeasty scum of churned-up blackness. She was speaking rapidly in a
-foreign language, laughing softly with malicious triumph and shaking a
-small, clenched fist at the night. It was thus that a woman at Jezreel
-must have looked, when she painted her face and tired her hair and
-leaned out of her palace window, jeering at the charioteer who had been
-sent to slay her. The passionate eloquence of Santa's gestures thrilled
-as much as it shocked Hindwood; it made her appearance of lavish
-modernity seem a disguise. And yet he admired her more than ever; it was
-her courage he admired. Putting his arm about her roughly, "Enough," he
-said. "You're coming inside."
-
-She darted back her head in defiance like a serpent about to strike.
-Then recognition of him dawned in her eyes. She ceased to struggle and
-relaxed against his breast. It was only for a second. Slipping her arm
-submissively into his, "Very well. If you say so," she whispered.
-
-Guiding her steps across the slippery deck, he pushed open the door of a
-little saloon and entered. The atmosphere was blue with wreaths of smoke
-and heavy with the smell of tobacco. At a table in the center, beneath a
-swinging lamp, the immigration officers were dealing cards and settling
-their debts with pennies. They were too absorbed in their petty gambling
-to notice what was going on about them. In a corner, outside the circle
-of light, he found a trunk and ordered her to sit down. The meekness
-with which she complied flattered his sense of her dependence. He might
-really have been a Pasha and she his slave-girl.
-
-He did not understand her. She cozened and baffled him. People and
-things which he did not understand were apt to rouse his resentment,
-especially when they were women. His distrust of the sex was inherent.
-But as he watched this woman drooping in the shadows, his pity came
-uppermost. She was so alone, so unprotected. The hour was late--long
-past midnight. Her storm of emotion had exhausted her. It was absurd
-that he should have allowed himself to become so jealous. He could never
-have made her his wife. The chances were, she would not have accepted
-him; she belonged to a more modish world. And if she had, she would have
-driven him from his course with her whims and tempests. She would have
-wrecked his career with her greed for wealthy trappings. He and she
-were utterly different. They had nothing in common but their physical
-attraction.
-
-He was seeing things clearly. With each fresh whiff of land, affairs
-were regrouping themselves in their true perspective. He had been the
-shuttlecock of a shipboard flirtation. He had magnified infatuation
-into a grand passion. On many a previous voyage he had been the amused
-spectator of just such profitless expenditures of sentiment. And here
-he was, a victim of the same foolishness! The futility of the ending
-was the adventure's condemnation. Probably she was indulging in similar
-reflections! Within an hour of stepping ashore they would have lost
-sight of each other forever. After so much intimacy and misplaced
-emotion, they would walk out of each other's life without regret. Partly
-out of curiosity, but more out of courtesy, he seated himself beside her
-for what he intended should be their last conversation.
-
-"What happens next?"
-
-She clutched her furs more closely about her. "I don't know."
-
-"But you must know," he persisted. "What I meant was, where is your
-destination?"
-
-"London." Then she added wearily, "You could have discovered by
-examining my labels."
-
-Her fatigue made him the more determined to be helpful. "I didn't ask
-out of impertinence, but because I thought it would be London. Probably
-there'll be no train to London to-night. If the Prince had been with us,
-they'd have put on a special, but you and I are the only passengers,
-and neither of us is sufficiently important. Besides, after this delay,
-it'll be nearly daylight before we clear the Customs."
-
-"Then I'll have to sleep in Plymouth."
-
-"Perhaps you'll be met by friends?"
-
-He had no sooner hazarded the suggestion than an obvious conjecture
-flashed through his mind. The marvel was that it had not flashed
-earlier. _She might be married._ If the conjecture proved correct,
-it would put the final punishing touch of satire to this wild-goose
-romance.
-
-Sweeping him with her pale, derisive eyes, "Friends!" she murmured. "You
-may set your mind at rest. I shall be met by no friends."
-
-After that there was silence, a silence interrupted at intervals by the
-exclamations of the players as they thumped down their cards and raked
-in their pennies.
-
-For relief he reverted to the subject uppermost in both their minds. "I
-wonder what became of him."
-
-"I wonder." Her tone betrayed no interest.
-
-"I've been trying to think back," he said, "trying to remember when last
-I saw him."
-
-"Yes."
-
-"I believe I last saw him alive just after----"
-
-She spun round, as though jerked on wires. "Alive! Who suggests that he
-isn't alive?"
-
-"No one. I'm the first. But if he isn't found by to-morrow, the
-suggestion will be on the lips of all the world."
-
-"I doubt it."
-
-"You do?" Hindwood smiled. "Men of the Prince's eminence are not
-allowed to vanish without a stir. I'm only hoping that you and I are not
-involved in it. We were the only people with whom he associated on the
-voyage. We're likely to be detained and certain to be questioned. For
-all we know the air's full of Marconi messages about us at this moment."
-
-Her face had gone white. "About us? What had we to do with it?"
-
-"Nothing. But when a tragedy of this sort occurs, we're all liable to be
-suspected."
-
-She gazed at him intently. "Then you think there was a tragedy?"
-
-"I feel sure of it. It's my belief that he either fell or was pushed
-overboard. Somewhere out there in the darkness he's bobbing up and down.
-It's almost as though I could see him. I couldn't feel more sure if----"
-
-She shuddered and pressed against him. "You're trying to frighten me.
-I won't be frightened. It's all nonsense what you're saying. Why should
-any one want to push him over?"
-
-"I'm sorry," he apologized. "I didn't mean to frighten you. Perhaps
-we're wasting our breath and already he's been found."
-
-"No, but why should any one want to push him over?" she urged.
-
-"I can't answer that. But he wasn't liked. One could be fascinated by
-his personality, but one couldn't like him. Take yourself--weren't you
-telling me a few minutes ago how intensely you hated him?"
-
-She nodded. "He was the sort of man every woman had the right to hate."
-After a pause she faced him, completely mistress of herself. "When did
-you last see him?"
-
-"I'm not certain." Hindwood hesitated. "As far as I remember, it was
-after dinner in the lounge. He was giving some instructions about his
-baggage. When did you?"
-
-"After dinner in the lounge." Her eyes met his and flickered. "It must
-have been shortly after eight, for I spent till ten in my stateroom
-finishing my packing."
-
-Before she had made an end, he knew that she had lied. Several times
-after dinner he had walked past her stateroom, hoping for a last
-encounter. Her trunks and cases had been piled in the passage, already
-locked and strapped. He had tried to discover from the stewardess her
-whereabouts and had been told that since dining she had not returned. He
-had gone on deck in search of her, hunting everywhere. It must have been
-shortly after ten that he had come across two shadowy figures in the
-bows. They were whispering together. They might have been embracing.
-The man's figure had been too dim for him to identify, but he could have
-sworn that the woman's was hers.
-
-He had reached this point in his piecing together of evidence, when he
-noticed that the card-players were pushing back their chairs.
-
-Santa touched his arm gently. "I think we're there."
-
-The next moment the soft bump of the tug against the piles confirmed the
-news of their arrival.
-
-
-V
-
-
-It began to look as if all hope of rest would have to be abandoned. At
-the moment of landing the dock had been almost festive. There had been
-a group of railway officials, mildly beaming and fussily important, who
-had approached Hindwood as he stepped ashore, with "Prince Rogovich,
-if we are not mistaken?" There had been another group of newspaper
-reporters who, having addressed him as "Your Highness," and having
-discovered their error, had promptly turned their backs on him.
-
-There had been a Major in uniform, with a monocle in his eye, who had
-pranced up, tearing off a salute and announcing, "I'm detailed by the
-Foreign Office, your Excellency."
-
-When they had learned that the Prince had unaccountably avoided
-Plymouth, their atmosphere of geniality faded. The special train, which
-was to have borne him swiftly to London, was promptly canceled. Within
-ten minutes, muttering with disgust, all the world except two porters
-had dribbled off into the night.
-
-In the waiting-room where, pending the inspection of the Customs
-officers, Hindwood and Santa were ordered to remain, their reception was
-no more enlivening. At first, when they had entered, a lunch-counter
-had been spread, gleaming with warmth and light. Before mirrors, girl
-attendants had been self-consciously reviewing their appearance with
-smiles of brightest expectation. Their expectancy had been quickly
-dulled by the news of the Prince's non-arrival. They had scarcely spared
-time to supply the wants of the two travelers before they had started
-to close up. The ticket clerk had copied the girls' example. As he had
-pulled down the shutter of his office he had briefly stated, "No train
-till the eight-thirty in the morning."
-
-After that they had been left--he and this strange woman--in the drafty
-gloom of the ill-lighted dockstation. The two porters had huddled down
-and snored among the baggage; Santa, closing her eyes, had appeared to
-join them in their slumbers.
-
-At last a solitary Customs officer had arrived. He volunteered no
-explanation for his delay. He was evidently newly risen, half awake,
-and in a mood of suppressed irritation. His examination was perfunctory.
-Having completed his barest duty, he likewise made his exit. It was
-then, when all their troubles seemed ended, that the porters had
-informed them that it was necessary for passengers to see their luggage
-weighed and personally to supervise its being loaded in the van for
-London.
-
-Hindwood turned to his companion. "You're tired. You'd better be off to
-bed. I'll see this through for you."
-
-Half an hour later, when he had complied with all formalities and was
-free to seek a bed himself, he remembered that he hadn't inquired
-where she would be staying and that he didn't know the name of a hotel.
-Wondering where he should sleep and how he could reach her with the
-receipts for her trunks, he wandered out into the yard of the station.
-The first grayness of dawn was spreading. A chill was in the air. Behind
-the sepulchers of muted houses a cock was crowing. He gazed up and down.
-Near the gate a horse-drawn cab was standing. Its lamp burned dimly,
-on the point of flickering out. The driver sat hunched on the box; the
-horse hung dejectedly between the shafts. They both slumbered immovably.
-
-Crossing the yard, he shook the man's arm. "Hi! Wake up. I want you to
-drive me to a good hotel." The man came to with a jerk. "A good 'otel!
-That's wot the lady wanted. You must be the gen'leman I wuz told to wait
-for."
-
-Hindwood nodded. "So you've driven the lady already! Then you'd better
-take me to wherever you took her."
-
-He had opened the door and was in the act of entering when the horse
-started forward, making him lose his balance. As he stretched out his
-hands to steady himself, what was his surprise to discover that the cab
-was already tenanted!
-
-
-VI
-
-
-I beg your pardon."
-
-There was no reply to his apology. He repeated it in a tone of more
-elaborate courtesy, "I _beg_ your pardon."
-
-When he was again greeted with silence, he added: "I thought it was
-empty. I didn't do it on purpose. I hope you're not hurt."
-
-In the mildewed square of blackness, rank with the smell of stables, he
-held his breath, trying to detect whether sleep would account for the
-taciturnity of the other occupant. He could detect nothing; all lesser
-sounds were drowned in the rattle of their progress. Groping, he felt a
-woman's dress. Hollowing his hand to shade the flame, he struck a match.
-For a brief moment his eyes met hers, opened wide and gazing at him.
-Instantly she leaned forward, pursing her lips. The flame went out.
-
-"What's the meaning of this?" He had been startled and spoke with
-sharpness.
-
-"There was only one cab, so I----" She yawned luxuriously. "So I waited.
-I didn't want to lose you."
-
-It was his turn to be silent. After a pause, while she gave him a chance
-to reply, she continued: "You'd have been stranded if I'd taken the only
-cab. And then I didn't want to lose you. Not that losing me would have
-meant anything to you--not now. It wouldn't, would it?"
-
-There was no escape. However she chose to accuse him, he would be forced
-to listen. But it couldn't be far to the hotel. Speaking reasonably, he
-attempted to appease her. "I've given you no occasion for supposing----"
-
-She laughed softly. "Don't you think so? On the boat you were burning up
-for me. You were molten--incandescent. Now you're dark and dank--through
-with me."
-
-She caught her breath. Though he could not see her, he knew that her
-small, clenched fists were pressed against her mouth. Again she was
-speaking.
-
-"Why is it? If you'd only give me a reason! While I've been sitting here
-alone, I've kept asking myself: 'Why is it? Am I less beautiful, less
-kind, less good? Does he think that he's discovered something evil about
-me? What have I done that he should have changed so suddenly?'"
-
-With a cry of pain, she turned. "What have I done? It's just that you
-should tell me. If you'll take me back, I'll be anything for you. I'll
-try so hard to be more beautiful."
-
-"You couldn't be more beautiful."
-
-It was said without enthusiasm. The suspicion still possessed him that
-she was play-acting. Last evening she had practiced these same wiles on
-the man who had vanished. Did she intend that he should vanish, too?
-It was horrible that he should ask himself such a question, and yet he
-could not rid his imagination of the snow-white hound, plunging to death
-and pointing at her like the finger of conscience. The happenings of
-that night had been sufficiently dramatic, so why this second rehearsal?
-He was too humble in his self-esteem to believe that his own attractions
-could account for such a storm of passion.
-
-"Santa, you're exaggerating." He spoke cautiously. "You never belonged
-to me. Until now you've given no hint that you wanted to belong to me.
-On the contrary, you've trifled with me and shown a distinct preference
-for another man. It's preposterous for you to talk about my taking you
-back when I never had you. We've been companions for a handful of hours.
-We've liked being together--at least, I have. But to create such a scene
-is absurd. Nothing warrants it. In the ordinary course of events, our
-liking might strengthen into love--there's no telling. But everything'll
-end right here and now if you force matters. What d'you know about me?
-About you I know even less. If any one were to ask me, I couldn't tell
-him whether you were a Pole or a Persian, or whether you were single,
-divorced, or married. I haven't the least idea of your social standing
-or why, while appearing so prosperous, you travel without a maid and by
-yourself. For all I know----"
-
-"A man needs to know nothing about a woman," she interrupted, "except
-that he loves her. She might be a thousand things; if he loved her, none
-of them would count. If she were bad, he would hope to make her good
-with his own goodness. Men always expect women to do that; why shouldn't
-a woman expect it of a man? If you loved me--and you did love me--no
-matter how wicked you thought me, even though you believed I'd killed
-some one, you wouldn't care. You'd find some splendid motive and
-persuade yourself that I'd done it for the best." She broke off. Then
-she added, "Of course, I haven't."
-
-"Haven't!"
-
-"Haven't killed somebody."
-
-It was an extraordinary disclaimer--as though it were always within the
-bounds of possibility that nice, conventional women might have killed
-somebody. She had said it as casually as another woman might have said,
-"I don't powder," or "I don't smoke."
-
-He scarcely know whether to be shocked or amused. He was loath to take
-her seriously. Behind the thinning darkness he was trying to discover
-her expression, when his calmness was swept away by a new disturbance.
-She had slipped to her knees in the narrow space. By the dim light that
-streaked the panes he could just make out her figure, bowed against him.
-The next moment her tears were falling, and she was kissing his hands.
-
-"You mustn't, Santa."
-
-He tried to withdraw his hands. She clung to them. Failing in that,
-he attempted to raise her face. She kept it obstinately averted. The
-bumping of the cab on the uneven paving jostled her against him;
-he feared lest inadvertently he might bruise her. The situation
-was grotesque. It stirred both his pity and his anger. If this were
-play-acting, then it was laughter and not sobbing that was shaking her.
-But if her grief were real----
-
-At that thought the shy, lonely tenderness of the man overwhelmed him.
-Here at last was a fellow-creature who needed his affection. She was so
-fragile, so capricious, so rapturous!
-
-"Poor Santa! I didn't mean---- Somehow I've hurt you."
-
-She didn't speak, but she stayed her sobbing.
-
-"Let me see your face."
-
-He stooped lower. The scent of her hair was in his nostrils. His
-reluctant arms went about her. Their embrace strengthened.
-
-With a moan she lifted up her face, white and ghostly as the dawn that
-was all about them. In a frenzy of silent longing their lips met.
-
-
-VII
-
-
-With a jerk the cab drew up against the pavement. Tossing the reins on
-the horse's back, the driver was lumbering down. That Santa might have
-time to compose herself, Hindwood leaned quickly out, slamming the door
-behind him.
-
-"Where've you brought us?"
-
-"It's a good 'otel," the man grumbled, on the defensive, staring at the
-gray cliff of shrouded windows. "It was a good 'otel you wanted. And
-then it's h'opposite the London Station where the train starts in the
-marnin'. It'll give the missis ten minutes extry in bed."
-
-"The missis!" Hindwood frowned. "If you refer to the lady who's with me,
-she's not my 'missis.'"
-
-The man became sly. Stretching a fat finger along his nose, he edged
-nearer and whispered: "Between you and me that's h'alright. Wot wiv
-drivin' so many gentry from the Contingnong me own morals are almost
-foreign."
-
-Hindwood turned from him coldly. "You're on the wrong tack. And now how
-does one get into this hotel? Will they admit us at such an hour?"
-
-"H'at h'all hours. H'absolutely h'at h'all hours."
-
-"If that's the case," he thrust his head inside the cab, "you stay here,
-Santa. I'll go and find out."
-
-In a few minutes he was back. "They'll take us. Go inside and wait while
-I settle with the driver." When he joined her at the desk, he found it
-necessary to make the same explanation that he had already made to
-the cabman. The night-porter had allotted them one room, taking it for
-granted they were married. He had to be informed that two were required.
-
-"D'you want 'em on the same floor and next to each other?"
-
-"On the roof if you like," Hindwood answered impatiently, "only let us
-get to bed. We're, or rather _I'm_ catching the eight-thirty train to
-London in the morning, and it's nearly daylight now. How about you?" He
-turned to Santa. "What train are you catching?"
-
-"The same as you."
-
-"Then we might as well breakfast together?"
-
-She nodded.
-
-Turning again to the night-porter, he said, "Put us both down for a call
-at seven."
-
-The man was leading the way upstairs. As they followed, Santa whispered,
-
-"You see, you were mistaken."
-
-"How?"
-
-"You threatened that we'd be detained and questioned. You frightened me
-terribly. We weren't."
-
-"No. We weren't."
-
-She slipped her arm through his companionably. "I feel so relieved and
-happy. I don't believe there was a tragedy. The Prince changed his mind
-at the last moment; he's landing at Boulogne or Rotterdam. It may even
-have been a strategy to mislead some enemy who was waiting for him here
-in Plymouth."
-
-"Perhaps. I never thought of that."
-
-Their rooms were on different floors. The porter showed the way to hers
-first. Now that they had to separate, Hindwood would have given much for
-a private word with her. Discreetly, outside her door, in the presence
-of the night-porter, they parted.
-
-"Then we meet at breakfast," he reminded her.
-
-"At breakfast," she assented. "And let's hope that we don't oversleep
-ourselves."
-
-
-VIII
-
-
-It seemed to him that his head had just touched the pillow when he was
-awakened by his door being pounded. Sitting up in bed, he consulted his
-watch. Seven exactly!
-
-"I'm awake," he shouted. With that he jumped out of bod to prevent
-himself from drowsing.
-
-His first thought was of her; again he was going to meet her. The
-prospect filled him with excitement, but not with gladness. His dreams
-had been troubled by her; there had been no moment since he had closed
-his eyes that he had been without her. The wildness of that kiss,
-bestowed in the dark by a woman humbling herself, had set his blood on
-fire. It was not right that a man should be kissed like that, and yet he
-longed to reexperience the sensation.
-
-"Any woman could have done it," he argued. "This isn't love; it's
-nothing peculiar to Santa. Any reasonably beautiful woman could have
-done it by acting the way she acted. I had consoled myself that I was
-immune from women. I was starving, and I didn't know it."
-
-His sane mind warned him that it would be wise to avoid further
-encounters. She was too alluring for him to withstand. There were too
-many things about her that were unaccountable. There was her frenzied
-display of infatuation for both himself and the Prince, all within the
-space of twelve hours.
-
-He was brushing his hair and viewing his reflection in the shabby
-mirror, when he reached this point. He stopped brushing and regarded his
-reflection intently. What could any woman discover in those features
-to go mad over? It was a hard face, cleanshaven, bony, and powerful,
-roughened by the wind and tanned by the sun. It was the mask of an
-ascetic, which concealed rather than revealed the emotions. And yet once
-it had been sensitive; you could trace that in the kindly blueness of
-the eyes and the faint tenderness of the full-lipped mouth. The hair was
-a rusty brown, growing thin about the temples; the nose was pinched at
-the nostrils with long-endured suffering--the brow furrowed. He smiled
-in amused disapproval and went on with his brushing. Not the face of an
-Apollo! Nothing to rave about!
-
-And yet, despite his looks, here was at least one woman who, for
-whatever reason, was desperate to marry him. On the drive through the
-dawn from the dock to the hotel she had left no doubt of her intentions.
-It inflamed his curiosity. Though he was nearing forty, with the
-exception of that one disastrous affair, women were still for him an
-untried adventure. But in the case of Santa, to indulge his curiosity
-further might lead to penalties. She was liable to repeat last night's
-performance; the journey to London would probably provide her with a
-fitting opportunity. If it did, could he muster the cruelty to refuse
-her?
-
-On one point his mind was made up: he would not marry her. He had no
-time to waste on marriage. With her it would be folly. Moreover, while
-her breaking down of reticences had spurred his eagerness, it had
-forfeited his respect. It had robbed him of his prerogative of conquest.
-It had changed him from the hunter into the hunted. He was all but
-trapped.
-
-"Trapped!"
-
-He was fastening his bag. He pressed the catch into the lock and stood
-up.
-
-"Trapped! Not yet. Not exactly."
-
-Immediately his mind began to race, devising plans for eluding capture.
-He didn't need to keep his breakfast appointment with her. He could miss
-the eight-thirty and travel to London later. He could slip out unnoticed
-and take up his abode in another hotel. Once he had lost her, he would
-have put himself beyond temptation. She would have no clew to his
-whereabouts, nor he to hers.
-
-As he passed slowly down the stairs, he was still undecided as to how he
-should act. On arriving in the hall, he loitered by the hotel desk, half
-determined to call for his reckoning and make a bolt for it. While he
-dallied, the yearning to see her for a last time swam uppermost. After
-all, he owed something to the only woman who had paid him the compliment
-of loving him. He would not speak to her, would not let her know that he
-was there. He would peep into the room unseen and remember her always as
-waiting for him.
-
-Bag in hand, he strode along the passage to the coffee-room, where
-breakfast was being served. The baize doors were a-swing with scurrying
-waiters. Stooping, he peered through the panes. Pushing the doors
-slightly open, he gazed more steadily. The room was littered with
-ungroomed people, their heads bowed, their elbows flapping, like a flock
-of city sparrows snatching crumbs from beneath the hoofs of passing
-traffic. Nowhere could he espy her, his rarer bird of the dainty
-plumage.
-
-He grew ashamed of his furtiveness. Why should he be afraid of her? She
-shouldn't be disappointed. She should find him gallantly expecting her.
-Resigning his bag to a solicitous bell-boy, he drew himself up to his
-lean western height and entered.
-
-
-IX
-
-
-Seated at a table, lie had watched the swing-doors for a full
-half-hour. He had finished his breakfast. If he were to catch the
-eight-thirty, it was time for him to be moving. He began to flirt with
-the idea of postponing his journey; it was evident she had overslept
-herself.
-
-At the desk, while he settled his account, he had it on the tip of his
-tongue to inquire for her, but he was daunted by the presence of the
-night-porter. The man kept eyeing him with a knowing grin, as though he
-were expecting just such a question.
-
-"I won't gratify him," Hindwood thought. "The fellow knows too much.
-It's fate, if I miss her."
-
-He crossed the road to the station. Having secured a seat in a
-first-class smoker, he roamed up and down the platform. Every few
-minutes he consulted his watch as the hands circled nearer to the
-half-hour. He bought papers at the news-stand and returned to buy more
-papers; from there, while not seeming to do so, he could obtain a clear
-view of the hotel. And still there was no sign of her.
-
-When it was almost too late, he threw caution to the winds. At a gait
-between a run and a walk, he recrossed the road and dashed up the hotel
-steps. As he confronted the clerk behind the desk, he was a little
-breathless; he was also aware that the night-porter's grin had widened.
-
-"There's a lady staying here. She was to have traveled with me to
-London. I'm afraid she's not been wakened."
-
-"A lady!" The clerk looked up with the bored expression of one who was
-impervious to romance. "A lady! Oh, yes."
-
-"She's a passenger from the _Ryndam_," he continued. "Her name's Miss
-Gorlof. Send some one to her room to find out at once----"
-
-The night-porter interrupted. Addressing the clerk, he said: "The
-gentleman means the foreign-looking lady wot I told you about--the one
-in all the furs." Then to Hindwood, "She was called for at six this
-mornin'. A gentleman in goggles, who couldn't speak no English, arrived
-in a tourin' car and drove off with 'er."
-
-"Drove off with her. But----"
-
-Realizing that too much emotion would make him appear ridiculous, he
-steadied his voice and asked casually, "I suppose she left a note for
-me?"
-
-The clerk glanced across his shoulder at the rack. "Your name's Mr.
-Hindwood, isn't it?" He raised his hand to a pigeonhole lettered "H".
-"You can see for yourself, sir. There's nothing in it."
-
-"Then perhaps it was a verbal message. She would be certain to leave me
-her address."
-
-The clerk turned to the night-porter. "Did she?" The night-porter beamed
-with satisfaction. "She did not."
-
-He had achieved his dramatic effect.
-
-
-X
-
-
-He was the last passenger to squeeze through the barrier. As he
-scrambled into his carriage, the train was on the point of moving.
-Spreading one of his many papers on his knees, he lit a cigarette. He
-believed he was behaving as though nothing had happened. "That I
-can take it like this proves that she was nothing to me," he assured
-himself.
-
-Ten minutes later he discovered that he had not read a line and that the
-cigarette had gone out.
-
-"I suppose I'm a bit upset," he admitted, "though goodness knows why I
-should be. The matter's ended exactly as I wanted."
-
-But had it? What had he wanted? Does a man ever know what he wants where
-a woman is concerned? He desires most the thing which he most dreads.
-During the voyage he had wanted to win her from Prince Rogovich. On
-the tug he had wanted to forget her. In the cab he had wanted to go on
-kissing her forever. That morning he had wanted to save his freedom.
-On the station, like a maddened schoolboy, his terror had been lest he
-might lose her.
-
-As a result he had lost her. Somewhere through the sunny lanes of Devon
-she was speeding with the gentleman who "couldn't speak no English"
-and wore goggles. In which direction and for what purpose he could not
-guess.
-
-He smiled bitterly. It was a situation which called for mirth. He had
-accused her of having trapped him at a time when she herself had been
-escaping from him. He had complained that her affection was too ardently
-obvious at a moment when she was proving herself most coldly elusive.
-While he had been resenting the way in which he was being hunted, she
-had already abandoned him to hunt to his heart's content.
-
-His reflections were broken in upon by a weakeyed old clergyman seated
-opposite to him in the far corner.
-
-"Excuse me, but I see by your labels that you've just landed. May I ask
-whether your vessel was the _Ryndam_?"
-
-"It was."
-
-"Then there's an item in the local paper which should interest you. It
-has to do with Prince Rogovich, the great Polish patriot. He was your
-fellow passenger, if I'm not mistaken."
-
-Hindwood was disinclined for conversation. He made his tone brusk that
-he might discourage further questions. "You're not mistaken, and I guess
-I know what you're going to tell me: that after all the preparations
-made for his reception, the Prince didn't land at Plymouth but, without
-notifying any one, traveled on either to Boulogne or Rotterdam."
-
-"But that wasn't what I was going to tell you," the old gentleman
-continued in his benevolent pulpit manner. "Oh, no, I was going to tell
-you something quite different. After the _Ryndam_ left Plymouth, the
-Captain had her searched from stem to stern. Not a trace of the Prince
-could be found."
-
-"Extraordinary! I suppose the news was received by wireless. Does the
-paper suggest an explanation?"
-
-"None whatsoever. I thought you'd be interested. Perhaps you'd like to
-read for yourself."
-
-The paper contained the bare fact as the clergyman had stated it. "A
-complete search was made. All his personal belongings were found intact,
-but of the Prince himself not a trace."
-
-Hindwood closed his eyes and pretended to sleep that he might protect
-himself from further intrusions. He wanted to argue his way through this
-problem and to acquit Santa of any share in what had happened. And yet,
-if an investigation were held and he himself had to tell all he knew,
-things would look black for her. Was that why----?
-
-He tried to crush the ugly thought, but it clamored to be expressed.
-Was that why she had made love to him--that her kiss might seal his lips
-with silence?
-
-The train was slowing down. He opened his eyes. In the cheerfulness of
-sunshine life took on a more normal aspect. Towering above crowded roofs
-of houses, a tall cathedral pricked the blueness of the sky.
-
-"Where are we?"
-
-The clergyman was collecting his bundles. "Exeter--where I alight."
-
-As soon as he had the carriage to himself, before any one could enter,
-he reached up to the rack and quickly removed the _Ryndam_ labels from
-his bag. Having done that, he stepped to the platform and went in search
-of papers. The torn labels were still in his hand. Surreptitiously he
-dropped them between the train and the platform, some distance lower
-down than his own carriage. He realized the stealth he had employed only
-when Exeter was left behind.
-
-"Ridiculous!" he shrugged his shoulders. "It's getting on my nerves."
-
-In his most recently acquired batch of papers he found no reference to
-the topic which absorbed him. At the time when the London press had been
-published, the disappearance of the Prince had not been known to the
-world.
-
-Throughout the journey, at every fresh stopping-place, he repeated the
-performance, dashing down platforms in quest of newsboys and purchasing
-copies of every journal on sale. He caught himself continually eyeing
-his bag to make sure that he really had removed all labels. He began
-to feel as if he himself were the criminal. In his intentions he was
-already an accessory after the fact. Whether Santa was innocent or
-guilty, at all costs he had determined to shield her.
-
-Through the late summer afternoon, as he drew nearer to London, his
-suspense began to die. He was getting the later editions now; none of
-them so much as mentioned the affair. In Plymouth and Bristol it had
-probably been of local importance. He took courage to smile. What a
-coward dread can make of an honest man!
-
-Afternoon was fading into the gold of evening when they steamed into
-Paddington. By making haste he could just reach the American Embassy
-before closing time. It was likely that several communications had
-been addressed to him there. He had cabled ahead to the Ritz for a
-reservation. It wouldn't take him far out of his direction to call at
-the Embassy on the way to his hotel.
-
-In the stir and bustle of familiar London, the nightmare of the voyage
-grew vague. He stepped from the carriage like a man awaking. It thrilled
-him with happy surprise to discover the old gray city, plumed with smoke
-and smiling, waiting unchanged beneath his feet to welcome him. The very
-smell of mingled gasoline and horses from the cab-ranks was reassuring.
-Every sight that his eyes encountered made him feel respectable.
-
-"Any luggage, sir?" It was a porter accosting him.
-
-"Yes. Two trunks. At least, I guess they're on this train."
-
-"Which van, sir?"
-
-"The one from Plymouth." Then, with conscious bravado, he added: "I'm
-from the _Ryndam_. You'll recognize them by the Holland-American tags."
-
-The porter had gone to secure a barrow. While Hindwood waited, gazing
-about him idly, his eyes were startled by a news-placard bearing the
-following legend:
-
-
-DISAPPEARANCE OF A PRINCE
-
-
-FOUL PLAY SUSPECTED
-
-
-He swayed, as though he had been struck by a bullet. He glanced round
-feverishly, fearing lest he might espy another placard stating, "Santa
-Gorlof Arrested." But no--for the moment she was safe. He thanked God
-for the touring-car and the forethought of the foreign gentleman who
-could speak no English.
-
-Quickly he began to readjust his plans. If he went to claim his trunks,
-there was no telling by whom he might be met--newspaper men, detectives,
-officials from the Foreign Office. Moreover, Santa's trunks were in the
-van. When he had explained himself, he might be called upon to account
-for her absence. There was only one thing for him to do: for her sake he
-must get out of England. If he delayed, he might be prevented. It would
-be unwise for him to go to the Ritz; he must spend the night at some
-obscure hotel. The only place to which he might be traced was the
-Embassy; but he would have to risk that--it was of the utmost importance
-that he should pick up his communications.
-
-He was on the point of making good his escape, when the porter trundled
-up with his barrow.
-
-"Hi, mister! Where are you goin'? I'll be needin' you to identify 'em."
-
-"I know you will." Hindwood turned on him a face which was flustered.
-"But I've just remembered I have an engagement. I'll send for them
-later. It'll make no difference to you; here's what I should have paid
-you."
-
-The man, having inspected it carefully, pocketed the half-crown. "It
-won't take long," he suggested; "me and the barrow's ready. And it won't
-cost you nothink, seein' as how you've paid me."
-
-"No time."
-
-Without more ado, he made a dash for the nearest taxi. "As fast as you
-like," he told the driver; "the faster, the bigger your fare."
-
-He fled out of the station at a forbidden rate, but after half a mile
-the taxi halted against the curb. Lowering the window, he looked out.
-
-"What's the matter? Something wrong with your engine?"
-
-"We ain't been follered. You can calm down," the driver assured him
-soothingly. "Wot's wrong is that you ain't told me no address."
-
-"Stupid of me! The American Embassy."
-
-At the Embassy, having explained his errand, he was requested to wait.
-Then, rather to his surprise, instead of having his letters handed
-to him, he was shown into a handsome room where, at the far end, a
-gray-haired man was seated, sorting papers behind a large mahogany
-table.
-
-Hindwood crossed the room and held out his hand.
-
-"I'm Philip Hindwood, the railroad expert. I guess you've heard of me.
-I called in case there was some mail for me. I had no intention of
-troubling you personally."
-
-"I'm glad you've come," said the gray-haired man gravely. "If you hadn't
-troubled me, I should have had to trouble you. There have been inquiries
-for you. They have to do with a woman who goes by the name of Santa
-Gorlof. The police thought you might know something about her. It seems
-she's wanted."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER THE SECOND--THE RETURN OF SANTA GORLOF
-
-
-I
-
-
-SO Santa was "wanted!" Why she was wanted Hindwood did not dare to
-question. And the police thought he could tell them something! He could,
-but it would be something to put them off her track. After kissing a
-woman, it wasn't likely he'd betray her. She might have committed every
-crime on the calendar; it would make no difference. He had learned his
-code of honor on the outskirts of civilization, where law is more often
-defied than obeyed. By his standards of chivalry, after what had passed
-between them, he had no option but to play the game by her. What did
-they think he knew? Why should they think he knew anything?
-
-He masked his anxiety with seeming unconcern. Without his assistance,
-they could make little headway. He must let fall no hint that would
-suggest a sentimental interest in her fortunes. He would be spied
-on--probably he had been spied on already. For all he knew, the
-clergyman in the train, the porter at Paddington, the taxi-driver who
-had assured him that he wasn't followed, were detectives. Henceforward
-he must live his life normally and in public, doing everything to disarm
-suspicion. Any divergence from his usual habits, such as staying in
-obscure quarters or canceling engagements that he might escape to the
-Continent, would create the impression that he was possessed of guilty
-knowledge. If he had to speak of her, he must refer to her as a charming
-acquaintance and profess horror that such a charge should have been
-brought against her.
-
-Following this line, he left the Embassy with the promise that he would
-consult with the police at their earliest convenience. From there he
-drove to the Ritz, adhering to arrangements made before this sinister
-thing had happened. To avoid being waylaid, he went straight to his
-rooms, having ordered his trunks to be fetched from the station and his
-dinner to be served in his apartment.
-
-The suite allotted him was one which he had occupied on several previous
-occasions. It soothed his ruffled pride to discover that his preferences
-had been remembered. From the front windows he could gaze down
-Piccadilly; from the side he could watch the green park, a lake of jade,
-imprisoned between walls of granite. In the panes facing westward a
-fairy city hung poised, tipped with flame and ensanguined by the sunset.
-
-Leisurely he set to work to bathe and shave, stretching out the ritual
-and reveling in the recovery of his self-respect. Slowly the sunset
-faded. Before he had made an end, the golden September dusk was drifting
-down. In the twilight he stretched himself on the bed, waiting for
-his trunks with his wardrobe to arrive. He felt that he could face the
-police with much more calmness if he was clad in the respectability of
-evening dress.
-
-He must have dozed, for the room was completely dark when he was brought
-to his feet by the sharp ringing of the telephone. As he fumbled for
-the receiver, he thought, "Well, I've a good reason for not seeing them.
-Pajamas aren't dignified."
-
-Aloud he said: "Yes. Quite correct--Mr. Hind-wood. Yes, the Mr. Hindwood
-who's just landed from the _Ryndam_. You traced me by my trunks! You
-were expecting I'd claim them in person! The man from the Ritz is
-there! That's all right. Thank you for telling me. What was my
-reason?--Certainly not. I was avoiding no one. What did you say you
-were?--A newspaper-man!--I guess not. I've nothing to tell--no. That's
-final."
-
-He had scarcely hung up when the bell commenced ringing again. The next
-half-hour was spent in refusing to be interviewed by invisible persons.
-It seemed as though every journalist in London were waiting in queue
-to get on to him. Some were suave, some bullying; all were persistent.
-Didn't he know that he owed it to the public to say something? If a list
-of questions was submitted to him, would he make a written statement?
-
-To cut the clamor short, he instructed the hotel operator to allow no
-one to speak with him who would not state his business. For the rest of
-the evening he was "out" to any one who had to do with the press. After
-that the telephone grew quiet.
-
-He switched on the lights. As he did so, he noticed that he was
-trembling with excitement. He was furious. This assault had made
-him aware of the unseen wall of hostility by which he and Santa were
-surrounded. She hadn't a chance; the whole of organized society was
-against her. The odds were brutally unfair. Nothing that she had done
-could warrant such unsportsmanly cruelty. So far it had not been proved
-that she had done anything, yet every one was willing to prejudge her.
-The pursuit was cowardly. Whether he loved her did not matter. It was
-a problem in knight-errantry: to protect her he was willing to risk all
-that he was and had.
-
-The arrival of his trunks gave him something else to think about. When
-he was dressed, he felt ready for every emergency. After all, he was not
-the criminal.
-
-He had his dinner spread against a window from which he could watch the
-arc-lights of Piccadilly strung across the night like a rope of pearls.
-He tried to be persuaded that he was enjoying himself. If the police
-didn't call on him within the hour, he would saunter out to a music-hall
-and rub shoulders with the crowd.
-
-But would he? To what purpose? He would have to go alone, as he always
-went. It would be different if she were with him. The last nine days had
-spoiled him for loneliness; they had taught him the romance of a woman's
-friendship. And yet, not friendship--she had asked for his affection.
-All his life he had craved to give his love to some woman. Until he had
-met Santa, his craving had been denied. No woman had seemed to care.
-Because of that, in spite of success, he had reckoned himself a failure.
-He had attained everything--power, position, wealth--everything except
-his desire. There had been moments on the voyage when it had seemed to
-him that his goal was in sight.
-
-If she were to tap on his door, how would he greet her? If she did, it
-would be like her; she could always be counted on to do the unexpected.
-He told himself that he would ask her no questions. He would not upbraid
-her. He would comfort her in the way that she understood best. When the
-police came to interrogate him, he would place his arm about her and
-answer:
-
-"Gentlemen, if it is Santa Gorlof you are seeking, she is here. I have
-asked her to be my wife." The scene as he conjured it was worthy
-of Dumas; he was thrilled by the gallantry of his imagination. His
-ponderings were cut short by a sharp rap. He sprang to his feet; it
-almost seemed that his dream was to be realized. The rap was repeated.
-Outside the door a page was standing.
-
-"There's a gentleman downstairs. He won't give his name. He says you
-left word, sir, at the American Embassy, that you would be willing to
-see him."
-
-"Show him up."
-
-
-II
-
-
-Leaving the door ajar, he drew a chair to his desk and commenced
-rummaging through a pile of documents. He planned to create the
-impression that he regarded this visit as of small importance. He was
-anxious, even at the risk of appearing vulgar, to be discovered in the
-rle of an American money-lord, every second of whose time represented
-dollars--the kind of man who was too influential to be bulldozed by the
-police methods of a country whose citizenship he did not share. He urged
-himself into a mood of contempt by recalling the beefy caricatures which
-pass currency in English fiction for veracious portraits of Scotland
-Yard detectives. This fellow would look like a constable off duty. When
-he sat down, he would bulge at the neck and mop his forehead with a
-multicolored handkerchief. He would be awed by elegance into sulky
-stupidity--but would become pompously affable when offered a cigar.
-
-"May I enter?" The door creaked.
-
-"Surely. Come in. But you must excuse me for a moment." Hindwood spoke
-without turning. He pretended to be sorting the last of his documents.
-The cultured tone of the voice had surprised him. Perhaps, after all,
-his guest might not be a detective.
-
-"Sorry to keep you. Time's valuable. My stay in England is short. There,
-that's finished. What can I do for you?" He pushed back his chair and
-rose to face his guest.
-
-If the man's intonation had surprised him, his appearance amazed him
-still more. He could have passed for the colonel of a crack cavalry
-regiment. His bearing was erect and dapper. His dark lounge suit, with
-the light stripes running through it, was so smartly tailored that one
-was apt to suspect that he was corseted. His hair was white, his cheeks
-tanned, his manner cheerful and commanding. He was of less than medium
-height. With his bristling mustache and pointed imperial he bore a
-distinct resemblance to Lord Roberts of Kandahar.
-
-Hindwood held out his hand with undisguised relief. "Won't you sit down,
-sir? I'm afraid I must have seemed discourteous. The truth is, I was
-expecting some one quite different. The boy didn't announce your name or
-business."
-
-The stranger accepted his hand with an ironic smile. He did not sit
-down. Instead he asked a question. "Wouldn't it be wise to shut the
-door?" Without waiting for permission, he went to the door and closed
-it. Before he closed it, he glanced out into the passage. Having
-regained the middle of the room, he gazed searchingly about him.
-
-"No one here who can listen?"
-
-Again taking matters into his own hands, he made a swift and thorough
-investigation, peering into the bathroom, stabbing draperies with his
-cane as with a sword, feeling behind clothes in cupboards. He left no
-corner uninspected in which an eavesdropper might be secreted. Last of
-all he approached the window near which Hindwood had dined. For a few
-seconds he stood there, staring down into the well of blackness and
-the mysterious fairyland of shifting lights. Laying aside his hat and
-gloves, but still retaining his cane, he remarked:
-
-"Beautiful! Very beautiful! Exquisite with the witchery of a woman's
-face, which masks a hidden wickedness!"
-
-Hindwood had been regarding him in silence. "I have yet to learn your
-name and business," he reminded him.
-
-The stranger chuckled. "My name! I have almost forgotten it. I assume
-so many. As for my business, I'm a secret service agent in the employ of
-the British Government."
-
-"Have you credentials?"
-
-"A letter."
-
-He produced from his breast pocket an envelope, containing this message,
-typed on American Embassy notepaper, "This will serve to introduce the
-gentleman who is anxious to consult you on the subject of which we spoke
-this afternoon."
-
-"Satisfactory?"
-
-"Quite. Perhaps now you'll be seated. If you smoke, I can recommend
-these cigars."
-
-Again the stranger, with unruffled urbanity, betrayed his alert
-independence. "If you have no objection, I prefer my own."
-
-"As you like." Hindwood was determined to conduct the interview along
-the lines of social politeness. Selecting a cigar himself, he notched
-the end. "I'm entirely at your disposal. There's little I can tell.
-I suppose the subject on which you're anxious to consult me is what
-happened on the _Ryndam_?"
-
-"Yes and no." The stranger puffed leisurely for a few moments. "The
-answer is yes, if by 'what happened on the _Ryndam_ you mean Santa
-Gorlof."
-
-
-III
-
-
-Santa Gorlof?" Hindwood feigned surprise. "A very charming lady!"
-
-The shrewd face puckered in a smile. The gray eyes grew piercing beneath
-the beetling, white brows. "So I've been given to understand. She has a
-way with the men, has our Santa. Even Prince Rogovich, old hand that he
-was, fell for her. I believe that's your expressive phrase in America.
-He fell for her in every sense, especially when she pushed him
-overboard."
-
-Hindwood frowned. He realized that a cat-and-mouse game had commenced,
-in which he had been allotted the rle of mouse. He resented the levity
-with which Santa's name had been mentioned. If the man was in earnest,
-the matter was too terrible for jest. Though he had harbored the same
-suspicion, to hear it stated as a fact appalled him. The charge sounded
-dastardly, spoken in that pleasant voice by this courtly English
-gentleman who was old enough to be her father.
-
-With an effort he kept command of his composure. "Of course you're
-joking?"
-
-"Not in the least."
-
-"Then, in plain American, you're accusing a beautiful and fascinating
-woman of murder."
-
-"Of what else?"
-
-Hindwood shrugged his shoulders. "Pardon my density. I didn't catch on.
-It was your appearance misled me; you look so much a gentleman."
-
-"I flatter myself that there are occasions when I am."
-
-"Then I guess we'll have to reckon this occasion an exception. I might
-remind you that it's a woman you're accusing and that the penalty for
-murder is death. Scarcely a subject to make merry over with a play upon
-words!"
-
-"And you're reminding me," the stranger added gently, "that, if she's
-a woman, you and I are men. You're trying to tell me that, if my
-supposition is correct, then all that ravishing caprice that we know
-as Santa Gorlof will have to be ruthlessly blotted out. Possibly you're
-picturing, as so many of her victims have pictured before you, the
-wealth of happiness that might be yours if you could win her for
-yourself."
-
-Hindwood's hand trembled as he flicked his ash. "My dear sir," he
-drawled, "I'm not twenty. I'm a hard-bitten man of the world. You credit
-me with too much romance. In your profession you're trained to spin
-theories. Please leave me out; stick to your assertion. You come to me,
-accusing a woman of my acquaintance--I can hardly call her a friend--of
-having committed murder. The charge sounds preposterous. Why you should
-come to me at all I can not guess. Before we go further, I have a right
-to ask a question: is this mere conjecture or can you prove it?"
-
-"I can prove it." The stranger paused, studying the despair his words
-had caused. "I can prove it." Then he added, "If you'll help."
-
-"If I'll perjure myself." Scowling, Hindwood leaped to his feet. "That
-was what you meant. At your time of life I should have thought you could
-have found a less infamous way of gaining your livelihood. There's your
-hat, and there's the door." The mocking old gentleman went through the
-dumb show of clapping his applause. He settled himself more deeply in
-his chair. When he spoke, it was with the lazy good-humor of a man at
-his club. "You fill me with admiration. Your last attitude was superb.
-I have only one criticism to offer of your play-acting; by letting your
-cigar go out, you betrayed the perturbation you were trying to
-disguise. It's been dead three minutes." He raised his hand, delaying
-interruption. "Don't be angry. I'm not doubting your momentary
-sincerity. But think back and then own that you also have suspected that
-she's guilty."
-
-"Never."
-
-"Humph! Your memory must be faulty. Allow me to prompt you with a few
-facts."
-
-Then and there, without hesitation or boasting, he detailed to Hindwood
-all his actions, from his departure from the _Ryndam_ to the moment
-when he had arrived at the Embassy. Hindwood listened to the narration
-dumfounded.
-
-"So you see," he concluded, "if I can tell you so much as this, there
-is probably much more that I could tell. You've been infatuated by a
-she-wolf. What she did to Prince Rogovich, she has done to at least
-a dozen of her admirers. She would have done the same to you. Because
-there have been moments when you thought you loved her, you're unwilling
-to hand her over to justice. You're even willing to risk your own good
-name in her defense. It's sports-manly of you, but she's undeserving
-of your loyalty. When you know the truth, you'll thank your lucky stars
-that I came to-night."
-
-
-IV
-
-
-Hindwood's face had gone ashen--not through fear for his own safety,
-but for hers. He was determined not to believe a word of what he
-had heard, and yet he was curious to learn. There was such an air of
-complete conviction about the stranger; it was impossible to doubt the
-integrity of his intentions. What he hoped was to discover some flaw in
-his logic. Sinking back into his chair, he stared in silence at the man
-who believed he knew everything.
-
-Remembering that his cigar had gone out, he commenced searching through
-his pockets for a match.
-
-"They're at your elbow," the stranger informed him. "No, not there. On
-the table. I've upset you more than I intended."
-
-Again they lapsed into silence.
-
-At last Hindwood said: "I owe you an apology. I've been insulting, but
-the blame is partly yours. You didn't explain yourself; you withheld
-your identity. I was expecting a kind of policeman. But I think you
-understand. Anyhow, I regret my rudeness. Now tell me, who are you?"
-
-"I'm Major Cleasby, formerly of the Indian Army. My main hobby is
-studying the Asiatic." Hindwood looked up sharply. He remembered the
-impression Santa had made on him, that if her eyes had been darker, she
-could have passed for a Hindoo princess.
-
-"I don't see what studying the Asiatic has to do with the disappearance
-of Prince Rogovich," he said. "If we're going to arrive anywhere, what
-we need is frankness. I think you ought to understand my side of the
-affair."
-
-The Major nodded.
-
-"Then, to start with, I'm unmarried--not that I'm a woman-hater, but my
-life has been too packed with important undertakings to leave me much
-time to spare on women. I've been a kind of express, stopping only at
-cities and rushing by all the villages. On the _Ryndam_ I was forced to
-come to rest; it so happened that Santa Gorlof was the village at
-which I halted. The _Ryndam_, as you know, isn't one of these floating
-palaces; she doesn't attract the flashy type of traveler. The company
-on this last voyage was dull--dull to the point of tears. The Prince and
-Santa Gorlof were the two exceptions. I got to know her first and the
-Prince later. It was I who introduced her to him. We were each of us a
-bit stand-offish at first; we drifted together against our wills, in an
-attempt to escape from boredom. Then we began to expect each other, till
-finally--We were two men and a woman, with nothing to distract us;
-it's an old story--the usual thing happened. I suppose you'd call it a
-three-cornered flirtation in which the Prince and I were rivals.
-
-"At first Santa was strictly impartial; toward the end it was the Prince
-she favored. I'm afraid I got huffy, which was distinctly childish, for
-none of us was serious. We were two men and a beautiful woman at loose
-ends, rather dangerously amusing ourselves. At Plymouth, if things had
-terminated normally, we should have come to our senses and gone our
-separate ways. At most we should have said good-by on reaching London.
-In none of our dealings had there been the least hint of anything
-serious--nothing that would suggest a love-affair. Speaking for myself,
-my interest in Santa had been on the wane for several days before we
-landed. I should have parted with her on the dock without compunction,
-if this extraordinary disappearance hadn't occurred. It was that that
-again drew us together. Neither of us was willing to believe the worst;
-we both tried to persuade ourselves that he'd changed his plans at the
-last moment. At the same time we were both a little anxious lest we
-might be bothered with questions and detained. Probably it was to avoid
-any such annoyance that she dodged her breakfast engagement with me and
-escaped so early this morning."
-
-The Major thrust himself forward, resting his chin on the handle of his
-cane. "That wasn't her reason."
-
-"You're presuming her guilt. Why wasn't it?"
-
-"You forget the foreigner who wore goggles and pretended he couldn't
-speak English. She couldn't possibly have sent him word. The necessity
-for her escape must have been foreseen and the means prearranged."
-
-Hindwood puzzled to find some more innocent explanation. "He might have
-been her husband."
-
-"He wasn't."
-
-"You speak as though you knew everything." Then, with a catch in his
-breath, "She isn't arrested?"
-
-"If she were, I shouldn't tell you."
-
-"Then what makes you so positive that he wasn't her husband?"
-
-The Major drew himself erect, smiling palely. "Because _I_ am her
-husband."
-
-
-V
-
-
-Hindwood rose and moved over to the window. He felt mentally stifled.
-He leaned out, gazing down into the pool of blackness, along whose
-floor, like the phosphorescence of fishes, lights drifted and darted.
-The sight of so much coolness quieted him. When he turned, the Major had
-not moved a muscle; he was sitting as he had left him, erect and palely
-smiling.
-
-"You'll not be surprised when I tell you, Major Cleasby, that your last
-piece of information completely overwhelms me. You come to me in the
-rle of a secret service agent, and now you claim to be her husband."
-
-"I'm both."
-
-"Do you mean me to understand that you're accumulating the evidence that
-will convict your wife?"
-
-"Convict her and, I regret to say, hang her. Stated baldly, that is my
-purpose."
-
-Hindwood perched himself on the window ledge and regarded his guest
-intently. He didn't look a monster; he looked in all respects a kindly,
-well-bred gentleman, and yet, if what he had just heard was correct,
-there were few monsters in history who could compare with him. Hindwood
-tried to picture him as Santa's husband. He couldn't. He was thankful
-that he couldn't. For a reason which he did not distress himself to
-analyze, he didn't wish to believe that she had ever had a husband. As
-for the hints about her criminal record and her many lovers, he utterly
-rejected them. Was it likely that a woman so royal and aloof could have
-stooped to the gutter? But if these accusations were not true, what was
-their object? Either it was a case of mistaken identity and there were
-two Santa Gorlofs, or the object was to infuriate him with jealousy so
-that he would blurt out all he knew.
-
-He eyed the Major doubtfully. He wasn't insane. He didn't look a rascal.
-And yet, what husband in his senses----? He began to notice details.
-
-The Major was less old than he had fancied at first; he was more worn
-than aged. Illness or tragedy might have whitened him. It was even
-possible that he had made himself up for the part he was playing. His
-eyes were clear, and his hands virile. With the mustache and imperial
-removed----
-
-"Major Cleasby, you ask me to accept a great deal on your bare word,"
-he said politely. "You come to me with nothing to introduce you but the
-most briefly formal letter. The moment you enter my room, before you'll
-have anything to do with me, you inspect every hiding-place as though
-I were a counterfeiter or an anarchist. You boldly announce to me that
-ever since I landed in England you've had me followed and observed. You
-use the results of your spying as a kind of blackmail to induce me to
-present you with the sort of evidence for which you're searching. You
-trick me into telling you about a shipboard flirtation with a woman whom
-you say you want convicted of murder. No sooner have I told you, than
-you declare that you yourself are married to her. I ought to refuse to
-allow this interview to go further without calling in a lawyer. I don't
-mean to be offensive, but your kaleidoscopic changes put a strain on my
-credulity. I can't believe your story that you're a secret service agent
-endeavoring to get your wife executed. When men tire of matrimony, they
-find less ingenious methods of recovering their bachelorhood."
-
-The Major smiled with his patient air of affability. "It isn't my
-bachelorhood that I'm trying to recover. It's my----"
-
-"If you don't mind," Hindwood cut in, "I'd like to finish my say first.
-One of the things that you may not have learned is that I'm here on a
-mission of international dimensions. It concerns more than one of the
-governments of Europe. I can't afford to have my name mixed up in a
-scandal and, what's more, I can bring influences to bear to prevent it
-from being introduced. You may be anything you like; whatever you are
-cuts no ice. I'm through with you and with whatever you may imagine took
-place on the _Ryndam_. You seem to think that I'm concealing a guilty
-knowledge that would enable you to bring this Gorlof woman to trial.
-You're on the wrong tack. I have no such knowledge. The longer you
-stay here, the more you waste my time." The Major was on the point of
-answering when the telephone rang shrilly. Grateful for a diversion,
-Hindwood crossed the room. As he unhooked the receiver, he glanced
-across his shoulder, "Excuse me."
-
-"Is this Mr. Hindwood?"
-
-"It is."
-
-It was the hotel operator asking.
-
-"There's a call for you, sir. It's from some one who's not on a
-newspaper. Will you take it?"
-
-"Certainly."
-
-There was a pause while the connection was being made; then a foreign
-voice, a woman's, questioned, "Eees thees Meester Hindwood? Eef you
-please, one meenute. A lady wants to talk wiz you."
-
-Coming across the distance, subdued and earnest, he caught the tones of
-a voice which was instantly familiar.
-
-"Don't be startled. Don't answer me. There's a man with you. Tell him
-nothing. If you ever loved me, even for a second, don't believe a word
-he says."
-
-She had not been arrested! A wave of joy swept over him. The uncertainty
-as to whether she was arrested had been crushing him.
-
-He waited, hoping she would speak again.
-
-Shattering the spell with a touch of bathos, the operator inquired,
-"Number?"
-
-With that he rang off. As he raised his head, he had the uncomfortable
-sensation that the Major had turned away from watching him.
-
-
-VI
-
-
-So you want to be rid of me!" The Major glanced across his shoulder, at
-the same time making no effort to remove himself.
-
-Hindwood crossed the room thoughtfully and seated himself. "I've made no
-secret of it from the moment you entered."
-
-The Major laughed genially. "I don't blame you. You think I'm a wronged
-husband trying to get even, or else an unscrupulous detective baiting
-traps with falsehoods. The situation's unpleasant--for you, especially."
-
-"I'm glad you realize it."
-
-"I assure you I do. You've given yourself away completely."
-
-"You think so?"
-
-"I don't think; I know. What you've told me proves beyond a doubt that
-you're possessed of exactly the knowledge that would bring Santa Gorlof
-to trial."
-
-"You're imaginative."
-
-"I'm observant. You're wondering what makes me so certain. The
-explanation's simple: I've studied Santa's tactics. Her strategy's the
-same in every instance. When a man suspects her guilt, she does what she
-did to you: seals his mouth with kisses."
-
-"This is too much." Hindwood brought his fist down with a bang. "Do you
-go or do I have to force you?"
-
-"This time I'll try one of yours."
-
-With astounding assurance the Major helped himself to one of Hindwood's
-cigars, which he had previously rejected. Without bravado he lighted
-it and, having ascertained that it was drawing, continued: "If you used
-force, you'd regret it. You'd make certain of the unwelcome publicity
-you're so anxious to avoid; you'd miss a stranger story than any Arabian
-tale that ever was concocted. You think you can still touch bottom; as
-a matter of fact you're already out of sight of land. You sit there
-looking an average, successful American; actually you've become an
-heroic figure, adrift upon an ocean so romantic and uncharted that it
-beats upon the cliffs of every human passion."
-
-Hindwood shifted uneasily. "So you're a fortuneteller in addition to
-being an ill-used husband and a detective!"
-
-Ignoring his sarcasm, the Major proceeded: "Some time ago you accused me
-of ingenuity in the means I had adopted to recover my bachelorhood. It's
-not my bachelorhood, but my own and my country's honor that, with
-your help, I'm endeavoring to recover. That sounds extravagant? But
-consider--what motive could be sufficiently extravagant to compel a man
-to bend all his energies toward bringing the woman whom he loves to the
-scaffold? Because I say it calmly, you doubt that I love her. What man
-could help loving her? She's the last of a long line of false, fair
-women who've stirred up madness and left behind a trail of ruin."
-
-Rising wearily, Hindwood turned his back and commenced fingering the
-documents on his desk. "There'll be nothing gained by carrying this
-discussion further."
-
-With a question the Major recaptured his attention. "Did it ever strike
-you that she's partly Asiatic?"
-
-Hindwood swung round, surprised into truth. "What makes you ask it?"
-
-
-VII
-
-
-Even to myself," the Major sighed, "the story which I am about to tell
-sounds incredible. My reason for confiding it to a stranger is that,
-when you have heard it, you may dispense with chivalry and become stern
-enough to do your duty. To protect a woman, whatever her age or
-looks, is an instinct as primitive as religion. When she happens to be
-beautiful and the object of your affection, not to protect her is a
-kind of blasphemy. You and I, though you deny it, are both in love
-with Santa. I am her husband, while you are no more than her chance-met
-admirer. Yet you, in her hour of danger, are prepared to shield her with
-your honor, whereas I am among the most relentless of her pursuers.
-
-"The best part of my life has been spent in India. I went there with
-my regiment when I was little more than a boy. The fascination of an
-ancient civilization took possession of my imagination. I became a
-student of it and soon acquired a knowledge of native habits which was
-more fitting to a secret agent than to a soldier. I learned to speak
-many dialects and could pass myself off as an Asiatic with the minimum
-amount of disguise. Instead of frequenting clubs and idling away my
-leisure in the usual round of social futilities which make up the
-average Anglo-Indian's life, I formed the practice of slipping out into
-the night and losing my identity in the teeming, Oriental shadow-world
-by which I was surrounded.
-
-"On one of my wanderings--when or where it is not necessary to
-particularize--I strolled into a temple and saw a young girl dancing. As
-perhaps you know, girls are dedicated to the worship of certain gods and
-goddesses at a very early age. They are for the most part deities who
-symbolize fecundity; the ritual with which they are celebrated is gross.
-The temple girls are chosen for their beauty and are trained by the
-priesthood to perform sensual dances, which are as old as time. They
-are not nuns or priestesses; their social status, if they may be said to
-have any in a land where woman is at best a plaything, approximates to
-that of temple slaves. They are taken from their parents at an age when
-sahibs' children are in nurseries. From the moment they are dedicated,
-their minds and souls are left to stagnate; they are treated like
-performing animals--fed and drilled and degraded that they may employ
-their bodies with the utmost grace.
-
-"This girl, the moment I saw her, impressed me as being the most
-fascinating human creature I had ever set eyes on. I had pressed in with
-the crowd from the evil-smelling, moonlit street. The temple was dim
-with the smoke of swaying censers. Its walls seemed vast with the flash
-of gold and jewels. At the far end, scarcely discernible, a huge god
-squatted, gloating and sinister. From somewhere in the shadows, swelling
-into frenzy, came the pounding of drums and the clash of barbaric music.
-Across the open pavement, between the god and the spectators, a chain of
-girls coiled and twisted like a snake.
-
-"At the time I entered, the dance was nearly ended. It had evidently
-been going on for a long while. One by one the girls were slipping down
-exhausted. There they lay disordered, with their hair twined about them
-and their slim, bronze bodies twitching.
-
-"But one girl danced on, ever quickening her pace, till she alone
-remained. She was like a streak of flame, a will-o'-the-wisp, a spring
-petal blown before the wind: she seemed the symbol of everything that
-is young and pagan. Her childish face was masked in an unchanging smile.
-Her lips were parted; her body gleamed golden among the muted lights.
-She stooped and darted like a lizard across her fallen comrades; with
-one leap she floated through the air, perched for a moment on the knees
-of the god, and vanished into his bosom. Instantly the censers were
-extinguished, and I was carried out into the evil-smelling street by the
-rush of the perspiring crowd.
-
-"From that night it was as though I were bewitched. There was never an
-hour when that drifting blossom of a girl was absent from my mind. I
-idealized her into a nobility that was more than earthly. I flung
-aside all sense of caste and race. I forgot that I was a sahib and over
-thirty, whereas she was a dancing girl and little more than a child. I
-excused my infatuation on the ground of magnanimity, telling myself that
-if I could possess her, I could save her from certain degradation. Above
-all, I wanted to wipe out her houri's smile and to cause the soul to
-appear in her eyes. Every hour that I could spare, I disguised myself as
-a native and haunted the temple. At rare intervals I caught glimpses of
-her. And so six months went by.
-
-"Gradually my desire strengthened into determination. I was insane with
-chivalry--utterly quixotic, as quixotic as you are now. I had raised her
-to such a pinnacle of worship that a liaison was not to be contemplated.
-What I planned was to carry her off and marry her. When you remember
-the gulf which the Anglo-Indian places between himself and the races he
-governs, you can estimate the measure of my madness. Such an act would
-entail resigning from my regiment and inviting social ostracism on every
-hand. It meant ruin, but to my impassioned mind no price seemed too high
-to pay.
-
-"There was an old priest who, unknown to me, had observed my comings and
-goings. One evening he addressed me by name. While I was hesitating as
-to what could be his motive, he volunteered to obtain the girl for me if
-I would reward him with a sufficient bribe.
-
-"Three nights later, as I waited, a door in the temple wall opened, and
-a muffled figure emerged. Without a word, obeying the instructions I had
-received, I turned away, and she followed. Through the sleeping city we
-crept, like a pair of shadows.
-
-"In the European quarter I had secretly rented a bungalow which had long
-been deserted. It stood in a wilderness of overgrown shrubberies; a high
-wall went about it. Not until the rusty gate had closed behind us did I
-dare to acknowledge her presence; then, taking her in my arms, I carried
-her up the path to the unlighted house. We entered. There were just the
-two of us; I had not risked engaging servants. In the darkness I set her
-down and lighted a lamp. As the flame quickened and I knelt beside her,
-she uncovered her face. So far, I had seen her only distantly. It was
-the moment for which I had waited. Her face was white."
-
-The Major passed his hand across his forehead. His lips tightened. He
-betrayed every sign of a man doing his best to conceal an overpowering
-emotion. He leaned back and gazed up at the ceiling, blowing out a cloud
-of smoke. When he had watched it disperse, he turned to Hindwood with a
-deprecating smile.
-
-"I hope I don't bore you. I'll omit the ardors and ecstasies of my
-love-affair and stick to the bare outline. What I discovered was that
-she was an Eurasian. She was fourteen years of age--a woman by Indian
-standards, but still a child by ours. Her eyes were gray, and her
-complexion was so light that, with any one but an expert, she could have
-passed for a European. There are millions of darkhaired women with her
-coloring to be found in any Latin country. Given the proper manners and
-a European setting, scarcely a soul would have suspected her. Certainly
-no one would dare to voice his suspicions who met her as my wife.
-
-"Her history I pieced together from many conversations. Her father had
-been a tea-planter--an Englishman of good family. Her mother had been
-a Burmese. They both had died in a cholera epidemic; their half-caste
-child had been picked up from the highways and placed in the temple.
-
-"Seeing that I was out to be chivalrous, I made up my mind to do the
-thing thoroughly. I hurried up a furlough that was due me and, taking
-her to France, placed her in a convent. My reason for choosing France
-was that, when she became my wife, there would be fewer chances of
-discovery if she passed as French instead of English. In the south,
-especially in Provence, there are many women of her type descended from
-the Saracens. If you've been to Arles, you must have noticed them. At
-the end of three years, when she was seventeen, I returned, married her,
-and took her back to India. If any one detected the deception, no one
-was bold enough to proclaim it. Every circumstance argued against such
-a surmise. She had forgotten much of the English she had known, and
-pretended to speak only French. I had coached her in her part; she acted
-it to perfection. By no hint or sign did she let the knowledge escape
-her that she could understand a word of any native dialect. So far as I
-am aware, she was accepted at her face value, as a young Provenal whom
-I had courted in her own country.
-
-"For some time my romantic folly brought us nothing but happiness. We
-invented a legend to account for her family, which, through continual
-repetition, we almost came to believe ourselves. No two people were ever
-more in love. Despite our difference in age and the racial gulf which
-divided us, no man and woman ever seemed more wisely mated. Apparently
-whatever shameful knowledge she had acquired in the temple had been
-blotted out by her superimposed refinement. Even to me she betrayed no
-hint of grossness; she appeared to be as sweet and innocent as the girl
-I claimed her to be--the girl I said I had surprised in the passionless
-tranquility of a French convent.
-
-"Her devotion to myself was pathetic--it verged on adoration. She was
-continually contriving new ways of rewarding me for the horrors from
-which I had saved her. To me the ground she trod was sacred. I delighted
-in making myself her slave. We competed with each other in generosity.
-With each of us the other's slightest whim was law. She was unbelievably
-beautiful, the most mysteriously beautiful woman in India. I was more
-than twice her years and the envy of every man who saw her. Her beauty
-seemed only the outshining of her goodness. Save for an accident, I
-should never have known otherwise.
-
-"We had been married two years when she bore me a child. Our dread, when
-we knew that she was to become a mother, was that our offspring might
-reveal the Asiatic strain. We took every precaution to hide the fact, if
-this should happen. But even this was spared us. Our boy was blue-eyed
-and flaxen-haired as any Anglo-Saxon. She worshiped him. He seemed to
-symbolize Heaven's blessing on the lie we practiced. He was never out of
-her sight. In her fear lest he might develop some native characteristic,
-she refused to have an _ayah_ and cared for him entirely. Wherever she
-went, she kept him with her; he slept in our room at night. So perfectly
-had she drilled herself that, up to this point, I can not recall an
-instance in which she had fallen below the level of a well-born
-white woman. It was the finest instinct in her nature that proved her
-undoing--her mother-love that trapped her into the self-revelation which
-produced our tragedy.
-
-"Our child was a sturdy little fellow of nearly two, just beginning to
-run about, when suddenly he died. We had a house-party at the time. His
-mother was playing tennis. While she was playing, he was strangled
-and thrown down a well by a native servant who believed he had been
-slighted. My wife, missing the child, went in search of him in panic and
-caught the native in the act of getting rid of the body. Instantly she
-reverted to what her mother had been before her. Snatching the man's
-knife, she killed him before any of her guests could restrain her. In
-the abandonment of her grief, she became an out and out Burmese woman,
-scattering dust on her hair, beating her breasts, and rending her
-clothes with the wildest lamentations. The fiction of her French origin
-was utterly destroyed. There was no longer any doubt among those who
-witnessed her that I was married to an Eurasian.
-
-"Our position at once became intolerable. A halfcaste is despised the
-world over, but in India especially. That night every servant left. None
-of our friends came near us. We sat alone with our grief in a deserted
-house. As her calmness returned, she grew tragically contrite--not
-contrite from any moral sense, but because she had given away our
-secret. She seemed incapable of appreciating that she had done any wrong
-in depriving justice of its victim. When I tried to explain to her that
-she had committed a crime, she shook her head impatiently, insisting
-that she had done what any mother ought to do under the circumstances.
-When I pressed the subject she became persuaded that I, too, was blaming
-her, and then that I had never properly loved either her or her child.
-And yet I think I never loved her more tenderly than at that moment.
-
-"A week later, after miserable days and nights of suspense, we received
-our sentence. Native sedition was running high. The Government did not
-dare to bring the wife of a British officer to trial. Such a course
-would have proved too damaging to the prestige of Anglo-Indian
-officialdom. I was promised that the scandal would be hushed up and I
-should be given a new employment, if I would agree to ship her out of
-India at once and to see to it that she never returned. What it amounted
-to for me was perpetual separation and for her perpetual banishment.
-
-"I have often tried to arrive at a sane conclusion as to how far I am
-the author of what she has become. Had I shared her banishment there
-can be little doubt that her white blood would have kept control of her
-poisoned heritage. Unfortunately I had a living to earn. Professionally
-I was broken. My savings were inconsiderable. I had her to maintain. I
-was past mid-life and by leaving India would have sacrificed the pension
-that was already in sight. Moreover, I knew of no way of marketing my
-training in any country outside India. So I played safe and bowed
-to authority. I resigned from my regiment and was transferred to the
-department of military intelligence. After knowing the security of
-a home and wife, at past forty I became a secret agent, a spy and a
-wanderer, a friendless and unfriendly man, unsociable and socially
-unacceptable. As for my wife, aged only twenty-one, she was exiled to
-England, a stranger in a gray, chill country, bankrupt in her happiness,
-with no one to defend her, taking with her the temptation of her unusual
-beauty and the treacherous inheritance of her intermingled blood.
-
-"There seemed no justice in the world for either of us. The offending
-cause of our punishment was the protective motherhood which had prompted
-her to slay the killer of our child. But, to use your terse Americanism,
-we were 'up against' blind angers and racial prejudices, which no amount
-of bucking on our part could change. So far as she was concerned, even
-before her life had started, she had been condemned. The initial sin had
-been her parents' when they had allowed themselves to create her. Before
-she had seen daylight, the uncharity of mankind had proclaimed her a
-half-caste and a pariah. From her inherited fate I had tried to
-snatch her when I had bought her from the temple. You may say that my
-recklessness was nothing more than selfishness, pharisaically parading
-as chivalry; in allowing her to bear me a child, I had only reduplicated
-the crime of her parents. Nevertheless, I had tried to rescue her and
-could have succeeded, had not her mother-love ensnared her. She was
-betrayed by the purest instinct in her nature; she was shown no more
-leniency than if it had been the basest. There lay the cruelty that
-rankled. She was judged not by motives, but by results. She would have
-been pardoned and applauded, had she been a full-blooded white woman.
-
-"In spite of all these accumulated injustices, I believe she would have
-retained the strength to go straight had there been any limit to our
-separation. There was none. For all the comfort that I could be to her,
-I might just as well have been dead or divorced from her. I was all that
-remained out of the ruin that had overtaken her, yet the most to which
-she could look forward, save for brief meetings at long intervals, was
-that I would be restored to her in my useless old age, when the glorious
-floodtide of her youth hud receded. You see I am sufficiently unbiased
-to be able to plead her case."
-
-The Major rose and, going over to the window, stood with his back toward
-Hindwood, gazing out into the night. Some minutes had elapsed, when he
-turned quietly.
-
-"Where had I got to? Ah, yes! To where I had to send her to England! I
-accompanied her to Calcutta to see her safely on the liner. Shall I ever
-forget that journey? It had the gloom of a funeral and the frenzy of
-an elopement. Actually my rle was that of a policeman deporting a
-miscreant who happened to be his wife. We tried to pack into moments
-the emotions of a lifetime. As background to our love-making was the
-poignant memory of the puzzled child, whom seven years earlier I had
-escorted on the same journey, _en route_ for France, where she was to
-be made over into a sahib's lady. In her wondering attitude toward
-the fortunes that assailed her, she was little changed. She was still
-startlingly unsophisticated--a child-woman, dangerously credulous and
-deceivingly unversed in masculine wiles. I had taught her to be so
-dependent that I dared not imagine how she would do without me. She was
-so artless. She took such pleasure in admiration. Love was so necessary
-to her; it was the breath of her life. Its misuse had been the breath
-and the means of life of her Burmese mother before her.
-
-"Her complete lack of comprehension that I in any way shared her
-sacrifice formed the most distressing part of my ordeal. She assumed
-that she was being exiled by ray choice. She persisted in talking as
-if she could stay, if I would only change my mind. Though she did
-not accuse me in words, she believed that I was ridding myself of her
-because she had disgraced me--that I was pushing her across the horizon,
-where she would be forgotten and out of sight. Up to the last moment
-she pleaded with and coaxed me, as though it were I who was refusing
-to repeal her sentence. The ship cast off, bearing her from me with her
-broken heart and her embittered memories of the newly-dug grave, while I
-turned back to ferret through the gutters of Asia, that I might earn the
-wherewithal to provide for her.
-
-"At first she wrote many times a day; then every day; then regularly to
-catch each outgoing mail. In the whole of England she knew nobody. In
-her anger against British justice she wished to know nobody. She was
-inconsolable, bruised in spirit, and crushed in her pride. After the
-pomp and hubbub of the East, she found London drab and melancholy. From
-her lodgings in Kensington she poured out her soul on paper. Much of
-what she wrote consisted of memories, the tender trifles which a mother
-treasures about her child.
-
-"Gradually, almost imperceptibly, there came a change. A querulous note
-crept in, a questioning of motives. Why had I sent her as far away as
-England? Why had I sent her away at all? If it were true that it was not
-I who had exiled her, why had I not accompanied her? Was it because I
-was tired and ashamed of her? It would have been kinder to have left her
-to dance in the temple. Then a new suspicion grew up, which betrayed an
-evil that I had never traced in her. With whom was I living? Some white
-woman? Was that why I had rid myself of her?
-
-"What answers could I make? It was like arguing with a spiteful child.
-Our misunderstandings were as wide as the distance that separated us.
-She implored and finally demanded that I should join her. The more I
-stated obstacles, the more convinced she became that I was cruel, like
-all the sahibs who were torturing her--the proud sahibs who thought
-nothing of a murdered baby, when it was only the child of a half-caste
-woman.
-
-"From then on her heart hardened, till at last I failed to recognize
-in her any resemblance to the gentle wife who had been so much my
-companion. She wrote vaguely about revenge, a revenge that should
-embrace the whole white race. Contempt should be repaid with despising,
-hatred with blows, blood with blood. Her beauty should be the weapon.
-She seemed to have gone mad. Suddenly her letters ceased. My remittances
-were returned; they had failed to reach her.
-
-"For what follows I have but one explanation. By some species of
-unconscious hypnotism, so long as I had exerted physical influence over
-her, I had had the power to make the European in her predominate. As my
-influence weakened with time and distance, she relapsed into the woman
-she always would have been, if I had not found her: a smiling menace to
-the nobilities of both the races from which she was descended, a
-human jackal following the hunt. That sounds harsh? Then listen to the
-conclusion of my story.
-
-"One day, six months after I had lost touch with her, I was glancing
-through an illustrated weekly when, on turning a page, I found her
-portrait gazing up at me. She was photographed in almost the attitude
-and attire in which I had first caught sight of her in the temple. The
-very setting was similar; behind her the huge god squatted, gloating and
-sinister--on her face was the unchanging houri's smile. On reading the
-text I discovered that she had leaped into instant fame as an exponent
-of Indian dancing. You will remember that in the last two years before
-the war the dance craze was at its height. She had been acclaimed a
-great artist; everything she said, did, and wore was fulsomely praised
-and described. There was no false reticence about either her or her
-admirers; she was frankly advertised as being possessed of the most
-beautiful body in Europe. She had given herself a French name and
-was announced as being of French ancestry. According to her printed
-biography, her father had been an orchid-hunter who had taken her with
-him on all his expeditions. On his last, in India, he had died; she
-had been kidnaped for her beauty and sold into the service of a Hindoo
-temple. From this bondage she had been rescued by an Englishman of title
-who had chivalrously restored her to her family in Marseilles. There was
-much more to the same effect--a jumble of perverted truth and romantic
-lies, precisely the kind of adventurous nonsense which appeals to the
-sensation-seeking public.
-
-"From then on, _via_ the press, I was always getting news of her.
-London, Paris, Berlin, St. Petersburg, each in turn went mad over her.
-She captivated a continent. Kings and emperors commanded her to appear
-before them. Her tours were royal triumphs. Little by little ugly rumors
-began to spread. There was a Parisian banker who, when he had lavished
-his all upon her, committed suicide, leaving his wife and children
-penniless. There was another scandal; it had to do with a Russian
-general who had betrayed his country. At his court-martial he poisoned
-himself when her name was introduced into the evidence. As though a
-conspiracy of silence had broken down, now that she began to be gossiped
-about, scandals gathered thick and fast. Each new one was more infamous
-than the last; out of each she emerged unpitying and smiling. It was
-only her victims who suffered. Her progress was marked by a trail of
-death and ruin. Nevertheless, infatuated by the exquisiteness of her
-body, men fluttered about her unceasingly, like moths, shriveling their
-souls in the flame of her fascination. When the peace of the world was
-violated by the Germans--"
-
-Hindwood leaned forward, tapping the Major's knee. "I can spare you
-your eloquence. The rest of your story is common property. The woman you
-describe stole the Allies' anti-submarine defense plans from her lover.
-He was a British naval officer, temporarily in Paris. She was caught
-red-handed. There was a sentimental agitation in her favor--an attempt
-to argue that as a physical masterpiece of feminine perfection she ought
-to be exempted. It accomplished nothing. She was a German spy, who had
-sold men's lives for profit. She received and deserved no more mercy
-than a rag-picker. After having been encouraged in her sins because
-of her unrivaled loveliness, she was led out at dawn in the woods of
-Vincennes, where the body which had maddened thousands of eyes was
-riddled with bullets."
-
-The Major's lips were smiling crookedly. "How could she have been
-riddled with bullets," he questioned, "when you crossed the Atlantic in
-her company?"
-
-Hindwood shrugged his shoulders. "If you insist on propounding
-conundrums, it's up to you to supply the answers."
-
-"I can supply them. The person executed in the woods of Vincennes was
-not a woman."
-
-"That's a daring assertion. Who was it?"
-
-"A distinguished French officer, a man who had been crippled in
-defending his country and held the highest awards for gallantry. In
-pre-war days he had been an old flame of hers, whom she had abandoned
-with more than her ordinary callousness. On hearing of her predicament,
-he begged to be allotted the duty of seeing that her sentence was
-properly executed. The reason he gave was that he might clear himself
-of the taint of ever having associated with a traitress. He was put in
-charge of the guard on her last night. Making use of his opportunity, he
-exchanged clothing with her and--"
-
-Hindwood stifled a yawn. "You expect me to believe this?"
-
-The Major mastered his anger. "I expect you to believe nothing. I'm here
-to state facts and to warn you that your friend, who now calls herself
-Santa Gorlof, is the same woman. My appeal to you for assistance
-in bringing her to justice is both personal and patriotic. I am
-her husband; my honor is involved. I am also an Englishman; all her
-intrigues, even this last, in which Prince Rogovich met his fate, are
-aimed against the friends of England--one of whom, I may remind you, is
-your own great nation. All I can say is that each man has his separate
-standard of loyalty. For me, an old soldier, my devotion to my country
-is more important than my compassion for an erring woman."
-
-Hindwood rose. Uncomfortably, against his will, he had been impressed by
-the stoical dignity of his persistent guest. "You deserve that I should
-be frank with you. Here's the truth--I accept very little of what you've
-told me. Either you've mistaken my traveling companion for another
-woman, or else you've been trying to prejudice me with a fantastic
-story. But even though I accepted your supposed revelation, I should
-refuse to help you. On your own showing, you're endeavoring to bring the
-mother of your child to the scaffold. I should respect you more if you
-left her fate to other hands. Disbelieving you, as I do, I regard
-the introduction of Miss Gorlof's name into the discussion as rank
-impertinence. Your coupling of my name with hers increases the cowardice
-of your discourtesy. If you had convinced me and I were eager to assist
-you, I couldn't. I know nothing about her--our acquaintance was the most
-casual. In all probability I've seen her for the last time; I haven't
-the vaguest notion where she's to be found. If your half-caste vampire
-actually escaped the bullets in the woods of Vincennes, I advise you to
-search for her in another direction. You may take my word for it that if
-Santa Gorlof learns of your activities, you'll find yourself in trouble.
-I reckon myself some judge when it comes to character."
-
-The Major drew out his silk handkerchief from his breast pocket and
-flicked a speck of dust from his immaculate white spats. With the utmost
-deliberation he recovered his hat and gloves. For a few seconds he gazed
-out of the window thoughtfully; then, turning slowly, he crossed the
-room. With his hand on the door knob, he glanced back solemnly. He
-passed his fingers across his lips and cleared his throat. "When she has
-added you to her list of victims, if she gives you time before she kills
-you, remember that I warned you."
-
-When Hindwood had recovered sufficiently from his surprise to follow him
-out into the passage, every sign of his unwelcome visitor had vanished.
-
-He had scarcely closed the door and reseated himself, when again there
-came a tapping.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER THE THIRD--HE PLUNGES INTO ROMANCE
-
-
-I
-
-
-HINDWOOD consulted his watch; the hour was nearing midnight. He was
-surprised to discover how the time had flown. The tapping outside his
-door continued. There was nothing hurried about it, nothing impatient.
-On the other hand, there was nothing humble. It was a secret, intimate
-kind of tapping, like the signaling of a woman to her lover. It would
-cease for a minute, so that he began to hope that he was to be left in
-quiet; then it would recommence.
-
-He sat obstinately at bay, almost holding his breath, not daring to
-move lest he should betray that he had noticed. He was determined not
-to admit this new disturber. He had had enough of danger warnings and
-revengeful husbands. The only danger that he greatly dreaded was the
-loss of a second night's rest.
-
-The sound was getting on his nerves. It was so irritatingly discreet
-and importunate. At first he had tried to believe that his caller was a
-hotel employee, but a servant would have taken silence for an answer
-a good five minutes ago. If it had been any one who had a right to be
-there, the tapping would have been bolder. Whoever it was, it was some
-one who had correctly estimated his mood.
-
-_Tap-a-tap, tap-a-tap_. An interval, and then, _tap-a-tap_.
-
-Getting stealthily to his feet, he tiptoed to the threshold and flung
-wide the door.
-
-"I beg your pardon." He caught her arm as she stumbled back. "I guess I
-startled you."
-
-"Shish!" She pressed a finger to her lips. "Let me inside, so that I can
-sit down."
-
-Giving her his arm, he led her to a chair. Having returned and closed
-the door, he surveyed her at his leisure.
-
-She had the appearance of a peasant woman dressed in her Sunday best,
-yet so great was her dignity, she did not seem out of place in her
-surroundings. She was very aged; her figure was shapeless and bowed. Her
-gray hair was cropped like a boy's; she wore spread over it, knotted at
-the throat, a neatly folded kerchief of white linen. She was clad in a
-black gown of the utmost plainness. Nothing distracted attention from
-her face, which was as stoical with endurance as a gladiator's. You
-could almost trace the riverbeds her tears had worn. The fist of fate
-had punched it flat. It was a ruin to which violence had done its worst,
-but had failed to destroy its gentleness. And he had expected Santa.
-Instead of feminine frailty, spurring weak desires, there had come
-this woman, iron of will, broken in body, ravished by years, with her
-tremendous impression of moral strength. As she sat before him, her
-gnarled hands resting on her cane, pushing back the weight of her
-ancient shoulders, she raised to him the dim valiance of her eyes. "What
-can I do for you?" he questioned. "Nothing." She swung her head from
-side to side with the brooding fierceness of a decrepit lioness. "It is
-you whom I have come to help."
-
-"I!" he smiled. "I think you are mistaken."
-
-"I am never mistaken." She gazed at him intently. "I have come to
-help you to act generously. You have it in your power to save a woman,
-perhaps at the sacrifice of yourself."
-
-He laughed quietly. "You mean Santa Gorlof. I wonder when I'm to hear
-the last of her. A secret service man has spent the past two hours
-instructing me what I can do for her. You must have met him. He had
-scarcely left when you began to tap. He tried to convince me that if I
-didn't protect myself by giving him information which would lead to her
-arrest, my name would be added to her list of victims. A pleasant
-sort of threat! I'm afraid he found me, as you will probably find me,
-disappointing. I'm not possessed of any incriminating information, and
-I don't place any faith in her list of victims. She struck me as being a
-very gracious and fascinating woman. Beyond that I have no opinion about
-her, either for or against."
-
-The old head sank further forward; the dim eyes became searching. "Then
-you told him nothing?"
-
-"I knew nothing to tell."
-
-There followed a deep silence, during which they gazed fixedly at each
-other. She sighed contentedly, nodding her approval. "So you are in love
-with her! That makes things easier. Even to me you lie--to me who am her
-friend!"
-
-"I deny that I am in love with her, but what makes you think so?"
-
-"She thinks so."
-
-"Then you come directly from her?"
-
-He had been unable to keep back the eagerness from his voice. Instantly
-he realized his indiscretion. Pulling up a chair, he seated himself
-opposite her, that he might lose nothing of her changes of expression.
-
-"You're the second unconventional visitor," he said, "whom I've received
-this evening. The object of both your visits seems to be the same--to
-associate my name with that of a lady to whom I am comparatively a
-stranger. We may have conversed together a couple of dozen times;
-when we parted, I never expected to hear from her. Within the space
-of twenty-four hours a man who claims to be her husband comes to me
-accusing her of every infamy. No sooner has the door closed behind him
-than you enter, asserting that I am in love with her. You must pardon
-me if I begin to suspect a plot. For all I know, you may be my first
-visitor's accomplice, employing a more disarming method to get me to
-commit myself. You tell me you are Santa Gorlof's friend; you might
-equally well say you are her grandmother--you offer me no proof. If
-she's really in trouble, I'm sorry. But I fail to see any way in which I
-can serve her."
-
-"If there were no way, I should not have troubled you, especially at
-this late hour. As for her being in danger, she has always been in
-danger. She was born into the world like that. I am old--very old. I
-have no traces of it left, but I, too, was once beautiful."
-
-The trembling hands fumbled at the white linen kerchief, loosening the
-knot against her neck. "Ah, yes, I was beautiful. But I did not come to
-you to speak of that. My friend, you are good; I saw that the moment I
-entered. I said to myself, 'There is the man who could understand our
-Santa and make her honorable like himself.' The world has given her no
-chance--no, never. The husband who should have cared for her tossed her
-aside like an old shoe when, like all animals robbed of their young, she
-struck out in self-defense. I see you have heard that--how her child
-was murdered and she was sent into exile for taking justice into her own
-hands. Doubtless you have heard much else. She is a woman who would have
-done no harm to any one if she had been allowed to remain a mother. But
-because they scoffed at her motherhood, all her goodness has turned to
-wickedness. Using her body as a decoy, she has slain men of the race
-that persecuted her. Because she could not get her child back, she has
-become an outlaw, making society pay for her loneliness."
-
-She paused, watching her effect.
-
-Hindwood had not removed his eyes from hers. His face was troubled.
-"I don't think you know what has been told me. The man who introduced
-himself to me as her husband said that she was a half-caste, a temple
-dancing-girl, who to revenge herself had poisoned white men's happiness
-and during the war had become an international spy, working against the
-Allies. He made the assertion that she was responsible for the vanishing
-of Prince Rogovich. If these things are so, how can I, a decent,
-self-respecting man--"
-
-Bending forward, the old lady clutched his hand. "It was decent,
-self-respecting men who made her what she is to-day."
-
-He released his hand quietly. "You have not denied any of the
-accusations which are brought against her. And yet, remembering her
-face, I can not believe that she is bad. You want me to save her. If
-by that you mean that you want me to pledge myself not to give evidence
-against her, you may tell her from me that I have no evidence."
-
-"I don't mean that."
-
-"Then what?"
-
-"I want you to declare to me that you love her. No, listen. There is
-still something in her that is pure. You have made her conscious of it.
-You can undo the wrong that has been done her and make her the woman she
-should be, if you choose."
-
-Hindwood rose from his seat and paced the room. Suddenly he halted and
-swung round. "How did you know that I desired her? Until you came, I
-scarcely realized it myself. Why should you have appointed yourself to
-tempt me--you, who are so old? Between sane people, what would be the
-use of my telling you that I loved her? Though I refused to believe any
-of the libels against her which even you seem to credit, there are two
-facts which it does not seem possible to escape: that she is married and
-that the police are on her track. I have been warned that when she
-traps men, she commences by appealing to their chivalry. That's what's
-happening now. Do you see where you place me? If she is falsely accused,
-I brand myself a coward by running away from her. If she is guilty,
-I endanger my good name by having any more to do with her. What I
-am waiting to hear you say is that this is a case of mistaken
-identity--that she is willing and able to prove it."
-
-"Will you help me out of my chair?"
-
-When she was on her feet, she let go his arm and commenced to move
-across the room.
-
-"Where are you going?"
-
-"To give her your message."
-
-"I've told you nothing."
-
-"You've told me that you love her."
-
-She was on the point of leaving. With quiet decision he put his back
-against the door, preventing her from opening it.
-
-"Madam," he said, "old as you are, you owe me some consideration. Before
-you go, I at least have a right to ask your name."
-
-She smiled wistfully. The harshness in her face was replaced by a
-glow of tenderness. "Yes, you have the right. I am called 'the Little
-Grandmother.' I am a readjuster of destinies--the champion of the
-down-trodden. I fight for those for whom the world has ceased to care."
-
-"But what have you to do with Santa?"
-
-"She has been oppressed."
-
-"And because she has been oppressed, you overlook any crimes she may
-have committed?"
-
-"I am not God, that I should judge. If people's hearts are empty, I
-reckon them my children."
-
-"Let me ask you one more question. Did Santa tell you that she loved
-me?"
-
-The old head shook sorrowfully. "To act nobly it is not necessary to be
-loved in return. Let me go. Do not try to follow me."
-
-Standing aside, he opened the door. "And we meet again?"
-
-As she hobbled out, she glanced across her shoulder. In her gesture
-there was the ghostly grace of the proud coquette who was vanishing and
-forgotten. "Will you want to," she whispered, "to-morrow?"
-
-
-II
-
-
-Now that she was gone he realized that under the hypnotic influence of
-her presence he had revealed far more than he had intended. He should
-never have allowed her to escape him. He should have insisted on
-accompanying her. She had afforded him his only clue to Santa's
-whereabouts.
-
-At all costs he must see Santa. His peace of mind depended on it. The
-thought of her would haunt him. He would never rest until he had arrived
-at the truth. Probably, until he had seen her, he would never be free
-from the mischief-making intrusions of anonymous intriguers. He
-dodged the theory of her guilt, preferring to persuade himself that
-a conspiracy was afoot, the object of which might be blackmail. More
-likely it was a clever move on the part of financial rivals to thwart
-his plans by discrediting him. If he could meet Santa, he would know
-for certain whether she was a decoy or a fellow-victim. Whatever his
-intellect might suspect, his heart resolutely acquitted her.
-
-It was too late to overtake the Little Grandmother, but he was
-determined to do his best to trace her. In the passage he discovered a
-solitary individual collecting boots and shoes, which had been placed
-for cleaning outside the neighboring doors.
-
-"An old lady left my room a few moments ago. She had short hair and a
-white handkerchief tied over her head. No doubt you saw her."
-
-The man rose from his stooping posture. "An old lady with short hair!
-You say she had a handkerchief tied over it? It doesn't sound like the
-Ritz. No, I did not see her."
-
-Of the man at the elevator he made the same inquiry, only to be informed
-that several old ladies had been carried up and down.
-
-Descending to the foyer, he presented himself at the desk.
-
-"Isn't it your rule to have all callers announced before they're shown
-in on your guests?"
-
-"Most decidedly."
-
-"Then how did it happen that an old lady, a rather curious old lady,
-with short hair and a white handkerchief over her head like a shawl, was
-allowed to' find her way into my room?"
-
-"If you'll give me the particulars, I'll have the staff on duty
-questioned."
-
-As he turned away, he threw back across his shoulder: "I shan't be going
-to bed yet. If you discover anything you might report it."
-
-Half an hour later he was summoned to the telephone. "About your
-visitor, sir; no one saw her." Far into the early hours of the morning
-he sat cogitating. What steps ought he to take to protect himself? He
-could place his case in the hands of the police, but if he did, he
-might stir up a hornet's nest. Most certainly he would be compelled
-to postpone his business on the Continent and to prolong his stay in
-England. But more disastrous than personal inconvenience, in going
-to the police he might be the means of putting Santa's enemies on her
-track. They would expect him to make a clean breast of everything; he
-would find difficulty in inventing convincing motives to explain the
-shiftiness of his conduct since landing.
-
-If he could speak to Santa, he would know how to act. If she were really
-implicated in the Rogovich affair, his best way of helping her would be
-to clear out of England. But if she could assure him of her innocence,
-he was prepared to stay and back her to the limit of his capacity.
-Across the jet-black sky the silver moon drifted like a water-lily--a
-parable of Santa, moving immaculately among rumors of darkest misdoings.
-Whatever she had done had not quenched her purity. If she had done the
-worst of which she was accused, her perverted mother-love still clothed
-her with the tatters of a tragic goodness.
-
-He jerked himself irritably back to reality. How could a woman who had
-spread death with her beauty still retain her purity? He had been warned
-that she trapped men by appealing not to their baseness, but to
-their chivalry. What wild-eyed feat of chivalry was this that he was
-performing? It was best to dispense with casuistry. The accumulated
-slanders to which he had listened had spurred his curiosity. They had
-changed a modishly attractive woman into a romantic figure--a figure
-which, if it were not noble, at least possessed the virtue of lonely
-courage.
-
-He would allow himself four days in England. If he had not heard from
-her by then, he would go about his business. Having to this extent set a
-limit to his difficulties, he took himself off to bed.
-
-
-III
-
-
-His first anxiety next morning was to scan the papers. He had all the
-London dailies brought to him and read them before he dressed. For the
-most part they told him nothing new, merely recording, with varying
-degrees of sensationalism, the indisputable fact that Prince Rogovich
-had vanished. One or two hinted at foul play. Several suggested
-accidental drowning. The bulk of them, and among these were the most
-reputable, presumed that the Prince had had private reasons for avoiding
-England and landing at a Continental port _incognito_. Santa Gorlof's
-name was not mentioned. He found nothing to confirm the warnings of last
-night or to alarm himself on her account.
-
-It was later, while eating breakfast with the _Times_ propped up before
-him, that he came across an item which set him viewing what had happened
-from a new angle. He was skipping through a sketch of the Prince's
-career, when he stumbled on the following paragraph: "It will be
-remembered how last summer the Polish women's sense of injustice
-concentrated in a silent protest. For an entire week, day and night,
-never less than a thousand mothers, each carrying a dead child in her
-breast, camped about the Rogovich Palace in Warsaw."
-
-Glancing back, he read more carefully the information which led up to
-the paragraph: "During the two years following the close of the war,
-Poland, together with most of Central Europe, has suffered intensely
-from famine. Children have contributed by far the largest proportion
-to the toll of death. For much of this, so far as Poland is concerned,
-Prince Rogovich has been held accountable. The national wealth which he
-has squandered on equipping armies might have been spent more profitably
-in purchasing foodstuffs. The trip to America, from which he was
-returning at the time of his mysterious disappearance, is said to have
-had as its object the floating of a loan which would enable his Generals
-to maintain their offensives for at least another twelve months. While
-the land-owning party in Poland, supported by French diplomacy, backed
-him up, his imperialistic policies were bitterly condemned by Polish
-mothers who had to watch their children perishing from starvation in
-order that frontiers might be extended. Already the death-rate was so
-high that it was impossible to supply sufficient coffins. At mid-day the
-main streets of Warsaw were jammed with funerals. Many of these funerals
-consisted of only two persons: a man and woman, themselves weak from
-want of nourishment, staggering under the puny load of a bundle wrapped
-in paper, containing the body of the latest son or daughter to die of
-hunger." Then followed the brief description of how the thousand Polish
-mothers had camped for a week in protest about the Prince's palace.
-
-Hindwood looked up from his paper, gazing across the flashing gulf
-of sunlight to where the azure sea of distant sky beat against the
-embattled strand of housetops. If Santa had pushed the Prince overboard,
-had that been her motive--that Polish children might no longer die of
-hunger? Perhaps always, if indeed she had killed men, her purpose had
-been to act as the scourge of the enemies of children. The memory of her
-own dead child had urged her. Mistakenly, but none the less valiantly,
-she had constituted herself the avenger of all mothers who had been
-despoiled by masculine callousness.
-
-What round-about journeys he was willing to undertake if only he might
-excuse her! Even though he were compelled to admit her guilt, he was
-determined to adjudge her magnanimous. At any rate, she had not been
-apprehended.
-
-With a lighter heart than he had experienced for some hours, he
-dismissed her from his thoughts and set out to fulfill his round of
-engagements.
-
-It was three o'clock when he returned. Immediately, on entering his room
-he noticed that a sheet of writing-paper had been pinned conspicuously
-to the pillow of his bed. Its evident purpose was to attract his
-attention. On approaching it, he saw that the message which it contained
-was printed in large letters and unsigned. It read:
-
-"_If you wish to see her, follow but do not speak to the widow._"
-
-It didn't make sense. What widow? The "her" whom he could see by
-following the widow referred presumably to Santa. But who had pinned the
-sheet of paper to his pillow? How had this person gained access to his
-rooms? That morning, when he went out, he had locked his door and left
-his key at the hotel desk. He had in his possession confidential papers
-of almost state importance. If their secrets were shared, he might
-just as well pack up and return to America. His sense that he was the
-storm-center of a conspiracy strengthened.
-
-Seizing his hat and gloves, he hurried down-stairs. He had just time
-to lodge a complaint with the management before keeping his next
-appointment.
-
-He had alighted from the elevator and was about to cross the foyer, when
-a woman rose from a chair near by and passed immediately in front of
-him. He jerked himself up with a murmured apology; then noticed that she
-was gowned in the heaviest widow's mourning. A coincidence, he thought,
-and yet not so very extraordinary! He was proceeding on his journey,
-when his eyes chanced to follow her. She had halted uncertainly, as
-though she had forgotten something; by the poise of her head, he
-guessed that behind her veil she was gazing at him. More to satisfy his
-curiosity than as the preface to an adventure, he also halted. Somewhat
-ostentatiously he drew from his pocket the sheet of note-paper which
-he had found pinned to his pillow. Unfolding it, he reread its printed
-message:
-
-"If you wish to see her, follow but do not speak to the widow."
-
-He looked up. Slowly, almost imperceptibly, the veiled figure nodded. He
-made a step, as if to approach her. Instantly she turned and passed out.
-
-Without further consideration, in his eagerness to see what she would do
-next, he followed.
-
-
-IV
-
-
-He had expected that outside the hotel, in the throng of anonymous
-traffic, she would wait for him. Without giving any further sign that
-she was aware of him, she moved quietly through the fashionable crowd of
-Piccadilly and turned into the sunlit leisure of St. James Street. The
-unconscious gaiety of her way of walking was strangely out of keeping
-with her garments of bereavement. Hindwood's curiosity was piqued. In a
-shamefaced way he was overwhelmingly interested. He felt himself capable
-of a great romance. For the moment he was almost grateful for the
-annoyances that had presented him with so thrilling an opportunity.
-
-What was he meant to do? The message had forbidden him to accost her. He
-had been ordered merely to follow. How long and whither? At the Foreign
-Office a high official was waiting for him, expecting every minute to
-hear him announced. To wander through London after an unknown woman was
-the trick of a gallant or a moonstruck boy. He was neither. He was a man
-of discretion, who aimed at becoming the advisor of statesmen and
-yet his conduct was open to every misinterpretation. He began to
-feel himself a scoundrel. For a man whose emotions had always been
-shepherded, the sensation was exciting and not wholly unpleasant.
-
-If he could only learn something about her! Crossing to the opposite
-pavement, he hurried his pace till he was abreast of her.
-
-She was young. Her figure was slight and upright. She was about the
-same build as Santa, but seemed taller. If she were indeed Santa, this
-impression of added height might be due to the somberness of her attire.
-She was so carefully veiled that even her hair was hidden; there was
-no feature by which he could identify her. He tried another experiment.
-Recrossing the street to a point some distance ahead, he loitered before
-a shop, making a self-conscious pretense of studying its wares. He heard
-the rustle of her crpe as she drew near him. She went by him so closely
-that she almost touched him. He was conscious of the faint fragrance of
-her perfume. In the window he caught the dim reflection of her figure.
-At the moment that she was immediately behind him, she moved her head in
-a backward gesture, seeming to indicate that he should follow. When
-he turned to obey, she was drifting through the September sunshine,
-completely self-absorbed and unnoticing.
-
-Traveling the yard of St. James Palace, she entered the Mall. There she
-hesitated, giving him time to catch up with her. A taxi was crawling by.
-She hailed it. Addressing the driver, but glancing directly at himself,
-she said in a sweet, distinct voice:
-
-"Victoria Station. The Brighton platform."
-
-
-V
-
-
-Was she Santa? The voice had sounded different, yet, had his life
-depended on it, he could not have decided. There was only one way of
-finding out--by joining her on the Brighton platform. This would mean
-missing his appointment at the Foreign Office. He was prepared to make
-the sacrifice, but he had no guarantee that the chase would end there.
-It was possible that she would still refuse to satisfy his curiosity and
-compel him to accompany her further. His rle was that of the incautious
-fly. But who was the master-spinner of this web in which it was intended
-that he should become entangled? Was it the Little Grandmother? He
-had asked her whether they would meet again. In the light of present
-happenings, her answer took on a sinister meaning, "Will you want to
-to-morrow?"
-
-As he stood there in the sunshine of the Mall, with the thud of
-fashionable equipages flashing by, a sullen conviction grew up within
-him that he was becoming afraid. An empty taxi hove in sight. He
-beckoned. Before it had halted, he was standing on the running-board.
-
-"To Victoria Station. The Brighton platform." The driver took his
-brevity for a sign that a train was to be caught by the narrowest of
-margins. He made such speed that they drew up against the curb just as
-the widow's vehicle was departing. She threw him a furtive glance
-from behind her veil, then turned and moved away as though he were
-the completest stranger. Imitating her discretion, he followed at a
-distance.
-
-Halting before the ticket-office, she produced her purse. He edged
-nearer; it was necessary that he should learn her destination.
-
-"A first-class single to Seafold," he heard her say.
-
-When his turn came, he repeated her words, adding: "How long before it
-starts?"
-
-"Five minutes," the clerk told him.
-
-As he gathered up his change, he was surprised to observe how little
-was left out of his pound. He had supposed Seafold would prove to be a
-suburb. By the cost of his ticket he estimated that it must be a journey
-of at least sixty miles. Was it worth the taking? Could he return that
-same evening? He might get stranded. If that happened, he was unprepared
-to spend the night. These considerations were swept aside when he
-noticed that the widow had once more vanished.
-
-Accosting a porter, "The Seafold platform?" he asked breathlessly.
-
-"Same as the one for Brighton."
-
-"That tells me nothing. There's no luggage. Show me."
-
-Before he had passed the barrier, he was aware that the train was
-crowded. In third-class compartments passengers were standing. To
-discover any one under these circumstances would be a labor of patience.
-Carriage-doors were being banged and locked. Even at this final moment
-his habitual caution reasserted itself. What else but folly could result
-from an adventure so recklessly undertaken?
-
-The porter caught him by the arm. "'Ere you are, mister. 'Op in. You're
-lucky."
-
-No sooner had he squeezed himself into the remaining seat than, with a
-groaning jerk, the train started.
-
-
-VI
-
-
-Lucky! The luckiest thing that could have happened to him would have
-been to be left behind. Here he was, following a woman whose face he had
-not seen, to a place which, up to a few moments ago, he had not known
-existed. Even to believe that he was following her required optimism; he
-had no proof that she was on the train. Probably it had been part of her
-strategy to send him scurrying on this fool's errand, in order that her
-accomplices might be undisturbed while they ransacked his rooms in his
-absence.
-
-"I'll make an end of this nonsense," he told himself, "by alighting at
-the next stopping-place."
-
-But where was the next stopping-place? He glanced along the double row
-of his fellow-passengers, barricaded behind their papers. He wanted
-to ask his question and watched for an opportunity. At last, losing
-patience, he nudged the man beside him.
-
-"Excuse me, sir; I'm a stranger. I've made a mistake. My ticket's to
-Seafold, wherever that may be, and I--"
-
-With his nose still glued to the page, the man muttered: "That's all
-right. You don't need to worry. It's where you're going."
-
-"But it isn't all right," Hindwood contradicted with a shade of
-annoyance. "I don't want to go to Seafold; I want to return to London.
-What I'm trying to ask you is where can I get out?"
-
-"Lewes, if you think it's worth while."
-
-"Why shouldn't I think it's worth while?"
-
-The paper rustled testily and was raised a few inches higher. "Because
-Lewes is almost at Seafold. It's the junction where you change--the one
-and only stop between here and Brighton."
-
-Turning away disgustedly, he watched the swiftly changing landscape.
-Everything that met his eyes was beautiful, with a domestic,
-thought-out, underlying tenderness. It had all been planned, that
-was what he felt, by the loving labor of countless generations. In
-a homeless man like himself the sight created a realization of
-forlornness. He had traveled five continents and had planted his
-affections nowhere. It was the same with his human relations. He could
-reckon his acquaintances by the thousand, yet there was no one to whom
-he was indispensably dear. By a mental transition, the implication of
-which he scarcely appreciated, he began to think of Santa.
-
-They were slowing down. He was surprised to discover that an hour had
-gone by. The man at his side folded up his paper. Now that they were
-about to part, he considered it safe to be friendly.
-
-"We're coming into Lewes," he said with a smile. "The Seafold train will
-be waiting just across the platform. You can't miss it."
-
-Hindwood thanked him brusquely.
-
-What to do next? If he were fortunate in catching an express, he could
-be in London in time to dine. As he stepped out, he saw the Seafold
-local waiting. What good would it do him to go to Seafold? Yet to quit
-now would be humiliatingly unadventurous. He was moving slowly towards
-the stair, when he was arrested by a voice.
-
-"If you wouldn't mind? It was stupid of me to drop it."
-
-He turned sharply. She was leaning out of a carriage window which he was
-in the act of passing.
-
-Without giving him time to question, she explained: "My ticket--it
-slipped from my hand. There it is behind you."
-
-The moment he had stooped and returned it, she withdrew herself. It
-had happened so quickly that he had no chance to guess at the features
-behind the heavy veil. With a promptitude of decision which almost
-deceived himself, as though he had never harbored any other intention,
-he opened the door and clambered into the carriage next to hers.
-
-"That's that," he thought, smiling tolerantly at his relieved sense of
-satisfaction. And then, "It was no accident. She saw that I was giving
-up the chase. She did it to keep me going. What's her game?"
-
-Whatever her game was, he was well on the road to enlightenment. The
-engine was puffing through a valley, across salt-marshes intersected by
-dykes and sluggish streams, where derelict boats lay sunken in the mud,
-rotting among the wild-flowers. Grazing sheep made the quiet plaintive
-with their cries. Gulls, disturbed by the train's impetuous onrush, rose
-and drifted lazily into the peace that slumbered further inland. Of a
-sudden, with a gesture of exaltation, the gleaming chalk-cliffs of the
-coast leaped into sight and beyond them the dull flash of the Channel.
-
-He was clamorous with excitement. Curiosity beat masterfully on the door
-of the future. He had to find out. Why had he been brought here? What
-had Santa to do with it? Who was the woman in the next compartment?
-
-They had halted several times. Each time he had watched carefully to see
-whether she was eluding him. Again their speed was slackening. They were
-entering a little, sandy town, dotted with red-brick villas, bleached
-by the wind and sun. He caught glimpses between the houses of a battered
-esplanade, of concrete breakwaters partly destroyed, of a pebbly beach
-alternately sucked down and quarrelsomely hurled back by the waves. Over
-all hung the haunting fragrance of salt, and gorse, and wild thyme.
-
-They had come to a standstill. Passengers were climbing out and greeting
-friends. A porter flung wide the door of his carriage, shouting,
-"Seafold! Seafold!"
-
-Having watched her alight, he followed. She was a few paces ahead,
-picking her way daintily through the crowd. Again she was all discretion
-and gave no hint that she had noticed him. Outside the gate, cabmen
-offered themselves for hire. She shook her head denyingly and passed on
-with her tripping step. Not until the station had been left behind did
-he remember that he ought to have inquired at what times the trains
-departed for London. Too late! His immediate business was keeping her in
-sight.
-
-With the unhesitating tread of one familiar with her surroundings, she
-chose what seemed to be the most important street. It was narrow and
-flanked by little, stooping cottages, most of which had been converted
-into shops which cater to the needs of tourists. It was the end of the
-season. A few remaining visitors were sauntering aimlessly up and down.
-Natives, standing in groups, had the appearance of being fishermen. Some
-of them nodded to her respectfully; without halting, she passed them
-with a pleasant word. At the bottom of the street she turned into a
-road, paralleling the sea-front, which led through a waste of turf and
-sand into the wind-swept uplands of the open country. Just where the
-country met the town there stood a lath-and-plaster house, isolated,
-facing seaward, creeper-covered, surrounded by high hedges. It was more
-pretentious than any he had seen as yet. Giving no sign that she was
-aware she was followed, she pushed open the rustic gate, passed up the
-red-tiled path, produced a latch-key, and admitted herself. There, in
-the bare stretch of road, having lured him all the way from London,
-without a single backward glance or any sign that would betray her
-recognition of his presence, she left him.
-
-
-VII
-
-
-Just what I might have expected," he said aloud.
-
-"Did you speak ter me, mister?"
-
-He swung round to find a freckled, bare-legged urchin gazing up at him.
-
-"I didn't. Who are you?"
-
-"A caddy from them links over there." He pointed a grubby finger along
-the road to where, half a mile away, the level of the seashore swept up
-into a bold, green headland.
-
-"Then I guess you're the sort of boy I'm looking for. Who lives in this
-house?"
-
-"A Madam Something or other. 'Er name sounds Russian."
-
-"What does she look like?"
-
-"Dunno. She's a widder and covers 'erself up. Not but what she 'as
-gentlemen friends as visits 'er."
-
-"You seem a sharp boy. Can you tell me how long she's lived here?"
-
-"Maybe a year; off and on that's ter say. I don't recolleck."
-
-"Is she by herself?"
-
-"There's an old woman in the garden sometimes as looks a 'undred. She
-wears a white hanky tied round 'er 'ead."
-
-"I think that's all I want to ask you. Here's something for you. Oh yes,
-do you happen to know about the trains to London?"
-
-"The last one's gorn, mister, if that's what yer means. It's the one
-that our gents at the golf-links aims ter catch."
-
-"Then I'm out of luck. Good evening, sonny, and thank you for your
-information."
-
-The bare legs showed no signs of departing; the freckled face still
-gazed up.
-
-"What's interesting you. My way of speaking? I'm American."
-
-The boy shook his head. "We 'ad Canadian soldiers 'ere during the war;
-they're pretty near Americans."
-
-"Then what is it?"
-
-"It's that you're the second gent to-day to slip me a shilling for
-telling 'im about this 'ouse. And it's something else." He sank his
-voice to a whisper. "Don't look round. There's been some one a-peeking
-from be'ind a bedroom winder most of the time as we've been talkin'. I'd
-best be goin'. Good evenin', mister."
-
-Not to attract attention by loitering, Hindwood set off at a
-businesslike pace down the road toward the headland. As he drew further
-away from the house, he walked more slowly; he was trying to sort out
-his facts. The woman who lived there had a Russian name. Santa Gorlof!
-She dressed like a widow. That would be to disguise herself. The news
-about the gentlemen friends who visited her was quite in keeping with
-the character which the Major had bestowed on her, but not at all
-welcome. She had lived there for a year, off and on. Her companion was
-an old woman, nearly a hundred--the Little Grandmother! But who was
-this man who earlier in the day had bribed the boy that he might obtain
-precisely the same information? He reminded himself that the police were
-hunting for her. The man might be a detective. If justice had already
-run her to earth, Seafold was the last place in which he ought to be
-found. If the boy had been accurate about the trains, there was no
-escape till the morning. Even though he were to hire an automobile, he
-would be placing his visit to Seafold on record. Self-preservation rose
-up rampant. What a fool he'd been to involve himself in so perilous an
-affair!
-
-And yet, once more and for the last time, he longed to see Santa's face.
-Why was it? Was it because her hearsay wickedness fascinated him? It
-was not because he loved her. It was not to gratify morbid curiosity--at
-least not entirely. Perhaps it was because he pitied her and, against
-his will, discovered a certain grandeur in her defiance. She had played
-a lone hand. Like a beast of prey in the jungle, she was surrounded; at
-this moment she must be listening for the stealthy tread of those who
-were encompassing her destruction, yet she had not lost her cunning. She
-was fighting to the end. Probably this time, as when the firing-squad
-waited for her in the woods of Vincennes, she was planning to employ
-a man as her substitute--_himself_. The fact remained that in her
-desperate need, she had appealed to him for help. There was the barest
-chance that she was innocent--a victim of false-appearing circumstances.
-He wanted to judge her for himself by tearing aside the widow's veil and
-gazing on her destroying beauty.
-
-Turning off the road, he struck across the links, climbing toward the
-towering headland. The wind, coming in gusts, rustled the parched gorse
-and brittle fronds of bracken. Behind his back the sun was setting,
-flinging a level bar of gold across the leaden sea. In sudden lulls,
-when the wind ceased blowing, the air pulsated with the rhythmic
-cannonading of waves assaulting the wall of cliffs. When he listened
-intently, he could hear the _ha-ha_ of their cheering and their sullen
-moan as they were beaten back. It was strange to think that two weeks
-ago he had been in New York, intent on nothing but acquiring a fortune.
-Women had not troubled him. Why should he now permit this woman,
-chance-met on ship-board, to divert him--a woman who could never be
-closer to him?
-
-He had reached the summit of the promontory. Etched against the
-sky-line, his figure must be visible for miles. The sun sank lower and
-vanished. Gazing through the clear atmosphere, far below him he could
-discern every detail of the house to which he had been tempted. It
-looked a fitting nest for an old poet. It held no hint of terror. At the
-same time it was strategically well situated for occupants who wished to
-keep an eye on all approaches.
-
-He had been watching for any sign of movement, when a curious thing
-happened. Though no figure appeared, from one of the upper windows a
-white cloth fluttered. He shaded his eyes with his hand. The signal was
-repeated. He tapped his breast and pointed, as much as to say, "Shall I
-come?" The cloth was shaken vigorously. On repeating the experiment,
-he obtained the same result. When he nodded his head in assent, the
-fluttering ended.
-
-So every step of his progress had been observed by some one spying
-through a telescope from behind the curtained windows! The first moment
-he had afforded an opportunity by looking back, the signaling had
-commenced. That so much secrecy should be employed seemed to betoken
-that Santa's case was desperate. That she should have run the risk of
-tempting him down from London must mean that he possessed some peculiar
-facility for rendering her a much needed service.
-
-The imminence of the danger, both to her and to himself, was emphasized
-by this latest precaution. She had not dared to admit him to the house
-or even to acknowledge his presence, until she had made certain that he,
-in his turn, was not followed.
-
-This thought, that he might be followed, filled him with an entirely
-new sensation; it peopled every clump of gorse and bed of bracken
-with possible unseen enemies. The rustling of the wind, the cry of a
-sea-bird, made him turn alertly, scanning with suspicion every hollow
-and mound of the wild, deserted landscape. It seemed unwise to allow his
-actions to announce his intentions too plainly. What his intentions were
-he was not very certain. His immediate inclination was to shake himself
-free from the whole mysterious complication.
-
-Continuing his ramble, he assumed a careless gait, descending the
-further side of the promontory and bearing always slightly inland, so
-that his course might lead back eventually to the road from which he had
-departed. As dusk was gathering, he found himself entering an abandoned
-military camp. The bare hutments, with their dusty windows and padlocked
-doors, stretched away in seeming endless avenues of ghostly silence.
-The Maple Leaf, painted on walls and sign-boards, explained the village
-boy's reference to Canadian soldiers. He had reached the heart of it,
-when he was possessed by the overpowering sensation that human eyes were
-gazing at him. Pulling himself up, he glanced back across his shoulder,
-crooking his arm to ward off a blow. Realizing what he was doing, he
-relaxed and stared deliberately about him. Nothing! No sign of life! Yet
-the certainty remained that human eyes were watching.
-
-"Nerves!" he muttered contemptuously.
-
-It was dark when, leaving the camp, he struck the road. Stars were
-coming out. Far away along the coast the distant lights of a harbor
-blinked and twinkled. He hurried his steps. His mind was made up. He
-would get something to eat in Seafold, discover a garage, hire a car and
-be back in London by midnight. To confirm his will in this decision, he
-began making plans for the morrow.
-
-To enter the town he had to pass the house. As its bulk gathered shape,
-his feet moved more slowly. Long before he came opposite it, he had
-caught the fragrance of the myrtle in its hedges. The windows which
-looked his way were shrouded. He paused for a moment outside the rustic
-gate. He was saying good-by to adventure. He was too old. His season for
-pardonable folly was ended. The prose of life had claimed him.
-
-Prolonging the pretense of temptation, he pushed open the gate. A
-hand touched his--a woman's. The desire to play safe faded. Weakly
-capitulating, he allowed himself to be led up the path and across the
-shadowy threshold. The door of the darkened house closed behind him. She
-was slipping the bolts into place.
-
-
-VIII
-
-
-He listened. He could not see her face--only the blurred outline of her
-figure. Except for the sound of her movements, the silence was unbroken.
-At the end of a passage, leading from the hall, a streak of gold escaped
-along the carpet.
-
-"Santa!"
-
-No answer.
-
-"Santa, why have you brought me?"
-
-Gliding past him down the passage, she darted into the lighted room,
-leaving the door ajar behind her. He followed gropingly. As he entered,
-he was momentarily confused by the sudden change from darkness.
-
-She was addressing him in a small, strained voice. "There's no need to
-be afraid."
-
-He looked about him, searching for the inspirer of fear. There was no
-one save themselves. Then he noticed how she trembled. She was making
-a brave effort to appear collected, but it was plain that she was wild
-with terror. Her eyes were wide and dilated. She stood on the defensive,
-backed against the fireplace, as though she were expecting violence. Her
-right hand was in advance of her body. It held something which caught
-the glow of the flames--a nickel-plated revolver, cocked and ready for
-immediate action. His reception was so different from anything he had
-anticipated that he stared with an amused expression of inquiry.
-
-At last he asked, "You knew from the start that I thought you were
-Santa?"
-
-Biting her lip to prevent herself from crying, she nodded. Far from
-being Santa, she was fair as any Dane, with China-blue eyes and the
-complexion of a wild rose. He noted the little wisps of curls which made
-a haze of gold about her forehead. She wore turquoise earrings. They
-were her only adornment. She herself was a decoration. She was like a
-statue of the finest porcelain, so flawless that she seemed unreal. Had
-it not been for her widow's mourning, he would have said that she was
-untouched by passionate experience. She had an appearance of provoking
-innocence, which made the paleness of her beauty ardent as a flame.
-
-Speaking quietly, "I'm not easily frightened," he said; "and you, while
-you keep me covered with that revolver, have no reason to be afraid. Any
-moment you choose you can kill me--you've only to press the trigger."
-
-Tears of horror sprang into her eyes. "But I don't want to kill you."
-
-[Illustration: 0136]
-
-"Then why don't you lay it aside?"
-
-"Because--" She gazed at him appealingly.
-
-"Because I'm alone. I may need it to protect myself."
-
-"From me? No. I should think you can see that." Was the house really
-empty? He listened. It was possible that some one might steal up from
-behind. He did not dare to turn. His only chance of preventing her from
-shooting him was to keep her engaged in conversation.
-
-"If you feel this way, why did you go to such elaborate pains to force
-me to visit you to-night? You must have known that I didn't want to
-come. It isn't I who have intruded." He smiled cheerfully. "At the risk
-of appearing rude, I'll be frank with you. When you crossed my path at
-the Ritz, I was on the point of keeping a most important engagement.
-When I followed you out of the hotel, it was because of a message I'd
-found pinned to my pillow, 'Follow the widow.' So it wasn't you in
-particular that I was following; I'd have followed any widow. I
-expected that you'd speak to me as soon as we were in the street. I'd
-no intention of giving up my appointment. You didn't; you led me on,
-further and further, a step at a time. I don't mind telling you that
-when I found myself in the train, I was extremely annoyed. By the time
-I'd arrived at Lewes, I'd fully made up my mind to abandon the chase.
-Then you spoke to me. I'd wasted so much of my afternoon that I didn't
-like being beaten. You'd roused my curiosity. Here in Seafold, you
-dodged me and left me standing in the road like a dummy. That used up
-the fag-end of my patience; I was mad clean through. I didn't care if
-I never saw you again. When you signaled me on the headland, I signaled
-back that I was coming. I wasn't. I was tired of being led on and
-eluded. When you caught me at the gate, I was flirting with temptation,
-but I'd already laid my plans to be back in London by midnight. So you
-see you can scarcely blame me for being here. The shoe's on the other
-foot entirely. You've put me to great inconvenience merely to tell me,
-it would seem, that you don't want to shoot me."
-
-"I don't."
-
-"Then why not throw the thing away? You're far more scared of it than I
-am."
-
-"Because I may have to use it."
-
-"On whom?"
-
-"You."
-
-"Why?"
-
-A sweet, slow smile turned up the edges of her mouth. "My orders were to
-keep you here, if once I'd managed to persuade you inside."
-
-He laughed outright. "You hate having me here, and you'd hate to see me
-go. Isn't that the way the land lies? I'm more or less in the same fix:
-I didn't want to come, and I don't want to stay. The fact remains that
-we're both here. Why not make the best of it? If you'll stop brandishing
-that weapon, I'll feel much more comfortable. I'm not trying to escape."
-
-"You might."
-
-For the first time he dared to shift his position. "Don't be alarmed,"
-he warned her. "That's easier. I was stiff. Now, if you'll listen, I've
-a proposal to make. You're treating me like a burglar, which isn't fair.
-You may know, but I've not the least idea how long you intend to hold me
-prisoner. I guess you're waiting for some one else to arrive, but that's
-neither here nor there. Before the third person comes, you may have shot
-me--of course, by accident. Revolvers go off if you keep them too long
-pointed. You know nothing about firearms, and I'm beginning to be rather
-fond of life. Here's what I propose: if you'll put it away, I'll give
-you my parole not to come within two yards of you or to attempt to
-escape. If I want my parole back, you shall have a full five minutes'
-notice."
-
-"If I thought that I could trust you--"
-
-"You can. Is it a bargain?"
-
-Without answering, placing her weapon on the mantelpiece, she turned
-her back on him. She seemed waiting to hear him advance further into the
-room. He did not stir.
-
-"What is it, Mr. Hindwood?"
-
-"It's that I've just remembered one thing for which our armistice has
-not provided. You'd better pick up your gun again. It's that I haven't
-dined. I wonder whether you'd let me into the village--" He left
-his sentence unended. He suddenly perceived that she was shaken with
-sobbing. In his concern, he forgot his compact as to distance and
-hurried over to her side. She swung round, her face blinded with tears.
-As she stumbled past him, she muttered: "You've beaten me. You're not
-afraid. I couldn't shoot you now if I wanted."
-
-
-IX
-
-
-Tiptoeing to the threshold, he turned the handle and peeped into the
-passage. As before, everything was in darkness.
-
-He was free to go. There was nothing to stop him--nothing except his
-honor. It was easy to argue that even his honor did not prevent him. He
-had canceled his parole when he had reopened negotiations by telling her
-to pick up her revolver. She had left it behind her on the mantel-shelf.
-He took it in his hand and examined it. It was a repeater. Every chamber
-was loaded. He whistled softly--so she had meant business! Setting the
-hammer at half-cock, he slipped the weapon in his pocket. He was master
-of the situation now.
-
-Why didn't he go? Two hours of steady driving, three at the most, and
-he could be in London. He reminded himself that at this very moment his
-private papers might be in the process of being ransacked. What if they
-were? The possibility left him utterly indifferent. He couldn't save
-them after the lapse of another three hours.
-
-No, the truth was that since his voyage on the _Ryndam_ all the emphases
-of his life were becoming altered. The importance of money and power
-no longer seemed paramount. After nearly forty years of living, he had
-awakened to the fact that it was women who shed a radiance of glamour
-in an otherwise gloomy world. Of all human adventures they were the most
-enthralling and the least certain of rewarding.
-
-It was curiosity that had enticed him into his present entanglements;
-his curiosity had yet to be satisfied. With a revolver in his pocket, he
-felt that he now possessed the means of extracting the right answers to
-his questions. He had suffered mild inconveniences, but so far he
-hadn't done so badly. He had established mysterious relations with two
-beautiful women. One of them was already under the same roof; the other,
-he believed, was momentarily expected. He began to figure himself as a
-poet, a dreamer, a potential storm-center of romance.
-
-"And all because she has blue eyes!" he hinted.
-
-Then he remembered that Santa's eyes were gray, and that up to the last
-half-hour it had been Santa whom he had supposed that he was following.
-
-He gazed about him, making an inspection of the room, trying to guess
-at the characters of its inhabitants. It was square and small. Its walls
-were lined ceiling-high with shelves overloaded with books of a learned
-appearance. A work-basket stood on a mahogany desk with mending,
-scissors, and reels of cotton strewn near it. A piano had been crushed
-into a corner, looking flippantly out of place amid these scholarly
-surroundings. Below the mantelshelf was a rack containing a row of
-pipes. Set about wherever a space allowed were vases of freshly cut
-flowers.
-
-The contradictions of the room suggested that it had once been a man's
-den, but had now been taken over by a woman. This seemed to indicate
-that the owner of the house was actually a widow.
-
-Almost the whole of the wall confronting the door was occupied by a tall
-French window, which opened directly on a lawn. Shrubs grew waist-high
-about it. Instinct told him that this was the likeliest approach for
-the other person, by whose order his kidnaping had been plotted. He felt
-convinced that this person would prove to be a woman, but he was taking
-no chances. With the night behind her, she could spy on him for hours
-without being detected. She might be spying on him now.
-
-Assuming a listless manner, he seated himself to one side of the
-fireplace. Out of the tail of his eye, without seeming to do so, he
-watched the shadowy panes. His right hand was thrust into his pocket,
-gripping the revolver.
-
-After the lapse of some minutes, he heard in the passage the widow's
-returning footsteps. Outside the door she halted, fumbling at the
-handle. Giving up the attempt, she called to him to open. Just as he was
-rising, a face, tense with eagerness, lifted itself out of the bushes,
-peering in on him.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER THE FOURTH--HE BECOMES PART OF THE GAME
-
-
-I
-
-
-THE face hung there against the darkness for a second; then the leaves
-closed over it as it was stealthily withdrawn. In the utterness of his
-astonishment, Hindwood all but gave himself away. It was not the face he
-had expected.
-
-Masking his excitement with a yawn, he turned his back on the window and
-stepped toward the door, opening it sufficiently to thrust his head into
-the passage, but not wide enough to permit the watcher in the bushes to
-learn anything of the person with whom he talked. He found his captress
-standing just beyond the threshold, carrying a tray, which accounted for
-her awkwardness.
-
-"You won't have to dine in the village," she explained. Then, catching
-his strange expression, "What has happened?"
-
-"Some one was to come to-night," he whispered: "the person who gave
-orders for my kidnaping. Isn't that so? She was to enter through the
-window from the lawn, while you held me prisoner at the revolver's
-point."
-
-"Is she here?"
-
-"No, but a man who is her enemy--a Major Cleasby. He's hiding directly
-in her path. He supposed you were she when you tried the door. He showed
-his face. Is there any way in which we can warn her?"
-
-The widow set down her tray. Her eyes met his searchingly. "If the man
-were there, you wouldn't want to save her."
-
-"Why not? You think I've invented the man in the bushes in order that
-Santa may be scared away? I'm no more afraid of Santa than I was of you.
-Besides, in your absence I've stolen your revolver. Ah, that convinces
-you! The man's her husband and a secret service agent. I can feel his
-eyes in my back. If you don't warn her, she'll be caught. There must
-have been some prearranged signal. What was it?"
-
-Instead of answering, she pressed nearer, glancing fearfully across
-her shoulder into the unlighted hall. Her voice came so faintly that he
-could only just hear her.
-
-"She wouldn't spare us. Why should you and I--? You don't know what she
-intended."
-
-He smiled grimly. "I can guess. I was to have been her scapegoat for the
-Rogovich murder. She was staging a new version of what happened in the
-woods of Vincennes. Whether she escaped or was brought to trial, I was
-to have been arrested. By that time she would have clothed me with the
-appearance of her guilt. I was to have figured as her lover and the
-Prince's rival. The motive for my crime was to have been jealousy. The
-old story--an innocent man dying in her stead!"
-
-"If you think you know that, why should you, unless you are her lover?"
-
-"Because she's a woman."
-
-Her hands seized his, coaxing him from the doorway into the darkened
-passage. "For the love of God, go!" she implored. "I give you back your
-parole."
-
-Drawing her to him, he held her fast. "Don't struggle. He might hear
-you. You decoyed me. You trapped me. Why this change? What makes you so
-concerned for my safety?"
-
-"I didn't know," she panted, "the kind of man you are."
-
-"What kind?"
-
-Her heart beat wildly. She lay against him unstirring, her face averted.
-The moment he released her, she burst forth into new pleading.
-
-"For my sake. I beg of you."
-
-Into the grimness of his smiling there stole a gleam of tenderness. "And
-leave you? I guess not. What's the signal?"
-
-"The piano."
-
-"Come, then," he said, "you shall play for me. While you play, if we
-mask our expressions, we can talk of what we choose. Outwardly, to
-deceive the man in the bushes, we must act a part. I'm an old friend.
-I've dropped in unexpectedly. You've provided me with supper. While
-I eat, we chatter and laugh. You sit at the piano and sing for me
-occasionally. When the hour for Santa's arrival is past, I take my
-leave. If you're brave, we can carry the farce through. Are you game?"
-
-For answer she picked up the tray and stepped into the room, smiling
-back at him as he followed.
-
-"I'm your humble servant, as always, Mr. Hind-wood, but I have only two
-hands and they're occupied. If you'll bring up that table--yes, set it
-before the fire. That's right. You must be comfortable, if I'm to sing
-for you."
-
-
-II
-
-
-She won't come now."
-
-The words reached him in a sigh. The pale hands fluttered from the
-keyboard. The fair head dropped. Almost instantly she straightened
-herself, banishing her appearance of weariness. "Don't think that I'm
-showing the white feather. It's only that I'm exhausted. She won't come
-now. I'm sure of it." Then, bending forward with a nervous tremor, "I
-daren't look round. Has he gone?"
-
-Hindwood pushed back his chair from before the hearth. For the moment he
-did not answer. He was striving to restore the spell which the intrusion
-of her fear had broken. Glancing at her sideways, he regarded her
-quietly where she sat at the piano in her widow's garb. Through the
-window at her back he caught a glimpse of the garden, shadowy and
-patched with moonlight. Above the silence he heard the rumble of waves,
-sifting the pebbles on the shore. Who was she, this woman who possessed
-the magic to enchant him? Who had been her husband? What kind of man?
-Had she loved him? How long since he had died? There were so many
-questions.
-
-She had persuaded him into following her, well knowing that he believed
-her to be Santa. She had met his discovery of her impersonation with a
-threat. When the luck was all in her favor, with the panic of a stricken
-conscience she had thrown in her hand. For the past two hours, in this
-cozy room, she had surrounded him with shy intimacies of affection, to
-the end that the unseen spectator, listening outside the panes, might
-be beguiled. Apparently the deception had succeeded; the spectator had
-given no sign. It had succeeded too well for Hindwood. It had roused
-in him the longing that, behind her pretense of friendship, there might
-lurk a genuine emotion of liking. He had tried to forget that the scene
-was stage-set. He had wanted to believe that it was real.
-
-"Has he gone?"
-
-There was a break in her voice.
-
-He pulled himself together. "Do you wish me to make certain?"
-
-Rising, he lounged over to the piano as though to select a sheet from
-the pile of music. In a flash he turned, wrenching wide the doors of the
-French-window, and was across the step in a bound. Nothing rose from the
-shadows to disturb the peace of the night. Stooping by the bushes, he
-made a hurried examination.
-
-"Come," he called. Then, seeing how she pressed her hands against her
-mouth, "There's no need to fear."
-
-When she was standing by his side, he explained: "To-morrow you might
-think that I'd tricked you. I want you to see for yourself. Here's where
-he was hiding when he peered in on me. The ground's trampled. The bushes
-are bent back."
-
-"He may be still here," she whispered, "in the garden--somewhere."
-
-Hindwood smiled reassuringly into her upturned face. "He wouldn't do you
-any harm if he were. Remember he's a secret service agent. As a matter
-of fact, he ought to make you feel safe."
-
-"Safe!" She knotted her hands against her breast. "Shall I ever feel
-safe? Oh, if I could confess--to you, to any one!"
-
-"If it would help----"
-
-Without giving him a chance to finish his sentence, she plucked at his
-sleeve with the eagerness of a child. "Would you?"
-
-"What?"
-
-"Let me?"
-
-
-III
-
-
-They had reentered the room, fastening the window securely behind them.
-When that was done, they had drawn the curtains across the panes.
-She had flung herself into a chair beside the fire and was waiting
-impatiently for him to join her. But he hovered in the center of the
-room, fingering his watch and looking troubled.
-
-"What's delaying you?" she asked without turning.
-
-He slipped his watch into his pocket. "I had no idea it was so late."
-
-"Does that matter? Till morning there are no trains."
-
-"I was thinking of hotels."
-
-"They'll be shut."
-
-"Precisely. So what am I----?"
-
-"Stay with me," she said lazily.
-
-The room became profoundly silent. The darkened house seemed to listen.
-Had he plumbed a new depth in this drama of betrayal at the moment
-when he hoped he had discovered loyalty? He had been deceived by women
-before. Had he not allowed Santa to deceive him, he would not have been
-here. He might tell himself that this woman was different. If a man did
-not tell himself that each new woman was different, the mischief of love
-would end.
-
-He caught sight of her flaxen head and became ashamed of his
-reflections. It wasn't possible, if the soul was foul, that the flesh
-should be so fair. She had the wonder of the dawn in her eyes. Nothing
-that she had said or done could belie the frankness of her innocence.
-Standing behind her chair, he gazed down in puzzlement at her
-graciousness.
-
-"There are conventions. We may have met unconventionally, but neither of
-us can afford to ignore them."
-
-Without looking up, she answered, "If you were as alone as I am, you
-could afford to ignore anything."
-
-"Perhaps I am."
-
-"Then you understand."
-
-"I think I understand." He spoke gently. "I suppose no man can ever be
-so lonely as a woman, especially as a woman who has lost her happiness,
-but I, too, have been lonely. Everybody has. The cowardice which comes
-of loneliness is responsible for nearly every wickedness. Most thefts,
-and cheatings, and even murders are committed in an effort to gain
-companionship. But you can't elude loneliness by short-cuts. Wherever
-you go, it's with you from birth to death. Brave people make it their
-friend. Cowards let it become their tempter. Loneliness is no excuse for
-wrong-doing, nor even for surrendering to the appearance of it."
-
-"Preaching?"
-
-"No. Trying to share with you my experience. Until this afternoon, you
-didn't know that I existed. All your life up to the last five minutes,
-you've been able to do without me. Don't be greedy and spoil everything
-before it's started. There's tomorrow."
-
-"Why wait for to-morrow when I trust you now?"
-
-He stooped lower. She had become irresistibly dear. In a rush he had
-found the clue to her character--her childishness. She couldn't bear to
-postpone the things she wanted.
-
-"Trust me! I wonder! You're the first woman to have the daring to tell
-me. I'm not sure that I feel complimented; at this hour of night one has
-to be a little cold to be trusted like that. But I trust you--which
-is strange after all that's happened. The person I distrust is myself.
-You're beautiful. The most beautiful----"
-
-"Am I more beautiful than Santa?"
-
-He caught the vision of her blue eyes glinting up at him. There was
-nothing roguish in their expression. They were pathetic in their
-earnestness. Her throat was stretched back, white and firm. Her lips
-were vivid and parted. Her question sounded like the ruse of a coquette,
-yet she seemed wholly unaware of her attraction.
-
-He drew himself erect, staring at the wall that he might forbid himself
-the danger of looking at her. His voice came harsh and abrupt. "Your
-confession can keep till morning. One can say and unsay anything. It's
-deeds that can never be unsaid."
-
-He had reached the door. She spoke dully. "You despise me." And then,
-"All my life I've waited for to-morrows. Go quickly."
-
-Glancing across his shoulder he saw her, a mist of gold in a great
-emptiness. Slowly he turned back.
-
-"Can't you guess the reason for my going? I reverence you too much."
-
-Clutching at his hands, she dragged herself to her feet. "It's
-friendship that I'm asking. What's the use of reverence? Like me a
-little. You'd do more for Santa. Only to like me wouldn't cost you
-much."
-
-
-IV
-
-
-I should have died if you'd left me." He was feeling both amused and
-annoyed at his surrender; at the same time he was on the alert for
-developments. She had extinguished the lamps. The sole illumination was
-the firelight. For what reason she had done it, whether as an aid to
-confession or as a discouragement to watchers, she allowed him to guess.
-Whatever the reason, the precaution was wise, but it increased the
-atmosphere of liaison. He had pushed back his chair to the extreme
-corner of the hearth, so that he was scarcely discernible. She sat
-where the glow from the coals beat up into her face. He saw her profile
-against a background of darkness.
-
-"Died!" He pursed his lips in masculine omniscience. "You'd have gone to
-your bed and had a good night's rest."
-
-"I shouldn't. I was in terror. I used to be afraid only by night; now
-it's both day and night. You're never afraid. You weren't afraid even
-when I----. How do you manage it?"
-
-"By doing things, instead of thinking about the things that can be done
-to me. I've learned that what we fear never happens--fear's a waste of
-time. Fear's imagination playing tricks by pouncing out of cupboards.
-It's the idiot of the intellect, gibbering in the attic after nightfall.
-IPs a coward, spreading cowardice with false alarms. It's a liar and a
-libeller; life's a thousand times kinder than fear would have us paint
-it."
-
-She sighed happily. "It was kind to me to-night." He waited for her
-confession to commence. She leaned back, her eyes half shut, watching
-the red landscape in the dancing flames. Time moved gently. Night seemed
-eternal. Her contentment proved contagious. Neither of them spoke.
-Nothing mattered save the comfort of her presence. In a hollow of the
-coals he invented a dream cottage to which he would take her. It had a
-scarlet wood behind it and mountains with ruby-tinted caves. As the fire
-settled, the mirage faded.
-
-"Does it strike you as comic," he questioned, "that you and I should sit
-here after midnight and that I shouldn't even know what to call you?"
-
-"Varensky. Anna Varensky."
-
-"Russian?"
-
-She nodded.
-
-"But are you Russian?"
-
-"I'm Ivan Varensky's wife."
-
-"You say it proudly, as though I ought to know who Ivan Varensky was."
-
-She turned her head slowly, wondering at him. "There's only one Ivan
-Varensky: the man who wanted to be like Christ."
-
-Hindwood jerked himself into wakefulness. "I'm afraid I need
-enlightenment. I don't----"
-
-"You do," she contradicted patiently, "or rather, you will when I've
-helped you to recall him. How hurt he would be, poor Ivan, that a man of
-your standing should so soon have forgotten him! He hoped to make such
-a noise in the world. After Czardom had fallen, he aimed to be a savior,
-healing men with words. But he wanted to be crucified at once. He
-cared more for Calvary than for the road that led up to it. He was an
-emotionalist, impatient of Gethsemane; it was the crown of thorns that
-he coveted. Having only words with which to save humanity, he dashed
-all over Russia in special trains, speechifying at every halting-place,
-foretelling his approaching end. He had no time to waste; he believed
-his days were numbered. His message was always the same, whether he
-was addressing the Duma, armies marching into action, or a handful of
-peasants: he was about to die for Russia. Then suddenly Trotzky
-and Lenine came. They were men who did things; they overthrew his
-government. Worse, still, they refused to fulfill his prophecies;
-instead of executing him, they bundled him into exile. To be forced to
-live, when he had pledged himself to die, was a more cruel crucifixion
-than any he had anticipated. He found himself nailed to the cross of
-ridicule with no one to applaud his sacrifice. He was left with nothing
-to talk about, for the thing he had talked about had not happened. He
-was an idealist, an inspirer, a prophet, but because death had avoided
-him, there was no gospel to write. Having climbed the long road to
-Calvary, he had the tragedy to survive. Don't think I'm belittling him.
-I loved him. It was a proud, but not an easy task to be the wife of a
-man who wanted to be like Christ."
-
-She collapsed into silence, sitting lost in thought, her arms hanging
-limply by her sides. He wondered what pictures she was seeing in the
-fire--armed men marching, revolution, palaces going up in dame.
-
-Of course he remembered the Varensky she had described--the Varensky
-who, in the darkest hour of the war, had hurled himself like a
-knight-errant to the rescue of the Allies. It was he who was to have
-consolidated Russia, leading its millions in an endless tide to the
-defeat of the enemies of righteousness. It was freedom he had promised;
-freedom to everybody. He had preached that every man was good in
-himself, that the things that made men bad were laws. Therefore he had
-swept all laws aside. He had done away with compulsion, repealed death
-penalties, thrown prisons wide. For a day and night he had held the
-stage, a shining figure, adored by despairing eyes. Then the slaves whom
-he had released from restraints had surged over him. He had vanished,
-trampled beneath ungrateful feet, and Russia had become a mob.
-
-So this was Varensky's wife! He felt awed. The romantic heroism of her
-husband's failure clothed her with a wistful sacredness. Three years ago
-he could not have approached her. He would scarcely have dared to have
-regarded her as a woman. The hysteria of the moment had canonized
-her. Streets through which she drove in Petrograd had been lined with
-kneeling throngs. There had been something medieval in the spontaneity
-of her worship. It had been rumored that she was a bride immaculate;
-that her purity was the secret of her husband's strength. Her face made
-the story credible. It had the virgin innocence of a saint's. And here
-he was allowed to sit beside her, with three years gone, sharing her
-hearth in this obscure place of hiding!
-
-"You were a Russian Joan of Arc," he declared enthusiastically. "How
-well I remember all the legends one read about you. And Varensky----
-It doesn't matter that he failed; his was the most gallant figure of the
-entire war. When every nation was embittered, he set us an example of
-how not to hate. He refused to kill, when all of us were slaying. He
-had the courage of meekness; in that at least he followed Christ. What
-became of him? There was a report----"
-
-"There have been many reports," she interrupted sadly. "Lest the latest
-be true, I wear mourning. I wear mourning for him always. Before his
-fall I was his perpetual bride; since his fall I am his perpetual widow.
-He wishes to be dead, so to please him-----"
-
-"Then he's still alive?" Immediately he was conscious of the indecency
-of his disappointment.
-
-She gazed into the darkness with a mild surprise. "I do not know. I
-never know. That's the torture of it. He was always less a man than a
-spirit. I begin to think he can not die."
-
-"You want him----?"
-
-If she had heard his uncompleted question, she ignored it. With folded
-hands she stared into the red heart of the fire. Behind her, across the
-walls and ceiling as flames leaped and flickered, shadows took fantastic
-shapes. When she spoke, as though she were talking to herself, her words
-came softly.
-
-"He was such a child--so dear, so vain, so intense, so sensitive.
-Why did he marry me, if it was only to resign me? He treated me as he
-treated Russia. We were both waiting for him to take us in his arms.
-But it was always ideals--things one can't embrace--that drew out his
-affections. Had he loved humanity less and individuals more, he
-could have gone so far. There was something monstrous about his
-self-abnegations. Perhaps he denied himself the things for which he did
-not care. He wanted to seem nobler than any one else. Through egotism
-he missed his chance. Had he planned to live, he could have killed his
-enemies and prevented revolution. There was a time when he could have
-crushed both Lenine and Trotzky. But he had to be too noble. 'No,' he
-said, 'if their ideal is more right than mine, it will conquer. Truth
-can not be silenced by slaughter.' It was his inhuman magnanimity that
-defeated him. So Lenine and Trotzky grew strong and crushed him. Because
-he had planned to die, millions are starving, and Russia is in chaos."
-
-"But he doesn't own it?"
-
-"In his heart--yes. Like a General who has blundered, the vision of lost
-battlefields is forever in his eyes--the forests of white crosses! His
-egotism is gone. He wants to make atonement; to perish seems the only
-way. Any one who would delay him, even though she were a woman who loved
-him, is his enemy. In his remorse he hounds death as other men avoid it.
-He's head of the counterrevolution and goes continually into Russia for
-the overthrow of Bolshevism. Not that he hopes for success, but that he
-may be put against a wall and shot."
-
-"And always he returns?"
-
-"Always until this last time."
-
-Her voice sank away in a whisper. He eyed her with misgiving. What was
-it she desired?
-
-"I read something of this. He's been missing for a long time?"
-
-"A long time."
-
-Coming out of the shadows, so that she could see his face, he drew his
-chair close to hers.
-
-"And what has this to do with your confession?"
-
-
-V
-
-
-She flinched, as though he had made a motion to strike her. "My
-confession! Ah, yes! I forgot." She tried to smile. Stretching out her
-hand, she touched him in a timid appeal for understanding. Taking it
-between his own he held it fast.
-
-"Like that," he said, "as though it were a bird that's tired. It
-isn't its own nest, but it's safe and warm; let it rest till it grows
-stronger."
-
-"You're good," she faltered. "Most good men are hard."
-
-"Maybe," he laughed. "But I'm not good. On the other hand, I don't
-suppose I'm bad. I'm simply a man who's always had to fight, so I know
-what it's like to be up against it. You're up against it at present. You
-can see nothing before you but a high stone wall with no way round it.
-I've been there, and I've found that when you can't get round a wall,
-there's usually a door. What do you say? Shall we look for a door
-together?"
-
-"I have." She sank her head. "Every day and night in three interminable
-years I've looked for it. I'm like a person lost in a fog, standing
-still, listening, running, falling."
-
-"Scared to death?"
-
-She nodded.
-
-"Then don't be scared; stop running. Wait for your fear to catch up with
-you. If you face it, it'll shrink to nothing. The feet of a pursuer are
-like an army. What's causing your panic? Varensky? The thought that he
-may not return?"
-
-"No."
-
-"That he may?"
-
-"No."
-
-"Then?"
-
-"That he may go on wasting me forever."
-
-She waited for him to say something. When he remained silent, she bent
-forward staring vacantly into the hearth. "Perhaps I'm a coward and
-unfaithful. Perhaps if he'd been successful---- I know what he thinks of
-me: that I'm a fair-weather wife. But I'm not. If it would help him, I'd
-give my life for him. He doesn't want my life. He doesn't want my body.
-He wants the one thing that I can't give him--that I should believe in
-him. There are people who still believe in him--the Little Grandmother.
-There are others, like Prince Rogovich, who pretended to believe in him
-that he might use him as a cat's-paw. He says good-by to me for the last
-time and vanishes. I wait in retirement for news of his execution. At
-the end of two months, three months, half a year, he comes back. Then
-the rehearsing for his martyrdom commences all afresh. If there were
-anything I could do! But to be wasted for no purpose!"
-
-She turned her head wearily, glancing at him sideways. "You called me
-the Joan of Russia. I was almost. There was a time when not to be loved
-and not to be a mother seemed a small price to pay for sainthood. It was
-my happiness against the happiness of millions. But now----" Her eyes
-filmed over.
-
-"But now------?" he prompted.
-
-She brushed her tears away with pitiful defiance. "I want to be a
-woman--to be everything in some man's life."
-
-"Perhaps you are in his, but he doesn't show it."
-
-She seemed to listen for laughter. Then, "No," she said. "When I try to
-be a woman, I play Satan to him."
-
-"And that's the wall?"
-
-"Not all of it. There's Santa."
-
-In the swift march of his emotions he had almost forgotten Santa. As
-though she had been drowning and he had turned back from rescuing her,
-the mention of her name stung him with reproach.
-
-"What of Santa?" he asked in a low voice.
-
-
-VI
-
-
-She's in love with my husband."
-
-He let go her hand. "Do you mind if I smoke? Perhaps you'll join me?
-No?"
-
-He took his time while he lit his cigarette. Then, speaking slowly, "I
-can't believe all the evil that I've heard about this woman. And yet I
-ought. Every fresh person has told me something increasingly vile.
-To make a case against her, I have only to take all the trouble she's
-caused me. I meet her on a liner and part with her on landing; from that
-moment I have no peace. I'm pestered by strangers accusing and defending
-her. My room is entered by spies. I find an anonymous note pinned to
-my pillow. I'm lured out of London into the heart of the country on
-the pretext that she's in danger and I can help her. You know the rest.
-Until the happenings of tonight, the most probable explanation seemed to
-be that she had taken a secret fancy to me and had turned to me in her
-distress, when she found herself suspected of a crime. That theory won't
-hold water any longer."
-
-"It might."
-
-"It couldn't. You tell me she's in love with your husband."
-
-"Santa can be in love with as many men as serve her purpose. The only
-loyalty to which she's constant is the memory of her dead child."
-
-He shook himself irritably. "Nothing that you' or any one has told me
-explains her. She left on me an impression of nobility which absolutely
-contradicts all this later information. Until I met you, it almost
-seemed there was a conspiracy on foot to poison my mind. What she is
-said to have done may all be true, but I can't help searching behind
-her actions for a higher motive. You'd clear matters up if you'd tell me
-frankly how it is that you come into the picture."
-
-"The picture!" She shrank back from him like a timid child.
-
-Controlling himself, he spoke patiently. "Do I need to be explicit? You
-ought to hate her. She's in love with your husband. When, a few hours
-ago, it was a case of warning her of the trap she was walking into, you
-were reluctant to give the signal. 'She wouldn't spare us,' you said;
-'so why should you and I----?' And yet you're her accomplice.
-It was you whom I followed. It was you who, when you'd got me into this
-room, tried to hold me at the revolver's point."
-
-She buried her face in the hollow of her arm. Her voice came muffled.
-"It was I."
-
-He waited for her to say more. She made no sound--not even of sobbing.
-
-"It was a dangerous game to play," he reminded her. "You didn't know
-your man or how he would take it. You must have had some strong motive.
-You might have killed me without even intending. What a risk you
-ran, doing a thing like that singlehanded! For a moment, when I first
-entered, everything was touch and go."
-
-And still she made no reply.
-
-The fire had burned low. He emptied coals on it. To bridge the
-embarrassment of her silence, he went over to the window, pulling aside
-the curtains, and stood gazing out at the glory of the night. The moon
-rode high. Trees were clumped and motionless. The crooning of waves made
-a continual lullaby.
-
-She was married, and she was wasted. She was not wanted, and she was not
-released. She had a husband who refused to live and could not contrive
-to die. As a substitute for passion she had tried sainthood; it had not
-satisfied.
-
-He let the curtains fall. Turning, he gazed back at the black-garbed
-figure bowed in the half-circle of firelight. Her golden hair had broken
-loose. It poured across her shoulders and gathered at her feet in a
-pool. At the moment she looked more a Magdalene than a saint. And this
-was the woman who had made men brave by her purity--to whom a nation had
-turned in its agony!
-
-A flood of pity swept over him. Poor, narrow shoulders to have borne
-such a burden! Poor, virgin feet to have come so long a journey! Poor,
-mortal hands to have given such a blessing! She had been robbed and cast
-aside.
-
-The cruelty of idealists! She was their victim. What did they attain?
-Idealists slew happiness on the altar of dreams that a future happiness
-might result from it. Though their dreams were mistaken, they lost
-nothing; they snatched their sensation of godlike righteousness. But who
-could restore the happiness of others which their frenzy had destroyed?
-
-If this time Varensky had had the decency to die, she was free. He
-himself could take her. But would she want him? He had no attractions.
-All that he could offer would be to serve her. He couldn't place her
-back on her pinnacle of fame. Instead of crowds, he would be her only
-worshiper. Would that satisfy a woman who had been a saint for a day?
-He could promise her rest and protection. He could take her feet in
-his hands and guide them over rough places. And if she wanted to be a
-woman----
-
-Crossing the room on tiptoe, he stood over her. Sinking to his knee, he
-placed a hand on her shoulder.
-
-"Won't you look up? I'm not here to hurt you. I wouldn't even judge you.
-Life's been hard."
-
-When she gave no sign, he spoke again.
-
-"I'm a man and a stranger. You're a wife. But you've told me so much.
-You're wounded. You can't go on by yourself."
-
-She moved. He knew now that she was listening.
-
-"There's that door in the wall we were going to find. Perhaps we've
-found it. Let me be your friend. It would be foolish and wrong for me to
-tell you that I----"
-
-She raised her head. Her hair fell back, and her eyes gazed out at him
-with hungry intensity. "Don't say it," she implored. "Varensky----"
-
-"But if he's dead? If I can bring you sure proof?"
-
-For answer she pressed his hand against her bosom.
-
-
-VII
-
-
-He seated himself at her feet, his arms clasped about his knees as
-if crouched before a camp-fire. How much meaning had she read into his
-implied confession? He felt happy; happier than ever before in his
-life, and yet, if she were the cause of his happiness, the odds were
-all against him. She had promised him nothing. She could promise him
-nothing. All he knew of her was what she had told him. His elation might
-prove to be no more than an emotion that would fade in the chill light
-of morning.
-
-"It would be foolish and wrong for me to tell you----" The words had
-risen to his lips unpremeditated. He had not realized that he cared for
-her until they were uttered. He had merely felt an immense compassion,
-an overwhelming desire to comfort her. That he should care for her at
-all was preposterous. It was paying her no compliment. Love that was
-worth the having required a more permanent incentive than physical
-beauty. Her mind and her character were a riddle to him. If his passion
-was no passing mood and she were indeed a widow, it would be her mind
-and her character that he might one day marry. He ought to have foreseen
-that something of this sort would be sure to happen between a man and
-woman left alone after midnight.
-
-But the triumphant self whom she had roused in him grinned impudently at
-this cautious moralizing. He gloried in the magnificent unwisdom of his
-indiscretion. He was surprised and delighted at this newly-discovered
-capacity for recklessness. When experience was growing stale, he had
-broken through limitations and found himself gazing on an unguessed
-landscape where adventure commenced afresh. He could still feel the
-softness of her flesh against his hand. That sudden act of tenderness
-had altered all their relations.
-
-He glanced up at her shyly. She, too, was dreaming. Her lips were
-smiling uncertainly; there was a far-away, brooding expression in her
-eyes. The blackness of her mourning merged with the shadows, making her
-seem disembodied; all he could see distinctly was the golden torrent of
-her hair framing the pallor of her face.
-
-"They knelt to you in Petrograd. I don't wonder."
-
-"Poor people! It did them no good. I never want any one else to do it."
-
-"But I kneel to you. I crouch at your feet."
-
-"I would rather be loved than worshiped." She restrained him gently.
-"Not yet."
-
-"Then, until I may love, I kneel to you."
-
-"You ought to find me repellent. No, let me speak. I own to you that I'm
-married, and here I sit with you alone, not knowing whether my husband
-lives or is buried. I must be wicked--more wicked than I guessed. Ivan
-was right; he used to tell me I played Satan to him. These hands, which
-look so soft and white, are cruel. This face, which seems so gentle, is
-a lie. This hair, which makes a pillow for your head, is a snare. One
-good man has already cast me aside. Rather than love me, he preferred
-death. And you are good. How near I came to killing you!" She bent over
-him, taking his face between her hands. "_You!_ Do you understand?" She
-had drawn his head back against her knees. Her lips all but touched him.
-He could feel the fanning of her breath. Her voice came pantingly, as
-though she dreaded her own question: "What can you see in me?"
-
-"Blue eyes, like a glimpse of heaven."
-
-"Tell me truly."
-
-"What can I see?" He stared up adoringly. "A woman who's still a child.
-A woman who's been cheated. A woman whose arms are empty. A woman who
-sits outside a tomb, dreaming of life."
-
-"Not of life," she corrected softly; "of being allowed to live for a
-man."
-
-"For me, perhaps?"
-
-She smiled vaguely.
-
-"Without knowing what kind of a man I am?"
-
-"Do you know me?" She sat upright, gazing straight before her. "You
-don't even know why I brought you."
-
-"Why?"
-
-"It seems strange to tell you now. It seems like a forgotten sadness, so
-forgotten that it might belong to some one else. And yet once it hurt. I
-brought you that I might win back my husband. Don't stiffen. Look up and
-see how I'm smiling. I was never his in your sense. I was an image in
-a niche, whose hands he kissed. I was a mascot, bringing him good luck.
-The woman part of me he postponed superstitiously till his cause should
-be won. It will never be won now."
-
-"But he warned you before he married you?"
-
-She shook her head. "He made sure of me. At first I was proud to be
-included in his sacrifice. Then failure made it all absurd. I was sorry
-for him. I knew only one way to comfort him. But because he had failed,
-he became the more determined to deny himself. Instead of comforting
-him, I became his tempter. Then Santa----"
-
-Hindwood pulled himself together and bent forward, glowering into the
-fire. "I can't understand all this talk of sacrifice. It sounds so
-confoundedly unpractical. As far as I can make out, your husband's idea
-of virtue was to abstain from everything that makes life worth living.
-He didn't profit any one by abstaining. All he did was to narrow
-himself. If he'd wanted to be an ascetic, why couldn't he have done the
-thing thoroughly and played the game? There was no need to drag you into
-it."
-
-"There was no need," she assented quietly, "but to have me and to
-withstand me made him appear more dedicated. He tantalized himself with
-the thought of me and used me as a knife with which to gash himself. I
-was a part of the road to Calvary he was treading in order that Russia
-might be saved. It gratified his pride to make the road spectacular.
-Then, when we were in exile and he was no longer a power, Santa came,
-the ruthless idealist--his very opposite."
-
-"Ruthless, perhaps! But I shouldn't call her an idealist."
-
-"She is--an idealist who, to gain her ends, stoops to any baseness.
-She's an avenging angel, beautiful and sinister. She's one of the few
-revolutionaries who knows what she wants; because she knows, she gets
-it. Varensky never knew. His head was in the clouds. He lost sight of
-his purpose in a mist of words."
-
-"What does she want?" As he asked the question, he glanced back at her
-where she gleamed like a phantom.
-
-"She wants----" There was a pause during which the only sound was the
-struggle of the distant surf. "She wants to make men pay for what they
-do to children. All her crimes---- She's a mother, robbed of her young;
-in her own fierce way, she's taken all the children of the world to her
-breast."
-
-"But men don't do anything."
-
-She caught his tone of puzzlement. "Oh yes. Each generation commits
-ferocious sins against the coming generation that can't protect itself.
-It's children who pay for wars and every social injustice. Men live like
-a marauding army, pillaging the land between birth and death. They pass
-on and leave to children the settlement of their reckless debts. Take
-this latest war; five million children in Europe alone are dying
-of starvation at this moment. Santa's marked down the men who are
-responsible for their suffering; silently, one by one, she drugs them
-with her beauty and exacts the penalty."
-
-"Prince Rogovich?"
-
-"Probably. He was raising funds for a new carnage."
-
-"But where do I come in? You said that you'd brought me here to help you
-win your husband."
-
-"She's in love with Ivan. To be loved by Santa is like witnessing the
-signature to one's death warrant. Perhaps she's a Bolshevik agent--the
-only people to whom the Bolsheviks are merciful are children. Perhaps
-she's really in love with him. She plays with him like a cat with a
-mouse."
-
-"And he?"
-
-"He's indifferent, as he is to every woman. Yet because she's
-treacherous and he wants to die, he takes her with him on many of his
-journeys. I hoped that if I could give you to her, she might spare him.
-That was before I knew you. I was beside myself with suspense. Ivan has
-been gone so long; to do her bidding seemed like giving him his last
-chance of life. She's in danger and in hiding. You're the one person who
-can prove her guilt. I thought that if I put you in her power, I'd place
-her under an obligation, so that----"
-
-"And now?"
-
-She covered her face with her hands. "God forgive me, it's your safety
-that counts--not Ivan's." He knelt against her, plucking her hands
-aside. "Look at me," he commanded. "So long as your husband lives, his
-safety comes first. In saving me, you might betray him. If, in snatching
-our happiness, we connived at his death, his shadow would always stand
-between us. I'm still your prisoner; I've not taken back my parole.
-Here's your revolver." He drew it from his pocket and laid it on her
-knees. "Fulfill your bargain."
-
-"How?"
-
-"Take me to Santa."
-
-"But Ivan--already he may be----"
-
-"Until we know, we'll play the game by him." When she hesitated, he
-added, "I wouldn't be friends with any woman who couldn't be loyal."
-
-Her hands groped after the revolver and found it. Forcing back her
-tears, she answered, "Nor would I with any man."
-
-Rising to his feet, he helped her to rise. "Take me to her."
-
-
-VIII
-
-
-As they stepped into the garden, the first restlessness of morning was
-in the air. The moon had vanished. Stars were going out. Along the low
-level of sea-line dawn cast a sickly shadow. It was as though night were
-an indigo curtain behind which silver forms were moving.
-
-She led the way across the lawn, through a door in the wall, and out on
-the short, crisp turf. She had thrown a cloak about her and pulled the
-hood over her head. It made her look cowled and elfin. It was the hour
-when everything is fantastic.
-
-He had an oppressive sense of unreality, as though this were all a dream
-from which he would shortly rouse. He stood aloof from recent happenings
-and surveyed his share in them in an elderly, derisive fashion. What
-were all these promises that he had been exchanging like a gallant?
-He tried to recall his exact words. To what extent had he committed
-himself? He had crossed the Atlantic that he might multiply his
-fortune--for no other reason. He was neither an idealist nor a
-sentimentalist; he had realized the chance that a bankrupt Europe
-offered and had come to take advantage of it. What would these derelicts
-of the catastrophe think of him if they guessed his real purpose? They
-were willfully, even contemptibly, unpractical; yet their perverted
-unselfishness troubled his conscience. To spend half one's years in
-exile, like the Little Grandmother, might not correct injustice, but at
-least it was a brave protest. To plan to die, like Varensky, because he
-had failed to rescue humanity, was a counsel of despair, but it had its
-gleam of nobility. To assassinate, like Santa, men whose statesmanship
-you did not comprehend was the madness of a zealot, but she at least
-staked her life against theirs. Into none of these undertakings did
-profit enter. It was disquieting to find himself among people so
-determined to convert the world to altruism. The world had been like
-this always; it would be like this to the end. If they were once to
-sense who he was, they would regard him as their enemy. He was walking
-into danger with his eyes wide open. His wisest plan would be to sink
-into the shadows and take the first train back to sanity. To do that he
-would have to leave her.
-
-And why not? What did he owe her? What was she to him? She belonged to
-another man. Waiting for him to die, or to make sure of his death, might
-prove a tedious business--a humiliating one, most certainly. And yet to
-leave her now----
-
-She had been going on ahead--or was it his steps that had been lagging?
-She had halted. As he came up, he felt the firm surface of the road
-beneath his tread.
-
-In the gloom she laid her hand on his arm. "If you've promised too
-much----"
-
-That determined him. "I keep my promises," he answered shortly.
-
-Walking side by side, they struggled on against the mass of
-all-surrounding vagueness. It seemed like a strong, gray tide pressing
-on their breasts, against which they made no headway.
-
-What was to be the upshot of it? She was guiding him to Santa. His
-lips twisted. It would take more than Santa to inspire him with terror.
-England wasn't the jungle. A man couldn't disappear unnoticed. Supposing
-in the next half-hour Santa were to do away with him, what would she
-gain by it? She would have silenced his testimony in the Rogo-vich
-affair, but she would have added to the evidence. If she were the woman
-she was painted, she would be too wary to do that. No, she would not
-attempt to kill him. Then what was her urgency?
-
-Gradually night was fading. The paleness from the sea was spreading.
-It drove like smoke, in billowy banks of vapor, creeping low along
-the ground. Live things were waking. In separate, plaintive warnings,
-early-risen birds were calling. Across the road ahead rabbits scurried.
-Against the formless vacancy of sky the rounded shoulders of the uplands
-became discernible. He took notice of their direction. She was leading
-him to the abandoned camp.
-
-"Madame Varensky."
-
-She started. "Not that."
-
-"I'm sorry. It was the only name I knew to call you. What do they
-usually----?"
-
-"Anna."
-
-She came close like a child and stood gazing up at him.
-
-He stooped and spoke gently. "You're a wild rose. Once more let me look
-into your eyes. It's so strange that you should care for me."
-
-"More strange to me," she said.
-
-He placed his hands on her shoulders. "There's something that I want you
-to remember. If harm comes to either of us, believe always that it was
-only good that I intended."
-
-"Whatever you brought me would be good," she murmured.
-
-"I wish it might." He tumbled the hood back so that he could see her
-hair. "When a man loves a woman who's already married, it doesn't often
-bring happiness. It wouldn't be right that it should. It isn't our fault
-that this has happened, but it will be if we misuse it."
-
-"We shan't misuse it."
-
-"There's something else." He groped after his words. "Before I came to
-you, I'd been foolish. There's no sense in regretting; if I hadn't been
-foolish, we shouldn't have met. I thought that I was following Santa;
-you can guess----"
-
-She inclined her head.
-
-"And there's one thing more. If your husband comes back, promise me
-you'll forget."
-
-She strained against him, so their lips were nearly touching. "Never."
-She spoke fiercely. And again, "Never. Though it's years and you
-forget."
-
-His hands slipped from her shoulders, lower and lower, till his arms
-closed about her. "Rest," he whispered, "if it's only for a moment,
-poor, tired little bird."
-
-Through the ghostly twilight of the autumn dawn they entered the
-deserted camp. Before one of the hutments she halted and tapped. She
-tapped again. There was no answer. Cautiously raising the latch,
-she peered into the room. Beckoning to him, she slipped across the
-threshold.
-
-
-IX
-
-
-The hut was empty. The floor was deep in dust. The ceiling was meshed
-with cobwebs. Nailed across the window, just as the soldiers had left
-it, a dingy curtain hung. Striking a match, he held it above his head.
-At the far end he made out signs of occupancy. On a shelf was a loaf of
-bread and near by a pitcher. In a corner, spread on the bare boards for a
-bed, was a wrap. He stooped; it was Santa's cloak of sables.
-
-The match went out. He turned. "How long has she been here?"
-
-"From the time she knew she was suspected."
-
-"She knew she was suspected at Plymouth. What made her motor all across
-England to this?" He glanced round with pity at the poverty-stricken
-forlornness.
-
-"She wanted to be near."
-
-"What? It would be better to tell me."
-
-"To the road out."
-
-He lit a cigarette and considered. "So there are more people in it," he
-said at last, "than just the few that I have met! It's an organization.
-I might have guessed. There are the people who helped the little old
-lady to visit me undetected. There are the people who entered my room in
-my absence. There's the foreign gentleman, who couldn't speak English,
-who called for Santa in his car. But if this hut is on the road out, why
-was she delaying?"
-
-"For you, perhaps."
-
-"But she was risking her freedom every second. Why for me, Anna?"
-
-Before he had given her time to answer, his mind had leaped to a new
-conjecture. "What if she's captured?"
-
-Suddenly the tragedy of this strange woman, temple-dancer,
-revolutionary, avenger of children, became vivid. Her pain stung him as
-though he had suffered it himself. He lived again the hunted hours
-that must have been hers while she had listened in this dusty room. He
-remembered her fascination, the grayness of her eyes, the fastidiousness
-of her dress. What a contrast to these surroundings! How often she must
-have crouched by that window, watching from behind the shabby curtain
-for the approach of the pursuer! The men she had killed did not matter.
-Probably they had deserved their death. His pity was reserved for
-her. She had been the pampered darling of princes. Her whims had been
-commands to lovers who themselves were rulers.
-
-No present had been too costly to purchase the ecstasy of her
-complaisance. Her body had been a jewel, guarded, coveted, irrepeatable
-in its beauty. Crimes had been committed for its possession. And this
-was her end! He heard in memory the hoarse pleading of her voice, trying
-vainly to convince him that love could make her good.
-
-The woman at his side was speaking. "We heard no sound. She was armed.
-If they'd tried to take her, she'd have defended herself."
-
-His thoughts came back. "Last night. Yes. If they'd taken her in the
-garden. But they might have known she would be armed. Perhaps they
-followed her. If they traced her to this hut, they might have waited
-till she was sleeping----"
-
-She shook her head. "It isn't that. She's grown tired of delaying. She's
-gone by the road out."
-
-He frowned. "That's the second time you've used the phrase. Can't you
-tell me plainly?"
-
-"If it's not too late, I'll show you."
-
-She darted out of the hut. When he joined her in the open, she was
-waiting impatiently to secure the door behind him. The moment it was
-fastened, she set off at a run. She raced like a boy, with none of a
-woman's awkwardness. With an occasional backward glance, up the long
-deserted avenue of the camp she fled. At first he was content to follow
-for the pleasure he had in watching her. She was so swift and young.
-She was like a deer in her slenderness. Sudden eagerness had transformed
-her. The hood had slipped back to her shoulders; the wind of her going
-fluttered in her hair.
-
-Outside the camp she bore to the left in a direction leading further
-afield. Over gorse and bracken dew had flung a silver net. The turf was
-a tapestry sewn with jewels. Larks were springing up. The keen fragrance
-of seaweed mingled with the honeyed perfumes of the land.
-
-He caught up with her. "Why?" he panted.
-
-She had no breath to waste in words. Turning on him a flushed and
-laughing face, she pointed ahead.
-
-Just short of the cliff-edge, where the sheer drop began, she sank to
-her knees, clasping her breast. While she recovered, he gazed about
-him. He discovered no sign of the thing she was pursuing. The sea was
-blanketed in mist. Above the blurred horizon, the red eye of the sun
-stared at him. From the foot of the cliff came the lapping of waves. No
-other sound.
-
-She had risen. He was about to speak. She pressed a finger to her lips.
-Taking him by the hand, she led him to the edge.
-
-At first, as he gazed down, he saw only the crumbling face of the chalk.
-Then he made out a winding path descending; it seemed no broader than a
-track that a goat might follow.
-
-"What is it?"
-
-"Listen."
-
-She dragged excitedly on his arm.
-
-Distinctly, above the lapping of waves, he heard the click of oars
-working in oar-locks. Beneath the fog a vessel was hiding. It had
-dropped a boat which was pulling toward the land.
-
-"The road out," she whispered.
-
-"But Santa----"
-
-She nodded. "It's not so difficult as it looks. It was used by
-smugglers. We use it----"
-
-She broke off. Oars were being shipped. The prow grounded. There was a
-muttering of men's voices. Some sort of discussion. A pause. Then oars
-were put out again. The rowing recommenced, growing fainter and fainter.
-
-
-X
-
-
-Gone!"
-
-She pressed against him in her gladness.
-
-Seeing the relief in her eyes, he questioned, "What does this mean to
-you, Anna?"
-
-"Safety."
-
-"Anything else?"
-
-"Freedom, perhaps."
-
-"You mean you think that Santa had received word of your husband and
-that that was why----?"
-
-"I don't want to think or mean; I only want to feel. It's as though I'd
-been living in a prison and the door had been flung wide. I wasn't one
-of them. They condemned me. In their hearts they despised me. I was too
-weak. I couldn't bear their cross." She clenched her hands against
-her cheeks till the knuckles showed white. "What's the good of being
-crucified? It's so much better to live and be glad for people."
-
-"And Santa," he asked, "where she's going, what will happen to her?"
-
-She raised her face. "Pain. She'll be hounded and hunted. She's getting
-too well known. Prince Rogovich thought he recognized her. She'll be
-always escaping, rushing from hiding to hiding, till one day---- To have
-been loved so much and to be pushed out of life----"
-
-Behind the mist they heard the creak of ropes running over pulleys.
-A gasoline engine was started. For an instant the shadow of a trawler
-loomed through the wall of opaqueness. The tiller was thrust over.
-She vanished. They stood very silently, listening and watching. In
-imagination Hindwood followed the vessel's course. It was not of the
-vessel he was thinking, but of the woman on board her. "To have been
-loved so much and to be pushed out of life----" If he had had the
-chance, what could he have done for her? She had fascinated him; but
-he had not loved her. She was past reclaiming. Love with a woman of
-her kind would have meant passion--nothing more. A fierce flame,
-self-consuming! A slow degrading of an emotion that was fine! Yet he
-was filled with pity and unreasoning remorse. Some day her enemies would
-overtake her--good, respectable men like Major Cleasby; the good men who
-by the injustice of their prejudices had made her what she was.
-
-"It's a chapter ended," he said quietly.
-
-Slipping his arm through hers, as though she already belonged to him,
-he was turning inland toward the peace of the rolling country, when
-his step was arrested. He caught the sound of labored breathing and
-the rattle of sliding chalk. Hands groped above the edge of the cliff,
-searching for a holding. They were followed by the head and shoulders
-of a man with a face intensely white, in which a pair of pale green
-eyes smoldered. Lower down and out of sight a woman spoke. The voice was
-Santa's.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER THE FIFTH--THE GREEN EYES CAST A SPELL
-
-
-I
-
-
-HINDWOOD stood rooted to the ground. He had thrust Anna behind him. She
-was tugging at his hand with the tenacity of terror. He scarcely dared
-breathe while he watched the green-eyed man dragging himself inch by
-inch to safety. To go to his assistance might cause his death. Any move
-that startled him might fling him back over the precipice. In falling he
-would sweep away the unseen woman who must be clinging to the face of
-the cliff below him.
-
-To Hindwood it seemed that he was present at a fantastic rehearsal of
-the Day of Resurrection. When the last trumpet blew, it would probably
-be precisely in some such fashion that the sea would give up its dead.
-It would happen about sunrise, when mankind was still abed. It would
-commence very quietly, when clouds were hanging low and the first of the
-barnyard cocks were crowing. Without warning, graves would open, and
-all the tired people, who had been so long resting, would begin to stir.
-Like the sound of falling rain, they would patter through the drowsing
-country, searching for their ancient dwellings. At first they would walk
-alone, then in groups, later in crowds. By the time the living looked
-out of their windows there would be no standing room on earth. Across
-seas and oceans the drowned would come swimming. They would wade through
-waves and clamber up cliffs, just as this man was doing.
-
-The vision became so probable that Hindwood glanced behind him to make
-sure that it was not happening. In a shimmering expanse of dew and
-autumn coloring lay the sweet, green landscape of living men, the kindly
-hedgerows, the sheltering valleys, the friendly villages. Everything was
-gentle and unaltered. It was only at this barrier, which the green-eyed
-stranger was struggling to surmount, that the tranquillity ended. At
-its brink eternity commenced, a pulsating oblivion of mist and grayness
-across which the rising sun peered curiously.
-
-The stranger was too occupied with his danger to be aware that he was
-being observed. Clutching at tufts and digging with his fingers, he was
-easing himself out of the abyss. Little by little he was gaining ground
-till at last, pulling his knees clear of the edge, he sprawled exhausted
-on the turf. But it was only for a moment. Twisting about, still lying
-flat, he reached down to his companion. As she appeared, he retreated,
-steadying her efforts and dragging her with him. Side by side they
-collapsed, breathing heavily and staring in dazed defiance at the death
-they had avoided.
-
-Hindwood made a step to approach them. He found himself tethered. Anna
-was gazing up at him, silently imploring. Her hair seemed a mass of
-solid gold, weighing her down. The blue veins in her temples stood out
-beneath her fairness. Her throat was milk-white and stretched back. Her
-lips were parted, revealing the coral of her mouth. It was as though she
-had been caught from behind by an assailant and brutally jerked back.
-With little endearing motions she caressed Hindwood's hand. He tried to
-fathom her necessity; in the presence of her weakness there was nothing
-that he would not have granted.
-
-The man with the green eyes had recovered. In the act of rising he had
-caught sight of them. His jaw had dropped open. If it was possible, his
-complexion had gone a shade whiter. His expression bore testimony to the
-medley of his emotions, the chief of which was astonishment. He made
-an oddly pathetic figure, with his scratched hands and torn clothing,
-crouching in that hunted attitude. He had lost his hat in the ascent.
-His brown hair was lank with perspiration. He was a lean man and
-graceful as a greyhound. Even in his present ungainly posture there was
-a hint of something swift and gallant in his bearing. One forgot that
-he was a vagabond who had eluded formalities and completed an illegal
-landing; he looked more like a champion unhorsed in a tourney. His brow
-was wide and noble, but the top of his head was shaped like a deformity
-and rose into a point like a dunce's cap. His eyes were well-spaced
-and piercing; they penetrated with a sense of power. His mouth was
-thin-lipped and sensitive--too sensitive for a man's. His face was
-narrow and smooth as a girl's. He had a haggard appearance of perpetual
-suffering, which the extremeness of his pallor served to enhance. He
-was indefinably tragic. He might have sat equally well for a portrait of
-Lucifer or of Harlequin overtaken by his folly.
-
-Very wearily he lifted himself from the ground and stumbled toward them.
-As he did so, Santa uttered a nervous cry and turned--after which she
-watched broodingly what happened.
-
-Paying no attention to Hindwood, the man made straight for Anna. Bending
-over her humbly, he whispered unintelligible words. Her terror left her.
-Making no sound, she raised to him eyes eloquent with compassion.
-
-"What did he say?" Hindwood questioned.
-
-She was prepared to reply, when the stranger stayed her with a gesture.
-"I was apologizing in Russian for having returned."
-
-Hindwood glanced at the ragged edge of the cliff and shrugged his
-shoulders. "An apology's scarcely necessary. You're to be congratulated.
-You seem to have recognized this lady. Who are you?"
-
-The stranger drew himself erect. A grim smile played about his mouth.
-"Ivan Varensky, at your service."
-
-[Illustration: 0187]
-
-
-II
-
-
-Hindwood stared at him with a frown. He was contrasting this Ivan
-Varensky with the leader of men whose deeds of three years ago had so
-deeply stirred him. One picture stood out ineffaceably. It was of a sea
-of panic-stricken soldiers, patriotism forgotten, arms flung away, in
-wild retreat, and of Ivan Varensky driving forward alone, as though
-he, by his single courage, could turn back the enemy. And this was the
-man--the white knight of Russia, the scape-goat, the magician of words!
-Had he met him three years ago, he would have knelt to him. Now all he
-could do was to frown.
-
-It was necessary to say something. He spoke gruffly. "You've chosen an
-odd method of returning. We had news you were dead."
-
-"I was," the green eyes narrowed, "nearly. I'm always nearly dying.
-Isn't that so, Anna? And then I come back. This last time, as you
-observed, I had the discourtesy to forget. I was thinking of Santa.
-Actually I struggled to survive. Believe me, that's unlike me."
-
-The forbearance of his manner was rebuking. Making an effort to be
-genial, Hindwood held out his hand. "It's a strange way to meet. I've
-long been your admirer. It was a close call--as close as a man could
-have."
-
-Varensky winced as the powerful grip closed about his fingers. They were
-long and pointed, more like a woman's than a man's. "A close call!" He
-smiled. "You're American? It wasn't--not for me. I could tell you-- But
-perhaps one day, when I've become past history, Anna will do that."
-
-As he mentioned his wife, he gave her a look at once tender and
-furtive--a look which acknowledged without rancor the truth of the
-situation. She started forward, but his eyes held her. She stopped
-half-way.
-
-"However you return," she said chokingly, "and however often, you know
-that I'm glad. It's the certainty that I shall lose you--that however
-often you return I shall never have you--"
-
-She bowed her head. From the edge of the cliff, without a trace of
-emotion, the other woman watched her.
-
-Tilting her face with his bruised fingers, Varensky regarded her
-earnestly. "As if I wasn't aware of that!" And then, "Let's be going."
-
-Side by side, but always separate, they moved across the downs. There
-was no backward glance. Hindwood followed them with his eyes till they
-sank into a hollow. The last he saw was the raw gold of her hair and the
-conical top of his pointed head, growing more distant above the bracken.
-
-
-III
-
-
-And I, too, have to apologize. I failed to keep my appointment."
-
-He swung round at the mockingly spoken words, to find that Santa had
-stolen up behind him. Until now he had had no time to notice her. His
-anger was so intense that it held him silent. After all that she had
-done and had intended to do to him, she had the effrontery to jest! Did
-she think that he was as much her dupe as the fool who had died for her
-in the woods of Vincennes?
-
-But his anger was short-lived and left him sternly cold. She was
-changed. Her fastidious elegance was a thing of the past. She was
-commonly attired as any fisher-girl. Her cheap blouse was rent at the
-neck; its sleeves were stained and in tatters. Her rough skirt had been
-nearly trodden off. She was tom and disheveled. She had suffered even
-more from her adventure than had Varensky. Her hat lay crushed at her
-feet in the grass. With her wounded hands she "was doing her best to
-twine the thick coils of her hair into place. She stood confessed for
-what she was, a fugitive from justice. The wildness of the landscape
-made a fitting setting. She looked startlingly untamed. She might have
-passed for a peasant Ophelia, except that her gray eyes were calm and
-her manner nonchalant.
-
-"There are a good many things, besides missing your appointment, for
-which you have to apologize."
-
-"I can explain--"
-
-He cut her short. "Between you and me no explanations are necessary."
-
-She jerked back her head, flattening her hands against her sides like a
-soldier standing at attention. "Why not?"
-
-He took his time to answer. "Because you're nothing to me."
-
-Her face went white, then flamed scarlet, as though he had struck
-her with his open palm. "Nothing to you!" She spoke slowly. "I, Santa
-Gorlof, am nothing to you! You're the first man to whom I ever offered
-my heart. I would lie down in the mud that you might walk over me. I'd
-let you beat me like a dog if I might only follow you. I'd starve that
-you might be fed, go thirsty that you might drink, break my body that
-you might not suffer. I would die if it would give you pleasure." Seeing
-that her rhetoric was having no effect, she sank her voice. "When I
-could have escaped, I waited for you. I risked my freedom for one last
-sight of you." She clutched at her breast, choking down a sob. "And you
-tell me that I'm nothing to you!"
-
-He was determined to remain unmoved by her emotion. Regarding her
-stonily, he asked: "What right had you to believe that you were anything
-to me?"
-
-She laughed forlornly. "No right at all."
-
-"If I had ever cared for you," he continued, "in your present
-predicament it would all be ended."
-
-She raised her brows contemptuously. "Of course."
-
-"You see, I've found out the sort of woman you are."
-
-"What sort?"
-
-"Need I recall?"
-
-He turned away, searching hollows and clumps of bushes for bobbing heads
-of watchers. Her captors might be closing in on her. Her indifference
-to her danger was disconcerting. With eyes still fixed on the distant
-landscape, he revealed his thoughts.
-
-"Your talk of love is paltry. It's tragic farce. You have a husband.
-You're liable to be jailed at any moment."
-
-He expected she would retort. When she maintained silence, he glanced
-down at his feet, ashamed of what he felt himself compelled to tell her.
-
-"Love! If it were true, and if your affection were desired, you have no
-love to offer. Nothing that is you is yours. Your hours are numbered.
-Your body and your life are forfeit. The man who is your husband is
-leading the hue-and-cry against you. If you think you can persuade me to
-go to the scaffold for you, rid yourself of the thought. There'll be no
-repetition of the woods of Vincennes. The victim in that case was your
-lover; I'm not." He met her eyes. "You never deceived me for a second.
-From the moment we left the _Ryndam_, I knew who it was had pushed
-Prince Rogovich overboard."
-
-"If you knew," she asked quietly, "why didn't you have me arrested?"
-
-"It was none of my business."
-
-"But you were kind after we'd landed. At the hotel you arranged to
-breakfast with me."
-
-"I couldn't bring myself to believe you were guilty."
-
-"And yet, after you had believed, you followed me to Seafold."
-
-"The detective instinct." He spoke testily. "Morbid curiosity."
-
-"No." She said it wistfully. Her face softened. "You followed me
-because, even against your will, you still cared for me. You pitied me.
-You were chivalrous. You refused to condemn me unheard. You hoped there
-was some mistake. You followed me to make sure."
-
-"And you've made me sure." He rapped out the words. "Since you insist
-on the truth, I came to Seafold hoping to find you innocent. If I had I
-should have fought for you. Whereas--"
-
-"Whereas?" she prompted nervously.
-
-"I found you'd done to me what you've done to every other man who ever
-befriended you--betrayed me and had me lured into an ambush where, for
-all I know, you'd given orders for me to be shot."
-
-"But you weren't."
-
-"No thanks to you. Your husband was ahead of you, hidden in the bushes,
-waiting for you. If we hadn't given the signal that warned you--"
-
-"But you gave it." She spoke triumphantly. "I'd trapped you, and yet you
-didn't want me to be caught. To have shown generosity at a moment when
-you thought that I was threatening your life, you must still have been
-fond of me."
-
-"Thought!" He drew back from her, revolted by her insincerity. "You left
-no room for thought. You were diabolically explicit. You knew that I
-could prove your guilt. You meant to kill me in order that I might be
-silenced."
-
-Her eyes filled. She stretched out her arms beseechingly. They fell
-hopelessly as he retreated from her.
-
-"Don't misjudge me," she implored. "I'm a woman who's finished. A woman,
-as you reminded me, whose hours are numbered--my body and my life are
-forfeit. It's true what you said: nothing that I am belongs to me. If
-you like to put it that way, I'm a woman who has nothing to offer. And
-yet I love you--the first man with whom I was ever in love, now when
-it's too late. You don't believe me; you're thinking of the many others.
-Let it pass. I had to see you once more. I couldn't come to you; you
-were surrounded by my enemies. To persuade you to come to me, I had to
-trick you. Until it was safe to visit you, I had to have you held by
-force. I compelled Anna, Madame Varensky to--"
-
-He made an impatient gesture. "Enough! I'm wondering to how many men
-you've made that speech before. I've heard all about your appeals to
-chivalry. If you were a man---- Unfortunately you're not, so I have a
-sentimental compunction about abandoning you. What are your plans? When
-I saw the ship I hoped you had escaped."
-
-"I had."
-
-"And you came back! Why?"
-
-"Varensky was landing from the boat that had been sent to take me off."
-She was laying claim to some obscure nobility, making a final bid for
-his admiration.
-
-"The mist's clearing," he said brusquely. "In another half-hour you'll
-be visible for miles. If you're seen here, you'll be taken."
-
-"I won't."
-
-"You think not?"
-
-She smiled languidly. It was her arch, mysterious way of smiling that
-had first attracted him. "Why don't you go?" she whispered in her
-hoarse, parched voice. "You loathe and despise me. You grudge me every
-moment we're together. I've done what was right; I'm willing to pay the
-penalty. I've earned a rest. I'm tired--you can't guess how tired."
-
-Now that she wanted him to go, he gazed at her with a new interest.
-If the trackers were hot upon his trail, what would be his sensations?
-Would he be able to be courteous and to talk calmly? Whatever might be
-her crimes, she had courage. What if it were true that by some tortuous
-process of reasoning she did actually believe she had done right? And
-what if it were true that she had intended him no harm, but had only
-attempted to win him by violence? The uneasy doubt took shape in his
-mind that he might have misjudged her. It would be a splendid memory
-to have, if she were wrongly executed--this gleaming morning, the larks
-singing, the blue-patched sky, the valiant sun, the rosy-tinted dew, and
-himself fleeing from the forlornness of a woman! Every man's hand was
-against her. She believed she had done right.
-
-He regarded her less coldly. She was perfect as on the day when all
-Europe had gone wild over her. And this masterpiece of loveliness, which
-had been known as Santa Gorlof, was doomed to be destroyed!
-
-"Go." She stamped her foot hysterically. "You torture me."
-
-He faced her obstinately. "What are you proposing? You've some plan in
-mind. Madame Varen-sky called this 'the road out.' Is it possible for
-you to take it?"
-
-"I know a shorter route."
-
-"You're certain?"
-
-"Please leave me. You must leave me. I'm a woman who has nothing to
-offer. You're a man who has everything to lose."
-
-He squared his lips. "I don't like the sound of this shorter route. I
-want to know more about it."
-
-As he made a step toward her, she dodged and broke from him, dashing
-toward the cliff. On the very edge he caught her. She struggled
-dangerously, but he stumbled back with her crushed against him.
-
-"You little fool!"
-
-She lay quiet, her face pressed against his cheek. Then she fell to
-sobbing.
-
-"What difference would it make? Why wouldn't you let me do it?"
-
-
-IV
-
-
-Why wouldn't he? It was the question he himself was asking. He had done
-nothing humane in preventing her. He had merely spared his own feelings.
-If she had succeeded, he would have found himself in an ugly situation.
-He would have been suspected of a crime similar to hers. There would
-have been no evidence to hang him, but he could never have established
-his innocence. He looked down at the woman shuddering in his arms, for
-all the world as though he were her lover. He had been within an ace of
-inheriting her isolation.
-
-"I didn't let you do it--" He hesitated. Then he took the plunge.
-"Because I intend to save you."
-
-She stirred. She glanced up at him. As her eyes met his, their
-expression of wonder gave way to one of gratitude. She strove to reach
-his lips, but he restrained her.
-
-"Promise me you'll live."
-
-"If you'll help me."
-
-How much she implied oy "help me," he did not stop to question.
-
-"We've no time to lose." He spoke hurriedly. "Where's the safest place
-of hiding?"
-
-"My old one. A hut----"
-
-"I know," he interrupted. "I'll go ahead to make sure the way is clear;
-you follow at a distance. Keep me in sight. If I look back, take cover."
-
-Without more ado, he turned away, retracing his steps to the camp.
-
-He attempted to walk jauntily, like a nature-lover who had risen early
-to enjoy the first freshness of the morning. Here and there he stooped
-to pluck a blackberry. He pulled a sprig of heather for his lapel.
-He flattered himself that, if he were being watched, his conduct was
-artistically normal.
-
-For all his display of carelessness, he advanced warily. There was
-nothing in the billowy expanse of greenness that escaped him. Somewhere
-within a radius of four miles the Major was waiting to make his pounce.
-He might be crouched in the next patch of bracken. He might be lying
-behind the nearest mound. The dapper, gallant-appearing old gentleman,
-who bore such a striking resemblance to Lord Roberts, assumed the terror
-of nemesis in his imagination. He seemed everywhere and nowhere. He
-would pop up, suave and neatly bespatted, at the moment when he was
-least expected.
-
-He gazed straight before him, not daring to look back, but he never lost
-consciousness of the fateful woman following him stealthily as a shadow.
-And always there was the memory of the other woman with the gentle eyes
-and shining hair.
-
-He reached the camp. It looked lonely as a graveyard. Rows of hutments,
-bleached to a bluish whiteness, gleamed in the morning sunshine. The
-downs curled above it like an emerald wave on the point of breaking.
-
-Passing along the bare avenue of silent dwellings he pushed open the
-door of Santa's place of refuge. Tiptoeing across the dusty floor, he
-knelt by the window, peering out.
-
-Seconds ticked into minutes. Ten minutes elapsed, twenty, half an hour.
-There was no sign of life. He strove to calm his fears. If she had been
-caught, it simplified matters. But such arguments failed to pacify him.
-He pictured her as he had seen her on the _Ryndam_--a splendid animal,
-proud, fastidious, mildly contemptuous; and then as he had seen her that
-morning, broken, desperate, defiant.
-
-Out there in the happy sunshine they might be carrying her away. They
-would drag her through the public streets as a criminal. They would lock
-her in a cell. They would hale her to a court to be gaped at. They would
-paw over her private life. They would pry into the intimacies of her
-love-affairs. Nothing that was hers would be sacred. Then, when
-the sport grew tedious, an old man, turned moralist by reason of
-decrepitude, would don a black cap and intrust her to the mercy of
-Almighty God.
-
-He staged her arrest as though he had seen it happen. He had strolled
-straight through her pursuers' ambush. They had let him pass. Directly
-she had appeared, they had risen out of the brush. Twisting her arms
-behind her, they had snapped handcuffs on her slender wrists. She had
-struggled, sinking to the ground, faint with terror. They had jerked her
-to her feet, half carrying her, pushing her forward.
-
-He raged impotently. What brutes men were! Nothing that she had done
-to his sex was bad enough. He thrust the vision from him. Each time it
-returned.
-
-The door creaked. He leaped as if he had been shot. She pressed a finger
-to her lips. Coming close, so that he could feel the rise and fall of
-her bosom, "He's here," she whispered.
-
-
-V
-
-
-Who?"
-
-She was puzzled by his stupidity. Then, "You know," she murmured. "He
-saw me in the distance and started to run toward me. I dropped to my
-knees and circled, approaching the hut from the back."
-
-"But he couldn't have recognized you."
-
-"He's on my track."
-
-"Alone?"
-
-"I saw no one else."
-
-Hindwood's forehead wrinkled as he reckoned the cost. "If he comes
-alone, we can deal with him."
-
-"You mean--?" She did not finish her sentence.
-
-He smiled sternly, thinking how far he had drifted from his moorings.
-"Scarcely. What made you ask?"
-
-"He's my husband." Her answer was enigmatic.
-
-They held their breath. She was clinging to him. There had been no
-sound, nothing that could have warned them. Pushing her from him, he
-stole toward the window. Not fifty yards away, rigid like a hound
-at fault, stood the Major. Slowly, scarcely turning his head, he was
-running his eye along the double line of hutments. There was nothing in
-his expression that would tell what he had found. As though he sensed
-that he was watched, he started forward at a rambling pace. He tried
-no doors. He peered through no panes. His bearing was that of a mildly
-interested tourist who had stumbled on the camp by accident. He passed
-out of sight inoffensively, idly slashing at the grass.
-
-It was some time before either of them dared to whisper. Then Hindwood
-straightened himself and drew back.
-
-"He's gone."
-
-"To return," she said tragically.
-
-"If he returns alone, what of it?"
-
-"He may catch me."
-
-"That doesn't follow. We may catch him instead."
-
-Her eyes grew long and narrow like a cat's. "What would we do with him?"
-she asked softly.
-
-He regarded her warily. "He told me he loved you," he said irrelevantly.
-
-"Love wouldn't stand in his way--nothing personal. For what he holds to
-be right, he'd mutilate himself. He'd kill the thing he loved best." She
-sank her voice. "We all would."
-
-"All--" He paused and began again. "With idealists like the Major,
-yourself and Varensky, human relations don't count. That was what you
-were trying to tell me, wasn't it? To achieve individual ideals, you'd
-sacrifice your own and everybody's happiness."
-
-Her expression became wooden as an idol's.
-
-"You'd sacrifice mine, for instance?"
-
-When she refused to answer, he made his inquiry more intrusive.
-
-"My life, perhaps? No obligation of loyalty or gratitude would hinder
-you? Be honest."
-
-He recognized the struggle which his words had occasioned. Her sleepy
-look had vanished. She believed he was preparing to desert her. She
-was mustering the courage to invent a falsehood. Already her hands were
-lying. They were wandering over him, patting and caressing. He clasped
-them in his own, holding her at arm's length. Her eyes met his; they
-grew steady and absorbed him.
-
-"Even though you were all I had, if your life caused suffering to
-children, I would kill you."
-
-He laughed at her solemnity over having told the truth.
-
-"With you it's children; with the Major it's patriotism; with Varensky
-it's freedom. With me it's nothing. I follow no will-o'-the-wisp--which
-is lucky for you. You're terribly tired; get some rest while you can.
-I'll watch. I'm no idealist; you can trust me."
-
-
-VI
-
-
-She had wrapped herself in her sable cloak and curled herself on the
-floor in the corner remotest from the window. When he judged she was
-sleeping, he stole to her side and stood gazing down. Her rags were
-hidden. Except for the weary disorder of her hair, she was almost the
-fashionable beauty of his Atlantic voyage.
-
-He looked closer. Fatigue had uncovered something hidden in her
-countenance, traces of lost girlhood. Her body seemed smaller, her
-features less decided. The mask of intrigue had fallen. He caught a
-glimpse of the slim, pathetic child whom the Major had discovered,
-swaying like lilac-bloom in the perfumed dusk of the Hindoo temple.
-
-Her feet peeped out from beneath the costly fur. Such doll's feet--so
-little to have come so long a journey! Her ankles were cut by the climb
-up the cliff. Her shoes were broken. As though the curtain had gone up
-in the theater of his brain, her feet began to act their story. He
-saw them tiny and brown, pattering about the shaded bungalow where the
-English tea-planter had lived with her Burmese mother. He saw them
-lost and wandering along the roads of India. He saw them in the temple,
-flashing like a swallow's flight across mosaic pavements. He
-followed all their progress, as they carried her through triumphs and
-bereavements to this moment.
-
-She sighed and moved languidly. The robe fell back, revealing her hands.
-They were grazed and wounded.
-
-Pouring water on his handkerchief from the pitcher, he bathed them
-gently. Just as he had finished, she opened her eyes.
-
-"You won't leave me?"
-
-"You'll find me sitting here," he assured her, "just like this when you
-waken."
-
-Smiling faintly, she drowsed off obediently as a child.
-
-All day she lay huddled in the corner, oblivious and spent with
-exhaustion. This must be the first long sleep she had snatched for
-several days and nights. Crouched beside the window, he guarded her.
-The Major might return. Varensky might send help. He himself could do
-nothing till after nightfall. The only food was the broken loaf of bread
-on the shelf beside the pitcher. He did not dare to touch it; when she
-woke, she would be hungry. The downs poured in a steady blaze of
-light. A fly drummed against the panes. On distant hillsides sheep were
-grazing; he envied them their freedom.
-
-He could go if he liked. As the monotony dragged on, the temptation
-strengthened. He was under no obligation to make himself an outlaw. If
-he were to slip away, he would not rouse her. Within the hour he could
-be speeding up to London. Once there he would be of importance--the one
-man, at least in some statesmen's estimate, who could solve the European
-situation. For this woman he was sacrificing the happiness of millions.
-The fleshpots of Egypt could be his for the claiming. If he stayed and
-she were arrested, he would be held as her accomplice. Self-interest and
-altruism urged him to escape. He owed nothing to her. Women had always
-been for him an enemy country, forbidden and enticing. They had been
-what darkest Africa was to the explorer, a forest-world of treacherous
-loveliness. In imagination he had always been approaching their borders,
-fascinated by the gleam of uplifted faces. But like Varensky, whose life
-was a constant challenging of terror, in this one matter he had been
-cowardly. Since the first false woman of his early manhood--?
-
-Why was it, this sudden clamor to possess the thing which all his years
-he had avoided? Was it because he felt the rising tide of loneliness
-and knew that the years were gaining on him? All this autumn day, as the
-silver clearness of morning faded into the deep gold of afternoon, he
-sat motionless, considering. Up to now he had maintained his pride,
-flattering himself that it was he who was doing the refusing. He had
-told himself arrogantly that he would succeed first--succeed immensely;
-after that he could have any woman for the asking. But could he? He was
-losing his faculty for sharing. Merely to marry a woman was not to win
-her. The illusion of ecstasy!
-
-He glanced over to the corner where she lay sleeping. She was the symbol
-of the feminine half of the world whom he had disregarded. It was she
-who had roused him, with her parched voice and instinctive passion.
-
-He studied her--her golden face, her cruel lips, her thin, sweet
-profile. He noticed the delicate firmness of her arms, the fineness of
-her throat, the tenderness of her molding. At every point she made him
-aware of his incompleteness.
-
-Across the downs, like a fisherman drawing in his nets, the sun was
-setting. The hut was vague with dusk. Like the crescent of a young moon,
-Santa had wakened and was rising.
-
-
-VII
-
-
-You promised to save me."
-
-"I will if I can."
-
-She knotted her hands in mental anguish.
-
-"You must. Any moment he may return. Have you thought of nothing?"
-
-Leaning across his shoulder she lifted the ragged curtain, peering out
-at the fading landscape; as she gazed, her face stiffened and her eyes
-became fixed in a leaden stare. Not more than thirty yards distant,
-with his back toward them, the Major was standing. He had followed their
-trail still closer.
-
-"We can't escape," she panted. "He'll be there all night, to-morrow,
-forever."
-
-"We can. Stop here and trust me."
-
-Rising stealthily, leaving the door ajar behind him, he slipped out
-of the hut. In the twilight he halted, breathing in the sweet evening
-fragrance. Without further secrecy, he strode toward the Major.
-
-"Good evening. I've been expecting you."
-
-At the first word the Major spun round, alertly on the defensive.
-
-"I have your prisoner," he continued. "I found I had no taste for being
-added to her list of victims. I'll be glad if you'll take her off my
-hands. She's in there." He jerked his thumb across his shoulder.
-
-The Major eyed him fiercely. "How d'you mean, you were expecting me?"
-
-Hindwood laughed. "I caught sight of you last night in Varensky's garden
-and this morning on the downs. I didn't let you know, because there were
-things I was anxious to investigate."
-
-"For instance?"
-
-"The purpose of her game."
-
-"And you've satisfied yourself?"
-
-"At the risk of my life--yes. When you warned me against being romantic,
-I thought you were merely jealous. Fortunately or unfortunately,
-whichever way you like to put it, I know now that everything you told me
-was correct."
-
-"Humph!"
-
-The Major twirled his mustaches thoughtfully.
-
-In the last of the daylight he looked like a lean, white cat.
-
-His coolness began to wear on Hindwood's nerves. "I suppose your men are
-hidden. Let's make an end."
-
-"I have no men." The Major spoke slowly. "You forget that this woman is
-my wife. I wished to spare her as much as possible by making the arrest
-myself!" His eyes narrowed shrewdly. "How did you manage to secure her?"
-
-"Luck. She had an accident. It's too long a story. She can't get away.
-I'm through; I've done my share."
-
-As he turned to go, the older man stretched out a delaying hand. His
-iron discipline wavered. "It's not a cheerful task. If you'll be so good
-as to stay--"
-
-"If you feel like that--"
-
-"I daren't allow myself to feel. It's something I owe my country."
-
-As though afraid that he would weaken, the Major set out at a run across
-the turf. Outside the hut he waited. As Hindwood caught up with him, he
-whispered:
-
-"Two men against one woman! For an old soldier it isn't gallant."
-
-He was on the point of entering, when he felt himself flung violently
-forward. Hindwood's arm was crooked about his throat, shutting off his
-breath. Bursting into the hut, he was hurled to the floor and found
-himself struggling in the darkness. He was being pressed down and down.
-A voice spoke, the accents of which a minute ago had been friendly.
-
-"Close the door. Get something to bind him. Anything that will hold.
-Tear strips off your dress."
-
-
-VIII
-
-
-It was over. The Major had been trussed and gagged. He had been
-handcuffed with his own manacles. His revolver had been removed and
-his pockets searched. He leaned propped against the wall like a jointed
-doll, his body making an exact right angle with his legs. The angry
-vigilance of his eyes was his only sign of life. There was no means
-of making a light, even if it had been safe to employ it. Now that the
-fight was ended, they sat staring into the gloom, anonymous as three
-shadows.
-
-It was Hindwood who broke the silence. "I've been guilty of an outrage,
-Major; I guess that's what you'd like to tell me. But you gave me no
-choice. Where I come from, women and children are held sacred. It was up
-to some man to protect her."
-
-He paused instinctively, as though he expected a reply. He looked to
-Santa where she crouched, motionless and scarcely discernible, in her
-corner. What were they thinking, this husband and wife, so brutally
-reunited? His sense of discomfort urged him to continue.
-
-"Don't run off with the idea that I approve of what she's done. And I'm
-not in love with her. If she were a man, I don't suppose I'd raise a
-finger to save her. But she's a woman: inconsistently, that makes all
-the difference. I couldn't stand for seeing her dragged away to the kind
-of shame--"
-
-Again he paused. The lack of response was maddening. Scrambling to his
-feet, he bent over the Major.
-
-"To be frank, now that I've got you, I don't know what to do with you.
-If you'll promise to keep quiet, I'll remove the gag."
-
-"No." Santa had not stirred. In the darkness she was little more than
-a voice. "Let me speak while he's forced to listen. Put him where I can
-see him."
-
-Taking his prisoner by the shoulders, Hindwood dragged him to the
-window. With a jerk he tore the ragged curtain from its nails. The downs
-were a sea of purple dusk. The moon hung like a lantern in an unruffled
-sky. Against the square of glass, the Major's face showed hawk-like.
-
-"You've changed." She spoke softly. "Do you remember when last we
-parted? On the docks at Calcutta. It hurt. Since then we've both gone
-down the ladder. For both of us it was the end of goodness. I must have
-known it. I waved till long after you were out of sight; then I wept
-till my heart was shriveled up. How long I've waited to tell you what
-you've made me suffer! You made me feel that I'd never been your wife,
-only a half-caste plaything. But you'd put a white soul into my body.
-It was a greater wickedness than anything I have done. Now that I'm
-what you've made me, father of my dead child, you seek me out to be my
-judge."
-
-Her hoarse voice died away. Like the protest of an uneasy conscience,
-the Major's handcuffs clinked together.
-
-"You think that you're just," she began again. "You come of a race which
-admires justice. Ah, but justice is not kindness! You knew what I was
-when you brought me from the temple--a wanton slave-girl. What had I
-learned of righteousness? It wasn't for my virtue that you bought me. It
-was for my pomegranate lips, my golden body, my little, caressing hands.
-Afterward, as an incentive to desire, it pleased you to bring the soul
-into my eyes. You made me long to be perfect. You seemed so strong and
-wise; I wanted to be like you. Without you I was afraid. You were my
-God. I felt brave when I touched you."
-
-Her voice sank. "After the little one came, I was no longer frightened.
-He was so nearly white. He was yours and mine. My blood seemed cleansed.
-I saw the world through the innocence of his eyes. The evil of the East
-ceased to call to me. But when he was killed and you put me from you----
-Murderer of a woman's faith," she addressed the silent face, "the soul
-in me was dying."
-
-She rocked in the shadows. "My crimes are yours, and you came to condemn
-me. You robbed me of everything but my body. My heart was famished; to
-feed it, I sold my beauty at a price. At first, for men's money; then,
-for their honor; at last, for their lives." She had risen. "You wonder
-why for their lives? They were men like you, outwardly just, who
-destroyed belief in goodness. Because of men like you women's hearts are
-broken and children go naked."
-
-Hindwood leaped to his feet, blocking her path. She leaned past him,
-staring down into the bandaged face.
-
-"Oh, husband without pity, god whom I worshipped, I burn in hell because
-of your justice."
-
-Slipping to her knees, she came into the square of light. "Am I not
-beautiful? Is there another like me? Would it not have been happier to
-have been kind? See what you have spoiled."
-
-
-IX
-
-
-There was the rustling of footsteps in the grass outside. Letting in a
-flood of moonlight, the door was pushed gently open.
-
-"May we enter?"
-
-Without waiting for a reply, a man padded noiselessly across the
-threshold. By his peaked head and the litheness of his body, Hindwood
-recognized him as Varensky. Behind him, with the mildness of attendant
-angels, Anna and the Little Grandmother followed. Just inside the room
-he halted.
-
-"What's this?"
-
-The bound face in the square of window had riveted his attention.
-
-"Her husband."
-
-"But why--?"
-
-Hindwood spoke again. "He had come to take her to be hanged."
-
-The pale face smiled contemptuously. "Hanging's only a way of dying. Was
-that any reason for making him suffer?"
-
-Without further argument, taking command of the situation, he stepped
-quickly to the Major's side. Stooping, he cut the bonds and removed the
-gag.
-
-"You're free--free to go where you like and to get us all into trouble.
-We shall be here for at least an hour, so you'll have time. I landed
-without permission in your England this morning. That's a cause for
-police interference. My name's Ivan Varensky."
-
-The Major rose painfully, blinking at the lean, green-eyed stranger
-as though he had discovered in him a jester. "There are still the
-handcuffs," he muttered.
-
-When the handcuffs had been knocked off, Varen-sky repeated, "You're
-free to go."
-
-The Major shook himself and resumed his strutting air, like a brave old
-rooster who had all but had his neck wrung. "If it makes no difference,
-I'll stay."
-
-With his left eye shut and his head on one side, Varensky regarded him
-comically. "No difference! It may. You're a secret service agent; I'm
-a revolutionary. You uphold laws; I defy them. You're the servant of
-force; I hate every form of compulsion. What difference it makes depends
-on yourself--whether you propose to stay as a spy or as a man of honor."
-
-"As a sportsman who abides by the rules of the game."
-
-Varensky shrugged his narrow shoulders. "As a sportsman who hunts
-women?" He turned tenderly to Santa. "You're famished. We'll cover up
-the window and make a light."
-
-When candles which they had brought had been kindled and the meal
-spread, Santa and Hindwood sat down on the floor, facing each other.
-While they ate there was dead silence. Hindwood kept catching glimpses
-of her eyes. What was to be the end of her? Her expression was stunned.
-They both knew what this silence betokened: when the meal was over, her
-fate was to be decided. He was aware of each separate personality, as
-though each were making an effort to explain itself. What was to be
-hoped for from the verdict of such a jury? Every one in the hut, except
-Anna and himself, was a fanatic. He did not try to see their faces; all
-he saw was their hands as they ministered to him. The hands of Varensky,
-half clown's, half martyr's. The wrinkled hands of the old noblewoman,
-worn with service, who had lived with outcasts and spent her years in
-exile. The hands of Anna, guilty with yearning.
-
-Varensky spoke without looking up. It was as though he were carrying on
-a conversation already started. "We can't restore life, so what right
-have we to destroy it? To be merciful--that's the only way."
-
-His green eyes sought the Major's. "We could have killed you
-to-night--but we didn't. Have you wondered why? By letting you go, we've
-put ourselves in your power. To-morrow you can drag us all to jail.
-You're a hard man. You exact an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth.
-You came here to-night to exact a life. If we had judged you by your own
-standards, we should have been justified in giving you no quarter. If
-we had, what good would it have done? You'd only have been dead. And if
-you'd managed to capture Santa, what good would that have done? To have
-had her executed wouldn't have made her a better woman."
-
-He reached out and took her unwilling hand, bending back the fingers one
-by one. "They're beautiful. See how cleverly they work. There's not a
-scientist living can reproduce their mechanism. No one knows how they
-grew to be like that."
-
-His tone became tender. "Santa's been bad. She's been treacherous and
-cruel: a faithless wife and a menace. Merely to punish her wouldn't undo
-her evil. Only she can do that."
-
-For the first time the Major spoke. "At what are you driving?"
-
-Varensky made no attempt to answer him. He seemed not to have heard. He
-sat cross-legged on the floor, folding and unfolding Santa's fingers,
-while his grotesque shadow squatted on the wall behind him. He looked
-like a kindly, embarrassed boy, trying to say something to the sulky
-girl so that it should not sound too wounding.
-
-"I wonder whether Santa's husband ever saw a woman when she was dead.
-There's no light in her eyes. She can't say that she's sorry. Last
-week I saw hundreds in the ditches about Kiev. They weren't lovely. We
-mustn't let our Santa become like that."
-
-He turned to the Major with a slow smile. "Must we? You wouldn't like to
-think of the woman you had loved--"
-
-The Major took a step into the room and stood biting his lips, glooming
-down at Varensky.
-
-"You and I, sir, view our duty from hostile standpoints. I care for this
-woman infinitely more than you can ever care. But I care still more for
-my country. She's betrayed it a score of times. Shall I, because I am
-her husband, stand by and allow her to betray it? Had I accomplished the
-purpose that brought me here to-night, my heart would have been broken.
-To have put handcuffs on her wrists and to have sworn away her life, do
-you think it would have cost me nothing? The very judge who sentenced
-her would have shunned me."
-
-The Little Grandmother looked up. She spoke gruffly. "And what would
-have been the use of your suffering? Society would have been revenged.
-It would have washed its hands, like Pontius Pilate. It would have
-smiled smugly, believing she was wrong and it was right. It would have
-gone on its way, manufacturing more criminals like her. The old evils
-that have made her what she is would have continued, while she--" She
-snapped her fingers furiously. "Like the women in the ditches about
-Kiev."
-
-When the room had grown silent, Varensky covered the Major with his
-mocking stare.
-
-"You must excuse our Little Grandmother. She feels these things
-intensely. More than half her years have been spent in prison."
-
-The Major pulled himself together. "She needs no excusing. What is it
-that you want of me?"
-
-
-X
-
-
-Santa's life. It's of no use to you." He smiled in the midst of his
-earnestness. "I'm a boy begging for a broken watch. You were going to
-throw it away. I have dreams that I could repair it."
-
-The Major twitched irritably. "And you talk like a boy. How can I give
-you what doesn't belong to me? At every port in Europe the police are
-watching. For me to forgive her wouldn't help. It isn't against me that
-she's offended; it's against the laws of civilization."
-
-"I know." Varensky nodded soothingly. "You're only one of the many
-agents of social vengeance. What I ought to have asked you was to give
-me the part of her life that does belong to you. She's in your clutches.
-Let her escape. Keep silent and drop your pursuit."
-
-"And if I do?"
-
-Varensky tucked his legs closer under him and bent forward. "Perhaps I
-could turn her into a saint." A note of passionate pleading crept into
-his voice. "She loves children. It was how her wickedness started. She
-was blind and mistaken, and all her crimes were committed for children.
-A woman who loves children must be good. She's done abominable things.
-She could become magnificent if she would do good with an equal
-violence."
-
-The Major glanced at the subject of these prophecies, sitting in their
-midst, rebelliously silent. He said wearily: "Mere words! You offer me
-no proof!"
-
-The white face seemed to grow till it filled the room. The green eyes
-glowed like emeralds. They were uncanny and hypnotic. Language came in a
-torrent. "It isn't her body--it's her soul. If she were to die now, what
-would happen to her? I tried to save the soul of a nation. Let me do
-for Santa what I couldn't do for Russia--prove that mercy restores where
-punishment destroys. There's been too much killing. The world grows
-worse instead of better. It's been going on for ages, this hanging and
-guillotining and bludgeoning. It's reformed nothing. It's the might is
-right of the jungle, the justice of apes and cavemen. Revenge, whether
-it's carried out by tooth and claw or by law-courts and armies, never
-heals anything; it always leaves a bruise. The face of Europe is bruised
-beyond recovery by our last display of justice. Its fields are rotten
-with corpses. Shall we add one more to the many--a woman's?"
-
-He paused, trembling like a leaf. When the Major only frowned, he sank
-back exhausted.
-
-"If you'd seen what I've seen--" His head sagged stupidly. "If you'd
-seen what I've seen--miles of men, all slaughtered; women dead of
-starvation, children hunting in packs like wolves. And all because
-there's no mercy. If you'd seen, you couldn't kill anything."
-
-The candles ceased to gutter. Shadows huddled motionless. The very
-silence seemed accused.
-
-Hindwood rose. He could endure the tension no longer. "I know nothing
-about her soul and not much about her guilt. All I know is that she's
-a woman at the end of her tether who's been handed one of the rawest of
-raw deals. That the world's been hard on her won't excuse her. We
-can't alter the world over night. If she's caught, as she may be at any
-moment, it'll be all up with her. I don't care what she's done or how
-much I lose by it, I'm not going to stand by and see her taken."
-
-The Major swung round. "Nor am I. But how to avoid it?"
-
-Hindwood showed his suspicion of this sudden conversion. "Tell me,"
-he answered cautiously, "have you handed in any reports, I mean
-officially--about my knowledge of Santa?"
-
-"Beyond the fact that you crossed on the same boat with her, you've not
-been mentioned."
-
-"And there's no one in your service, besides yourself, who has the least
-idea of her whereabouts?"
-
-"No one."
-
-"Then it can be managed."
-
-He was dimly conscious of the pale expectancy of the faces lifted up to
-him. He felt that he was on the edge of a whirlpool into which he was
-being slowly dragged. Even at this last moment he made an effort to
-resist it. Then it seemed to him that in the heart of its eddies he saw
-a woman. She grew distinct; her face was Anna's.
-
-"Let me explain," he said. "I'm neither humanitarian nor idealist. I
-have no fantastic hopes of turning sinners into saints. I'm head of a
-group of American financiers, and I'm in Europe to employ its starving
-peoples. Don't misunderstand me. The result of my mission may be
-philanthropic, but its purpose is to make a profit. Since the war
-Europe's become a bargain-counter where everything's exposed for
-sale--everything except food. I can supply food. With food I can
-purchase, for a fraction of their value, railroads, factories, labor. I
-tell you this so that you may not doubt me when I say that I have it in
-my power to protect her. Once out of England, no escaping criminal could
-find a safer place of refuge than in my company. I have influence with
-all governments; with food I can stop revolution. None of them dares
-suspect me. I propose that I should take Santa with me. I travel
-on diplomatic passports; with me she'll have no trouble in crossing
-frontiers."
-
-The silence that greeted his offer lengthened. At a loss to account for
-it, he glanced from face to face.
-
-"Have I offended?"
-
-It was Santa who replied. Leaping up in their midst, tattered and
-disheveled, she threatened them like dogs whom she would beat aside.
-
-"Beasts!" A sob caught her breath. "Is it impossible even for you, who
-call yourselves my friends, to believe any good of me? I swear before
-heaven he has no love for me."
-
-
-XI
-
-
-Back in London he lost no time in completing arrangements for
-departure. Every boat that left for France without him lessened Santa's
-chance of safety. And yet, though he worked frantically, canceling
-appointments and clearing up correspondence, he couldn't bring home to
-himself the reality of the situation. The hut on the downs and all that
-had happened there seemed something that he had read or imagined. Only
-the face of Anna stood out in memory, clear-cut and actual. It seemed
-impossible to believe that he, Philip Hindwood, was in league with
-revolutionaries. That he was in league was proved to him when he set
-about procuring the passport and viss necessary for Santa to accompany
-him. By the time he obtained them, he had abused confidence and perjured
-himself beyond hope of pardon. They were made out in the name of "Edith
-Jones, spinster; American-born subject; aged thirty years; confidential
-secretary to Philip Hindwood, whom she is accompanying." All her permits
-were marked _Special_ and _Diplomatic_. It wasn't until the bustle was
-over and he was seated in the train for Dover, that the true proportions
-of his entanglement dawned on him.
-
-At Dover she was to meet him. That had been the understanding. From
-then on, day in, day out, he would never be without her. No matter what
-strange country he traversed, she would sit beside him, reminding him of
-his complicity in her crimes. He would have to talk with her, eat
-with her, pretend to consult with her, just as if she were what he had
-claimed her to be--his confidential secretary. Would she have the sense
-to act discreetly? Would she expect him to make love to her? He glowered
-out of the window at the fleeting landscape. Any folly was possible to a
-woman with her record.
-
-What made him most furious was the easy way in which he had allowed her
-to twist him round her fingers. It was the woods of Vincennes all over
-again. He was going into disordered countries, where governments were
-toppling and anarchy was rife. When she felt herself beyond the reach of
-danger, what was to prevent her from getting rid of him? Russia, if he
-got so far, was the kind of nightmare in which anything might happen. In
-Russia murder was one of the fine arts. He remembered Anna's suspicion
-that Santa was a Bolshevist agent. It added nothing to his comfort.
-
-He had given way to idealism. It was the madness of a moment. It was
-listening to Varensky that had worked the mischief. Varensky had said
-something about idealism. What was it? That idealism was the vanishing
-point--the last outpost between Man and Eternity. His words came back.
-
-"When you gaze up a railroad track, there's always a point in the
-infinite distance where, just before they vanish, the parallel rails
-seem to join. If a train were ever to reach that point, it would mean
-death. Life's like that--a track along which we travel on the parallel
-rails of possibility and desire. The lure of the idealist is to overtake
-the illusion, where possibility and desire seem to merge, and the safety
-of the journey ends."
-
-For him the safety of the journey had ended the moment it had started.
-If Varensky had meant anything by the vanishing point, he had meant that
-death is the unconscious goal of all idealists. Hind-wood shrugged his
-shoulders. It seemed highly probable when you took Santa with you on
-your travels.
-
-The smell of the sea was in the air. They were slowing down, grinding
-their way to the docks through the town of Dover.
-
-He didn't want to see her. He would make no effort to find her. She
-might have been prevented from joining him--perhaps arrested.
-
-After the train had halted, he took his time. No one whom he recognized
-was on the platform. Directing a porter to attend to his baggage, he
-went quickly to the embarkation office to get his permit for going
-aboard. As he was entering, he felt his arm touched timidly, and turned.
-
-"I'm here."
-
-"I see you are."
-
-"Didn't you expect me?"
-
-He made an effort to act courteously. "Of course. There are formalities
-to be gone through. You'd better stick close to me. Don't attract
-attention. Let me do the talking."
-
-They fell into line behind a queue of passengers, winding slowly toward
-a table where officials were receiving and inspecting passports. He
-stood well in front of her, doing his best to hide her. When his turn
-came and the official held out his hand, he presented her passport with
-his own perfunctorily.
-
-"Mine and my secretary's."
-
-The official was on the point of returning them, when a stockily-built
-man leaned across his shoulder and whispered something. Both of them
-looked up, staring hard at Santa.
-
-"Which is Miss Jones?" the official asked.
-
-"This lady at my side."
-
-"So you're Miss Jones, an American citizen?"
-
-Before she could reply, Hindwood had interposed. "I've already told you
-she's Miss Jones. If you'll look, you'll see that her passport's marked
-_Diplomatic_ as well as mine."
-
-The two men consulted together in lowered tones. Then the passport was
-O.K.'d and restored.
-
-Picking it up, together with the embarkation permits, Hindwood strolled
-leisurely towards the gangplank. Directly they were on board he hurried
-Santa to her cabin and shut the door.
-
-"You'll stay here till we sight France. I'm giving no one else the
-opportunity for suspecting a likeness."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER THE SIXTH--THE ESCAPE
-
-
-I
-
-
-THE steamer had no sooner reached Calais than a new cause for alarm
-presented itself. During the channel crossing Hindwood had been keyed up
-to the last point of tension. Every moment he had expected to be tapped
-on the shoulder and informed that his secretary's identity had been
-discovered. He had spent most of his time surreptitiously mounting guard
-in the neighborhood of Santa's cabin. If the same man chanced to pass
-him twice, he had at once jumped to the conclusion that he was being
-shadowed.
-
-The hesitancy at Dover over O.K.'ing Santa's passport had robbed him
-of whatever sense of security he had possessed. It had compelled him
-to acknowledge the ruin that faced him, should he be exposed while
-engineering the flight of so notorious a criminal. As the Major had
-warned him, she was being sought by the police of every country.
-
-If the worst should happen, he would find no apologists. It would be
-useless for him to plead a chivalrous motive. She had been the lodestar
-of masculine passions too often. Though he managed to escape a prison
-sentence, he would emerge from the catastrophe broken in character--a
-paltry creature, half knave, half fool, who had gambled away his
-integrity and made himself a laughing stock. Already in imagination he
-was reading the scare headlines which would advertise his shame to the
-world. He would be regarded as a malefactor--hustled behind bars and
-herded for trial with blackmailers and pickpockets.
-
-Dogged by these persistent dreads, when the ship was inside Calais
-harbor he rapped on her door and having heard her bid him enter, slipped
-across the threshold, announcing tersely:
-
-"We're there."
-
-Since she joined him, he had held no conversation with her. She made
-no attempt to break through his silence. Rising obediently, while she
-adjusted her hat, she watched him in the mirror with the eyes of a
-reproachful dog. Without sign or sound, as he turned away impatiently,
-she followed. No sooner did they appear on deck than the new cause for
-alarm started.
-
-A handsome and distinguished-looking foreigner began taking immediate
-notice of her. He was so quick to pick her out in the throng that it
-seemed he must have been watching for her. Whoever and whatever he was,
-he was manifestly a man of breeding--the kind of man who might have
-been her companion in the old, wild days of her triumphant folly. He was
-about thirty-five, tall, dark, finely-built, and of military bearing.
-He had a closely-trimmed mustache, bold, black eyes, and a Latin type
-of countenance. That was all that Hindwood permitted himself to observe;
-changing his position promptly, he shut Santa out from the stranger's
-line of vision. But the man was not to be balked. With an air of
-complete unconcern, he fell into line immediately behind them, treading
-closely on their heels as they passed up the gangplank. On the way
-to the Customs he managed to get ahead, so that he could glance back
-several times at Santa.
-
-After their baggage had been inspected it was necessary for them to file
-through a stuffy room where passports were examined. It was here that
-Hindwood was fully prepared to be caught. The officials at Dover had
-probably cabled a warning; the inquisitive stranger might prove to
-be their emissary. Quite the contrary occurred. The French official,
-catching sight of the magic words _Diplomatic_ and _Special_,
-scrutinized no further and returned the papers with a courteous apology.
-Making the most of his luck, Hindwood hurried Santa out onto the
-platform, down the long train labeled Stuttgart, Warsaw, etc., and into
-the _wagons-lits_ which went express to Vienna.
-
-Before leaving London he had reserved two separate compartments in the
-name of "Philip Hindwood and party." Now that he claimed them, he found
-to his annoyance that they were adjoining and connected by a private
-door. It was an indiscretion that he had not intended. Having seen Santa
-safely settled, he set off to superintend the placing on board of their
-bags.
-
-He was gone perhaps five minutes. As he reentered the corridor of his
-section, the first sight that met his eyes was the handsome stranger
-engaged in earnest talk with the _wagon-lits_ conductor. Some money
-passed. Next thing the stranger's belongings were being transferred
-from lower down the train to the compartment on the further side from
-Santa's. Hindwood entered his own compartment, shaded the windows that
-looked out on the corridor and made fast his door.
-
-What was the game? Was this a fresh example of Santa's irresistible
-charm? And if it was, was he to be subjected to this kind of
-impertinence throughout the entire journey? Or was the man a secret
-service agent in the employ of some foreign Government, who, believing
-he had recognized her, was keeping her in sight till she should have
-crossed the frontier into his own country, where he would have power to
-arrest her?
-
-In his anger he tried to blame Santa; she must have unconsciously
-exercised her talent for attraction. Strangers didn't follow women
-unless----
-
-But he had to own himself unjust. She was dressed with the utmost
-plainness, in a tailored costume, minus furs or any lavishness. There
-was nothing to complain of in her deportment. It was as modest as
-could have been expected had she really been "Edith Jones, aged thirty,
-American-born citizen, confidential secretary." The fault lay in
-something beyond her control--her beauty. It refused to be subdued.
-It shone out the more conspicuously in the absence of adornment. It
-constituted itself an unforeseen embarrassment, if not a menace. The
-further he traveled into continental countries, the less he would be
-believed when he stated that she was Miss Jones and no more than his
-secretary. Already more people than the obtrusive stranger had stared
-at her. She had only to appear to make herself the focus of attention.
-Sooner or later, to-day, to-morrow, a month hence, some one would catch
-sight of her who had known her in the past. She had been feted in
-too many cities, her portrait had been too widely published, for her
-features not to be remembered. These distressing reflections were cut
-short by the shrill tootings of tin horns which announce the departure
-of a train in France. When Calais had been left behind and they were
-rushing past stripped orchards and harvested fields, he unlatched the
-dividing door. She was sitting lost in thought, staring out of the
-window with a wistful expression.
-
-"Come into my compartment. I'd like to talk."
-
-The jerk with which she turned betrayed the strain under which she
-was laboring. He watched the undulating grace with which she rose, the
-calculated delicacy of her every movement. Though she had dressed in
-rags, nothing could have disguised her.
-
-When he had closed the door, she remained standing.
-
-"Please sit down," he said with cold politeness. "We're safe for the
-moment. As you see, I've lowered the blinds. No one can spy on us.
-You've noticed him?"
-
-Drawing off her gloves, she smoothed them out mechanically, maintaining
-her silence.
-
-"Tell me," he urged, "what do you make of him?"
-
-"Nothing." Her voice was flat and toneless. "Wherever I go, it's always
-the same. You ought to know--on the _Ryndam_ you were like it."
-
-He passed over the implied accusation. "Then you don't think he's
-a----?"
-
-"I've not troubled to think." She glanced drearily aside. "Men are
-brutes. If you'd left me alone on the cliff--I wish you had. It would
-have been all ended."
-
-She said it without spite--almost without reproach. In the presence of
-her melancholy, he recovered something of his compassion.
-
-"But I didn't leave you, and nothing's gained by recrimination. The
-point is this fellow next door. What's his purpose? How are we going to
-manage him?"
-
-"Easily. Fling me to him as you'd toss a dog a bone. You'll be rid of
-your share of the danger."
-
-"I don't want to be rid of you." He passed his hand across his forehead,
-mastering his impatience.
-
-"I don't pretend I shan't be glad----"
-
-"To be quit of me," she prompted.
-
-"To be relieved of the risk of you," he corrected. "But not until I've
-fulfilled my promise."
-
-She smiled. "You promised you'd save me. I can't be saved. Varensky's
-talk about redeeming me was visionary. I was born to be what I am."
-
-He relaxed and sat forward, exerting himself to make the conversation
-less unfriendly. "Of course I know why you speak this way: it's because
-of my recent treatment of you. We were nearly found out at Dover;
-the anxiety of it's getting on my nerves. I promised to give you your
-chance; my promise stands. The least I can ask of you as a sportswoman
-is to play up to me."
-
-Her whole demeanor changed. The golden face flashed. "I will."
-
-"Then if this man is only an impudent admirer, how are we to shake him?
-It's my business for the present to protect you. If this is the sort
-of thing that always happens, it's possible that it'll occur again. I
-daren't resent his conduct. Ordinarily I should know what to do with
-him. How is the repetition of the annoyance to be avoided?"
-
-A slow flush mounted from her throat to her cheeks. "You won't take my
-suggestion, so I don't think I'll make it."
-
-"Let's have it."
-
-Not looking at him, she muttered: "He'll try to scrape acquaintance.
-When he does, introduce me to him as your wife."
-
-"But to do that----"
-
-He fell silent. He was thinking of Anna. For the first time he was
-conscious of his aloneness with this woman.
-
-Not wishing to wound her, he procrastinated.
-
-"To do that might only add to our complications."
-
-"It might." Her gray eyes struggled to meet his gaze. "It isn't likely.
-He won't believe you."
-
-"Then what would be gained?"
-
-"You'd have told him, without insult, that he wasn't wanted."
-
-He glanced out of the window at the rushing landscape. At last he spoke.
-"If there's no other way----"
-
-She rested her thin, fine hand on his gently. "You're generous. If the
-day ever comes when you despise yourself as I despise myself to-day,
-remember that once you were able to make a wicked woman believe in
-goodness--to make her long with all her heart to be like you." Her eyes
-became misty. "At this moment I'm not far from redemption."
-
-Lunch was announced. He gave orders to have it served in his
-compartment. While they ate, he outlined to her his plans. He had asked
-her how long she expected to be with him.
-
-Her reply was discomfortingly vague. "As long as you can endure me."
-
-"Inside of two months," he told her, "I think I can promise you
-immunity. At present, according to information, Central Europe's
-starving. With winter comes the crisis. I've forseen that. For some time
-I've been shipping food to Holland. It's lying there in warehouses in
-immense quantities. I have an entire fleet secretly at work, plying back
-and forth across the Atlantic. When the famine becomes too acute, I'm
-prepared to strike my bargain. I'll take railroads and concessions in
-exchange for bread. Other upstarts have carved out kingdoms with armies;
-I intend to conquer mine with food. There never was a war or any social
-uprising that wasn't caused by an empty stomach. Within three hours
-of my terms having been accepted, my trains will be streaming out of
-Holland. Where they halt, the flames of revolution will be quenched. If
-I haven't miscalculated, I shall be unofficial President of the United
-States of Europe." He paused to watch his effect. "I've nominated
-myself," he smiled.
-
-His smile was unreturned. She was regarding him with an expression of
-horror. Their rles seemed reversed. It was evident that to her way of
-thinking it was he who had become the criminal and she who was looking
-down on him from a higher moral level.
-
-"But they're starving." Her voice shook passionately. "If you have these
-stores, why don't you feed them? They're dying. So many of them are
-children!"
-
-"You don't understand." He tried to make his tones reasonable. "I've
-invested all my fortune in the venture. I'm a business man. In business
-one man's calamity is another's opportunity. The same is true of
-nations."
-
-Seeing that she still looked grieved, he patted her shoulder. "Don't
-worry. We'll rustle through. Your life will be spared."
-
-"I wasn't thinking of my life." She spoke contemptuously.
-
-"Then of what?"
-
-"Of the women dead of hunger in the ditches about Kiev."
-
-As she rose to leave, she glanced back from the doorway. "There was
-a message I had to deliver to you. Varensky's setting out on his last
-journey. He hopes to see you in Budapest. He told me to say, 'Soon you
-can have her.'"
-
-
-II
-
-
-Thrusting its war-scarred head into the clouds, Amiens had been left
-behind: they were skirting the old battle-line. Though seasons had come
-and vanished, memories of tragedy were still apparent. Shell-torn walls
-had been patched, but the patches served to emphasize the ruin. One
-could trace in the landscape crumbling trench-systems and the rusty red
-of entangled wire. Here and there, in gleaming plots, white crosses grew
-in humble clusters. In fancy he pictured the hosts who had died. The
-unprofitable patience of their sacrifice! Had they known what was to be
-the result, would they have gone to their death so gladly? The result of
-their idealism was hunger. He recalled his awkward phrase--the world's
-hunger had proved to be his opportunity. Santa's horror disturbed his
-memory. He was inclined to go to her and explain. Everything had to be
-purchased by labor. Anything one possessed was the wage of labor. To
-give things away did harm. It wasn't business. It set a premium on
-laziness. Even to give food to a starving nation did harm; it made that
-nation a pauper. The most primitive of all laws was that bread should
-be earned by the sweat of the brow--that if a man did not toil, neither
-should he eat. The only righteous way to feed starving people was to set
-them to work. So his thoughts ran on, building up the argument.
-
-But he did not go to her. It was Varensky's message that deterred him:
-"He told me to say, 'Soon you can have her.'" Did Santa know what was
-meant--that the message referred to Anna? She must know. What difference
-would this make to her? She also loved, and she was a panther-woman.
-
-The countryside grew blurred with dusk. The stiff, white crosses faded
-out of sight. Forgetting his danger, he fell asleep, wondering whether
-Anna would be with her husband at Budapest.
-
-
-III
-
-
-When he awoke, he was in total darkness. Glancing through the window,
-he discovered that the world outside was weakly lit with straggling rows
-of street-lamps. They seemed to be marching in the same direction as
-the train; in the far distance they rushed together, making night hollow
-with their flare. His first thought was of Santa; a thousand things
-might have happened.
-
-As he groped at the handle of the dividing door, he caught the sound of
-laughter.
-
-"May I enter?"
-
-The Santa whom his eyes encountered was no longer the fugitive from
-justice. She was mysteriously changed. There was animation in her
-countenance and seduction in her voice. She was again the enchantress
-of men, reckless and tender, who had all but captured his heart on the
-Atlantic voyage. He looked to see what had caused this transformation.
-Lolling in the entrance was the handsome stranger.
-
-Before Hindwood could speak, she was addressing him gaily. "So you've
-wakened! I didn't like to disturb you. You've almost made me miss my
-dinner. If you're ready now----"
-
-The stranger interrupted. "I've not dined. But I have my place reserved.
-If there should prove to be no room, perhaps you would flatter me by
-occupying my place instead."
-
-Santa shook her head graciously. "It's good of you, but my husband and I
-will take our chance."
-
-She was the only one whom her claim that Hind-wood was her husband left
-undisturbed. The two men glared at each other in astonishment. It was
-the stranger who recovered first.
-
-"If I had known that this lady was your wife, I should have asked your
-permission before I made my offer. I shall be very happy if you will
-permit me to do you both this service. I ought to introduce myself."
-
-He fumbled in his pocketbook and produced a card on which was engraved,
-"Captain Serge Lajos, Hungarian Royal Hussars."
-
-"My name is Hindwood--Philip Hindwood." Hindwood returned the compliment
-surlily. "I agree with my wife; we both prefer that you retain your
-place and that we be allowed to take our chance."
-
-Santa rose eagerly to prevent the giving of further offense. Her smile
-was for the Captain. "We waste time talking. You'll join us, Captain?
-We'll take our chance together."
-
-Without risking a reply, she led the way, Hindwood following and the
-Captain coming last. There was no opportunity for speech in the swaying
-corridor. When the dining-car was reached, they were shown immediately
-to a vacant table.
-
-At first they sat in silence, watching how the lights flashing by the
-panes were strengthening into a golden blur.
-
-"Where are we?"
-
-It was Hindwood who had decided to be amiable.
-
-"Entering Paris."
-
-"So late as that!" He consulted his watch. "We go through without
-changing, they told us."
-
-"There's no change till Vienna."
-
-The Captain's answers were mechanical. He seemed to be brushing aside a
-presence that annoyed him. His puzzled eyes were fixed on Santa.
-
-Suppressing his irritation, Hindwood made another effort at
-friendliness. "I didn't notice you till we were getting into Calais. I
-guess we must have traveled together from London."
-
-Captain Lajos, if that really was his name, seemed to be thinking
-of something else. He let some seconds elapse. When he spoke, it was
-without looking up. "I noticed you from the first. I can prove it.
-Your wife didn't join you till Dover." Then he seemed to repent of his
-intrusive rudeness and changed the subject. "I was glad to see the last
-of London. I'd been sent to meet some one who failed to arrive. It was
-all in the papers. You probably know as much about the circumstances as
-I do. The person was Prince Rogovich."
-
-Santa's face went white. Her lips became set in an artificial smile.
-Beneath the table her hand clutched Hindwood's. For all that, it was she
-who took up the challenge.
-
-"We've not been reading the papers lately." Above the clatter of the
-wheels, her trembling voice was scarcely audible. "My husband and I
-have been very busy and---- But your friend, why was he so unkind as to
-disappoint you?"
-
-The Captain had turned to her as though greedy for her sympathy. His
-dark, bold eyes drank up her face.
-
-"He wasn't unkind. He was----" He shrugged his shoulders and spread
-abroad his hands. "Until something is proved, I suppose the best way to
-express it would be to say that he was unavoidably delayed. He left
-New York on a liner and disappeared on the evening that he should have
-landed."
-
-Hindwood bent forward, attempting to divert attention from Santa. He
-tapped the Captain's hand.
-
-"Excuse me for intruding on a conversation which you evidently intend
-to include only my wife, but there are no points of call on an Atlantic
-voyage. If your friend started from New York and the ship was not lost,
-how could he have been delayed?"
-
-"How? That's the question."
-
-The Captain's hostility was unmistakable, and yet the odd thing was that
-it exempted Santa.
-
-While the first course was being served, Hindwood racked his brains to
-discover the motive which lay behind the Captain's attitude. Was he a
-police-agent, amusing himself and biding his time? Was he doubtful of
-Santa's identity and cultivating her acquaintance as a means of making
-certain? Was he merely a disappointed male, infuriated at finding a
-husband in possession?
-
-Santa was speaking again. She had made good use of the respite to
-compose herself. "It must have been terribly anxious for you waiting.
-I suppose you were there to meet him at the port where he ought to have
-arrived?"
-
-Hindwood held his breath. She was practically asking the man whether he
-had been one of the welcoming group of officials on that night when the
-_Ryndam_ had reached Plymouth. If he had been, he must have seen them.
-He must remember them. He might even know their biographical details,
-their business, and that they were not married. At all events, if that
-were the case, it would explain the keenness of his interest.
-
-"No, I wasn't at Plymouth."
-
-They both shot upright in their chairs and sat rigid. For a moment they
-had no doubt that the Captain had declared his hand.
-
-Then he postponed the crisis by adding, "You see, my friend, as you call
-him, was traveling by the Holland-American Line, so Plymouth was where
-he should have landed. We had a special train arranged to hurry him to
-London. The first warning I received of the disaster was at Paddington,
-when I was informed that the special train had been canceled."
-
-"Then it was a disaster?"
-
-Santa asked the question in an awed tone which, under the circumstances,
-was not altogether feigned. Getting a grip on herself, she leaned across
-the table, making her eyes large and tender. "We're fellow-travelers,
-chance-met. My husband and I are Americans; when we part from you,
-it's almost certain we shall never meet again. I'm not seeking your
-confidence, but you're worried. If it would help you to tell----"
-
-The Captain shook his head gravely. He appeared to be worshiping her
-in everything save words, though it was possible that his adoration was
-mockery. "There's nothing to tell. Not yet. I wish there were. There may
-be something at Paris. The English police are working. They promised to
-keep in touch with me by telegram."
-
-With amazing daring Santa persisted, "But what do you suppose happened?"
-
-Before answering the Captain arranged his knife and fork neatly on his
-plate. He looked up sharply like a bird of prey. "Murder. To your dainty
-ears that must sound shocking. I have reasons for this belief which, for
-the present, I'm not at liberty to share."
-
-During the pause that followed Hindwood was on tenterhooks lest, with
-her next question, she should betray herself. To prevent her, he flung
-himself into the gap.
-
-"I agree with you," he said with weighty dullness. "I agree with
-you that some sort of accident strikes one as extremely likely. You
-mentioned that a special had been chartered to bring your friend to
-London. That would indicate that he was a person of consequence."
-
-"He was."
-
-The words sounded like an epitaph. They were spoken with the impatience
-of a door being banged.
-
-Turning to Santa, the Captain was on the point of saying something
-further, when the waiter approached with the information that at the
-next stop the dining-car would be cut off. They became aware that they
-were the only diners left. The train was slowing down. The noise of its
-progress had changed to a hollow rumbling, which told them that a bridge
-was being crossed. Shifting their gaze, they discovered Paris, sparkling
-like a pile of jewels strewn in the lap of night. Below them in slow
-coils, mysterious with luminous reflections, wound the Seine. Hindwood's
-instant thought was that somewhere out there beneath the darkness, the
-woods of Vincennes were hiding.
-
-Having paid their bill, they commenced the return journey through
-corridors dense with eager passengers. Before their section had been
-reached, the train was in the station. At the first open door, the
-Captain sprang to the platform and was lost.
-
-"Where's he gone?" Santa whispered.
-
-Hindwood glanced at her palely. "To get his telegram. To get----"
-
-Seizing her arm, he hurried her back to his compartment, where behind
-locked doors they could spend in private whatever of freedom remained.
-
-
-IV
-
-
-The jig's up."
-
-Hoping that he was creating an impression of calmness, he lit a
-cigarette. She raised her face to his with a softness in her eyes that
-he had never noticed.
-
-"If it is," she pleaded, clutching at his hands, "swear you hadn't the
-least idea who I really am. Disown me. Act as though my arrest had come
-to you as an utter shock."
-
-He seated himself beside her. "But, my dear Santa, that wouldn't help
-you."
-
-"Help me! Of course not," she agreed with rapid vehemence. "If I'm
-caught, I'm beyond helping. It's of you I'm thinking--you, with your
-generosity and your splendid plans. If I dragged you down, as I dragged
-down all the others, my heart would break. I never meant you any harm.
-You do believe me?"
-
-"I do now."
-
-"Say you know that I've loved you," she urged. And, when he hesitated,
-"Quickly. Time's running short. Let me hear you say just once, 'Santa, I
-know that you've loved me.'"
-
-"Santa, I know----"
-
-"You wouldn't kiss me?" She asked the question scarcely above her
-breath. "There've been so many who paid to kiss me. You wouldn't give me
-the best, that would be the last?"
-
-When his lips touched hers, she smiled.
-
-"They may come now."
-
-Minutes dragged by like hours. Every sound was magnified into something
-monstrous. A dozen times they imagined they heard police clearing the
-corridor, preparatory to bursting in the door. What they heard was only
-newly-arrived passengers and porters disposing of their baggage. At last
-suspense became its own anesthetic.
-
-"Did he tell you his destination?" Hindwood whispered.
-
-Not daring to speak, she shook her head.
-
-"Why did you get into conversation with him?" Her lips scarcely moved.
-He had to listen acutely.
-
-"I didn't. He pretended to have mistaken his compartment. I was crying.
-He saw."
-
-"Why were you crying?"
-
-"Because of you."
-
-"And you told him?"
-
-"Not exactly."
-
-"What did he say? I heard you laughing when I entered. How did he
-commence?"
-
-"He said I was too beautiful to be unhappy--it's the way every man
-starts. Then he said that he'd recognized me, just as though he'd been
-looking for me always. And then he tortured me by wondering whether our
-paths had ever crossed."
-
-"And you answered?"
-
-"Never--unless he'd seen me in America." Hindwood fell silent. Without
-warning he leaped to his feet. Before he could escape, she was clinging
-to him.
-
-"Don't leave me to face them."
-
-"I'm not." He freed himself from her grasp. "If I've guessed right, you
-won't have to face them." With that he was gone.
-
-A quarter of an hour elapsed: he had not returned. Nothing that she
-dreaded had happened. With a lurch the train jerked forward. Farewells
-were being shouted. Station-lamps streamed past, the scarcer lights
-of freight-yards, then at last the glow-worm warmth of a city under
-darkness.
-
-The door opened. She rose trembling, steadying herself against the wall.
-When she saw who it was, she sank back. "Tell me."
-
-"We were on the wrong track." He spoke leisurely. "Captain Lajos wasn't
-lying. I followed him. He met his man with the telegram. He suspects us
-so little that he showed it to me. It read, 'No further developments.'"
-
-"Thank God." She pressed her handkerchief to her lips. And then, "Why
-should he have shown it to you? It was to put us off our guard."
-
-He sat down in the seat opposite. "I think not. He's changed his
-tactics. He's made up his mind to be friendly. It's you he's after, but
-in a different fashion. He thinks he's in love with you."
-
-"But he threatened----"
-
-"No. It was our own guilty conscience. Here's how I figure it out. He
-probably has seen you before. He can't remember where. It may have been
-in the days when you were dancing. It was the vague recollection of you
-that piqued his curiosity and got him staring. When he found you alone
-and crying, he thought he'd stumbled on an adventure. My entering upset
-his calculations. I became for him the cruel husband; he hated me on
-the spot. My dear Santa, our meeting with him is the luckiest thing that
-could have happened."
-
-Dabbing her eyes, she tried to laugh. "I don't see it."
-
-"It's as plain as a pike-staff." He bent forward, lowering his voice.
-"He was mixed up with Prince Rogovich. He's one of the people who's
-hunting for you. In his company you won't be suspected. He'll get you
-across all the frontiers."
-
-She was still reluctantly incredulous. "But the things he said at
-dinner. He played with us like a cat."
-
-"He wasn't playing with us." Hindwood became eager in his determination
-to convince her. "He was playing into our hands. He knows all the things
-that we want to know. Every move the police make is telegraphed to him.
-It was the frankness with which he let us into his secrets that was so
-alarming."
-
-"Then how must we act?"
-
-"The way we have been acting. Until it's safe to be rid of him, we must
-keep him believing that we're married, and none too happily. I'm afraid
-it's up to you to keep him lulled by pretending----"
-
-"Don't;" she closed her eyes. "It's like going back to the ugly past."
-
-"It's beastly, I know." He spoke seriously. "But what else----? Any
-moment he may recall where last he saw you. Sleep over it. We can decide
-in the morning."
-
-
-V
-
-
-All night he had been haunted by the oppressive sense that, if he did
-not watch, something terrible would, happen. It was shortly after dawn
-when he rose. Stepping into the corridor he found that he had the train
-to himself. It seemed as depopulated as an early morning house and,
-despite the clamor of its going, as silent. He placed himself near
-Santa's door and stood staring out at the misty landscape streaking past
-like a trail of smoke. It was here that Santa found him when she slipped
-from her compartment.
-
-He turned quickly. "He's not up yet." Then, noticing her pallor and the
-shadows under her eyes, "You haven't slept?"
-
-"Not much."
-
-"Making your decision, I suppose?"
-
-She bit her lip nervously. "I shall have to pretend---- It'll only be
-pretending. You'll understand?"
-
-"It won't last long," he comforted her. "If we've been running on time,
-we must be in Alsace-Lorraine already. Within the next few hours we'll
-be out of France and into Germany. You'll feel safer there, won't you?"
-
-What he was really asking was whether it wasn't true that during the war
-she'd been a German spy.
-
-"Shall I?" was all she answered.
-
-They fell silent. Without mentioning it, each guessed the motive which
-had occasioned the other's early rising. They dared not let the Captain
-out of their sight. While they could not see him, they had no peace of
-mind. Whereas yesterday his companionship had seemed to spell death,
-to-day it spelt protection. Yesterday they had done everything to elude
-him; to-day it would probably be he who would do the avoiding. It was
-essential that they should have won his confidence before they arrived
-on German soil. There was little time to lose. He had not appeared when
-the first sitting for breakfast was announced.
-
-In the restaurant car they dawdled over their meal and sat on long after
-it was ended. They had even begun to discuss the possibility of his
-having left the train during the night, when with an eagerness kindred
-to their own he entered. Hindwood waved to him.
-
-"I'm afraid we've finished. But won't you seat yourself at our table?
-I've no doubt my wife will join you in a cup of coffee. While you
-breakfast, if it's not objectionable, I'll smoke a cigarette."
-
-Captain Lajos beamed like a pleased boy. If one wasn't prejudiced in his
-disfavor, it was possible to find him likable. "I shall be delighted,"
-he said in an embarrassed tone. "Journeys are tedious nowadays. Once
-every one who counted was gay and prosperous; one was never at a loss
-to find a friend. To-day, in this bankrupt world, the only travelers are
-money-lenders and pawn-brokers." He laughed. "I may as well confess: I
-didn't think you were up yet--that's what made me late. I was so tired
-of my own society that I was waiting for you."
-
-As he said, "I was waiting for you," his eyes flashed on Santa.
-
-It was she who spoke. "I fancy we've been just as bored with ourselves
-and even more eager to meet you. What you told us last night sounded so
-mysterious and romantic. I could hardly sleep for thinking about it. To
-have a Prince for one's friend and to travel so far to welcome him, only
-to find----" She clasped her hands childishly. "Life can be so drab--how
-drab, a man of your kind can never know. American husbands, no matter
-what they possess, take a pride in always working."
-
-He disappointed her curiosity with a crooked smile. "Whether you're a
-Prince or a millionaire, there's nothing romantic about being murdered."
-Then her allurement kindled the longing in his eyes. "You're wanting me
-to confide the secrets that I warned you I couldn't share. Surely you
-must know something of Prince Rogovich?"
-
-"No. Truly." She returned his searching gaze with apparent frankness.
-
-Hindwood jogged her elbow. "My dear, I've remembered. When we sailed
-there was a Prince Rogovich in the States, doing his best to raise a
-loan--I think it was for Poland. It was rumored that the money was to be
-squandered on military adventures. I guess he didn't find many takers.
-You're in the Hungarian Hussars, Captain, but you must excuse me for
-stating that on our side of the Atlantic we've seen all we want of
-armies."
-
-Santa clicked her tongue impatiently. "That's all very well, but it
-doesn't explain why the Prince----"
-
-"It might," Hindwood insisted mildly. "Discouraged men often commit
-suicide. He was coming home. He'd failed in his object----"
-
-"He hadn't." The Captain glanced quickly behind him to see whether any
-one could have heard him. He continued in a voice that was little above
-a whisper, "Only a few of us knew. He was coming home in triumph."
-
-Leaning across the table with suppressed excitement, Santa made the
-appeal of pretty women throughout the ages. "I wish you'd trust me."
-
-Hindwood pushed back his chair. "It's time for a cigar. Perhaps you'll
-join me later. If you'll excuse me----"
-
-They paid him scant attention. The last he saw of them they were gazing
-enraptured into each other's eyes.
-
-
-VI
-
-
-It was well over an hour since he had returned to his compartment. He
-had left his door wide, so that he could inspect every one who passed
-along the corridor. They couldn't have slipped by without his noticing.
-He was becoming almost as distrustful of Santa as he was of the
-stranger. Already the rle of unwanted husband was growing irksome. The
-thing that baffled him most was her morbid curiosity. It was revolting
-to think of her, with her disarming air of refinement, encouraging
-her admirer to conjecture the details of a crime which she herself had
-committed. But how had she committed it? He himself did not know. He had
-just begun to contrive the scene in his mind when they entered. Her face
-was lit with a new intensity. At a glance he was aware that whatever she
-had learned had quickened her emotions. The Captain followed grudgingly,
-like a dog hanging back on a chain.
-
-"Captain Lajos has been telling me," she commenced. "But we'd better
-have the door closed. He's been telling me things that you ought to
-know. He's so concerned for my sake that he's offered to repeat them."
-
-The Captain seated himself opposite to Hind-wood and regarded him
-gravely. "The things that I've been telling your wife are not my
-secrets. I must ask you to give me your solemn promise."
-
-"You may take that for granted."
-
-"And there's one other point. I didn't offer to repeat them; it was Mrs.
-Hindwood who urged me. I'm making this plain because I don't want you to
-think I'm offering you my advice uninvited."
-
-Hindwood lit a fresh cigar, fortifying himself against whatever shock
-was pending. "I give you full credit for your motives."
-
-"Then let me ask you a question. Have you noticed that there are
-scarcely any women on this train?"
-
-"I believe you're right. But until you mentioned it I hadn't noticed."
-
-"Well, if you'll watch, you'll see that I'm correct. There are women
-and children in plenty on trains moving westward. But on trains moving
-eastward, where we're going--no."
-
-Hindwood watched the man intently, wondering at what he was driving.
-
-"Would you be surprised," he continued, "if I were to tell you that one
-of the chief reasons for the women's absence is this affair of Prince
-Rogo-vich?"
-
-"You rather harp on Prince Rogovich, don't you?" Hindwood flicked his
-ash. "After a time one ceases to be surprised at anything. But aren't
-you presuming too much in insisting on his having been murdered? All
-that's known by your own account is that he's vanished. In any case,
-what can he possibly have to do with the scarcity of women on trains
-running eastward?"
-
-"Everything." The Captain's face darkened with earnestness. "What I'm
-trying to tell you is that you're taking your wife into danger. Every
-man who can afford it, in the countries to which you're going, is
-hurrying his women-folk to France, England, Spain, America--anywhere
-westward for safety. They can feel the storm rising, the deluge of
-catastrophe that can't be held back much longer. When it bursts, it'll
-tear everything established from its moorings and sweep across Europe in
-a wave of savagery."
-
-"And this deluge that you speak of--what had Prince Rogovich to do with
-it?"
-
-"He was keeping it from bursting."
-
-Hindwood smiled. "Alone?"
-
-"No man's single strength could accomplish that. He was one of the most
-powerful of the resisting forces. When society's tottering, it's the
-little added strain that upsets the equilibrium. Remember how the last
-war started, with an obscure assassination."
-
-Hindwood crossed his knees and dug himself back into the cushions. "Your
-information, to say the least of it, is strangely melodramatic. If I
-understand you aright, you're urging me to discontinue my journey. Can't
-you be more explicit?"
-
-"I can." The Captain betrayed a hint of temper. "I suppose I shall have
-to if I'm to convince you. The stability of the whole of Central and
-Eastern Europe has been upset by the repartitioning of the Peace Treaty.
-The situation as it exists to-day is intolerable. The ruin which the war
-commenced has been completed by the pacification. The old social order
-has been overthrown; in its place we have a dozen rash experiments. In
-Russia, instead of the Czar, we have Bolshevism. In what was once the
-Austro-Hungarian Empire we have a series of Republics, which are nothing
-more than old racial hatreds entrenched behind newly created frontiers.
-In Poland, which was prisoner to three nations for two centuries,
-we have a released convict, vengeful with a sense of past injustice.
-Instead of reconstruction, we have disorganization. Trade is at a
-standstill. Money is valueless. Confidence is gone. Poverty has made a
-clean sweep of class distinctions. Mob-rule has usurped the rights of
-authority. Like a lean wolf, famine gallops through the desolation in
-ever widening circles."
-
-"But Prince Rogovich?" Hindwood recalled him. "What had he to do with
-it?"
-
-"He was the leader of the monarchist party in Europe--the organizer of
-a secret movement to set up again the thrones which war has toppled.
-Incidentally he was to have established a new throne for himself
-in Poland. Behind him he had the landowning classes and the old
-aristocracy, which the new regime of haphazard democracy has beggared.
-He was biding his time till the crisis should become sufficiently acute
-for him to strike his blow. He had his armies ready. All he lacked was
-munitions. The floating of the loan in America completed his program."
-
-"But you said that the fact that he was returning in triumph was known
-only to a few. If only a few knew it, why should his death have caused
-this sudden exodus of women on trains running westward?"
-
-"For two reasons: because he was the recognized strong man of the buffer
-states which lie between Russian anarchy and civilization; and because
-the crisis of starvation, for which he had been waiting, is now in
-sight. While Bolshevism was making its drives against Poland, Central
-Europe was compelled to hold together. Now that Bolshevism is crumbling,
-that compulsion is relaxed. All the way from Siberia to the frontiers of
-Germany millions are perishing from lack of food. Presently the Russian
-millions will commence to march westward to the lands of plenty.
-They'll march like Death, swinging his scythe. They'll sweep on like a
-pestilence. They'll lope like gaunt wolves, savage and relentless. The
-starving peoples of Central Europe, who would once have resisted them,
-will join them. Prince Rogovich, had he lived, could have prevented
-them."
-
-"How?" It was Santa.
-
-"He would have declared a new war, with the return to monarchy as his
-battle-cry. He had his nucleus armies in readiness; they would have
-sprung from their hiding-places overnight. There would have been a
-tremendous rally to him as the only man unscrupulous enough to handle
-the situation. He would have made his bargain with the Allies."
-
-"And then?"
-
-"He would have trained his guns on the lean hordes of Russia and would
-have blown them back across their borders."
-
-Again Santa spoke. Her voice came low and haltingly. "He would have made
-the world pass through the fires of Moloch for a second time. The person
-who murdered him must have known it."
-
-Hindwood turned to her. There was a startled expression in his eyes. He
-was quite certain she had known it. He was seeing the real Santa for
-the first time. She was a Charlotte Corday, who had dipped her hands in
-blood that she might prevent a more colossal crime.
-
-"I begin to see," he muttered.
-
-The Captain took the words as addressed to himself. "I'm glad you do.
-It must be obvious to you now that where you're going is no place for
-a woman. If you'll accept my advice, you'll turn back at the next
-stopping-place."
-
-"Impossible." Hindwood recalled himself to the part he was playing.
-"You're a soldier; you'd be ashamed to run away at the first hint of
-danger. In a sense I also am a soldier, a soldier of business. I, too,
-have my marching orders and my duty."
-
-"Then if you won't turn back yourself, send Mrs. Hindwood back." The
-man's voice shook. "You're taking her to almost certain death. She's too
-beautiful--I beg it of you."
-
-To his amazement Hindwood found himself liking the stranger. "My wife's
-beauty has no bearing on the problem. We're exceedingly grateful to you,
-Captain Lajos; but to act on your warning--it's out of the question."
-
-The Captain shot him a dark look, then let his gaze rest on Santa. When
-she kept her eyes averted, he pretended to lose interest in the subject.
-The train was slowing down. He cleared the pane with his glove.
-
-"It's the frontier."
-
-Hindwood rose and hurriedly commenced to gather together his belongings.
-Sitting perfectly still with an air of quiet criticism, the Captain
-watched him. When the last bag had been strapped and made ready for
-removal, "Why are you doing that?" he inquired.
-
-"The German Customs. I suppose we'll have to get out and go through the
-old jog-trot of being inspected."
-
-"You don't need to; you can have it done here. Excuse me, if I seem
-officious. I was immediately behind you at Calais and couldn't help
-noticing that your passports are the same as mine--diplomatic. The
-advantage of a diplomatic passport in crossing frontiers is that the
-officials have to come to you."
-
-"I didn't know. If that's the case--"
-
-He resumed his seat with a sickening sensation. The Captain's presence
-was stifling him. He longed to escape, if it were only for five minutes.
-He felt choked with lies. It seemed impossible that the Captain should
-not be aware of the atmosphere of falsehood.
-
-Passengers were already filing down the corridor and being herded by
-soldiers on the platform. As carriages were emptied, doors were locked
-and sealed. Evidently nothing was to be left to chance; while the
-passengers were held prisoners in the waiting-rooms, the train was to
-be searched from end to end. To a guilty conscience there was something
-exceedingly intimidating about this military display of thoroughness.
-
-The _wagon-lits_ conductor looked into the compartment. Seeing the three
-of them seated there, he burst into a frantic protest. Captain Lajos
-annihilated him with the ferocity of his explanation. When the conductor
-had retreated, the Captain turned to Hindwood.
-
-"Like most of your compatriots, I see you're not strong on languages. If
-I can be of use to you, I'll act as your interpreter."
-
-"My wife is--" Then he remembered that he knew nothing of Santa's
-linguistic attainments. "You're very thoughtful of our comfort," he
-substituted.
-
-Guttural voices sounded. Two crop-headed ex-drill-sergeants presented
-themselves. Without waste of words they rasped out a peremptory order.
-
-"They want to see your passports," the Captain interpreted.
-
-While the passports were being examined, there was silence. Again
-questions were asked and again the Captain interpreted.
-
-"Are you carrying fire-arms?"
-
-"Have you any contraband?"
-
-"Do you intend to stay in Germany?"
-
-There was a pause. The passports were folded and on the point of being
-returned when another unintelligible conversation started.
-
-The Captain smiled. "They're punctilious. As a matter of form, they want
-to hear you assert that you're the Philip Hindwood to whom this passport
-was issued."
-
-"Most certainly. They can prove that by comparing my face with the
-attached photograph."
-
-The Captain turned to Santa with the utmost suavity. "And that you're
-the Edith Jones, Mr. Hindwood's secretary."
-
-Having exploded his bomb, he rose. For a moment he seemed to hesitate as
-to whether he should expose them. Then, making a stiff bow, he murmured,
-"That's all."
-
-Directly he had departed, Hindwood locked the door behind him. "He shall
-ferret out no more of our secrets."
-
-From then on, they traveled in a state of siege. Several times they
-thought they heard a tapping. Whether it was the Captain's, they did not
-allow themselves to discover. They opened to no one whom they had not
-summoned.
-
-
-VII
-
-
-Soon after the train restarted, Santa rested her hand on his arm. "You
-think better of me now. I'm so tired, I should cry if you spoke to me.
-Let me sleep on your couch. I'm afraid to be alone."
-
-He covered her with his rug and did his best to make her comfortable.
-She was utterly exhausted. In a few minutes her eyes closed and she was
-breathing gently.
-
-Several hours elapsed. She was still sleeping. He was glad not to have
-to talk. His mind was filled with a tremendous picture: "There was a
-certain rich man, which was clothed in purple and fine linen, and fared
-sumptuously every day. And there was a certain beggar named Lazarus,
-which was laid at his gate full of sores."
-
-He saw the world that he was leaving, self-satisfied, callous,
-well-nourished. He saw the world to which he was going, out of which he
-had planned to make a profit--a world picked clean by the crime of
-war and peopled by living skeletons. When its pain had passed
-beyond endurance, the outcast world would attack the world which was
-comfortable. It would come crawling like a beggar to a rich man's door.
-When it found the door barred, it would go mad. It had nothing to lose
-by violence. With its bare hands it would storm the dwelling.
-
-How would the comfortable world defend itself? The Captain said with
-cannon. From a safe distance it would blow the empty bellies into
-nothingness. But bread was cheaper than high explosives. Why not fill
-the empty bellies instead of shattering them?
-
-He recalled the fields round Amiens, starred with miniature forests of
-stiff, protesting crosses. Why had those crosses been planted if it had
-not been to teach the living world to share?
-
-A barricade of bread could prevent further bloodshed. It always could
-have prevented it. The gray tide of wolf-men could be halted by a
-barricade of bread. Strange that no one had ever thought of it! There
-had never been a war that a barricade of bread could not have halted.
-Back and forth across the Atlantic his food-ships were plying. In
-Holland his warehouses were bulging--
-
-He glanced at the sleeping face of Santa--sweet and sad as an avenging
-angel's. Her solution of injustice was simple: to slay the wrong-doer
-before he could do his wrong. It was her own suffering that had taught
-her this cruel mercy. If she, a half-caste, disinherited at birth, could
-so risk her soul's salvation for humanity--
-
-He drew himself up sharply. He was turning visionary. At this rate he
-would end as a second Varensky. All his plans for capturing power would
-be thwarted. He had seen nothing as yet that would corroborate the
-Captain's disastrous prophecies.
-
-At Stuttgart he watched the Captain receive another telegram. If the man
-had lied to him, what was his purpose? How much did he know? How much
-did he infer? Had his discovery that they were not married been an
-accident or had he led up to it by strategy? When Vienna was reached, it
-would be necessary to throw' him off their track.
-
-They were winding through blue valleys of the Bavarian Tyrol, steeped
-in the contentment of autumnal sunshine. Like eagles' nests, built high
-above pine-forests, he caught glimpses of _chalets_ perched on narrow
-ledges. Here and there they passed villages, mere clusters of dolls'
-houses, childish and make-believe as memories of fairyland. He began to
-smile at his mood of pessimism. Were Santa to waken, she would refute
-the Captain's bogey stories. He bent over her, tempted to rouse her. At
-last he shook her shoulder.
-
-"Santa, don't be frightened. I want to ask you a question. What the
-Captain said wasn't true?"
-
-She gazed up at him bewildered, dreams still in her eyes; then turned
-her face drowsily back to the pillow. "What wasn't true? I don't
-understand."
-
-"The part about Prince Rogovich and blowing those starving wretches back
-with cannon."
-
-She settled herself wearily. "I'm so terribly tired. I don't want to be
-reminded." And then, "It was why I killed him; so that he shouldn't."
-
-
-VIII
-
-
-Darkness had long since gathered when they crossed the starvation-line
-into Austria. Perhaps it was no more than imagination, but he
-immediately became conscious of a vague depression. Glancing through
-the misty panes, he espied no signs of life--only bare fields, pollarded
-trees like gallows, and the sullen profiles of shrouded houses. No
-trains flashed by, going in the opposite direction. Wayside stations
-were shuttered. Night was a stagnant tank. In the all-pervading silence
-the sound of their own going was the only clamor.
-
-It was not until they were nearing Vienna that any lights broke
-the monotony of the blackness--even these, like lanterns of lonely
-grave-diggers, were faint and rare. Shadowy apartment-houses and rotting
-factories looked less like habitations than monstrous sepulchers. It
-was difficult to believe that this pulseless carcass had once been the
-Bacchante among modern metropolises--that even at this moment memories
-of its rhythm were setting the feet of happier streets to music. He
-caught the vision of other cities after nightfall; New York, a tall
-white virgin, sheathed in jewels; London, a grimy smith, striking sparks
-from a giant anvil; Paris, a wanton goddess, smiling through the dusk,
-her face lit up by fire-fly constellations. How impossible it would be
-to approach any one of them without becoming aware of its presence! Yet
-a man might easily travel through Vienna without suspecting that it lay
-cowering behind the darkness.
-
-It was after midnight when the train halted in the empty cathedral of
-the Bahnhof. Directly the doors were opened, lean men poured into
-the compartments, whining for the privilege of handling the baggage.
-Hindwood delayed until he had allowed the Captain sufficient time to
-make his exit, then he thought it safe to assist Santa to the platform.
-Once again, despite the lateness of the hour, it was necessary to go
-through tedious formalities. The question asked most pressingly, as at
-the German frontier, was whether they were possessed of fire-arms.
-
-At last they were free to go in search of beds. As they stepped into
-the station-yard, they got their first glimpse of Austria's destitution.
-Huddled against the walls was a collection of human derelicts which
-seemed more in keeping with Dante's "Inferno" than the city which had
-set the world waltzing to _The Merry Widow_. They were of all conditions
-and ages, from grandparents to toddling children, from artisans to
-aristocrats. In the scant light they lifted up greenish faces which
-snarled, while their extended hands demanded charity. The police beat
-them back, like huntsmen separating hounds from their quarry. They
-retreated whimpering into the shadows.
-
-From the line of worn-out vehicles which were waiting, Hindwood selected
-a creaking taxi. Having seen Santa seat herself, he ordered the man to
-drive to the Hotel Bristol.
-
-"Pretty awful," he groaned, as he sank back against the musty cushions.
-
-She stifled a sob. "It was nothing. It's worse than that."
-
-He spoke again. "I didn't see the Captain. I think we're rid of him."
-
-"I wouldn't be optimistic."
-
-Down the long, deserted Mariahilfer Strasse they bumped and rattled. It
-was ungarnished and forbidding as an empty house. The few people whom
-they met scuffled out of sight at sound of intrusion, looking less like
-human beings than vermin. Over all there hung a sense of evil, as though
-a crime lay undiscovered behind the silence.
-
-As they turned into the Ring, which circles the inner city, Santa woke
-into animation. Leaning from the window, she pointed. "Do you see that
-huge pile like a palace, with all the statues and the steps going up to
-it? That's the Opera House. I danced there once at the command of the
-Emperor."
-
-"Then you're known here?" He clutched her hand.
-
-She shook her head sadly. "I was the toast of Europe then. Whereas
-to-day---- It makes a difference."
-
-In the Krtner-Ring they drew up before a blazing entrance. Laughing
-people were passing in and out, women muffled in costly wraps,
-accompanied by men in evening-attire.
-
-"What's this?" The change was so sudden that it shook his sense of
-reality. "This doesn't look like--"
-
-She placed her lips close to his ear as she alighted.
-
-"It looks like asking for revolution. 'After me, the deluge'--you
-remember? The men aren't Austrians. They're foreign vultures here to
-snatch bargains--human bargains as well. But the women--"
-
-Inside the doors of the hotel every reminder of famine had been blotted
-out. Its white marble halls and stairways were richly carpeted. Its
-furnishings in gilt and satin had been carried out with the utmost
-lavishness. The costal of its chandeliers glittered with a dazzling
-intensity. From the restaurant drifted the wild gayety of a gipsy
-orchestra, enfever-ing the atmosphere with the yearning of elusive
-romance. Whispering to the beat of the music came the glide of dancing
-footsteps. Flunkeys with powdered heads, tricked out in plush breeches
-like marionettes, hurried to and fro on all-absorbing errands.
-
-After Santa had been shown to her ornate room, he stepped out into the
-gloomy street to assure himself. It was all true, in spite of the lie
-which he had witnessed. The pinched faces were still there, and the
-enfeebled bodies crawling through the shadows.
-
-As he reentered the white glare which shone from the hotel, he glanced
-back with a sense of impending ruin. For a second time his mind was
-filled with a tremendous picture: "And there was a certain rich man and
-a beggar named Lazarus, which was laid at his gate, desiring to be fed.
-Moreover, the dogs came and licked his sores."
-
-He caught the vision of his food-ships piling up stores in Holland. At
-the thought, as he crept between the sheets in his comfortable bed, he
-sickened.
-
-
-IX
-
-
-He had returned from a disturbing interview with the Austrian ministers
-responsible for considering his proposals. He was passing the hotel
-desk, when it occurred to him that some one might have left a message.
-On inquiry two were handed out to him, one a telegram, the other a
-letter. Ripping open the telegram, a glance told him it was in German
-and had been dispatched from Budapest. He had slipped it into his
-pocket, thinking, "I'll have to get Santa to translate that," when he
-unfolded it again to see by whom it had been sent. The sender's name was
-a single word, "Anna."
-
-His heart gave a bound. She was near to him! He could see her again
-within a handful of hours. For a moment nothing else seemed to
-matter--neither Santa's safety, nor the agony of hunger by which he
-was surrounded. His blood ran hot with yearning. How had she reached
-Budapest so quickly? What was her object? To have accomplished the
-journey she must have set out from England ahead of him or else have
-left on the same day, traveling by the alternative route via Belgium.
-While he had been journeying in the company of Santa, going through the
-mummery of pretending he was married, Anna had been paralleling his
-footsteps. Was Varensky with her? But if she were alone...
-
-Mechanically, as he entered the elevator, he slit the flap of the
-letter. It had evidently been left personally, for it bore no postmark
-and was hastily scrawled on the stationery of the hotel. The hand was
-unknown to him. The note read:
-
-"_Yesterday you avoided me. I have told her everything. I am more sure
-than ever you ought to send her back. I must leave you now for a little
-while. When we meet again, I hope it will be as friends_.
-
-"_Lajos_."
-
-At last they had got rid of him! But what was it he had told her? And
-what made him so sure that they would meet again? The man wrote as if he
-were confident that he could lay his hands on them at any moment.
-
-Stepping out of the elevator, Hindwood made directly for Santa's room.
-He recalled it vaguely as he had seen it the night before, with its
-Empire furniture, painted cupids, silken hangings, and tall mirrors--its
-knowing air of having been the illicit nest of innumerable short-lived
-love-affairs. Its gaudy luxury, so glaringly in contrast with the
-embittered need of the outside world, had stirred his anger. In reply
-to his knock, her hoarse voice bade him enter. Before he was across the
-threshold, he was aware of the intoxicating fragrance of roses.
-
-Just inside the room, frowning with bewilderment, he halted. There were
-stacks of them--sheaves of them everywhere. They were scattered on the
-floor. They were arranged in vases. They lay strewn about in boxes. They
-were of all shades and varieties.
-
-"What's the meaning?"
-
-She beckoned to him to join her at the tall window against which she was
-standing.
-
-"We missed this last night." She pointed.
-
-Following her direction, he saw that the window looked down obliquely
-on the imposing architecture of the Opera House. The mellow October
-sunlight drifted softly across gray roofs and fell in an orange splash
-into the deep fissure of the street below. Along the pavements the
-tide of traffic wandered nervelessly. On a neighboring ledge, two plump
-pigeons were engaged in an ardent courtship.
-
-"What did we miss? I see nothing."
-
-Then he noticed the panting of her bosom and that her expression was
-tender with tremulous emotion.
-
-Drawing her fine fingers across her eyes, she shuddered. "Stupid of me!
-I forgot; they would bring back nothing to you--the scent of the roses
-and then the Opera House, looking the same as ever. I've been dreaming
-of other mornings, when I woke after nights of triumph. Perhaps it was
-this room that set me remembering. It's not the first time I've slept in
-it." As she caught his eyes reading her memories, she flushed guiltily.
-"Yes, in those days I was never lonely."
-
-"But the roses!" he reminded her impatiently. "How did you get them? At
-the price things cost in Vienna, some one must have spent a fortune."
-
-She placed a hand on his arm appealingly. "Don't begrudge me. He must
-have known. I think he did it for my burial."
-
-Her words sent a chill through him. He shifted his weight uncomfortably.
-"We're in too tight a corner to waste energy on sentiment. If we're
-going to make a fight for it, we've got to keep our heads clear. Who
-gave them to you?"
-
-She pressed her forehead against the warm pane. The gold of the world
-outside cast a sheen of gold on her profile. Her unwanted loveliness
-hurt him. It reproached him. It recalled to him the ache of his old
-desire in the days before he had known that he could have her. And now
-that he could have her for the asking....
-
-"Captain Lajos gave them to me. They've been arriving ever since we
-parted. He waited till you'd gone; then he came to me. He came to tell
-me why he'd followed me. He was persuaded I was your mistress. This
-morning he did something noble--very noble for a man of his sort to a
-woman of mine; he begged me to become his wife."
-
-"Without knowing anything about you? He must be mad."
-
-"Don't say that." She closed her eyes painfully. "I shan't trouble you
-or any one much longer. I shall soon be so still. When one's sure of
-that, it's good to be loved just once again, even though--" She turned
-slowly and faced him. "I don't need to tell you who it is that I love
-truly. This man--he's nothing. No man ever will---- You see I've lived
-for men and admiration--for things like--" She pointed to the roses.
-"It's new to me to be neglected. So it's comforting to know that a man
-can still desire me, even though I'd rather kill myself than go with
-him."
-
-He broke the silence that had settled between them. "You mustn't talk
-like this. You've years of life before you. I'll get you away safely."
-
-She smiled. "No." Then she changed the subject. "What happened to you?"
-
-"You mean at my conference?" He seated himself beside her
-dressing-table. "The worst that could have happened--nothing. Some
-change has taken place for which I can't account. When I sent my
-suggestions from America, they were hailed with enthusiasm. I was a
-saviour--everything that's splendid and extravagant. But now---- The
-Government's paralyzed. It isn't a Government; it's a passenger. 'You've
-let us starve too long. It doesn't matter now--' that's what I was told
-this morning. The ministers with whom I consulted spoke as if they were
-sitting on the edge of a volcano, waiting to be blown up. They're so
-sure that an eruption's inevitable that they don't consider it worth
-while to make an effort to save themselves. I couldn't rouse them. When
-I pressed them for the cause of their lethargy, they prophesied a new
-war, in very much the same words as Captain Lajos--a war in which the
-well-fed are to be pillaged by the starving."
-
-"But did you tell them that you could ship food into Austria at once?"
-
-"I told them. I assured them that I could put Austria back on her feet
-in twelve months. I offered to provision her and to supply coal for her
-factories, if they'd give me control of the railroads and a per capita
-percentage on the total increase of national industry. 'Provision us
-with pleasure' was their attitude; 'we'll raise no official objection.'
-'Very kind of you,' I replied; 'but where do I come in. I'm no
-philanthropist.'" He brought his fist down with a bang on the
-dressing-table. "There's a nigger in the wood-pile. Upon my soul, I
-believe those fellows are determined that I shan't prevent their nation
-from dying. If I shipped them the food as a gift, they'd burn it."
-
-She came over from the window and stood gazing down at him. "You're
-right. They would if they dared. Can't you guess?"
-
-"I can't. Their currency's hardly worth the paper it's printed on.
-People are dropping dead in the streets--I saw them. Their gaols are
-packed with children turned criminals through hunger. There'll be no
-crops next year; the grain's consumed that should have been saved for
-the sowing. They've butchered all their live-stock. The brains of the
-country are in exile. The intellectual classes have been wiped out. And
-here I come with my offer to save them, and they reject it. Without the
-help of some outside force like myself, things can only go from bad to
-worse."
-
-"Precisely."
-
-He glanced up, irritated by the promptitude of her agreement.
-"Precisely! Why do you say that?"
-
-"It's what they want--things to go from bad to worse. The worse things
-get, the more certain they are of revolution. They're afraid your food
-would postpone it."
-
-"Afraid! Why on earth?"
-
-"Because they hope to snatch more out of the catastrophe of revolution
-than you can offer them. These ministers with whom you've been dealing
-are the tools of the exiled monarchists. They belong to the party in all
-countries which made the last war possible and all wars before it.
-What do they care for the people? They never have cared. Let the brutes
-starve,' they say, 'if it suits our purpose. We can always breed more.'
-They regard the people as their serfs, to be fooled with patriotism when
-danger threatens and to be kept in chains to toil for them when peace
-has been restored. If the people go hungry long enough, they'll reason
-that the loss of their kings is the cause. They'll rise up and recall
-them. They'll start to die for them afresh. It'll happen in all the
-outcast countries. In the wholesale scramble, it'll be every nation for
-itself. The strong will struggle to expand their frontiers, and the
-weak will go to the wall. The deluge of blood--" She sank to her knees,
-seizing his hands imploringly. "If you'll sacrifice your stores of food,
-you can stop it."
-
-"But if I do that, without guaranties, I'm bankrupt. I get nothing."
-
-"You'll get more than I got when, to accomplish the same purpose, I
-murdered Prince Rogovich. I'll get the scaffold. You'll earn the thanks
-of humanity. You'll go down to the ages...."
-
-He could see only the wide greyness of her eyes, pleading, coercing,
-unbalancing his judgment.
-
-He jumped to his feet, shaking off their spell. "I'm no dreamer--no
-Varensky," he said gruffly. "I have to make a profit." Then, defending
-himself from her unspoken accusation, "We're only guessing. We have
-no facts. There are other famished countries--Hungary and Poland. What
-Austria refuses, they may accept." He dug his hand into his pocket.
-"That reminds me. Here's a telegram from Budapest. I can't understand
-it. It's in German."
-
-She was crouched on the floor. As he stooped to give it to her, she
-caught sight of the signature.
-
-"From Anna. Varensky must be with her. Then the crisis is nearer than I
-thought."
-
-"Read it. Tell me what it says," he urged.
-
-She looked up palely, wilted with disappointment. "'_Come at once. I
-need you_.' That's all."
-
-"Does she give no address?"
-
-"She wouldn't risk it. I know where to find her."
-
-"Then we'll start--"
-
-"But what about--?"
-
-He did not hear her. The blood was hammering in his temples. He left her
-forgotten, seated among her roses. The music of a wild exultation was
-maddening his heart.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER THE SEVENTH--THE CAPTURE
-
-
-I
-
-
-SO Anna had turned to him out of all the world!
-
-She had felt so sure of him that she had not even stated the reason for
-her urgency--only "_Come at once. I need you_." That she should have
-relied so implicitly on his compliance put him on his honor not to
-disappoint her. She must have known that her telegram would find him
-involved in important business. The earliest she could have counted
-on seeing him must have been to-morrow. He was determined, if it were
-humanly possible, to exceed her best expectations; he would see her
-to-night. Having phoned for the hotel porter to be sent to him, he
-immediately commenced to pack. He recalled the message that Santa had
-delivered him: "Varensky's setting out on his last journey. He told
-me to say, 'Soon you can have her.'" Did Anna's telegram mean that
-Varensky's final journey was ended?
-
-He was throwing his belongings together when the porter entered.
-
-"You wanted me, sir?"
-
-"Yes. What's the first train--the fastest to Budapest?"
-
-"The first, if it's still running, starts from the Nord-Bahnhof within
-the hour. But--"
-
-"Then order me a taxi. I'll be ready in ten minutes. Have my bill made
-up. Send some one to my secretary's room to fetch down her baggage."
-
-"Certainly. But--"
-
-Hindwood glanced at the man coldly. "I'm in too much of a hurry for
-conversation."
-
-A little later, as he was pocketing his change, having settled his
-account, the cashier addressed him.
-
-He shook his head. "Don't understand." Then, catching sight of Santa,
-he beckoned. "The fellow's trying to say something. Find out what's
-troubling him."
-
-The cashier repeated more earnestly the words that he had previously
-uttered.
-
-"He wants to know whether you really think you can leave Vienna," Santa
-translated.
-
-"What's to prevent?" Then he caught her arm, lowering his voice.
-"Perhaps they're on to you."
-
-The Krtner-Ring was extraordinarily deserted. Against the curb a
-wheezing taxi was standing--the only one in sight. Its engine was
-running. The bags had been piled on the front seat beside the driver,
-evidently very much to his annoyance; he was doing his best to
-tumble them back on to the pavement. The hotel porter was vigorously
-restraining him. An altercation was in progress which threatened any
-minute to develop into a fight.
-
-"What's the matter?"
-
-The porter replied across his shoulder, still holding the bags in place.
-"He doesn't want to drive you."
-
-"Tell him I'll give him five times the legal fare."
-
-When the offer had been translated, the man seemed mollified.
-
-The porter opened the door. "Quietly. Jump in before he changes his
-mind. He promises to do his best."
-
-"His best! I should think so."
-
-As the cab moved off, Hindwood missed the porter's parting words. He
-turned to Santa. "Do they always come this hold-up game with foreigners
-in Vienna?"
-
-"It isn't a hold-up game. He didn't want to drive us. He was afraid.
-Something's wrong. Look how empty the streets are. Didn't you see how
-white and scared every one was in the hotel? The cashier would have told
-us; you wouldn't even let me listen to him."
-
-"Jealous!" he thought. "It'll be awkward having to take care of both her
-and Anna."
-
-They had driven for ten minutes in silence when Santa spoke again. "It's
-a queer way he's taking us."
-
-"How queer?"
-
-"So round-about."
-
-"As long as he keeps going, we don't need to worry."
-
-"But why should he turn up all the side-streets?"
-
-"I don't know. It'll be time to grow nervous when he stops."
-
-At that moment he stopped, but it was only for a second. Spinning his
-cab about, he spurted off in a new direction. Glancing from the window
-as he turned, they saw that the main thoroughfare ahead was blocked by
-what appeared to be a procession. Street after street he tried, working
-round in a circle, never getting any nearer. At last, growing desperate,
-he took the plunge, tooting his horn and forcing his way through the
-outskirts of the seething mob. By the time Hindwood had ordered him
-to turn back it was too late; for a hundred yards behind them, from
-pavement to pavement, the thoroughfare was packed with pedestrians and
-vehicles, all headed in the one direction. To get out and walk, even
-if they had been willing to sacrifice their baggage, was out of the
-question. The crowd in front was more dense than the crowd behind. The
-air was full of shrieks of fainting women and the shiver of plate-glass
-as shop-windows gave way under the pressure. To escape the crush, which
-was momentarily increasing, people were clambering to the roof of the
-taxi and standing thick along the running-boards.
-
-Santa was speaking in a torrent to the strangers clinging to the doors.
-
-"Can't you stop long enough to tell me what's happening?" Hindwood
-interrupted.
-
-She apologized. "I forgot for the moment that you can't speak German.
-They're as puzzled as we are. All they know is that they're doing what
-every one else is doing. They don't know the cause. The same thing's
-happening at every station. A panic's struck Vienna--a foreboding of
-disaster. It's a case of nerves. In some places looting has started.
-Every one's escaping--the entire population. It's anything to get
-westward to France, Switzerland, Germany, away from this nightmare of
-starvation. They're storming the trains in the Bahnhof, trying to compel
-the engineers to--"
-
-Turning from him, she commenced to ply more questions in her hurried
-flow of German.
-
-It was all clear now--the porter's hesitancy, the cashier's earnestness,
-the driver's reluctance. They had been trying to prevent him from
-hurrying a woman into danger. He had been too obsessed by the thought of
-reaching Anna even to pay attention. For confirmation of what Santa
-had told him, he had only to glance at the surrounding throng. The lean
-multitude was absurdly prepared for its futile exodus. Irrespective of
-class, every individual was burdened with whatever he or she had had
-time to rescue of the household goods. They carried bundles beneath
-their arms and sacks on their backs. Everything on wheels had been
-commandeered. Some pushed perambulators, piled high with ill-assorted
-belongings; others had harnessed themselves to carts. None of them
-could have considered whether his or her presence would be allowed in a
-happier country. Obviously over night the half of Vienna could not have
-procured the necessary permits to travel.
-
-On the outskirts those who were most desperate, because furthest from
-the station, had begun to charge. Hindwood watched the stampede--how
-terror was transforming forlorn human beings into animals. They were
-of all kinds and sorts, mechanics, waiters, slum-dwellers, merchants,
-shop-girls,' demi-mondaines, with here and there a sprinkling of
-patrician faces from the palaces of the bankrupt aristocracy. There
-were lonely men and women, but for the most part they were grouped
-in families, the children dragging at their mother's skirts and
-the youngest in the father's arms. They pushed, jostled and fought,
-trampling the weak in their frenzy to get forward.
-
-Suddenly the madness of self-preservation froze with horror. At the
-end of the street, far up the pale river of gray faces, horsemen were
-advancing, standing tall in their stirrups, smiting with their swords.
-Santa flung herself to the floor. "Down. Keep down. The children--oh, my
-God!"
-
-Like a volley of hail, bullets commenced to patter. They whipped the
-street from end to end, hissing in their flight and thudding as they
-found their target. The taxi tossed and rocked like a rowboat in a
-mill-race. The mob had given way; like water from a burst dam, it
-roared between the tall, confining houses. It swept backwards weeping,
-bleeding, desperate, exhausted, wilder in its retreat than it had been
-in its advance. Behind it came the cavalry, riding it down, firing and
-stabbing. In five minutes nothing was in sight, save upset vehicles,
-scattered belongings, dead lying awkwardly in the October sunshine and
-wounded crawling weakly in search of refuge.
-
-Reaching through the shattered window, Hindwood tapped the driver's
-shoulder. "Drive on."
-
-At the touch the man crumpled. There was a crimson blot in the center of
-his forehead.
-
-Santa sat up, staring furiously. "If you'd not refused them bread--"
-
-"I didn't."
-
-"You did. You were only willing to sell."
-
-Her eyes were blazing. Her hands were clenched. Her tears fell slowly.
-In the terrific silence which followed so much clamor, the street itself
-seemed to accuse him. Picking up their bags, he led the way to the
-station. Scenes such as the one he had witnessed might be happening in
-Budapest. There was no time to be lost.
-
-"Find out whether it's possible to send a wire."
-
-"Where to?" she asked suspiciously.
-
-"To Amsterdam."
-
-"What for?"
-
-"Do you need to ask?"
-
-After a hurried conversation with a scared official, she turned. "If
-it's to do with food, they'll accept it. The lines may be cut at any
-moment."
-
-He dashed off his telegram. "_Crisis sooner than expected. Without delay
-start food-trains under armed guard for Budapest and Vienna_."
-
-It might spell bankruptcy for him--the ruin of all his plans. He
-rebelled against the improvidence of philanthropy, yet dimly he
-discerned the proportions of his chance. If he would, he could teach
-the world how wars could be stopped. As he watched the message being
-dispatched, he wondered why he had sent it. Was he frightened by the
-sight of bloodshed, or angered, like Varensky, by an unjust display of
-force? Or had he sent it because this maelstrom of human agony swirled
-between him and the woman he loved, and food might prove to be the only
-means by which she could be rescued? He sought to explain his actions by
-business motives: if his food trains were actually on the spot, he could
-strike a better bargain with tottering governments.
-
-
-II
-
-
-The express for Budapest was several hours late. When at last it got
-under way, it carried few passengers. It was plunging straight into the
-heart of the danger, from which all the world which possessed the price
-of a fare was escaping.
-
-Santa listened to and reported on the conversation of fellow-travelers.
-They were Hungarian officers returning to their regiments, to whom a
-fight spelt opportunity; they were husbands and fathers, careless of
-their own safety in their dread of what might be happening to their
-families; they were merchants and men of wealth, anxious to be at hand
-for the defense of their possessions. As the talk went on, the greatness
-of the risk grew increasingly obvious; it bred an atmosphere of
-free-masonry. Strangers accosted each other, exchanging views on the
-hazards; they crowded about the entrance of any compartment where a
-speaker seemed possessed of accurate information. Most of what was said
-was no more than conjecture; much of it was utterly contradictory. One
-man asserted that the Bolsheviks were attacking all along the Russian
-front; another that Bolshevism had collapsed and the peasants were
-massacring. Another knew for certain that throughout Central Europe the
-Reds were rising; yet another that the Monarchists had sprung to arms
-and were marching. Every rumor or invention was accepted with equal
-credulity. Anything was possible. No one knew for certain either the
-magnitude or the cause of the rumored disaster. Only one fact seemed
-indisputable: somewhere further eastward had occurred a catastrophe of
-shattering proportions--a catastrophe in the tragedy of which each one
-of them would shortly be involved.
-
-Hindwood turned away from the babel of voices to the autumn landscape
-gliding past the windows. It consisted as far as eye could stretch of
-unboundaried, level fields, gridironed by straight, military roads,
-marked by avenues of pollarded trees, intersecting always at right
-angles. The fields were neglected. They told their own story of seed
-consumed, which should have been saved for sowing, and of cattle
-slaughtered. Over everything, despite the brilliant blueness of the sky,
-there hung an atmosphere of melancholy. Down white-penciled highways
-little groups were trekking, always in the one direction. They appeared
-crushed and harmless, more like insects, scarcely human. They limped
-forlornly, dragging carts and carrying children. They were the
-advance-guard of the army of starvation. Hindwood remembered the
-Captain's prophecy. "They'll march to the lands of plenty like Death
-swinging his scythe, like a pestilence, like gaunt wolves."
-
-At the frontier, where the train crossed from Austria into Hungary, he
-gained his first lesson in the resistlessness of necessity. There
-had been an unequal battle, in which only one side had been armed. It
-appeared that the Austrian guards had tried to turn back the Hungarian
-fugitives. They had fired their rifles till their ammunition was
-exhausted; then they had sickened of the slaughter. Opposition had made
-no difference; the tide of fugitives had still pressed on. Misery had
-proved more potent than explosives; it had made death, if not desirable,
-at least negligible. Its meek persistence had conquered. The Austrian
-soldiery had revolted against their officers and stood with grounded
-arms, watching the stream of poverty trickling through the barrier of
-corpses.
-
-"Like water finding its own level," Hindwood thought. It would be like
-this the world over, if something were not done at once to check it. The
-outcast nations lay one behind the other, like terraced avalanches, in
-an ascending scale of destitution--behind the Austrians the Hungarians,
-behind the Hungarians the Poles, behind the Poles the Russians, each a
-degree more agonized in its privation. Now that the movement had started
-it would go on, sliding, filtering, settling, until the peoples of
-the earth had regained an economic level. The Dives nations, which had
-refused to share, would try to hold the Lazarus nations at bay by force.
-They would spray them with cannon. They would charge them with bayonets.
-They would bomb them, gas them, dig labyrinths of trenches. In the
-end, as had happened here, though the pariah portion of humanity was
-weaponless, the meek persistency of its misery would conquer. Careless
-of oblivion, it would press on. He alone could give the Dives nations
-a seventh hour chance; at the price of his financial ruin, he could
-prevent the deluge of famine from spreading by damming it with a wall of
-bread.
-
-Darkness had fallen. The carriages were unlighted. The train was moving
-cautiously, jerking, stopping, starting, like a live thing scenting
-carnage. Scattered through the night camp-fires were burning. In the
-gloom conversation dragged on wearily with reiterated guesses.
-
-He felt his hand clasped.
-
-"What is it?" he whispered. "Frightened? You won't be caught now. You're
-as safe as the rest of us. No one'll have time to remember you."
-
-"I wasn't thinking of myself."
-
-"Then--?"
-
-"Of you--that perhaps you were born for such a time as this."
-
-"Ah!" He drew his breath. The echo of his own thought! "And perhaps you,
-too," he suggested.
-
-She twisted herself, leaning her breast against his arm. Glancing down
-through the darkness, he caught the tenderness in her eyes and the
-gleaming smoothness of her cheek and throat.
-
-"I wish I could believe it," she said softly; "to stand beside you,
-making you strong.... You could never love me; but to stand beside you,
-when you rescue the world, that would mean redemption."
-
-"When I rescue the world!" He laughed quietly. "I'm no Varensky. I came
-here to make money."
-
-She swept aside his cynicism. "You were born for this moment. And I, an
-outcast woman whom the world has hunted, will help you. Perhaps I
-shall give my life for you." She spoke exultantly. "I, whom you have
-rejected."
-
-"You exaggerate. Things may not be as bad as they appear. What we've
-seen may be no more than a local disturbance."
-
-She refused to argue. "Be kind to me while we're together."
-
-On the outskirts of Budapest they came to a halt. The air was tainted
-with a nauseating odor. Standing on a siding was a long line of
-freight-cars in process of being shunted. By the light of lanterns swung
-by men on the tracks, it was possible to see that the freight-cars were
-inhabited. Figures hung out of them thin as skeletons, entirely naked or
-clad in flapping rags. The passengers of the express had crowded to the
-windows, pointing, commenting, gesticulating.
-
-Hindwood turned to Santa. "What is it?"
-
-She answered bitterly. "The death train."
-
-"But the people aren't dead."
-
-"Not yet. They're families ruined by the war and by the peace. Some
-of them saw their homes burned by the Cossacks; others had their farms
-stolen to pay the Allies' debts. They're nobody's business. When you've
-reached the end of your tether in Hungary, you join the death train and
-die by inches. You have no food, no sanitation. Wherever you halt, you
-spread contagion. When things have grown too bad in one place, you're
-dragged to another." She swallowed down a sob. "The train's full of
-children--and you tell me that you came here to make money."
-
-On arrival at Budapest they found the station picketed by soldiers. They
-were immediately conducted under an armed guard to an office where the
-purpose of their journey was investigated. When Hindwood had explained
-their errand--that it had to do with the food-supply--he was treated
-with courtesy and given his choice of hotels. Santa chose the Ritz. A
-military order was made out for their rooms. A safe-conduct was handed
-them. A rickety conveyance, with a lean horse between the shafts, was
-allotted to them. They were launched into a city quenched of lights,
-with a soldier seated beside the driver for protection.
-
-The wide avenues down which they drove were deserted. They were still
-unaware of what had happened. They had not dared to ask, lest any slip
-of the tongue might lead to trouble. There were no signs of revolution
-in the thoroughfares. They were hushed and reverent as the aisles of
-a cathedral. Every few hundred yards a mounted gendarme rode out to
-challenge them; then, seeing the soldier on the box, backed into the
-shadows. Only one disquieting incident occurred. The uneasiness which it
-caused was due to guilty memories rather than to any actual menace. As
-they were turning towards the Danube, they heard a sharp trotting behind
-them. A closed brougham swept past, drawn by a pair of high-stepping
-horses. The equipage was one which must formerly have belonged to the
-Royal Palace; it was the ghost of a forgotten splendor. Hindwood rose in
-his seat to watch it vanish. Then he saw something that made him
-catch his breath. Running between its wheels was a snow-white Russian
-wolfhound.
-
-Santa heard his commotion. "What's the excitement?"
-
-"Nothing."
-
-By the time she had raised herself to follow his glance, the hint of
-peril was gone. The next moment they were drawing up at the hotel.
-
-
-III
-
-
-Again as the door swung to behind them, they were greeted by sounds of
-merriment and dancing, only here the abandon was wilder than at Vienna.
-Hindwood saw at a glance that this was no assemblage of alien hucksters,
-drawn from all the world to gather bargains. As regards the men, they
-were devil-may-care and smart, of the same type as Captain Lajos--the
-sort who would follow the game to the last throw of the dice. Many of
-them had made no attempt to disguise their profession; they were clad in
-gorgeous uniforms of Hungarian regiments long since ordered disbanded
-by the Allies. Their breasts were ablaze with Imperial decorations. They
-strode the marble floors with the clink of spurs and the rattling of
-swords. While they drugged the midnight hours with laughter and debauch,
-their faces were feverish with listening expectancy--the expectancy of
-an event for which they waited.
-
-The women looked like captives of a raid. Some hung back timidly; some
-were bold with wine; all were weary and pinched with hunger. Like the
-men, they seemed only to be acting a part. In the midst of recklessness
-they would give way to distaste, as though remorseful of this way of
-combating starvation.
-
-With the stench of the death train still in his nostrils, Hindwood
-stared at the spectacle in pity and disgust. "Fiddling while Rome is
-burning," he muttered.
-
-His elbow was jogged by a black-coated individual with the appeasing
-manners of a tailor.
-
-"I understand English. What is it you desire?"
-
-Hindwood swung round. "So much the better. I want what one usually wants
-at a hotel--accommodation."
-
-The man rubbed his hands. "Sorry, sir. We're full up. Every room, in
-fact every lounge is taken."
-
-"You'll have to find something. I have a military order."
-
-Having read it the man returned the slip of paper. "That's different.
-You're here on Government business--for the same purpose as these other
-gentlemen, I take it?"
-
-Hindwood replied non-committally. "Yes, on Government business."
-
-"In that case I'll give you a room in the basement--a servant's, my
-last. It's all I have to offer."
-
-"But two rooms are necessary. I have my secretary with me--this lady."
-
-The man shrugged his shoulders. "To demand the impossible is useless.
-To-morrow--who knows? If things happen, I may be able to give you more
-rooms than you require. For the present..."
-
-Seeing that nothing was to be gained by arguing, Hindwood consented to
-the arrangement.
-
-"The room will be my secretary's. If you'll lend me blankets, I'll find
-a place in the passage."
-
-The room proved to be poor in the extreme--nothing but four bare walls
-and an iron cot. When he had turned the key he tiptoed over to Santa.
-
-"What's this monstrous thing for which they're waiting--this something
-that may happen to-morrow?"
-
-She placed her hands in his, as though she felt the need of protection.
-Her golden face was tragic. "War."
-
-His common sense revolted. Though everything seemed to prove her guess
-correct, he refused to accept it. "War! It can't be. What would any one
-gain by it? It was war that produced all this hideous mess--the death
-train and all that. Besides, how can people fight who can scarcely
-crawl? They have one foot in the grave already. Ten well-fed men could
-defeat a battalion. Whatever's in the wind, it isn't war. To launch a
-war requires money."
-
-"With you it's always money. To launch this kind of a war requires
-nothing but despair."
-
-Stepping back from him tempestuously, she flung herself full length on
-the cot. Her face was hidden, buried in the pillow. While she lay
-there tense, the sound of dance-music, advancing and retreating, tapped
-dreamily against the walls. It spoke to him of romance, of a woman he
-could love, and of passion snatched perilously before life ended, in a
-mysterious city after nightfall.
-
-She had raised herself and was regarding him feverishly. Her red lips
-were parted as with thirst.
-
-"I know you so well," she was saying softly; "I know you because I love
-you. You refuse to believe it's war because you wouldn't be able to sell
-and bargain. But it is war--the sort of war we saw at the frontier:
-a war in which weaponless millions will march to the overthrow of
-embattled thousands."
-
-"You're unjust." He spoke patiently. "I'm unwilling to believe it's war
-because I can't see any reason for it."
-
-"Any reason!" Her eyes became twin storms. "Would you require a reason
-if you'd seen your children die for lack of bread? You'd perish gladly,
-if you could first tear the throat out of one person who was too well
-nourished."
-
-He went and stood beside her, stooping over her, placing his hand
-against her forehead. "You're burning. You've been through too much. Get
-some rest. To-morrow we'll find Anna and perhaps Var-ensky; it's more
-than likely they'll be able to tell us." He paused. "I know what makes
-you so relentless; it's your own dead child--"
-
-Her arms shot up, dragging him down and nestling his face against her
-breast. "Oh, my man, it's not that. It's that I'm jealous for you--so
-afraid you may deceive yourself and miss your chance." He stumbled back
-from the temptation of her yielding body and the comfort of her fragrant
-warmth.
-
-"My chance is yours; we may both have been born for this moment."
-
-Long after he had stretched himself outside her door, he felt that in
-the austerity of the four bare walls she still crouched watching from
-her bed.
-
-
-IV
-
-
-He slept restlessly. The music and the dancing rarely halted. Once when
-he roused, it was with the suffocating sense that a man was bending
-over him, fumbling at the handle of Santa's door. As he sat up, he was
-convinced that the man looked back just before he vanished around the
-corner.
-
-When he finally wakened, it was in the chill of dawn. He was surrounded
-by a ghostly stillness. Rising softly, he slipped down the passage and
-out into the public rooms of the hotel. It was as though a wizard had
-waved his wand. The merry-makers lay strewn about carelessly, wherever
-sleep had overtaken them. In the pale light of morning, robbed of
-animation, their faces showed waxlike and wan. Swords, which had
-clattered martially, sprawled grotesquely by crumpled bodies. Uniforms
-looked tarnished, dresses shabby. Girls, with their lips parted and
-their hair disordered, lay with heads stretched back in their lovers'
-arms. Over all was spread the weariness of folly.
-
-Tiptoeing from group to group, he searched for the man who had tried
-Santa's door. Nowhere could he find him. Returning to her room, he
-tapped lightly. He was afraid to make more noise in that atmosphere of
-menace. Receiving no answer, he pushed the door stealthily and peered
-across the threshold. He had feared lest he might find her gone; there
-she lay curled up in her cot, her hair poured across her pillow, her
-face cushioned against her hollowed arm. Gray light falling from a
-narrow window clothed her with a lonely pathos. Bending over her, he
-shook her shoulder. "Santa."
-
-She sat up with a start.
-
-"Has it happened?"
-
-"Not yet. They're sleeping like the dead."
-
-"Then why--?"
-
-"There's someone who knows us here. He tried your door. It makes me
-think we're watched. We can slip out now and hunt up Varensky. If we
-wait till later, we'll be followed."
-
-Her pupils dilated, obscuring the grayness of her eyes; they became
-black pools, mirroring her terror. "To be caught with Varensky would
-mean death." He seated himself on the edge of her cot. "I didn't think
-you knew what fear was. Don't be frightened. I'll protect you."
-
-"Dear!" All of a sudden she had become intensely calm. "Did you think I
-was afraid for myself? Before many days, perhaps before to-day is out,
-it'll be you who'll need protecting. I beg you, don't go near Varensky."
-
-"But--"
-
-"Let me go myself," she implored. When he glanced away without replying,
-she rushed on impetuously. "Some one's got to take risks. I don't count.
-Your life must be spared."
-
-With an effort he brought his gaze back. "There's Anna."
-
-Instead of the explosion he had expected, her voice became gravely
-tender. "I forgot. You care for her as I care for you. I'm sorry."
-
-Her feet slipped to the floor; he saw them marble white against the
-bare, scrubbed boards--beautiful as hands, the feet of a dancer. As he
-retreated, she smiled bravely, "You shan't wait long."
-
-
-V
-
-
-So far as they were aware, no one had noticed their departure. The
-deep breathing of the motley throng had been like the beat of a muffled
-engine. Even the night-porter, who should have been on guard, had
-collapsed across his desk with his face buried in his arms.
-
-They had stepped out of the hotel into a pulseless street where mists
-from the Danube hung like cobwebs. Hindwood could not rid himself of the
-suspicion that they were followed. He glanced back repeatedly, drawing
-Santa sharply into doorways in attempt after attempt to trap the
-tracker. If a tracker there was, he never revealed himself. At last
-Hindwood realized that precautions were profitless. The cessation of
-their own footsteps gave ample warning. A pursuer had only to halt when
-they halted, to escape detection behind the fog.
-
-They scarcely dared talk, and then only in brief whispers. It puzzled
-him how she could keep her direction. It was like tunneling a passage
-through chalk, which crumbled, yielded, and caved in as one went
-forward. The whole world dripped sullenly--unseen gutters, unseen trees,
-treacherous pavements. And there was always the drifting whiteness,
-pricking one's eyes as with little darts.
-
-She had gone too far and turned back, feeling her way along the wall.
-Before a large double-door she paused and knocked. She rapped three
-times peculiarly before a grill was slipped back and a question asked.
-The answer which she gave appeared to be the countersign. A smaller door
-in the doubledoor was opened and they entered.
-
-The person who had admitted them was a new type to Hindwood: flat
-featured, fair-headed, blue-eyed, clad in a loose khaki shirt, which
-bulged like a blouse, and in a pair of baggy breeches which were tucked
-into high-boots, roomy as pouches. But it was the expression of the man
-that was most impressive--his brooding appearance of enormous patience.
-Santa spoke rapidly in a language which was neither German nor French.
-The man nodded and led the way across a gloomy courtyard, up stairs
-rotten with decay, into a stone corridor lined with stout forbidding
-doors.
-
-"Is it a prison?" Hindwood whispered.
-
-"Little better. It's a barracks inhabited by the brains of outcast
-Russia--students, for the most part, male and female, who have escaped
-from the Red Terror. Russia has no use for brains at present. Brains are
-too dangerous. Wherever the Bolshevist finds them, he blows them out.
-Many of these exiles are survivors of Denikin's and Kolchak's armies.
-Having tried to save their country with rifles, they're now preparing
-themselves to rescue her with knowledge. They're learning to be doctors,
-engineers and lawyers, so that they may become the soul of the Russia
-of the future. Meanwhile they live anyhow, sleep anywhere and starve
-abominably. They're not wanted in Hungary or in any European country.
-They're suspected and hounded. The only reason they've been allotted
-this mildewed dwelling is in order that they may be watched."
-
-The guide had thrown open a door and stood signing to them, trying to
-catch their attention.
-
-It was a grim sight that met their eyes, similar to the one they had
-left behind at the hotel only a thousand times more sordid. The windows
-were locked and heavily barred. The air was poisonous. The room was
-stripped of furnishings. On bare boards innumerable human beings,
-without a shred of bedding, sprawled, drugged with sleep, herded
-together in indecent proximity. There was scarcely space to walk between
-them. They were of both sexes. Here and there a child lay folded in a
-parent's arms. The men were of all ages, but for the most part young and
-still in the tattered uniforms of their defeated armies. The women were
-scarcely distinguishable from the men. Their heads were cropped. They
-wore odd garments of mixed masculine and feminine attire, such as could
-be purchased for next to nothing at any rag-shop. Some retained the
-soldier-garb of the Battalions of Death. As Hindwood gazed across the
-pool of mud-colored faces, "Heaven help us, if this is the soul of the
-future Russia!" he thought.
-
-Suddenly his interest shifted. In the corner remotest from the door,
-his eye had caught the shining of golden tresses. Their owner's face
-was turned away from him; they seemed to weigh her down and were piled
-beneath her head in a cushion. On her left lay an aged peasant woman; on
-her right a man with a death-white face and a head that was peaked like
-a dunce's cap. The guide was already stooping over the man, touching
-him with a strange reverence. The man sat up. His green eyes opened.
-Hindwood experienced the same sensation of discomfort he had felt, when
-he had first seen them peering at him above the edge of the cliff at
-Seafold.
-
-Varensky had risen. With his peculiarly catlike motion, he was picking a
-path towards them. He held out his hand.
-
-"It was brave of you to come." And then to Santa, "Of you, too. But of
-you it was expected."
-
-Hindwood bristled like a dog. He was distrustful of romantic attitudes.
-"Let's get down to facts. You know as well as I do that it wasn't any
-lofty motive that brought me."
-
-"No?" The eye-brows arched themselves comically. "Then what?"
-
-"Your wife's message."
-
-"Ah! I understand. She didn't tell me. You see, she thinks I'm going to
-get myself killed at last; probably she wants you to help stop me. Not
-that I'm of the least use to her--don't think that. But she's the soul
-of honor. My death would mean her freedom; because of that she'd do
-anything in her power to prevent--"
-
-Hindwood drew himself erect. "These are matters which it's not decent
-for us to discuss."
-
-The narrow shoulders flew up into a shrug. "Why on earth not? When
-things are so, there can be nothing indecent in being frank about them.
-Is it less indecent for you to love my wife than for me to tell that
-I know you love her? There'd be no sense in your loving her unless you
-both hoped--I won't finish what I was going to say; your feelings are
-so sensitive." He rested his hand not unkindly on Hindwood's arm. "Don't
-you realize, my dear fellow, that you're to be congratulated? This
-happening which means catastrophe for countless millions, for you and
-Anna spells opportunity. Be honest. You would not have risked visiting
-me, if you had not realized that."
-
-Hindwood sought for spitefulness in Varensky's tones. All he found was
-the surge of a quiet happiness.
-
-"One would think that I wanted you to die!" he exclaimed blankly.
-
-"Well, don't you? Why shouldn't you?" Varen-sky smiled sadly. "If I
-could love Anna or any other woman the way you do---- But no--to me such
-affections have been denied. I love people only in crowds, by tens of
-thousands and by nations; in my heart there's no room for more human
-passions. I'm God's instrument; the hour of my testing is at hand. These
-mildewed walls inclose my Gethsemane."
-
-He flung his arms apart grotesquely; they formed with his body the shape
-of a cross. The fire of fanaticism blazed in his eyes. "To-morrow I
-shall be crucified." He drew a shuddering breath.
-
-"A born actor!" was Hindwood's silent comment--"An egoist who craves the
-lime-light."
-
-And yet, to his chagrin, he found himself impressed. He was so deeply
-stirred that he dared not trust himself to speak for a moment; when he
-did, it was with calculated coldness.
-
-"You think only of yourself. It's not you alone; even those of us who
-make no claim to be God's instruments, stand more than a sporting
-chance of being crucified, as you call it. There are Santa and Anna, for
-instance; there's the collection of wretched down-and-outs gathered in
-this building; there are the scarecrows I saw in the death train; there
-are all the teeming swarms of human lice crawling westward along a
-thousand roads. In the presence of an agony so widespread, I can't
-muster a tear for your individual tragedy. It's no time for theatrics."
-
-For an instant Varensky's gaunt face quivered. Making an effort, with an
-air of mocking courtliness he mastered his injured pride.
-
-"I was mistaken and I ask your pardon. We all have our plans to make
-ahead. I supposed you were here to ascertain approximately the hour at
-which I proposed to---- Shall we say, depart?"
-
-"You were badly mistaken," Hindwood cut in contemptuously. "I'm here
-to find out if there's any possible way in which we can save the
-situation."
-
-"We!"
-
-Varensky stared. He became rigid as though he were carved from marble.
-"We!" he repeated haughtily.
-
-While Hindwood was searching for a clue to his amazement, his next words
-supplied it.
-
-"I thought it was I who was to save the world."
-
-"Splendid! You have a plan?"
-
-Varensky's eyes filmed over. "Yes. But if I were to tell you, you
-wouldn't understand." Coming out of the clouds, he placed his hand
-tolerantly on Hind-wood's shoulder. "Splendid, you said. So you want me
-to have a plan? Let's sit down and talk more quietly. These people are
-tired--in sleep they forget. So you also have ambitions to become a
-saviour?"
-
-It was like the night in the hut all over again, when they had talked of
-Santa's redemption. There he sat, this discredited dictator, half-saint,
-half-charlatan, his knees drawn sharply up to his chin, his white face
-peering over them. The stale air sighed with the breathing of sleepers.
-A child whimpered and was hugged closer to the breast. In the far corner
-lay the desired woman. Gazing eagerly into both their eyes was the
-oriental countenance of the other woman, for whom neither of them cared.
-
-"A saviour! No. I have no ambitions in that direction. But I have a
-scheme," Hindwood admitted.
-
-"What is it?"
-
-"Bread. I came to sell bread for trade-concessions. In Austria I found
-the Government unwilling to purchase. This morning, when I consult with
-Hungarian officials, I may be met with the same refusal. What's the
-game? Why should men in control of hungry nations refuse my help?
-For six months they've been urging me to come to them. Something's
-happened--the signs of it are everywhere. Trains running westward are
-packed with women. The last sight we had of Vienna was a street-riot and
-people brutally shot down. And again at the frontier there were piles of
-dead--not only men: women and children who had been butchered to prevent
-them from escaping. Budapest's under military law. By some error, Santa
-and I on arrival were mistaken for conspirators in an army plot. We're
-billeted at what appears to be its headquarters--a place jammed with
-carousing officers of supposedly disbanded regiments. What's in the air?
-What is this dreadful news which some people rejoice over, from which
-others flee in panic, but which no one dares to mention? If you can tell
-me, I shall know how to act."
-
-"If I can tell you--! Suppose I were to tell you the worst, how would
-you act then?"
-
-"That depends. I'm no more unselfish than anybody else. At a pinch I
-could forget my own interests and ruin myself for the public welfare.
-Here's how I stand. I have enough food at my command to keep Europe for
-several weeks from actual starvation. If the crisis is genuine, that
-ought to give time for the conscience of the civilized world to be
-aroused. But even if the world's conscience should prove too sluggish, I
-still have a personal fortune which would keep hunger at bay for
-several months. I'm no philanthropist--I should make myself penniless
-reluctantly. I'm in no sense your rival for the honors of Calvary. My
-mission in Europe is to sell at a profit. So if you can do better----"
-
-"What you're telling me," Varensky interrupted, "is that, if by personal
-sacrifice you could avert a world disaster, you'd be willing to give
-something for nothing."
-
-"Precisely. But I must first be convinced that the circumstances warrant
-it."
-
-"There's one point you've overlooked." Varen-sky's green eyes narrowed.
-"Up to the moment you entered this room, I was fully persuaded that I
-was the man on whom the privilege of paying the price must fall. I'd
-coveted the privilege. All my life I'd worked for it. If you rob me of
-it, have you reckoned the cost?"
-
-"In money?"
-
-"In something more valuable. If I live, you can never be Anna's
-husband."
-
-Hindwood hated the man for his subtlety. He was being deliberately
-tempted. He threw a glance toward the sleeping woman in the corner whose
-fate, as well as his own, he was deciding. Close to him, drawing nearer,
-he saw the pleading eyes of Santa. He gave his answer.
-
-"I may be the man who was born for this moment. Play fair by me; tell
-me what's happened." Varensky rocked himself slowly back and forth.
-Suddenly he came to rest.
-
-"I'm the thing that's happened. I'm responsible for everything. I've
-never learnt to let bad alone; in trying to make things better, I make
-them worse. It was my hand that shot down the crowd at Vienna. It was
-I who butchered the women and children at the frontier. I'm the force
-which drives behind the human lice who crawl westward along a thousand
-roads. You think me mad; but listen. Every freedom gained entails a new
-bondage. I helped to free Russia from the Czar; in so doing, I prepared
-the way for Bolshevism. I've fought Bolshevism with my dreams, my
-happiness, with everything I possess. Bolshevism is overthrown. What
-have I produced? Chaos."
-
-"Overthrown! Then that's the meaning of it." Santa had half risen.
-
-Varensky turned his death-white face on her, chilling her enthusiasm.
-"It's collapsed like a pack of cards. With it have vanished the last
-of the restraints. Every Russian's his own master now to choose his own
-ditch in which to perish. We've destroyed a vision that turned out to
-be a nightmare, but we've set up nothing in its stead. We, who are
-idealists, have worked the final disillusion. We've made two hundred
-millions hopeless. They're fleeing from the emptiness. The contagion of
-their despair is spreading. You saw its results in Vienna. It runs
-ahead of them; they're already on the march. They've broken into Poland.
-They're drawing nearer. How to stop them----?"
-
-Hindwood's lips had squared themselves. "I can stop them. My food-trains
-will be here by tomorrow. What hungry men need is not political
-programs, but bread." Then he added thoughtfully, "I can stop them, if
-I'm not prevented. There's some one who's playing a different game; he's
-some one who wants the world to starve. That's what Austria's refusal
-meant; that's the meaning of these secret signs of rejoicing. He's
-bigger than any nation. Who is he?"
-
-Varensky shook his head. "There was a man." He looked knowingly at
-Santa. "He was drowned."
-
-Hindwood jumped to his feet as though there was no time to be lost. "I'm
-going to find out. I have an appointment with the Governor of Hungary.
-If he rejects my offer, I shall demand----"
-
-"And if he refuses----?"
-
-"I shall play my winning-card. Don't ask me what it is. But if I play
-it, I shall need your help. You've talked of crucifixion: I may provide
-you with the chance. How many of these----?" He pointed to the sleeping
-outcasts.
-
-Varensky's eyes were shining. "I've four hundred: three hundred veterans
-of Denikin's and Kolchak's armies and a hundred girl-soldiers of the
-Battalions of Death."
-
-"Have them warned."
-
-As he turned on his heel, he saw that Anna had wakened. She cried out
-after him. He dared not face her. Leaping down the stairs, he went at a
-run across the courtyard. It was only when the door into the street had
-closed behind him, that he realized that Santa was panting at his elbow.
-
-
-VI
-
-
-Mists were clearing. The sun had emerged fiery above a mountain-range
-of clouds. As they hurried in search of their hotel, they caught
-glimpses of the Danube, spanned by many bridges, and on the further bank
-the palace-crowned heights of Buda. The ancient city looked imperially
-beautiful. There was a touch of the East about it, a lavishness and
-rose-tinted whiteness. Its quays and pavements shone wet, as though
-they had been daubed with lacquer. It seemed incredible that behind its
-gold-splashed walls the ghosts of hunger gathered.
-
-During their absence from the Ritz, a transformation had been effected.
-All signs of disorder had been banished. In place of the untimely
-Bacchanalians, stiff-bosomed waiters stood guard over neat tables with
-a solicitous air which was bewilderingly normal. Even the breakfast menu
-gave the lie to starvation.
-
-They took their seats in silence, eating without interest whatever was
-set before them. Hindwood's sensations were those of a man who has given
-way to his emotions at a theatre. It was as though the lights had
-gone up, shaming him in public. There had been nothing to warrant his
-surrender to sentiment. He totaled up the accumulated incentives: he
-had witnessed a street-riot, people slain at the frontier, the hideous
-contrast between the death train and dancing--and last of all Varensky.
-But these things in themselves constituted no argument; the cause that
-lay behind them was still conjectural. As for Varensky, whatever he had
-said was unreliable. His wish was parent to his thought. He was a man
-born to stir up turbulences, which he considered it his mission to
-pacify. He was dangerous as a forest-fire: one spark of his wild
-idealism made the whole world lurid. In the breath of adversity he
-became a sheet of flame, destructive and self-destroying. His goal was
-the vanishing-point, in the No Man's Land between desire and things
-attainable.
-
-Hindwood writhed at remembering the ease with which his judgment had
-been unseated. In his weakness he had given a promise, which it would
-be folly to fulfill and dishonorable to withdraw. He glanced across at
-Santa. How was she taking this return to normality?
-
-She met his eyes with passionate adoration. "It was god-like of you."
-
-He pretended ignorance. "What?"
-
-"Your self-denial. You've given up everything--Anna, ambition,
-money--all the things you worship."
-
-He assumed a judicial expression. "Perhaps not. It mayn't be necessary."
-
-"But it will."
-
-"If it is," he said, "I shall stick to my contract. But I've reason to
-believe we've exaggerated."
-
-"Would to God we had!"
-
-Her fervor disturbed him. He leaned across the table. "You don't mean
-to tell me you accept this bogey story about starving millions marching?
-There's a sense of security this morning. Surely you must have felt it?"
-
-She shook her head. "We've had a meal--that's all. Within a mile from
-here I could show you a hospital where five hundred babies sit shivering
-like monkeys. They're wrapped in paper; they've never known what it was
-not to be hungry from the day they were born. I could take you to the
-workmen's quarter, where naked men and women would squirm at your
-feet like dogs; they're too weak to walk. I could lead you past the
-bread-lines, already forming----"
-
-He stayed her by covering her hand. "I'm not denying it. When countries
-make wars they have to pay penalties."
-
-The storm that was brewing betrayed itself in her eyes. "What are you
-denying?"
-
-"Don't let's make a scene," he urged. "My promise holds if I find that
-circumstances warrant it. In a little while I'm seeing the Governor of
-Hungary; after that I'll be sure. While I'm gone, I have one request to
-make of you: keep your room and talk to nobody."
-
-She rose from the table in suppressed defiance.
-
-"Why?"
-
-"For your own safety. It was lucky I slept across your threshold last
-night. Your door was tried."
-
-Her smile accused him. "By whom?"
-
-"If I'm not mistaken, by the man who afterwards tracked us through the
-fog."
-
-She turned away as though she were finished with him. When she found
-that he was following, she delivered a parting shot. "You told me this
-to frighten me. Did you think you could make me your accomplice in
-cowardice?"
-
-
-VII
-
-
-So these were the rewards of knight-errantry! In his anger he was
-glad to be rid of her. He was free at last. She'd been nothing but an
-embarrassment. If she were to attempt a reconciliation, he would turn
-his back on her. It wasn't likely that he'd put his neck into the same
-noose twice.
-
-Little by little from resenting her, he began to suspect her. Had she
-been using him as a cat's-paw in a deeper game? Every man with whom she
-had ever associated, she had destroyed; could she be expected, to show
-more mercy to a man by whom she had been rejected? Her husband's words
-came back: "When she has added you to her list of victims, if she gives
-you time before she kills you, remember that I warned you."
-
-Everything to do with her became distorted when interpreted in the light
-of treachery. The pathos of her unrequited affection had been a mask;
-her humanitarianism had been a cloak for her designs. When he retraced
-his relations with her, it seemed glaringly probable that from the start
-she had been the agent of his financial rivals, placed by them on board
-the _Ryndam_ with the definite intention of accomplishing his ruin.
-Except for her final error in tactics, she would have attained her
-object. He had escaped by the narrowest of margins.
-
-But the other people who had come upon the scene, where did they stand?
-Were they her puppets, jumping whichever way she pulled the wires,
-or were they her active co-conspirators? Varensky and the Little
-Grandmother were undoubtedly her puppets; she employed their enthusiasms
-to serve her purposes. Anna was her victim--a woman wronged and cheated,
-infinitely dear to him and tragic. It was Captain Lajos who troubled
-him. The more he thought about him, the more certain he became that the
-Captain and Santa were hand in glove. The farce which they had enacted
-on the train had been prearranged with a view to intimidating him. His
-most unnerving information, concerning the menace of starving millions,
-had come from the Captain. And there was a further fact, which had been
-disquieting him all morning: it was Captain Lajos who had tried Santa's
-door last night.
-
-What did they think to gain by their plotting? Having pondered the
-conundrum, he decided that their object was to thwart his schemes for
-grasping world-power, and that the means they had chosen were to compel
-him to give for nothing the hoards of food which he had intended that
-Europe should buy.
-
-Well aware that this theory was far from covering all the facts, he was
-still feeling his way through a quagmire of surmise, when a visitor was
-announced. In the foyer he found an officer, resplendently uniformed,
-waiting to escort him to his audience at the Royal Palace. He
-was whizzed away in a handsome car. As he traveled, his companion
-entertained him with anecdotes, grimly humorous, of Bela Kun's reign of
-terror.
-
-"Experiments of that sort soon disprove themselves," he said cheerfully.
-"We live through them and go on again."
-
-"And your country is going on again?" Hindwood inquired.
-
-"Emphatically. Signs of revival are already apparent."
-
-"But what about Russia? How's revival possible without security?"
-
-The officer laughed carelessly. "I catch your meaning; you've heard this
-latest about Bolshevism's downfall. In our part of the world we pay
-no heed to rumors; they're inventions of political opportunists or of
-gamblers in the international exchange. Even if this latest is true,
-it's the best thing that could have happened."
-
-Hindwood twisted in his seat that he might lose nothing of his
-companion's expression. "The best thing in the long run--that's granted.
-But meanwhile, because of the breakdown in organization, over a hundred
-million Russians are likely to die."
-
-Again the officer laughed, stretching his long legs. "The fittest will
-survive. One has to die somehow. The last war was fought because the
-world was too crowded. Famine's nature's cure for overpopulation."
-
-The remark sounded singularly ill-timed, coming from a man whose country
-was also starving. Hindwood frowned. "A heartless cure and, thank
-goodness, not the only one."
-
-"Not more heartless than civilized society's, which encourages armed
-nations to strangle each other with every filthy invention of science.
-When you forbid Nature to correct matters in her own way, sooner or
-later you find yourself with a war on your hands. The matter's very
-simple: so many mouths to fill and so many rations. When the mouths are
-in excess of the rations, some one has to go short. The people who are
-selected to go short can either drop in their tracks or fight. If they
-fight and win, the result's the same--some one else has to go without.
-The adjustment's automatic."
-
-"The thought of death," Hindwood suggested quietly, "especially of other
-people's death, doesn't seem to trouble you."
-
-"That's natural. Killing and dying are my trade."
-
-Brutal as was the point of view, after Santa's sentimental fallacies,
-there was something honest and direct about these bald assertions.
-
-Hindwood spoke again. "What applies to Russia, applies equally to
-Hungary. My errand at the Palace is to offer sufficient food to keep
-your country alive. According to your theory, I'm interfering with
-Nature's laws. I'm doing something economically immoral. I ought to
-leave you to your fate."
-
-To his amazement he was met with a polite concurrence. "That's how I
-regard it."
-
-It was impossible to credit the man's sincerity. Hindwood glanced aside,
-irritated and shocked. He was seeking a motive for such disinterested
-frankness. There was nothing more to say.
-
-He had been so much absorbed in the conversation that he had not noticed
-their direction. They were skimming high above the Danube, crossing a
-bridge that spanned the sunlit gulf in giant strides. Behind lay Pest,
-modern as a second Paris; in front lay Buda, ancient and scarcely
-Christian, still bearing the marks of its Turkish occupation. On
-reaching the further bank, the ascent to the Palace begun to climb.
-
-It was just as they were reaching the top that Hindwood was for a second
-time startled by the ghost of memory. Peering down on him from the
-ramparts, with its head between its paws, was a snow-white Russian
-wolf-hound. The next moment they had passed beneath an arch, between
-saluting sentries, and had halted in the Palace-yard.
-
-
-VIII
-
-
-The Yard was an immobile sea of faces. As far as eye could reach,
-soldiers were drawn up in close formation. It was clear that this was
-no ceremonial parade. The men were in full marching order; their
-field-kitchens were smoking in the background. They had the look of
-troops equipped for action, expecting to take the offensive at any
-moment. This much he saw as he was hurried into the Palace, before the
-great doors clanged behind him.
-
-He found himself on the threshold of a magnificence that he had not
-imagined existed. Everywhere his eyes rested, they encountered riches
-accumulated through the centuries. Pictures and tapestries gazed down on
-him from the walls, chronicling the glory of the bygone Hapsburgs. Suits
-of mail, gold-inlaid and gem-studded, stood like knights of old, leaning
-on their swords. He followed his escort up a marble staircase, along
-endless corridors, from which doors opened into silent apartments,
-giving yet fresh vistas of royal splendors.
-
-At last, in the far distance, the passage was blocked by a gigantic
-figure that might have escaped from Grand Opera; it stood so stiff
-and motionless that he mistook it for a wax-work. It was garbed as a
-halberdier, in parti-colored hose and shining armor. Only when the eyes
-moved did he realize that he was gazing at one of the Palace-guards.
-When the password had been given, they were allowed to slip behind
-a curtain. In the ante-room he was told to wait. His escort vanished
-through the inner-doors. A moment later the doors reopened and his
-escort beckoned.
-
-He was aware of a blaze of light, lofty walls, tall windows, a
-tapestried room ornately furnished and a treacherously polished expanse
-of floor. A man was rising from behind an ormolu table. He was a man
-utterly simple and modern--the last man one would have expected to find
-in the pomp of medieval surroundings. His face was clean-shaven, bluff
-and wind-tanned. In his navy-blue suit he looked more like a yachtsman
-than the Governor of a State.
-
-He was approaching with his hand outstretched. "I couldn't do less than
-receive you," he was saying.
-
-The words, though spoken pleasantly, sounded like a dismissal.
-
-"Perhaps your Excellency has forgotten the purpose of my errand?"
-
-"Not in the least. Let's sit down; we can talk more informally. The
-trouble is that you've come too late. Crises as acute as ours have a
-knack of settling themselves."
-
-Hindwood accepted a cigarette that was proffered. He took his time
-while he lit it. "Your solution is mustering in the Palace-yard. My
-food-supplies are no longer needed. Is that what you intend me to
-understand?"
-
-"Exactly."
-
-"Your Excellency spoke just now of crises settling themselves. Did you
-mean that so many of your countrymen have died that at last there's
-sufficient food to go round?"
-
-"Far from it. Our shortage is greater than ever."
-
-"I judged as much." Hindwood tapped his ash casually. "I only arrived
-last night, but in the time I've been in Budapest I've seen the
-death-train, the bread-lines, the utter destitution. I've reason to
-believe that Bolshevism has collapsed and that millions of outcast
-Russians are marching. They're moving westward."
-
-He paused, himself skeptical of the preposterous assertion he was about
-to make. Then he remembered the words he had learnt from Captain Lajos
-and repeated them like a lesson.
-
-"They're sweeping westward like a pestilence. They're loping like gaunt
-wolves. They're drawing nearer, like Death swinging his scythe. Poland
-will go down before them first. Its famished people will join them. Your
-turn will come next. The march will never halt till the empty bellies
-have been filled. They can't be filled till the whole of Europe has
-been swamped by revolution, unless----" He paused again, waiting for
-encouragement. When the steady gray eyes still regarded him attentively,
-he continued, "Unless I fill them."
-
-"Or unless," said his Excellency like a man commenting on the weather,
-"I destroy them."
-
-There was a deep quiet. So Varensky had been a true prophet. It was the
-end of the world they were discussing--the end of truth, justice, mercy,
-everything that was kind.
-
-Across the silence a bugle-call spurted like a stream of blood.
-
-"You see my position?" his Excellency resumed reasonably. "If I buy from
-you, I prolong the agony; worse still, I run my country further into
-debt. If I give the call to arms, many of us will die; but it's better
-to die fighting than from hunger. Besides, in the topsy-turvydom of war,
-who knows, we may find ourselves arrayed on the winning side." Hindwood
-was too stunned to think quickly. He was still refusing to believe the
-worst. "I miss your point. Would your Excellency mind explaining?"
-
-"My point's simple enough. The condition of Hungary and of the whole of
-Central Europe is due to two causes: the first that we made a world-war;
-the second that we lost it. The victors had a right to exact a penalty,
-but look at what they've done. We were exhausted; nevertheless, if
-they'd told us what we owed them, we'd have paid them. Instead of
-that, they cloaked revenge with idealism. They constituted themselves
-evangelists, fore-ordained to reform us. With their gospel of
-self-determination, they gave every racial hostility within our borders
-a voice. They carved us up into bickering factions, which they called
-nations, and bestowed on them the power to make themselves annoying
-behind new frontiers. They dipped their hands into our national
-resources and made gifts to their favorites. Transylvania was our
-granary; it went to Rumania. Bohemia was our coal-supply; the Czechs
-have it, Hungary is no longer self-supporting. We have our factories,
-but no fuel to run them; our skilled workmen, but no means of employing
-them. On every side we're fenced in by mushroom democracies drawing
-sustenance from what was once our body. The wrong they have done us
-is the motive of their hate. We European countries fall into three
-categories: the robbers, the receivers of stolen goods and the pillaged.
-There's no intercourse between us; confidence is at an end. Our currency
-has become worthless as the paper on which it's printed. There's no flow
-of trade. We each have too much of one commodity and none whatsoever of
-others--too many factories here, too much wheat there, too much coal in
-another place. We're rival storekeepers, overstocked in certain lines,
-who refuse to take down our shutters. If we could forget our quarrels
-and club together, we'd have all the means of life. We deserve our
-fate, you'll say. But no--it was the Allies' surgeons who carved us into
-impotence and on top of that imposed indemnities. We have nothing to
-eat, so we prefer to fight."
-
-"But what do you gain by it?"
-
-His Excellency smiled. "Everything or nothing. We can't be worse off.
-The Russian menace may prove to be our salvation. The Red Terror has
-vanished; the Famine Terror has taken its place. If the starving hordes
-pouring westwards aren't halted, civilization will be blotted out by
-savagery. And who's to halt them? Not the Allies. Their common people
-are rebellious; they know that in the last war they were as much cheated
-and exploited as any of the enemy whom they routed. And not their
-politicians and profiteers; they're too bloated with their spoils. It's
-the story of Rome repeating itself. The obesity which follows victory
-has conquered the conquerors. Their fighting days are ended; they'll
-have to hire mercenaries. The only mercenaries available are the nations
-they have trampled. Hungary holds herself for hire at a price."
-
-"What price?"
-
-"The restoration of her old frontiers."
-
-Hindwood spoke eagerly. "No one shall die. We've had enough of dying. I
-have a better solution--bread. My food-trains should be arriving tonight
-or to-morrow. I wired for them before I left Vienna. I'll build a wall
-of bread from the Black Sea to the Baltic."
-
-"And who'll pay you?"
-
-"No one."
-
-The answer had been totally unexpected. His Excellency glanced sharply
-across his shoulder as though seeking advice. Hindwood followed his
-direction and saw to his amazement that the tapestry, hanging behind the
-ormolu table, was agitated. Throughout the interview an unseen audience
-had been present. His Excellency turned back.
-
-"You shall neither give nor sell. I may admire your humanity, but in
-Hungary I forbid you to build what you so picturesquely call your wall
-of bread. Austria, as I know, has already refused you; in Poland you
-will receive the same answer. Things have advanced too far for there
-to be any harm in telling you; moreover, I owe it to you to be frank.
-I represent a class which the democracy of the Allies has totally
-disinherited--the class of the landed gentry and the old nobility.
-However matters might improve in our respective countries, our lot would
-be in no way benefited. The Peace of the Allies uprooted aristocracy
-and planted in its stead a raw Republicanism. The estates of men like
-myself, whether Austrian, Polish, Russian or Hungarian, have been in
-our families for centuries. They were grants from Kings for loyalty
-and services. Now that our Kings have been sent into exile, our entire
-status is in jeopardy. Our rank and privileges have become a jest.
-To-morrow or the next day, where it has not happened already, we shall
-join our Kings in banishment; our wealth will be confiscated. The excuse
-of a new war is the chance of European Monarchists. Banded together, we
-may snatch back our authority and set up the thrones which the Allies
-have toppled. So long as the people starve, they will follow us.
-Monarchy is the symbol of their lost contentment; they'll fight for
-it if we make its restoration their battle-cry. But if once we were to
-allow you to give them bread----"
-
-Hindwood sprang to his feet. The time had come to play his winning-card.
-"They would lay down their arms," he cried triumphantly. "They shall lay
-them down. By to-morrow they shall be fed."
-
-Again the tapestry rustled. For a moment it seemed that some one was
-about to disclose himself. Then all grew quiet.
-
-"I have given you your answer," said his Excellency.
-
-Hindwood laughed. "And I can force your hand. I shall appeal to the
-people over your head."
-
-Without further ceremony, he swung round on his heel and departed.
-
-On regaining the hotel he went in search of Santa. She was not there.
-He betook himself to her room to await her coming. One hour, two hours
-slipped by. He began to be anxious. In the appearance of the room there
-was nothing to distress him; all her belongings were intact. When he
-made inquiries of the hotel staff, they professed entire ignorance of
-her whereabouts.
-
-Apart from the concern he felt for her safety, she was utterly essential
-to his plans. It was necessary that he should get in touch with
-Varensky; without Varensky and his four hundred veterans he was
-helpless. When his food-trains arrived, he would need them. He made
-repeated efforts to rediscover the mildewed barracks; every time he
-missed his direction. For fear of spies, he did not dare to ask; he
-remembered Santa's warning, that to be seen with Varensky meant death.
-Day faded. Darkness fell. She had not returned.
-
-It was nearing midnight when word reached him that the first of his
-trains was in the freight-yard. It had been given the right of way from
-Holland and had been rushed straight through under an armed guard. He
-was powerless to turn the information to account. Wearied with anxiety,
-he had begun to prepare for bed, when, without knocking, the door was
-burst open. Captain Lajos entered. His face was haggard. He was fierce
-and breathless.
-
-"You've heard?"
-
-"I've heard nothing."
-
-"She's been captured."
-
-"By whom?"
-
-"Prince Rogovich."
-
-Hindwood clapped his hand to his forehead. Either he or this man was
-mad.
-
-"It's impossible. Rogovich is dead."
-
-"And I tell you he's at the Palace. He was there behind the tapestry
-this morning. She's with him now and he's torturing her."
-
-"Then why are you here, if you care for her so much?"
-
-"That you may help me rescue her."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER THE EIGHTH--THE VANISHING POINT
-
-
-I
-
-
-SPURRED into haste by the Captain's air of calamity. Hindwood had
-commenced to dress. During the few minutes that it took him to hurry
-into his clothes he thought furiously: with the result that by the time
-he was clad for departure, he seated himself obstinately on the edge
-of the bed. Meanwhile, in the belief that he was being followed, the
-Captain had led the way into the passage. He had now returned and stood
-filling the doorway, a turbulent figure in his gorgeous uniform of the
-Royal Hussars.
-
-"There's no time to lose." he rapped out.
-
-Hindwood eyed him calmly. "If you were sent to execute me, you can do it
-here as conveniently as anywhere else."
-
-The sheer amazement which greeted this accusation seemed to disprove its
-accuracy. The Captain answered scornfully:
-
-"What devil of contrariness has put that thought into your head? If my
-errand were known, it would be I who would be executed. She's in love
-with you--that's why I sought you. It's the fact that you're my rival in
-her affections that makes you the one man in Budapest whom I can trust.
-There'll be bloodshed----"
-
-"Go slower," Hindwood interrupted. "Put yourself in my place. You know
-too much--far more than seems healthy. You know that this morning when I
-was with the Governor, there was an unseen listener behind the tapestry.
-You assert, that he was a man whom all the world believes to be dead. If
-you'll think back to our journey from Calais, you'll remember that
-the reason for his having been murdered formed your chief topic of
-conversation. Seeing that you know so much, you're probably aware that
-my interview with the Governor ended in a threat. To make that threat
-effective, the cooperation of the woman whom you first supposed to be
-my wife and afterwards discovered to be my secretary is absolutely
-necessary. On my return from the Palace she had vanished. Here again,
-you pretend to know more than I do; at close on midnight you come
-bursting into my room, demanding that I accompany you to her rescue."
-
-The Captain stared dully. "Every second counts. What is it that you wish
-me to tell?"
-
-"Why you've hung on my trail from Calais until now."
-
-"Eh!" His expression became embarrassed; then he raised his head with a
-fearless gesture. "I see what you're driving at. I acknowledge that my
-movements are open to misinterpretation. But I didn't follow you; it
-was she whom I followed. As I told you in our first conversation, I was
-returning from England where I'd been sent by my Government to intercept
-Prince Rogovich with important despatches. The moment I clapped my
-eyes on your traveling companion, I recognized in her a startling
-resemblance; it was to a woman I had adored. She was far beyond me--the
-mistress of archdukes and for a brief while of an emperor. The nearest
-I ever came to touching her was when I was swept by her train at Court
-functions." He paused dramatically. "During the war she was shot by the
-enemies of my country. Infamous things were said of her. If they were
-true, they would make no difference to my love. No difference, do you
-understand?" Again he paused. "What else?"
-
-Hindwood narrowed his eyes. "Each time I've met you, you've harped on
-the same theme--Prince Rogovich. Up to now I've not thought it necessary
-to tell you: I knew this Prince Rogovich. Besides myself, there was
-probably only one other person who spoke with him before his end. What
-makes you so certain that it was a man, presumed to have been drowned
-in the English Channel, who spied on me this morning from behind the
-tapestry?"
-
-"I was beside him. I'm his bodyguard--if you like, his secretary. I've
-just come from him. Can you have stronger proof than that?" Suddenly
-the Captain's patience broke down. "How many more questions? God knows
-what's happening."
-
-Hindwood had risen. "There are several. Why did he disappear?"
-
-"He has not said."
-
-"What makes you require my help to rescue her?"
-
-"He may kill me. It's not likely he'll kill both of us."
-
-"What's his motive?" Hindwood spoke more slowly. All his suspicion was
-emphasized in his words. "What's his motive for kidnaping this woman who
-resembles----"
-
-"How can I tell?" The Captain was desperate. "We talk and talk while
-time passes. I suppose his interest is the same in this woman as in all
-women. Perhaps he was the discarded lover of that other woman, and, like
-myself, has noticed the resemblance."
-
-Hindwood picked up his hat. "I'm coming."
-
-"Are you armed?"
-
-"Not in your sense. I shall fight with a different sort of weapon."
-
-
-II
-
-
-At the door a closed vehicle was standing. To Hindwood it seemed the
-one that had flashed by him on the previous evening. He glanced between
-the wheels; there was no Russian wolf-hound. Even before he was seated,
-the lash had been laid across the horses' backs. The next moment they
-were galloping down the gloomy street. Leaning from the window, the
-Captain was urging the coachman to drive faster.
-
-When the pace had settled to a rapid trot, Hind-wood broke the silence.
-
-"You're an Hungarian officer; Prince Rogovich is a Polish statesman.
-You tell me you're his secretary. What's a Polish statesman doing in the
-Royal Palace, directing Hungary's affairs?"
-
-"It isn't Hungary's affairs that he's directing; it's the campaign
-against Democracy. The present crisis has made Budapest the jumping-off
-point for the offensive which the Monarchists have been waiting to
-launch. The Monarchists are men of every country, who have sunk their
-nationalities and made a common cause."
-
-"And you--are you a Monarchist?"
-
-His reply came muffled. "I was. To-night I'm a traitor."
-
-The horses, thrown sharply back on their haunches, swerved toward the
-pavement; the carriage jerked to a halt. Almost brushing the wheels in
-the narrow street, a column of soldiers shuffled past. Their rifles
-were slung at all angles. Their shoulders were bowed beneath their
-heavy packs. They crawled weakly, more like stragglers retreating than
-storm-troops advancing. Even in the darkness their bones showed pointed
-and their faces lean with famine.
-
-"Reservists," the Captain explained shortly. "Mobilization has begun."
-
-Hindwood strained through the gloom, touching his arm excitedly.
-"Starving men being sent to kill men who are more starving. You've
-spoken of a woman you adored--a woman who was shot for hideous
-treacheries. Her treacheries were committed to prevent just such crimes
-as that. Don't interrupt me--not yet. You've expected me to believe an
-impossible story: that a man can return from the dead. If I were to tell
-you an equally improbable story, what difference would it make to your
-love? If I were to tell you that the resemblance was not mistaken
-and that the woman at the Palace is the same as she who was reported
-executed in the woods of Vincennes?"
-
-The last of the column had slouched into the blackness. The horses leapt
-forward impatiently.
-
-The question was repeated. "What difference?"
-
-The Captain's voice burst from him. "God forgive me--none."
-
-Neither of them dared to trust the other. Their respite was growing
-shorter. They had crossed the bridge above the Danube. In a moment the
-ascent to the Palace would commence. It was Hindwood who decided on
-boldness. If he were walking into an ambush, he could not make matters
-worse.
-
-He said, "Weapons will be useless. Only to kill the Prince won't save
-her. If we manage to escape from the Palace, the streets are full of
-armed men. We should only rescue her to die with her. I have a plan.
-Do you know the barracks of the Russian refugees? If I were to write a
-note, would you guarantee to have it delivered?"
-
-By the light of matches held by the Captain, he scrawled rapidly. The
-last sentence read, "If you have not heard from me again by 2 A. M.,
-consider that the worst has happened and carry out these instructions."
-He addressed the note to, "_The Husband of Anna_."
-
-"Have it entrusted to a man who cannot read English." The Captain
-extinguished the final match.
-
-"I shall send it by the driver of this carriage."
-
-
-III
-
-
-They had alighted some distance short of the gateway where the sentries
-would be on guard. The message for Varensky had been handed over. The
-horses had been wheeled about; save for their trotting growing fainter
-down the slope, the night was without a sound. The moon shone fitfully.
-Stars were obscured. The city out of which they had climbed lay
-pulseless in an unillumined pit of blackness. The Palace, piled high
-above them, loomed sepulchral.
-
-The Captain groped his way beneath the wall of the ramparts, searching
-for something which at last he found. It pushed inwards at his touch.
-The door closed behind them.
-
-In the intenser darkness Hindwood stretched out his hands. They
-encountered the rough surface of clammy masonry. He was in some sort of
-a tunnel. The floor sloped gradually upwards. The atmosphere smelt dank.
-He spoke. Getting no answer, he held his breath. Going away from him he
-heard the stealthy hurrying of the Captain's footfall. Rather than be
-left, perhaps to be forgotten, he started forward at a blundering run.
-He came to steps. He was prepared to be attacked. It might be here that
-he would be hurled back. He climbed them almost on all fours, steadying
-himself with his hands. It seemed to him that he had been ascending for
-hours, when he heard footsteps returning. A match was struck; he saw the
-Captain staring down at him.
-
-"We're in time." The match went out.
-
-"Catch hold of me. Tread softly."
-
-They passed through another door. The air was growing warmer. It was
-evident that they were traversing a secret passage which wound within
-the Palace walls. At a turn they heard a muttering of voices. The
-Captain whispered, "Do nothing till I give the word."
-
-They approached more cautiously to where a needle of light stabbed the
-darkness. Hindwood caught the fragrance of tobacco smoke. As he stooped
-to the spy-hole, a purring voice commenced speaking almost at his elbow,
-"My dear lady, you're mine--a fact which you don't seem to realize. I
-have only to press this button, which summons my attendants; I can snuff
-out your life with as little effort as I flick this ash."
-
-He found himself peering into a room, furnished with oriental
-lavishness. He had a confused glimpse of beaten brass-work, shaded
-lamps, low tables, cushions piled about in place of chairs. It was a
-blaze of color. At the far end was a gilded throne and bound to it was
-Santa. Her hands were tightly corded. Her ankles were lashed so that she
-could not stir. Her face was pale as ivory. Only her eyes seemed alive;
-they flashed indomitably. Pacing up and down, never shifting his gaze
-from hers, was the black-bearded man who had disappeared from the
-_Ryndam_.
-
-She spoke defiantly. "Summon your attendants. Do you think I fear
-death?"
-
-"I know you don't, dear lady. That's why I've invented a more subtle
-revenge. If I were an ordinary man, I should detest the very sight of
-you; whereas, so magnanimous am I, that your attempt to murder me
-has added a novel piquancy to your fascination. I have been too much
-loved--too spontaneously, too adoringly. You afford me a contrast. I
-intend to keep you caged like a lioness. The hatred in your eyes will
-spur my affection. Always, even when I caress you, I shall have to be
-on my guard. Our courtship will be a perpetual adventure. The goal of
-desire will be forever out of grasp, yet forever within handstretch."
-
-He stroked his black beard thoughtfully. "With you I shall never know
-satiety. This continual hoping will keep me young. You, my dear, will
-be my secret source of romance. Every day I shall take you down, as one
-takes down a volume, and turn your latest pages which I alone may scan."
-
-She strained at her bonds. "It will be no romance."
-
-He smiled with terrifying quietness.
-
-"Your value to me," he continued in his purring voice, "is that you've
-cost me so much. Ugh! Every time I look at you I remember how it felt
-when I sank and sank. When I rose above the waves, I saw your lights,
-streaking like a golden snake into the blackness. I struck out after you
-hopelessly. I shouted. Then I found myself alone, with no one to
-take pity on me and not one chance in a million of being rescued. The
-millionth chance arrived." He stooped at her feet, kissing her tortured
-hands. "And here we are met, under these auspicious circumstances,
-carrying on this pleasant conversation. What were you doing while I
-was drowning? Making love beneath the stars to your infatuated
-American--leaning on his arm, perhaps, warmly wrapped in your sables?
-And I was so cold! Did you give me a thought, I wonder?"
-
-She stared past him like a woman frozen. "Let me know the worst."
-
-Tapping her cheek with pretended kindness, he resumed his pacing.
-
-"Why the worst? Is that flattering, when I've spoken of our courtship?
-We're well matched in wickedness, if in nothing else. You're wanted for
-the scaffold, whereas I should have been hung long ago if I'd received
-my deserts. I'd be interested to know what you'd do, if you were in my
-place. How much mercy would you show me? You must own that merely to
-kill a person who has tried to drown you is too brief a punishment. The
-punishment I've planned for you is one that'll make you pray every hour
-for extinction. For a woman who has dispensed annihilation so lavishly
-I can think of nothing more just than that, when her own life has become
-intolerable, she should be refused the boon of death."
-
-She spoke humbly. "There's nothing too bad that you can do to me. But
-I'm not the woman who tried to murder you. I'm changed. I've learnt
-something. I learnt it from a man."
-
-He bowed towards her mockingly. "Your American?"
-
-"My American, who can never be mine. I've learnt that even when we don't
-acknowledge Him, there's a God in the world who acts through us. It was
-He who saved me from the woods of Vincennes. It was He who prevented you
-from drowning. He had some purpose--a divine moment for which He waited.
-That purpose has yet to be accomplished. Who are you or I----?"
-
-"I can tell you who you are," he snapped: "a dancing-woman, with a price
-upon your head. As for myself," his pale face flooded with a strangely
-Satanic beauty, "it would puzzle the wisest man to say who I am.
-To-night I am Prince Rogovich; tomorrow I may be Emperor. My puppets are
-mustering. By dawn they'll be marching. They're hungry; victory to them
-means bread."
-
-"But if one were to feed them--?"
-
-"Your American again!" He gazed down on her, showing his white teeth
-and laughing. "What faith you have in the man! If your American is God's
-unaccomplished purpose, then God and all His angels are thwarted. The
-messenger I have sent to execute him will not fail; he has good reason
-to hate him. He's his rival for your affections. You were the bribe I
-offered him. You may rest assured the Captain's work will be done well.
-His turn comes next."
-
-Jerking back her head, he stooped lower, drinking in her despair.
-"Millionth chances come once, if then. Yours came at Vincennes. Cease
-hoping. Your American is----"
-
-"It's a lie."
-
-Hindwood felt himself flung violently back. The wall turned inwards.
-There was a report--then silence.
-
-
-IV
-
-
-The Prince had pitched forward with his head in Santa's lap. His hands
-were clawing at her gown. As he struggled, he stiffened and slid back,
-till he lay across her feet, grinning up at her. The Captain, his
-revolver still smoking in his hand, threw himself to his knees, feeling
-for his victim's heart. He spoke dully.
-
-"The dream of Monarchy is ended."
-
-The quietness was broken by a distant clamor. Momentarily it gathered
-volume and drew nearer.
-
-Throughout the Palace, which had seemed so wrapt in sleep, feet
-were running. From the Palace-yard rose the clatter of arms and the
-impatience of orders being shouted. On the door of the chamber an
-importunate tapping had commenced.
-
-Hindwood looked up in the midst of freeing Santa. "They'll beat in the
-panels. Find out what they want."
-
-The Captain dragged himself to the door which he did not dare to open. A
-rapid exchange of Hungarian followed. As Santa tottered to her feet with
-the last cord severed, the Captain tiptoed back.
-
-"Escape by the passage. The shot was heard. They insist on seeing Prince
-Rogovich."
-
-"To be butchered in the streets! I guess not." Hindwood shook his head.
-"Escape does not lie in that direction. They shall see _him_. In ten
-minutes. At the window. Tell them."
-
-The Captain stood aghast, pointing down at the glazing eyes of the man
-he had murdered. "They can't."
-
-"I say they can."
-
-The answer was delivered. The tapping ceased abruptly.
-
-"Hang on to your nerves." Hindwood crouched above the body, dragging it
-into a sitting posture. "We've exactly ten minutes to make it look like
-a man who hopes to become an emperor. The peace of the world may depend
-on it." He turned to the Captain. "You who were his bodyguard, how would
-he have dressed if his ambition had been granted?"
-
-Too pale for speech, the Captain moved towards a chest; with trembling
-hands he drew forth a purple robe, ermine-lined and gold-woven with
-mythical beasts of heraldry. Dipping deeper, he laid beside it a scepter
-and an iron crown of twisted laurels.
-
-Hindwood smiled grimly. "So the scene had been rehearsed! How do these
-things go? You must help me put them on him."
-
-When the Prince had been arrayed, "Now the throne," he ordered. "It'll
-take the three of us to move it."
-
-The gilded throne had been hauled from its alcove, so as to face the
-window. The dead man, in the tinsel of his dreams, had been seated on
-it. He was bound, to prevent him from lolling--bound with the cords with
-which he himself had secured Santa. His gold-encrusted robe was spread
-about him. Across his knees, with his right hand resting on it, was the
-scepter. On his head was the iron crown of laurels.
-
-"The lamps! Place them at his feet. Switch on all the lights, then
-vanish."
-
-The curtains were flung back. A dazzling shaft pierced the outer
-darkness. There was a breathless silence as of worship; a superstitious
-rustling; a deafening acclamation, which echoed and roared about the
-Palace-yard.
-
-[Illustration: 0338]
-
-It continued unabated for a full five minutes. It sagged and sank. Again
-it mounted. Then it paused expectant. It was for all the world like a
-triumph at the opera, when a singer only bows and an encore is demanded.
-It recommenced. This time there was a note of anger.
-
-The dead man grinned down at the applauding mob. He gave no sign to
-these men, prepared to die for him. Slowly it seemed to dawn on them
-that he did not care--that he had never cared for their wounds and
-hunger; that for men of his sort they were only beasts; that it made no
-difference whether they were conquered or victorious; he would sit there
-as all the kings and emperors before him, secure and immobile, sneering
-at their sacrifices and coining their sufferings into profit.
-
-They found contempt in his vacant stare; cruelty in his marble hands
-that clutched the scepter. Gesticulating and cursing, they hurled
-reproaches at him. They trampled the officers who tried to quell them.
-Shots were exchanged. Pandemonium was commencing.
-
-Hindwood consulted his watch. It lacked but a few minutes till two
-o'clock. If he could hold the garrison in confusion, Varensky would have
-time to seize his chance.
-
-He turned to the Captain behind the curtain where they watched. "What is
-it they want?"
-
-"It was some acknowledgment at first; then a speech; now it's bread.
-Can't you hear them, 'Bread! Bread! Or we do not march.'"
-
-At that moment the hammering on the outer door re-started. Hindwood
-seized the Captain's arm. "You must speak to them; they wouldn't
-understand me. You're in uniform. There's Santa. If you don't all is
-lost."
-
-"What shall I tell them?"
-
-"Anything. Speak to them as the mouthpiece of Prince Rogovich. Say
-there's food in the freight-yards--two train-loads of it--and more
-arriving; that soon the warehouses of Budapest will be bulging."
-
-The Captain stepped forward, an heroic figure. Just as he appeared in
-the oblong of the window--whether it was the sight of his uniform that
-provoked the storm was not certain--a volley of bullets shattered the
-glass. He clapped his hand to his forehead. There was a second volley.
-The room was plunged in darkness. Hindwood darted forward. The pounding
-on the outer-door grew frantic. In the Palace-yard there was the silence
-of horror.
-
-Released by the knife of flying lead, the body of the Prince had doubled
-forward, as though to peer down at the man who had betrayed him. The
-Captain was beyond all help.
-
-As Hindwood leapt back in search of Santa, the door went down with a
-crash. In a second the darkness was filled to overflowing--halberdiers,
-Palace servants, wild-eyed officials. In the confusion he caught her
-hand and escaped unnoticed through the pressing throng. As they hurried
-through salons hung with priceless treasures, looting had started. The
-first of the mob were ruthlessly at work. At the foot of the marble
-staircase he glanced at his watch. "It's exactly two o'clock," he
-murmured.
-
-
-V
-
-
-They had passed beneath the gateway where sentries should have
-challenged. Their posts were deserted. As they struck the road,
-descending beneath the ramparts, Santa questioned, "Why did you say,
-'It's exactly two o'clock'?"
-
-"Because of a note I sent Varensky." He changed the subject. "How were
-you captured?"
-
-She hesitated. "It was after we'd quarreled. I was afraid I'd lost you.
-A messenger arrived, saying you were with the Governor and wanted me. It
-was a lie; the person who wanted me was Prince Rogovich."
-
-"Then Lajos betrayed you?"
-
-"No. He knew nothing of what happened on the _Ryndam_. He was infatuated
-with me and must have talked." She clutched his arm. "You're putting me
-off. You said so strangely, 'It's exactly two o'clock.' What was in your
-note to Varensky?" For answer he halted and pointed.
-
-Far below in the gulf of blackness, where a moment ago there had seemed
-to be nothing, life had begun to quicken. In the flash of multitudinous
-street-lamps, a city was being born. It kindled in vivid strokes, like
-veins of fire etched on the pavement of the night. As though an artist
-were completing his design, ten thousand windows opened their pin-point
-eyes, filling in blank spaces with rapid specks of gold. Seen from such
-a height, the effect was in miniature. The very sounds which rose up
-were little. At first they were no more than a sustained humming, as
-when a hive is about to swarm. They swelled to a melodious muttering.
-Then, with a rush of ecstasy, the storm of joy broke; the air pulsated
-with the maddening clash of chimes.
-
-She was clinging to him. "What is it? Is it the thing for which we've
-hoped?"
-
-He glanced back across his shoulder at the huge pile, towering on the
-rock above him. Those madmen up there, destroying and pillaging, had
-they time to hear it? The Palace was glowing like a furnace. As he
-watched, a column of flame shot tall towards the sky.
-
-Seizing her hand, he broke into a run, making all the haste he could
-down the steep decline. Behind them the flames crept like serpents,
-licking the clouds and mounting higher. The heat was like the breath of
-a pursuer. Night had become vivid as day. There was no concealment. The
-crest of the ramparts was a gigantic torch. The Danube far below was
-stained red as wine. Their very shadows were lurid. And still the bells
-across the river pealed out their joy.
-
-There was a galloping. Riderless horses, broken loose from the stables,
-thundered by. Then an automobile, driven by a man with a seared and
-wounded face. Others followed. The crowd on foot, fleeing from its
-handiwork, was not far behind. As an empty car, with an officer at the
-wheel, slowed down at a hairpin bend, Santa and he leapt aboard.
-
-The danger was outdistanced. They had crossed the Danube. They were
-scarcely likely now to be implicated in what had happened to Prince
-Rogo-vich. But they were still at the mercy of their reckless driver. In
-his panic he had not once looked around; he was unaware that he carried
-passengers. Hindwood knew very clearly where he wanted to go; it was
-probably the last place to which he would be taken. The streets of Pest
-near the river were solitary, but somewhere the mob was gathering. It
-might prove awkward to be found in the company of a uniformed Monarchist
-who was escaping.
-
-Having formulated his plan, he whispered it to Santa. "While I tackle
-him, you grasp the wheel." Leaning forward, he flung his arm about
-the man's neck, jerking him backwards. The car swerved and mounted the
-pavement. Santa turned it into the road again. Taken by surprise, the
-man offered small resistance; the struggle was short. Hindwood toppled
-him out, climbed into the front seat and took his place.
-
-"The station. Where is it?" he asked breathlessly. She glanced at
-him with a revival of her old suspicion. "We're not leaving. Why the
-station?" He could have laughed. "Still the old, distrustful Santa!
-Little fool--the food-trains."
-
-The first streets which they traversed were deserted; yet lamps were
-lighted and the air was clamorous with belfry-music. As they drew
-further into the city, they shot past groups and isolated individuals,
-crawling in the same direction. For the most part they were the kind of
-persons Santa had offered to show him that morning--people in rags or
-entirely stark, who hobbled from weakness or dragged themselves on all
-fours like dogs. It was as though the dead were rising from their graves
-to follow the Pied Piper of the Resurrection.
-
-They came to a square, where soldiers had been concentrated. Their
-packs and rifles littered the open space; the soldiers themselves had
-vanished.
-
-The traffic grew dense. It was all on foot. Hind-wood turned to Santa,
-"We shall make better time if we leave the car."
-
-As they mingled with the crowd, he had a nightmare sensation of
-unreality. He had never rubbed shoulders with so many human beings
-so nearly naked. They themselves seemed to regard their conditions as
-normal. It was he who was odd. Their legs were mere poles; their arms
-laths. Their heads were misshapen like deflated footballs. With panting
-persistence they padded forward, too frail to be anything but orderly.
-The air was full of an earthy fragrance. Their bodies were clammy to the
-touch. He could push them aside like shadows. The hair was brittle as
-withered moss.
-
-It was the fashionable quarter of Budapest. Great arc-lights shone down
-on this flowing river of gray flesh. Behind plate-glass windows
-luxuries were displayed for the temptation of the bargain-snatching
-foreigner--feathers and furs, jewels and laces. Past them, with eyes
-enfevered by starvation, stole the noiseless populace. There was a woman
-whose sole clothing was a rag about her neck; she continued to live in
-Hindwood's imagination long after the sight of her was gone. And still,
-with thunderous merriment, the bells above the city pealed on.
-
-At a turn they came to the station. Further progress was blocked.
-Exerting his strength against the weakness of the mob, Hindwood edged
-his way forward. When he could go no farther, he swung round on Santa.
-"Tell them that I own the food-trains and that I'm going to get them
-bread."
-
-She had no sooner uttered her translation than a lane was cleared. As
-he passed, he was aware that parched lips stooped to kiss his hands,
-his garments, the very ground that he trod. He shuddered. The indecent
-self-abasement of such necessity inflamed his indignation. Ahead a
-cordon was drawn across the road. It was composed of Russian refugees.
-He recognized them by their baggy blouses and by the short-haired women
-of the Battalions of Death. From the tail of a wagon an orator was
-speechifying. His head was peaked like a dunce's cap. Beside him stood a
-woman, white as a lily with hair the color of raw gold.
-
-Hindwood caught Santa's arm. "For heaven's sake, what's he saying?"
-
-"What he always says on such occasions. He's preaching his gospel of
-non-resistance and promising to die for them."
-
-"Who cares for whom he dies, when bellies are empty and bodies are
-naked? Tell them I'll clothe them and give them bread."
-
-As she translated what he had said, a cry went up which drowned
-Varensky. He found himself in the open space, clambering up to the wagon
-and dragging Santa up beside him. There was a deep silence.
-
-"Tell them," he commanded, "that starvation is ended. I'll feed them
-on one condition: that they refuse to fight. Tell them I'll drive the
-Russian menace back without a single shot being fired. Tell them that
-I promise, on my honor as an American, to feed them all. Though
-food-trains are exhausted to-night, more will arrive to-morrow. More and
-more."
-
-He paused, blinded with emotion at sight of the forest of thin hands
-strained up to him. Shooting out his fist tremendously, he threatened.
-"And tell them that I won't feed a jack one of them, if there's another
-man, woman or child slaughtered, or a hint of rioting."
-
-
-VI
-
-
-He had kept his word; as far as Hungary was concerned, every living
-soul had been nourished. For seven days and nights, sleeping only at odd
-intervals, he had sat in the barracks of the Russian refugees with the
-map of Europe staring down on him from the wall. Wherever a food-train
-had been despatched, the place had been marked by a little red flag. He
-had had a wireless-apparatus installed; from that bare room, heavy with
-mildew, he had sent out his S. O. S. calls to humanity. He had begged,
-threatened, argued, commanded until at last he knew that he had won
-his cause. What he did not know was that his own example had proved
-more convincing than many words. The simple drama of his personal
-conversion--that he should be giving what he had come to sell--had
-stirred men's consciences. It had given him the right to talk. Where
-once troops would have been hurried, food was being pushed forward.
-It was an experiment alarmingly novel; but his phrase caught on,
-"The Barricade of Bread." It had been flashed across five continents.
-Wherever the printed word had power, it had kindled men's imaginations.
-By a world war-wrecked, confronted by yet another war, it had been
-hailed as the strategy that would end all wars.
-
-Loaf by loaf, sack by sack the barricade was rising. Those little red
-flags, pinned on the map, marked its progress. It was deepening and
-spreading in a flanking movement, just as formerly army corps had massed
-for offensives. Soon the barricade would be complete; it would stretch
-in an unbroken line from the Dardanelles to the Baltic. There would be
-fighting, probably to the east of Poland, where the Monarchists were
-marching in a forlorn attempt to defeat the famished hordes. That could
-not be prevented. But by the time the outcasts struck his main defense,
-he would be in a position to halt them.
-
-It was only now, when the situation was in hand, that he had leisure
-to realize what he had been doing. He was filled with depression in his
-hour of triumph. It was long past midnight. He felt gray and spent. The
-barracks were as quiet as a morgue. He wondered why; they had been so
-crowded with derelicts of valiant armies, men and girls, who, having
-failed to save Russia with the rifle, had been preparing to rescue her
-with knowledge. Then he recalled. He had sent them all away. They
-had been the new kind of soldier, by whose sacrifice his ideal had
-conquered. He saw again their uplifted faces, as he had summoned them
-one by one and ordered them on their perilous journeys. Wherever a red
-flag was pinned on the map, one of those derelicts was in command. The
-"Little Grandmother," she had been the last. Beside himself and his
-wireless operators, there could be no one left except Varensky, Santa
-and Anna.
-
-He glanced at the window. It was a square of jet. During the early
-days and nights it had framed a heart of fire, where the Palace had
-smouldered on the heights of Buda. Like a subsided volcano, the Palace
-had burned itself out. It was as though the fury of his life were ended.
-He bowed his head in his arms, striving to reconjure what had happened.
-
-Flitting about the room, with his strangely catlike tread, Varensky had
-been forever entering and exiting. He had been his second self, silent
-and agile, anticipating his plans without a word spoken. It was Varensky
-who had marshaled his exiled compatriots and placed their services at
-his disposal. It was Varensky who had warned him of the strategic points
-where the barricade must be strengthened. It had been always Varensky
-to whom he had turned for advice and courage when things were darkest.
-Without Varensky he could have accomplished nothing. And yet it was
-Varensky whom he had dethroned. This should have been his moment. He had
-shouted him down, snatched control from him and earned the credit.
-The self-effacement of one whom he had despised as an egoist made him
-humble. In a rush of tenderness he discovered that he loved him. The
-peaked head was forgotten, and the face scared white as if it had seen a
-ghost. The timidity of his appearance no longer counted; the thing
-that mattered was the spirit, resolute and shining as a sword, that hid
-within the scabbard of the grotesque body.
-
-And now that he remembered, there had been grief in his green eyes--the
-grief of a man who had been cheated. Once again Varensky had drawn him
-near to Calvary; the chance to die had been stolen from him.
-
-And Anna--he could not guess how she felt or what she thought. In all
-those seven days and nights it seemed as though she had never looked at
-him. She had moved about him like a nun, ministering to his wants with
-her gaze averted. Vaguely he was aware that to him she was not what she
-appeared to others. The old legend had been revived; again, as in St.
-Petersburg after the fall of Czardom, wherever she passed people knelt.
-To him she was no saint; his desire was too human.
-
-Watching the three of them with sphinxlike wisdom, there had been Santa,
-her womanhood clamorous and ignored. What had she made of it? Had she
-found material for humor in their temporary heroism?
-
-And so he came back to his first question--what had he been doing? In
-constructing the barricade of bread, he had been preventing Varensky
-from dying; in preventing Varensky from dying, he had been raising a
-barricade between himself and Anna. Having bankrupted his pocket, he had
-bankrupted his heart. In spite of warnings, he had gone in search of the
-vanishing point, where the parallel rails of possibility and desire seem
-to join--the point at which, to quote Varensky's words, "The safety of
-the journey ends." It was the goal of every man who wrecks himself in
-the hope that he may save a world.
-
-How long had he been sitting there brooding? He was cold. The square
-of window had turned from jet to gray. Furtively he glanced behind him.
-Anna was gazing down on him.
-
-
-VII
-
-
-She was dressed for a journey, muffled in furs. Her left hand was
-gloved; her right extended. His heart turned coward. Surely he had
-earned his reward. He commenced to rise, pushing back his chair. The
-steady blueness of her eyes held him.
-
-"Good-by," she said. "I should have left without saying good-by, if I
-had not known I could trust you."
-
-"But you can trust me. It's because you can trust me that you must
-stay."
-
-"I can't stay."
-
-"Why not?"
-
-"We made a bargain. Do you remember? That until we were free, we would
-play the game by him--that we would even guard him against himself.
-You told me once, 'I wouldn't be friends with a woman who couldn't be
-loyal.' I'm trying to be loyal." She caught her breath. "He's gone."
-
-"Varensky?"
-
-She nodded.
-
-"Where?"
-
-"To die for us."
-
-In the silence that followed, the heat of his temptation vanished. He
-felt accused by the quixotic magnanimity of this strange creature, half
-prophet, half charlatan, whose wife he had coveted.
-
-"Once I'd have been glad that he should die," he confessed slowly,
-"but not now. Food has done far more than his sacrifice could have
-accomplished. Why should he be determined to die now?"
-
-She trusted herself to come closer, standing over him and giving him her
-hand.
-
-"Perhaps for our sakes. Perhaps for his own. Perhaps in the hope that
-his appearance may put a stop to what's left of the fighting. There was
-a wireless last night which he kept to himself. It said that skirmishing
-was developing between the Poles and the Russian refugees in the No
-Man's Land beyond Kovel. It was after he had read it that he went out.
-I waited for him to return--when I guessed. We've all misjudged him.
-Perhaps we're still misjudging him. Who can say why he's gone? There's
-nothing gained by attributing motives. He wants to give his life. He's
-promised he would so often; always he's been thwarted. He owes it to his
-honor. Kovel may be the world's last battle--his final chance."
-
-In the bare room the dawn was spreading. Hind-wood rose from his chair,
-stretching his cramped body and gazing at the map with its safe red line
-of flags.
-
-"Our work is ended," he said quietly. "Within the next few hours
-stronger men will be here to take control--a commission of the best
-brains, picked from all the nations. God chose us to be His stopgap."
-He paused. "After having been His instruments in averting a
-world-catastrophe to speak of things personal seems paltry. And yet my
-love for you fills all my thoughts. I leave Budapest a bankrupt. I shall
-have to start life afresh. Your love is literally my sole possession and
-I have no right to it."
-
-She was backing towards the door, retreating from him. He stepped over
-to the window, widening the distance that separated them.
-
-"Do you feel more secure now? You needn't fear me," he reproached her.
-"Was it because I spoke of our love? We have no reason to be ashamed of
-it. We've played fair. How could we do less when Varensky has played so
-fair by us? It's for our sakes he's gone, that he may free us." Then,
-"You're setting out alone on a journey. Would you mind telling me its
-object?"
-
-"You know. To prevent him. To catch up with him. To bring him back."
-
-"And if he refuses?"
-
-"To die with him."
-
-He smiled whimsically. "The vanishing point! For you, with your high
-standard of honor, if you were to overtake it, your problem would be
-solved. But suppose the vanishing point eludes you. Suppose your husband
-agrees to live, have you thought of that? It means that you and I will
-never----"
-
-With an imploring gesture she cut him short. "It means that you and I
-will never learn to despise each other. It means that I shall always
-remember you at your greatest, as I've seen you in the last seven days,
-self-sacrificing, brave and noble--so self-forgetting that you could
-even forget the woman you adored."
-
-He sank his head. In the gray square of window he looked old and
-haggard. "It's true, and yet it's incredible: if we were to allow him to
-die, we should despise each other. In the long years----" He glanced up.
-"Though you were willing to let him and I won you, do you think I would
-want you? Not that way. I'd want you so little that I'm coming with you
-to help you to prevent him."
-
-
-VIII
-
-
-Long lines of neglected tillage! Deserted farms! Broken fences! A gray
-expanse of sky! Knots of peasants trekking always westward! Panting
-cattle, nearing the exhaustion point! Creaking carts! Dawn growing
-whiter; day growing golden; sunlight fading; night becoming flecked with
-stars! Always the rhythm of the engine, the plunging into the distance,
-the impatient urgency to thrust forward!
-
-It had been useless to think of traveling by trains; the railways were
-too congested. Moreover, they had strongly suspected that he had set
-out by car. If the No Man's Land beyond Kovel were his destination,
-then Cracow would lie midway on his journey. Cracow was one of the
-strong-points in the barricade, where a clump of red flags was flying.
-All the traffic was escaping from the danger. If he had chosen that
-route, there would be definite news of him. Any one traveling towards
-the danger could not help but be remarked.
-
-As they inquired of fugitives, they discovered that two cars were ahead
-of them. The first contained a madman, with eyes green as emeralds and a
-face white and set as a mask; the second, a dark-haired woman, beautiful
-as a fallen angel. The woman seemed to be in pursuit of the man. They
-were, perhaps, thirty miles apart. They had thundered by into the
-imperiled future as though the self-same devil rode behind them.
-
-What could be Santa's purpose? Anna and he argued the point, sometimes
-aloud, more often in their unuttered thoughts. All their old doubts
-concerning her rose up rampant. Was she a Bolshevist agent, hurrying
-back to sell the last of her secrets? Was her purpose to save or to
-betray Varensky?
-
-What had she ever wanted from him? Had she found a quality in his
-self-destroying idealism that had called forth her pitying worship? In
-her own dark way had she enshrined him in a mysterious corner of her
-heart? Had she recognized in him a childlike weakness that had compelled
-her protection? Had he stood in the twilight of her life for a door that
-might open into ultimate redemption?
-
-Or was it loneliness that had made her follow him--the sure knowledge
-that everything was ended? In those seven days, whilst they had made
-history together, had she seen something that had tortured her? That she
-was not wanted, as he was not wanted? Was it despair that had beckoned
-her into the chaos through which he hurried to destruction?
-
-When they reached Cracow it was to find the city deserted. The streets
-by which they entered were deathly silent; the doors wide open; the
-pavements strewn with furniture which owners had lacked time to rescue.
-Here and there were carts which had collapsed, and thin horses which
-had died in harness. Even cats and dogs had departed. Terror peered from
-behind the blankness of windows. It was like a city pillaged.
-
-Whatever optimisms they had entertained, they knew for certain now that
-war had started. Out of sight, across gray wastes to the eastward, gray
-ranks of skeletons, armed with nothing but disease, were approaching.
-The dread they inspired was so great that outcasts, only a shade less
-starving, had stampeded before them.
-
-At a turn they came to the railroad. Here their eyes met a different
-spectacle. From a freight-train on a siding men, white to the eyes with
-dust, were rolling barrels. They were volunteers recruited from the
-safer nations--the first of the new kind of army. They were piling flour
-where once they would have been stacking shells. Hindwood recognized the
-barrels' markings. His sense of tragedy lightened. Laughing down into
-his companion's eyes, he shouted, "Mine! Look, Anna. Mine that I meant
-to sell!"
-
-A short-haired girl, in the tattered uniform of the Battalion of Death,
-was in charge. Coming up to the car, she saluted smartly. Yes, she had
-seen Varensky. It was three hours since he had passed. He had filled up
-with water and gasolene, gasolene having arrived on the supply-train.
-He had left for Brest-Litovsk, stating that his object was to gain a
-respite for the barricade-builders. He proposed to put himself at the
-head of the famine-march and to check the rapidity of its advance. After
-his departure, the other had panted up--the dark-haired woman--only an
-hour behind him.
-
-Wasting no time in conversation, Hindwood imitated Varensky's example.
-He was dazed for want of sleep--almost nodding. But the man he had to
-save was ahead of him. Having filled his tanks and made sure of his
-engine, he started forward.
-
-They were throbbing through empty streets again, when a strange sound
-thrilled the silence--a trumpet-call, which rang out sharply across the
-housetops and broke off suddenly.
-
-Had they come? He slowed down, prepared to wheel about.
-
-Seeing what was in his thoughts, Anna rested her hand on his arm
-reassuringly.
-
-"It's from the tower of St. Mary's. How often I've heard it! Ah, there
-it is again!" Gazing up and bending forward, she listened. Then she
-spoke, as though addressing some one who walked above the city, "Brave
-fellow! Though they've all deserted, you've stayed on."
-
-"To whom are you talking?"
-
-She explained quickly. Centuries ago the Church of St. Mary's had been
-an outpost of Christendom, used as a watch-tower against the invading
-Tartar; a soldier had been kept continually stationed there to give
-warning on a trumpet of the first approach of danger. In the fourteenth
-century, whilst arousing the city, the trumpeter had been struck in the
-throat by an arrow. His call had faltered, rallied and sunk. With his
-dying breath he had sounded a final blast, which had broken off short.
-The broken call had saved Cracow. Ever since, to commemorate his
-faithfulness, there had never been an hour, day or night, when his
-broken trumpet-call, ending abruptly in an abyss of silence, had not
-been sounded from the tower.
-
-Hindwood leant across the wheel, staring dreamily before him. "It might
-have been his voice--Varen-sky's. He's like that--a dying trumpeter,
-sounding a last warning. I almost believe in him. It's too late----"
-
-"It may not be," she whispered.
-
-Night was falling. Straining his eyes to keep awake, he drove
-impetuously on, forcing a path through the opposing shadows.
-
-
-IX
-
-
-How they had arrived it would have puzzled him to tell. He had vague
-memories of sunsets and dawns; of times when sleep had drugged him; of
-unrefreshed awakenings.
-
-They had reached Brest-Litovsk, the city fatal to the Russians, which
-the Czar had always superstitiously avoided. Like Cracow, it was
-deserted. Unlike Cracow, it was a pile of ruins. Seven times in seven
-years it had been bombarded and captured. Beneath an iron sky, it
-listened for the tramp of the latest conqueror.
-
-Hindwood drew forth his map. It was over a hundred versts to Kovel; he
-doubted whether his gasolene would take him. There was nowhere where he
-could replenish his supply. Before him lay a No Man's Land from which
-everything had perished--behind a silence from which everything had
-escaped. To continue his pursuit was folly. There was no promise of
-success to allure him; of Varensky and Santa he had lost all trace.
-He glanced at his drowsing companion; he had pledged his word to her.
-Reluctantly he climbed into his seat and started forward.
-
-The suicidal stupidity of war--that was the thought that absorbed him.
-Every sight that his eyes encountered emphasized its madness. Yet beyond
-the horizon, where distance seemed to terminate, men were killing one
-another. He understood at last Varensky's passion to die. When all else
-had failed, to offer one's body was the only protest.
-
-The landscape was growing featureless. Rivers had overflowed. The labor
-of centuries was sinking beneath morass. Villages and post-houses had
-been destroyed; woods torn by shell-fire. Stationed along the route,
-like buoys guarding a channel, black and white verst-poles gleamed
-monotonously. On either side stretched a never-ending graveyard, marked
-by rough crosses or inverted rifles. Down this pitiless straight road
-had marched the seven invasions--Russian, German, Polish, Bolshevist,
-each with a dream of glory in its eyes. With the victory lost and the
-dream forgotten, they moldered companionably.
-
-It was half-way to Kovel that he first noticed what was happening;
-behind scrub and fallen trees it had probably been happening for some
-time. It was a gray wolf, grown bold, which first drew his attention.
-Like a dog, seeking its master, it came trotting down the road. After
-that they came in packs--not only wolves, but every other kind of
-untamed animal. It was as though they were fleeing before a drive--the
-tremendous drive of a famished nation. In their dread they seemed to
-have postponed their right to prey. Hunter and quarry journeyed side by
-side, their enmities in abeyance in their common terror of the enmity
-which stalked behind.
-
-Hindwood had grown used to the spectacle, when suddenly he was startled
-by another sight--a child. A child so matted and neglected, that he
-scarcely recognized him as human. His feet were swathed in balls
-of rags. He limped painfully, walking among the animals and staring
-straight before him. At shortening intervals others followed, till at
-last they came in crowds.
-
-Beyond Kovel, where commences the crumbling trench-system in which the
-vanished Russo-German armies remained locked for so many years, he came
-across his first trace of Varensky--an abandoned car with a broken axle.
-Varensky must be on foot, not far ahead. He had passed another mile when
-his own car halted; the gasolene had given out. With the ceasing of the
-engine he caught another sound--the popping of rifle-fire. It dawned on
-him that the trenches of the dead battlefield were again inhabited. He
-had been driving straight into the heart of the fighting.
-
-The firing was drawing nearer. The Monarchists were falling back. A
-bullet whizzed over his head and pinged into a mass of rusted wire.
-
-All that followed happened in a flash. He had seized Anna and rushed
-with her to cover. From where he watched, he could see soldiers
-retreating, and the tops of steel helmets bobbing above the trenches. Of
-the advancing host he could see nothing.
-
-Suddenly from behind a mound, a man with a peaked head sprang up. He
-was dressed as a civilian. He commenced to run up the road towards
-the enemy, waving something white. Immediately, from another place of
-hiding, a woman leapt up and followed. It was as though on the instant
-truce had been declared; a tranquillity of amazement settled down.
-
-As he reached what appeared to be No Man's Land, he drew himself erect,
-with expanded chest, and commenced to sweep his arms in the gestures
-of oratory. It was dumb show; it was impossible to hear what was being
-said. While he was speaking, the woman caught up with him and flung
-herself upon him, making a shield of her body.
-
-Curiosity satisfied, both sides fired. The man and woman crumpled.
-Fighting recommenced.
-
-
-THE END
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Vanishing Point, by Coningsby Dawson
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-<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en">
- <head>
- <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=UTF-8" />
- <title>
- The Vanishing Point, by Coningsby Dawson
- </title>
- <link rel="coverpage" href="images/cover.jpg" />
- <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
-
- body { margin:5%; background:#faebd0; text-align:justify}
- P { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; }
- H1,H2,H3,H4,H5,H6 { text-align: center; margin-left: 15%; margin-right: 15%; }
- hr { width: 50%; text-align: center;}
- .foot { margin-left: 5%; margin-right: 5%; text-align: justify; font-size: 80%; font-style: italic;}
- blockquote {font-size: 97%; font-style: italic; margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%;}
- .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
- .toc { margin-left: 10%; margin-bottom: .75em;}
- .toc2 { margin-left: 20%;}
- .indent5 { margin-left: 5%;}
- .indent10 { margin-left: 10%;}
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- border-left: dashed thin; text-align: center;
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- span.dropcap { float: left; margin: 0 0.1em 0 0; line-height: 0.8 }
- pre { font-style: italic; font-size: 90%; margin-left: 10%;}
-
-</style>
- </head>
- <body>
-
-
-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Vanishing Point, by Coningsby Dawson
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: The Vanishing Point
-
-Author: Coningsby Dawson
-
-Illustrator: James Montgomery Flagg
-
-Release Date: November 19, 2015 [EBook #50499]
-Last Updated: March 12, 2018
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE VANISHING POINT ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David Widger from page images generously
-provided by the Internet Archive
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
- <div style="height: 8em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h1>
- THE VANISHING POINT
- </h1>
- <h2>
- By Coningsby Dawson
- </h2>
- <h4>
- Author of &ldquo;The Kingdom Round the Corner,&rdquo; &ldquo;The Garden Without Walls,&rdquo; etc.
- </h4>
- <h3>
- Illustrated By James Montgomery Flagg
- </h3>
- <h4>
- New York
- </h4>
- <h5>
- MCMXXII
- </h5>
- <h5>
- Copyright, 1922, by Cosmopolitan Book Corporation
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0001" id="linkimage-0001"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0001.jpg" alt="0001m " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0001.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0002" id="linkimage-0002"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0008.jpg" alt="0008m " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0008.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0003" id="linkimage-0003"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0009.jpg" alt="0009m " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0009.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- <i>&ldquo;When you gaze up a railroad track,&rdquo; said Varensky, &ldquo;there's always a
- point in the infinite distance where, just before they vanish, the
- parallel rails seem, to join. If a train were ever to reach that point
- it would mean death.</i>
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- <i>&ldquo;Life's like that&mdash;a track along which we travel on the parallel
- rails of possibility and desire. The lure of the idealist is to overtake
- the illusion, where possibility and desire seem to merge, and the safety
- of the journey ends.&rdquo;</i>
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0001"> <b>THE VANISHING POINT</b> </a>
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER THE FIRST&mdash;THE DISAPPEARANCE OF A
- PATRIOT </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER THE SECOND&mdash;THE RETURN OF SANTA
- GORLOF </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER THE THIRD&mdash;HE PLUNGES INTO ROMANCE
- </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER THE FOURTH&mdash;HE BECOMES PART OF THE
- GAME </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER THE FIFTH&mdash;THE GREEN EYES CAST A
- SPELL </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER THE SIXTH&mdash;THE ESCAPE </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER THE SEVENTH&mdash;THE CAPTURE </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER THE EIGHTH&mdash;THE VANISHING POINT </a>
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /> <br /> <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h1>
- THE VANISHING POINT
- </h1>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER THE FIRST&mdash;THE DISAPPEARANCE OF A PATRIOT
- </h2>
- <h3>
- I
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">P</span>RINCE ROGOVICH!
- Prince Rogovich!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Staring up at the clammy wall of the liner, blanched by searchlights,
- against which the little tug bumped and jostled, Philip Hindwood could
- hear the Prince's name being shouted in staterooms, along decks and
- passageways.
- </p>
- <p>
- It had been midnight when they had drifted like a gallivanting hotel, all
- portholes ablaze, into the starlit vagueness of Plymouth Harbor. The <i>Ryndam</i>
- did not dock there; she only halted long enough to put off the English
- passengers and to drop the English mail. There had been three passengers
- to land, of whom Hindwood had been the first; the rest were disembarking
- at Boulogne or Rotterdam. They had been met just outside the harbor by the
- tug, and the transshipping of the mail had immediately commenced. The last
- bag had been tossed over the side; the immigration officials had completed
- their inspection. Santa Gorlof, the second passenger for England,
- radiantly smiling above her sables, had come down the gangplank. It was
- for the third passenger that the liner delayed and the tug still waited.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Prince Rogovich! Prince Rogovich!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The cries were becoming more insistent and impatient. They broke on the
- stillness with the monotony of despair. To judge by the sound, every soul
- aboard the liner had taken up the search, from the firemen in the
- stoke-hole to the Marconi men on the top deck. Even the thud of the
- engines seemed ominous, like the pounding of a heart stifled with
- foreboding. Across the velvety expanse of water, as though they had a
- secret they were trying to communicate, shore lights winked and twinkled.
- They seemed to be signaling the information that, no matter how long the
- search was maintained, Prince Rogovich would not be found that night.
- </p>
- <h3>
- II
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">E</span>xcept for this
- last disturbing incident, it had been a pleasant voyage&mdash;the most
- pleasant Philip Hindwood could remember. They had left New York in the
- brilliant clearness of blue September skies. The clear blueness had
- followed them. The slow-going, matronly <i>Ryndam</i> had steamed on an
- even keel through seas as tranquil and reflective as the proverbial
- mill-pond. Her company had been dull, consisting mainly of American
- drummers and Dutch Colonials returning from Java. But he had no grounds
- for complaint; he had chosen her for her dullness. He had wanted to lay up
- a store of rest before plunging into the strenuous excitements which were
- the purpose of his journey.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had gone aboard her in an unsociable frame of mind, determined to talk
- to nobody; the success of his errand depended on his silence. He believed
- that he was half a year ahead of the times. When his rivals had caught up
- to where he was at present, he would have made himself a world power and
- dictator.
- </p>
- <p>
- But the dullness of the ship's company had exceeded expectations. Because
- of this he had broken his compact and allowed his privacy to be invaded by
- two vivid personalities. The first had been Prince Rogovich&mdash;the
- second, Santa Gorlof.
- </p>
- <p>
- Prince Rogovich had evidently boarded the ship with precisely the same
- intentions as himself. All his meals had been served in his stateroom; it
- had not been until the evening of the third day that he had appeared on
- deck. He was a man of commanding height, lean of hip and contemptuous of
- eye, with the disquieting, haughty reticence of an inscrutable Pharaoh.
- There was something alluring and oriental about the man, at once sinister
- and charming. Behind his silky black beard he hid a face which was deathly
- white; its pallor was not of ill-health, but of passion. It was easy to
- believe all the rumors about him, both as regarded his diabolical
- cleverness and his sensual cruelty. His enemies were legion. Even among
- his countrymen he could count few friends, although he was reckoned their
- greatest patriot. In Poland he was suspected as much as he was admired,
- and was accused of intriguing in order that he might set up a throne for
- himself. The object of his flying visit to America had been to consult
- financial magnates on the advisability of floating an international loan
- in the interests of Poland. There were men the world over and in Russia
- especially, who would have paid a king's ransom for advance information as
- to what answer the financiers had returned.
- </p>
- <p>
- Though Hindwood would not have claimed as much, he and the Prince were two
- of a kind, equally magnificent in their dreams, equally relentless in
- their means of realization, and equally insatiable in their instinct for
- conquest. Their difference lay in the fact that the Polish aristocrat had
- already attained the goal toward which the self-made American was no more
- than striving.
- </p>
- <p>
- Their first meeting had happened in the early hours of the morning.
- Hindwood, being unable to sleep, had partly dressed and gone on deck.
- There, in the grayness of the dawn, he had espied a tall figure slowly
- pacing, accompanied by a snow-white Russian wolfhound. It was the
- remarkable grace of the man that had first held him, his faculty for
- stillness, his spectral paleness, his padded tread. But the moment he had
- approached him, the sense of his grace had been obscured by an atmosphere
- of menace. So sinister was his beauty that it had required an effort to
- pass him twice. Secretly Hindwood had observed him. He was like his hound,
- treacherously languid, insolently fastidious, and bred to the point of
- emaciation. But his languor was the disguise of a hidden fierceness, which
- betrayed itself in his red, curved lips and the marble coldness of his
- stare. It was at the third time of passing, when he had all but gone by
- him, that he had heard his name spoken.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mr. Hindwood.&rdquo; Then, as he had turned, &ldquo;You're the famous railroad
- expert. Am I right? It's fortunate we should have met. I missed you in
- America. So you, too, are among the sleepless!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Then and there had started the first of those amazing conversations, which
- had held Hindwood fascinated for the remainder of the voyage. It had made
- no difference that in his heart he had almost hated the man&mdash;hated
- his ruthlessness, his subtlety, his polished immorality; the moment he
- commenced to talk, he surrendered to his spell. Their encounters had taken
- place for the most part between midnight and sunrise. To be his companion
- was like eavesdropping on the intimate counsels of all the cabinets of
- Europe or like reading your daily paper a year before it was published for
- the rest of mankind. On matters which did not concern him the Prince could
- be brilliantly confessional; indiscretion was the bait with which he lured
- his victims to reveal themselves. The secrets which were his own he kept.
- Never once did he drop a hint that would indicate the success or failure
- of his recent mission. The single time that, Santa Gorlof had asked him
- point-blank, his dark eyes had become focusless as opals, and his white
- face, under its silky covering of beard, unnoticing and sphinx-like. It
- was then that Hindwood had recognized the resemblance to Pharaoh in his
- tyrannic immobility and silence.
- </p>
- <p>
- And Santa Gorlof! There was a woman&mdash;mysterious, exotic, well-nigh
- mythical! Compared with her the Prince was an open book. From the start
- she had made no attempt to explain herself, had referred neither to her
- past nor her future, had offered no credentials. She had imposed herself
- on Hind-wood like a goddess who expected to be worshiped. She had swept
- him off his feet, beaten aside his caution, and reached his heart before
- he was aware.
- </p>
- <p>
- But was it his heart? How often, in the past few days, he had asked
- himself that question! He didn't want to believe that it was his heart. He
- was a man who rode alone; his aloneness was the reason for his swiftness.
- He had been tricked once by a woman. That was when he was a boy; now he
- was a man nearing forty. She had cheated him so cruelly that, though she
- had been dead many years, the bitterness still rankled. Behind the beauty
- of all women his skepticism detected the shallow loveliness of the one
- false woman who had stolen his idealism, that she might trample on it.
- </p>
- <p>
- He did not love Santa. He had assured himself a thousand times that he did
- not love her. She was too dangerous, too incalculable. He had spent long
- hours of wakeful nights in completing the inventory of her bad points. And
- yet, while he had been with her, his veins had run fire; while he had been
- apart from her, all his pleasures had seemed tasteless. Who was she?
- Whence had she come? Whither was she going? What had been her business on
- the <i>Ryndam</i>, and what had Prince Rogovich known about her? The
- Prince had known something&mdash;something which had given him power over
- her. At a glance from him, her caprice had vanished and she had become
- downcast as a child. He had muttered a few unintelligible words, probably
- in Polish, and her pride had crumbled.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood was at a loss to account for these signs of a secret
- understanding. It had been he who had introduced them. It had been Santa
- who had confessed to curiosity about the Prince and had begged for the
- introduction. The moment he had made them acquainted, they had seemed to
- become delighted with each other's company&mdash;so delighted that there
- had been times when he himself had felt excluded. A half-humorous rivalry
- for Santa's favors had sprung up between the Prince and himself. This
- atmosphere of jealousy had been accentuated by the behavior of the
- wolfhound; Santa's mere approach had been sufficient to rouse him into
- fury. He had become so dangerous that he had had to be sent below whenever
- she was present.
- </p>
- <p>
- And yet, despite her manifest efforts to hold the Prince enchanted, behind
- his back she had expressed the most vigorous aversion. She had spoken of
- his reputation for treachery and the whispers that went the rounds of his
- heartlessness toward women. During the final days of the voyage she had
- partly atoned for this inconsistency by appealing to Hindwood to protect
- her against the Prince's far too pressing attention. She had declared
- herself to be in some kind of danger&mdash;though what kind, whether moral
- or physical, she had left him to conjecture. She had rather flattered him
- by her appeal; nevertheless, he had been considerably surprised to observe
- how little interest she had still displayed in protecting herself. During
- the whole of that last day, while they had been approaching the white line
- of Cornish coast, she had scarcely devoted to him a glance or a word;
- every minute she had spent with His Highness, whom she professed to regard
- with so much terror. She had created the impression of employing every
- trick at her disposal in a frantic attempt to secure him as her conquest.
- </p>
- <p>
- If, as many of the passengers had asserted, the presence of Santa Gorlof
- and the Prince on the same boat had been no accident, then what had been
- the object of their elaborately planned deception? Were they lovers who
- had chosen this secret method of traveling in order to avoid a scandal? Or
- was she one of the many women whom he was reported to have abandoned, who
- had seized the leisure of an Atlantic voyage as an opportunity for
- reinstating herself in his affection?
- </p>
- <p>
- As Hindwood listened in the darkness to the Prince's name being shouted
- and waited for the tug to cast off, the surmise strengthened into
- certainty that he had been the dupe of a piece of play-acting, the purpose
- of which he could not fathom.
- </p>
- <h3>
- III
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">P</span>hilip!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He had been so absorbed in his thoughts that he had not noticed how she
- had stolen up behind him. Without removing his arms from the rail, he
- turned slowly and surveyed her.
- </p>
- <p>
- An enviable woman! And her age? Perhaps thirty. She was probably a Slav&mdash;either
- Russian or Polish. Her face was smooth as marble, high cheekboned and
- golden in complexion. Her eyes were almond-shaped, heavy-lidded, and of
- the palest gray. Her lips were passionate and always a little parted,
- revealing a line of perfect whiteness like a streak of snow between the
- curling edges of two rose-petals. But it was her hair that was her glory&mdash;abundant
- as night, blue-black as steel, and polished as metal. She wore it simply,
- gathered back from her forehead and caught in a loose knot, low against
- her neck. There was an air of indefinable aristocracy about her; perhaps
- it was the slightness of her figure and the alert composure of her
- carriage. And then there was a touch of the exotic, wistfully sad, yet
- exceedingly mocking. Like so many Slavs, behind the European there lurked
- a hint of the Asiatic. If her eyes had been darker, she might easily have
- passed for a Hindoo princess.
- </p>
- <p>
- Her fascination, quite apart from her beauty, lay in the fact that she was
- so ravishingly feminine. To be a woman was her proud profession&mdash;and
- in this again she was Asiatic. What hours she must have spent over
- pampering her body! She was sleek and groomed as a race-horse. Physically
- she was the last word in feminine perfection. Her string of pearls was
- worth more than most men earn in a lifetime. Her sables represented the
- year's income of a millionaire. There was no item of her attire that was
- not sumptuous and that had not been acquired regardless of expense. To
- have achieved her luxuriance of beauty must have dissipated a fortune.
- Whose fortune? Surely, not hers!
- </p>
- <p>
- His mind was haunted by misgivings as he watched her. He had so nearly
- allowed himself to care for her. It was only her lightness and willful
- inconsiderateness that had prevented. But now that he had been prevented,
- her employment of his Christian name struck him as singularly
- inappropriate. It made him suspect a trap. It put him in a mood to
- interpret any tenderness on her part as strategy, as a signal that
- something was wanted.
- </p>
- <p>
- While he eyed her in silence, she drew nearer and leaned across the rail.
- Her shoulder pressed him. He was aware of the tingling sensation of her
- warmth, like a little hand caressing. He caught her fragrance, secret and
- somnolent as the magic of hidden rose-gardens in Damascus.
- </p>
- <p>
- She spoke. Her voice was deep and foreign; it seemed too deep to be pent
- in so slight a body. It was harsh in many of its tones, as though there
- had been times when it had been parched with thirst. It conjured visions
- of caravans creeping across molten deserts. It was hypnotic, barbaric. In
- listening to it, he lost sight of the exquisite sophistication of her
- appearance. His imagination reclothed her, loosening her hair, veiling her
- face, shrouding her in a robe of gold and saffron, slipping sandals on her
- feet and making her ankles tinkle with many bangles.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You don't like me any more. Is it not so?&rdquo; she questioned softly. &ldquo;My
- master is offended.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He shook himself irritably, as though he were flinging off the yoke of her
- attraction. &ldquo;I'm not offended. I was thinking.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;About what?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Prince Rogovich.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And why should my master be thinking of Prince Rogovich?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He leaned still further across the rail in an instinctive effort to avoid
- her. There was seduction in the feigned humility with which she addressed
- him, as though he were a Pasha and she a slave-girl.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Because,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;it would be indecent for me to be thinking of
- anything else. He may be dead. There's no knowing. This time last night I
- could walk and talk and laugh with him. He was full of plans. He was
- something real that I could touch. To-night he has vanished.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Vanished!&rdquo; She repeated the word with a sigh which was almost of
- contentment.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I was wondering,&rdquo; he continued, and then halted. &ldquo;You were wondering?&rdquo;
- she prompted.
- </p>
- <p>
- Drawing himself erect, he faced her. Her bantering tone had roused his
- indignation. Yet, even in his revulsion, he thrilled to the sweetness of
- her luring eyes, glinting at him palely through the shadows.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He was more your friend, much more your friend, than mine,&rdquo; he reproached
- her. &ldquo;There's probably been a tragedy. Yet you don't seem to care. One
- might even believe you were glad.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not glad. Not exactly.&rdquo; She spoke smilingly, averting her eyes. &ldquo;But as
- for caring&mdash;why should I?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He laughed quietly. &ldquo;Yes, why should you? Why should you care what happens
- to any man?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But I hated him,&rdquo; she protested. &ldquo;He had given me cause to hate him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You had a strange way of showing it. You made yourself most amazingly
- charming. He could never have guessed&mdash;no one could ever have guessed
- who watched you with him, that you&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah, no. Only you and I&mdash;we knew. It wasn't our business to let
- everybody guess.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Suddenly she seemed to divine what was troubling him. Darting out her
- hand, she seized his wrist in a grip of steel. That such strength lay
- hidden in so frail a hand was unexpected. Her attitude instantly changed
- to one of coaxing.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You're jealous. Don't be jealous. It had to be, and it's ended. In a
- sense it was for your sake that it had to happen.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Leisurely he freed himself, bending back her fingers and taking pleasure
- in demonstrating that his strength was the greater.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I've no idea what you're talking about,&rdquo; he said coldly. &ldquo;Your feelings
- toward Prince Rogovich are none of my concern. If, by the thing that had
- to happen, you refer to the shameless way in which you made love to him, I
- can not conceive any possible set of circumstances that would make it
- necessary for you to make love for my sake to another man.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He had turned and was sauntering away from her. She went after him
- breathlessly, arresting him once more with the secret strength of her
- slim, gloved hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To make love to him! I didn't mean that.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- What it was that she had meant, she had no time to tell. The siren of the
- <i>Ryndam</i> burst into an earsplitting blast, impatient, repeated, and
- agonizing. At the signal gangplanks were withdrawn from the tug and run
- back into dark holes in the side of the liner. Ropes were cast off and
- coiled. Engines began to quicken and screws to churn. The narrow channel
- which had separated the two vessels commenced to widen. On the <i>Ryndam</i>
- the band struck up. Above its lively clamor the sound of Prince Rogovich's
- name being shouted could still be heard. As Hindwood stared up at the
- floating mammoth, scanning the tiers of faces gaping down, even at tills
- last moment he half expected to see the Prince come rushing out. Instead a
- sight much stranger met his eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- The tug was backing away to get sufficient clearance to turn in the
- direction of land. She had not quite cleared herself, when signs of
- frenzied disturbance were noticeable on the promenade deck. The musicians
- were dropping their instruments and fleeing. Passengers were glancing
- across their shoulders and scattering in all directions. In the vacant
- space which their stampede had created, the infuriated head of the
- Prince's wolfhound reared itself. For a couple of seconds he hung there
- poised, glaring down; then suddenly he seemed to descry the object he was
- searching. Steadying himself, he shot straight out into the gulf of
- blackness. In a white streak, like the finger of conscience pointing, he
- fell, just missing the deck of the tug, where Hindwood and his companion
- were standing. He must have struck the side, for as he reached the water
- he sank.
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0008.jpg" alt="0008m " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0008.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- It was over in less time than it takes to tell, but it had seemed to
- Hindwood that as the hound had leaped, his burning gaze had been fixed on
- Santa Gorlof.
- </p>
- <h3>
- IV
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>he made no sound
- while the danger lasted, but the moment the hurtling, white body had
- fallen short, she rushed to the side, peering down into the yeasty scum of
- churned-up blackness. She was speaking rapidly in a foreign language,
- laughing softly with malicious triumph and shaking a small, clenched fist
- at the night. It was thus that a woman at Jezreel must have looked, when
- she painted her face and tired her hair and leaned out of her palace
- window, jeering at the charioteer who had been sent to slay her. The
- passionate eloquence of Santa's gestures thrilled as much as it shocked
- Hindwood; it made her appearance of lavish modernity seem a disguise. And
- yet he admired her more than ever; it was her courage he admired. Putting
- his arm about her roughly, &ldquo;Enough,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;You're coming inside.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She darted back her head in defiance like a serpent about to strike. Then
- recognition of him dawned in her eyes. She ceased to struggle and relaxed
- against his breast. It was only for a second. Slipping her arm
- submissively into his, &ldquo;Very well. If you say so,&rdquo; she whispered.
- </p>
- <p>
- Guiding her steps across the slippery deck, he pushed open the door of a
- little saloon and entered. The atmosphere was blue with wreaths of smoke
- and heavy with the smell of tobacco. At a table in the center, beneath a
- swinging lamp, the immigration officers were dealing cards and settling
- their debts with pennies. They were too absorbed in their petty gambling
- to notice what was going on about them. In a corner, outside the circle of
- light, he found a trunk and ordered her to sit down. The meekness with
- which she complied flattered his sense of her dependence. He might really
- have been a Pasha and she his slave-girl.
- </p>
- <p>
- He did not understand her. She cozened and baffled him. People and things
- which he did not understand were apt to rouse his resentment, especially
- when they were women. His distrust of the sex was inherent. But as he
- watched this woman drooping in the shadows, his pity came uppermost. She
- was so alone, so unprotected. The hour was late&mdash;long past midnight.
- Her storm of emotion had exhausted her. It was absurd that he should have
- allowed himself to become so jealous. He could never have made her his
- wife. The chances were, she would not have accepted him; she belonged to a
- more modish world. And if she had, she would have driven him from his
- course with her whims and tempests. She would have wrecked his career with
- her greed for wealthy trappings. He and she were utterly different. They
- had nothing in common but their physical attraction.
- </p>
- <p>
- He was seeing things clearly. With each fresh whiff of land, affairs were
- regrouping themselves in their true perspective. He had been the
- shuttlecock of a shipboard flirtation. He had magnified infatuation into a
- grand passion. On many a previous voyage he had been the amused spectator
- of just such profitless expenditures of sentiment. And here he was, a
- victim of the same foolishness! The futility of the ending was the
- adventure's condemnation. Probably she was indulging in similar
- reflections! Within an hour of stepping ashore they would have lost sight
- of each other forever. After so much intimacy and misplaced emotion, they
- would walk out of each other's life without regret. Partly out of
- curiosity, but more out of courtesy, he seated himself beside her for what
- he intended should be their last conversation.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What happens next?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She clutched her furs more closely about her. &ldquo;I don't know.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But you must know,&rdquo; he persisted. &ldquo;What I meant was, where is your
- destination?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;London.&rdquo; Then she added wearily, &ldquo;You could have discovered by examining
- my labels.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her fatigue made him the more determined to be helpful. &ldquo;I didn't ask out
- of impertinence, but because I thought it would be London. Probably
- there'll be no train to London to-night. If the Prince had been with us,
- they'd have put on a special, but you and I are the only passengers, and
- neither of us is sufficiently important. Besides, after this delay, it'll
- be nearly daylight before we clear the Customs.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then I'll have to sleep in Plymouth.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Perhaps you'll be met by friends?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He had no sooner hazarded the suggestion than an obvious conjecture
- flashed through his mind. The marvel was that it had not flashed earlier.
- <i>She might be married.</i> If the conjecture proved correct, it would
- put the final punishing touch of satire to this wild-goose romance.
- </p>
- <p>
- Sweeping him with her pale, derisive eyes, &ldquo;Friends!&rdquo; she murmured. &ldquo;You
- may set your mind at rest. I shall be met by no friends.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- After that there was silence, a silence interrupted at intervals by the
- exclamations of the players as they thumped down their cards and raked in
- their pennies.
- </p>
- <p>
- For relief he reverted to the subject uppermost in both their minds. &ldquo;I
- wonder what became of him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I wonder.&rdquo; Her tone betrayed no interest.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I've been trying to think back,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;trying to remember when last I
- saw him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I believe I last saw him alive just after&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She spun round, as though jerked on wires. &ldquo;Alive! Who suggests that he
- isn't alive?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No one. I'm the first. But if he isn't found by to-morrow, the suggestion
- will be on the lips of all the world.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I doubt it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You do?&rdquo; Hindwood smiled. &ldquo;Men of the Prince's eminence are not allowed
- to vanish without a stir. I'm only hoping that you and I are not involved
- in it. We were the only people with whom he associated on the voyage.
- We're likely to be detained and certain to be questioned. For all we know
- the air's full of Marconi messages about us at this moment.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her face had gone white. &ldquo;About us? What had we to do with it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nothing. But when a tragedy of this sort occurs, we're all liable to be
- suspected.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She gazed at him intently. &ldquo;Then you think there was a tragedy?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I feel sure of it. It's my belief that he either fell or was pushed
- overboard. Somewhere out there in the darkness he's bobbing up and down.
- It's almost as though I could see him. I couldn't feel more sure if&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She shuddered and pressed against him. &ldquo;You're trying to frighten me. I
- won't be frightened. It's all nonsense what you're saying. Why should any
- one want to push him over?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm sorry,&rdquo; he apologized. &ldquo;I didn't mean to frighten you. Perhaps we're
- wasting our breath and already he's been found.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, but why should any one want to push him over?&rdquo; she urged.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I can't answer that. But he wasn't liked. One could be fascinated by his
- personality, but one couldn't like him. Take yourself&mdash;weren't you
- telling me a few minutes ago how intensely you hated him?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She nodded. &ldquo;He was the sort of man every woman had the right to hate.&rdquo;
- After a pause she faced him, completely mistress of herself. &ldquo;When did you
- last see him?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm not certain.&rdquo; Hindwood hesitated. &ldquo;As far as I remember, it was after
- dinner in the lounge. He was giving some instructions about his baggage.
- When did you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;After dinner in the lounge.&rdquo; Her eyes met his and flickered. &ldquo;It must
- have been shortly after eight, for I spent till ten in my stateroom
- finishing my packing.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Before she had made an end, he knew that she had lied. Several times after
- dinner he had walked past her stateroom, hoping for a last encounter. Her
- trunks and cases had been piled in the passage, already locked and
- strapped. He had tried to discover from the stewardess her whereabouts and
- had been told that since dining she had not returned. He had gone on deck
- in search of her, hunting everywhere. It must have been shortly after ten
- that he had come across two shadowy figures in the bows. They were
- whispering together. They might have been embracing. The man's figure had
- been too dim for him to identify, but he could have sworn that the woman's
- was hers.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had reached this point in his piecing together of evidence, when he
- noticed that the card-players were pushing back their chairs.
- </p>
- <p>
- Santa touched his arm gently. &ldquo;I think we're there.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The next moment the soft bump of the tug against the piles confirmed the
- news of their arrival.
- </p>
- <h3>
- V
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>t began to look as
- if all hope of rest would have to be abandoned. At the moment of landing
- the dock had been almost festive. There had been a group of railway
- officials, mildly beaming and fussily important, who had approached
- Hindwood as he stepped ashore, with &ldquo;Prince Rogovich, if we are not
- mistaken?&rdquo; There had been another group of newspaper reporters who, having
- addressed him as &ldquo;Your Highness,&rdquo; and having discovered their error, had
- promptly turned their backs on him.
- </p>
- <p>
- There had been a Major in uniform, with a monocle in his eye, who had
- pranced up, tearing off a salute and announcing, &ldquo;I'm detailed by the
- Foreign Office, your Excellency.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- When they had learned that the Prince had unaccountably avoided Plymouth,
- their atmosphere of geniality faded. The special train, which was to have
- borne him swiftly to London, was promptly canceled. Within ten minutes,
- muttering with disgust, all the world except two porters had dribbled off
- into the night.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the waiting-room where, pending the inspection of the Customs officers,
- Hindwood and Santa were ordered to remain, their reception was no more
- enlivening. At first, when they had entered, a lunch-counter had been
- spread, gleaming with warmth and light. Before mirrors, girl attendants
- had been self-consciously reviewing their appearance with smiles of
- brightest expectation. Their expectancy had been quickly dulled by the
- news of the Prince's non-arrival. They had scarcely spared time to supply
- the wants of the two travelers before they had started to close up. The
- ticket clerk had copied the girls' example. As he had pulled down the
- shutter of his office he had briefly stated, &ldquo;No train till the
- eight-thirty in the morning.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- After that they had been left&mdash;he and this strange woman&mdash;in the
- drafty gloom of the ill-lighted dockstation. The two porters had huddled
- down and snored among the baggage; Santa, closing her eyes, had appeared
- to join them in their slumbers.
- </p>
- <p>
- At last a solitary Customs officer had arrived. He volunteered no
- explanation for his delay. He was evidently newly risen, half awake, and
- in a mood of suppressed irritation. His examination was perfunctory.
- Having completed his barest duty, he likewise made his exit. It was then,
- when all their troubles seemed ended, that the porters had informed them
- that it was necessary for passengers to see their luggage weighed and
- personally to supervise its being loaded in the van for London.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood turned to his companion. &ldquo;You're tired. You'd better be off to
- bed. I'll see this through for you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Half an hour later, when he had complied with all formalities and was free
- to seek a bed himself, he remembered that he hadn't inquired where she
- would be staying and that he didn't know the name of a hotel. Wondering
- where he should sleep and how he could reach her with the receipts for her
- trunks, he wandered out into the yard of the station. The first grayness
- of dawn was spreading. A chill was in the air. Behind the sepulchers of
- muted houses a cock was crowing. He gazed up and down. Near the gate a
- horse-drawn cab was standing. Its lamp burned dimly, on the point of
- flickering out. The driver sat hunched on the box; the horse hung
- dejectedly between the shafts. They both slumbered immovably.
- </p>
- <p>
- Crossing the yard, he shook the man's arm. &ldquo;Hi! Wake up. I want you to
- drive me to a good hotel.&rdquo; The man came to with a jerk. &ldquo;A good 'otel!
- That's wot the lady wanted. You must be the gen'leman I wuz told to wait
- for.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood nodded. &ldquo;So you've driven the lady already! Then you'd better
- take me to wherever you took her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He had opened the door and was in the act of entering when the horse
- started forward, making him lose his balance. As he stretched out his
- hands to steady himself, what was his surprise to discover that the cab
- was already tenanted!
- </p>
- <h3>
- VI
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span> beg your pardon.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was no reply to his apology. He repeated it in a tone of more
- elaborate courtesy, &ldquo;I <i>beg</i> your pardon.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- When he was again greeted with silence, he added: &ldquo;I thought it was empty.
- I didn't do it on purpose. I hope you're not hurt.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- In the mildewed square of blackness, rank with the smell of stables, he
- held his breath, trying to detect whether sleep would account for the
- taciturnity of the other occupant. He could detect nothing; all lesser
- sounds were drowned in the rattle of their progress. Groping, he felt a
- woman's dress. Hollowing his hand to shade the flame, he struck a match.
- For a brief moment his eyes met hers, opened wide and gazing at him.
- Instantly she leaned forward, pursing her lips. The flame went out.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's the meaning of this?&rdquo; He had been startled and spoke with
- sharpness.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There was only one cab, so I&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; She yawned luxuriously. &ldquo;So I
- waited. I didn't want to lose you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was his turn to be silent. After a pause, while she gave him a chance
- to reply, she continued: &ldquo;You'd have been stranded if I'd taken the only
- cab. And then I didn't want to lose you. Not that losing me would have
- meant anything to you&mdash;not now. It wouldn't, would it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was no escape. However she chose to accuse him, he would be forced
- to listen. But it couldn't be far to the hotel. Speaking reasonably, he
- attempted to appease her. &ldquo;I've given you no occasion for supposing&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She laughed softly. &ldquo;Don't you think so? On the boat you were burning up
- for me. You were molten&mdash;incandescent. Now you're dark and dank&mdash;through
- with me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She caught her breath. Though he could not see her, he knew that her
- small, clenched fists were pressed against her mouth. Again she was
- speaking.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why is it? If you'd only give me a reason! While I've been sitting here
- alone, I've kept asking myself: 'Why is it? Am I less beautiful, less
- kind, less good? Does he think that he's discovered something evil about
- me? What have I done that he should have changed so suddenly?'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- With a cry of pain, she turned. &ldquo;What have I done? It's just that you
- should tell me. If you'll take me back, I'll be anything for you. I'll try
- so hard to be more beautiful.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You couldn't be more beautiful.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was said without enthusiasm. The suspicion still possessed him that she
- was play-acting. Last evening she had practiced these same wiles on the
- man who had vanished. Did she intend that he should vanish, too? It was
- horrible that he should ask himself such a question, and yet he could not
- rid his imagination of the snow-white hound, plunging to death and
- pointing at her like the finger of conscience. The happenings of that
- night had been sufficiently dramatic, so why this second rehearsal? He was
- too humble in his self-esteem to believe that his own attractions could
- account for such a storm of passion.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Santa, you're exaggerating.&rdquo; He spoke cautiously. &ldquo;You never belonged to
- me. Until now you've given no hint that you wanted to belong to me. On the
- contrary, you've trifled with me and shown a distinct preference for
- another man. It's preposterous for you to talk about my taking you back
- when I never had you. We've been companions for a handful of hours. We've
- liked being together&mdash;at least, I have. But to create such a scene is
- absurd. Nothing warrants it. In the ordinary course of events, our liking
- might strengthen into love&mdash;there's no telling. But everything'll end
- right here and now if you force matters. What d'you know about me? About
- you I know even less. If any one were to ask me, I couldn't tell him
- whether you were a Pole or a Persian, or whether you were single,
- divorced, or married. I haven't the least idea of your social standing or
- why, while appearing so prosperous, you travel without a maid and by
- yourself. For all I know&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A man needs to know nothing about a woman,&rdquo; she interrupted, &ldquo;except that
- he loves her. She might be a thousand things; if he loved her, none of
- them would count. If she were bad, he would hope to make her good with his
- own goodness. Men always expect women to do that; why shouldn't a woman
- expect it of a man? If you loved me&mdash;and you did love me&mdash;no
- matter how wicked you thought me, even though you believed I'd killed some
- one, you wouldn't care. You'd find some splendid motive and persuade
- yourself that I'd done it for the best.&rdquo; She broke off. Then she added,
- &ldquo;Of course, I haven't.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Haven't!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Haven't killed somebody.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was an extraordinary disclaimer&mdash;as though it were always within
- the bounds of possibility that nice, conventional women might have killed
- somebody. She had said it as casually as another woman might have said, &ldquo;I
- don't powder,&rdquo; or &ldquo;I don't smoke.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He scarcely know whether to be shocked or amused. He was loath to take her
- seriously. Behind the thinning darkness he was trying to discover her
- expression, when his calmness was swept away by a new disturbance. She had
- slipped to her knees in the narrow space. By the dim light that streaked
- the panes he could just make out her figure, bowed against him. The next
- moment her tears were falling, and she was kissing his hands.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You mustn't, Santa.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He tried to withdraw his hands. She clung to them. Failing in that, he
- attempted to raise her face. She kept it obstinately averted. The bumping
- of the cab on the uneven paving jostled her against him; he feared lest
- inadvertently he might bruise her. The situation was grotesque. It stirred
- both his pity and his anger. If this were play-acting, then it was
- laughter and not sobbing that was shaking her. But if her grief were real&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- At that thought the shy, lonely tenderness of the man overwhelmed him.
- Here at last was a fellow-creature who needed his affection. She was so
- fragile, so capricious, so rapturous!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Poor Santa! I didn't mean&mdash;&mdash; Somehow I've hurt you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She didn't speak, but she stayed her sobbing.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Let me see your face.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He stooped lower. The scent of her hair was in his nostrils. His reluctant
- arms went about her. Their embrace strengthened.
- </p>
- <p>
- With a moan she lifted up her face, white and ghostly as the dawn that was
- all about them. In a frenzy of silent longing their lips met.
- </p>
- <h3>
- VII
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">W</span>ith a jerk the cab
- drew up against the pavement. Tossing the reins on the horse's back, the
- driver was lumbering down. That Santa might have time to compose herself,
- Hindwood leaned quickly out, slamming the door behind him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Where've you brought us?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's a good 'otel,&rdquo; the man grumbled, on the defensive, staring at the
- gray cliff of shrouded windows. &ldquo;It was a good 'otel you wanted. And then
- it's h'opposite the London Station where the train starts in the marnin'.
- It'll give the missis ten minutes extry in bed.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The missis!&rdquo; Hindwood frowned. &ldquo;If you refer to the lady who's with me,
- she's not my 'missis.'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The man became sly. Stretching a fat finger along his nose, he edged
- nearer and whispered: &ldquo;Between you and me that's h'alright. Wot wiv
- drivin' so many gentry from the Contingnong me own morals are almost
- foreign.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood turned from him coldly. &ldquo;You're on the wrong tack. And now how
- does one get into this hotel? Will they admit us at such an hour?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;H'at h'all hours. H'absolutely h'at h'all hours.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If that's the case,&rdquo; he thrust his head inside the cab, &ldquo;you stay here,
- Santa. I'll go and find out.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- In a few minutes he was back. &ldquo;They'll take us. Go inside and wait while I
- settle with the driver.&rdquo; When he joined her at the desk, he found it
- necessary to make the same explanation that he had already made to the
- cabman. The night-porter had allotted them one room, taking it for granted
- they were married. He had to be informed that two were required.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D'you want 'em on the same floor and next to each other?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;On the roof if you like,&rdquo; Hindwood answered impatiently, &ldquo;only let us get
- to bed. We're, or rather <i>I'm</i> catching the eight-thirty train to
- London in the morning, and it's nearly daylight now. How about you?&rdquo; He
- turned to Santa. &ldquo;What train are you catching?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The same as you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then we might as well breakfast together?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She nodded.
- </p>
- <p>
- Turning again to the night-porter, he said, &ldquo;Put us both down for a call
- at seven.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The man was leading the way upstairs. As they followed, Santa whispered,
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You see, you were mistaken.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You threatened that we'd be detained and questioned. You frightened me
- terribly. We weren't.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No. We weren't.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She slipped her arm through his companionably. &ldquo;I feel so relieved and
- happy. I don't believe there was a tragedy. The Prince changed his mind at
- the last moment; he's landing at Boulogne or Rotterdam. It may even have
- been a strategy to mislead some enemy who was waiting for him here in
- Plymouth.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Perhaps. I never thought of that.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Their rooms were on different floors. The porter showed the way to hers
- first. Now that they had to separate, Hindwood would have given much for a
- private word with her. Discreetly, outside her door, in the presence of
- the night-porter, they parted.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then we meet at breakfast,&rdquo; he reminded her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;At breakfast,&rdquo; she assented. &ldquo;And let's hope that we don't oversleep
- ourselves.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- VIII
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>t seemed to him
- that his head had just touched the pillow when he was awakened by his door
- being pounded. Sitting up in bed, he consulted his watch. Seven exactly!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm awake,&rdquo; he shouted. With that he jumped out of bod to prevent himself
- from drowsing.
- </p>
- <p>
- His first thought was of her; again he was going to meet her. The prospect
- filled him with excitement, but not with gladness. His dreams had been
- troubled by her; there had been no moment since he had closed his eyes
- that he had been without her. The wildness of that kiss, bestowed in the
- dark by a woman humbling herself, had set his blood on fire. It was not
- right that a man should be kissed like that, and yet he longed to
- reexperience the sensation.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Any woman could have done it,&rdquo; he argued. &ldquo;This isn't love; it's nothing
- peculiar to Santa. Any reasonably beautiful woman could have done it by
- acting the way she acted. I had consoled myself that I was immune from
- women. I was starving, and I didn't know it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- His sane mind warned him that it would be wise to avoid further
- encounters. She was too alluring for him to withstand. There were too many
- things about her that were unaccountable. There was her frenzied display
- of infatuation for both himself and the Prince, all within the space of
- twelve hours.
- </p>
- <p>
- He was brushing his hair and viewing his reflection in the shabby mirror,
- when he reached this point. He stopped brushing and regarded his
- reflection intently. What could any woman discover in those features to go
- mad over? It was a hard face, cleanshaven, bony, and powerful, roughened
- by the wind and tanned by the sun. It was the mask of an ascetic, which
- concealed rather than revealed the emotions. And yet once it had been
- sensitive; you could trace that in the kindly blueness of the eyes and the
- faint tenderness of the full-lipped mouth. The hair was a rusty brown,
- growing thin about the temples; the nose was pinched at the nostrils with
- long-endured suffering&mdash;the brow furrowed. He smiled in amused
- disapproval and went on with his brushing. Not the face of an Apollo!
- Nothing to rave about!
- </p>
- <p>
- And yet, despite his looks, here was at least one woman who, for whatever
- reason, was desperate to marry him. On the drive through the dawn from the
- dock to the hotel she had left no doubt of her intentions. It inflamed his
- curiosity. Though he was nearing forty, with the exception of that one
- disastrous affair, women were still for him an untried adventure. But in
- the case of Santa, to indulge his curiosity further might lead to
- penalties. She was liable to repeat last night's performance; the journey
- to London would probably provide her with a fitting opportunity. If it
- did, could he muster the cruelty to refuse her?
- </p>
- <p>
- On one point his mind was made up: he would not marry her. He had no time
- to waste on marriage. With her it would be folly. Moreover, while her
- breaking down of reticences had spurred his eagerness, it had forfeited
- his respect. It had robbed him of his prerogative of conquest. It had
- changed him from the hunter into the hunted. He was all but trapped.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Trapped!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He was fastening his bag. He pressed the catch into the lock and stood up.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Trapped! Not yet. Not exactly.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Immediately his mind began to race, devising plans for eluding capture. He
- didn't need to keep his breakfast appointment with her. He could miss the
- eight-thirty and travel to London later. He could slip out unnoticed and
- take up his abode in another hotel. Once he had lost her, he would have
- put himself beyond temptation. She would have no clew to his whereabouts,
- nor he to hers.
- </p>
- <p>
- As he passed slowly down the stairs, he was still undecided as to how he
- should act. On arriving in the hall, he loitered by the hotel desk, half
- determined to call for his reckoning and make a bolt for it. While he
- dallied, the yearning to see her for a last time swam uppermost. After
- all, he owed something to the only woman who had paid him the compliment
- of loving him. He would not speak to her, would not let her know that he
- was there. He would peep into the room unseen and remember her always as
- waiting for him.
- </p>
- <p>
- Bag in hand, he strode along the passage to the coffee-room, where
- breakfast was being served. The baize doors were a-swing with scurrying
- waiters. Stooping, he peered through the panes. Pushing the doors slightly
- open, he gazed more steadily. The room was littered with ungroomed people,
- their heads bowed, their elbows flapping, like a flock of city sparrows
- snatching crumbs from beneath the hoofs of passing traffic. Nowhere could
- he espy her, his rarer bird of the dainty plumage.
- </p>
- <p>
- He grew ashamed of his furtiveness. Why should he be afraid of her? She
- shouldn't be disappointed. She should find him gallantly expecting her.
- Resigning his bag to a solicitous bell-boy, he drew himself up to his lean
- western height and entered.
- </p>
- <h3>
- IX
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>eated at a table,
- lie had watched the swing-doors for a full half-hour. He had finished his
- breakfast. If he were to catch the eight-thirty, it was time for him to be
- moving. He began to flirt with the idea of postponing his journey; it was
- evident she had overslept herself.
- </p>
- <p>
- At the desk, while he settled his account, he had it on the tip of his
- tongue to inquire for her, but he was daunted by the presence of the
- night-porter. The man kept eyeing him with a knowing grin, as though he
- were expecting just such a question.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I won't gratify him,&rdquo; Hindwood thought. &ldquo;The fellow knows too much. It's
- fate, if I miss her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He crossed the road to the station. Having secured a seat in a first-class
- smoker, he roamed up and down the platform. Every few minutes he consulted
- his watch as the hands circled nearer to the half-hour. He bought papers
- at the news-stand and returned to buy more papers; from there, while not
- seeming to do so, he could obtain a clear view of the hotel. And still
- there was no sign of her.
- </p>
- <p>
- When it was almost too late, he threw caution to the winds. At a gait
- between a run and a walk, he recrossed the road and dashed up the hotel
- steps. As he confronted the clerk behind the desk, he was a little
- breathless; he was also aware that the night-porter's grin had widened.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There's a lady staying here. She was to have traveled with me to London.
- I'm afraid she's not been wakened.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A lady!&rdquo; The clerk looked up with the bored expression of one who was
- impervious to romance. &ldquo;A lady! Oh, yes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She's a passenger from the <i>Ryndam</i>,&rdquo; he continued. &ldquo;Her name's Miss
- Gorlof. Send some one to her room to find out at once&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The night-porter interrupted. Addressing the clerk, he said: &ldquo;The
- gentleman means the foreign-looking lady wot I told you about&mdash;the
- one in all the furs.&rdquo; Then to Hindwood, &ldquo;She was called for at six this
- mornin'. A gentleman in goggles, who couldn't speak no English, arrived in
- a tourin' car and drove off with 'er.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Drove off with her. But&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Realizing that too much emotion would make him appear ridiculous, he
- steadied his voice and asked casually, &ldquo;I suppose she left a note for me?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The clerk glanced across his shoulder at the rack. &ldquo;Your name's Mr.
- Hindwood, isn't it?&rdquo; He raised his hand to a pigeonhole lettered &ldquo;H&rdquo;. &ldquo;You
- can see for yourself, sir. There's nothing in it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then perhaps it was a verbal message. She would be certain to leave me
- her address.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The clerk turned to the night-porter. &ldquo;Did she?&rdquo; The night-porter beamed
- with satisfaction. &ldquo;She did not.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He had achieved his dramatic effect.
- </p>
- <h3>
- X
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">H</span>e was the last
- passenger to squeeze through the barrier. As he scrambled into his
- carriage, the train was on the point of moving. Spreading one of his many
- papers on his knees, he lit a cigarette. He believed he was behaving as
- though nothing had happened. &ldquo;That I can take it like this proves that she
- was nothing to me,&rdquo; he assured himself.
- </p>
- <p>
- Ten minutes later he discovered that he had not read a line and that the
- cigarette had gone out.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I suppose I'm a bit upset,&rdquo; he admitted, &ldquo;though goodness knows why I
- should be. The matter's ended exactly as I wanted.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- But had it? What had he wanted? Does a man ever know what he wants where a
- woman is concerned? He desires most the thing which he most dreads. During
- the voyage he had wanted to win her from Prince Rogovich. On the tug he
- had wanted to forget her. In the cab he had wanted to go on kissing her
- forever. That morning he had wanted to save his freedom. On the station,
- like a maddened schoolboy, his terror had been lest he might lose her.
- </p>
- <p>
- As a result he had lost her. Somewhere through the sunny lanes of Devon
- she was speeding with the gentleman who &ldquo;couldn't speak no English&rdquo; and
- wore goggles. In which direction and for what purpose he could not guess.
- </p>
- <p>
- He smiled bitterly. It was a situation which called for mirth. He had
- accused her of having trapped him at a time when she herself had been
- escaping from him. He had complained that her affection was too ardently
- obvious at a moment when she was proving herself most coldly elusive.
- While he had been resenting the way in which he was being hunted, she had
- already abandoned him to hunt to his heart's content.
- </p>
- <p>
- His reflections were broken in upon by a weakeyed old clergyman seated
- opposite to him in the far corner.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Excuse me, but I see by your labels that you've just landed. May I ask
- whether your vessel was the <i>Ryndam</i>?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It was.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then there's an item in the local paper which should interest you. It has
- to do with Prince Rogovich, the great Polish patriot. He was your fellow
- passenger, if I'm not mistaken.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood was disinclined for conversation. He made his tone brusk that he
- might discourage further questions. &ldquo;You're not mistaken, and I guess I
- know what you're going to tell me: that after all the preparations made
- for his reception, the Prince didn't land at Plymouth but, without
- notifying any one, traveled on either to Boulogne or Rotterdam.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But that wasn't what I was going to tell you,&rdquo; the old gentleman
- continued in his benevolent pulpit manner. &ldquo;Oh, no, I was going to tell
- you something quite different. After the <i>Ryndam</i> left Plymouth, the
- Captain had her searched from stem to stern. Not a trace of the Prince
- could be found.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Extraordinary! I suppose the news was received by wireless. Does the
- paper suggest an explanation?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;None whatsoever. I thought you'd be interested. Perhaps you'd like to
- read for yourself.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The paper contained the bare fact as the clergyman had stated it. &ldquo;A
- complete search was made. All his personal belongings were found intact,
- but of the Prince himself not a trace.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood closed his eyes and pretended to sleep that he might protect
- himself from further intrusions. He wanted to argue his way through this
- problem and to acquit Santa of any share in what had happened. And yet, if
- an investigation were held and he himself had to tell all he knew, things
- would look black for her. Was that why&mdash;&mdash;?
- </p>
- <p>
- He tried to crush the ugly thought, but it clamored to be expressed. Was
- that why she had made love to him&mdash;that her kiss might seal his lips
- with silence?
- </p>
- <p>
- The train was slowing down. He opened his eyes. In the cheerfulness of
- sunshine life took on a more normal aspect. Towering above crowded roofs
- of houses, a tall cathedral pricked the blueness of the sky.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Where are we?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The clergyman was collecting his bundles. &ldquo;Exeter&mdash;where I alight.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- As soon as he had the carriage to himself, before any one could enter, he
- reached up to the rack and quickly removed the <i>Ryndam</i> labels from
- his bag. Having done that, he stepped to the platform and went in search
- of papers. The torn labels were still in his hand. Surreptitiously he
- dropped them between the train and the platform, some distance lower down
- than his own carriage. He realized the stealth he had employed only when
- Exeter was left behind.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ridiculous!&rdquo; he shrugged his shoulders. &ldquo;It's getting on my nerves.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- In his most recently acquired batch of papers he found no reference to the
- topic which absorbed him. At the time when the London press had been
- published, the disappearance of the Prince had not been known to the
- world.
- </p>
- <p>
- Throughout the journey, at every fresh stopping-place, he repeated the
- performance, dashing down platforms in quest of newsboys and purchasing
- copies of every journal on sale. He caught himself continually eyeing his
- bag to make sure that he really had removed all labels. He began to feel
- as if he himself were the criminal. In his intentions he was already an
- accessory after the fact. Whether Santa was innocent or guilty, at all
- costs he had determined to shield her.
- </p>
- <p>
- Through the late summer afternoon, as he drew nearer to London, his
- suspense began to die. He was getting the later editions now; none of them
- so much as mentioned the affair. In Plymouth and Bristol it had probably
- been of local importance. He took courage to smile. What a coward dread
- can make of an honest man!
- </p>
- <p>
- Afternoon was fading into the gold of evening when they steamed into
- Paddington. By making haste he could just reach the American Embassy
- before closing time. It was likely that several communications had been
- addressed to him there. He had cabled ahead to the Ritz for a reservation.
- It wouldn't take him far out of his direction to call at the Embassy on
- the way to his hotel.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the stir and bustle of familiar London, the nightmare of the voyage
- grew vague. He stepped from the carriage like a man awaking. It thrilled
- him with happy surprise to discover the old gray city, plumed with smoke
- and smiling, waiting unchanged beneath his feet to welcome him. The very
- smell of mingled gasoline and horses from the cab-ranks was reassuring.
- Every sight that his eyes encountered made him feel respectable.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Any luggage, sir?&rdquo; It was a porter accosting him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes. Two trunks. At least, I guess they're on this train.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Which van, sir?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The one from Plymouth.&rdquo; Then, with conscious bravado, he added: &ldquo;I'm from
- the <i>Ryndam</i>. You'll recognize them by the Holland-American tags.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The porter had gone to secure a barrow. While Hindwood waited, gazing
- about him idly, his eyes were startled by a news-placard bearing the
- following legend:
- </p>
- <h3>
- DISAPPEARANCE OF A PRINCE
- </h3>
- <h3>
- FOUL PLAY SUSPECTED
- </h3>
- <p>
- He swayed, as though he had been struck by a bullet. He glanced round
- feverishly, fearing lest he might espy another placard stating, &ldquo;Santa
- Gorlof Arrested.&rdquo; But no&mdash;for the moment she was safe. He thanked God
- for the touring-car and the forethought of the foreign gentleman who could
- speak no English.
- </p>
- <p>
- Quickly he began to readjust his plans. If he went to claim his trunks,
- there was no telling by whom he might be met&mdash;newspaper men,
- detectives, officials from the Foreign Office. Moreover, Santa's trunks
- were in the van. When he had explained himself, he might be called upon to
- account for her absence. There was only one thing for him to do: for her
- sake he must get out of England. If he delayed, he might be prevented. It
- would be unwise for him to go to the Ritz; he must spend the night at some
- obscure hotel. The only place to which he might be traced was the Embassy;
- but he would have to risk that&mdash;it was of the utmost importance that
- he should pick up his communications.
- </p>
- <p>
- He was on the point of making good his escape, when the porter trundled up
- with his barrow.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hi, mister! Where are you goin'? I'll be needin' you to identify 'em.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I know you will.&rdquo; Hindwood turned on him a face which was flustered. &ldquo;But
- I've just remembered I have an engagement. I'll send for them later. It'll
- make no difference to you; here's what I should have paid you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The man, having inspected it carefully, pocketed the half-crown. &ldquo;It won't
- take long,&rdquo; he suggested; &ldquo;me and the barrow's ready. And it won't cost
- you nothink, seein' as how you've paid me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No time.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Without more ado, he made a dash for the nearest taxi. &ldquo;As fast as you
- like,&rdquo; he told the driver; &ldquo;the faster, the bigger your fare.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He fled out of the station at a forbidden rate, but after half a mile the
- taxi halted against the curb. Lowering the window, he looked out.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's the matter? Something wrong with your engine?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We ain't been follered. You can calm down,&rdquo; the driver assured him
- soothingly. &ldquo;Wot's wrong is that you ain't told me no address.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Stupid of me! The American Embassy.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At the Embassy, having explained his errand, he was requested to wait.
- Then, rather to his surprise, instead of having his letters handed to him,
- he was shown into a handsome room where, at the far end, a gray-haired man
- was seated, sorting papers behind a large mahogany table.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood crossed the room and held out his hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm Philip Hindwood, the railroad expert. I guess you've heard of me. I
- called in case there was some mail for me. I had no intention of troubling
- you personally.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm glad you've come,&rdquo; said the gray-haired man gravely. &ldquo;If you hadn't
- troubled me, I should have had to trouble you. There have been inquiries
- for you. They have to do with a woman who goes by the name of Santa
- Gorlof. The police thought you might know something about her. It seems
- she's wanted.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER THE SECOND&mdash;THE RETURN OF SANTA GORLOF
- </h2>
- <h3>
- I
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>O Santa was
- &ldquo;wanted!&rdquo; Why she was wanted Hindwood did not dare to question. And the
- police thought he could tell them something! He could, but it would be
- something to put them off her track. After kissing a woman, it wasn't
- likely he'd betray her. She might have committed every crime on the
- calendar; it would make no difference. He had learned his code of honor on
- the outskirts of civilization, where law is more often defied than obeyed.
- By his standards of chivalry, after what had passed between them, he had
- no option but to play the game by her. What did they think he knew? Why
- should they think he knew anything?
- </p>
- <p>
- He masked his anxiety with seeming unconcern. Without his assistance, they
- could make little headway. He must let fall no hint that would suggest a
- sentimental interest in her fortunes. He would be spied on&mdash;probably
- he had been spied on already. For all he knew, the clergyman in the train,
- the porter at Paddington, the taxi-driver who had assured him that he
- wasn't followed, were detectives. Henceforward he must live his life
- normally and in public, doing everything to disarm suspicion. Any
- divergence from his usual habits, such as staying in obscure quarters or
- canceling engagements that he might escape to the Continent, would create
- the impression that he was possessed of guilty knowledge. If he had to
- speak of her, he must refer to her as a charming acquaintance and profess
- horror that such a charge should have been brought against her.
- </p>
- <p>
- Following this line, he left the Embassy with the promise that he would
- consult with the police at their earliest convenience. From there he drove
- to the Ritz, adhering to arrangements made before this sinister thing had
- happened. To avoid being waylaid, he went straight to his rooms, having
- ordered his trunks to be fetched from the station and his dinner to be
- served in his apartment.
- </p>
- <p>
- The suite allotted him was one which he had occupied on several previous
- occasions. It soothed his ruffled pride to discover that his preferences
- had been remembered. From the front windows he could gaze down Piccadilly;
- from the side he could watch the green park, a lake of jade, imprisoned
- between walls of granite. In the panes facing westward a fairy city hung
- poised, tipped with flame and ensanguined by the sunset.
- </p>
- <p>
- Leisurely he set to work to bathe and shave, stretching out the ritual and
- reveling in the recovery of his self-respect. Slowly the sunset faded.
- Before he had made an end, the golden September dusk was drifting down. In
- the twilight he stretched himself on the bed, waiting for his trunks with
- his wardrobe to arrive. He felt that he could face the police with much
- more calmness if he was clad in the respectability of evening dress.
- </p>
- <p>
- He must have dozed, for the room was completely dark when he was brought
- to his feet by the sharp ringing of the telephone. As he fumbled for the
- receiver, he thought, &ldquo;Well, I've a good reason for not seeing them.
- Pajamas aren't dignified.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Aloud he said: &ldquo;Yes. Quite correct&mdash;Mr. Hind-wood. Yes, the Mr.
- Hindwood who's just landed from the <i>Ryndam</i>. You traced me by my
- trunks! You were expecting I'd claim them in person! The man from the Ritz
- is there! That's all right. Thank you for telling me. What was my reason?&mdash;Certainly
- not. I was avoiding no one. What did you say you were?&mdash;A
- newspaper-man!&mdash;I guess not. I've nothing to tell&mdash;no. That's
- final.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He had scarcely hung up when the bell commenced ringing again. The next
- half-hour was spent in refusing to be interviewed by invisible persons. It
- seemed as though every journalist in London were waiting in queue to get
- on to him. Some were suave, some bullying; all were persistent. Didn't he
- know that he owed it to the public to say something? If a list of
- questions was submitted to him, would he make a written statement?
- </p>
- <p>
- To cut the clamor short, he instructed the hotel operator to allow no one
- to speak with him who would not state his business. For the rest of the
- evening he was &ldquo;out&rdquo; to any one who had to do with the press. After that
- the telephone grew quiet.
- </p>
- <p>
- He switched on the lights. As he did so, he noticed that he was trembling
- with excitement. He was furious. This assault had made him aware of the
- unseen wall of hostility by which he and Santa were surrounded. She hadn't
- a chance; the whole of organized society was against her. The odds were
- brutally unfair. Nothing that she had done could warrant such
- unsportsmanly cruelty. So far it had not been proved that she had done
- anything, yet every one was willing to prejudge her. The pursuit was
- cowardly. Whether he loved her did not matter. It was a problem in
- knight-errantry: to protect her he was willing to risk all that he was and
- had.
- </p>
- <p>
- The arrival of his trunks gave him something else to think about. When he
- was dressed, he felt ready for every emergency. After all, he was not the
- criminal.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had his dinner spread against a window from which he could watch the
- arc-lights of Piccadilly strung across the night like a rope of pearls. He
- tried to be persuaded that he was enjoying himself. If the police didn't
- call on him within the hour, he would saunter out to a music-hall and rub
- shoulders with the crowd.
- </p>
- <p>
- But would he? To what purpose? He would have to go alone, as he always
- went. It would be different if she were with him. The last nine days had
- spoiled him for loneliness; they had taught him the romance of a woman's
- friendship. And yet, not friendship&mdash;she had asked for his affection.
- All his life he had craved to give his love to some woman. Until he had
- met Santa, his craving had been denied. No woman had seemed to care.
- Because of that, in spite of success, he had reckoned himself a failure.
- He had attained everything&mdash;power, position, wealth&mdash;everything
- except his desire. There had been moments on the voyage when it had seemed
- to him that his goal was in sight.
- </p>
- <p>
- If she were to tap on his door, how would he greet her? If she did, it
- would be like her; she could always be counted on to do the unexpected. He
- told himself that he would ask her no questions. He would not upbraid her.
- He would comfort her in the way that she understood best. When the police
- came to interrogate him, he would place his arm about her and answer:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Gentlemen, if it is Santa Gorlof you are seeking, she is here. I have
- asked her to be my wife.&rdquo; The scene as he conjured it was worthy of Dumas;
- he was thrilled by the gallantry of his imagination. His ponderings were
- cut short by a sharp rap. He sprang to his feet; it almost seemed that his
- dream was to be realized. The rap was repeated. Outside the door a page
- was standing.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There's a gentleman downstairs. He won't give his name. He says you left
- word, sir, at the American Embassy, that you would be willing to see him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Show him up.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- II
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">L</span>eaving the door
- ajar, he drew a chair to his desk and commenced rummaging through a pile
- of documents. He planned to create the impression that he regarded this
- visit as of small importance. He was anxious, even at the risk of
- appearing vulgar, to be discovered in the rôle of an American money-lord,
- every second of whose time represented dollars&mdash;the kind of man who
- was too influential to be bulldozed by the police methods of a country
- whose citizenship he did not share. He urged himself into a mood of
- contempt by recalling the beefy caricatures which pass currency in English
- fiction for veracious portraits of Scotland Yard detectives. This fellow
- would look like a constable off duty. When he sat down, he would bulge at
- the neck and mop his forehead with a multicolored handkerchief. He would
- be awed by elegance into sulky stupidity&mdash;but would become pompously
- affable when offered a cigar.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;May I enter?&rdquo; The door creaked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Surely. Come in. But you must excuse me for a moment.&rdquo; Hindwood spoke
- without turning. He pretended to be sorting the last of his documents. The
- cultured tone of the voice had surprised him. Perhaps, after all, his
- guest might not be a detective.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sorry to keep you. Time's valuable. My stay in England is short. There,
- that's finished. What can I do for you?&rdquo; He pushed back his chair and rose
- to face his guest.
- </p>
- <p>
- If the man's intonation had surprised him, his appearance amazed him still
- more. He could have passed for the colonel of a crack cavalry regiment.
- His bearing was erect and dapper. His dark lounge suit, with the light
- stripes running through it, was so smartly tailored that one was apt to
- suspect that he was corseted. His hair was white, his cheeks tanned, his
- manner cheerful and commanding. He was of less than medium height. With
- his bristling mustache and pointed imperial he bore a distinct resemblance
- to Lord Roberts of Kandahar.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood held out his hand with undisguised relief. &ldquo;Won't you sit down,
- sir? I'm afraid I must have seemed discourteous. The truth is, I was
- expecting some one quite different. The boy didn't announce your name or
- business.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The stranger accepted his hand with an ironic smile. He did not sit down.
- Instead he asked a question. &ldquo;Wouldn't it be wise to shut the door?&rdquo;
- Without waiting for permission, he went to the door and closed it. Before
- he closed it, he glanced out into the passage. Having regained the middle
- of the room, he gazed searchingly about him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No one here who can listen?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Again taking matters into his own hands, he made a swift and thorough
- investigation, peering into the bathroom, stabbing draperies with his cane
- as with a sword, feeling behind clothes in cupboards. He left no corner
- uninspected in which an eavesdropper might be secreted. Last of all he
- approached the window near which Hindwood had dined. For a few seconds he
- stood there, staring down into the well of blackness and the mysterious
- fairyland of shifting lights. Laying aside his hat and gloves, but still
- retaining his cane, he remarked:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Beautiful! Very beautiful! Exquisite with the witchery of a woman's face,
- which masks a hidden wickedness!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood had been regarding him in silence. &ldquo;I have yet to learn your name
- and business,&rdquo; he reminded him.
- </p>
- <p>
- The stranger chuckled. &ldquo;My name! I have almost forgotten it. I assume so
- many. As for my business, I'm a secret service agent in the employ of the
- British Government.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Have you credentials?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A letter.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He produced from his breast pocket an envelope, containing this message,
- typed on American Embassy notepaper, &ldquo;This will serve to introduce the
- gentleman who is anxious to consult you on the subject of which we spoke
- this afternoon.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Satisfactory?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Quite. Perhaps now you'll be seated. If you smoke, I can recommend these
- cigars.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Again the stranger, with unruffled urbanity, betrayed his alert
- independence. &ldquo;If you have no objection, I prefer my own.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;As you like.&rdquo; Hindwood was determined to conduct the interview along the
- lines of social politeness. Selecting a cigar himself, he notched the end.
- &ldquo;I'm entirely at your disposal. There's little I can tell. I suppose the
- subject on which you're anxious to consult me is what happened on the <i>Ryndam</i>?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes and no.&rdquo; The stranger puffed leisurely for a few moments. &ldquo;The answer
- is yes, if by 'what happened on the <i>Ryndam</i> you mean Santa Gorlof.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- III
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>anta Gorlof?&rdquo;
- Hindwood feigned surprise. &ldquo;A very charming lady!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The shrewd face puckered in a smile. The gray eyes grew piercing beneath
- the beetling, white brows. &ldquo;So I've been given to understand. She has a
- way with the men, has our Santa. Even Prince Rogovich, old hand that he
- was, fell for her. I believe that's your expressive phrase in America. He
- fell for her in every sense, especially when she pushed him overboard.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood frowned. He realized that a cat-and-mouse game had commenced, in
- which he had been allotted the rôle of mouse. He resented the levity with
- which Santa's name had been mentioned. If the man was in earnest, the
- matter was too terrible for jest. Though he had harbored the same
- suspicion, to hear it stated as a fact appalled him. The charge sounded
- dastardly, spoken in that pleasant voice by this courtly English gentleman
- who was old enough to be her father.
- </p>
- <p>
- With an effort he kept command of his composure. &ldquo;Of course you're
- joking?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not in the least.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then, in plain American, you're accusing a beautiful and fascinating
- woman of murder.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Of what else?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood shrugged his shoulders. &ldquo;Pardon my density. I didn't catch on. It
- was your appearance misled me; you look so much a gentleman.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I flatter myself that there are occasions when I am.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then I guess we'll have to reckon this occasion an exception. I might
- remind you that it's a woman you're accusing and that the penalty for
- murder is death. Scarcely a subject to make merry over with a play upon
- words!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And you're reminding me,&rdquo; the stranger added gently, &ldquo;that, if she's a
- woman, you and I are men. You're trying to tell me that, if my supposition
- is correct, then all that ravishing caprice that we know as Santa Gorlof
- will have to be ruthlessly blotted out. Possibly you're picturing, as so
- many of her victims have pictured before you, the wealth of happiness that
- might be yours if you could win her for yourself.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood's hand trembled as he flicked his ash. &ldquo;My dear sir,&rdquo; he drawled,
- &ldquo;I'm not twenty. I'm a hard-bitten man of the world. You credit me with
- too much romance. In your profession you're trained to spin theories.
- Please leave me out; stick to your assertion. You come to me, accusing a
- woman of my acquaintance&mdash;I can hardly call her a friend&mdash;of
- having committed murder. The charge sounds preposterous. Why you should
- come to me at all I can not guess. Before we go further, I have a right to
- ask a question: is this mere conjecture or can you prove it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I can prove it.&rdquo; The stranger paused, studying the despair his words had
- caused. &ldquo;I can prove it.&rdquo; Then he added, &ldquo;If you'll help.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If I'll perjure myself.&rdquo; Scowling, Hindwood leaped to his feet. &ldquo;That was
- what you meant. At your time of life I should have thought you could have
- found a less infamous way of gaining your livelihood. There's your hat,
- and there's the door.&rdquo; The mocking old gentleman went through the dumb
- show of clapping his applause. He settled himself more deeply in his
- chair. When he spoke, it was with the lazy good-humor of a man at his
- club. &ldquo;You fill me with admiration. Your last attitude was superb. I have
- only one criticism to offer of your play-acting; by letting your cigar go
- out, you betrayed the perturbation you were trying to disguise. It's been
- dead three minutes.&rdquo; He raised his hand, delaying interruption. &ldquo;Don't be
- angry. I'm not doubting your momentary sincerity. But think back and then
- own that you also have suspected that she's guilty.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Never.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Humph! Your memory must be faulty. Allow me to prompt you with a few
- facts.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Then and there, without hesitation or boasting, he detailed to Hindwood
- all his actions, from his departure from the <i>Ryndam</i> to the moment
- when he had arrived at the Embassy. Hindwood listened to the narration
- dumfounded.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;So you see,&rdquo; he concluded, &ldquo;if I can tell you so much as this, there is
- probably much more that I could tell. You've been infatuated by a
- she-wolf. What she did to Prince Rogovich, she has done to at least a
- dozen of her admirers. She would have done the same to you. Because there
- have been moments when you thought you loved her, you're unwilling to hand
- her over to justice. You're even willing to risk your own good name in her
- defense. It's sports-manly of you, but she's undeserving of your loyalty.
- When you know the truth, you'll thank your lucky stars that I came
- to-night.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- IV
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">H</span>indwood's face had
- gone ashen&mdash;not through fear for his own safety, but for hers. He was
- determined not to believe a word of what he had heard, and yet he was
- curious to learn. There was such an air of complete conviction about the
- stranger; it was impossible to doubt the integrity of his intentions. What
- he hoped was to discover some flaw in his logic. Sinking back into his
- chair, he stared in silence at the man who believed he knew everything.
- </p>
- <p>
- Remembering that his cigar had gone out, he commenced searching through
- his pockets for a match.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They're at your elbow,&rdquo; the stranger informed him. &ldquo;No, not there. On the
- table. I've upset you more than I intended.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Again they lapsed into silence.
- </p>
- <p>
- At last Hindwood said: &ldquo;I owe you an apology. I've been insulting, but the
- blame is partly yours. You didn't explain yourself; you withheld your
- identity. I was expecting a kind of policeman. But I think you understand.
- Anyhow, I regret my rudeness. Now tell me, who are you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm Major Cleasby, formerly of the Indian Army. My main hobby is studying
- the Asiatic.&rdquo; Hindwood looked up sharply. He remembered the impression
- Santa had made on him, that if her eyes had been darker, she could have
- passed for a Hindoo princess.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't see what studying the Asiatic has to do with the disappearance of
- Prince Rogovich,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;If we're going to arrive anywhere, what we
- need is frankness. I think you ought to understand my side of the affair.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Major nodded.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then, to start with, I'm unmarried&mdash;not that I'm a woman-hater, but
- my life has been too packed with important undertakings to leave me much
- time to spare on women. I've been a kind of express, stopping only at
- cities and rushing by all the villages. On the <i>Ryndam</i> I was forced
- to come to rest; it so happened that Santa Gorlof was the village at which
- I halted. The <i>Ryndam</i>, as you know, isn't one of these floating
- palaces; she doesn't attract the flashy type of traveler. The company on
- this last voyage was dull&mdash;dull to the point of tears. The Prince and
- Santa Gorlof were the two exceptions. I got to know her first and the
- Prince later. It was I who introduced her to him. We were each of us a bit
- stand-offish at first; we drifted together against our wills, in an
- attempt to escape from boredom. Then we began to expect each other, till
- finally&mdash;We were two men and a woman, with nothing to distract us;
- it's an old story&mdash;the usual thing happened. I suppose you'd call it
- a three-cornered flirtation in which the Prince and I were rivals.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;At first Santa was strictly impartial; toward the end it was the Prince
- she favored. I'm afraid I got huffy, which was distinctly childish, for
- none of us was serious. We were two men and a beautiful woman at loose
- ends, rather dangerously amusing ourselves. At Plymouth, if things had
- terminated normally, we should have come to our senses and gone our
- separate ways. At most we should have said good-by on reaching London. In
- none of our dealings had there been the least hint of anything serious&mdash;nothing
- that would suggest a love-affair. Speaking for myself, my interest in
- Santa had been on the wane for several days before we landed. I should
- have parted with her on the dock without compunction, if this
- extraordinary disappearance hadn't occurred. It was that that again drew
- us together. Neither of us was willing to believe the worst; we both tried
- to persuade ourselves that he'd changed his plans at the last moment. At
- the same time we were both a little anxious lest we might be bothered with
- questions and detained. Probably it was to avoid any such annoyance that
- she dodged her breakfast engagement with me and escaped so early this
- morning.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Major thrust himself forward, resting his chin on the handle of his
- cane. &ldquo;That wasn't her reason.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You're presuming her guilt. Why wasn't it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You forget the foreigner who wore goggles and pretended he couldn't speak
- English. She couldn't possibly have sent him word. The necessity for her
- escape must have been foreseen and the means prearranged.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood puzzled to find some more innocent explanation. &ldquo;He might have
- been her husband.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He wasn't.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You speak as though you knew everything.&rdquo; Then, with a catch in his
- breath, &ldquo;She isn't arrested?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If she were, I shouldn't tell you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then what makes you so positive that he wasn't her husband?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Major drew himself erect, smiling palely. &ldquo;Because <i>I</i> am her
- husband.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- V
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">H</span>indwood rose and
- moved over to the window. He felt mentally stifled. He leaned out, gazing
- down into the pool of blackness, along whose floor, like the
- phosphorescence of fishes, lights drifted and darted. The sight of so much
- coolness quieted him. When he turned, the Major had not moved a muscle; he
- was sitting as he had left him, erect and palely smiling.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You'll not be surprised when I tell you, Major Cleasby, that your last
- piece of information completely overwhelms me. You come to me in the rôle
- of a secret service agent, and now you claim to be her husband.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm both.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you mean me to understand that you're accumulating the evidence that
- will convict your wife?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Convict her and, I regret to say, hang her. Stated baldly, that is my
- purpose.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood perched himself on the window ledge and regarded his guest
- intently. He didn't look a monster; he looked in all respects a kindly,
- well-bred gentleman, and yet, if what he had just heard was correct, there
- were few monsters in history who could compare with him. Hindwood tried to
- picture him as Santa's husband. He couldn't. He was thankful that he
- couldn't. For a reason which he did not distress himself to analyze, he
- didn't wish to believe that she had ever had a husband. As for the hints
- about her criminal record and her many lovers, he utterly rejected them.
- Was it likely that a woman so royal and aloof could have stooped to the
- gutter? But if these accusations were not true, what was their object?
- Either it was a case of mistaken identity and there were two Santa
- Gorlofs, or the object was to infuriate him with jealousy so that he would
- blurt out all he knew.
- </p>
- <p>
- He eyed the Major doubtfully. He wasn't insane. He didn't look a rascal.
- And yet, what husband in his senses&mdash;&mdash;? He began to notice
- details.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Major was less old than he had fancied at first; he was more worn than
- aged. Illness or tragedy might have whitened him. It was even possible
- that he had made himself up for the part he was playing. His eyes were
- clear, and his hands virile. With the mustache and imperial removed&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Major Cleasby, you ask me to accept a great deal on your bare word,&rdquo; he
- said politely. &ldquo;You come to me with nothing to introduce you but the most
- briefly formal letter. The moment you enter my room, before you'll have
- anything to do with me, you inspect every hiding-place as though I were a
- counterfeiter or an anarchist. You boldly announce to me that ever since I
- landed in England you've had me followed and observed. You use the results
- of your spying as a kind of blackmail to induce me to present you with the
- sort of evidence for which you're searching. You trick me into telling you
- about a shipboard flirtation with a woman whom you say you want convicted
- of murder. No sooner have I told you, than you declare that you yourself
- are married to her. I ought to refuse to allow this interview to go
- further without calling in a lawyer. I don't mean to be offensive, but
- your kaleidoscopic changes put a strain on my credulity. I can't believe
- your story that you're a secret service agent endeavoring to get your wife
- executed. When men tire of matrimony, they find less ingenious methods of
- recovering their bachelorhood.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Major smiled with his patient air of affability. &ldquo;It isn't my
- bachelorhood that I'm trying to recover. It's my&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If you don't mind,&rdquo; Hindwood cut in, &ldquo;I'd like to finish my say first.
- One of the things that you may not have learned is that I'm here on a
- mission of international dimensions. It concerns more than one of the
- governments of Europe. I can't afford to have my name mixed up in a
- scandal and, what's more, I can bring influences to bear to prevent it
- from being introduced. You may be anything you like; whatever you are cuts
- no ice. I'm through with you and with whatever you may imagine took place
- on the <i>Ryndam</i>. You seem to think that I'm concealing a guilty
- knowledge that would enable you to bring this Gorlof woman to trial.
- You're on the wrong tack. I have no such knowledge. The longer you stay
- here, the more you waste my time.&rdquo; The Major was on the point of answering
- when the telephone rang shrilly. Grateful for a diversion, Hindwood
- crossed the room. As he unhooked the receiver, he glanced across his
- shoulder, &ldquo;Excuse me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Is this Mr. Hindwood?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was the hotel operator asking.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There's a call for you, sir. It's from some one who's not on a newspaper.
- Will you take it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Certainly.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a pause while the connection was being made; then a foreign
- voice, a woman's, questioned, &ldquo;Eees thees Meester Hindwood? Eef you
- please, one meenute. A lady wants to talk wiz you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Coming across the distance, subdued and earnest, he caught the tones of a
- voice which was instantly familiar.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't be startled. Don't answer me. There's a man with you. Tell him
- nothing. If you ever loved me, even for a second, don't believe a word he
- says.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She had not been arrested! A wave of joy swept over him. The uncertainty
- as to whether she was arrested had been crushing him.
- </p>
- <p>
- He waited, hoping she would speak again.
- </p>
- <p>
- Shattering the spell with a touch of bathos, the operator inquired,
- &ldquo;Number?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- With that he rang off. As he raised his head, he had the uncomfortable
- sensation that the Major had turned away from watching him.
- </p>
- <h3>
- VI
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>o you want to be
- rid of me!&rdquo; The Major glanced across his shoulder, at the same time making
- no effort to remove himself.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood crossed the room thoughtfully and seated himself. &ldquo;I've made no
- secret of it from the moment you entered.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Major laughed genially. &ldquo;I don't blame you. You think I'm a wronged
- husband trying to get even, or else an unscrupulous detective baiting
- traps with falsehoods. The situation's unpleasant&mdash;for you,
- especially.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm glad you realize it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I assure you I do. You've given yourself away completely.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You think so?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't think; I know. What you've told me proves beyond a doubt that
- you're possessed of exactly the knowledge that would bring Santa Gorlof to
- trial.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You're imaginative.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm observant. You're wondering what makes me so certain. The
- explanation's simple: I've studied Santa's tactics. Her strategy's the
- same in every instance. When a man suspects her guilt, she does what she
- did to you: seals his mouth with kisses.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This is too much.&rdquo; Hindwood brought his fist down with a bang. &ldquo;Do you go
- or do I have to force you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This time I'll try one of yours.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- With astounding assurance the Major helped himself to one of Hindwood's
- cigars, which he had previously rejected. Without bravado he lighted it
- and, having ascertained that it was drawing, continued: &ldquo;If you used
- force, you'd regret it. You'd make certain of the unwelcome publicity
- you're so anxious to avoid; you'd miss a stranger story than any Arabian
- tale that ever was concocted. You think you can still touch bottom; as a
- matter of fact you're already out of sight of land. You sit there looking
- an average, successful American; actually you've become an heroic figure,
- adrift upon an ocean so romantic and uncharted that it beats upon the
- cliffs of every human passion.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood shifted uneasily. &ldquo;So you're a fortuneteller in addition to being
- an ill-used husband and a detective!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Ignoring his sarcasm, the Major proceeded: &ldquo;Some time ago you accused me
- of ingenuity in the means I had adopted to recover my bachelorhood. It's
- not my bachelorhood, but my own and my country's honor that, with your
- help, I'm endeavoring to recover. That sounds extravagant? But consider&mdash;what
- motive could be sufficiently extravagant to compel a man to bend all his
- energies toward bringing the woman whom he loves to the scaffold? Because
- I say it calmly, you doubt that I love her. What man could help loving
- her? She's the last of a long line of false, fair women who've stirred up
- madness and left behind a trail of ruin.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Rising wearily, Hindwood turned his back and commenced fingering the
- documents on his desk. &ldquo;There'll be nothing gained by carrying this
- discussion further.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- With a question the Major recaptured his attention. &ldquo;Did it ever strike
- you that she's partly Asiatic?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood swung round, surprised into truth. &ldquo;What makes you ask it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- VII
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">E</span>ven to myself,&rdquo;
- the Major sighed, &ldquo;the story which I am about to tell sounds incredible.
- My reason for confiding it to a stranger is that, when you have heard it,
- you may dispense with chivalry and become stern enough to do your duty. To
- protect a woman, whatever her age or looks, is an instinct as primitive as
- religion. When she happens to be beautiful and the object of your
- affection, not to protect her is a kind of blasphemy. You and I, though
- you deny it, are both in love with Santa. I am her husband, while you are
- no more than her chance-met admirer. Yet you, in her hour of danger, are
- prepared to shield her with your honor, whereas I am among the most
- relentless of her pursuers.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The best part of my life has been spent in India. I went there with my
- regiment when I was little more than a boy. The fascination of an ancient
- civilization took possession of my imagination. I became a student of it
- and soon acquired a knowledge of native habits which was more fitting to a
- secret agent than to a soldier. I learned to speak many dialects and could
- pass myself off as an Asiatic with the minimum amount of disguise. Instead
- of frequenting clubs and idling away my leisure in the usual round of
- social futilities which make up the average Anglo-Indian's life, I formed
- the practice of slipping out into the night and losing my identity in the
- teeming, Oriental shadow-world by which I was surrounded.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;On one of my wanderings&mdash;when or where it is not necessary to
- particularize&mdash;I strolled into a temple and saw a young girl dancing.
- As perhaps you know, girls are dedicated to the worship of certain gods
- and goddesses at a very early age. They are for the most part deities who
- symbolize fecundity; the ritual with which they are celebrated is gross.
- The temple girls are chosen for their beauty and are trained by the
- priesthood to perform sensual dances, which are as old as time. They are
- not nuns or priestesses; their social status, if they may be said to have
- any in a land where woman is at best a plaything, approximates to that of
- temple slaves. They are taken from their parents at an age when sahibs'
- children are in nurseries. From the moment they are dedicated, their minds
- and souls are left to stagnate; they are treated like performing animals&mdash;fed
- and drilled and degraded that they may employ their bodies with the utmost
- grace.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This girl, the moment I saw her, impressed me as being the most
- fascinating human creature I had ever set eyes on. I had pressed in with
- the crowd from the evil-smelling, moonlit street. The temple was dim with
- the smoke of swaying censers. Its walls seemed vast with the flash of gold
- and jewels. At the far end, scarcely discernible, a huge god squatted,
- gloating and sinister. From somewhere in the shadows, swelling into
- frenzy, came the pounding of drums and the clash of barbaric music. Across
- the open pavement, between the god and the spectators, a chain of girls
- coiled and twisted like a snake.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;At the time I entered, the dance was nearly ended. It had evidently been
- going on for a long while. One by one the girls were slipping down
- exhausted. There they lay disordered, with their hair twined about them
- and their slim, bronze bodies twitching.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But one girl danced on, ever quickening her pace, till she alone
- remained. She was like a streak of flame, a will-o'-the-wisp, a spring
- petal blown before the wind: she seemed the symbol of everything that is
- young and pagan. Her childish face was masked in an unchanging smile. Her
- lips were parted; her body gleamed golden among the muted lights. She
- stooped and darted like a lizard across her fallen comrades; with one leap
- she floated through the air, perched for a moment on the knees of the god,
- and vanished into his bosom. Instantly the censers were extinguished, and
- I was carried out into the evil-smelling street by the rush of the
- perspiring crowd.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;From that night it was as though I were bewitched. There was never an
- hour when that drifting blossom of a girl was absent from my mind. I
- idealized her into a nobility that was more than earthly. I flung aside
- all sense of caste and race. I forgot that I was a sahib and over thirty,
- whereas she was a dancing girl and little more than a child. I excused my
- infatuation on the ground of magnanimity, telling myself that if I could
- possess her, I could save her from certain degradation. Above all, I
- wanted to wipe out her houri's smile and to cause the soul to appear in
- her eyes. Every hour that I could spare, I disguised myself as a native
- and haunted the temple. At rare intervals I caught glimpses of her. And so
- six months went by.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Gradually my desire strengthened into determination. I was insane with
- chivalry&mdash;utterly quixotic, as quixotic as you are now. I had raised
- her to such a pinnacle of worship that a liaison was not to be
- contemplated. What I planned was to carry her off and marry her. When you
- remember the gulf which the Anglo-Indian places between himself and the
- races he governs, you can estimate the measure of my madness. Such an act
- would entail resigning from my regiment and inviting social ostracism on
- every hand. It meant ruin, but to my impassioned mind no price seemed too
- high to pay.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There was an old priest who, unknown to me, had observed my comings and
- goings. One evening he addressed me by name. While I was hesitating as to
- what could be his motive, he volunteered to obtain the girl for me if I
- would reward him with a sufficient bribe.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Three nights later, as I waited, a door in the temple wall opened, and a
- muffled figure emerged. Without a word, obeying the instructions I had
- received, I turned away, and she followed. Through the sleeping city we
- crept, like a pair of shadows.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;In the European quarter I had secretly rented a bungalow which had long
- been deserted. It stood in a wilderness of overgrown shrubberies; a high
- wall went about it. Not until the rusty gate had closed behind us did I
- dare to acknowledge her presence; then, taking her in my arms, I carried
- her up the path to the unlighted house. We entered. There were just the
- two of us; I had not risked engaging servants. In the darkness I set her
- down and lighted a lamp. As the flame quickened and I knelt beside her,
- she uncovered her face. So far, I had seen her only distantly. It was the
- moment for which I had waited. Her face was white.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Major passed his hand across his forehead. His lips tightened. He
- betrayed every sign of a man doing his best to conceal an overpowering
- emotion. He leaned back and gazed up at the ceiling, blowing out a cloud
- of smoke. When he had watched it disperse, he turned to Hindwood with a
- deprecating smile.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I hope I don't bore you. I'll omit the ardors and ecstasies of my
- love-affair and stick to the bare outline. What I discovered was that she
- was an Eurasian. She was fourteen years of age&mdash;a woman by Indian
- standards, but still a child by ours. Her eyes were gray, and her
- complexion was so light that, with any one but an expert, she could have
- passed for a European. There are millions of darkhaired women with her
- coloring to be found in any Latin country. Given the proper manners and a
- European setting, scarcely a soul would have suspected her. Certainly no
- one would dare to voice his suspicions who met her as my wife.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Her history I pieced together from many conversations. Her father had
- been a tea-planter&mdash;an Englishman of good family. Her mother had been
- a Burmese. They both had died in a cholera epidemic; their half-caste
- child had been picked up from the highways and placed in the temple.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Seeing that I was out to be chivalrous, I made up my mind to do the thing
- thoroughly. I hurried up a furlough that was due me and, taking her to
- France, placed her in a convent. My reason for choosing France was that,
- when she became my wife, there would be fewer chances of discovery if she
- passed as French instead of English. In the south, especially in Provence,
- there are many women of her type descended from the Saracens. If you've
- been to Arles, you must have noticed them. At the end of three years, when
- she was seventeen, I returned, married her, and took her back to India. If
- any one detected the deception, no one was bold enough to proclaim it.
- Every circumstance argued against such a surmise. She had forgotten much
- of the English she had known, and pretended to speak only French. I had
- coached her in her part; she acted it to perfection. By no hint or sign
- did she let the knowledge escape her that she could understand a word of
- any native dialect. So far as I am aware, she was accepted at her face
- value, as a young Provençal whom I had courted in her own country.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;For some time my romantic folly brought us nothing but happiness. We
- invented a legend to account for her family, which, through continual
- repetition, we almost came to believe ourselves. No two people were ever
- more in love. Despite our difference in age and the racial gulf which
- divided us, no man and woman ever seemed more wisely mated. Apparently
- whatever shameful knowledge she had acquired in the temple had been
- blotted out by her superimposed refinement. Even to me she betrayed no
- hint of grossness; she appeared to be as sweet and innocent as the girl I
- claimed her to be&mdash;the girl I said I had surprised in the passionless
- tranquility of a French convent.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Her devotion to myself was pathetic&mdash;it verged on adoration. She was
- continually contriving new ways of rewarding me for the horrors from which
- I had saved her. To me the ground she trod was sacred. I delighted in
- making myself her slave. We competed with each other in generosity. With
- each of us the other's slightest whim was law. She was unbelievably
- beautiful, the most mysteriously beautiful woman in India. I was more than
- twice her years and the envy of every man who saw her. Her beauty seemed
- only the outshining of her goodness. Save for an accident, I should never
- have known otherwise.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We had been married two years when she bore me a child. Our dread, when
- we knew that she was to become a mother, was that our offspring might
- reveal the Asiatic strain. We took every precaution to hide the fact, if
- this should happen. But even this was spared us. Our boy was blue-eyed and
- flaxen-haired as any Anglo-Saxon. She worshiped him. He seemed to
- symbolize Heaven's blessing on the lie we practiced. He was never out of
- her sight. In her fear lest he might develop some native characteristic,
- she refused to have an <i>ayah</i> and cared for him entirely. Wherever
- she went, she kept him with her; he slept in our room at night. So
- perfectly had she drilled herself that, up to this point, I can not recall
- an instance in which she had fallen below the level of a well-born white
- woman. It was the finest instinct in her nature that proved her undoing&mdash;her
- mother-love that trapped her into the self-revelation which produced our
- tragedy.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Our child was a sturdy little fellow of nearly two, just beginning to run
- about, when suddenly he died. We had a house-party at the time. His mother
- was playing tennis. While she was playing, he was strangled and thrown
- down a well by a native servant who believed he had been slighted. My
- wife, missing the child, went in search of him in panic and caught the
- native in the act of getting rid of the body. Instantly she reverted to
- what her mother had been before her. Snatching the man's knife, she killed
- him before any of her guests could restrain her. In the abandonment of her
- grief, she became an out and out Burmese woman, scattering dust on her
- hair, beating her breasts, and rending her clothes with the wildest
- lamentations. The fiction of her French origin was utterly destroyed.
- There was no longer any doubt among those who witnessed her that I was
- married to an Eurasian.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Our position at once became intolerable. A halfcaste is despised the
- world over, but in India especially. That night every servant left. None
- of our friends came near us. We sat alone with our grief in a deserted
- house. As her calmness returned, she grew tragically contrite&mdash;not
- contrite from any moral sense, but because she had given away our secret.
- She seemed incapable of appreciating that she had done any wrong in
- depriving justice of its victim. When I tried to explain to her that she
- had committed a crime, she shook her head impatiently, insisting that she
- had done what any mother ought to do under the circumstances. When I
- pressed the subject she became persuaded that I, too, was blaming her, and
- then that I had never properly loved either her or her child. And yet I
- think I never loved her more tenderly than at that moment.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A week later, after miserable days and nights of suspense, we received
- our sentence. Native sedition was running high. The Government did not
- dare to bring the wife of a British officer to trial. Such a course would
- have proved too damaging to the prestige of Anglo-Indian officialdom. I
- was promised that the scandal would be hushed up and I should be given a
- new employment, if I would agree to ship her out of India at once and to
- see to it that she never returned. What it amounted to for me was
- perpetual separation and for her perpetual banishment.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I have often tried to arrive at a sane conclusion as to how far I am the
- author of what she has become. Had I shared her banishment there can be
- little doubt that her white blood would have kept control of her poisoned
- heritage. Unfortunately I had a living to earn. Professionally I was
- broken. My savings were inconsiderable. I had her to maintain. I was past
- mid-life and by leaving India would have sacrificed the pension that was
- already in sight. Moreover, I knew of no way of marketing my training in
- any country outside India. So I played safe and bowed to authority. I
- resigned from my regiment and was transferred to the department of
- military intelligence. After knowing the security of a home and wife, at
- past forty I became a secret agent, a spy and a wanderer, a friendless and
- unfriendly man, unsociable and socially unacceptable. As for my wife, aged
- only twenty-one, she was exiled to England, a stranger in a gray, chill
- country, bankrupt in her happiness, with no one to defend her, taking with
- her the temptation of her unusual beauty and the treacherous inheritance
- of her intermingled blood.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There seemed no justice in the world for either of us. The offending
- cause of our punishment was the protective motherhood which had prompted
- her to slay the killer of our child. But, to use your terse Americanism,
- we were 'up against' blind angers and racial prejudices, which no amount
- of bucking on our part could change. So far as she was concerned, even
- before her life had started, she had been condemned. The initial sin had
- been her parents' when they had allowed themselves to create her. Before
- she had seen daylight, the uncharity of mankind had proclaimed her a
- half-caste and a pariah. From her inherited fate I had tried to snatch her
- when I had bought her from the temple. You may say that my recklessness
- was nothing more than selfishness, pharisaically parading as chivalry; in
- allowing her to bear me a child, I had only reduplicated the crime of her
- parents. Nevertheless, I had tried to rescue her and could have succeeded,
- had not her mother-love ensnared her. She was betrayed by the purest
- instinct in her nature; she was shown no more leniency than if it had been
- the basest. There lay the cruelty that rankled. She was judged not by
- motives, but by results. She would have been pardoned and applauded, had
- she been a full-blooded white woman.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;In spite of all these accumulated injustices, I believe she would have
- retained the strength to go straight had there been any limit to our
- separation. There was none. For all the comfort that I could be to her, I
- might just as well have been dead or divorced from her. I was all that
- remained out of the ruin that had overtaken her, yet the most to which she
- could look forward, save for brief meetings at long intervals, was that I
- would be restored to her in my useless old age, when the glorious
- floodtide of her youth hud receded. You see I am sufficiently unbiased to
- be able to plead her case.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Major rose and, going over to the window, stood with his back toward
- Hindwood, gazing out into the night. Some minutes had elapsed, when he
- turned quietly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Where had I got to? Ah, yes! To where I had to send her to England! I
- accompanied her to Calcutta to see her safely on the liner. Shall I ever
- forget that journey? It had the gloom of a funeral and the frenzy of an
- elopement. Actually my rôle was that of a policeman deporting a miscreant
- who happened to be his wife. We tried to pack into moments the emotions of
- a lifetime. As background to our love-making was the poignant memory of
- the puzzled child, whom seven years earlier I had escorted on the same
- journey, <i>en route</i> for France, where she was to be made over into a
- sahib's lady. In her wondering attitude toward the fortunes that assailed
- her, she was little changed. She was still startlingly unsophisticated&mdash;a
- child-woman, dangerously credulous and deceivingly unversed in masculine
- wiles. I had taught her to be so dependent that I dared not imagine how
- she would do without me. She was so artless. She took such pleasure in
- admiration. Love was so necessary to her; it was the breath of her life.
- Its misuse had been the breath and the means of life of her Burmese mother
- before her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Her complete lack of comprehension that I in any way shared her sacrifice
- formed the most distressing part of my ordeal. She assumed that she was
- being exiled by ray choice. She persisted in talking as if she could stay,
- if I would only change my mind. Though she did not accuse me in words, she
- believed that I was ridding myself of her because she had disgraced me&mdash;that
- I was pushing her across the horizon, where she would be forgotten and out
- of sight. Up to the last moment she pleaded with and coaxed me, as though
- it were I who was refusing to repeal her sentence. The ship cast off,
- bearing her from me with her broken heart and her embittered memories of
- the newly-dug grave, while I turned back to ferret through the gutters of
- Asia, that I might earn the wherewithal to provide for her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;At first she wrote many times a day; then every day; then regularly to
- catch each outgoing mail. In the whole of England she knew nobody. In her
- anger against British justice she wished to know nobody. She was
- inconsolable, bruised in spirit, and crushed in her pride. After the pomp
- and hubbub of the East, she found London drab and melancholy. From her
- lodgings in Kensington she poured out her soul on paper. Much of what she
- wrote consisted of memories, the tender trifles which a mother treasures
- about her child.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Gradually, almost imperceptibly, there came a change. A querulous note
- crept in, a questioning of motives. Why had I sent her as far away as
- England? Why had I sent her away at all? If it were true that it was not I
- who had exiled her, why had I not accompanied her? Was it because I was
- tired and ashamed of her? It would have been kinder to have left her to
- dance in the temple. Then a new suspicion grew up, which betrayed an evil
- that I had never traced in her. With whom was I living? Some white woman?
- Was that why I had rid myself of her?
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What answers could I make? It was like arguing with a spiteful child. Our
- misunderstandings were as wide as the distance that separated us. She
- implored and finally demanded that I should join her. The more I stated
- obstacles, the more convinced she became that I was cruel, like all the
- sahibs who were torturing her&mdash;the proud sahibs who thought nothing
- of a murdered baby, when it was only the child of a half-caste woman.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;From then on her heart hardened, till at last I failed to recognize in
- her any resemblance to the gentle wife who had been so much my companion.
- She wrote vaguely about revenge, a revenge that should embrace the whole
- white race. Contempt should be repaid with despising, hatred with blows,
- blood with blood. Her beauty should be the weapon. She seemed to have gone
- mad. Suddenly her letters ceased. My remittances were returned; they had
- failed to reach her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;For what follows I have but one explanation. By some species of
- unconscious hypnotism, so long as I had exerted physical influence over
- her, I had had the power to make the European in her predominate. As my
- influence weakened with time and distance, she relapsed into the woman she
- always would have been, if I had not found her: a smiling menace to the
- nobilities of both the races from which she was descended, a human jackal
- following the hunt. That sounds harsh? Then listen to the conclusion of my
- story.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;One day, six months after I had lost touch with her, I was glancing
- through an illustrated weekly when, on turning a page, I found her
- portrait gazing up at me. She was photographed in almost the attitude and
- attire in which I had first caught sight of her in the temple. The very
- setting was similar; behind her the huge god squatted, gloating and
- sinister&mdash;on her face was the unchanging houri's smile. On reading
- the text I discovered that she had leaped into instant fame as an exponent
- of Indian dancing. You will remember that in the last two years before the
- war the dance craze was at its height. She had been acclaimed a great
- artist; everything she said, did, and wore was fulsomely praised and
- described. There was no false reticence about either her or her admirers;
- she was frankly advertised as being possessed of the most beautiful body
- in Europe. She had given herself a French name and was announced as being
- of French ancestry. According to her printed biography, her father had
- been an orchid-hunter who had taken her with him on all his expeditions.
- On his last, in India, he had died; she had been kidnaped for her beauty
- and sold into the service of a Hindoo temple. From this bondage she had
- been rescued by an Englishman of title who had chivalrously restored her
- to her family in Marseilles. There was much more to the same effect&mdash;a
- jumble of perverted truth and romantic lies, precisely the kind of
- adventurous nonsense which appeals to the sensation-seeking public.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;From then on, <i>via</i> the press, I was always getting news of her.
- London, Paris, Berlin, St. Petersburg, each in turn went mad over her. She
- captivated a continent. Kings and emperors commanded her to appear before
- them. Her tours were royal triumphs. Little by little ugly rumors began to
- spread. There was a Parisian banker who, when he had lavished his all upon
- her, committed suicide, leaving his wife and children penniless. There was
- another scandal; it had to do with a Russian general who had betrayed his
- country. At his court-martial he poisoned himself when her name was
- introduced into the evidence. As though a conspiracy of silence had broken
- down, now that she began to be gossiped about, scandals gathered thick and
- fast. Each new one was more infamous than the last; out of each she
- emerged unpitying and smiling. It was only her victims who suffered. Her
- progress was marked by a trail of death and ruin. Nevertheless, infatuated
- by the exquisiteness of her body, men fluttered about her unceasingly,
- like moths, shriveling their souls in the flame of her fascination. When
- the peace of the world was violated by the Germans&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood leaned forward, tapping the Major's knee. &ldquo;I can spare you your
- eloquence. The rest of your story is common property. The woman you
- describe stole the Allies' anti-submarine defense plans from her lover. He
- was a British naval officer, temporarily in Paris. She was caught
- red-handed. There was a sentimental agitation in her favor&mdash;an
- attempt to argue that as a physical masterpiece of feminine perfection she
- ought to be exempted. It accomplished nothing. She was a German spy, who
- had sold men's lives for profit. She received and deserved no more mercy
- than a rag-picker. After having been encouraged in her sins because of her
- unrivaled loveliness, she was led out at dawn in the woods of Vincennes,
- where the body which had maddened thousands of eyes was riddled with
- bullets.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Major's lips were smiling crookedly. &ldquo;How could she have been riddled
- with bullets,&rdquo; he questioned, &ldquo;when you crossed the Atlantic in her
- company?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood shrugged his shoulders. &ldquo;If you insist on propounding conundrums,
- it's up to you to supply the answers.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I can supply them. The person executed in the woods of Vincennes was not
- a woman.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's a daring assertion. Who was it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A distinguished French officer, a man who had been crippled in defending
- his country and held the highest awards for gallantry. In pre-war days he
- had been an old flame of hers, whom she had abandoned with more than her
- ordinary callousness. On hearing of her predicament, he begged to be
- allotted the duty of seeing that her sentence was properly executed. The
- reason he gave was that he might clear himself of the taint of ever having
- associated with a traitress. He was put in charge of the guard on her last
- night. Making use of his opportunity, he exchanged clothing with her and&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood stifled a yawn. &ldquo;You expect me to believe this?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Major mastered his anger. &ldquo;I expect you to believe nothing. I'm here
- to state facts and to warn you that your friend, who now calls herself
- Santa Gorlof, is the same woman. My appeal to you for assistance in
- bringing her to justice is both personal and patriotic. I am her husband;
- my honor is involved. I am also an Englishman; all her intrigues, even
- this last, in which Prince Rogovich met his fate, are aimed against the
- friends of England&mdash;one of whom, I may remind you, is your own great
- nation. All I can say is that each man has his separate standard of
- loyalty. For me, an old soldier, my devotion to my country is more
- important than my compassion for an erring woman.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood rose. Uncomfortably, against his will, he had been impressed by
- the stoical dignity of his persistent guest. &ldquo;You deserve that I should be
- frank with you. Here's the truth&mdash;I accept very little of what you've
- told me. Either you've mistaken my traveling companion for another woman,
- or else you've been trying to prejudice me with a fantastic story. But
- even though I accepted your supposed revelation, I should refuse to help
- you. On your own showing, you're endeavoring to bring the mother of your
- child to the scaffold. I should respect you more if you left her fate to
- other hands. Disbelieving you, as I do, I regard the introduction of Miss
- Gorlof's name into the discussion as rank impertinence. Your coupling of
- my name with hers increases the cowardice of your discourtesy. If you had
- convinced me and I were eager to assist you, I couldn't. I know nothing
- about her&mdash;our acquaintance was the most casual. In all probability
- I've seen her for the last time; I haven't the vaguest notion where she's
- to be found. If your half-caste vampire actually escaped the bullets in
- the woods of Vincennes, I advise you to search for her in another
- direction. You may take my word for it that if Santa Gorlof learns of your
- activities, you'll find yourself in trouble. I reckon myself some judge
- when it comes to character.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Major drew out his silk handkerchief from his breast pocket and
- flicked a speck of dust from his immaculate white spats. With the utmost
- deliberation he recovered his hat and gloves. For a few seconds he gazed
- out of the window thoughtfully; then, turning slowly, he crossed the room.
- With his hand on the door knob, he glanced back solemnly. He passed his
- fingers across his lips and cleared his throat. &ldquo;When she has added you to
- her list of victims, if she gives you time before she kills you, remember
- that I warned you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- When Hindwood had recovered sufficiently from his surprise to follow him
- out into the passage, every sign of his unwelcome visitor had vanished.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had scarcely closed the door and reseated himself, when again there
- came a tapping.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER THE THIRD&mdash;HE PLUNGES INTO ROMANCE
- </h2>
- <h3>
- I
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">H</span>INDWOOD consulted
- his watch; the hour was nearing midnight. He was surprised to discover how
- the time had flown. The tapping outside his door continued. There was
- nothing hurried about it, nothing impatient. On the other hand, there was
- nothing humble. It was a secret, intimate kind of tapping, like the
- signaling of a woman to her lover. It would cease for a minute, so that he
- began to hope that he was to be left in quiet; then it would recommence.
- </p>
- <p>
- He sat obstinately at bay, almost holding his breath, not daring to move
- lest he should betray that he had noticed. He was determined not to admit
- this new disturber. He had had enough of danger warnings and revengeful
- husbands. The only danger that he greatly dreaded was the loss of a second
- night's rest.
- </p>
- <p>
- The sound was getting on his nerves. It was so irritatingly discreet and
- importunate. At first he had tried to believe that his caller was a hotel
- employee, but a servant would have taken silence for an answer a good five
- minutes ago. If it had been any one who had a right to be there, the
- tapping would have been bolder. Whoever it was, it was some one who had
- correctly estimated his mood.
- </p>
- <p>
- <i>Tap-a-tap, tap-a-tap</i>. An interval, and then, <i>tap-a-tap</i>.
- </p>
- <p>
- Getting stealthily to his feet, he tiptoed to the threshold and flung wide
- the door.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I beg your pardon.&rdquo; He caught her arm as she stumbled back. &ldquo;I guess I
- startled you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Shish!&rdquo; She pressed a finger to her lips. &ldquo;Let me inside, so that I can
- sit down.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Giving her his arm, he led her to a chair. Having returned and closed the
- door, he surveyed her at his leisure.
- </p>
- <p>
- She had the appearance of a peasant woman dressed in her Sunday best, yet
- so great was her dignity, she did not seem out of place in her
- surroundings. She was very aged; her figure was shapeless and bowed. Her
- gray hair was cropped like a boy's; she wore spread over it, knotted at
- the throat, a neatly folded kerchief of white linen. She was clad in a
- black gown of the utmost plainness. Nothing distracted attention from her
- face, which was as stoical with endurance as a gladiator's. You could
- almost trace the riverbeds her tears had worn. The fist of fate had
- punched it flat. It was a ruin to which violence had done its worst, but
- had failed to destroy its gentleness. And he had expected Santa. Instead
- of feminine frailty, spurring weak desires, there had come this woman,
- iron of will, broken in body, ravished by years, with her tremendous
- impression of moral strength. As she sat before him, her gnarled hands
- resting on her cane, pushing back the weight of her ancient shoulders, she
- raised to him the dim valiance of her eyes. &ldquo;What can I do for you?&rdquo; he
- questioned. &ldquo;Nothing.&rdquo; She swung her head from side to side with the
- brooding fierceness of a decrepit lioness. &ldquo;It is you whom I have come to
- help.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I!&rdquo; he smiled. &ldquo;I think you are mistaken.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I am never mistaken.&rdquo; She gazed at him intently. &ldquo;I have come to help you
- to act generously. You have it in your power to save a woman, perhaps at
- the sacrifice of yourself.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He laughed quietly. &ldquo;You mean Santa Gorlof. I wonder when I'm to hear the
- last of her. A secret service man has spent the past two hours instructing
- me what I can do for her. You must have met him. He had scarcely left when
- you began to tap. He tried to convince me that if I didn't protect myself
- by giving him information which would lead to her arrest, my name would be
- added to her list of victims. A pleasant sort of threat! I'm afraid he
- found me, as you will probably find me, disappointing. I'm not possessed
- of any incriminating information, and I don't place any faith in her list
- of victims. She struck me as being a very gracious and fascinating woman.
- Beyond that I have no opinion about her, either for or against.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The old head sank further forward; the dim eyes became searching. &ldquo;Then
- you told him nothing?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I knew nothing to tell.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There followed a deep silence, during which they gazed fixedly at each
- other. She sighed contentedly, nodding her approval. &ldquo;So you are in love
- with her! That makes things easier. Even to me you lie&mdash;to me who am
- her friend!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I deny that I am in love with her, but what makes you think so?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She thinks so.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then you come directly from her?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He had been unable to keep back the eagerness from his voice. Instantly he
- realized his indiscretion. Pulling up a chair, he seated himself opposite
- her, that he might lose nothing of her changes of expression.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You're the second unconventional visitor,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;whom I've received
- this evening. The object of both your visits seems to be the same&mdash;to
- associate my name with that of a lady to whom I am comparatively a
- stranger. We may have conversed together a couple of dozen times; when we
- parted, I never expected to hear from her. Within the space of twenty-four
- hours a man who claims to be her husband comes to me accusing her of every
- infamy. No sooner has the door closed behind him than you enter, asserting
- that I am in love with her. You must pardon me if I begin to suspect a
- plot. For all I know, you may be my first visitor's accomplice, employing
- a more disarming method to get me to commit myself. You tell me you are
- Santa Gorlof's friend; you might equally well say you are her grandmother&mdash;you
- offer me no proof. If she's really in trouble, I'm sorry. But I fail to
- see any way in which I can serve her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If there were no way, I should not have troubled you, especially at this
- late hour. As for her being in danger, she has always been in danger. She
- was born into the world like that. I am old&mdash;very old. I have no
- traces of it left, but I, too, was once beautiful.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The trembling hands fumbled at the white linen kerchief, loosening the
- knot against her neck. &ldquo;Ah, yes, I was beautiful. But I did not come to
- you to speak of that. My friend, you are good; I saw that the moment I
- entered. I said to myself, 'There is the man who could understand our
- Santa and make her honorable like himself.' The world has given her no
- chance&mdash;no, never. The husband who should have cared for her tossed
- her aside like an old shoe when, like all animals robbed of their young,
- she struck out in self-defense. I see you have heard that&mdash;how her
- child was murdered and she was sent into exile for taking justice into her
- own hands. Doubtless you have heard much else. She is a woman who would
- have done no harm to any one if she had been allowed to remain a mother.
- But because they scoffed at her motherhood, all her goodness has turned to
- wickedness. Using her body as a decoy, she has slain men of the race that
- persecuted her. Because she could not get her child back, she has become
- an outlaw, making society pay for her loneliness.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She paused, watching her effect.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood had not removed his eyes from hers. His face was troubled. &ldquo;I
- don't think you know what has been told me. The man who introduced himself
- to me as her husband said that she was a half-caste, a temple
- dancing-girl, who to revenge herself had poisoned white men's happiness
- and during the war had become an international spy, working against the
- Allies. He made the assertion that she was responsible for the vanishing
- of Prince Rogovich. If these things are so, how can I, a decent,
- self-respecting man&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Bending forward, the old lady clutched his hand. &ldquo;It was decent,
- self-respecting men who made her what she is to-day.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He released his hand quietly. &ldquo;You have not denied any of the accusations
- which are brought against her. And yet, remembering her face, I can not
- believe that she is bad. You want me to save her. If by that you mean that
- you want me to pledge myself not to give evidence against her, you may
- tell her from me that I have no evidence.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't mean that.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then what?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I want you to declare to me that you love her. No, listen. There is still
- something in her that is pure. You have made her conscious of it. You can
- undo the wrong that has been done her and make her the woman she should
- be, if you choose.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood rose from his seat and paced the room. Suddenly he halted and
- swung round. &ldquo;How did you know that I desired her? Until you came, I
- scarcely realized it myself. Why should you have appointed yourself to
- tempt me&mdash;you, who are so old? Between sane people, what would be the
- use of my telling you that I loved her? Though I refused to believe any of
- the libels against her which even you seem to credit, there are two facts
- which it does not seem possible to escape: that she is married and that
- the police are on her track. I have been warned that when she traps men,
- she commences by appealing to their chivalry. That's what's happening now.
- Do you see where you place me? If she is falsely accused, I brand myself a
- coward by running away from her. If she is guilty, I endanger my good name
- by having any more to do with her. What I am waiting to hear you say is
- that this is a case of mistaken identity&mdash;that she is willing and
- able to prove it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Will you help me out of my chair?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- When she was on her feet, she let go his arm and commenced to move across
- the room.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Where are you going?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To give her your message.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I've told you nothing.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You've told me that you love her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She was on the point of leaving. With quiet decision he put his back
- against the door, preventing her from opening it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Madam,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;old as you are, you owe me some consideration. Before
- you go, I at least have a right to ask your name.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She smiled wistfully. The harshness in her face was replaced by a glow of
- tenderness. &ldquo;Yes, you have the right. I am called 'the Little
- Grandmother.' I am a readjuster of destinies&mdash;the champion of the
- down-trodden. I fight for those for whom the world has ceased to care.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But what have you to do with Santa?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She has been oppressed.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And because she has been oppressed, you overlook any crimes she may have
- committed?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I am not God, that I should judge. If people's hearts are empty, I reckon
- them my children.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Let me ask you one more question. Did Santa tell you that she loved me?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The old head shook sorrowfully. &ldquo;To act nobly it is not necessary to be
- loved in return. Let me go. Do not try to follow me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Standing aside, he opened the door. &ldquo;And we meet again?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- As she hobbled out, she glanced across her shoulder. In her gesture there
- was the ghostly grace of the proud coquette who was vanishing and
- forgotten. &ldquo;Will you want to,&rdquo; she whispered, &ldquo;to-morrow?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- II
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">N</span>ow that she was
- gone he realized that under the hypnotic influence of her presence he had
- revealed far more than he had intended. He should never have allowed her
- to escape him. He should have insisted on accompanying her. She had
- afforded him his only clue to Santa's whereabouts.
- </p>
- <p>
- At all costs he must see Santa. His peace of mind depended on it. The
- thought of her would haunt him. He would never rest until he had arrived
- at the truth. Probably, until he had seen her, he would never be free from
- the mischief-making intrusions of anonymous intriguers. He dodged the
- theory of her guilt, preferring to persuade himself that a conspiracy was
- afoot, the object of which might be blackmail. More likely it was a clever
- move on the part of financial rivals to thwart his plans by discrediting
- him. If he could meet Santa, he would know for certain whether she was a
- decoy or a fellow-victim. Whatever his intellect might suspect, his heart
- resolutely acquitted her.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was too late to overtake the Little Grandmother, but he was determined
- to do his best to trace her. In the passage he discovered a solitary
- individual collecting boots and shoes, which had been placed for cleaning
- outside the neighboring doors.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An old lady left my room a few moments ago. She had short hair and a
- white handkerchief tied over her head. No doubt you saw her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The man rose from his stooping posture. &ldquo;An old lady with short hair! You
- say she had a handkerchief tied over it? It doesn't sound like the Ritz.
- No, I did not see her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Of the man at the elevator he made the same inquiry, only to be informed
- that several old ladies had been carried up and down.
- </p>
- <p>
- Descending to the foyer, he presented himself at the desk.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Isn't it your rule to have all callers announced before they're shown in
- on your guests?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Most decidedly.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then how did it happen that an old lady, a rather curious old lady, with
- short hair and a white handkerchief over her head like a shawl, was
- allowed to' find her way into my room?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If you'll give me the particulars, I'll have the staff on duty
- questioned.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- As he turned away, he threw back across his shoulder: &ldquo;I shan't be going
- to bed yet. If you discover anything you might report it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Half an hour later he was summoned to the telephone. &ldquo;About your visitor,
- sir; no one saw her.&rdquo; Far into the early hours of the morning he sat
- cogitating. What steps ought he to take to protect himself? He could place
- his case in the hands of the police, but if he did, he might stir up a
- hornet's nest. Most certainly he would be compelled to postpone his
- business on the Continent and to prolong his stay in England. But more
- disastrous than personal inconvenience, in going to the police he might be
- the means of putting Santa's enemies on her track. They would expect him
- to make a clean breast of everything; he would find difficulty in
- inventing convincing motives to explain the shiftiness of his conduct
- since landing.
- </p>
- <p>
- If he could speak to Santa, he would know how to act. If she were really
- implicated in the Rogovich affair, his best way of helping her would be to
- clear out of England. But if she could assure him of her innocence, he was
- prepared to stay and back her to the limit of his capacity. Across the
- jet-black sky the silver moon drifted like a water-lily&mdash;a parable of
- Santa, moving immaculately among rumors of darkest misdoings. Whatever she
- had done had not quenched her purity. If she had done the worst of which
- she was accused, her perverted mother-love still clothed her with the
- tatters of a tragic goodness.
- </p>
- <p>
- He jerked himself irritably back to reality. How could a woman who had
- spread death with her beauty still retain her purity? He had been warned
- that she trapped men by appealing not to their baseness, but to their
- chivalry. What wild-eyed feat of chivalry was this that he was performing?
- It was best to dispense with casuistry. The accumulated slanders to which
- he had listened had spurred his curiosity. They had changed a modishly
- attractive woman into a romantic figure&mdash;a figure which, if it were
- not noble, at least possessed the virtue of lonely courage.
- </p>
- <p>
- He would allow himself four days in England. If he had not heard from her
- by then, he would go about his business. Having to this extent set a limit
- to his difficulties, he took himself off to bed.
- </p>
- <h3>
- III
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">H</span>is first anxiety
- next morning was to scan the papers. He had all the London dailies brought
- to him and read them before he dressed. For the most part they told him
- nothing new, merely recording, with varying degrees of sensationalism, the
- indisputable fact that Prince Rogovich had vanished. One or two hinted at
- foul play. Several suggested accidental drowning. The bulk of them, and
- among these were the most reputable, presumed that the Prince had had
- private reasons for avoiding England and landing at a Continental port <i>incognito</i>.
- Santa Gorlof's name was not mentioned. He found nothing to confirm the
- warnings of last night or to alarm himself on her account.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was later, while eating breakfast with the <i>Times</i> propped up
- before him, that he came across an item which set him viewing what had
- happened from a new angle. He was skipping through a sketch of the
- Prince's career, when he stumbled on the following paragraph: &ldquo;It will be
- remembered how last summer the Polish women's sense of injustice
- concentrated in a silent protest. For an entire week, day and night, never
- less than a thousand mothers, each carrying a dead child in her breast,
- camped about the Rogovich Palace in Warsaw.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Glancing back, he read more carefully the information which led up to the
- paragraph: &ldquo;During the two years following the close of the war, Poland,
- together with most of Central Europe, has suffered intensely from famine.
- Children have contributed by far the largest proportion to the toll of
- death. For much of this, so far as Poland is concerned, Prince Rogovich
- has been held accountable. The national wealth which he has squandered on
- equipping armies might have been spent more profitably in purchasing
- foodstuffs. The trip to America, from which he was returning at the time
- of his mysterious disappearance, is said to have had as its object the
- floating of a loan which would enable his Generals to maintain their
- offensives for at least another twelve months. While the land-owning party
- in Poland, supported by French diplomacy, backed him up, his imperialistic
- policies were bitterly condemned by Polish mothers who had to watch their
- children perishing from starvation in order that frontiers might be
- extended. Already the death-rate was so high that it was impossible to
- supply sufficient coffins. At mid-day the main streets of Warsaw were
- jammed with funerals. Many of these funerals consisted of only two
- persons: a man and woman, themselves weak from want of nourishment,
- staggering under the puny load of a bundle wrapped in paper, containing
- the body of the latest son or daughter to die of hunger.&rdquo; Then followed
- the brief description of how the thousand Polish mothers had camped for a
- week in protest about the Prince's palace.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood looked up from his paper, gazing across the flashing gulf of
- sunlight to where the azure sea of distant sky beat against the embattled
- strand of housetops. If Santa had pushed the Prince overboard, had that
- been her motive&mdash;that Polish children might no longer die of hunger?
- Perhaps always, if indeed she had killed men, her purpose had been to act
- as the scourge of the enemies of children. The memory of her own dead
- child had urged her. Mistakenly, but none the less valiantly, she had
- constituted herself the avenger of all mothers who had been despoiled by
- masculine callousness.
- </p>
- <p>
- What round-about journeys he was willing to undertake if only he might
- excuse her! Even though he were compelled to admit her guilt, he was
- determined to adjudge her magnanimous. At any rate, she had not been
- apprehended.
- </p>
- <p>
- With a lighter heart than he had experienced for some hours, he dismissed
- her from his thoughts and set out to fulfill his round of engagements.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was three o'clock when he returned. Immediately, on entering his room
- he noticed that a sheet of writing-paper had been pinned conspicuously to
- the pillow of his bed. Its evident purpose was to attract his attention.
- On approaching it, he saw that the message which it contained was printed
- in large letters and unsigned. It read:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>If you wish to see her, follow but do not speak to the widow.</i>&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It didn't make sense. What widow? The &ldquo;her&rdquo; whom he could see by following
- the widow referred presumably to Santa. But who had pinned the sheet of
- paper to his pillow? How had this person gained access to his rooms? That
- morning, when he went out, he had locked his door and left his key at the
- hotel desk. He had in his possession confidential papers of almost state
- importance. If their secrets were shared, he might just as well pack up
- and return to America. His sense that he was the storm-center of a
- conspiracy strengthened.
- </p>
- <p>
- Seizing his hat and gloves, he hurried down-stairs. He had just time to
- lodge a complaint with the management before keeping his next appointment.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had alighted from the elevator and was about to cross the foyer, when a
- woman rose from a chair near by and passed immediately in front of him. He
- jerked himself up with a murmured apology; then noticed that she was
- gowned in the heaviest widow's mourning. A coincidence, he thought, and
- yet not so very extraordinary! He was proceeding on his journey, when his
- eyes chanced to follow her. She had halted uncertainly, as though she had
- forgotten something; by the poise of her head, he guessed that behind her
- veil she was gazing at him. More to satisfy his curiosity than as the
- preface to an adventure, he also halted. Somewhat ostentatiously he drew
- from his pocket the sheet of note-paper which he had found pinned to his
- pillow. Unfolding it, he reread its printed message:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If you wish to see her, follow but do not speak to the widow.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He looked up. Slowly, almost imperceptibly, the veiled figure nodded. He
- made a step, as if to approach her. Instantly she turned and passed out.
- </p>
- <p>
- Without further consideration, in his eagerness to see what she would do
- next, he followed.
- </p>
- <h3>
- IV
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">H</span>e had expected
- that outside the hotel, in the throng of anonymous traffic, she would wait
- for him. Without giving any further sign that she was aware of him, she
- moved quietly through the fashionable crowd of Piccadilly and turned into
- the sunlit leisure of St. James Street. The unconscious gaiety of her way
- of walking was strangely out of keeping with her garments of bereavement.
- Hindwood's curiosity was piqued. In a shamefaced way he was overwhelmingly
- interested. He felt himself capable of a great romance. For the moment he
- was almost grateful for the annoyances that had presented him with so
- thrilling an opportunity.
- </p>
- <p>
- What was he meant to do? The message had forbidden him to accost her. He
- had been ordered merely to follow. How long and whither? At the Foreign
- Office a high official was waiting for him, expecting every minute to hear
- him announced. To wander through London after an unknown woman was the
- trick of a gallant or a moonstruck boy. He was neither. He was a man of
- discretion, who aimed at becoming the advisor of statesmen and yet his
- conduct was open to every misinterpretation. He began to feel himself a
- scoundrel. For a man whose emotions had always been shepherded, the
- sensation was exciting and not wholly unpleasant.
- </p>
- <p>
- If he could only learn something about her! Crossing to the opposite
- pavement, he hurried his pace till he was abreast of her.
- </p>
- <p>
- She was young. Her figure was slight and upright. She was about the same
- build as Santa, but seemed taller. If she were indeed Santa, this
- impression of added height might be due to the somberness of her attire.
- She was so carefully veiled that even her hair was hidden; there was no
- feature by which he could identify her. He tried another experiment.
- Recrossing the street to a point some distance ahead, he loitered before a
- shop, making a self-conscious pretense of studying its wares. He heard the
- rustle of her crêpe as she drew near him. She went by him so closely that
- she almost touched him. He was conscious of the faint fragrance of her
- perfume. In the window he caught the dim reflection of her figure. At the
- moment that she was immediately behind him, she moved her head in a
- backward gesture, seeming to indicate that he should follow. When he
- turned to obey, she was drifting through the September sunshine,
- completely self-absorbed and unnoticing.
- </p>
- <p>
- Traveling the yard of St. James Palace, she entered the Mall. There she
- hesitated, giving him time to catch up with her. A taxi was crawling by.
- She hailed it. Addressing the driver, but glancing directly at himself,
- she said in a sweet, distinct voice:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Victoria Station. The Brighton platform.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- V
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">W</span>as she Santa? The
- voice had sounded different, yet, had his life depended on it, he could
- not have decided. There was only one way of finding out&mdash;by joining
- her on the Brighton platform. This would mean missing his appointment at
- the Foreign Office. He was prepared to make the sacrifice, but he had no
- guarantee that the chase would end there. It was possible that she would
- still refuse to satisfy his curiosity and compel him to accompany her
- further. His rôle was that of the incautious fly. But who was the
- master-spinner of this web in which it was intended that he should become
- entangled? Was it the Little Grandmother? He had asked her whether they
- would meet again. In the light of present happenings, her answer took on a
- sinister meaning, &ldquo;Will you want to to-morrow?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- As he stood there in the sunshine of the Mall, with the thud of
- fashionable equipages flashing by, a sullen conviction grew up within him
- that he was becoming afraid. An empty taxi hove in sight. He beckoned.
- Before it had halted, he was standing on the running-board.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To Victoria Station. The Brighton platform.&rdquo; The driver took his brevity
- for a sign that a train was to be caught by the narrowest of margins. He
- made such speed that they drew up against the curb just as the widow's
- vehicle was departing. She threw him a furtive glance from behind her
- veil, then turned and moved away as though he were the completest
- stranger. Imitating her discretion, he followed at a distance.
- </p>
- <p>
- Halting before the ticket-office, she produced her purse. He edged nearer;
- it was necessary that he should learn her destination.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A first-class single to Seafold,&rdquo; he heard her say.
- </p>
- <p>
- When his turn came, he repeated her words, adding: &ldquo;How long before it
- starts?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Five minutes,&rdquo; the clerk told him.
- </p>
- <p>
- As he gathered up his change, he was surprised to observe how little was
- left out of his pound. He had supposed Seafold would prove to be a suburb.
- By the cost of his ticket he estimated that it must be a journey of at
- least sixty miles. Was it worth the taking? Could he return that same
- evening? He might get stranded. If that happened, he was unprepared to
- spend the night. These considerations were swept aside when he noticed
- that the widow had once more vanished.
- </p>
- <p>
- Accosting a porter, &ldquo;The Seafold platform?&rdquo; he asked breathlessly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Same as the one for Brighton.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That tells me nothing. There's no luggage. Show me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Before he had passed the barrier, he was aware that the train was crowded.
- In third-class compartments passengers were standing. To discover any one
- under these circumstances would be a labor of patience. Carriage-doors
- were being banged and locked. Even at this final moment his habitual
- caution reasserted itself. What else but folly could result from an
- adventure so recklessly undertaken?
- </p>
- <p>
- The porter caught him by the arm. &ldquo;'Ere you are, mister. 'Op in. You're
- lucky.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- No sooner had he squeezed himself into the remaining seat than, with a
- groaning jerk, the train started.
- </p>
- <h3>
- VI
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">L</span>ucky! The luckiest
- thing that could have happened to him would have been to be left behind.
- Here he was, following a woman whose face he had not seen, to a place
- which, up to a few moments ago, he had not known existed. Even to believe
- that he was following her required optimism; he had no proof that she was
- on the train. Probably it had been part of her strategy to send him
- scurrying on this fool's errand, in order that her accomplices might be
- undisturbed while they ransacked his rooms in his absence.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'll make an end of this nonsense,&rdquo; he told himself, &ldquo;by alighting at the
- next stopping-place.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- But where was the next stopping-place? He glanced along the double row of
- his fellow-passengers, barricaded behind their papers. He wanted to ask
- his question and watched for an opportunity. At last, losing patience, he
- nudged the man beside him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Excuse me, sir; I'm a stranger. I've made a mistake. My ticket's to
- Seafold, wherever that may be, and I&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- With his nose still glued to the page, the man muttered: &ldquo;That's all
- right. You don't need to worry. It's where you're going.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But it isn't all right,&rdquo; Hindwood contradicted with a shade of annoyance.
- &ldquo;I don't want to go to Seafold; I want to return to London. What I'm
- trying to ask you is where can I get out?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Lewes, if you think it's worth while.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why shouldn't I think it's worth while?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The paper rustled testily and was raised a few inches higher. &ldquo;Because
- Lewes is almost at Seafold. It's the junction where you change&mdash;the
- one and only stop between here and Brighton.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Turning away disgustedly, he watched the swiftly changing landscape.
- Everything that met his eyes was beautiful, with a domestic, thought-out,
- underlying tenderness. It had all been planned, that was what he felt, by
- the loving labor of countless generations. In a homeless man like himself
- the sight created a realization of forlornness. He had traveled five
- continents and had planted his affections nowhere. It was the same with
- his human relations. He could reckon his acquaintances by the thousand,
- yet there was no one to whom he was indispensably dear. By a mental
- transition, the implication of which he scarcely appreciated, he began to
- think of Santa.
- </p>
- <p>
- They were slowing down. He was surprised to discover that an hour had gone
- by. The man at his side folded up his paper. Now that they were about to
- part, he considered it safe to be friendly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We're coming into Lewes,&rdquo; he said with a smile. &ldquo;The Seafold train will
- be waiting just across the platform. You can't miss it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood thanked him brusquely.
- </p>
- <p>
- What to do next? If he were fortunate in catching an express, he could be
- in London in time to dine. As he stepped out, he saw the Seafold local
- waiting. What good would it do him to go to Seafold? Yet to quit now would
- be humiliatingly unadventurous. He was moving slowly towards the stair,
- when he was arrested by a voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If you wouldn't mind? It was stupid of me to drop it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He turned sharply. She was leaning out of a carriage window which he was
- in the act of passing.
- </p>
- <p>
- Without giving him time to question, she explained: &ldquo;My ticket&mdash;it
- slipped from my hand. There it is behind you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The moment he had stooped and returned it, she withdrew herself. It had
- happened so quickly that he had no chance to guess at the features behind
- the heavy veil. With a promptitude of decision which almost deceived
- himself, as though he had never harbored any other intention, he opened
- the door and clambered into the carriage next to hers.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's that,&rdquo; he thought, smiling tolerantly at his relieved sense of
- satisfaction. And then, &ldquo;It was no accident. She saw that I was giving up
- the chase. She did it to keep me going. What's her game?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Whatever her game was, he was well on the road to enlightenment. The
- engine was puffing through a valley, across salt-marshes intersected by
- dykes and sluggish streams, where derelict boats lay sunken in the mud,
- rotting among the wild-flowers. Grazing sheep made the quiet plaintive
- with their cries. Gulls, disturbed by the train's impetuous onrush, rose
- and drifted lazily into the peace that slumbered further inland. Of a
- sudden, with a gesture of exaltation, the gleaming chalk-cliffs of the
- coast leaped into sight and beyond them the dull flash of the Channel.
- </p>
- <p>
- He was clamorous with excitement. Curiosity beat masterfully on the door
- of the future. He had to find out. Why had he been brought here? What had
- Santa to do with it? Who was the woman in the next compartment?
- </p>
- <p>
- They had halted several times. Each time he had watched carefully to see
- whether she was eluding him. Again their speed was slackening. They were
- entering a little, sandy town, dotted with red-brick villas, bleached by
- the wind and sun. He caught glimpses between the houses of a battered
- esplanade, of concrete breakwaters partly destroyed, of a pebbly beach
- alternately sucked down and quarrelsomely hurled back by the waves. Over
- all hung the haunting fragrance of salt, and gorse, and wild thyme.
- </p>
- <p>
- They had come to a standstill. Passengers were climbing out and greeting
- friends. A porter flung wide the door of his carriage, shouting, &ldquo;Seafold!
- Seafold!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Having watched her alight, he followed. She was a few paces ahead, picking
- her way daintily through the crowd. Again she was all discretion and gave
- no hint that she had noticed him. Outside the gate, cabmen offered
- themselves for hire. She shook her head denyingly and passed on with her
- tripping step. Not until the station had been left behind did he remember
- that he ought to have inquired at what times the trains departed for
- London. Too late! His immediate business was keeping her in sight.
- </p>
- <p>
- With the unhesitating tread of one familiar with her surroundings, she
- chose what seemed to be the most important street. It was narrow and
- flanked by little, stooping cottages, most of which had been converted
- into shops which cater to the needs of tourists. It was the end of the
- season. A few remaining visitors were sauntering aimlessly up and down.
- Natives, standing in groups, had the appearance of being fishermen. Some
- of them nodded to her respectfully; without halting, she passed them with
- a pleasant word. At the bottom of the street she turned into a road,
- paralleling the sea-front, which led through a waste of turf and sand into
- the wind-swept uplands of the open country. Just where the country met the
- town there stood a lath-and-plaster house, isolated, facing seaward,
- creeper-covered, surrounded by high hedges. It was more pretentious than
- any he had seen as yet. Giving no sign that she was aware she was
- followed, she pushed open the rustic gate, passed up the red-tiled path,
- produced a latch-key, and admitted herself. There, in the bare stretch of
- road, having lured him all the way from London, without a single backward
- glance or any sign that would betray her recognition of his presence, she
- left him.
- </p>
- <h3>
- VII
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">J</span>ust what I might
- have expected,&rdquo; he said aloud.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Did you speak ter me, mister?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He swung round to find a freckled, bare-legged urchin gazing up at him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I didn't. Who are you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A caddy from them links over there.&rdquo; He pointed a grubby finger along the
- road to where, half a mile away, the level of the seashore swept up into a
- bold, green headland.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then I guess you're the sort of boy I'm looking for. Who lives in this
- house?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A Madam Something or other. 'Er name sounds Russian.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What does she look like?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Dunno. She's a widder and covers 'erself up. Not but what she 'as
- gentlemen friends as visits 'er.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You seem a sharp boy. Can you tell me how long she's lived here?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Maybe a year; off and on that's ter say. I don't recolleck.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Is she by herself?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There's an old woman in the garden sometimes as looks a 'undred. She
- wears a white hanky tied round 'er 'ead.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I think that's all I want to ask you. Here's something for you. Oh yes,
- do you happen to know about the trains to London?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The last one's gorn, mister, if that's what yer means. It's the one that
- our gents at the golf-links aims ter catch.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then I'm out of luck. Good evening, sonny, and thank you for your
- information.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The bare legs showed no signs of departing; the freckled face still gazed
- up.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's interesting you. My way of speaking? I'm American.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The boy shook his head. &ldquo;We 'ad Canadian soldiers 'ere during the war;
- they're pretty near Americans.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then what is it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's that you're the second gent to-day to slip me a shilling for telling
- 'im about this 'ouse. And it's something else.&rdquo; He sank his voice to a
- whisper. &ldquo;Don't look round. There's been some one a-peeking from be'ind a
- bedroom winder most of the time as we've been talkin'. I'd best be goin'.
- Good evenin', mister.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Not to attract attention by loitering, Hindwood set off at a businesslike
- pace down the road toward the headland. As he drew further away from the
- house, he walked more slowly; he was trying to sort out his facts. The
- woman who lived there had a Russian name. Santa Gorlof! She dressed like a
- widow. That would be to disguise herself. The news about the gentlemen
- friends who visited her was quite in keeping with the character which the
- Major had bestowed on her, but not at all welcome. She had lived there for
- a year, off and on. Her companion was an old woman, nearly a hundred&mdash;the
- Little Grandmother! But who was this man who earlier in the day had bribed
- the boy that he might obtain precisely the same information? He reminded
- himself that the police were hunting for her. The man might be a
- detective. If justice had already run her to earth, Seafold was the last
- place in which he ought to be found. If the boy had been accurate about
- the trains, there was no escape till the morning. Even though he were to
- hire an automobile, he would be placing his visit to Seafold on record.
- Self-preservation rose up rampant. What a fool he'd been to involve
- himself in so perilous an affair!
- </p>
- <p>
- And yet, once more and for the last time, he longed to see Santa's face.
- Why was it? Was it because her hearsay wickedness fascinated him? It was
- not because he loved her. It was not to gratify morbid curiosity&mdash;at
- least not entirely. Perhaps it was because he pitied her and, against his
- will, discovered a certain grandeur in her defiance. She had played a lone
- hand. Like a beast of prey in the jungle, she was surrounded; at this
- moment she must be listening for the stealthy tread of those who were
- encompassing her destruction, yet she had not lost her cunning. She was
- fighting to the end. Probably this time, as when the firing-squad waited
- for her in the woods of Vincennes, she was planning to employ a man as her
- substitute&mdash;<i>himself</i>. The fact remained that in her desperate
- need, she had appealed to him for help. There was the barest chance that
- she was innocent&mdash;a victim of false-appearing circumstances. He
- wanted to judge her for himself by tearing aside the widow's veil and
- gazing on her destroying beauty.
- </p>
- <p>
- Turning off the road, he struck across the links, climbing toward the
- towering headland. The wind, coming in gusts, rustled the parched gorse
- and brittle fronds of bracken. Behind his back the sun was setting,
- flinging a level bar of gold across the leaden sea. In sudden lulls, when
- the wind ceased blowing, the air pulsated with the rhythmic cannonading of
- waves assaulting the wall of cliffs. When he listened intently, he could
- hear the <i>ha-ha</i> of their cheering and their sullen moan as they were
- beaten back. It was strange to think that two weeks ago he had been in New
- York, intent on nothing but acquiring a fortune. Women had not troubled
- him. Why should he now permit this woman, chance-met on ship-board, to
- divert him&mdash;a woman who could never be closer to him?
- </p>
- <p>
- He had reached the summit of the promontory. Etched against the sky-line,
- his figure must be visible for miles. The sun sank lower and vanished.
- Gazing through the clear atmosphere, far below him he could discern every
- detail of the house to which he had been tempted. It looked a fitting nest
- for an old poet. It held no hint of terror. At the same time it was
- strategically well situated for occupants who wished to keep an eye on all
- approaches.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had been watching for any sign of movement, when a curious thing
- happened. Though no figure appeared, from one of the upper windows a white
- cloth fluttered. He shaded his eyes with his hand. The signal was
- repeated. He tapped his breast and pointed, as much as to say, &ldquo;Shall I
- come?&rdquo; The cloth was shaken vigorously. On repeating the experiment, he
- obtained the same result. When he nodded his head in assent, the
- fluttering ended.
- </p>
- <p>
- So every step of his progress had been observed by some one spying through
- a telescope from behind the curtained windows! The first moment he had
- afforded an opportunity by looking back, the signaling had commenced. That
- so much secrecy should be employed seemed to betoken that Santa's case was
- desperate. That she should have run the risk of tempting him down from
- London must mean that he possessed some peculiar facility for rendering
- her a much needed service.
- </p>
- <p>
- The imminence of the danger, both to her and to himself, was emphasized by
- this latest precaution. She had not dared to admit him to the house or
- even to acknowledge his presence, until she had made certain that he, in
- his turn, was not followed.
- </p>
- <p>
- This thought, that he might be followed, filled him with an entirely new
- sensation; it peopled every clump of gorse and bed of bracken with
- possible unseen enemies. The rustling of the wind, the cry of a sea-bird,
- made him turn alertly, scanning with suspicion every hollow and mound of
- the wild, deserted landscape. It seemed unwise to allow his actions to
- announce his intentions too plainly. What his intentions were he was not
- very certain. His immediate inclination was to shake himself free from the
- whole mysterious complication.
- </p>
- <p>
- Continuing his ramble, he assumed a careless gait, descending the further
- side of the promontory and bearing always slightly inland, so that his
- course might lead back eventually to the road from which he had departed.
- As dusk was gathering, he found himself entering an abandoned military
- camp. The bare hutments, with their dusty windows and padlocked doors,
- stretched away in seeming endless avenues of ghostly silence. The Maple
- Leaf, painted on walls and sign-boards, explained the village boy's
- reference to Canadian soldiers. He had reached the heart of it, when he
- was possessed by the overpowering sensation that human eyes were gazing at
- him. Pulling himself up, he glanced back across his shoulder, crooking his
- arm to ward off a blow. Realizing what he was doing, he relaxed and stared
- deliberately about him. Nothing! No sign of life! Yet the certainty
- remained that human eyes were watching.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nerves!&rdquo; he muttered contemptuously.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was dark when, leaving the camp, he struck the road. Stars were coming
- out. Far away along the coast the distant lights of a harbor blinked and
- twinkled. He hurried his steps. His mind was made up. He would get
- something to eat in Seafold, discover a garage, hire a car and be back in
- London by midnight. To confirm his will in this decision, he began making
- plans for the morrow.
- </p>
- <p>
- To enter the town he had to pass the house. As its bulk gathered shape,
- his feet moved more slowly. Long before he came opposite it, he had caught
- the fragrance of the myrtle in its hedges. The windows which looked his
- way were shrouded. He paused for a moment outside the rustic gate. He was
- saying good-by to adventure. He was too old. His season for pardonable
- folly was ended. The prose of life had claimed him.
- </p>
- <p>
- Prolonging the pretense of temptation, he pushed open the gate. A hand
- touched his&mdash;a woman's. The desire to play safe faded. Weakly
- capitulating, he allowed himself to be led up the path and across the
- shadowy threshold. The door of the darkened house closed behind him. She
- was slipping the bolts into place.
- </p>
- <h3>
- VIII
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">H</span>e listened. He
- could not see her face&mdash;only the blurred outline of her figure.
- Except for the sound of her movements, the silence was unbroken. At the
- end of a passage, leading from the hall, a streak of gold escaped along
- the carpet.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Santa!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- No answer.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Santa, why have you brought me?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Gliding past him down the passage, she darted into the lighted room,
- leaving the door ajar behind her. He followed gropingly. As he entered, he
- was momentarily confused by the sudden change from darkness.
- </p>
- <p>
- She was addressing him in a small, strained voice. &ldquo;There's no need to be
- afraid.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He looked about him, searching for the inspirer of fear. There was no one
- save themselves. Then he noticed how she trembled. She was making a brave
- effort to appear collected, but it was plain that she was wild with
- terror. Her eyes were wide and dilated. She stood on the defensive, backed
- against the fireplace, as though she were expecting violence. Her right
- hand was in advance of her body. It held something which caught the glow
- of the flames&mdash;a nickel-plated revolver, cocked and ready for
- immediate action. His reception was so different from anything he had
- anticipated that he stared with an amused expression of inquiry.
- </p>
- <p>
- At last he asked, &ldquo;You knew from the start that I thought you were Santa?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Biting her lip to prevent herself from crying, she nodded. Far from being
- Santa, she was fair as any Dane, with China-blue eyes and the complexion
- of a wild rose. He noted the little wisps of curls which made a haze of
- gold about her forehead. She wore turquoise earrings. They were her only
- adornment. She herself was a decoration. She was like a statue of the
- finest porcelain, so flawless that she seemed unreal. Had it not been for
- her widow's mourning, he would have said that she was untouched by
- passionate experience. She had an appearance of provoking innocence, which
- made the paleness of her beauty ardent as a flame.
- </p>
- <p>
- Speaking quietly, &ldquo;I'm not easily frightened,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;and you, while
- you keep me covered with that revolver, have no reason to be afraid. Any
- moment you choose you can kill me&mdash;you've only to press the trigger.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Tears of horror sprang into her eyes. &ldquo;But I don't want to kill you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0004" id="linkimage-0004"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0136.jpg" alt="0136m " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0136.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then why don't you lay it aside?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Because&mdash;&rdquo; She gazed at him appealingly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Because I'm alone. I may need it to protect myself.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;From me? No. I should think you can see that.&rdquo; Was the house really
- empty? He listened. It was possible that some one might steal up from
- behind. He did not dare to turn. His only chance of preventing her from
- shooting him was to keep her engaged in conversation.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If you feel this way, why did you go to such elaborate pains to force me
- to visit you to-night? You must have known that I didn't want to come. It
- isn't I who have intruded.&rdquo; He smiled cheerfully. &ldquo;At the risk of
- appearing rude, I'll be frank with you. When you crossed my path at the
- Ritz, I was on the point of keeping a most important engagement. When I
- followed you out of the hotel, it was because of a message I'd found
- pinned to my pillow, 'Follow the widow.' So it wasn't you in particular
- that I was following; I'd have followed any widow. I expected that you'd
- speak to me as soon as we were in the street. I'd no intention of giving
- up my appointment. You didn't; you led me on, further and further, a step
- at a time. I don't mind telling you that when I found myself in the train,
- I was extremely annoyed. By the time I'd arrived at Lewes, I'd fully made
- up my mind to abandon the chase. Then you spoke to me. I'd wasted so much
- of my afternoon that I didn't like being beaten. You'd roused my
- curiosity. Here in Seafold, you dodged me and left me standing in the road
- like a dummy. That used up the fag-end of my patience; I was mad clean
- through. I didn't care if I never saw you again. When you signaled me on
- the headland, I signaled back that I was coming. I wasn't. I was tired of
- being led on and eluded. When you caught me at the gate, I was flirting
- with temptation, but I'd already laid my plans to be back in London by
- midnight. So you see you can scarcely blame me for being here. The shoe's
- on the other foot entirely. You've put me to great inconvenience merely to
- tell me, it would seem, that you don't want to shoot me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then why not throw the thing away? You're far more scared of it than I
- am.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Because I may have to use it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;On whom?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A sweet, slow smile turned up the edges of her mouth. &ldquo;My orders were to
- keep you here, if once I'd managed to persuade you inside.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He laughed outright. &ldquo;You hate having me here, and you'd hate to see me
- go. Isn't that the way the land lies? I'm more or less in the same fix: I
- didn't want to come, and I don't want to stay. The fact remains that we're
- both here. Why not make the best of it? If you'll stop brandishing that
- weapon, I'll feel much more comfortable. I'm not trying to escape.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You might.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- For the first time he dared to shift his position. &ldquo;Don't be alarmed,&rdquo; he
- warned her. &ldquo;That's easier. I was stiff. Now, if you'll listen, I've a
- proposal to make. You're treating me like a burglar, which isn't fair. You
- may know, but I've not the least idea how long you intend to hold me
- prisoner. I guess you're waiting for some one else to arrive, but that's
- neither here nor there. Before the third person comes, you may have shot
- me&mdash;of course, by accident. Revolvers go off if you keep them too
- long pointed. You know nothing about firearms, and I'm beginning to be
- rather fond of life. Here's what I propose: if you'll put it away, I'll
- give you my parole not to come within two yards of you or to attempt to
- escape. If I want my parole back, you shall have a full five minutes'
- notice.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If I thought that I could trust you&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You can. Is it a bargain?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Without answering, placing her weapon on the mantelpiece, she turned her
- back on him. She seemed waiting to hear him advance further into the room.
- He did not stir.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is it, Mr. Hindwood?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's that I've just remembered one thing for which our armistice has not
- provided. You'd better pick up your gun again. It's that I haven't dined.
- I wonder whether you'd let me into the village&mdash;&rdquo; He left his
- sentence unended. He suddenly perceived that she was shaken with sobbing.
- In his concern, he forgot his compact as to distance and hurried over to
- her side. She swung round, her face blinded with tears. As she stumbled
- past him, she muttered: &ldquo;You've beaten me. You're not afraid. I couldn't
- shoot you now if I wanted.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- IX
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>iptoeing to the
- threshold, he turned the handle and peeped into the passage. As before,
- everything was in darkness.
- </p>
- <p>
- He was free to go. There was nothing to stop him&mdash;nothing except his
- honor. It was easy to argue that even his honor did not prevent him. He
- had canceled his parole when he had reopened negotiations by telling her
- to pick up her revolver. She had left it behind her on the mantel-shelf.
- He took it in his hand and examined it. It was a repeater. Every chamber
- was loaded. He whistled softly&mdash;so she had meant business! Setting
- the hammer at half-cock, he slipped the weapon in his pocket. He was
- master of the situation now.
- </p>
- <p>
- Why didn't he go? Two hours of steady driving, three at the most, and he
- could be in London. He reminded himself that at this very moment his
- private papers might be in the process of being ransacked. What if they
- were? The possibility left him utterly indifferent. He couldn't save them
- after the lapse of another three hours.
- </p>
- <p>
- No, the truth was that since his voyage on the <i>Ryndam</i> all the
- emphases of his life were becoming altered. The importance of money and
- power no longer seemed paramount. After nearly forty years of living, he
- had awakened to the fact that it was women who shed a radiance of glamour
- in an otherwise gloomy world. Of all human adventures they were the most
- enthralling and the least certain of rewarding.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was curiosity that had enticed him into his present entanglements; his
- curiosity had yet to be satisfied. With a revolver in his pocket, he felt
- that he now possessed the means of extracting the right answers to his
- questions. He had suffered mild inconveniences, but so far he hadn't done
- so badly. He had established mysterious relations with two beautiful
- women. One of them was already under the same roof; the other, he
- believed, was momentarily expected. He began to figure himself as a poet,
- a dreamer, a potential storm-center of romance.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And all because she has blue eyes!&rdquo; he hinted.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then he remembered that Santa's eyes were gray, and that up to the last
- half-hour it had been Santa whom he had supposed that he was following.
- </p>
- <p>
- He gazed about him, making an inspection of the room, trying to guess at
- the characters of its inhabitants. It was square and small. Its walls were
- lined ceiling-high with shelves overloaded with books of a learned
- appearance. A work-basket stood on a mahogany desk with mending, scissors,
- and reels of cotton strewn near it. A piano had been crushed into a
- corner, looking flippantly out of place amid these scholarly surroundings.
- Below the mantelshelf was a rack containing a row of pipes. Set about
- wherever a space allowed were vases of freshly cut flowers.
- </p>
- <p>
- The contradictions of the room suggested that it had once been a man's
- den, but had now been taken over by a woman. This seemed to indicate that
- the owner of the house was actually a widow.
- </p>
- <p>
- Almost the whole of the wall confronting the door was occupied by a tall
- French window, which opened directly on a lawn. Shrubs grew waist-high
- about it. Instinct told him that this was the likeliest approach for the
- other person, by whose order his kidnaping had been plotted. He felt
- convinced that this person would prove to be a woman, but he was taking no
- chances. With the night behind her, she could spy on him for hours without
- being detected. She might be spying on him now.
- </p>
- <p>
- Assuming a listless manner, he seated himself to one side of the
- fireplace. Out of the tail of his eye, without seeming to do so, he
- watched the shadowy panes. His right hand was thrust into his pocket,
- gripping the revolver.
- </p>
- <p>
- After the lapse of some minutes, he heard in the passage the widow's
- returning footsteps. Outside the door she halted, fumbling at the handle.
- Giving up the attempt, she called to him to open. Just as he was rising, a
- face, tense with eagerness, lifted itself out of the bushes, peering in on
- him.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER THE FOURTH&mdash;HE BECOMES PART OF THE GAME
- </h2>
- <h3>
- I
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HE face hung there
- against the darkness for a second; then the leaves closed over it as it
- was stealthily withdrawn. In the utterness of his astonishment, Hindwood
- all but gave himself away. It was not the face he had expected.
- </p>
- <p>
- Masking his excitement with a yawn, he turned his back on the window and
- stepped toward the door, opening it sufficiently to thrust his head into
- the passage, but not wide enough to permit the watcher in the bushes to
- learn anything of the person with whom he talked. He found his captress
- standing just beyond the threshold, carrying a tray, which accounted for
- her awkwardness.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You won't have to dine in the village,&rdquo; she explained. Then, catching his
- strange expression, &ldquo;What has happened?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Some one was to come to-night,&rdquo; he whispered: &ldquo;the person who gave orders
- for my kidnaping. Isn't that so? She was to enter through the window from
- the lawn, while you held me prisoner at the revolver's point.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Is she here?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, but a man who is her enemy&mdash;a Major Cleasby. He's hiding
- directly in her path. He supposed you were she when you tried the door. He
- showed his face. Is there any way in which we can warn her?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The widow set down her tray. Her eyes met his searchingly. &ldquo;If the man
- were there, you wouldn't want to save her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why not? You think I've invented the man in the bushes in order that
- Santa may be scared away? I'm no more afraid of Santa than I was of you.
- Besides, in your absence I've stolen your revolver. Ah, that convinces
- you! The man's her husband and a secret service agent. I can feel his eyes
- in my back. If you don't warn her, she'll be caught. There must have been
- some prearranged signal. What was it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Instead of answering, she pressed nearer, glancing fearfully across her
- shoulder into the unlighted hall. Her voice came so faintly that he could
- only just hear her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She wouldn't spare us. Why should you and I&mdash;? You don't know what
- she intended.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He smiled grimly. &ldquo;I can guess. I was to have been her scapegoat for the
- Rogovich murder. She was staging a new version of what happened in the
- woods of Vincennes. Whether she escaped or was brought to trial, I was to
- have been arrested. By that time she would have clothed me with the
- appearance of her guilt. I was to have figured as her lover and the
- Prince's rival. The motive for my crime was to have been jealousy. The old
- story&mdash;an innocent man dying in her stead!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If you think you know that, why should you, unless you are her lover?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Because she's a woman.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her hands seized his, coaxing him from the doorway into the darkened
- passage. &ldquo;For the love of God, go!&rdquo; she implored. &ldquo;I give you back your
- parole.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Drawing her to him, he held her fast. &ldquo;Don't struggle. He might hear you.
- You decoyed me. You trapped me. Why this change? What makes you so
- concerned for my safety?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I didn't know,&rdquo; she panted, &ldquo;the kind of man you are.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What kind?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her heart beat wildly. She lay against him unstirring, her face averted.
- The moment he released her, she burst forth into new pleading.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;For my sake. I beg of you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Into the grimness of his smiling there stole a gleam of tenderness. &ldquo;And
- leave you? I guess not. What's the signal?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The piano.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Come, then,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;you shall play for me. While you play, if we mask
- our expressions, we can talk of what we choose. Outwardly, to deceive the
- man in the bushes, we must act a part. I'm an old friend. I've dropped in
- unexpectedly. You've provided me with supper. While I eat, we chatter and
- laugh. You sit at the piano and sing for me occasionally. When the hour
- for Santa's arrival is past, I take my leave. If you're brave, we can
- carry the farce through. Are you game?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- For answer she picked up the tray and stepped into the room, smiling back
- at him as he followed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm your humble servant, as always, Mr. Hind-wood, but I have only two
- hands and they're occupied. If you'll bring up that table&mdash;yes, set
- it before the fire. That's right. You must be comfortable, if I'm to sing
- for you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- II
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>he won't come
- now.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The words reached him in a sigh. The pale hands fluttered from the
- keyboard. The fair head dropped. Almost instantly she straightened
- herself, banishing her appearance of weariness. &ldquo;Don't think that I'm
- showing the white feather. It's only that I'm exhausted. She won't come
- now. I'm sure of it.&rdquo; Then, bending forward with a nervous tremor, &ldquo;I
- daren't look round. Has he gone?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood pushed back his chair from before the hearth. For the moment he
- did not answer. He was striving to restore the spell which the intrusion
- of her fear had broken. Glancing at her sideways, he regarded her quietly
- where she sat at the piano in her widow's garb. Through the window at her
- back he caught a glimpse of the garden, shadowy and patched with
- moonlight. Above the silence he heard the rumble of waves, sifting the
- pebbles on the shore. Who was she, this woman who possessed the magic to
- enchant him? Who had been her husband? What kind of man? Had she loved
- him? How long since he had died? There were so many questions.
- </p>
- <p>
- She had persuaded him into following her, well knowing that he believed
- her to be Santa. She had met his discovery of her impersonation with a
- threat. When the luck was all in her favor, with the panic of a stricken
- conscience she had thrown in her hand. For the past two hours, in this
- cozy room, she had surrounded him with shy intimacies of affection, to the
- end that the unseen spectator, listening outside the panes, might be
- beguiled. Apparently the deception had succeeded; the spectator had given
- no sign. It had succeeded too well for Hindwood. It had roused in him the
- longing that, behind her pretense of friendship, there might lurk a
- genuine emotion of liking. He had tried to forget that the scene was
- stage-set. He had wanted to believe that it was real.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Has he gone?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a break in her voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- He pulled himself together. &ldquo;Do you wish me to make certain?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Rising, he lounged over to the piano as though to select a sheet from the
- pile of music. In a flash he turned, wrenching wide the doors of the
- French-window, and was across the step in a bound. Nothing rose from the
- shadows to disturb the peace of the night. Stooping by the bushes, he made
- a hurried examination.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Come,&rdquo; he called. Then, seeing how she pressed her hands against her
- mouth, &ldquo;There's no need to fear.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- When she was standing by his side, he explained: &ldquo;To-morrow you might
- think that I'd tricked you. I want you to see for yourself. Here's where
- he was hiding when he peered in on me. The ground's trampled. The bushes
- are bent back.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He may be still here,&rdquo; she whispered, &ldquo;in the garden&mdash;somewhere.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood smiled reassuringly into her upturned face. &ldquo;He wouldn't do you
- any harm if he were. Remember he's a secret service agent. As a matter of
- fact, he ought to make you feel safe.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Safe!&rdquo; She knotted her hands against her breast. &ldquo;Shall I ever feel safe?
- Oh, if I could confess&mdash;to you, to any one!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If it would help&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Without giving him a chance to finish his sentence, she plucked at his
- sleeve with the eagerness of a child. &ldquo;Would you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Let me?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- III
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>hey had reentered
- the room, fastening the window securely behind them. When that was done,
- they had drawn the curtains across the panes. She had flung herself into a
- chair beside the fire and was waiting impatiently for him to join her. But
- he hovered in the center of the room, fingering his watch and looking
- troubled.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's delaying you?&rdquo; she asked without turning.
- </p>
- <p>
- He slipped his watch into his pocket. &ldquo;I had no idea it was so late.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Does that matter? Till morning there are no trains.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I was thinking of hotels.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They'll be shut.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Precisely. So what am I&mdash;&mdash;?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Stay with me,&rdquo; she said lazily.
- </p>
- <p>
- The room became profoundly silent. The darkened house seemed to listen.
- Had he plumbed a new depth in this drama of betrayal at the moment when he
- hoped he had discovered loyalty? He had been deceived by women before. Had
- he not allowed Santa to deceive him, he would not have been here. He might
- tell himself that this woman was different. If a man did not tell himself
- that each new woman was different, the mischief of love would end.
- </p>
- <p>
- He caught sight of her flaxen head and became ashamed of his reflections.
- It wasn't possible, if the soul was foul, that the flesh should be so
- fair. She had the wonder of the dawn in her eyes. Nothing that she had
- said or done could belie the frankness of her innocence. Standing behind
- her chair, he gazed down in puzzlement at her graciousness.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There are conventions. We may have met unconventionally, but neither of
- us can afford to ignore them.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Without looking up, she answered, &ldquo;If you were as alone as I am, you could
- afford to ignore anything.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Perhaps I am.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then you understand.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I think I understand.&rdquo; He spoke gently. &ldquo;I suppose no man can ever be so
- lonely as a woman, especially as a woman who has lost her happiness, but
- I, too, have been lonely. Everybody has. The cowardice which comes of
- loneliness is responsible for nearly every wickedness. Most thefts, and
- cheatings, and even murders are committed in an effort to gain
- companionship. But you can't elude loneliness by short-cuts. Wherever you
- go, it's with you from birth to death. Brave people make it their friend.
- Cowards let it become their tempter. Loneliness is no excuse for
- wrong-doing, nor even for surrendering to the appearance of it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Preaching?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No. Trying to share with you my experience. Until this afternoon, you
- didn't know that I existed. All your life up to the last five minutes,
- you've been able to do without me. Don't be greedy and spoil everything
- before it's started. There's tomorrow.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why wait for to-morrow when I trust you now?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He stooped lower. She had become irresistibly dear. In a rush he had found
- the clue to her character&mdash;her childishness. She couldn't bear to
- postpone the things she wanted.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Trust me! I wonder! You're the first woman to have the daring to tell me.
- I'm not sure that I feel complimented; at this hour of night one has to be
- a little cold to be trusted like that. But I trust you&mdash;which is
- strange after all that's happened. The person I distrust is myself. You're
- beautiful. The most beautiful&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Am I more beautiful than Santa?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He caught the vision of her blue eyes glinting up at him. There was
- nothing roguish in their expression. They were pathetic in their
- earnestness. Her throat was stretched back, white and firm. Her lips were
- vivid and parted. Her question sounded like the ruse of a coquette, yet
- she seemed wholly unaware of her attraction.
- </p>
- <p>
- He drew himself erect, staring at the wall that he might forbid himself
- the danger of looking at her. His voice came harsh and abrupt. &ldquo;Your
- confession can keep till morning. One can say and unsay anything. It's
- deeds that can never be unsaid.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He had reached the door. She spoke dully. &ldquo;You despise me.&rdquo; And then, &ldquo;All
- my life I've waited for to-morrows. Go quickly.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Glancing across his shoulder he saw her, a mist of gold in a great
- emptiness. Slowly he turned back.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Can't you guess the reason for my going? I reverence you too much.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Clutching at his hands, she dragged herself to her feet. &ldquo;It's friendship
- that I'm asking. What's the use of reverence? Like me a little. You'd do
- more for Santa. Only to like me wouldn't cost you much.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- IV
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span> should have died
- if you'd left me.&rdquo; He was feeling both amused and annoyed at his
- surrender; at the same time he was on the alert for developments. She had
- extinguished the lamps. The sole illumination was the firelight. For what
- reason she had done it, whether as an aid to confession or as a
- discouragement to watchers, she allowed him to guess. Whatever the reason,
- the precaution was wise, but it increased the atmosphere of liaison. He
- had pushed back his chair to the extreme corner of the hearth, so that he
- was scarcely discernible. She sat where the glow from the coals beat up
- into her face. He saw her profile against a background of darkness.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Died!&rdquo; He pursed his lips in masculine omniscience. &ldquo;You'd have gone to
- your bed and had a good night's rest.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I shouldn't. I was in terror. I used to be afraid only by night; now it's
- both day and night. You're never afraid. You weren't afraid even when I&mdash;&mdash;.
- How do you manage it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;By doing things, instead of thinking about the things that can be done to
- me. I've learned that what we fear never happens&mdash;fear's a waste of
- time. Fear's imagination playing tricks by pouncing out of cupboards. It's
- the idiot of the intellect, gibbering in the attic after nightfall. IPs a
- coward, spreading cowardice with false alarms. It's a liar and a libeller;
- life's a thousand times kinder than fear would have us paint it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She sighed happily. &ldquo;It was kind to me to-night.&rdquo; He waited for her
- confession to commence. She leaned back, her eyes half shut, watching the
- red landscape in the dancing flames. Time moved gently. Night seemed
- eternal. Her contentment proved contagious. Neither of them spoke. Nothing
- mattered save the comfort of her presence. In a hollow of the coals he
- invented a dream cottage to which he would take her. It had a scarlet wood
- behind it and mountains with ruby-tinted caves. As the fire settled, the
- mirage faded.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Does it strike you as comic,&rdquo; he questioned, &ldquo;that you and I should sit
- here after midnight and that I shouldn't even know what to call you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Varensky. Anna Varensky.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Russian?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She nodded.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But are you Russian?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm Ivan Varensky's wife.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You say it proudly, as though I ought to know who Ivan Varensky was.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She turned her head slowly, wondering at him. &ldquo;There's only one Ivan
- Varensky: the man who wanted to be like Christ.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood jerked himself into wakefulness. &ldquo;I'm afraid I need
- enlightenment. I don't&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You do,&rdquo; she contradicted patiently, &ldquo;or rather, you will when I've
- helped you to recall him. How hurt he would be, poor Ivan, that a man of
- your standing should so soon have forgotten him! He hoped to make such a
- noise in the world. After Czardom had fallen, he aimed to be a savior,
- healing men with words. But he wanted to be crucified at once. He cared
- more for Calvary than for the road that led up to it. He was an
- emotionalist, impatient of Gethsemane; it was the crown of thorns that he
- coveted. Having only words with which to save humanity, he dashed all over
- Russia in special trains, speechifying at every halting-place, foretelling
- his approaching end. He had no time to waste; he believed his days were
- numbered. His message was always the same, whether he was addressing the
- Duma, armies marching into action, or a handful of peasants: he was about
- to die for Russia. Then suddenly Trotzky and Lenine came. They were men
- who did things; they overthrew his government. Worse, still, they refused
- to fulfill his prophecies; instead of executing him, they bundled him into
- exile. To be forced to live, when he had pledged himself to die, was a
- more cruel crucifixion than any he had anticipated. He found himself
- nailed to the cross of ridicule with no one to applaud his sacrifice. He
- was left with nothing to talk about, for the thing he had talked about had
- not happened. He was an idealist, an inspirer, a prophet, but because
- death had avoided him, there was no gospel to write. Having climbed the
- long road to Calvary, he had the tragedy to survive. Don't think I'm
- belittling him. I loved him. It was a proud, but not an easy task to be
- the wife of a man who wanted to be like Christ.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She collapsed into silence, sitting lost in thought, her arms hanging
- limply by her sides. He wondered what pictures she was seeing in the fire&mdash;armed
- men marching, revolution, palaces going up in dame.
- </p>
- <p>
- Of course he remembered the Varensky she had described&mdash;the Varensky
- who, in the darkest hour of the war, had hurled himself like a
- knight-errant to the rescue of the Allies. It was he who was to have
- consolidated Russia, leading its millions in an endless tide to the defeat
- of the enemies of righteousness. It was freedom he had promised; freedom
- to everybody. He had preached that every man was good in himself, that the
- things that made men bad were laws. Therefore he had swept all laws aside.
- He had done away with compulsion, repealed death penalties, thrown prisons
- wide. For a day and night he had held the stage, a shining figure, adored
- by despairing eyes. Then the slaves whom he had released from restraints
- had surged over him. He had vanished, trampled beneath ungrateful feet,
- and Russia had become a mob.
- </p>
- <p>
- So this was Varensky's wife! He felt awed. The romantic heroism of her
- husband's failure clothed her with a wistful sacredness. Three years ago
- he could not have approached her. He would scarcely have dared to have
- regarded her as a woman. The hysteria of the moment had canonized her.
- Streets through which she drove in Petrograd had been lined with kneeling
- throngs. There had been something medieval in the spontaneity of her
- worship. It had been rumored that she was a bride immaculate; that her
- purity was the secret of her husband's strength. Her face made the story
- credible. It had the virgin innocence of a saint's. And here he was
- allowed to sit beside her, with three years gone, sharing her hearth in
- this obscure place of hiding!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You were a Russian Joan of Arc,&rdquo; he declared enthusiastically. &ldquo;How well
- I remember all the legends one read about you. And Varensky&mdash;&mdash;
- It doesn't matter that he failed; his was the most gallant figure of the
- entire war. When every nation was embittered, he set us an example of how
- not to hate. He refused to kill, when all of us were slaying. He had the
- courage of meekness; in that at least he followed Christ. What became of
- him? There was a report&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There have been many reports,&rdquo; she interrupted sadly. &ldquo;Lest the latest be
- true, I wear mourning. I wear mourning for him always. Before his fall I
- was his perpetual bride; since his fall I am his perpetual widow. He
- wishes to be dead, so to please him&mdash;&mdash;-&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then he's still alive?&rdquo; Immediately he was conscious of the indecency of
- his disappointment.
- </p>
- <p>
- She gazed into the darkness with a mild surprise. &ldquo;I do not know. I never
- know. That's the torture of it. He was always less a man than a spirit. I
- begin to think he can not die.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You want him&mdash;&mdash;?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- If she had heard his uncompleted question, she ignored it. With folded
- hands she stared into the red heart of the fire. Behind her, across the
- walls and ceiling as flames leaped and flickered, shadows took fantastic
- shapes. When she spoke, as though she were talking to herself, her words
- came softly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He was such a child&mdash;so dear, so vain, so intense, so sensitive. Why
- did he marry me, if it was only to resign me? He treated me as he treated
- Russia. We were both waiting for him to take us in his arms. But it was
- always ideals&mdash;things one can't embrace&mdash;that drew out his
- affections. Had he loved humanity less and individuals more, he could have
- gone so far. There was something monstrous about his self-abnegations.
- Perhaps he denied himself the things for which he did not care. He wanted
- to seem nobler than any one else. Through egotism he missed his chance.
- Had he planned to live, he could have killed his enemies and prevented
- revolution. There was a time when he could have crushed both Lenine and
- Trotzky. But he had to be too noble. 'No,' he said, 'if their ideal is
- more right than mine, it will conquer. Truth can not be silenced by
- slaughter.' It was his inhuman magnanimity that defeated him. So Lenine
- and Trotzky grew strong and crushed him. Because he had planned to die,
- millions are starving, and Russia is in chaos.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But he doesn't own it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;In his heart&mdash;yes. Like a General who has blundered, the vision of
- lost battlefields is forever in his eyes&mdash;the forests of white
- crosses! His egotism is gone. He wants to make atonement; to perish seems
- the only way. Any one who would delay him, even though she were a woman
- who loved him, is his enemy. In his remorse he hounds death as other men
- avoid it. He's head of the counterrevolution and goes continually into
- Russia for the overthrow of Bolshevism. Not that he hopes for success, but
- that he may be put against a wall and shot.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And always he returns?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Always until this last time.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her voice sank away in a whisper. He eyed her with misgiving. What was it
- she desired?
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I read something of this. He's been missing for a long time?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A long time.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Coming out of the shadows, so that she could see his face, he drew his
- chair close to hers.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And what has this to do with your confession?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- V
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>he flinched, as
- though he had made a motion to strike her. &ldquo;My confession! Ah, yes! I
- forgot.&rdquo; She tried to smile. Stretching out her hand, she touched him in a
- timid appeal for understanding. Taking it between his own he held it fast.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Like that,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;as though it were a bird that's tired. It isn't its
- own nest, but it's safe and warm; let it rest till it grows stronger.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You're good,&rdquo; she faltered. &ldquo;Most good men are hard.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Maybe,&rdquo; he laughed. &ldquo;But I'm not good. On the other hand, I don't suppose
- I'm bad. I'm simply a man who's always had to fight, so I know what it's
- like to be up against it. You're up against it at present. You can see
- nothing before you but a high stone wall with no way round it. I've been
- there, and I've found that when you can't get round a wall, there's
- usually a door. What do you say? Shall we look for a door together?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I have.&rdquo; She sank her head. &ldquo;Every day and night in three interminable
- years I've looked for it. I'm like a person lost in a fog, standing still,
- listening, running, falling.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Scared to death?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She nodded.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then don't be scared; stop running. Wait for your fear to catch up with
- you. If you face it, it'll shrink to nothing. The feet of a pursuer are
- like an army. What's causing your panic? Varensky? The thought that he may
- not return?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That he may?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That he may go on wasting me forever.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She waited for him to say something. When he remained silent, she bent
- forward staring vacantly into the hearth. &ldquo;Perhaps I'm a coward and
- unfaithful. Perhaps if he'd been successful&mdash;&mdash; I know what he
- thinks of me: that I'm a fair-weather wife. But I'm not. If it would help
- him, I'd give my life for him. He doesn't want my life. He doesn't want my
- body. He wants the one thing that I can't give him&mdash;that I should
- believe in him. There are people who still believe in him&mdash;the Little
- Grandmother. There are others, like Prince Rogovich, who pretended to
- believe in him that he might use him as a cat's-paw. He says good-by to me
- for the last time and vanishes. I wait in retirement for news of his
- execution. At the end of two months, three months, half a year, he comes
- back. Then the rehearsing for his martyrdom commences all afresh. If there
- were anything I could do! But to be wasted for no purpose!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She turned her head wearily, glancing at him sideways. &ldquo;You called me the
- Joan of Russia. I was almost. There was a time when not to be loved and
- not to be a mother seemed a small price to pay for sainthood. It was my
- happiness against the happiness of millions. But now&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; Her
- eyes filmed over.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But now&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;?&rdquo; he prompted.
- </p>
- <p>
- She brushed her tears away with pitiful defiance. &ldquo;I want to be a woman&mdash;to
- be everything in some man's life.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Perhaps you are in his, but he doesn't show it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She seemed to listen for laughter. Then, &ldquo;No,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;When I try to be
- a woman, I play Satan to him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And that's the wall?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not all of it. There's Santa.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- In the swift march of his emotions he had almost forgotten Santa. As
- though she had been drowning and he had turned back from rescuing her, the
- mention of her name stung him with reproach.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What of Santa?&rdquo; he asked in a low voice.
- </p>
- <h3>
- VI
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>he's in love with
- my husband.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He let go her hand. &ldquo;Do you mind if I smoke? Perhaps you'll join me? No?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He took his time while he lit his cigarette. Then, speaking slowly, &ldquo;I
- can't believe all the evil that I've heard about this woman. And yet I
- ought. Every fresh person has told me something increasingly vile. To make
- a case against her, I have only to take all the trouble she's caused me. I
- meet her on a liner and part with her on landing; from that moment I have
- no peace. I'm pestered by strangers accusing and defending her. My room is
- entered by spies. I find an anonymous note pinned to my pillow. I'm lured
- out of London into the heart of the country on the pretext that she's in
- danger and I can help her. You know the rest. Until the happenings of
- tonight, the most probable explanation seemed to be that she had taken a
- secret fancy to me and had turned to me in her distress, when she found
- herself suspected of a crime. That theory won't hold water any longer.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It might.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It couldn't. You tell me she's in love with your husband.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Santa can be in love with as many men as serve her purpose. The only
- loyalty to which she's constant is the memory of her dead child.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He shook himself irritably. &ldquo;Nothing that you' or any one has told me
- explains her. She left on me an impression of nobility which absolutely
- contradicts all this later information. Until I met you, it almost seemed
- there was a conspiracy on foot to poison my mind. What she is said to have
- done may all be true, but I can't help searching behind her actions for a
- higher motive. You'd clear matters up if you'd tell me frankly how it is
- that you come into the picture.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The picture!&rdquo; She shrank back from him like a timid child.
- </p>
- <p>
- Controlling himself, he spoke patiently. &ldquo;Do I need to be explicit? You
- ought to hate her. She's in love with your husband. When, a few hours ago,
- it was a case of warning her of the trap she was walking into, you were
- reluctant to give the signal. 'She wouldn't spare us,' you said; 'so why
- should you and I&mdash;&mdash;?' And yet you're her accomplice. It was you
- whom I followed. It was you who, when you'd got me into this room, tried
- to hold me at the revolver's point.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She buried her face in the hollow of her arm. Her voice came muffled. &ldquo;It
- was I.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He waited for her to say more. She made no sound&mdash;not even of
- sobbing.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It was a dangerous game to play,&rdquo; he reminded her. &ldquo;You didn't know your
- man or how he would take it. You must have had some strong motive. You
- might have killed me without even intending. What a risk you ran, doing a
- thing like that singlehanded! For a moment, when I first entered,
- everything was touch and go.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And still she made no reply.
- </p>
- <p>
- The fire had burned low. He emptied coals on it. To bridge the
- embarrassment of her silence, he went over to the window, pulling aside
- the curtains, and stood gazing out at the glory of the night. The moon
- rode high. Trees were clumped and motionless. The crooning of waves made a
- continual lullaby.
- </p>
- <p>
- She was married, and she was wasted. She was not wanted, and she was not
- released. She had a husband who refused to live and could not contrive to
- die. As a substitute for passion she had tried sainthood; it had not
- satisfied.
- </p>
- <p>
- He let the curtains fall. Turning, he gazed back at the black-garbed
- figure bowed in the half-circle of firelight. Her golden hair had broken
- loose. It poured across her shoulders and gathered at her feet in a pool.
- At the moment she looked more a Magdalene than a saint. And this was the
- woman who had made men brave by her purity&mdash;to whom a nation had
- turned in its agony!
- </p>
- <p>
- A flood of pity swept over him. Poor, narrow shoulders to have borne such
- a burden! Poor, virgin feet to have come so long a journey! Poor, mortal
- hands to have given such a blessing! She had been robbed and cast aside.
- </p>
- <p>
- The cruelty of idealists! She was their victim. What did they attain?
- Idealists slew happiness on the altar of dreams that a future happiness
- might result from it. Though their dreams were mistaken, they lost
- nothing; they snatched their sensation of godlike righteousness. But who
- could restore the happiness of others which their frenzy had destroyed?
- </p>
- <p>
- If this time Varensky had had the decency to die, she was free. He himself
- could take her. But would she want him? He had no attractions. All that he
- could offer would be to serve her. He couldn't place her back on her
- pinnacle of fame. Instead of crowds, he would be her only worshiper. Would
- that satisfy a woman who had been a saint for a day? He could promise her
- rest and protection. He could take her feet in his hands and guide them
- over rough places. And if she wanted to be a woman&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- Crossing the room on tiptoe, he stood over her. Sinking to his knee, he
- placed a hand on her shoulder.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Won't you look up? I'm not here to hurt you. I wouldn't even judge you.
- Life's been hard.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- When she gave no sign, he spoke again.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm a man and a stranger. You're a wife. But you've told me so much.
- You're wounded. You can't go on by yourself.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She moved. He knew now that she was listening.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There's that door in the wall we were going to find. Perhaps we've found
- it. Let me be your friend. It would be foolish and wrong for me to tell
- you that I&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She raised her head. Her hair fell back, and her eyes gazed out at him
- with hungry intensity. &ldquo;Don't say it,&rdquo; she implored. &ldquo;Varensky&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But if he's dead? If I can bring you sure proof?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- For answer she pressed his hand against her bosom.
- </p>
- <h3>
- VII
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">H</span>e seated himself
- at her feet, his arms clasped about his knees as if crouched before a
- camp-fire. How much meaning had she read into his implied confession? He
- felt happy; happier than ever before in his life, and yet, if she were the
- cause of his happiness, the odds were all against him. She had promised
- him nothing. She could promise him nothing. All he knew of her was what
- she had told him. His elation might prove to be no more than an emotion
- that would fade in the chill light of morning.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It would be foolish and wrong for me to tell you&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; The words
- had risen to his lips unpremeditated. He had not realized that he cared
- for her until they were uttered. He had merely felt an immense compassion,
- an overwhelming desire to comfort her. That he should care for her at all
- was preposterous. It was paying her no compliment. Love that was worth the
- having required a more permanent incentive than physical beauty. Her mind
- and her character were a riddle to him. If his passion was no passing mood
- and she were indeed a widow, it would be her mind and her character that
- he might one day marry. He ought to have foreseen that something of this
- sort would be sure to happen between a man and woman left alone after
- midnight.
- </p>
- <p>
- But the triumphant self whom she had roused in him grinned impudently at
- this cautious moralizing. He gloried in the magnificent unwisdom of his
- indiscretion. He was surprised and delighted at this newly-discovered
- capacity for recklessness. When experience was growing stale, he had
- broken through limitations and found himself gazing on an unguessed
- landscape where adventure commenced afresh. He could still feel the
- softness of her flesh against his hand. That sudden act of tenderness had
- altered all their relations.
- </p>
- <p>
- He glanced up at her shyly. She, too, was dreaming. Her lips were smiling
- uncertainly; there was a far-away, brooding expression in her eyes. The
- blackness of her mourning merged with the shadows, making her seem
- disembodied; all he could see distinctly was the golden torrent of her
- hair framing the pallor of her face.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They knelt to you in Petrograd. I don't wonder.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Poor people! It did them no good. I never want any one else to do it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But I kneel to you. I crouch at your feet.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I would rather be loved than worshiped.&rdquo; She restrained him gently. &ldquo;Not
- yet.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then, until I may love, I kneel to you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You ought to find me repellent. No, let me speak. I own to you that I'm
- married, and here I sit with you alone, not knowing whether my husband
- lives or is buried. I must be wicked&mdash;more wicked than I guessed.
- Ivan was right; he used to tell me I played Satan to him. These hands,
- which look so soft and white, are cruel. This face, which seems so gentle,
- is a lie. This hair, which makes a pillow for your head, is a snare. One
- good man has already cast me aside. Rather than love me, he preferred
- death. And you are good. How near I came to killing you!&rdquo; She bent over
- him, taking his face between her hands. &ldquo;<i>You!</i> Do you understand?&rdquo;
- She had drawn his head back against her knees. Her lips all but touched
- him. He could feel the fanning of her breath. Her voice came pantingly, as
- though she dreaded her own question: &ldquo;What can you see in me?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Blue eyes, like a glimpse of heaven.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Tell me truly.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What can I see?&rdquo; He stared up adoringly. &ldquo;A woman who's still a child. A
- woman who's been cheated. A woman whose arms are empty. A woman who sits
- outside a tomb, dreaming of life.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not of life,&rdquo; she corrected softly; &ldquo;of being allowed to live for a man.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;For me, perhaps?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She smiled vaguely.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Without knowing what kind of a man I am?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you know me?&rdquo; She sat upright, gazing straight before her. &ldquo;You don't
- even know why I brought you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It seems strange to tell you now. It seems like a forgotten sadness, so
- forgotten that it might belong to some one else. And yet once it hurt. I
- brought you that I might win back my husband. Don't stiffen. Look up and
- see how I'm smiling. I was never his in your sense. I was an image in a
- niche, whose hands he kissed. I was a mascot, bringing him good luck. The
- woman part of me he postponed superstitiously till his cause should be
- won. It will never be won now.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But he warned you before he married you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She shook her head. &ldquo;He made sure of me. At first I was proud to be
- included in his sacrifice. Then failure made it all absurd. I was sorry
- for him. I knew only one way to comfort him. But because he had failed, he
- became the more determined to deny himself. Instead of comforting him, I
- became his tempter. Then Santa&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood pulled himself together and bent forward, glowering into the
- fire. &ldquo;I can't understand all this talk of sacrifice. It sounds so
- confoundedly unpractical. As far as I can make out, your husband's idea of
- virtue was to abstain from everything that makes life worth living. He
- didn't profit any one by abstaining. All he did was to narrow himself. If
- he'd wanted to be an ascetic, why couldn't he have done the thing
- thoroughly and played the game? There was no need to drag you into it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There was no need,&rdquo; she assented quietly, &ldquo;but to have me and to
- withstand me made him appear more dedicated. He tantalized himself with
- the thought of me and used me as a knife with which to gash himself. I was
- a part of the road to Calvary he was treading in order that Russia might
- be saved. It gratified his pride to make the road spectacular. Then, when
- we were in exile and he was no longer a power, Santa came, the ruthless
- idealist&mdash;his very opposite.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ruthless, perhaps! But I shouldn't call her an idealist.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She is&mdash;an idealist who, to gain her ends, stoops to any baseness.
- She's an avenging angel, beautiful and sinister. She's one of the few
- revolutionaries who knows what she wants; because she knows, she gets it.
- Varensky never knew. His head was in the clouds. He lost sight of his
- purpose in a mist of words.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What does she want?&rdquo; As he asked the question, he glanced back at her
- where she gleamed like a phantom.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She wants&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; There was a pause during which the only sound
- was the struggle of the distant surf. &ldquo;She wants to make men pay for what
- they do to children. All her crimes&mdash;&mdash; She's a mother, robbed
- of her young; in her own fierce way, she's taken all the children of the
- world to her breast.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But men don't do anything.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She caught his tone of puzzlement. &ldquo;Oh yes. Each generation commits
- ferocious sins against the coming generation that can't protect itself.
- It's children who pay for wars and every social injustice. Men live like a
- marauding army, pillaging the land between birth and death. They pass on
- and leave to children the settlement of their reckless debts. Take this
- latest war; five million children in Europe alone are dying of starvation
- at this moment. Santa's marked down the men who are responsible for their
- suffering; silently, one by one, she drugs them with her beauty and exacts
- the penalty.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Prince Rogovich?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Probably. He was raising funds for a new carnage.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But where do I come in? You said that you'd brought me here to help you
- win your husband.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She's in love with Ivan. To be loved by Santa is like witnessing the
- signature to one's death warrant. Perhaps she's a Bolshevik agent&mdash;the
- only people to whom the Bolsheviks are merciful are children. Perhaps
- she's really in love with him. She plays with him like a cat with a
- mouse.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And he?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He's indifferent, as he is to every woman. Yet because she's treacherous
- and he wants to die, he takes her with him on many of his journeys. I
- hoped that if I could give you to her, she might spare him. That was
- before I knew you. I was beside myself with suspense. Ivan has been gone
- so long; to do her bidding seemed like giving him his last chance of life.
- She's in danger and in hiding. You're the one person who can prove her
- guilt. I thought that if I put you in her power, I'd place her under an
- obligation, so that&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And now?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She covered her face with her hands. &ldquo;God forgive me, it's your safety
- that counts&mdash;not Ivan's.&rdquo; He knelt against her, plucking her hands
- aside. &ldquo;Look at me,&rdquo; he commanded. &ldquo;So long as your husband lives, his
- safety comes first. In saving me, you might betray him. If, in snatching
- our happiness, we connived at his death, his shadow would always stand
- between us. I'm still your prisoner; I've not taken back my parole. Here's
- your revolver.&rdquo; He drew it from his pocket and laid it on her knees.
- &ldquo;Fulfill your bargain.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Take me to Santa.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But Ivan&mdash;already he may be&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Until we know, we'll play the game by him.&rdquo; When she hesitated, he added,
- &ldquo;I wouldn't be friends with any woman who couldn't be loyal.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her hands groped after the revolver and found it. Forcing back her tears,
- she answered, &ldquo;Nor would I with any man.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Rising to his feet, he helped her to rise. &ldquo;Take me to her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- VIII
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>s they stepped
- into the garden, the first restlessness of morning was in the air. The
- moon had vanished. Stars were going out. Along the low level of sea-line
- dawn cast a sickly shadow. It was as though night were an indigo curtain
- behind which silver forms were moving.
- </p>
- <p>
- She led the way across the lawn, through a door in the wall, and out on
- the short, crisp turf. She had thrown a cloak about her and pulled the
- hood over her head. It made her look cowled and elfin. It was the hour
- when everything is fantastic.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had an oppressive sense of unreality, as though this were all a dream
- from which he would shortly rouse. He stood aloof from recent happenings
- and surveyed his share in them in an elderly, derisive fashion. What were
- all these promises that he had been exchanging like a gallant? He tried to
- recall his exact words. To what extent had he committed himself? He had
- crossed the Atlantic that he might multiply his fortune&mdash;for no other
- reason. He was neither an idealist nor a sentimentalist; he had realized
- the chance that a bankrupt Europe offered and had come to take advantage
- of it. What would these derelicts of the catastrophe think of him if they
- guessed his real purpose? They were willfully, even contemptibly,
- unpractical; yet their perverted unselfishness troubled his conscience. To
- spend half one's years in exile, like the Little Grandmother, might not
- correct injustice, but at least it was a brave protest. To plan to die,
- like Varensky, because he had failed to rescue humanity, was a counsel of
- despair, but it had its gleam of nobility. To assassinate, like Santa, men
- whose statesmanship you did not comprehend was the madness of a zealot,
- but she at least staked her life against theirs. Into none of these
- undertakings did profit enter. It was disquieting to find himself among
- people so determined to convert the world to altruism. The world had been
- like this always; it would be like this to the end. If they were once to
- sense who he was, they would regard him as their enemy. He was walking
- into danger with his eyes wide open. His wisest plan would be to sink into
- the shadows and take the first train back to sanity. To do that he would
- have to leave her.
- </p>
- <p>
- And why not? What did he owe her? What was she to him? She belonged to
- another man. Waiting for him to die, or to make sure of his death, might
- prove a tedious business&mdash;a humiliating one, most certainly. And yet
- to leave her now&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- She had been going on ahead&mdash;or was it his steps that had been
- lagging? She had halted. As he came up, he felt the firm surface of the
- road beneath his tread.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the gloom she laid her hand on his arm. &ldquo;If you've promised too much&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- That determined him. &ldquo;I keep my promises,&rdquo; he answered shortly.
- </p>
- <p>
- Walking side by side, they struggled on against the mass of
- all-surrounding vagueness. It seemed like a strong, gray tide pressing on
- their breasts, against which they made no headway.
- </p>
- <p>
- What was to be the upshot of it? She was guiding him to Santa. His lips
- twisted. It would take more than Santa to inspire him with terror. England
- wasn't the jungle. A man couldn't disappear unnoticed. Supposing in the
- next half-hour Santa were to do away with him, what would she gain by it?
- She would have silenced his testimony in the Rogo-vich affair, but she
- would have added to the evidence. If she were the woman she was painted,
- she would be too wary to do that. No, she would not attempt to kill him.
- Then what was her urgency?
- </p>
- <p>
- Gradually night was fading. The paleness from the sea was spreading. It
- drove like smoke, in billowy banks of vapor, creeping low along the
- ground. Live things were waking. In separate, plaintive warnings,
- early-risen birds were calling. Across the road ahead rabbits scurried.
- Against the formless vacancy of sky the rounded shoulders of the uplands
- became discernible. He took notice of their direction. She was leading him
- to the abandoned camp.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Madame Varensky.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She started. &ldquo;Not that.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm sorry. It was the only name I knew to call you. What do they usually&mdash;&mdash;?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Anna.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She came close like a child and stood gazing up at him.
- </p>
- <p>
- He stooped and spoke gently. &ldquo;You're a wild rose. Once more let me look
- into your eyes. It's so strange that you should care for me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;More strange to me,&rdquo; she said.
- </p>
- <p>
- He placed his hands on her shoulders. &ldquo;There's something that I want you
- to remember. If harm comes to either of us, believe always that it was
- only good that I intended.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Whatever you brought me would be good,&rdquo; she murmured.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I wish it might.&rdquo; He tumbled the hood back so that he could see her hair.
- &ldquo;When a man loves a woman who's already married, it doesn't often bring
- happiness. It wouldn't be right that it should. It isn't our fault that
- this has happened, but it will be if we misuse it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We shan't misuse it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There's something else.&rdquo; He groped after his words. &ldquo;Before I came to
- you, I'd been foolish. There's no sense in regretting; if I hadn't been
- foolish, we shouldn't have met. I thought that I was following Santa; you
- can guess&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She inclined her head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And there's one thing more. If your husband comes back, promise me you'll
- forget.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She strained against him, so their lips were nearly touching. &ldquo;Never.&rdquo; She
- spoke fiercely. And again, &ldquo;Never. Though it's years and you forget.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- His hands slipped from her shoulders, lower and lower, till his arms
- closed about her. &ldquo;Rest,&rdquo; he whispered, &ldquo;if it's only for a moment, poor,
- tired little bird.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Through the ghostly twilight of the autumn dawn they entered the deserted
- camp. Before one of the hutments she halted and tapped. She tapped again.
- There was no answer. Cautiously raising the latch, she peered into the
- room. Beckoning to him, she slipped across the threshold.
- </p>
- <h3>
- IX
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>he hut was empty.
- The floor was deep in dust. The ceiling was meshed with cobwebs. Nailed
- across the window, just as the soldiers had left it, a dingy curtain hung.
- Striking a match, he held it above his head. At the far end he made out
- signs of occupancy. On a shelf was a loaf of bread and near by a pitcher.
- In a corner, spread on the bare boards for a bed, was a wrap. He stooped;
- it was Santa's cloak of sables.
- </p>
- <p>
- The match went out. He turned. &ldquo;How long has she been here?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;From the time she knew she was suspected.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She knew she was suspected at Plymouth. What made her motor all across
- England to this?&rdquo; He glanced round with pity at the poverty-stricken
- forlornness.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She wanted to be near.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What? It would be better to tell me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To the road out.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He lit a cigarette and considered. &ldquo;So there are more people in it,&rdquo; he
- said at last, &ldquo;than just the few that I have met! It's an organization. I
- might have guessed. There are the people who helped the little old lady to
- visit me undetected. There are the people who entered my room in my
- absence. There's the foreign gentleman, who couldn't speak English, who
- called for Santa in his car. But if this hut is on the road out, why was
- she delaying?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;For you, perhaps.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But she was risking her freedom every second. Why for me, Anna?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Before he had given her time to answer, his mind had leaped to a new
- conjecture. &ldquo;What if she's captured?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Suddenly the tragedy of this strange woman, temple-dancer, revolutionary,
- avenger of children, became vivid. Her pain stung him as though he had
- suffered it himself. He lived again the hunted hours that must have been
- hers while she had listened in this dusty room. He remembered her
- fascination, the grayness of her eyes, the fastidiousness of her dress.
- What a contrast to these surroundings! How often she must have crouched by
- that window, watching from behind the shabby curtain for the approach of
- the pursuer! The men she had killed did not matter. Probably they had
- deserved their death. His pity was reserved for her. She had been the
- pampered darling of princes. Her whims had been commands to lovers who
- themselves were rulers.
- </p>
- <p>
- No present had been too costly to purchase the ecstasy of her
- complaisance. Her body had been a jewel, guarded, coveted, irrepeatable in
- its beauty. Crimes had been committed for its possession. And this was her
- end! He heard in memory the hoarse pleading of her voice, trying vainly to
- convince him that love could make her good.
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman at his side was speaking. &ldquo;We heard no sound. She was armed. If
- they'd tried to take her, she'd have defended herself.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- His thoughts came back. &ldquo;Last night. Yes. If they'd taken her in the
- garden. But they might have known she would be armed. Perhaps they
- followed her. If they traced her to this hut, they might have waited till
- she was sleeping&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She shook her head. &ldquo;It isn't that. She's grown tired of delaying. She's
- gone by the road out.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He frowned. &ldquo;That's the second time you've used the phrase. Can't you tell
- me plainly?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If it's not too late, I'll show you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She darted out of the hut. When he joined her in the open, she was waiting
- impatiently to secure the door behind him. The moment it was fastened, she
- set off at a run. She raced like a boy, with none of a woman's
- awkwardness. With an occasional backward glance, up the long deserted
- avenue of the camp she fled. At first he was content to follow for the
- pleasure he had in watching her. She was so swift and young. She was like
- a deer in her slenderness. Sudden eagerness had transformed her. The hood
- had slipped back to her shoulders; the wind of her going fluttered in her
- hair.
- </p>
- <p>
- Outside the camp she bore to the left in a direction leading further
- afield. Over gorse and bracken dew had flung a silver net. The turf was a
- tapestry sewn with jewels. Larks were springing up. The keen fragrance of
- seaweed mingled with the honeyed perfumes of the land.
- </p>
- <p>
- He caught up with her. &ldquo;Why?&rdquo; he panted.
- </p>
- <p>
- She had no breath to waste in words. Turning on him a flushed and laughing
- face, she pointed ahead.
- </p>
- <p>
- Just short of the cliff-edge, where the sheer drop began, she sank to her
- knees, clasping her breast. While she recovered, he gazed about him. He
- discovered no sign of the thing she was pursuing. The sea was blanketed in
- mist. Above the blurred horizon, the red eye of the sun stared at him.
- From the foot of the cliff came the lapping of waves. No other sound.
- </p>
- <p>
- She had risen. He was about to speak. She pressed a finger to her lips.
- Taking him by the hand, she led him to the edge.
- </p>
- <p>
- At first, as he gazed down, he saw only the crumbling face of the chalk.
- Then he made out a winding path descending; it seemed no broader than a
- track that a goat might follow.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Listen.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She dragged excitedly on his arm.
- </p>
- <p>
- Distinctly, above the lapping of waves, he heard the click of oars working
- in oar-locks. Beneath the fog a vessel was hiding. It had dropped a boat
- which was pulling toward the land.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The road out,&rdquo; she whispered.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But Santa&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She nodded. &ldquo;It's not so difficult as it looks. It was used by smugglers.
- We use it&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She broke off. Oars were being shipped. The prow grounded. There was a
- muttering of men's voices. Some sort of discussion. A pause. Then oars
- were put out again. The rowing recommenced, growing fainter and fainter.
- </p>
- <h3>
- X
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">G</span>one!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She pressed against him in her gladness.
- </p>
- <p>
- Seeing the relief in her eyes, he questioned, &ldquo;What does this mean to you,
- Anna?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Safety.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Anything else?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Freedom, perhaps.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You mean you think that Santa had received word of your husband and that
- that was why&mdash;&mdash;?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't want to think or mean; I only want to feel. It's as though I'd
- been living in a prison and the door had been flung wide. I wasn't one of
- them. They condemned me. In their hearts they despised me. I was too weak.
- I couldn't bear their cross.&rdquo; She clenched her hands against her cheeks
- till the knuckles showed white. &ldquo;What's the good of being crucified? It's
- so much better to live and be glad for people.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And Santa,&rdquo; he asked, &ldquo;where she's going, what will happen to her?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She raised her face. &ldquo;Pain. She'll be hounded and hunted. She's getting
- too well known. Prince Rogovich thought he recognized her. She'll be
- always escaping, rushing from hiding to hiding, till one day&mdash;&mdash;
- To have been loved so much and to be pushed out of life&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Behind the mist they heard the creak of ropes running over pulleys. A
- gasoline engine was started. For an instant the shadow of a trawler loomed
- through the wall of opaqueness. The tiller was thrust over. She vanished.
- They stood very silently, listening and watching. In imagination Hindwood
- followed the vessel's course. It was not of the vessel he was thinking,
- but of the woman on board her. &ldquo;To have been loved so much and to be
- pushed out of life&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; If he had had the chance, what could he
- have done for her? She had fascinated him; but he had not loved her. She
- was past reclaiming. Love with a woman of her kind would have meant
- passion&mdash;nothing more. A fierce flame, self-consuming! A slow
- degrading of an emotion that was fine! Yet he was filled with pity and
- unreasoning remorse. Some day her enemies would overtake her&mdash;good,
- respectable men like Major Cleasby; the good men who by the injustice of
- their prejudices had made her what she was.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's a chapter ended,&rdquo; he said quietly.
- </p>
- <p>
- Slipping his arm through hers, as though she already belonged to him, he
- was turning inland toward the peace of the rolling country, when his step
- was arrested. He caught the sound of labored breathing and the rattle of
- sliding chalk. Hands groped above the edge of the cliff, searching for a
- holding. They were followed by the head and shoulders of a man with a face
- intensely white, in which a pair of pale green eyes smoldered. Lower down
- and out of sight a woman spoke. The voice was Santa's.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER THE FIFTH&mdash;THE GREEN EYES CAST A SPELL
- </h2>
- <h3>
- I
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">H</span>INDWOOD stood
- rooted to the ground. He had thrust Anna behind him. She was tugging at
- his hand with the tenacity of terror. He scarcely dared breathe while he
- watched the green-eyed man dragging himself inch by inch to safety. To go
- to his assistance might cause his death. Any move that startled him might
- fling him back over the precipice. In falling he would sweep away the
- unseen woman who must be clinging to the face of the cliff below him.
- </p>
- <p>
- To Hindwood it seemed that he was present at a fantastic rehearsal of the
- Day of Resurrection. When the last trumpet blew, it would probably be
- precisely in some such fashion that the sea would give up its dead. It
- would happen about sunrise, when mankind was still abed. It would commence
- very quietly, when clouds were hanging low and the first of the barnyard
- cocks were crowing. Without warning, graves would open, and all the tired
- people, who had been so long resting, would begin to stir. Like the sound
- of falling rain, they would patter through the drowsing country, searching
- for their ancient dwellings. At first they would walk alone, then in
- groups, later in crowds. By the time the living looked out of their
- windows there would be no standing room on earth. Across seas and oceans
- the drowned would come swimming. They would wade through waves and clamber
- up cliffs, just as this man was doing.
- </p>
- <p>
- The vision became so probable that Hindwood glanced behind him to make
- sure that it was not happening. In a shimmering expanse of dew and autumn
- coloring lay the sweet, green landscape of living men, the kindly
- hedgerows, the sheltering valleys, the friendly villages. Everything was
- gentle and unaltered. It was only at this barrier, which the green-eyed
- stranger was struggling to surmount, that the tranquillity ended. At its
- brink eternity commenced, a pulsating oblivion of mist and grayness across
- which the rising sun peered curiously.
- </p>
- <p>
- The stranger was too occupied with his danger to be aware that he was
- being observed. Clutching at tufts and digging with his fingers, he was
- easing himself out of the abyss. Little by little he was gaining ground
- till at last, pulling his knees clear of the edge, he sprawled exhausted
- on the turf. But it was only for a moment. Twisting about, still lying
- flat, he reached down to his companion. As she appeared, he retreated,
- steadying her efforts and dragging her with him. Side by side they
- collapsed, breathing heavily and staring in dazed defiance at the death
- they had avoided.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood made a step to approach them. He found himself tethered. Anna was
- gazing up at him, silently imploring. Her hair seemed a mass of solid
- gold, weighing her down. The blue veins in her temples stood out beneath
- her fairness. Her throat was milk-white and stretched back. Her lips were
- parted, revealing the coral of her mouth. It was as though she had been
- caught from behind by an assailant and brutally jerked back. With little
- endearing motions she caressed Hindwood's hand. He tried to fathom her
- necessity; in the presence of her weakness there was nothing that he would
- not have granted.
- </p>
- <p>
- The man with the green eyes had recovered. In the act of rising he had
- caught sight of them. His jaw had dropped open. If it was possible, his
- complexion had gone a shade whiter. His expression bore testimony to the
- medley of his emotions, the chief of which was astonishment. He made an
- oddly pathetic figure, with his scratched hands and torn clothing,
- crouching in that hunted attitude. He had lost his hat in the ascent. His
- brown hair was lank with perspiration. He was a lean man and graceful as a
- greyhound. Even in his present ungainly posture there was a hint of
- something swift and gallant in his bearing. One forgot that he was a
- vagabond who had eluded formalities and completed an illegal landing; he
- looked more like a champion unhorsed in a tourney. His brow was wide and
- noble, but the top of his head was shaped like a deformity and rose into a
- point like a dunce's cap. His eyes were well-spaced and piercing; they
- penetrated with a sense of power. His mouth was thin-lipped and sensitive&mdash;too
- sensitive for a man's. His face was narrow and smooth as a girl's. He had
- a haggard appearance of perpetual suffering, which the extremeness of his
- pallor served to enhance. He was indefinably tragic. He might have sat
- equally well for a portrait of Lucifer or of Harlequin overtaken by his
- folly.
- </p>
- <p>
- Very wearily he lifted himself from the ground and stumbled toward them.
- As he did so, Santa uttered a nervous cry and turned&mdash;after which she
- watched broodingly what happened.
- </p>
- <p>
- Paying no attention to Hindwood, the man made straight for Anna. Bending
- over her humbly, he whispered unintelligible words. Her terror left her.
- Making no sound, she raised to him eyes eloquent with compassion.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What did he say?&rdquo; Hindwood questioned.
- </p>
- <p>
- She was prepared to reply, when the stranger stayed her with a gesture. &ldquo;I
- was apologizing in Russian for having returned.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood glanced at the ragged edge of the cliff and shrugged his
- shoulders. &ldquo;An apology's scarcely necessary. You're to be congratulated.
- You seem to have recognized this lady. Who are you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The stranger drew himself erect. A grim smile played about his mouth.
- &ldquo;Ivan Varensky, at your service.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0005" id="linkimage-0005"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0187.jpg" alt="0187m " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0187.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <h3>
- II
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">H</span>indwood stared at
- him with a frown. He was contrasting this Ivan Varensky with the leader of
- men whose deeds of three years ago had so deeply stirred him. One picture
- stood out ineffaceably. It was of a sea of panic-stricken soldiers,
- patriotism forgotten, arms flung away, in wild retreat, and of Ivan
- Varensky driving forward alone, as though he, by his single courage, could
- turn back the enemy. And this was the man&mdash;the white knight of
- Russia, the scape-goat, the magician of words! Had he met him three years
- ago, he would have knelt to him. Now all he could do was to frown.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was necessary to say something. He spoke gruffly. &ldquo;You've chosen an odd
- method of returning. We had news you were dead.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I was,&rdquo; the green eyes narrowed, &ldquo;nearly. I'm always nearly dying. Isn't
- that so, Anna? And then I come back. This last time, as you observed, I
- had the discourtesy to forget. I was thinking of Santa. Actually I
- struggled to survive. Believe me, that's unlike me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The forbearance of his manner was rebuking. Making an effort to be genial,
- Hindwood held out his hand. &ldquo;It's a strange way to meet. I've long been
- your admirer. It was a close call&mdash;as close as a man could have.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Varensky winced as the powerful grip closed about his fingers. They were
- long and pointed, more like a woman's than a man's. &ldquo;A close call!&rdquo; He
- smiled. &ldquo;You're American? It wasn't&mdash;not for me. I could tell you&mdash;
- But perhaps one day, when I've become past history, Anna will do that.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- As he mentioned his wife, he gave her a look at once tender and furtive&mdash;a
- look which acknowledged without rancor the truth of the situation. She
- started forward, but his eyes held her. She stopped half-way.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;However you return,&rdquo; she said chokingly, &ldquo;and however often, you know
- that I'm glad. It's the certainty that I shall lose you&mdash;that however
- often you return I shall never have you&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She bowed her head. From the edge of the cliff, without a trace of
- emotion, the other woman watched her.
- </p>
- <p>
- Tilting her face with his bruised fingers, Varensky regarded her
- earnestly. &ldquo;As if I wasn't aware of that!&rdquo; And then, &ldquo;Let's be going.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Side by side, but always separate, they moved across the downs. There was
- no backward glance. Hindwood followed them with his eyes till they sank
- into a hollow. The last he saw was the raw gold of her hair and the
- conical top of his pointed head, growing more distant above the bracken.
- </p>
- <h3>
- III
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>nd I, too, have to
- apologize. I failed to keep my appointment.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He swung round at the mockingly spoken words, to find that Santa had
- stolen up behind him. Until now he had had no time to notice her. His
- anger was so intense that it held him silent. After all that she had done
- and had intended to do to him, she had the effrontery to jest! Did she
- think that he was as much her dupe as the fool who had died for her in the
- woods of Vincennes?
- </p>
- <p>
- But his anger was short-lived and left him sternly cold. She was changed.
- Her fastidious elegance was a thing of the past. She was commonly attired
- as any fisher-girl. Her cheap blouse was rent at the neck; its sleeves
- were stained and in tatters. Her rough skirt had been nearly trodden off.
- She was tom and disheveled. She had suffered even more from her adventure
- than had Varensky. Her hat lay crushed at her feet in the grass. With her
- wounded hands she &ldquo;was doing her best to twine the thick coils of her hair
- into place. She stood confessed for what she was, a fugitive from justice.
- The wildness of the landscape made a fitting setting. She looked
- startlingly untamed. She might have passed for a peasant Ophelia, except
- that her gray eyes were calm and her manner nonchalant.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There are a good many things, besides missing your appointment, for which
- you have to apologize.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I can explain&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He cut her short. &ldquo;Between you and me no explanations are necessary.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She jerked back her head, flattening her hands against her sides like a
- soldier standing at attention. &ldquo;Why not?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He took his time to answer. &ldquo;Because you're nothing to me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her face went white, then flamed scarlet, as though he had struck her with
- his open palm. &ldquo;Nothing to you!&rdquo; She spoke slowly. &ldquo;I, Santa Gorlof, am
- nothing to you! You're the first man to whom I ever offered my heart. I
- would lie down in the mud that you might walk over me. I'd let you beat me
- like a dog if I might only follow you. I'd starve that you might be fed,
- go thirsty that you might drink, break my body that you might not suffer.
- I would die if it would give you pleasure.&rdquo; Seeing that her rhetoric was
- having no effect, she sank her voice. &ldquo;When I could have escaped, I waited
- for you. I risked my freedom for one last sight of you.&rdquo; She clutched at
- her breast, choking down a sob. &ldquo;And you tell me that I'm nothing to you!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He was determined to remain unmoved by her emotion. Regarding her stonily,
- he asked: &ldquo;What right had you to believe that you were anything to me?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She laughed forlornly. &ldquo;No right at all.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If I had ever cared for you,&rdquo; he continued, &ldquo;in your present predicament
- it would all be ended.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She raised her brows contemptuously. &ldquo;Of course.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You see, I've found out the sort of woman you are.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What sort?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Need I recall?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He turned away, searching hollows and clumps of bushes for bobbing heads
- of watchers. Her captors might be closing in on her. Her indifference to
- her danger was disconcerting. With eyes still fixed on the distant
- landscape, he revealed his thoughts.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Your talk of love is paltry. It's tragic farce. You have a husband.
- You're liable to be jailed at any moment.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He expected she would retort. When she maintained silence, he glanced down
- at his feet, ashamed of what he felt himself compelled to tell her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Love! If it were true, and if your affection were desired, you have no
- love to offer. Nothing that is you is yours. Your hours are numbered. Your
- body and your life are forfeit. The man who is your husband is leading the
- hue-and-cry against you. If you think you can persuade me to go to the
- scaffold for you, rid yourself of the thought. There'll be no repetition
- of the woods of Vincennes. The victim in that case was your lover; I'm
- not.&rdquo; He met her eyes. &ldquo;You never deceived me for a second. From the
- moment we left the <i>Ryndam</i>, I knew who it was had pushed Prince
- Rogovich overboard.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If you knew,&rdquo; she asked quietly, &ldquo;why didn't you have me arrested?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It was none of my business.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But you were kind after we'd landed. At the hotel you arranged to
- breakfast with me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I couldn't bring myself to believe you were guilty.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And yet, after you had believed, you followed me to Seafold.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The detective instinct.&rdquo; He spoke testily. &ldquo;Morbid curiosity.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No.&rdquo; She said it wistfully. Her face softened. &ldquo;You followed me because,
- even against your will, you still cared for me. You pitied me. You were
- chivalrous. You refused to condemn me unheard. You hoped there was some
- mistake. You followed me to make sure.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And you've made me sure.&rdquo; He rapped out the words. &ldquo;Since you insist on
- the truth, I came to Seafold hoping to find you innocent. If I had I
- should have fought for you. Whereas&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Whereas?&rdquo; she prompted nervously.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I found you'd done to me what you've done to every other man who ever
- befriended you&mdash;betrayed me and had me lured into an ambush where,
- for all I know, you'd given orders for me to be shot.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But you weren't.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No thanks to you. Your husband was ahead of you, hidden in the bushes,
- waiting for you. If we hadn't given the signal that warned you&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But you gave it.&rdquo; She spoke triumphantly. &ldquo;I'd trapped you, and yet you
- didn't want me to be caught. To have shown generosity at a moment when you
- thought that I was threatening your life, you must still have been fond of
- me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Thought!&rdquo; He drew back from her, revolted by her insincerity. &ldquo;You left
- no room for thought. You were diabolically explicit. You knew that I could
- prove your guilt. You meant to kill me in order that I might be silenced.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her eyes filled. She stretched out her arms beseechingly. They fell
- hopelessly as he retreated from her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't misjudge me,&rdquo; she implored. &ldquo;I'm a woman who's finished. A woman,
- as you reminded me, whose hours are numbered&mdash;my body and my life are
- forfeit. It's true what you said: nothing that I am belongs to me. If you
- like to put it that way, I'm a woman who has nothing to offer. And yet I
- love you&mdash;the first man with whom I was ever in love, now when it's
- too late. You don't believe me; you're thinking of the many others. Let it
- pass. I had to see you once more. I couldn't come to you; you were
- surrounded by my enemies. To persuade you to come to me, I had to trick
- you. Until it was safe to visit you, I had to have you held by force. I
- compelled Anna, Madame Varensky to&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He made an impatient gesture. &ldquo;Enough! I'm wondering to how many men
- you've made that speech before. I've heard all about your appeals to
- chivalry. If you were a man&mdash;&mdash; Unfortunately you're not, so I
- have a sentimental compunction about abandoning you. What are your plans?
- When I saw the ship I hoped you had escaped.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I had.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And you came back! Why?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Varensky was landing from the boat that had been sent to take me off.&rdquo;
- She was laying claim to some obscure nobility, making a final bid for his
- admiration.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The mist's clearing,&rdquo; he said brusquely. &ldquo;In another half-hour you'll be
- visible for miles. If you're seen here, you'll be taken.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I won't.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You think not?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She smiled languidly. It was her arch, mysterious way of smiling that had
- first attracted him. &ldquo;Why don't you go?&rdquo; she whispered in her hoarse,
- parched voice. &ldquo;You loathe and despise me. You grudge me every moment
- we're together. I've done what was right; I'm willing to pay the penalty.
- I've earned a rest. I'm tired&mdash;you can't guess how tired.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Now that she wanted him to go, he gazed at her with a new interest. If the
- trackers were hot upon his trail, what would be his sensations? Would he
- be able to be courteous and to talk calmly? Whatever might be her crimes,
- she had courage. What if it were true that by some tortuous process of
- reasoning she did actually believe she had done right? And what if it were
- true that she had intended him no harm, but had only attempted to win him
- by violence? The uneasy doubt took shape in his mind that he might have
- misjudged her. It would be a splendid memory to have, if she were wrongly
- executed&mdash;this gleaming morning, the larks singing, the blue-patched
- sky, the valiant sun, the rosy-tinted dew, and himself fleeing from the
- forlornness of a woman! Every man's hand was against her. She believed she
- had done right.
- </p>
- <p>
- He regarded her less coldly. She was perfect as on the day when all Europe
- had gone wild over her. And this masterpiece of loveliness, which had been
- known as Santa Gorlof, was doomed to be destroyed!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Go.&rdquo; She stamped her foot hysterically. &ldquo;You torture me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He faced her obstinately. &ldquo;What are you proposing? You've some plan in
- mind. Madame Varen-sky called this 'the road out.' Is it possible for you
- to take it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I know a shorter route.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You're certain?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Please leave me. You must leave me. I'm a woman who has nothing to offer.
- You're a man who has everything to lose.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He squared his lips. &ldquo;I don't like the sound of this shorter route. I want
- to know more about it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- As he made a step toward her, she dodged and broke from him, dashing
- toward the cliff. On the very edge he caught her. She struggled
- dangerously, but he stumbled back with her crushed against him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You little fool!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She lay quiet, her face pressed against his cheek. Then she fell to
- sobbing.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What difference would it make? Why wouldn't you let me do it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- IV
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">W</span>hy wouldn't he? It
- was the question he himself was asking. He had done nothing humane in
- preventing her. He had merely spared his own feelings. If she had
- succeeded, he would have found himself in an ugly situation. He would have
- been suspected of a crime similar to hers. There would have been no
- evidence to hang him, but he could never have established his innocence.
- He looked down at the woman shuddering in his arms, for all the world as
- though he were her lover. He had been within an ace of inheriting her
- isolation.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I didn't let you do it&mdash;&rdquo; He hesitated. Then he took the plunge.
- &ldquo;Because I intend to save you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She stirred. She glanced up at him. As her eyes met his, their expression
- of wonder gave way to one of gratitude. She strove to reach his lips, but
- he restrained her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Promise me you'll live.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If you'll help me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- How much she implied oy &ldquo;help me,&rdquo; he did not stop to question.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We've no time to lose.&rdquo; He spoke hurriedly. &ldquo;Where's the safest place of
- hiding?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My old one. A hut&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I know,&rdquo; he interrupted. &ldquo;I'll go ahead to make sure the way is clear;
- you follow at a distance. Keep me in sight. If I look back, take cover.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Without more ado, he turned away, retracing his steps to the camp.
- </p>
- <p>
- He attempted to walk jauntily, like a nature-lover who had risen early to
- enjoy the first freshness of the morning. Here and there he stooped to
- pluck a blackberry. He pulled a sprig of heather for his lapel. He
- flattered himself that, if he were being watched, his conduct was
- artistically normal.
- </p>
- <p>
- For all his display of carelessness, he advanced warily. There was nothing
- in the billowy expanse of greenness that escaped him. Somewhere within a
- radius of four miles the Major was waiting to make his pounce. He might be
- crouched in the next patch of bracken. He might be lying behind the
- nearest mound. The dapper, gallant-appearing old gentleman, who bore such
- a striking resemblance to Lord Roberts, assumed the terror of nemesis in
- his imagination. He seemed everywhere and nowhere. He would pop up, suave
- and neatly bespatted, at the moment when he was least expected.
- </p>
- <p>
- He gazed straight before him, not daring to look back, but he never lost
- consciousness of the fateful woman following him stealthily as a shadow.
- And always there was the memory of the other woman with the gentle eyes
- and shining hair.
- </p>
- <p>
- He reached the camp. It looked lonely as a graveyard. Rows of hutments,
- bleached to a bluish whiteness, gleamed in the morning sunshine. The downs
- curled above it like an emerald wave on the point of breaking.
- </p>
- <p>
- Passing along the bare avenue of silent dwellings he pushed open the door
- of Santa's place of refuge. Tiptoeing across the dusty floor, he knelt by
- the window, peering out.
- </p>
- <p>
- Seconds ticked into minutes. Ten minutes elapsed, twenty, half an hour.
- There was no sign of life. He strove to calm his fears. If she had been
- caught, it simplified matters. But such arguments failed to pacify him. He
- pictured her as he had seen her on the <i>Ryndam</i>&mdash;a splendid
- animal, proud, fastidious, mildly contemptuous; and then as he had seen
- her that morning, broken, desperate, defiant.
- </p>
- <p>
- Out there in the happy sunshine they might be carrying her away. They
- would drag her through the public streets as a criminal. They would lock
- her in a cell. They would hale her to a court to be gaped at. They would
- paw over her private life. They would pry into the intimacies of her
- love-affairs. Nothing that was hers would be sacred. Then, when the sport
- grew tedious, an old man, turned moralist by reason of decrepitude, would
- don a black cap and intrust her to the mercy of Almighty God.
- </p>
- <p>
- He staged her arrest as though he had seen it happen. He had strolled
- straight through her pursuers' ambush. They had let him pass. Directly she
- had appeared, they had risen out of the brush. Twisting her arms behind
- her, they had snapped handcuffs on her slender wrists. She had struggled,
- sinking to the ground, faint with terror. They had jerked her to her feet,
- half carrying her, pushing her forward.
- </p>
- <p>
- He raged impotently. What brutes men were! Nothing that she had done to
- his sex was bad enough. He thrust the vision from him. Each time it
- returned.
- </p>
- <p>
- The door creaked. He leaped as if he had been shot. She pressed a finger
- to her lips. Coming close, so that he could feel the rise and fall of her
- bosom, &ldquo;He's here,&rdquo; she whispered.
- </p>
- <h3>
- V
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">W</span>ho?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She was puzzled by his stupidity. Then, &ldquo;You know,&rdquo; she murmured. &ldquo;He saw
- me in the distance and started to run toward me. I dropped to my knees and
- circled, approaching the hut from the back.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But he couldn't have recognized you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He's on my track.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Alone?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I saw no one else.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood's forehead wrinkled as he reckoned the cost. &ldquo;If he comes alone,
- we can deal with him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You mean&mdash;?&rdquo; She did not finish her sentence.
- </p>
- <p>
- He smiled sternly, thinking how far he had drifted from his moorings.
- &ldquo;Scarcely. What made you ask?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He's my husband.&rdquo; Her answer was enigmatic.
- </p>
- <p>
- They held their breath. She was clinging to him. There had been no sound,
- nothing that could have warned them. Pushing her from him, he stole toward
- the window. Not fifty yards away, rigid like a hound at fault, stood the
- Major. Slowly, scarcely turning his head, he was running his eye along the
- double line of hutments. There was nothing in his expression that would
- tell what he had found. As though he sensed that he was watched, he
- started forward at a rambling pace. He tried no doors. He peered through
- no panes. His bearing was that of a mildly interested tourist who had
- stumbled on the camp by accident. He passed out of sight inoffensively,
- idly slashing at the grass.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was some time before either of them dared to whisper. Then Hindwood
- straightened himself and drew back.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He's gone.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To return,&rdquo; she said tragically.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If he returns alone, what of it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He may catch me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That doesn't follow. We may catch him instead.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her eyes grew long and narrow like a cat's. &ldquo;What would we do with him?&rdquo;
- she asked softly.
- </p>
- <p>
- He regarded her warily. &ldquo;He told me he loved you,&rdquo; he said irrelevantly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Love wouldn't stand in his way&mdash;nothing personal. For what he holds
- to be right, he'd mutilate himself. He'd kill the thing he loved best.&rdquo;
- She sank her voice. &ldquo;We all would.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All&mdash;&rdquo; He paused and began again. &ldquo;With idealists like the Major,
- yourself and Varensky, human relations don't count. That was what you were
- trying to tell me, wasn't it? To achieve individual ideals, you'd
- sacrifice your own and everybody's happiness.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her expression became wooden as an idol's.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You'd sacrifice mine, for instance?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- When she refused to answer, he made his inquiry more intrusive.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My life, perhaps? No obligation of loyalty or gratitude would hinder you?
- Be honest.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He recognized the struggle which his words had occasioned. Her sleepy look
- had vanished. She believed he was preparing to desert her. She was
- mustering the courage to invent a falsehood. Already her hands were lying.
- They were wandering over him, patting and caressing. He clasped them in
- his own, holding her at arm's length. Her eyes met his; they grew steady
- and absorbed him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Even though you were all I had, if your life caused suffering to
- children, I would kill you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He laughed at her solemnity over having told the truth.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;With you it's children; with the Major it's patriotism; with Varensky
- it's freedom. With me it's nothing. I follow no will-o'-the-wisp&mdash;which
- is lucky for you. You're terribly tired; get some rest while you can. I'll
- watch. I'm no idealist; you can trust me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- VI
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>he had wrapped
- herself in her sable cloak and curled herself on the floor in the corner
- remotest from the window. When he judged she was sleeping, he stole to her
- side and stood gazing down. Her rags were hidden. Except for the weary
- disorder of her hair, she was almost the fashionable beauty of his
- Atlantic voyage.
- </p>
- <p>
- He looked closer. Fatigue had uncovered something hidden in her
- countenance, traces of lost girlhood. Her body seemed smaller, her
- features less decided. The mask of intrigue had fallen. He caught a
- glimpse of the slim, pathetic child whom the Major had discovered, swaying
- like lilac-bloom in the perfumed dusk of the Hindoo temple.
- </p>
- <p>
- Her feet peeped out from beneath the costly fur. Such doll's feet&mdash;so
- little to have come so long a journey! Her ankles were cut by the climb up
- the cliff. Her shoes were broken. As though the curtain had gone up in the
- theater of his brain, her feet began to act their story. He saw them tiny
- and brown, pattering about the shaded bungalow where the English
- tea-planter had lived with her Burmese mother. He saw them lost and
- wandering along the roads of India. He saw them in the temple, flashing
- like a swallow's flight across mosaic pavements. He followed all their
- progress, as they carried her through triumphs and bereavements to this
- moment.
- </p>
- <p>
- She sighed and moved languidly. The robe fell back, revealing her hands.
- They were grazed and wounded.
- </p>
- <p>
- Pouring water on his handkerchief from the pitcher, he bathed them gently.
- Just as he had finished, she opened her eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You won't leave me?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You'll find me sitting here,&rdquo; he assured her, &ldquo;just like this when you
- waken.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Smiling faintly, she drowsed off obediently as a child.
- </p>
- <p>
- All day she lay huddled in the corner, oblivious and spent with
- exhaustion. This must be the first long sleep she had snatched for several
- days and nights. Crouched beside the window, he guarded her. The Major
- might return. Varensky might send help. He himself could do nothing till
- after nightfall. The only food was the broken loaf of bread on the shelf
- beside the pitcher. He did not dare to touch it; when she woke, she would
- be hungry. The downs poured in a steady blaze of light. A fly drummed
- against the panes. On distant hillsides sheep were grazing; he envied them
- their freedom.
- </p>
- <p>
- He could go if he liked. As the monotony dragged on, the temptation
- strengthened. He was under no obligation to make himself an outlaw. If he
- were to slip away, he would not rouse her. Within the hour he could be
- speeding up to London. Once there he would be of importance&mdash;the one
- man, at least in some statesmen's estimate, who could solve the European
- situation. For this woman he was sacrificing the happiness of millions.
- The fleshpots of Egypt could be his for the claiming. If he stayed and she
- were arrested, he would be held as her accomplice. Self-interest and
- altruism urged him to escape. He owed nothing to her. Women had always
- been for him an enemy country, forbidden and enticing. They had been what
- darkest Africa was to the explorer, a forest-world of treacherous
- loveliness. In imagination he had always been approaching their borders,
- fascinated by the gleam of uplifted faces. But like Varensky, whose life
- was a constant challenging of terror, in this one matter he had been
- cowardly. Since the first false woman of his early manhood&mdash;?
- </p>
- <p>
- Why was it, this sudden clamor to possess the thing which all his years he
- had avoided? Was it because he felt the rising tide of loneliness and knew
- that the years were gaining on him? All this autumn day, as the silver
- clearness of morning faded into the deep gold of afternoon, he sat
- motionless, considering. Up to now he had maintained his pride, flattering
- himself that it was he who was doing the refusing. He had told himself
- arrogantly that he would succeed first&mdash;succeed immensely; after that
- he could have any woman for the asking. But could he? He was losing his
- faculty for sharing. Merely to marry a woman was not to win her. The
- illusion of ecstasy!
- </p>
- <p>
- He glanced over to the corner where she lay sleeping. She was the symbol
- of the feminine half of the world whom he had disregarded. It was she who
- had roused him, with her parched voice and instinctive passion.
- </p>
- <p>
- He studied her&mdash;her golden face, her cruel lips, her thin, sweet
- profile. He noticed the delicate firmness of her arms, the fineness of her
- throat, the tenderness of her molding. At every point she made him aware
- of his incompleteness.
- </p>
- <p>
- Across the downs, like a fisherman drawing in his nets, the sun was
- setting. The hut was vague with dusk. Like the crescent of a young moon,
- Santa had wakened and was rising.
- </p>
- <h3>
- VII
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">Y</span>ou promised to
- save me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I will if I can.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She knotted her hands in mental anguish.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You must. Any moment he may return. Have you thought of nothing?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Leaning across his shoulder she lifted the ragged curtain, peering out at
- the fading landscape; as she gazed, her face stiffened and her eyes became
- fixed in a leaden stare. Not more than thirty yards distant, with his back
- toward them, the Major was standing. He had followed their trail still
- closer.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We can't escape,&rdquo; she panted. &ldquo;He'll be there all night, to-morrow,
- forever.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We can. Stop here and trust me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Rising stealthily, leaving the door ajar behind him, he slipped out of the
- hut. In the twilight he halted, breathing in the sweet evening fragrance.
- Without further secrecy, he strode toward the Major.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good evening. I've been expecting you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At the first word the Major spun round, alertly on the defensive.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I have your prisoner,&rdquo; he continued. &ldquo;I found I had no taste for being
- added to her list of victims. I'll be glad if you'll take her off my
- hands. She's in there.&rdquo; He jerked his thumb across his shoulder.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Major eyed him fiercely. &ldquo;How d'you mean, you were expecting me?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood laughed. &ldquo;I caught sight of you last night in Varensky's garden
- and this morning on the downs. I didn't let you know, because there were
- things I was anxious to investigate.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;For instance?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The purpose of her game.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And you've satisfied yourself?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;At the risk of my life&mdash;yes. When you warned me against being
- romantic, I thought you were merely jealous. Fortunately or unfortunately,
- whichever way you like to put it, I know now that everything you told me
- was correct.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Humph!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Major twirled his mustaches thoughtfully.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the last of the daylight he looked like a lean, white cat.
- </p>
- <p>
- His coolness began to wear on Hindwood's nerves. &ldquo;I suppose your men are
- hidden. Let's make an end.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I have no men.&rdquo; The Major spoke slowly. &ldquo;You forget that this woman is my
- wife. I wished to spare her as much as possible by making the arrest
- myself!&rdquo; His eyes narrowed shrewdly. &ldquo;How did you manage to secure her?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Luck. She had an accident. It's too long a story. She can't get away. I'm
- through; I've done my share.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- As he turned to go, the older man stretched out a delaying hand. His iron
- discipline wavered. &ldquo;It's not a cheerful task. If you'll be so good as to
- stay&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If you feel like that&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I daren't allow myself to feel. It's something I owe my country.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- As though afraid that he would weaken, the Major set out at a run across
- the turf. Outside the hut he waited. As Hindwood caught up with him, he
- whispered:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Two men against one woman! For an old soldier it isn't gallant.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He was on the point of entering, when he felt himself flung violently
- forward. Hindwood's arm was crooked about his throat, shutting off his
- breath. Bursting into the hut, he was hurled to the floor and found
- himself struggling in the darkness. He was being pressed down and down. A
- voice spoke, the accents of which a minute ago had been friendly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Close the door. Get something to bind him. Anything that will hold. Tear
- strips off your dress.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- VIII
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>t was over. The
- Major had been trussed and gagged. He had been handcuffed with his own
- manacles. His revolver had been removed and his pockets searched. He
- leaned propped against the wall like a jointed doll, his body making an
- exact right angle with his legs. The angry vigilance of his eyes was his
- only sign of life. There was no means of making a light, even if it had
- been safe to employ it. Now that the fight was ended, they sat staring
- into the gloom, anonymous as three shadows.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was Hindwood who broke the silence. &ldquo;I've been guilty of an outrage,
- Major; I guess that's what you'd like to tell me. But you gave me no
- choice. Where I come from, women and children are held sacred. It was up
- to some man to protect her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He paused instinctively, as though he expected a reply. He looked to Santa
- where she crouched, motionless and scarcely discernible, in her corner.
- What were they thinking, this husband and wife, so brutally reunited? His
- sense of discomfort urged him to continue.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't run off with the idea that I approve of what she's done. And I'm
- not in love with her. If she were a man, I don't suppose I'd raise a
- finger to save her. But she's a woman: inconsistently, that makes all the
- difference. I couldn't stand for seeing her dragged away to the kind of
- shame&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Again he paused. The lack of response was maddening. Scrambling to his
- feet, he bent over the Major.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To be frank, now that I've got you, I don't know what to do with you. If
- you'll promise to keep quiet, I'll remove the gag.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No.&rdquo; Santa had not stirred. In the darkness she was little more than a
- voice. &ldquo;Let me speak while he's forced to listen. Put him where I can see
- him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Taking his prisoner by the shoulders, Hindwood dragged him to the window.
- With a jerk he tore the ragged curtain from its nails. The downs were a
- sea of purple dusk. The moon hung like a lantern in an unruffled sky.
- Against the square of glass, the Major's face showed hawk-like.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You've changed.&rdquo; She spoke softly. &ldquo;Do you remember when last we parted?
- On the docks at Calcutta. It hurt. Since then we've both gone down the
- ladder. For both of us it was the end of goodness. I must have known it. I
- waved till long after you were out of sight; then I wept till my heart was
- shriveled up. How long I've waited to tell you what you've made me suffer!
- You made me feel that I'd never been your wife, only a half-caste
- plaything. But you'd put a white soul into my body. It was a greater
- wickedness than anything I have done. Now that I'm what you've made me,
- father of my dead child, you seek me out to be my judge.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her hoarse voice died away. Like the protest of an uneasy conscience, the
- Major's handcuffs clinked together.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You think that you're just,&rdquo; she began again. &ldquo;You come of a race which
- admires justice. Ah, but justice is not kindness! You knew what I was when
- you brought me from the temple&mdash;a wanton slave-girl. What had I
- learned of righteousness? It wasn't for my virtue that you bought me. It
- was for my pomegranate lips, my golden body, my little, caressing hands.
- Afterward, as an incentive to desire, it pleased you to bring the soul
- into my eyes. You made me long to be perfect. You seemed so strong and
- wise; I wanted to be like you. Without you I was afraid. You were my God.
- I felt brave when I touched you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her voice sank. &ldquo;After the little one came, I was no longer frightened. He
- was so nearly white. He was yours and mine. My blood seemed cleansed. I
- saw the world through the innocence of his eyes. The evil of the East
- ceased to call to me. But when he was killed and you put me from you&mdash;&mdash;
- Murderer of a woman's faith,&rdquo; she addressed the silent face, &ldquo;the soul in
- me was dying.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She rocked in the shadows. &ldquo;My crimes are yours, and you came to condemn
- me. You robbed me of everything but my body. My heart was famished; to
- feed it, I sold my beauty at a price. At first, for men's money; then, for
- their honor; at last, for their lives.&rdquo; She had risen. &ldquo;You wonder why for
- their lives? They were men like you, outwardly just, who destroyed belief
- in goodness. Because of men like you women's hearts are broken and
- children go naked.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood leaped to his feet, blocking her path. She leaned past him,
- staring down into the bandaged face.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, husband without pity, god whom I worshipped, I burn in hell because
- of your justice.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Slipping to her knees, she came into the square of light. &ldquo;Am I not
- beautiful? Is there another like me? Would it not have been happier to
- have been kind? See what you have spoiled.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- IX
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>here was the
- rustling of footsteps in the grass outside. Letting in a flood of
- moonlight, the door was pushed gently open.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;May we enter?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Without waiting for a reply, a man padded noiselessly across the
- threshold. By his peaked head and the litheness of his body, Hindwood
- recognized him as Varensky. Behind him, with the mildness of attendant
- angels, Anna and the Little Grandmother followed. Just inside the room he
- halted.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's this?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The bound face in the square of window had riveted his attention.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Her husband.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But why&mdash;?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood spoke again. &ldquo;He had come to take her to be hanged.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The pale face smiled contemptuously. &ldquo;Hanging's only a way of dying. Was
- that any reason for making him suffer?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Without further argument, taking command of the situation, he stepped
- quickly to the Major's side. Stooping, he cut the bonds and removed the
- gag.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You're free&mdash;free to go where you like and to get us all into
- trouble. We shall be here for at least an hour, so you'll have time. I
- landed without permission in your England this morning. That's a cause for
- police interference. My name's Ivan Varensky.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Major rose painfully, blinking at the lean, green-eyed stranger as
- though he had discovered in him a jester. &ldquo;There are still the handcuffs,&rdquo;
- he muttered.
- </p>
- <p>
- When the handcuffs had been knocked off, Varen-sky repeated, &ldquo;You're free
- to go.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Major shook himself and resumed his strutting air, like a brave old
- rooster who had all but had his neck wrung. &ldquo;If it makes no difference,
- I'll stay.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- With his left eye shut and his head on one side, Varensky regarded him
- comically. &ldquo;No difference! It may. You're a secret service agent; I'm a
- revolutionary. You uphold laws; I defy them. You're the servant of force;
- I hate every form of compulsion. What difference it makes depends on
- yourself&mdash;whether you propose to stay as a spy or as a man of honor.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;As a sportsman who abides by the rules of the game.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Varensky shrugged his narrow shoulders. &ldquo;As a sportsman who hunts women?&rdquo;
- He turned tenderly to Santa. &ldquo;You're famished. We'll cover up the window
- and make a light.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- When candles which they had brought had been kindled and the meal spread,
- Santa and Hindwood sat down on the floor, facing each other. While they
- ate there was dead silence. Hindwood kept catching glimpses of her eyes.
- What was to be the end of her? Her expression was stunned. They both knew
- what this silence betokened: when the meal was over, her fate was to be
- decided. He was aware of each separate personality, as though each were
- making an effort to explain itself. What was to be hoped for from the
- verdict of such a jury? Every one in the hut, except Anna and himself, was
- a fanatic. He did not try to see their faces; all he saw was their hands
- as they ministered to him. The hands of Varensky, half clown's, half
- martyr's. The wrinkled hands of the old noblewoman, worn with service, who
- had lived with outcasts and spent her years in exile. The hands of Anna,
- guilty with yearning.
- </p>
- <p>
- Varensky spoke without looking up. It was as though he were carrying on a
- conversation already started. &ldquo;We can't restore life, so what right have
- we to destroy it? To be merciful&mdash;that's the only way.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- His green eyes sought the Major's. &ldquo;We could have killed you to-night&mdash;but
- we didn't. Have you wondered why? By letting you go, we've put ourselves
- in your power. To-morrow you can drag us all to jail. You're a hard man.
- You exact an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth. You came here
- to-night to exact a life. If we had judged you by your own standards, we
- should have been justified in giving you no quarter. If we had, what good
- would it have done? You'd only have been dead. And if you'd managed to
- capture Santa, what good would that have done? To have had her executed
- wouldn't have made her a better woman.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He reached out and took her unwilling hand, bending back the fingers one
- by one. &ldquo;They're beautiful. See how cleverly they work. There's not a
- scientist living can reproduce their mechanism. No one knows how they grew
- to be like that.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- His tone became tender. &ldquo;Santa's been bad. She's been treacherous and
- cruel: a faithless wife and a menace. Merely to punish her wouldn't undo
- her evil. Only she can do that.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- For the first time the Major spoke. &ldquo;At what are you driving?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Varensky made no attempt to answer him. He seemed not to have heard. He
- sat cross-legged on the floor, folding and unfolding Santa's fingers,
- while his grotesque shadow squatted on the wall behind him. He looked like
- a kindly, embarrassed boy, trying to say something to the sulky girl so
- that it should not sound too wounding.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I wonder whether Santa's husband ever saw a woman when she was dead.
- There's no light in her eyes. She can't say that she's sorry. Last week I
- saw hundreds in the ditches about Kiev. They weren't lovely. We mustn't
- let our Santa become like that.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He turned to the Major with a slow smile. &ldquo;Must we? You wouldn't like to
- think of the woman you had loved&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Major took a step into the room and stood biting his lips, glooming
- down at Varensky.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You and I, sir, view our duty from hostile standpoints. I care for this
- woman infinitely more than you can ever care. But I care still more for my
- country. She's betrayed it a score of times. Shall I, because I am her
- husband, stand by and allow her to betray it? Had I accomplished the
- purpose that brought me here to-night, my heart would have been broken. To
- have put handcuffs on her wrists and to have sworn away her life, do you
- think it would have cost me nothing? The very judge who sentenced her
- would have shunned me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Little Grandmother looked up. She spoke gruffly. &ldquo;And what would have
- been the use of your suffering? Society would have been revenged. It would
- have washed its hands, like Pontius Pilate. It would have smiled smugly,
- believing she was wrong and it was right. It would have gone on its way,
- manufacturing more criminals like her. The old evils that have made her
- what she is would have continued, while she&mdash;&rdquo; She snapped her
- fingers furiously. &ldquo;Like the women in the ditches about Kiev.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- When the room had grown silent, Varensky covered the Major with his
- mocking stare.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You must excuse our Little Grandmother. She feels these things intensely.
- More than half her years have been spent in prison.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Major pulled himself together. &ldquo;She needs no excusing. What is it that
- you want of me?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- X
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>anta's life. It's
- of no use to you.&rdquo; He smiled in the midst of his earnestness. &ldquo;I'm a boy
- begging for a broken watch. You were going to throw it away. I have dreams
- that I could repair it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Major twitched irritably. &ldquo;And you talk like a boy. How can I give you
- what doesn't belong to me? At every port in Europe the police are
- watching. For me to forgive her wouldn't help. It isn't against me that
- she's offended; it's against the laws of civilization.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I know.&rdquo; Varensky nodded soothingly. &ldquo;You're only one of the many agents
- of social vengeance. What I ought to have asked you was to give me the
- part of her life that does belong to you. She's in your clutches. Let her
- escape. Keep silent and drop your pursuit.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And if I do?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Varensky tucked his legs closer under him and bent forward. &ldquo;Perhaps I
- could turn her into a saint.&rdquo; A note of passionate pleading crept into his
- voice. &ldquo;She loves children. It was how her wickedness started. She was
- blind and mistaken, and all her crimes were committed for children. A
- woman who loves children must be good. She's done abominable things. She
- could become magnificent if she would do good with an equal violence.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Major glanced at the subject of these prophecies, sitting in their
- midst, rebelliously silent. He said wearily: &ldquo;Mere words! You offer me no
- proof!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The white face seemed to grow till it filled the room. The green eyes
- glowed like emeralds. They were uncanny and hypnotic. Language came in a
- torrent. &ldquo;It isn't her body&mdash;it's her soul. If she were to die now,
- what would happen to her? I tried to save the soul of a nation. Let me do
- for Santa what I couldn't do for Russia&mdash;prove that mercy restores
- where punishment destroys. There's been too much killing. The world grows
- worse instead of better. It's been going on for ages, this hanging and
- guillotining and bludgeoning. It's reformed nothing. It's the might is
- right of the jungle, the justice of apes and cavemen. Revenge, whether
- it's carried out by tooth and claw or by law-courts and armies, never
- heals anything; it always leaves a bruise. The face of Europe is bruised
- beyond recovery by our last display of justice. Its fields are rotten with
- corpses. Shall we add one more to the many&mdash;a woman's?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He paused, trembling like a leaf. When the Major only frowned, he sank
- back exhausted.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If you'd seen what I've seen&mdash;&rdquo; His head sagged stupidly. &ldquo;If you'd
- seen what I've seen&mdash;miles of men, all slaughtered; women dead of
- starvation, children hunting in packs like wolves. And all because there's
- no mercy. If you'd seen, you couldn't kill anything.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The candles ceased to gutter. Shadows huddled motionless. The very silence
- seemed accused.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood rose. He could endure the tension no longer. &ldquo;I know nothing
- about her soul and not much about her guilt. All I know is that she's a
- woman at the end of her tether who's been handed one of the rawest of raw
- deals. That the world's been hard on her won't excuse her. We can't alter
- the world over night. If she's caught, as she may be at any moment, it'll
- be all up with her. I don't care what she's done or how much I lose by it,
- I'm not going to stand by and see her taken.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Major swung round. &ldquo;Nor am I. But how to avoid it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood showed his suspicion of this sudden conversion. &ldquo;Tell me,&rdquo; he
- answered cautiously, &ldquo;have you handed in any reports, I mean officially&mdash;about
- my knowledge of Santa?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Beyond the fact that you crossed on the same boat with her, you've not
- been mentioned.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And there's no one in your service, besides yourself, who has the least
- idea of her whereabouts?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No one.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then it can be managed.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He was dimly conscious of the pale expectancy of the faces lifted up to
- him. He felt that he was on the edge of a whirlpool into which he was
- being slowly dragged. Even at this last moment he made an effort to resist
- it. Then it seemed to him that in the heart of its eddies he saw a woman.
- She grew distinct; her face was Anna's.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Let me explain,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I'm neither humanitarian nor idealist. I have
- no fantastic hopes of turning sinners into saints. I'm head of a group of
- American financiers, and I'm in Europe to employ its starving peoples.
- Don't misunderstand me. The result of my mission may be philanthropic, but
- its purpose is to make a profit. Since the war Europe's become a
- bargain-counter where everything's exposed for sale&mdash;everything
- except food. I can supply food. With food I can purchase, for a fraction
- of their value, railroads, factories, labor. I tell you this so that you
- may not doubt me when I say that I have it in my power to protect her.
- Once out of England, no escaping criminal could find a safer place of
- refuge than in my company. I have influence with all governments; with
- food I can stop revolution. None of them dares suspect me. I propose that
- I should take Santa with me. I travel on diplomatic passports; with me
- she'll have no trouble in crossing frontiers.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The silence that greeted his offer lengthened. At a loss to account for
- it, he glanced from face to face.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Have I offended?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was Santa who replied. Leaping up in their midst, tattered and
- disheveled, she threatened them like dogs whom she would beat aside.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Beasts!&rdquo; A sob caught her breath. &ldquo;Is it impossible even for you, who
- call yourselves my friends, to believe any good of me? I swear before
- heaven he has no love for me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- XI
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">B</span>ack in London he
- lost no time in completing arrangements for departure. Every boat that
- left for France without him lessened Santa's chance of safety. And yet,
- though he worked frantically, canceling appointments and clearing up
- correspondence, he couldn't bring home to himself the reality of the
- situation. The hut on the downs and all that had happened there seemed
- something that he had read or imagined. Only the face of Anna stood out in
- memory, clear-cut and actual. It seemed impossible to believe that he,
- Philip Hindwood, was in league with revolutionaries. That he was in league
- was proved to him when he set about procuring the passport and visés
- necessary for Santa to accompany him. By the time he obtained them, he had
- abused confidence and perjured himself beyond hope of pardon. They were
- made out in the name of &ldquo;Edith Jones, spinster; American-born subject;
- aged thirty years; confidential secretary to Philip Hindwood, whom she is
- accompanying.&rdquo; All her permits were marked <i>Special</i> and <i>Diplomatic</i>.
- It wasn't until the bustle was over and he was seated in the train for
- Dover, that the true proportions of his entanglement dawned on him.
- </p>
- <p>
- At Dover she was to meet him. That had been the understanding. From then
- on, day in, day out, he would never be without her. No matter what strange
- country he traversed, she would sit beside him, reminding him of his
- complicity in her crimes. He would have to talk with her, eat with her,
- pretend to consult with her, just as if she were what he had claimed her
- to be&mdash;his confidential secretary. Would she have the sense to act
- discreetly? Would she expect him to make love to her? He glowered out of
- the window at the fleeting landscape. Any folly was possible to a woman
- with her record.
- </p>
- <p>
- What made him most furious was the easy way in which he had allowed her to
- twist him round her fingers. It was the woods of Vincennes all over again.
- He was going into disordered countries, where governments were toppling
- and anarchy was rife. When she felt herself beyond the reach of danger,
- what was to prevent her from getting rid of him? Russia, if he got so far,
- was the kind of nightmare in which anything might happen. In Russia murder
- was one of the fine arts. He remembered Anna's suspicion that Santa was a
- Bolshevist agent. It added nothing to his comfort.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had given way to idealism. It was the madness of a moment. It was
- listening to Varensky that had worked the mischief. Varensky had said
- something about idealism. What was it? That idealism was the vanishing
- point&mdash;the last outpost between Man and Eternity. His words came
- back.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;When you gaze up a railroad track, there's always a point in the infinite
- distance where, just before they vanish, the parallel rails seem to join.
- If a train were ever to reach that point, it would mean death. Life's like
- that&mdash;a track along which we travel on the parallel rails of
- possibility and desire. The lure of the idealist is to overtake the
- illusion, where possibility and desire seem to merge, and the safety of
- the journey ends.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- For him the safety of the journey had ended the moment it had started. If
- Varensky had meant anything by the vanishing point, he had meant that
- death is the unconscious goal of all idealists. Hind-wood shrugged his
- shoulders. It seemed highly probable when you took Santa with you on your
- travels.
- </p>
- <p>
- The smell of the sea was in the air. They were slowing down, grinding
- their way to the docks through the town of Dover.
- </p>
- <p>
- He didn't want to see her. He would make no effort to find her. She might
- have been prevented from joining him&mdash;perhaps arrested.
- </p>
- <p>
- After the train had halted, he took his time. No one whom he recognized
- was on the platform. Directing a porter to attend to his baggage, he went
- quickly to the embarkation office to get his permit for going aboard. As
- he was entering, he felt his arm touched timidly, and turned.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm here.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I see you are.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Didn't you expect me?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He made an effort to act courteously. &ldquo;Of course. There are formalities to
- be gone through. You'd better stick close to me. Don't attract attention.
- Let me do the talking.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- They fell into line behind a queue of passengers, winding slowly toward a
- table where officials were receiving and inspecting passports. He stood
- well in front of her, doing his best to hide her. When his turn came and
- the official held out his hand, he presented her passport with his own
- perfunctorily.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mine and my secretary's.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The official was on the point of returning them, when a stockily-built man
- leaned across his shoulder and whispered something. Both of them looked
- up, staring hard at Santa.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Which is Miss Jones?&rdquo; the official asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This lady at my side.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;So you're Miss Jones, an American citizen?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Before she could reply, Hindwood had interposed. &ldquo;I've already told you
- she's Miss Jones. If you'll look, you'll see that her passport's marked <i>Diplomatic</i>
- as well as mine.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The two men consulted together in lowered tones. Then the passport was
- O.K.'d and restored.
- </p>
- <p>
- Picking it up, together with the embarkation permits, Hindwood strolled
- leisurely towards the gangplank. Directly they were on board he hurried
- Santa to her cabin and shut the door.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You'll stay here till we sight France. I'm giving no one else the
- opportunity for suspecting a likeness.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER THE SIXTH&mdash;THE ESCAPE
- </h2>
- <h3>
- I
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HE steamer had no
- sooner reached Calais than a new cause for alarm presented itself. During
- the channel crossing Hindwood had been keyed up to the last point of
- tension. Every moment he had expected to be tapped on the shoulder and
- informed that his secretary's identity had been discovered. He had spent
- most of his time surreptitiously mounting guard in the neighborhood of
- Santa's cabin. If the same man chanced to pass him twice, he had at once
- jumped to the conclusion that he was being shadowed.
- </p>
- <p>
- The hesitancy at Dover over O.K.'ing Santa's passport had robbed him of
- whatever sense of security he had possessed. It had compelled him to
- acknowledge the ruin that faced him, should he be exposed while
- engineering the flight of so notorious a criminal. As the Major had warned
- him, she was being sought by the police of every country.
- </p>
- <p>
- If the worst should happen, he would find no apologists. It would be
- useless for him to plead a chivalrous motive. She had been the lodestar of
- masculine passions too often. Though he managed to escape a prison
- sentence, he would emerge from the catastrophe broken in character&mdash;a
- paltry creature, half knave, half fool, who had gambled away his integrity
- and made himself a laughing stock. Already in imagination he was reading
- the scare headlines which would advertise his shame to the world. He would
- be regarded as a malefactor&mdash;hustled behind bars and herded for trial
- with blackmailers and pickpockets.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dogged by these persistent dreads, when the ship was inside Calais harbor
- he rapped on her door and having heard her bid him enter, slipped across
- the threshold, announcing tersely:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We're there.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Since she joined him, he had held no conversation with her. She made no
- attempt to break through his silence. Rising obediently, while she
- adjusted her hat, she watched him in the mirror with the eyes of a
- reproachful dog. Without sign or sound, as he turned away impatiently, she
- followed. No sooner did they appear on deck than the new cause for alarm
- started.
- </p>
- <p>
- A handsome and distinguished-looking foreigner began taking immediate
- notice of her. He was so quick to pick her out in the throng that it
- seemed he must have been watching for her. Whoever and whatever he was, he
- was manifestly a man of breeding&mdash;the kind of man who might have been
- her companion in the old, wild days of her triumphant folly. He was about
- thirty-five, tall, dark, finely-built, and of military bearing. He had a
- closely-trimmed mustache, bold, black eyes, and a Latin type of
- countenance. That was all that Hindwood permitted himself to observe;
- changing his position promptly, he shut Santa out from the stranger's line
- of vision. But the man was not to be balked. With an air of complete
- unconcern, he fell into line immediately behind them, treading closely on
- their heels as they passed up the gangplank. On the way to the Customs he
- managed to get ahead, so that he could glance back several times at Santa.
- </p>
- <p>
- After their baggage had been inspected it was necessary for them to file
- through a stuffy room where passports were examined. It was here that
- Hindwood was fully prepared to be caught. The officials at Dover had
- probably cabled a warning; the inquisitive stranger might prove to be
- their emissary. Quite the contrary occurred. The French official, catching
- sight of the magic words <i>Diplomatic</i> and <i>Special</i>, scrutinized
- no further and returned the papers with a courteous apology. Making the
- most of his luck, Hindwood hurried Santa out onto the platform, down the
- long train labeled Stuttgart, Warsaw, etc., and into the <i>wagons-lits</i>
- which went express to Vienna.
- </p>
- <p>
- Before leaving London he had reserved two separate compartments in the
- name of &ldquo;Philip Hindwood and party.&rdquo; Now that he claimed them, he found to
- his annoyance that they were adjoining and connected by a private door. It
- was an indiscretion that he had not intended. Having seen Santa safely
- settled, he set off to superintend the placing on board of their bags.
- </p>
- <p>
- He was gone perhaps five minutes. As he reentered the corridor of his
- section, the first sight that met his eyes was the handsome stranger
- engaged in earnest talk with the <i>wagon-lits</i> conductor. Some money
- passed. Next thing the stranger's belongings were being transferred from
- lower down the train to the compartment on the further side from Santa's.
- Hindwood entered his own compartment, shaded the windows that looked out
- on the corridor and made fast his door.
- </p>
- <p>
- What was the game? Was this a fresh example of Santa's irresistible charm?
- And if it was, was he to be subjected to this kind of impertinence
- throughout the entire journey? Or was the man a secret service agent in
- the employ of some foreign Government, who, believing he had recognized
- her, was keeping her in sight till she should have crossed the frontier
- into his own country, where he would have power to arrest her?
- </p>
- <p>
- In his anger he tried to blame Santa; she must have unconsciously
- exercised her talent for attraction. Strangers didn't follow women unless&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- But he had to own himself unjust. She was dressed with the utmost
- plainness, in a tailored costume, minus furs or any lavishness. There was
- nothing to complain of in her deportment. It was as modest as could have
- been expected had she really been &ldquo;Edith Jones, aged thirty, American-born
- citizen, confidential secretary.&rdquo; The fault lay in something beyond her
- control&mdash;her beauty. It refused to be subdued. It shone out the more
- conspicuously in the absence of adornment. It constituted itself an
- unforeseen embarrassment, if not a menace. The further he traveled into
- continental countries, the less he would be believed when he stated that
- she was Miss Jones and no more than his secretary. Already more people
- than the obtrusive stranger had stared at her. She had only to appear to
- make herself the focus of attention. Sooner or later, to-day, to-morrow, a
- month hence, some one would catch sight of her who had known her in the
- past. She had been feted in too many cities, her portrait had been too
- widely published, for her features not to be remembered. These distressing
- reflections were cut short by the shrill tootings of tin horns which
- announce the departure of a train in France. When Calais had been left
- behind and they were rushing past stripped orchards and harvested fields,
- he unlatched the dividing door. She was sitting lost in thought, staring
- out of the window with a wistful expression.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Come into my compartment. I'd like to talk.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The jerk with which she turned betrayed the strain under which she was
- laboring. He watched the undulating grace with which she rose, the
- calculated delicacy of her every movement. Though she had dressed in rags,
- nothing could have disguised her.
- </p>
- <p>
- When he had closed the door, she remained standing.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Please sit down,&rdquo; he said with cold politeness. &ldquo;We're safe for the
- moment. As you see, I've lowered the blinds. No one can spy on us. You've
- noticed him?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Drawing off her gloves, she smoothed them out mechanically, maintaining
- her silence.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Tell me,&rdquo; he urged, &ldquo;what do you make of him?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nothing.&rdquo; Her voice was flat and toneless. &ldquo;Wherever I go, it's always
- the same. You ought to know&mdash;on the <i>Ryndam</i> you were like it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He passed over the implied accusation. &ldquo;Then you don't think he's a&mdash;&mdash;?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I've not troubled to think.&rdquo; She glanced drearily aside. &ldquo;Men are brutes.
- If you'd left me alone on the cliff&mdash;I wish you had. It would have
- been all ended.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She said it without spite&mdash;almost without reproach. In the presence
- of her melancholy, he recovered something of his compassion.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But I didn't leave you, and nothing's gained by recrimination. The point
- is this fellow next door. What's his purpose? How are we going to manage
- him?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Easily. Fling me to him as you'd toss a dog a bone. You'll be rid of your
- share of the danger.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't want to be rid of you.&rdquo; He passed his hand across his forehead,
- mastering his impatience.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't pretend I shan't be glad&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To be quit of me,&rdquo; she prompted.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To be relieved of the risk of you,&rdquo; he corrected. &ldquo;But not until I've
- fulfilled my promise.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She smiled. &ldquo;You promised you'd save me. I can't be saved. Varensky's talk
- about redeeming me was visionary. I was born to be what I am.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He relaxed and sat forward, exerting himself to make the conversation less
- unfriendly. &ldquo;Of course I know why you speak this way: it's because of my
- recent treatment of you. We were nearly found out at Dover; the anxiety of
- it's getting on my nerves. I promised to give you your chance; my promise
- stands. The least I can ask of you as a sportswoman is to play up to me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her whole demeanor changed. The golden face flashed. &ldquo;I will.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then if this man is only an impudent admirer, how are we to shake him?
- It's my business for the present to protect you. If this is the sort of
- thing that always happens, it's possible that it'll occur again. I daren't
- resent his conduct. Ordinarily I should know what to do with him. How is
- the repetition of the annoyance to be avoided?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A slow flush mounted from her throat to her cheeks. &ldquo;You won't take my
- suggestion, so I don't think I'll make it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Let's have it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Not looking at him, she muttered: &ldquo;He'll try to scrape acquaintance. When
- he does, introduce me to him as your wife.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But to do that&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He fell silent. He was thinking of Anna. For the first time he was
- conscious of his aloneness with this woman.
- </p>
- <p>
- Not wishing to wound her, he procrastinated.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To do that might only add to our complications.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It might.&rdquo; Her gray eyes struggled to meet his gaze. &ldquo;It isn't likely. He
- won't believe you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then what would be gained?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You'd have told him, without insult, that he wasn't wanted.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He glanced out of the window at the rushing landscape. At last he spoke.
- &ldquo;If there's no other way&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She rested her thin, fine hand on his gently. &ldquo;You're generous. If the day
- ever comes when you despise yourself as I despise myself to-day, remember
- that once you were able to make a wicked woman believe in goodness&mdash;to
- make her long with all her heart to be like you.&rdquo; Her eyes became misty.
- &ldquo;At this moment I'm not far from redemption.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Lunch was announced. He gave orders to have it served in his compartment.
- While they ate, he outlined to her his plans. He had asked her how long
- she expected to be with him.
- </p>
- <p>
- Her reply was discomfortingly vague. &ldquo;As long as you can endure me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Inside of two months,&rdquo; he told her, &ldquo;I think I can promise you immunity.
- At present, according to information, Central Europe's starving. With
- winter comes the crisis. I've forseen that. For some time I've been
- shipping food to Holland. It's lying there in warehouses in immense
- quantities. I have an entire fleet secretly at work, plying back and forth
- across the Atlantic. When the famine becomes too acute, I'm prepared to
- strike my bargain. I'll take railroads and concessions in exchange for
- bread. Other upstarts have carved out kingdoms with armies; I intend to
- conquer mine with food. There never was a war or any social uprising that
- wasn't caused by an empty stomach. Within three hours of my terms having
- been accepted, my trains will be streaming out of Holland. Where they
- halt, the flames of revolution will be quenched. If I haven't
- miscalculated, I shall be unofficial President of the United States of
- Europe.&rdquo; He paused to watch his effect. &ldquo;I've nominated myself,&rdquo; he
- smiled.
- </p>
- <p>
- His smile was unreturned. She was regarding him with an expression of
- horror. Their rôles seemed reversed. It was evident that to her way of
- thinking it was he who had become the criminal and she who was looking
- down on him from a higher moral level.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But they're starving.&rdquo; Her voice shook passionately. &ldquo;If you have these
- stores, why don't you feed them? They're dying. So many of them are
- children!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You don't understand.&rdquo; He tried to make his tones reasonable. &ldquo;I've
- invested all my fortune in the venture. I'm a business man. In business
- one man's calamity is another's opportunity. The same is true of nations.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Seeing that she still looked grieved, he patted her shoulder. &ldquo;Don't
- worry. We'll rustle through. Your life will be spared.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I wasn't thinking of my life.&rdquo; She spoke contemptuously.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then of what?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Of the women dead of hunger in the ditches about Kiev.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- As she rose to leave, she glanced back from the doorway. &ldquo;There was a
- message I had to deliver to you. Varensky's setting out on his last
- journey. He hopes to see you in Budapest. He told me to say, 'Soon you can
- have her.'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- II
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>hrusting its
- war-scarred head into the clouds, Amiens had been left behind: they were
- skirting the old battle-line. Though seasons had come and vanished,
- memories of tragedy were still apparent. Shell-torn walls had been
- patched, but the patches served to emphasize the ruin. One could trace in
- the landscape crumbling trench-systems and the rusty red of entangled
- wire. Here and there, in gleaming plots, white crosses grew in humble
- clusters. In fancy he pictured the hosts who had died. The unprofitable
- patience of their sacrifice! Had they known what was to be the result,
- would they have gone to their death so gladly? The result of their
- idealism was hunger. He recalled his awkward phrase&mdash;the world's
- hunger had proved to be his opportunity. Santa's horror disturbed his
- memory. He was inclined to go to her and explain. Everything had to be
- purchased by labor. Anything one possessed was the wage of labor. To give
- things away did harm. It wasn't business. It set a premium on laziness.
- Even to give food to a starving nation did harm; it made that nation a
- pauper. The most primitive of all laws was that bread should be earned by
- the sweat of the brow&mdash;that if a man did not toil, neither should he
- eat. The only righteous way to feed starving people was to set them to
- work. So his thoughts ran on, building up the argument.
- </p>
- <p>
- But he did not go to her. It was Varensky's message that deterred him: &ldquo;He
- told me to say, 'Soon you can have her.'&rdquo; Did Santa know what was meant&mdash;that
- the message referred to Anna? She must know. What difference would this
- make to her? She also loved, and she was a panther-woman.
- </p>
- <p>
- The countryside grew blurred with dusk. The stiff, white crosses faded out
- of sight. Forgetting his danger, he fell asleep, wondering whether Anna
- would be with her husband at Budapest.
- </p>
- <h3>
- III
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">W</span>hen he awoke, he
- was in total darkness. Glancing through the window, he discovered that the
- world outside was weakly lit with straggling rows of street-lamps. They
- seemed to be marching in the same direction as the train; in the far
- distance they rushed together, making night hollow with their flare. His
- first thought was of Santa; a thousand things might have happened.
- </p>
- <p>
- As he groped at the handle of the dividing door, he caught the sound of
- laughter.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;May I enter?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Santa whom his eyes encountered was no longer the fugitive from
- justice. She was mysteriously changed. There was animation in her
- countenance and seduction in her voice. She was again the enchantress of
- men, reckless and tender, who had all but captured his heart on the
- Atlantic voyage. He looked to see what had caused this transformation.
- Lolling in the entrance was the handsome stranger.
- </p>
- <p>
- Before Hindwood could speak, she was addressing him gaily. &ldquo;So you've
- wakened! I didn't like to disturb you. You've almost made me miss my
- dinner. If you're ready now&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The stranger interrupted. &ldquo;I've not dined. But I have my place reserved.
- If there should prove to be no room, perhaps you would flatter me by
- occupying my place instead.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Santa shook her head graciously. &ldquo;It's good of you, but my husband and I
- will take our chance.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She was the only one whom her claim that Hind-wood was her husband left
- undisturbed. The two men glared at each other in astonishment. It was the
- stranger who recovered first.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If I had known that this lady was your wife, I should have asked your
- permission before I made my offer. I shall be very happy if you will
- permit me to do you both this service. I ought to introduce myself.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He fumbled in his pocketbook and produced a card on which was engraved,
- &ldquo;Captain Serge Lajos, Hungarian Royal Hussars.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My name is Hindwood&mdash;Philip Hindwood.&rdquo; Hindwood returned the
- compliment surlily. &ldquo;I agree with my wife; we both prefer that you retain
- your place and that we be allowed to take our chance.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Santa rose eagerly to prevent the giving of further offense. Her smile was
- for the Captain. &ldquo;We waste time talking. You'll join us, Captain? We'll
- take our chance together.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Without risking a reply, she led the way, Hindwood following and the
- Captain coming last. There was no opportunity for speech in the swaying
- corridor. When the dining-car was reached, they were shown immediately to
- a vacant table.
- </p>
- <p>
- At first they sat in silence, watching how the lights flashing by the
- panes were strengthening into a golden blur.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Where are we?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was Hindwood who had decided to be amiable.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Entering Paris.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;So late as that!&rdquo; He consulted his watch. &ldquo;We go through without
- changing, they told us.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There's no change till Vienna.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Captain's answers were mechanical. He seemed to be brushing aside a
- presence that annoyed him. His puzzled eyes were fixed on Santa.
- </p>
- <p>
- Suppressing his irritation, Hindwood made another effort at friendliness.
- &ldquo;I didn't notice you till we were getting into Calais. I guess we must
- have traveled together from London.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Captain Lajos, if that really was his name, seemed to be thinking of
- something else. He let some seconds elapse. When he spoke, it was without
- looking up. &ldquo;I noticed you from the first. I can prove it. Your wife
- didn't join you till Dover.&rdquo; Then he seemed to repent of his intrusive
- rudeness and changed the subject. &ldquo;I was glad to see the last of London.
- I'd been sent to meet some one who failed to arrive. It was all in the
- papers. You probably know as much about the circumstances as I do. The
- person was Prince Rogovich.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Santa's face went white. Her lips became set in an artificial smile.
- Beneath the table her hand clutched Hindwood's. For all that, it was she
- who took up the challenge.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We've not been reading the papers lately.&rdquo; Above the clatter of the
- wheels, her trembling voice was scarcely audible. &ldquo;My husband and I have
- been very busy and&mdash;&mdash; But your friend, why was he so unkind as
- to disappoint you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Captain had turned to her as though greedy for her sympathy. His dark,
- bold eyes drank up her face.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He wasn't unkind. He was&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; He shrugged his shoulders and
- spread abroad his hands. &ldquo;Until something is proved, I suppose the best
- way to express it would be to say that he was unavoidably delayed. He left
- New York on a liner and disappeared on the evening that he should have
- landed.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood bent forward, attempting to divert attention from Santa. He
- tapped the Captain's hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Excuse me for intruding on a conversation which you evidently intend to
- include only my wife, but there are no points of call on an Atlantic
- voyage. If your friend started from New York and the ship was not lost,
- how could he have been delayed?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How? That's the question.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Captain's hostility was unmistakable, and yet the odd thing was that
- it exempted Santa.
- </p>
- <p>
- While the first course was being served, Hindwood racked his brains to
- discover the motive which lay behind the Captain's attitude. Was he a
- police-agent, amusing himself and biding his time? Was he doubtful of
- Santa's identity and cultivating her acquaintance as a means of making
- certain? Was he merely a disappointed male, infuriated at finding a
- husband in possession?
- </p>
- <p>
- Santa was speaking again. She had made good use of the respite to compose
- herself. &ldquo;It must have been terribly anxious for you waiting. I suppose
- you were there to meet him at the port where he ought to have arrived?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood held his breath. She was practically asking the man whether he
- had been one of the welcoming group of officials on that night when the <i>Ryndam</i>
- had reached Plymouth. If he had been, he must have seen them. He must
- remember them. He might even know their biographical details, their
- business, and that they were not married. At all events, if that were the
- case, it would explain the keenness of his interest.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, I wasn't at Plymouth.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- They both shot upright in their chairs and sat rigid. For a moment they
- had no doubt that the Captain had declared his hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then he postponed the crisis by adding, &ldquo;You see, my friend, as you call
- him, was traveling by the Holland-American Line, so Plymouth was where he
- should have landed. We had a special train arranged to hurry him to
- London. The first warning I received of the disaster was at Paddington,
- when I was informed that the special train had been canceled.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then it was a disaster?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Santa asked the question in an awed tone which, under the circumstances,
- was not altogether feigned. Getting a grip on herself, she leaned across
- the table, making her eyes large and tender. &ldquo;We're fellow-travelers,
- chance-met. My husband and I are Americans; when we part from you, it's
- almost certain we shall never meet again. I'm not seeking your confidence,
- but you're worried. If it would help you to tell&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Captain shook his head gravely. He appeared to be worshiping her in
- everything save words, though it was possible that his adoration was
- mockery. &ldquo;There's nothing to tell. Not yet. I wish there were. There may
- be something at Paris. The English police are working. They promised to
- keep in touch with me by telegram.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- With amazing daring Santa persisted, &ldquo;But what do you suppose happened?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Before answering the Captain arranged his knife and fork neatly on his
- plate. He looked up sharply like a bird of prey. &ldquo;Murder. To your dainty
- ears that must sound shocking. I have reasons for this belief which, for
- the present, I'm not at liberty to share.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- During the pause that followed Hindwood was on tenterhooks lest, with her
- next question, she should betray herself. To prevent her, he flung himself
- into the gap.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I agree with you,&rdquo; he said with weighty dullness. &ldquo;I agree with you that
- some sort of accident strikes one as extremely likely. You mentioned that
- a special had been chartered to bring your friend to London. That would
- indicate that he was a person of consequence.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He was.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The words sounded like an epitaph. They were spoken with the impatience of
- a door being banged.
- </p>
- <p>
- Turning to Santa, the Captain was on the point of saying something
- further, when the waiter approached with the information that at the next
- stop the dining-car would be cut off. They became aware that they were the
- only diners left. The train was slowing down. The noise of its progress
- had changed to a hollow rumbling, which told them that a bridge was being
- crossed. Shifting their gaze, they discovered Paris, sparkling like a pile
- of jewels strewn in the lap of night. Below them in slow coils, mysterious
- with luminous reflections, wound the Seine. Hindwood's instant thought was
- that somewhere out there beneath the darkness, the woods of Vincennes were
- hiding.
- </p>
- <p>
- Having paid their bill, they commenced the return journey through
- corridors dense with eager passengers. Before their section had been
- reached, the train was in the station. At the first open door, the Captain
- sprang to the platform and was lost.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Where's he gone?&rdquo; Santa whispered.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood glanced at her palely. &ldquo;To get his telegram. To get&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Seizing her arm, he hurried her back to his compartment, where behind
- locked doors they could spend in private whatever of freedom remained.
- </p>
- <h3>
- IV
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>he jig's up.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hoping that he was creating an impression of calmness, he lit a cigarette.
- She raised her face to his with a softness in her eyes that he had never
- noticed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If it is,&rdquo; she pleaded, clutching at his hands, &ldquo;swear you hadn't the
- least idea who I really am. Disown me. Act as though my arrest had come to
- you as an utter shock.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He seated himself beside her. &ldquo;But, my dear Santa, that wouldn't help
- you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Help me! Of course not,&rdquo; she agreed with rapid vehemence. &ldquo;If I'm caught,
- I'm beyond helping. It's of you I'm thinking&mdash;you, with your
- generosity and your splendid plans. If I dragged you down, as I dragged
- down all the others, my heart would break. I never meant you any harm. You
- do believe me?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I do now.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Say you know that I've loved you,&rdquo; she urged. And, when he hesitated,
- &ldquo;Quickly. Time's running short. Let me hear you say just once, 'Santa, I
- know that you've loved me.'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Santa, I know&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You wouldn't kiss me?&rdquo; She asked the question scarcely above her breath.
- &ldquo;There've been so many who paid to kiss me. You wouldn't give me the best,
- that would be the last?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- When his lips touched hers, she smiled.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They may come now.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Minutes dragged by like hours. Every sound was magnified into something
- monstrous. A dozen times they imagined they heard police clearing the
- corridor, preparatory to bursting in the door. What they heard was only
- newly-arrived passengers and porters disposing of their baggage. At last
- suspense became its own anesthetic.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Did he tell you his destination?&rdquo; Hindwood whispered.
- </p>
- <p>
- Not daring to speak, she shook her head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why did you get into conversation with him?&rdquo; Her lips scarcely moved. He
- had to listen acutely.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I didn't. He pretended to have mistaken his compartment. I was crying. He
- saw.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why were you crying?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Because of you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And you told him?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not exactly.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What did he say? I heard you laughing when I entered. How did he
- commence?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He said I was too beautiful to be unhappy&mdash;it's the way every man
- starts. Then he said that he'd recognized me, just as though he'd been
- looking for me always. And then he tortured me by wondering whether our
- paths had ever crossed.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And you answered?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Never&mdash;unless he'd seen me in America.&rdquo; Hindwood fell silent.
- Without warning he leaped to his feet. Before he could escape, she was
- clinging to him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't leave me to face them.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm not.&rdquo; He freed himself from her grasp. &ldquo;If I've guessed right, you
- won't have to face them.&rdquo; With that he was gone.
- </p>
- <p>
- A quarter of an hour elapsed: he had not returned. Nothing that she
- dreaded had happened. With a lurch the train jerked forward. Farewells
- were being shouted. Station-lamps streamed past, the scarcer lights of
- freight-yards, then at last the glow-worm warmth of a city under darkness.
- </p>
- <p>
- The door opened. She rose trembling, steadying herself against the wall.
- When she saw who it was, she sank back. &ldquo;Tell me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We were on the wrong track.&rdquo; He spoke leisurely. &ldquo;Captain Lajos wasn't
- lying. I followed him. He met his man with the telegram. He suspects us so
- little that he showed it to me. It read, 'No further developments.'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Thank God.&rdquo; She pressed her handkerchief to her lips. And then, &ldquo;Why
- should he have shown it to you? It was to put us off our guard.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He sat down in the seat opposite. &ldquo;I think not. He's changed his tactics.
- He's made up his mind to be friendly. It's you he's after, but in a
- different fashion. He thinks he's in love with you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But he threatened&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No. It was our own guilty conscience. Here's how I figure it out. He
- probably has seen you before. He can't remember where. It may have been in
- the days when you were dancing. It was the vague recollection of you that
- piqued his curiosity and got him staring. When he found you alone and
- crying, he thought he'd stumbled on an adventure. My entering upset his
- calculations. I became for him the cruel husband; he hated me on the spot.
- My dear Santa, our meeting with him is the luckiest thing that could have
- happened.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Dabbing her eyes, she tried to laugh. &ldquo;I don't see it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's as plain as a pike-staff.&rdquo; He bent forward, lowering his voice. &ldquo;He
- was mixed up with Prince Rogovich. He's one of the people who's hunting
- for you. In his company you won't be suspected. He'll get you across all
- the frontiers.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She was still reluctantly incredulous. &ldquo;But the things he said at dinner.
- He played with us like a cat.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He wasn't playing with us.&rdquo; Hindwood became eager in his determination to
- convince her. &ldquo;He was playing into our hands. He knows all the things that
- we want to know. Every move the police make is telegraphed to him. It was
- the frankness with which he let us into his secrets that was so alarming.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then how must we act?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The way we have been acting. Until it's safe to be rid of him, we must
- keep him believing that we're married, and none too happily. I'm afraid
- it's up to you to keep him lulled by pretending&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't;&rdquo; she closed her eyes. &ldquo;It's like going back to the ugly past.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's beastly, I know.&rdquo; He spoke seriously. &ldquo;But what else&mdash;&mdash;?
- Any moment he may recall where last he saw you. Sleep over it. We can
- decide in the morning.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- V
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>ll night he had
- been haunted by the oppressive sense that, if he did not watch, something
- terrible would, happen. It was shortly after dawn when he rose. Stepping
- into the corridor he found that he had the train to himself. It seemed as
- depopulated as an early morning house and, despite the clamor of its
- going, as silent. He placed himself near Santa's door and stood staring
- out at the misty landscape streaking past like a trail of smoke. It was
- here that Santa found him when she slipped from her compartment.
- </p>
- <p>
- He turned quickly. &ldquo;He's not up yet.&rdquo; Then, noticing her pallor and the
- shadows under her eyes, &ldquo;You haven't slept?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not much.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Making your decision, I suppose?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She bit her lip nervously. &ldquo;I shall have to pretend&mdash;&mdash; It'll
- only be pretending. You'll understand?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It won't last long,&rdquo; he comforted her. &ldquo;If we've been running on time, we
- must be in Alsace-Lorraine already. Within the next few hours we'll be out
- of France and into Germany. You'll feel safer there, won't you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- What he was really asking was whether it wasn't true that during the war
- she'd been a German spy.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Shall I?&rdquo; was all she answered.
- </p>
- <p>
- They fell silent. Without mentioning it, each guessed the motive which had
- occasioned the other's early rising. They dared not let the Captain out of
- their sight. While they could not see him, they had no peace of mind.
- Whereas yesterday his companionship had seemed to spell death, to-day it
- spelt protection. Yesterday they had done everything to elude him; to-day
- it would probably be he who would do the avoiding. It was essential that
- they should have won his confidence before they arrived on German soil.
- There was little time to lose. He had not appeared when the first sitting
- for breakfast was announced.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the restaurant car they dawdled over their meal and sat on long after
- it was ended. They had even begun to discuss the possibility of his having
- left the train during the night, when with an eagerness kindred to their
- own he entered. Hindwood waved to him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm afraid we've finished. But won't you seat yourself at our table? I've
- no doubt my wife will join you in a cup of coffee. While you breakfast, if
- it's not objectionable, I'll smoke a cigarette.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Captain Lajos beamed like a pleased boy. If one wasn't prejudiced in his
- disfavor, it was possible to find him likable. &ldquo;I shall be delighted,&rdquo; he
- said in an embarrassed tone. &ldquo;Journeys are tedious nowadays. Once every
- one who counted was gay and prosperous; one was never at a loss to find a
- friend. To-day, in this bankrupt world, the only travelers are
- money-lenders and pawn-brokers.&rdquo; He laughed. &ldquo;I may as well confess: I
- didn't think you were up yet&mdash;that's what made me late. I was so
- tired of my own society that I was waiting for you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- As he said, &ldquo;I was waiting for you,&rdquo; his eyes flashed on Santa.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was she who spoke. &ldquo;I fancy we've been just as bored with ourselves and
- even more eager to meet you. What you told us last night sounded so
- mysterious and romantic. I could hardly sleep for thinking about it. To
- have a Prince for one's friend and to travel so far to welcome him, only
- to find&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; She clasped her hands childishly. &ldquo;Life can be so
- drab&mdash;how drab, a man of your kind can never know. American husbands,
- no matter what they possess, take a pride in always working.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He disappointed her curiosity with a crooked smile. &ldquo;Whether you're a
- Prince or a millionaire, there's nothing romantic about being murdered.&rdquo;
- Then her allurement kindled the longing in his eyes. &ldquo;You're wanting me to
- confide the secrets that I warned you I couldn't share. Surely you must
- know something of Prince Rogovich?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No. Truly.&rdquo; She returned his searching gaze with apparent frankness.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood jogged her elbow. &ldquo;My dear, I've remembered. When we sailed there
- was a Prince Rogovich in the States, doing his best to raise a loan&mdash;I
- think it was for Poland. It was rumored that the money was to be
- squandered on military adventures. I guess he didn't find many takers.
- You're in the Hungarian Hussars, Captain, but you must excuse me for
- stating that on our side of the Atlantic we've seen all we want of
- armies.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Santa clicked her tongue impatiently. &ldquo;That's all very well, but it
- doesn't explain why the Prince&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It might,&rdquo; Hindwood insisted mildly. &ldquo;Discouraged men often commit
- suicide. He was coming home. He'd failed in his object&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He hadn't.&rdquo; The Captain glanced quickly behind him to see whether any one
- could have heard him. He continued in a voice that was little above a
- whisper, &ldquo;Only a few of us knew. He was coming home in triumph.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Leaning across the table with suppressed excitement, Santa made the appeal
- of pretty women throughout the ages. &ldquo;I wish you'd trust me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood pushed back his chair. &ldquo;It's time for a cigar. Perhaps you'll
- join me later. If you'll excuse me&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- They paid him scant attention. The last he saw of them they were gazing
- enraptured into each other's eyes.
- </p>
- <h3>
- VI
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>t was well over an
- hour since he had returned to his compartment. He had left his door wide,
- so that he could inspect every one who passed along the corridor. They
- couldn't have slipped by without his noticing. He was becoming almost as
- distrustful of Santa as he was of the stranger. Already the rôle of
- unwanted husband was growing irksome. The thing that baffled him most was
- her morbid curiosity. It was revolting to think of her, with her disarming
- air of refinement, encouraging her admirer to conjecture the details of a
- crime which she herself had committed. But how had she committed it? He
- himself did not know. He had just begun to contrive the scene in his mind
- when they entered. Her face was lit with a new intensity. At a glance he
- was aware that whatever she had learned had quickened her emotions. The
- Captain followed grudgingly, like a dog hanging back on a chain.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Captain Lajos has been telling me,&rdquo; she commenced. &ldquo;But we'd better have
- the door closed. He's been telling me things that you ought to know. He's
- so concerned for my sake that he's offered to repeat them.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Captain seated himself opposite to Hind-wood and regarded him gravely.
- &ldquo;The things that I've been telling your wife are not my secrets. I must
- ask you to give me your solemn promise.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You may take that for granted.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And there's one other point. I didn't offer to repeat them; it was Mrs.
- Hindwood who urged me. I'm making this plain because I don't want you to
- think I'm offering you my advice uninvited.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood lit a fresh cigar, fortifying himself against whatever shock was
- pending. &ldquo;I give you full credit for your motives.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then let me ask you a question. Have you noticed that there are scarcely
- any women on this train?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I believe you're right. But until you mentioned it I hadn't noticed.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, if you'll watch, you'll see that I'm correct. There are women and
- children in plenty on trains moving westward. But on trains moving
- eastward, where we're going&mdash;no.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood watched the man intently, wondering at what he was driving.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Would you be surprised,&rdquo; he continued, &ldquo;if I were to tell you that one of
- the chief reasons for the women's absence is this affair of Prince
- Rogo-vich?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You rather harp on Prince Rogovich, don't you?&rdquo; Hindwood flicked his ash.
- &ldquo;After a time one ceases to be surprised at anything. But aren't you
- presuming too much in insisting on his having been murdered? All that's
- known by your own account is that he's vanished. In any case, what can he
- possibly have to do with the scarcity of women on trains running
- eastward?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Everything.&rdquo; The Captain's face darkened with earnestness. &ldquo;What I'm
- trying to tell you is that you're taking your wife into danger. Every man
- who can afford it, in the countries to which you're going, is hurrying his
- women-folk to France, England, Spain, America&mdash;anywhere westward for
- safety. They can feel the storm rising, the deluge of catastrophe that
- can't be held back much longer. When it bursts, it'll tear everything
- established from its moorings and sweep across Europe in a wave of
- savagery.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And this deluge that you speak of&mdash;what had Prince Rogovich to do
- with it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He was keeping it from bursting.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood smiled. &ldquo;Alone?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No man's single strength could accomplish that. He was one of the most
- powerful of the resisting forces. When society's tottering, it's the
- little added strain that upsets the equilibrium. Remember how the last war
- started, with an obscure assassination.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood crossed his knees and dug himself back into the cushions. &ldquo;Your
- information, to say the least of it, is strangely melodramatic. If I
- understand you aright, you're urging me to discontinue my journey. Can't
- you be more explicit?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I can.&rdquo; The Captain betrayed a hint of temper. &ldquo;I suppose I shall have to
- if I'm to convince you. The stability of the whole of Central and Eastern
- Europe has been upset by the repartitioning of the Peace Treaty. The
- situation as it exists to-day is intolerable. The ruin which the war
- commenced has been completed by the pacification. The old social order has
- been overthrown; in its place we have a dozen rash experiments. In Russia,
- instead of the Czar, we have Bolshevism. In what was once the
- Austro-Hungarian Empire we have a series of Republics, which are nothing
- more than old racial hatreds entrenched behind newly created frontiers. In
- Poland, which was prisoner to three nations for two centuries, we have a
- released convict, vengeful with a sense of past injustice. Instead of
- reconstruction, we have disorganization. Trade is at a standstill. Money
- is valueless. Confidence is gone. Poverty has made a clean sweep of class
- distinctions. Mob-rule has usurped the rights of authority. Like a lean
- wolf, famine gallops through the desolation in ever widening circles.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But Prince Rogovich?&rdquo; Hindwood recalled him. &ldquo;What had he to do with it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He was the leader of the monarchist party in Europe&mdash;the organizer
- of a secret movement to set up again the thrones which war has toppled.
- Incidentally he was to have established a new throne for himself in
- Poland. Behind him he had the landowning classes and the old aristocracy,
- which the new regime of haphazard democracy has beggared. He was biding
- his time till the crisis should become sufficiently acute for him to
- strike his blow. He had his armies ready. All he lacked was munitions. The
- floating of the loan in America completed his program.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But you said that the fact that he was returning in triumph was known
- only to a few. If only a few knew it, why should his death have caused
- this sudden exodus of women on trains running westward?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;For two reasons: because he was the recognized strong man of the buffer
- states which lie between Russian anarchy and civilization; and because the
- crisis of starvation, for which he had been waiting, is now in sight.
- While Bolshevism was making its drives against Poland, Central Europe was
- compelled to hold together. Now that Bolshevism is crumbling, that
- compulsion is relaxed. All the way from Siberia to the frontiers of
- Germany millions are perishing from lack of food. Presently the Russian
- millions will commence to march westward to the lands of plenty. They'll
- march like Death, swinging his scythe. They'll sweep on like a pestilence.
- They'll lope like gaunt wolves, savage and relentless. The starving
- peoples of Central Europe, who would once have resisted them, will join
- them. Prince Rogovich, had he lived, could have prevented them.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How?&rdquo; It was Santa.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He would have declared a new war, with the return to monarchy as his
- battle-cry. He had his nucleus armies in readiness; they would have sprung
- from their hiding-places overnight. There would have been a tremendous
- rally to him as the only man unscrupulous enough to handle the situation.
- He would have made his bargain with the Allies.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And then?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He would have trained his guns on the lean hordes of Russia and would
- have blown them back across their borders.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Again Santa spoke. Her voice came low and haltingly. &ldquo;He would have made
- the world pass through the fires of Moloch for a second time. The person
- who murdered him must have known it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood turned to her. There was a startled expression in his eyes. He
- was quite certain she had known it. He was seeing the real Santa for the
- first time. She was a Charlotte Corday, who had dipped her hands in blood
- that she might prevent a more colossal crime.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I begin to see,&rdquo; he muttered.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Captain took the words as addressed to himself. &ldquo;I'm glad you do. It
- must be obvious to you now that where you're going is no place for a
- woman. If you'll accept my advice, you'll turn back at the next
- stopping-place.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Impossible.&rdquo; Hindwood recalled himself to the part he was playing.
- &ldquo;You're a soldier; you'd be ashamed to run away at the first hint of
- danger. In a sense I also am a soldier, a soldier of business. I, too,
- have my marching orders and my duty.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then if you won't turn back yourself, send Mrs. Hindwood back.&rdquo; The man's
- voice shook. &ldquo;You're taking her to almost certain death. She's too
- beautiful&mdash;I beg it of you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- To his amazement Hindwood found himself liking the stranger. &ldquo;My wife's
- beauty has no bearing on the problem. We're exceedingly grateful to you,
- Captain Lajos; but to act on your warning&mdash;it's out of the question.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Captain shot him a dark look, then let his gaze rest on Santa. When
- she kept her eyes averted, he pretended to lose interest in the subject.
- The train was slowing down. He cleared the pane with his glove.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's the frontier.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood rose and hurriedly commenced to gather together his belongings.
- Sitting perfectly still with an air of quiet criticism, the Captain
- watched him. When the last bag had been strapped and made ready for
- removal, &ldquo;Why are you doing that?&rdquo; he inquired.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The German Customs. I suppose we'll have to get out and go through the
- old jog-trot of being inspected.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You don't need to; you can have it done here. Excuse me, if I seem
- officious. I was immediately behind you at Calais and couldn't help
- noticing that your passports are the same as mine&mdash;diplomatic. The
- advantage of a diplomatic passport in crossing frontiers is that the
- officials have to come to you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I didn't know. If that's the case&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He resumed his seat with a sickening sensation. The Captain's presence was
- stifling him. He longed to escape, if it were only for five minutes. He
- felt choked with lies. It seemed impossible that the Captain should not be
- aware of the atmosphere of falsehood.
- </p>
- <p>
- Passengers were already filing down the corridor and being herded by
- soldiers on the platform. As carriages were emptied, doors were locked and
- sealed. Evidently nothing was to be left to chance; while the passengers
- were held prisoners in the waiting-rooms, the train was to be searched
- from end to end. To a guilty conscience there was something exceedingly
- intimidating about this military display of thoroughness.
- </p>
- <p>
- The <i>wagon-lits</i> conductor looked into the compartment. Seeing the
- three of them seated there, he burst into a frantic protest. Captain Lajos
- annihilated him with the ferocity of his explanation. When the conductor
- had retreated, the Captain turned to Hindwood.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Like most of your compatriots, I see you're not strong on languages. If I
- can be of use to you, I'll act as your interpreter.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My wife is&mdash;&rdquo; Then he remembered that he knew nothing of Santa's
- linguistic attainments. &ldquo;You're very thoughtful of our comfort,&rdquo; he
- substituted.
- </p>
- <p>
- Guttural voices sounded. Two crop-headed ex-drill-sergeants presented
- themselves. Without waste of words they rasped out a peremptory order.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They want to see your passports,&rdquo; the Captain interpreted.
- </p>
- <p>
- While the passports were being examined, there was silence. Again
- questions were asked and again the Captain interpreted.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Are you carrying fire-arms?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Have you any contraband?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you intend to stay in Germany?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a pause. The passports were folded and on the point of being
- returned when another unintelligible conversation started.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Captain smiled. &ldquo;They're punctilious. As a matter of form, they want
- to hear you assert that you're the Philip Hindwood to whom this passport
- was issued.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Most certainly. They can prove that by comparing my face with the
- attached photograph.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Captain turned to Santa with the utmost suavity. &ldquo;And that you're the
- Edith Jones, Mr. Hindwood's secretary.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Having exploded his bomb, he rose. For a moment he seemed to hesitate as
- to whether he should expose them. Then, making a stiff bow, he murmured,
- &ldquo;That's all.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Directly he had departed, Hindwood locked the door behind him. &ldquo;He shall
- ferret out no more of our secrets.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- From then on, they traveled in a state of siege. Several times they
- thought they heard a tapping. Whether it was the Captain's, they did not
- allow themselves to discover. They opened to no one whom they had not
- summoned.
- </p>
- <h3>
- VII
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>oon after the
- train restarted, Santa rested her hand on his arm. &ldquo;You think better of me
- now. I'm so tired, I should cry if you spoke to me. Let me sleep on your
- couch. I'm afraid to be alone.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He covered her with his rug and did his best to make her comfortable. She
- was utterly exhausted. In a few minutes her eyes closed and she was
- breathing gently.
- </p>
- <p>
- Several hours elapsed. She was still sleeping. He was glad not to have to
- talk. His mind was filled with a tremendous picture: &ldquo;There was a certain
- rich man, which was clothed in purple and fine linen, and fared
- sumptuously every day. And there was a certain beggar named Lazarus, which
- was laid at his gate full of sores.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He saw the world that he was leaving, self-satisfied, callous,
- well-nourished. He saw the world to which he was going, out of which he
- had planned to make a profit&mdash;a world picked clean by the crime of
- war and peopled by living skeletons. When its pain had passed beyond
- endurance, the outcast world would attack the world which was comfortable.
- It would come crawling like a beggar to a rich man's door. When it found
- the door barred, it would go mad. It had nothing to lose by violence. With
- its bare hands it would storm the dwelling.
- </p>
- <p>
- How would the comfortable world defend itself? The Captain said with
- cannon. From a safe distance it would blow the empty bellies into
- nothingness. But bread was cheaper than high explosives. Why not fill the
- empty bellies instead of shattering them?
- </p>
- <p>
- He recalled the fields round Amiens, starred with miniature forests of
- stiff, protesting crosses. Why had those crosses been planted if it had
- not been to teach the living world to share?
- </p>
- <p>
- A barricade of bread could prevent further bloodshed. It always could have
- prevented it. The gray tide of wolf-men could be halted by a barricade of
- bread. Strange that no one had ever thought of it! There had never been a
- war that a barricade of bread could not have halted. Back and forth across
- the Atlantic his food-ships were plying. In Holland his warehouses were
- bulging&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- He glanced at the sleeping face of Santa&mdash;sweet and sad as an
- avenging angel's. Her solution of injustice was simple: to slay the
- wrong-doer before he could do his wrong. It was her own suffering that had
- taught her this cruel mercy. If she, a half-caste, disinherited at birth,
- could so risk her soul's salvation for humanity&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- He drew himself up sharply. He was turning visionary. At this rate he
- would end as a second Varensky. All his plans for capturing power would be
- thwarted. He had seen nothing as yet that would corroborate the Captain's
- disastrous prophecies.
- </p>
- <p>
- At Stuttgart he watched the Captain receive another telegram. If the man
- had lied to him, what was his purpose? How much did he know? How much did
- he infer? Had his discovery that they were not married been an accident or
- had he led up to it by strategy? When Vienna was reached, it would be
- necessary to throw' him off their track.
- </p>
- <p>
- They were winding through blue valleys of the Bavarian Tyrol, steeped in
- the contentment of autumnal sunshine. Like eagles' nests, built high above
- pine-forests, he caught glimpses of <i>chalets</i> perched on narrow
- ledges. Here and there they passed villages, mere clusters of dolls'
- houses, childish and make-believe as memories of fairyland. He began to
- smile at his mood of pessimism. Were Santa to waken, she would refute the
- Captain's bogey stories. He bent over her, tempted to rouse her. At last
- he shook her shoulder.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Santa, don't be frightened. I want to ask you a question. What the
- Captain said wasn't true?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She gazed up at him bewildered, dreams still in her eyes; then turned her
- face drowsily back to the pillow. &ldquo;What wasn't true? I don't understand.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The part about Prince Rogovich and blowing those starving wretches back
- with cannon.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She settled herself wearily. &ldquo;I'm so terribly tired. I don't want to be
- reminded.&rdquo; And then, &ldquo;It was why I killed him; so that he shouldn't.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- VIII
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">D</span>arkness had long
- since gathered when they crossed the starvation-line into Austria. Perhaps
- it was no more than imagination, but he immediately became conscious of a
- vague depression. Glancing through the misty panes, he espied no signs of
- life&mdash;only bare fields, pollarded trees like gallows, and the sullen
- profiles of shrouded houses. No trains flashed by, going in the opposite
- direction. Wayside stations were shuttered. Night was a stagnant tank. In
- the all-pervading silence the sound of their own going was the only
- clamor.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was not until they were nearing Vienna that any lights broke the
- monotony of the blackness&mdash;even these, like lanterns of lonely
- grave-diggers, were faint and rare. Shadowy apartment-houses and rotting
- factories looked less like habitations than monstrous sepulchers. It was
- difficult to believe that this pulseless carcass had once been the
- Bacchante among modern metropolises&mdash;that even at this moment
- memories of its rhythm were setting the feet of happier streets to music.
- He caught the vision of other cities after nightfall; New York, a tall
- white virgin, sheathed in jewels; London, a grimy smith, striking sparks
- from a giant anvil; Paris, a wanton goddess, smiling through the dusk, her
- face lit up by fire-fly constellations. How impossible it would be to
- approach any one of them without becoming aware of its presence! Yet a man
- might easily travel through Vienna without suspecting that it lay cowering
- behind the darkness.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was after midnight when the train halted in the empty cathedral of the
- Bahnhof. Directly the doors were opened, lean men poured into the
- compartments, whining for the privilege of handling the baggage. Hindwood
- delayed until he had allowed the Captain sufficient time to make his exit,
- then he thought it safe to assist Santa to the platform. Once again,
- despite the lateness of the hour, it was necessary to go through tedious
- formalities. The question asked most pressingly, as at the German
- frontier, was whether they were possessed of fire-arms.
- </p>
- <p>
- At last they were free to go in search of beds. As they stepped into the
- station-yard, they got their first glimpse of Austria's destitution.
- Huddled against the walls was a collection of human derelicts which seemed
- more in keeping with Dante's &ldquo;Inferno&rdquo; than the city which had set the
- world waltzing to <i>The Merry Widow</i>. They were of all conditions and
- ages, from grandparents to toddling children, from artisans to
- aristocrats. In the scant light they lifted up greenish faces which
- snarled, while their extended hands demanded charity. The police beat them
- back, like huntsmen separating hounds from their quarry. They retreated
- whimpering into the shadows.
- </p>
- <p>
- From the line of worn-out vehicles which were waiting, Hindwood selected a
- creaking taxi. Having seen Santa seat herself, he ordered the man to drive
- to the Hotel Bristol.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Pretty awful,&rdquo; he groaned, as he sank back against the musty cushions.
- </p>
- <p>
- She stifled a sob. &ldquo;It was nothing. It's worse than that.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He spoke again. &ldquo;I didn't see the Captain. I think we're rid of him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I wouldn't be optimistic.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Down the long, deserted Mariahilfer Strasse they bumped and rattled. It
- was ungarnished and forbidding as an empty house. The few people whom they
- met scuffled out of sight at sound of intrusion, looking less like human
- beings than vermin. Over all there hung a sense of evil, as though a crime
- lay undiscovered behind the silence.
- </p>
- <p>
- As they turned into the Ring, which circles the inner city, Santa woke
- into animation. Leaning from the window, she pointed. &ldquo;Do you see that
- huge pile like a palace, with all the statues and the steps going up to
- it? That's the Opera House. I danced there once at the command of the
- Emperor.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then you're known here?&rdquo; He clutched her hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- She shook her head sadly. &ldquo;I was the toast of Europe then. Whereas to-day&mdash;&mdash;
- It makes a difference.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- In the Kârtner-Ring they drew up before a blazing entrance. Laughing
- people were passing in and out, women muffled in costly wraps, accompanied
- by men in evening-attire.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's this?&rdquo; The change was so sudden that it shook his sense of
- reality. &ldquo;This doesn't look like&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She placed her lips close to his ear as she alighted.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It looks like asking for revolution. 'After me, the deluge'&mdash;you
- remember? The men aren't Austrians. They're foreign vultures here to
- snatch bargains&mdash;human bargains as well. But the women&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Inside the doors of the hotel every reminder of famine had been blotted
- out. Its white marble halls and stairways were richly carpeted. Its
- furnishings in gilt and satin had been carried out with the utmost
- lavishness. The costal of its chandeliers glittered with a dazzling
- intensity. From the restaurant drifted the wild gayety of a gipsy
- orchestra, enfever-ing the atmosphere with the yearning of elusive
- romance. Whispering to the beat of the music came the glide of dancing
- footsteps. Flunkeys with powdered heads, tricked out in plush breeches
- like marionettes, hurried to and fro on all-absorbing errands.
- </p>
- <p>
- After Santa had been shown to her ornate room, he stepped out into the
- gloomy street to assure himself. It was all true, in spite of the lie
- which he had witnessed. The pinched faces were still there, and the
- enfeebled bodies crawling through the shadows.
- </p>
- <p>
- As he reentered the white glare which shone from the hotel, he glanced
- back with a sense of impending ruin. For a second time his mind was filled
- with a tremendous picture: &ldquo;And there was a certain rich man and a beggar
- named Lazarus, which was laid at his gate, desiring to be fed. Moreover,
- the dogs came and licked his sores.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He caught the vision of his food-ships piling up stores in Holland. At the
- thought, as he crept between the sheets in his comfortable bed, he
- sickened.
- </p>
- <h3>
- IX
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">H</span>e had returned
- from a disturbing interview with the Austrian ministers responsible for
- considering his proposals. He was passing the hotel desk, when it occurred
- to him that some one might have left a message. On inquiry two were handed
- out to him, one a telegram, the other a letter. Ripping open the telegram,
- a glance told him it was in German and had been dispatched from Budapest.
- He had slipped it into his pocket, thinking, &ldquo;I'll have to get Santa to
- translate that,&rdquo; when he unfolded it again to see by whom it had been
- sent. The sender's name was a single word, &ldquo;Anna.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- His heart gave a bound. She was near to him! He could see her again within
- a handful of hours. For a moment nothing else seemed to matter&mdash;neither
- Santa's safety, nor the agony of hunger by which he was surrounded. His
- blood ran hot with yearning. How had she reached Budapest so quickly? What
- was her object? To have accomplished the journey she must have set out
- from England ahead of him or else have left on the same day, traveling by
- the alternative route via Belgium. While he had been journeying in the
- company of Santa, going through the mummery of pretending he was married,
- Anna had been paralleling his footsteps. Was Varensky with her? But if she
- were alone...
- </p>
- <p>
- Mechanically, as he entered the elevator, he slit the flap of the letter.
- It had evidently been left personally, for it bore no postmark and was
- hastily scrawled on the stationery of the hotel. The hand was unknown to
- him. The note read:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Yesterday you avoided me. I have told her everything. I am more sure
- than ever you ought to send her back. I must leave you now for a little
- while. When we meet again, I hope it will be as friends</i>.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Lajos</i>.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At last they had got rid of him! But what was it he had told her? And what
- made him so sure that they would meet again? The man wrote as if he were
- confident that he could lay his hands on them at any moment.
- </p>
- <p>
- Stepping out of the elevator, Hindwood made directly for Santa's room. He
- recalled it vaguely as he had seen it the night before, with its Empire
- furniture, painted cupids, silken hangings, and tall mirrors&mdash;its
- knowing air of having been the illicit nest of innumerable short-lived
- love-affairs. Its gaudy luxury, so glaringly in contrast with the
- embittered need of the outside world, had stirred his anger. In reply to
- his knock, her hoarse voice bade him enter. Before he was across the
- threshold, he was aware of the intoxicating fragrance of roses.
- </p>
- <p>
- Just inside the room, frowning with bewilderment, he halted. There were
- stacks of them&mdash;sheaves of them everywhere. They were scattered on
- the floor. They were arranged in vases. They lay strewn about in boxes.
- They were of all shades and varieties.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's the meaning?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She beckoned to him to join her at the tall window against which she was
- standing.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We missed this last night.&rdquo; She pointed.
- </p>
- <p>
- Following her direction, he saw that the window looked down obliquely on
- the imposing architecture of the Opera House. The mellow October sunlight
- drifted softly across gray roofs and fell in an orange splash into the
- deep fissure of the street below. Along the pavements the tide of traffic
- wandered nervelessly. On a neighboring ledge, two plump pigeons were
- engaged in an ardent courtship.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What did we miss? I see nothing.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Then he noticed the panting of her bosom and that her expression was
- tender with tremulous emotion.
- </p>
- <p>
- Drawing her fine fingers across her eyes, she shuddered. &ldquo;Stupid of me! I
- forgot; they would bring back nothing to you&mdash;the scent of the roses
- and then the Opera House, looking the same as ever. I've been dreaming of
- other mornings, when I woke after nights of triumph. Perhaps it was this
- room that set me remembering. It's not the first time I've slept in it.&rdquo;
- As she caught his eyes reading her memories, she flushed guiltily. &ldquo;Yes,
- in those days I was never lonely.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But the roses!&rdquo; he reminded her impatiently. &ldquo;How did you get them? At
- the price things cost in Vienna, some one must have spent a fortune.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She placed a hand on his arm appealingly. &ldquo;Don't begrudge me. He must have
- known. I think he did it for my burial.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her words sent a chill through him. He shifted his weight uncomfortably.
- &ldquo;We're in too tight a corner to waste energy on sentiment. If we're going
- to make a fight for it, we've got to keep our heads clear. Who gave them
- to you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She pressed her forehead against the warm pane. The gold of the world
- outside cast a sheen of gold on her profile. Her unwanted loveliness hurt
- him. It reproached him. It recalled to him the ache of his old desire in
- the days before he had known that he could have her. And now that he could
- have her for the asking....
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Captain Lajos gave them to me. They've been arriving ever since we
- parted. He waited till you'd gone; then he came to me. He came to tell me
- why he'd followed me. He was persuaded I was your mistress. This morning
- he did something noble&mdash;very noble for a man of his sort to a woman
- of mine; he begged me to become his wife.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Without knowing anything about you? He must be mad.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't say that.&rdquo; She closed her eyes painfully. &ldquo;I shan't trouble you or
- any one much longer. I shall soon be so still. When one's sure of that,
- it's good to be loved just once again, even though&mdash;&rdquo; She turned
- slowly and faced him. &ldquo;I don't need to tell you who it is that I love
- truly. This man&mdash;he's nothing. No man ever will&mdash;&mdash; You see
- I've lived for men and admiration&mdash;for things like&mdash;&rdquo; She
- pointed to the roses. &ldquo;It's new to me to be neglected. So it's comforting
- to know that a man can still desire me, even though I'd rather kill myself
- than go with him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He broke the silence that had settled between them. &ldquo;You mustn't talk like
- this. You've years of life before you. I'll get you away safely.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She smiled. &ldquo;No.&rdquo; Then she changed the subject. &ldquo;What happened to you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You mean at my conference?&rdquo; He seated himself beside her dressing-table.
- &ldquo;The worst that could have happened&mdash;nothing. Some change has taken
- place for which I can't account. When I sent my suggestions from America,
- they were hailed with enthusiasm. I was a saviour&mdash;everything that's
- splendid and extravagant. But now&mdash;&mdash; The Government's
- paralyzed. It isn't a Government; it's a passenger. 'You've let us starve
- too long. It doesn't matter now&mdash;' that's what I was told this
- morning. The ministers with whom I consulted spoke as if they were sitting
- on the edge of a volcano, waiting to be blown up. They're so sure that an
- eruption's inevitable that they don't consider it worth while to make an
- effort to save themselves. I couldn't rouse them. When I pressed them for
- the cause of their lethargy, they prophesied a new war, in very much the
- same words as Captain Lajos&mdash;a war in which the well-fed are to be
- pillaged by the starving.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But did you tell them that you could ship food into Austria at once?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I told them. I assured them that I could put Austria back on her feet in
- twelve months. I offered to provision her and to supply coal for her
- factories, if they'd give me control of the railroads and a per capita
- percentage on the total increase of national industry. 'Provision us with
- pleasure' was their attitude; 'we'll raise no official objection.' 'Very
- kind of you,' I replied; 'but where do I come in. I'm no philanthropist.'&rdquo;
- He brought his fist down with a bang on the dressing-table. &ldquo;There's a
- nigger in the wood-pile. Upon my soul, I believe those fellows are
- determined that I shan't prevent their nation from dying. If I shipped
- them the food as a gift, they'd burn it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She came over from the window and stood gazing down at him. &ldquo;You're right.
- They would if they dared. Can't you guess?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I can't. Their currency's hardly worth the paper it's printed on. People
- are dropping dead in the streets&mdash;I saw them. Their gaols are packed
- with children turned criminals through hunger. There'll be no crops next
- year; the grain's consumed that should have been saved for the sowing.
- They've butchered all their live-stock. The brains of the country are in
- exile. The intellectual classes have been wiped out. And here I come with
- my offer to save them, and they reject it. Without the help of some
- outside force like myself, things can only go from bad to worse.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Precisely.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He glanced up, irritated by the promptitude of her agreement. &ldquo;Precisely!
- Why do you say that?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's what they want&mdash;things to go from bad to worse. The worse
- things get, the more certain they are of revolution. They're afraid your
- food would postpone it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Afraid! Why on earth?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Because they hope to snatch more out of the catastrophe of revolution
- than you can offer them. These ministers with whom you've been dealing are
- the tools of the exiled monarchists. They belong to the party in all
- countries which made the last war possible and all wars before it. What do
- they care for the people? They never have cared. Let the brutes starve,'
- they say, 'if it suits our purpose. We can always breed more.' They regard
- the people as their serfs, to be fooled with patriotism when danger
- threatens and to be kept in chains to toil for them when peace has been
- restored. If the people go hungry long enough, they'll reason that the
- loss of their kings is the cause. They'll rise up and recall them. They'll
- start to die for them afresh. It'll happen in all the outcast countries.
- In the wholesale scramble, it'll be every nation for itself. The strong
- will struggle to expand their frontiers, and the weak will go to the wall.
- The deluge of blood&mdash;&rdquo; She sank to her knees, seizing his hands
- imploringly. &ldquo;If you'll sacrifice your stores of food, you can stop it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But if I do that, without guaranties, I'm bankrupt. I get nothing.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You'll get more than I got when, to accomplish the same purpose, I
- murdered Prince Rogovich. I'll get the scaffold. You'll earn the thanks of
- humanity. You'll go down to the ages....&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He could see only the wide greyness of her eyes, pleading, coercing,
- unbalancing his judgment.
- </p>
- <p>
- He jumped to his feet, shaking off their spell. &ldquo;I'm no dreamer&mdash;no
- Varensky,&rdquo; he said gruffly. &ldquo;I have to make a profit.&rdquo; Then, defending
- himself from her unspoken accusation, &ldquo;We're only guessing. We have no
- facts. There are other famished countries&mdash;Hungary and Poland. What
- Austria refuses, they may accept.&rdquo; He dug his hand into his pocket. &ldquo;That
- reminds me. Here's a telegram from Budapest. I can't understand it. It's
- in German.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She was crouched on the floor. As he stooped to give it to her, she caught
- sight of the signature.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;From Anna. Varensky must be with her. Then the crisis is nearer than I
- thought.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Read it. Tell me what it says,&rdquo; he urged.
- </p>
- <p>
- She looked up palely, wilted with disappointment. &ldquo;'<i>Come at once. I
- need you</i>.' That's all.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Does she give no address?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She wouldn't risk it. I know where to find her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then we'll start&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But what about&mdash;?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He did not hear her. The blood was hammering in his temples. He left her
- forgotten, seated among her roses. The music of a wild exultation was
- maddening his heart.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER THE SEVENTH&mdash;THE CAPTURE
- </h2>
- <h3>
- I
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>O Anna had turned
- to him out of all the world!
- </p>
- <p>
- She had felt so sure of him that she had not even stated the reason for
- her urgency&mdash;only &ldquo;<i>Come at once. I need you</i>.&rdquo; That she should
- have relied so implicitly on his compliance put him on his honor not to
- disappoint her. She must have known that her telegram would find him
- involved in important business. The earliest she could have counted on
- seeing him must have been to-morrow. He was determined, if it were humanly
- possible, to exceed her best expectations; he would see her to-night.
- Having phoned for the hotel porter to be sent to him, he immediately
- commenced to pack. He recalled the message that Santa had delivered him:
- &ldquo;Varensky's setting out on his last journey. He told me to say, 'Soon you
- can have her.'&rdquo; Did Anna's telegram mean that Varensky's final journey was
- ended?
- </p>
- <p>
- He was throwing his belongings together when the porter entered.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You wanted me, sir?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes. What's the first train&mdash;the fastest to Budapest?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The first, if it's still running, starts from the Nord-Bahnhof within the
- hour. But&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then order me a taxi. I'll be ready in ten minutes. Have my bill made up.
- Send some one to my secretary's room to fetch down her baggage.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Certainly. But&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood glanced at the man coldly. &ldquo;I'm in too much of a hurry for
- conversation.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A little later, as he was pocketing his change, having settled his
- account, the cashier addressed him.
- </p>
- <p>
- He shook his head. &ldquo;Don't understand.&rdquo; Then, catching sight of Santa, he
- beckoned. &ldquo;The fellow's trying to say something. Find out what's troubling
- him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The cashier repeated more earnestly the words that he had previously
- uttered.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He wants to know whether you really think you can leave Vienna,&rdquo; Santa
- translated.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's to prevent?&rdquo; Then he caught her arm, lowering his voice. &ldquo;Perhaps
- they're on to you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Kârtner-Ring was extraordinarily deserted. Against the curb a wheezing
- taxi was standing&mdash;the only one in sight. Its engine was running. The
- bags had been piled on the front seat beside the driver, evidently very
- much to his annoyance; he was doing his best to tumble them back on to the
- pavement. The hotel porter was vigorously restraining him. An altercation
- was in progress which threatened any minute to develop into a fight.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's the matter?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The porter replied across his shoulder, still holding the bags in place.
- &ldquo;He doesn't want to drive you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Tell him I'll give him five times the legal fare.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- When the offer had been translated, the man seemed mollified.
- </p>
- <p>
- The porter opened the door. &ldquo;Quietly. Jump in before he changes his mind.
- He promises to do his best.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;His best! I should think so.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- As the cab moved off, Hindwood missed the porter's parting words. He
- turned to Santa. &ldquo;Do they always come this hold-up game with foreigners in
- Vienna?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It isn't a hold-up game. He didn't want to drive us. He was afraid.
- Something's wrong. Look how empty the streets are. Didn't you see how
- white and scared every one was in the hotel? The cashier would have told
- us; you wouldn't even let me listen to him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Jealous!&rdquo; he thought. &ldquo;It'll be awkward having to take care of both her
- and Anna.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- They had driven for ten minutes in silence when Santa spoke again. &ldquo;It's a
- queer way he's taking us.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How queer?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;So round-about.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;As long as he keeps going, we don't need to worry.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But why should he turn up all the side-streets?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't know. It'll be time to grow nervous when he stops.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At that moment he stopped, but it was only for a second. Spinning his cab
- about, he spurted off in a new direction. Glancing from the window as he
- turned, they saw that the main thoroughfare ahead was blocked by what
- appeared to be a procession. Street after street he tried, working round
- in a circle, never getting any nearer. At last, growing desperate, he took
- the plunge, tooting his horn and forcing his way through the outskirts of
- the seething mob. By the time Hindwood had ordered him to turn back it was
- too late; for a hundred yards behind them, from pavement to pavement, the
- thoroughfare was packed with pedestrians and vehicles, all headed in the
- one direction. To get out and walk, even if they had been willing to
- sacrifice their baggage, was out of the question. The crowd in front was
- more dense than the crowd behind. The air was full of shrieks of fainting
- women and the shiver of plate-glass as shop-windows gave way under the
- pressure. To escape the crush, which was momentarily increasing, people
- were clambering to the roof of the taxi and standing thick along the
- running-boards.
- </p>
- <p>
- Santa was speaking in a torrent to the strangers clinging to the doors.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Can't you stop long enough to tell me what's happening?&rdquo; Hindwood
- interrupted.
- </p>
- <p>
- She apologized. &ldquo;I forgot for the moment that you can't speak German.
- They're as puzzled as we are. All they know is that they're doing what
- every one else is doing. They don't know the cause. The same thing's
- happening at every station. A panic's struck Vienna&mdash;a foreboding of
- disaster. It's a case of nerves. In some places looting has started. Every
- one's escaping&mdash;the entire population. It's anything to get westward
- to France, Switzerland, Germany, away from this nightmare of starvation.
- They're storming the trains in the Bahnhof, trying to compel the engineers
- to&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Turning from him, she commenced to ply more questions in her hurried flow
- of German.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was all clear now&mdash;the porter's hesitancy, the cashier's
- earnestness, the driver's reluctance. They had been trying to prevent him
- from hurrying a woman into danger. He had been too obsessed by the thought
- of reaching Anna even to pay attention. For confirmation of what Santa had
- told him, he had only to glance at the surrounding throng. The lean
- multitude was absurdly prepared for its futile exodus. Irrespective of
- class, every individual was burdened with whatever he or she had had time
- to rescue of the household goods. They carried bundles beneath their arms
- and sacks on their backs. Everything on wheels had been commandeered. Some
- pushed perambulators, piled high with ill-assorted belongings; others had
- harnessed themselves to carts. None of them could have considered whether
- his or her presence would be allowed in a happier country. Obviously over
- night the half of Vienna could not have procured the necessary permits to
- travel.
- </p>
- <p>
- On the outskirts those who were most desperate, because furthest from the
- station, had begun to charge. Hindwood watched the stampede&mdash;how
- terror was transforming forlorn human beings into animals. They were of
- all kinds and sorts, mechanics, waiters, slum-dwellers, merchants,
- shop-girls,' demi-mondaines, with here and there a sprinkling of patrician
- faces from the palaces of the bankrupt aristocracy. There were lonely men
- and women, but for the most part they were grouped in families, the
- children dragging at their mother's skirts and the youngest in the
- father's arms. They pushed, jostled and fought, trampling the weak in
- their frenzy to get forward.
- </p>
- <p>
- Suddenly the madness of self-preservation froze with horror. At the end of
- the street, far up the pale river of gray faces, horsemen were advancing,
- standing tall in their stirrups, smiting with their swords. Santa flung
- herself to the floor. &ldquo;Down. Keep down. The children&mdash;oh, my God!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Like a volley of hail, bullets commenced to patter. They whipped the
- street from end to end, hissing in their flight and thudding as they found
- their target. The taxi tossed and rocked like a rowboat in a mill-race.
- The mob had given way; like water from a burst dam, it roared between the
- tall, confining houses. It swept backwards weeping, bleeding, desperate,
- exhausted, wilder in its retreat than it had been in its advance. Behind
- it came the cavalry, riding it down, firing and stabbing. In five minutes
- nothing was in sight, save upset vehicles, scattered belongings, dead
- lying awkwardly in the October sunshine and wounded crawling weakly in
- search of refuge.
- </p>
- <p>
- Reaching through the shattered window, Hindwood tapped the driver's
- shoulder. &ldquo;Drive on.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At the touch the man crumpled. There was a crimson blot in the center of
- his forehead.
- </p>
- <p>
- Santa sat up, staring furiously. &ldquo;If you'd not refused them bread&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I didn't.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You did. You were only willing to sell.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her eyes were blazing. Her hands were clenched. Her tears fell slowly. In
- the terrific silence which followed so much clamor, the street itself
- seemed to accuse him. Picking up their bags, he led the way to the
- station. Scenes such as the one he had witnessed might be happening in
- Budapest. There was no time to be lost.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Find out whether it's possible to send a wire.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Where to?&rdquo; she asked suspiciously.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To Amsterdam.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What for?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you need to ask?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- After a hurried conversation with a scared official, she turned. &ldquo;If it's
- to do with food, they'll accept it. The lines may be cut at any moment.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He dashed off his telegram. &ldquo;<i>Crisis sooner than expected. Without delay
- start food-trains under armed guard for Budapest and Vienna</i>.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It might spell bankruptcy for him&mdash;the ruin of all his plans. He
- rebelled against the improvidence of philanthropy, yet dimly he discerned
- the proportions of his chance. If he would, he could teach the world how
- wars could be stopped. As he watched the message being dispatched, he
- wondered why he had sent it. Was he frightened by the sight of bloodshed,
- or angered, like Varensky, by an unjust display of force? Or had he sent
- it because this maelstrom of human agony swirled between him and the woman
- he loved, and food might prove to be the only means by which she could be
- rescued? He sought to explain his actions by business motives: if his food
- trains were actually on the spot, he could strike a better bargain with
- tottering governments.
- </p>
- <h3>
- II
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>he express for
- Budapest was several hours late. When at last it got under way, it carried
- few passengers. It was plunging straight into the heart of the danger,
- from which all the world which possessed the price of a fare was escaping.
- </p>
- <p>
- Santa listened to and reported on the conversation of fellow-travelers.
- They were Hungarian officers returning to their regiments, to whom a fight
- spelt opportunity; they were husbands and fathers, careless of their own
- safety in their dread of what might be happening to their families; they
- were merchants and men of wealth, anxious to be at hand for the defense of
- their possessions. As the talk went on, the greatness of the risk grew
- increasingly obvious; it bred an atmosphere of free-masonry. Strangers
- accosted each other, exchanging views on the hazards; they crowded about
- the entrance of any compartment where a speaker seemed possessed of
- accurate information. Most of what was said was no more than conjecture;
- much of it was utterly contradictory. One man asserted that the Bolsheviks
- were attacking all along the Russian front; another that Bolshevism had
- collapsed and the peasants were massacring. Another knew for certain that
- throughout Central Europe the Reds were rising; yet another that the
- Monarchists had sprung to arms and were marching. Every rumor or invention
- was accepted with equal credulity. Anything was possible. No one knew for
- certain either the magnitude or the cause of the rumored disaster. Only
- one fact seemed indisputable: somewhere further eastward had occurred a
- catastrophe of shattering proportions&mdash;a catastrophe in the tragedy
- of which each one of them would shortly be involved.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood turned away from the babel of voices to the autumn landscape
- gliding past the windows. It consisted as far as eye could stretch of
- unboundaried, level fields, gridironed by straight, military roads, marked
- by avenues of pollarded trees, intersecting always at right angles. The
- fields were neglected. They told their own story of seed consumed, which
- should have been saved for sowing, and of cattle slaughtered. Over
- everything, despite the brilliant blueness of the sky, there hung an
- atmosphere of melancholy. Down white-penciled highways little groups were
- trekking, always in the one direction. They appeared crushed and harmless,
- more like insects, scarcely human. They limped forlornly, dragging carts
- and carrying children. They were the advance-guard of the army of
- starvation. Hindwood remembered the Captain's prophecy. &ldquo;They'll march to
- the lands of plenty like Death swinging his scythe, like a pestilence,
- like gaunt wolves.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At the frontier, where the train crossed from Austria into Hungary, he
- gained his first lesson in the resistlessness of necessity. There had been
- an unequal battle, in which only one side had been armed. It appeared that
- the Austrian guards had tried to turn back the Hungarian fugitives. They
- had fired their rifles till their ammunition was exhausted; then they had
- sickened of the slaughter. Opposition had made no difference; the tide of
- fugitives had still pressed on. Misery had proved more potent than
- explosives; it had made death, if not desirable, at least negligible. Its
- meek persistence had conquered. The Austrian soldiery had revolted against
- their officers and stood with grounded arms, watching the stream of
- poverty trickling through the barrier of corpses.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Like water finding its own level,&rdquo; Hindwood thought. It would be like
- this the world over, if something were not done at once to check it. The
- outcast nations lay one behind the other, like terraced avalanches, in an
- ascending scale of destitution&mdash;behind the Austrians the Hungarians,
- behind the Hungarians the Poles, behind the Poles the Russians, each a
- degree more agonized in its privation. Now that the movement had started
- it would go on, sliding, filtering, settling, until the peoples of the
- earth had regained an economic level. The Dives nations, which had refused
- to share, would try to hold the Lazarus nations at bay by force. They
- would spray them with cannon. They would charge them with bayonets. They
- would bomb them, gas them, dig labyrinths of trenches. In the end, as had
- happened here, though the pariah portion of humanity was weaponless, the
- meek persistency of its misery would conquer. Careless of oblivion, it
- would press on. He alone could give the Dives nations a seventh hour
- chance; at the price of his financial ruin, he could prevent the deluge of
- famine from spreading by damming it with a wall of bread.
- </p>
- <p>
- Darkness had fallen. The carriages were unlighted. The train was moving
- cautiously, jerking, stopping, starting, like a live thing scenting
- carnage. Scattered through the night camp-fires were burning. In the gloom
- conversation dragged on wearily with reiterated guesses.
- </p>
- <p>
- He felt his hand clasped.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is it?&rdquo; he whispered. &ldquo;Frightened? You won't be caught now. You're
- as safe as the rest of us. No one'll have time to remember you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I wasn't thinking of myself.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then&mdash;?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Of you&mdash;that perhaps you were born for such a time as this.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; He drew his breath. The echo of his own thought! &ldquo;And perhaps you,
- too,&rdquo; he suggested.
- </p>
- <p>
- She twisted herself, leaning her breast against his arm. Glancing down
- through the darkness, he caught the tenderness in her eyes and the
- gleaming smoothness of her cheek and throat.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I wish I could believe it,&rdquo; she said softly; &ldquo;to stand beside you, making
- you strong.... You could never love me; but to stand beside you, when you
- rescue the world, that would mean redemption.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;When I rescue the world!&rdquo; He laughed quietly. &ldquo;I'm no Varensky. I came
- here to make money.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She swept aside his cynicism. &ldquo;You were born for this moment. And I, an
- outcast woman whom the world has hunted, will help you. Perhaps I shall
- give my life for you.&rdquo; She spoke exultantly. &ldquo;I, whom you have rejected.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You exaggerate. Things may not be as bad as they appear. What we've seen
- may be no more than a local disturbance.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She refused to argue. &ldquo;Be kind to me while we're together.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- On the outskirts of Budapest they came to a halt. The air was tainted with
- a nauseating odor. Standing on a siding was a long line of freight-cars in
- process of being shunted. By the light of lanterns swung by men on the
- tracks, it was possible to see that the freight-cars were inhabited.
- Figures hung out of them thin as skeletons, entirely naked or clad in
- flapping rags. The passengers of the express had crowded to the windows,
- pointing, commenting, gesticulating.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood turned to Santa. &ldquo;What is it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She answered bitterly. &ldquo;The death train.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But the people aren't dead.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not yet. They're families ruined by the war and by the peace. Some of
- them saw their homes burned by the Cossacks; others had their farms stolen
- to pay the Allies' debts. They're nobody's business. When you've reached
- the end of your tether in Hungary, you join the death train and die by
- inches. You have no food, no sanitation. Wherever you halt, you spread
- contagion. When things have grown too bad in one place, you're dragged to
- another.&rdquo; She swallowed down a sob. &ldquo;The train's full of children&mdash;and
- you tell me that you came here to make money.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- On arrival at Budapest they found the station picketed by soldiers. They
- were immediately conducted under an armed guard to an office where the
- purpose of their journey was investigated. When Hindwood had explained
- their errand&mdash;that it had to do with the food-supply&mdash;he was
- treated with courtesy and given his choice of hotels. Santa chose the
- Ritz. A military order was made out for their rooms. A safe-conduct was
- handed them. A rickety conveyance, with a lean horse between the shafts,
- was allotted to them. They were launched into a city quenched of lights,
- with a soldier seated beside the driver for protection.
- </p>
- <p>
- The wide avenues down which they drove were deserted. They were still
- unaware of what had happened. They had not dared to ask, lest any slip of
- the tongue might lead to trouble. There were no signs of revolution in the
- thoroughfares. They were hushed and reverent as the aisles of a cathedral.
- Every few hundred yards a mounted gendarme rode out to challenge them;
- then, seeing the soldier on the box, backed into the shadows. Only one
- disquieting incident occurred. The uneasiness which it caused was due to
- guilty memories rather than to any actual menace. As they were turning
- towards the Danube, they heard a sharp trotting behind them. A closed
- brougham swept past, drawn by a pair of high-stepping horses. The equipage
- was one which must formerly have belonged to the Royal Palace; it was the
- ghost of a forgotten splendor. Hindwood rose in his seat to watch it
- vanish. Then he saw something that made him catch his breath. Running
- between its wheels was a snow-white Russian wolfhound.
- </p>
- <p>
- Santa heard his commotion. &ldquo;What's the excitement?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nothing.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- By the time she had raised herself to follow his glance, the hint of peril
- was gone. The next moment they were drawing up at the hotel.
- </p>
- <h3>
- III
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>gain as the door
- swung to behind them, they were greeted by sounds of merriment and
- dancing, only here the abandon was wilder than at Vienna. Hindwood saw at
- a glance that this was no assemblage of alien hucksters, drawn from all
- the world to gather bargains. As regards the men, they were devil-may-care
- and smart, of the same type as Captain Lajos&mdash;the sort who would
- follow the game to the last throw of the dice. Many of them had made no
- attempt to disguise their profession; they were clad in gorgeous uniforms
- of Hungarian regiments long since ordered disbanded by the Allies. Their
- breasts were ablaze with Imperial decorations. They strode the marble
- floors with the clink of spurs and the rattling of swords. While they
- drugged the midnight hours with laughter and debauch, their faces were
- feverish with listening expectancy&mdash;the expectancy of an event for
- which they waited.
- </p>
- <p>
- The women looked like captives of a raid. Some hung back timidly; some
- were bold with wine; all were weary and pinched with hunger. Like the men,
- they seemed only to be acting a part. In the midst of recklessness they
- would give way to distaste, as though remorseful of this way of combating
- starvation.
- </p>
- <p>
- With the stench of the death train still in his nostrils, Hindwood stared
- at the spectacle in pity and disgust. &ldquo;Fiddling while Rome is burning,&rdquo; he
- muttered.
- </p>
- <p>
- His elbow was jogged by a black-coated individual with the appeasing
- manners of a tailor.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I understand English. What is it you desire?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood swung round. &ldquo;So much the better. I want what one usually wants
- at a hotel&mdash;accommodation.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The man rubbed his hands. &ldquo;Sorry, sir. We're full up. Every room, in fact
- every lounge is taken.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You'll have to find something. I have a military order.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Having read it the man returned the slip of paper. &ldquo;That's different.
- You're here on Government business&mdash;for the same purpose as these
- other gentlemen, I take it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood replied non-committally. &ldquo;Yes, on Government business.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;In that case I'll give you a room in the basement&mdash;a servant's, my
- last. It's all I have to offer.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But two rooms are necessary. I have my secretary with me&mdash;this
- lady.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The man shrugged his shoulders. &ldquo;To demand the impossible is useless.
- To-morrow&mdash;who knows? If things happen, I may be able to give you
- more rooms than you require. For the present...&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Seeing that nothing was to be gained by arguing, Hindwood consented to the
- arrangement.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The room will be my secretary's. If you'll lend me blankets, I'll find a
- place in the passage.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The room proved to be poor in the extreme&mdash;nothing but four bare
- walls and an iron cot. When he had turned the key he tiptoed over to
- Santa.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's this monstrous thing for which they're waiting&mdash;this
- something that may happen to-morrow?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She placed her hands in his, as though she felt the need of protection.
- Her golden face was tragic. &ldquo;War.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- His common sense revolted. Though everything seemed to prove her guess
- correct, he refused to accept it. &ldquo;War! It can't be. What would any one
- gain by it? It was war that produced all this hideous mess&mdash;the death
- train and all that. Besides, how can people fight who can scarcely crawl?
- They have one foot in the grave already. Ten well-fed men could defeat a
- battalion. Whatever's in the wind, it isn't war. To launch a war requires
- money.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;With you it's always money. To launch this kind of a war requires nothing
- but despair.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Stepping back from him tempestuously, she flung herself full length on the
- cot. Her face was hidden, buried in the pillow. While she lay there tense,
- the sound of dance-music, advancing and retreating, tapped dreamily
- against the walls. It spoke to him of romance, of a woman he could love,
- and of passion snatched perilously before life ended, in a mysterious city
- after nightfall.
- </p>
- <p>
- She had raised herself and was regarding him feverishly. Her red lips were
- parted as with thirst.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I know you so well,&rdquo; she was saying softly; &ldquo;I know you because I love
- you. You refuse to believe it's war because you wouldn't be able to sell
- and bargain. But it is war&mdash;the sort of war we saw at the frontier: a
- war in which weaponless millions will march to the overthrow of embattled
- thousands.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You're unjust.&rdquo; He spoke patiently. &ldquo;I'm unwilling to believe it's war
- because I can't see any reason for it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Any reason!&rdquo; Her eyes became twin storms. &ldquo;Would you require a reason if
- you'd seen your children die for lack of bread? You'd perish gladly, if
- you could first tear the throat out of one person who was too well
- nourished.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He went and stood beside her, stooping over her, placing his hand against
- her forehead. &ldquo;You're burning. You've been through too much. Get some
- rest. To-morrow we'll find Anna and perhaps Var-ensky; it's more than
- likely they'll be able to tell us.&rdquo; He paused. &ldquo;I know what makes you so
- relentless; it's your own dead child&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her arms shot up, dragging him down and nestling his face against her
- breast. &ldquo;Oh, my man, it's not that. It's that I'm jealous for you&mdash;so
- afraid you may deceive yourself and miss your chance.&rdquo; He stumbled back
- from the temptation of her yielding body and the comfort of her fragrant
- warmth.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My chance is yours; we may both have been born for this moment.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Long after he had stretched himself outside her door, he felt that in the
- austerity of the four bare walls she still crouched watching from her bed.
- </p>
- <h3>
- IV
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">H</span>e slept
- restlessly. The music and the dancing rarely halted. Once when he roused,
- it was with the suffocating sense that a man was bending over him,
- fumbling at the handle of Santa's door. As he sat up, he was convinced
- that the man looked back just before he vanished around the corner.
- </p>
- <p>
- When he finally wakened, it was in the chill of dawn. He was surrounded by
- a ghostly stillness. Rising softly, he slipped down the passage and out
- into the public rooms of the hotel. It was as though a wizard had waved
- his wand. The merry-makers lay strewn about carelessly, wherever sleep had
- overtaken them. In the pale light of morning, robbed of animation, their
- faces showed waxlike and wan. Swords, which had clattered martially,
- sprawled grotesquely by crumpled bodies. Uniforms looked tarnished,
- dresses shabby. Girls, with their lips parted and their hair disordered,
- lay with heads stretched back in their lovers' arms. Over all was spread
- the weariness of folly.
- </p>
- <p>
- Tiptoeing from group to group, he searched for the man who had tried
- Santa's door. Nowhere could he find him. Returning to her room, he tapped
- lightly. He was afraid to make more noise in that atmosphere of menace.
- Receiving no answer, he pushed the door stealthily and peered across the
- threshold. He had feared lest he might find her gone; there she lay curled
- up in her cot, her hair poured across her pillow, her face cushioned
- against her hollowed arm. Gray light falling from a narrow window clothed
- her with a lonely pathos. Bending over her, he shook her shoulder.
- &ldquo;Santa.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She sat up with a start.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Has it happened?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not yet. They're sleeping like the dead.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then why&mdash;?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There's someone who knows us here. He tried your door. It makes me think
- we're watched. We can slip out now and hunt up Varensky. If we wait till
- later, we'll be followed.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her pupils dilated, obscuring the grayness of her eyes; they became black
- pools, mirroring her terror. &ldquo;To be caught with Varensky would mean
- death.&rdquo; He seated himself on the edge of her cot. &ldquo;I didn't think you knew
- what fear was. Don't be frightened. I'll protect you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Dear!&rdquo; All of a sudden she had become intensely calm. &ldquo;Did you think I
- was afraid for myself? Before many days, perhaps before to-day is out,
- it'll be you who'll need protecting. I beg you, don't go near Varensky.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Let me go myself,&rdquo; she implored. When he glanced away without replying,
- she rushed on impetuously. &ldquo;Some one's got to take risks. I don't count.
- Your life must be spared.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- With an effort he brought his gaze back. &ldquo;There's Anna.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Instead of the explosion he had expected, her voice became gravely tender.
- &ldquo;I forgot. You care for her as I care for you. I'm sorry.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her feet slipped to the floor; he saw them marble white against the bare,
- scrubbed boards&mdash;beautiful as hands, the feet of a dancer. As he
- retreated, she smiled bravely, &ldquo;You shan't wait long.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- V
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>o far as they were
- aware, no one had noticed their departure. The deep breathing of the
- motley throng had been like the beat of a muffled engine. Even the
- night-porter, who should have been on guard, had collapsed across his desk
- with his face buried in his arms.
- </p>
- <p>
- They had stepped out of the hotel into a pulseless street where mists from
- the Danube hung like cobwebs. Hindwood could not rid himself of the
- suspicion that they were followed. He glanced back repeatedly, drawing
- Santa sharply into doorways in attempt after attempt to trap the tracker.
- If a tracker there was, he never revealed himself. At last Hindwood
- realized that precautions were profitless. The cessation of their own
- footsteps gave ample warning. A pursuer had only to halt when they halted,
- to escape detection behind the fog.
- </p>
- <p>
- They scarcely dared talk, and then only in brief whispers. It puzzled him
- how she could keep her direction. It was like tunneling a passage through
- chalk, which crumbled, yielded, and caved in as one went forward. The
- whole world dripped sullenly&mdash;unseen gutters, unseen trees,
- treacherous pavements. And there was always the drifting whiteness,
- pricking one's eyes as with little darts.
- </p>
- <p>
- She had gone too far and turned back, feeling her way along the wall.
- Before a large double-door she paused and knocked. She rapped three times
- peculiarly before a grill was slipped back and a question asked. The
- answer which she gave appeared to be the countersign. A smaller door in
- the doubledoor was opened and they entered.
- </p>
- <p>
- The person who had admitted them was a new type to Hindwood: flat
- featured, fair-headed, blue-eyed, clad in a loose khaki shirt, which
- bulged like a blouse, and in a pair of baggy breeches which were tucked
- into high-boots, roomy as pouches. But it was the expression of the man
- that was most impressive&mdash;his brooding appearance of enormous
- patience. Santa spoke rapidly in a language which was neither German nor
- French. The man nodded and led the way across a gloomy courtyard, up
- stairs rotten with decay, into a stone corridor lined with stout
- forbidding doors.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Is it a prison?&rdquo; Hindwood whispered.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Little better. It's a barracks inhabited by the brains of outcast Russia&mdash;students,
- for the most part, male and female, who have escaped from the Red Terror.
- Russia has no use for brains at present. Brains are too dangerous.
- Wherever the Bolshevist finds them, he blows them out. Many of these
- exiles are survivors of Denikin's and Kolchak's armies. Having tried to
- save their country with rifles, they're now preparing themselves to rescue
- her with knowledge. They're learning to be doctors, engineers and lawyers,
- so that they may become the soul of the Russia of the future. Meanwhile
- they live anyhow, sleep anywhere and starve abominably. They're not wanted
- in Hungary or in any European country. They're suspected and hounded. The
- only reason they've been allotted this mildewed dwelling is in order that
- they may be watched.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The guide had thrown open a door and stood signing to them, trying to
- catch their attention.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was a grim sight that met their eyes, similar to the one they had left
- behind at the hotel only a thousand times more sordid. The windows were
- locked and heavily barred. The air was poisonous. The room was stripped of
- furnishings. On bare boards innumerable human beings, without a shred of
- bedding, sprawled, drugged with sleep, herded together in indecent
- proximity. There was scarcely space to walk between them. They were of
- both sexes. Here and there a child lay folded in a parent's arms. The men
- were of all ages, but for the most part young and still in the tattered
- uniforms of their defeated armies. The women were scarcely distinguishable
- from the men. Their heads were cropped. They wore odd garments of mixed
- masculine and feminine attire, such as could be purchased for next to
- nothing at any rag-shop. Some retained the soldier-garb of the Battalions
- of Death. As Hindwood gazed across the pool of mud-colored faces, &ldquo;Heaven
- help us, if this is the soul of the future Russia!&rdquo; he thought.
- </p>
- <p>
- Suddenly his interest shifted. In the corner remotest from the door, his
- eye had caught the shining of golden tresses. Their owner's face was
- turned away from him; they seemed to weigh her down and were piled beneath
- her head in a cushion. On her left lay an aged peasant woman; on her right
- a man with a death-white face and a head that was peaked like a dunce's
- cap. The guide was already stooping over the man, touching him with a
- strange reverence. The man sat up. His green eyes opened. Hindwood
- experienced the same sensation of discomfort he had felt, when he had
- first seen them peering at him above the edge of the cliff at Seafold.
- </p>
- <p>
- Varensky had risen. With his peculiarly catlike motion, he was picking a
- path towards them. He held out his hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It was brave of you to come.&rdquo; And then to Santa, &ldquo;Of you, too. But of you
- it was expected.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood bristled like a dog. He was distrustful of romantic attitudes.
- &ldquo;Let's get down to facts. You know as well as I do that it wasn't any
- lofty motive that brought me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No?&rdquo; The eye-brows arched themselves comically. &ldquo;Then what?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Your wife's message.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah! I understand. She didn't tell me. You see, she thinks I'm going to
- get myself killed at last; probably she wants you to help stop me. Not
- that I'm of the least use to her&mdash;don't think that. But she's the
- soul of honor. My death would mean her freedom; because of that she'd do
- anything in her power to prevent&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood drew himself erect. &ldquo;These are matters which it's not decent for
- us to discuss.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The narrow shoulders flew up into a shrug. &ldquo;Why on earth not? When things
- are so, there can be nothing indecent in being frank about them. Is it
- less indecent for you to love my wife than for me to tell that I know you
- love her? There'd be no sense in your loving her unless you both hoped&mdash;I
- won't finish what I was going to say; your feelings are so sensitive.&rdquo; He
- rested his hand not unkindly on Hindwood's arm. &ldquo;Don't you realize, my
- dear fellow, that you're to be congratulated? This happening which means
- catastrophe for countless millions, for you and Anna spells opportunity.
- Be honest. You would not have risked visiting me, if you had not realized
- that.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood sought for spitefulness in Varensky's tones. All he found was the
- surge of a quiet happiness.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;One would think that I wanted you to die!&rdquo; he exclaimed blankly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, don't you? Why shouldn't you?&rdquo; Varen-sky smiled sadly. &ldquo;If I could
- love Anna or any other woman the way you do&mdash;&mdash; But no&mdash;to
- me such affections have been denied. I love people only in crowds, by tens
- of thousands and by nations; in my heart there's no room for more human
- passions. I'm God's instrument; the hour of my testing is at hand. These
- mildewed walls inclose my Gethsemane.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He flung his arms apart grotesquely; they formed with his body the shape
- of a cross. The fire of fanaticism blazed in his eyes. &ldquo;To-morrow I shall
- be crucified.&rdquo; He drew a shuddering breath.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A born actor!&rdquo; was Hindwood's silent comment&mdash;&ldquo;An egoist who craves
- the lime-light.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And yet, to his chagrin, he found himself impressed. He was so deeply
- stirred that he dared not trust himself to speak for a moment; when he
- did, it was with calculated coldness.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You think only of yourself. It's not you alone; even those of us who make
- no claim to be God's instruments, stand more than a sporting chance of
- being crucified, as you call it. There are Santa and Anna, for instance;
- there's the collection of wretched down-and-outs gathered in this
- building; there are the scarecrows I saw in the death train; there are all
- the teeming swarms of human lice crawling westward along a thousand roads.
- In the presence of an agony so widespread, I can't muster a tear for your
- individual tragedy. It's no time for theatrics.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- For an instant Varensky's gaunt face quivered. Making an effort, with an
- air of mocking courtliness he mastered his injured pride.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I was mistaken and I ask your pardon. We all have our plans to make
- ahead. I supposed you were here to ascertain approximately the hour at
- which I proposed to&mdash;&mdash; Shall we say, depart?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You were badly mistaken,&rdquo; Hindwood cut in contemptuously. &ldquo;I'm here to
- find out if there's any possible way in which we can save the situation.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Varensky stared. He became rigid as though he were carved from marble.
- &ldquo;We!&rdquo; he repeated haughtily.
- </p>
- <p>
- While Hindwood was searching for a clue to his amazement, his next words
- supplied it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I thought it was I who was to save the world.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Splendid! You have a plan?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Varensky's eyes filmed over. &ldquo;Yes. But if I were to tell you, you wouldn't
- understand.&rdquo; Coming out of the clouds, he placed his hand tolerantly on
- Hind-wood's shoulder. &ldquo;Splendid, you said. So you want me to have a plan?
- Let's sit down and talk more quietly. These people are tired&mdash;in
- sleep they forget. So you also have ambitions to become a saviour?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was like the night in the hut all over again, when they had talked of
- Santa's redemption. There he sat, this discredited dictator, half-saint,
- half-charlatan, his knees drawn sharply up to his chin, his white face
- peering over them. The stale air sighed with the breathing of sleepers. A
- child whimpered and was hugged closer to the breast. In the far corner lay
- the desired woman. Gazing eagerly into both their eyes was the oriental
- countenance of the other woman, for whom neither of them cared.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A saviour! No. I have no ambitions in that direction. But I have a
- scheme,&rdquo; Hindwood admitted.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Bread. I came to sell bread for trade-concessions. In Austria I found the
- Government unwilling to purchase. This morning, when I consult with
- Hungarian officials, I may be met with the same refusal. What's the game?
- Why should men in control of hungry nations refuse my help? For six months
- they've been urging me to come to them. Something's happened&mdash;the
- signs of it are everywhere. Trains running westward are packed with women.
- The last sight we had of Vienna was a street-riot and people brutally shot
- down. And again at the frontier there were piles of dead&mdash;not only
- men: women and children who had been butchered to prevent them from
- escaping. Budapest's under military law. By some error, Santa and I on
- arrival were mistaken for conspirators in an army plot. We're billeted at
- what appears to be its headquarters&mdash;a place jammed with carousing
- officers of supposedly disbanded regiments. What's in the air? What is
- this dreadful news which some people rejoice over, from which others flee
- in panic, but which no one dares to mention? If you can tell me, I shall
- know how to act.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If I can tell you&mdash;! Suppose I were to tell you the worst, how would
- you act then?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That depends. I'm no more unselfish than anybody else. At a pinch I could
- forget my own interests and ruin myself for the public welfare. Here's how
- I stand. I have enough food at my command to keep Europe for several weeks
- from actual starvation. If the crisis is genuine, that ought to give time
- for the conscience of the civilized world to be aroused. But even if the
- world's conscience should prove too sluggish, I still have a personal
- fortune which would keep hunger at bay for several months. I'm no
- philanthropist&mdash;I should make myself penniless reluctantly. I'm in no
- sense your rival for the honors of Calvary. My mission in Europe is to
- sell at a profit. So if you can do better&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What you're telling me,&rdquo; Varensky interrupted, &ldquo;is that, if by personal
- sacrifice you could avert a world disaster, you'd be willing to give
- something for nothing.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Precisely. But I must first be convinced that the circumstances warrant
- it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There's one point you've overlooked.&rdquo; Varen-sky's green eyes narrowed.
- &ldquo;Up to the moment you entered this room, I was fully persuaded that I was
- the man on whom the privilege of paying the price must fall. I'd coveted
- the privilege. All my life I'd worked for it. If you rob me of it, have
- you reckoned the cost?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;In money?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;In something more valuable. If I live, you can never be Anna's husband.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood hated the man for his subtlety. He was being deliberately
- tempted. He threw a glance toward the sleeping woman in the corner whose
- fate, as well as his own, he was deciding. Close to him, drawing nearer,
- he saw the pleading eyes of Santa. He gave his answer.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I may be the man who was born for this moment. Play fair by me; tell me
- what's happened.&rdquo; Varensky rocked himself slowly back and forth. Suddenly
- he came to rest.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm the thing that's happened. I'm responsible for everything. I've never
- learnt to let bad alone; in trying to make things better, I make them
- worse. It was my hand that shot down the crowd at Vienna. It was I who
- butchered the women and children at the frontier. I'm the force which
- drives behind the human lice who crawl westward along a thousand roads.
- You think me mad; but listen. Every freedom gained entails a new bondage.
- I helped to free Russia from the Czar; in so doing, I prepared the way for
- Bolshevism. I've fought Bolshevism with my dreams, my happiness, with
- everything I possess. Bolshevism is overthrown. What have I produced?
- Chaos.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Overthrown! Then that's the meaning of it.&rdquo; Santa had half risen.
- </p>
- <p>
- Varensky turned his death-white face on her, chilling her enthusiasm.
- &ldquo;It's collapsed like a pack of cards. With it have vanished the last of
- the restraints. Every Russian's his own master now to choose his own ditch
- in which to perish. We've destroyed a vision that turned out to be a
- nightmare, but we've set up nothing in its stead. We, who are idealists,
- have worked the final disillusion. We've made two hundred millions
- hopeless. They're fleeing from the emptiness. The contagion of their
- despair is spreading. You saw its results in Vienna. It runs ahead of
- them; they're already on the march. They've broken into Poland. They're
- drawing nearer. How to stop them&mdash;&mdash;?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood's lips had squared themselves. &ldquo;I can stop them. My food-trains
- will be here by tomorrow. What hungry men need is not political programs,
- but bread.&rdquo; Then he added thoughtfully, &ldquo;I can stop them, if I'm not
- prevented. There's some one who's playing a different game; he's some one
- who wants the world to starve. That's what Austria's refusal meant; that's
- the meaning of these secret signs of rejoicing. He's bigger than any
- nation. Who is he?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Varensky shook his head. &ldquo;There was a man.&rdquo; He looked knowingly at Santa.
- &ldquo;He was drowned.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood jumped to his feet as though there was no time to be lost. &ldquo;I'm
- going to find out. I have an appointment with the Governor of Hungary. If
- he rejects my offer, I shall demand&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And if he refuses&mdash;&mdash;?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I shall play my winning-card. Don't ask me what it is. But if I play it,
- I shall need your help. You've talked of crucifixion: I may provide you
- with the chance. How many of these&mdash;&mdash;?&rdquo; He pointed to the
- sleeping outcasts.
- </p>
- <p>
- Varensky's eyes were shining. &ldquo;I've four hundred: three hundred veterans
- of Denikin's and Kolchak's armies and a hundred girl-soldiers of the
- Battalions of Death.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Have them warned.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- As he turned on his heel, he saw that Anna had wakened. She cried out
- after him. He dared not face her. Leaping down the stairs, he went at a
- run across the courtyard. It was only when the door into the street had
- closed behind him, that he realized that Santa was panting at his elbow.
- </p>
- <h3>
- VI
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">M</span>ists were
- clearing. The sun had emerged fiery above a mountain-range of clouds. As
- they hurried in search of their hotel, they caught glimpses of the Danube,
- spanned by many bridges, and on the further bank the palace-crowned
- heights of Buda. The ancient city looked imperially beautiful. There was a
- touch of the East about it, a lavishness and rose-tinted whiteness. Its
- quays and pavements shone wet, as though they had been daubed with
- lacquer. It seemed incredible that behind its gold-splashed walls the
- ghosts of hunger gathered.
- </p>
- <p>
- During their absence from the Ritz, a transformation had been effected.
- All signs of disorder had been banished. In place of the untimely
- Bacchanalians, stiff-bosomed waiters stood guard over neat tables with a
- solicitous air which was bewilderingly normal. Even the breakfast menu
- gave the lie to starvation.
- </p>
- <p>
- They took their seats in silence, eating without interest whatever was set
- before them. Hindwood's sensations were those of a man who has given way
- to his emotions at a theatre. It was as though the lights had gone up,
- shaming him in public. There had been nothing to warrant his surrender to
- sentiment. He totaled up the accumulated incentives: he had witnessed a
- street-riot, people slain at the frontier, the hideous contrast between
- the death train and dancing&mdash;and last of all Varensky. But these
- things in themselves constituted no argument; the cause that lay behind
- them was still conjectural. As for Varensky, whatever he had said was
- unreliable. His wish was parent to his thought. He was a man born to stir
- up turbulences, which he considered it his mission to pacify. He was
- dangerous as a forest-fire: one spark of his wild idealism made the whole
- world lurid. In the breath of adversity he became a sheet of flame,
- destructive and self-destroying. His goal was the vanishing-point, in the
- No Man's Land between desire and things attainable.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood writhed at remembering the ease with which his judgment had been
- unseated. In his weakness he had given a promise, which it would be folly
- to fulfill and dishonorable to withdraw. He glanced across at Santa. How
- was she taking this return to normality?
- </p>
- <p>
- She met his eyes with passionate adoration. &ldquo;It was god-like of you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He pretended ignorance. &ldquo;What?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Your self-denial. You've given up everything&mdash;Anna, ambition, money&mdash;all
- the things you worship.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He assumed a judicial expression. &ldquo;Perhaps not. It mayn't be necessary.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But it will.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If it is,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I shall stick to my contract. But I've reason to
- believe we've exaggerated.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Would to God we had!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her fervor disturbed him. He leaned across the table. &ldquo;You don't mean to
- tell me you accept this bogey story about starving millions marching?
- There's a sense of security this morning. Surely you must have felt it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She shook her head. &ldquo;We've had a meal&mdash;that's all. Within a mile from
- here I could show you a hospital where five hundred babies sit shivering
- like monkeys. They're wrapped in paper; they've never known what it was
- not to be hungry from the day they were born. I could take you to the
- workmen's quarter, where naked men and women would squirm at your feet
- like dogs; they're too weak to walk. I could lead you past the
- bread-lines, already forming&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He stayed her by covering her hand. &ldquo;I'm not denying it. When countries
- make wars they have to pay penalties.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The storm that was brewing betrayed itself in her eyes. &ldquo;What are you
- denying?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't let's make a scene,&rdquo; he urged. &ldquo;My promise holds if I find that
- circumstances warrant it. In a little while I'm seeing the Governor of
- Hungary; after that I'll be sure. While I'm gone, I have one request to
- make of you: keep your room and talk to nobody.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She rose from the table in suppressed defiance.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;For your own safety. It was lucky I slept across your threshold last
- night. Your door was tried.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her smile accused him. &ldquo;By whom?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If I'm not mistaken, by the man who afterwards tracked us through the
- fog.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She turned away as though she were finished with him. When she found that
- he was following, she delivered a parting shot. &ldquo;You told me this to
- frighten me. Did you think you could make me your accomplice in
- cowardice?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- VII
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>o these were the
- rewards of knight-errantry! In his anger he was glad to be rid of her. He
- was free at last. She'd been nothing but an embarrassment. If she were to
- attempt a reconciliation, he would turn his back on her. It wasn't likely
- that he'd put his neck into the same noose twice.
- </p>
- <p>
- Little by little from resenting her, he began to suspect her. Had she been
- using him as a cat's-paw in a deeper game? Every man with whom she had
- ever associated, she had destroyed; could she be expected, to show more
- mercy to a man by whom she had been rejected? Her husband's words came
- back: &ldquo;When she has added you to her list of victims, if she gives you
- time before she kills you, remember that I warned you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Everything to do with her became distorted when interpreted in the light
- of treachery. The pathos of her unrequited affection had been a mask; her
- humanitarianism had been a cloak for her designs. When he retraced his
- relations with her, it seemed glaringly probable that from the start she
- had been the agent of his financial rivals, placed by them on board the <i>Ryndam</i>
- with the definite intention of accomplishing his ruin. Except for her
- final error in tactics, she would have attained her object. He had escaped
- by the narrowest of margins.
- </p>
- <p>
- But the other people who had come upon the scene, where did they stand?
- Were they her puppets, jumping whichever way she pulled the wires, or were
- they her active co-conspirators? Varensky and the Little Grandmother were
- undoubtedly her puppets; she employed their enthusiasms to serve her
- purposes. Anna was her victim&mdash;a woman wronged and cheated,
- infinitely dear to him and tragic. It was Captain Lajos who troubled him.
- The more he thought about him, the more certain he became that the Captain
- and Santa were hand in glove. The farce which they had enacted on the
- train had been prearranged with a view to intimidating him. His most
- unnerving information, concerning the menace of starving millions, had
- come from the Captain. And there was a further fact, which had been
- disquieting him all morning: it was Captain Lajos who had tried Santa's
- door last night.
- </p>
- <p>
- What did they think to gain by their plotting? Having pondered the
- conundrum, he decided that their object was to thwart his schemes for
- grasping world-power, and that the means they had chosen were to compel
- him to give for nothing the hoards of food which he had intended that
- Europe should buy.
- </p>
- <p>
- Well aware that this theory was far from covering all the facts, he was
- still feeling his way through a quagmire of surmise, when a visitor was
- announced. In the foyer he found an officer, resplendently uniformed,
- waiting to escort him to his audience at the Royal Palace. He was whizzed
- away in a handsome car. As he traveled, his companion entertained him with
- anecdotes, grimly humorous, of Bela Kun's reign of terror.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Experiments of that sort soon disprove themselves,&rdquo; he said cheerfully.
- &ldquo;We live through them and go on again.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And your country is going on again?&rdquo; Hindwood inquired.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Emphatically. Signs of revival are already apparent.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But what about Russia? How's revival possible without security?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The officer laughed carelessly. &ldquo;I catch your meaning; you've heard this
- latest about Bolshevism's downfall. In our part of the world we pay no
- heed to rumors; they're inventions of political opportunists or of
- gamblers in the international exchange. Even if this latest is true, it's
- the best thing that could have happened.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood twisted in his seat that he might lose nothing of his companion's
- expression. &ldquo;The best thing in the long run&mdash;that's granted. But
- meanwhile, because of the breakdown in organization, over a hundred
- million Russians are likely to die.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Again the officer laughed, stretching his long legs. &ldquo;The fittest will
- survive. One has to die somehow. The last war was fought because the world
- was too crowded. Famine's nature's cure for overpopulation.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The remark sounded singularly ill-timed, coming from a man whose country
- was also starving. Hindwood frowned. &ldquo;A heartless cure and, thank
- goodness, not the only one.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not more heartless than civilized society's, which encourages armed
- nations to strangle each other with every filthy invention of science.
- When you forbid Nature to correct matters in her own way, sooner or later
- you find yourself with a war on your hands. The matter's very simple: so
- many mouths to fill and so many rations. When the mouths are in excess of
- the rations, some one has to go short. The people who are selected to go
- short can either drop in their tracks or fight. If they fight and win, the
- result's the same&mdash;some one else has to go without. The adjustment's
- automatic.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The thought of death,&rdquo; Hindwood suggested quietly, &ldquo;especially of other
- people's death, doesn't seem to trouble you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's natural. Killing and dying are my trade.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Brutal as was the point of view, after Santa's sentimental fallacies,
- there was something honest and direct about these bald assertions.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood spoke again. &ldquo;What applies to Russia, applies equally to Hungary.
- My errand at the Palace is to offer sufficient food to keep your country
- alive. According to your theory, I'm interfering with Nature's laws. I'm
- doing something economically immoral. I ought to leave you to your fate.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- To his amazement he was met with a polite concurrence. &ldquo;That's how I
- regard it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was impossible to credit the man's sincerity. Hindwood glanced aside,
- irritated and shocked. He was seeking a motive for such disinterested
- frankness. There was nothing more to say.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had been so much absorbed in the conversation that he had not noticed
- their direction. They were skimming high above the Danube, crossing a
- bridge that spanned the sunlit gulf in giant strides. Behind lay Pest,
- modern as a second Paris; in front lay Buda, ancient and scarcely
- Christian, still bearing the marks of its Turkish occupation. On reaching
- the further bank, the ascent to the Palace begun to climb.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was just as they were reaching the top that Hindwood was for a second
- time startled by the ghost of memory. Peering down on him from the
- ramparts, with its head between its paws, was a snow-white Russian
- wolf-hound. The next moment they had passed beneath an arch, between
- saluting sentries, and had halted in the Palace-yard.
- </p>
- <h3>
- VIII
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>he Yard was an
- immobile sea of faces. As far as eye could reach, soldiers were drawn up
- in close formation. It was clear that this was no ceremonial parade. The
- men were in full marching order; their field-kitchens were smoking in the
- background. They had the look of troops equipped for action, expecting to
- take the offensive at any moment. This much he saw as he was hurried into
- the Palace, before the great doors clanged behind him.
- </p>
- <p>
- He found himself on the threshold of a magnificence that he had not
- imagined existed. Everywhere his eyes rested, they encountered riches
- accumulated through the centuries. Pictures and tapestries gazed down on
- him from the walls, chronicling the glory of the bygone Hapsburgs. Suits
- of mail, gold-inlaid and gem-studded, stood like knights of old, leaning
- on their swords. He followed his escort up a marble staircase, along
- endless corridors, from which doors opened into silent apartments, giving
- yet fresh vistas of royal splendors.
- </p>
- <p>
- At last, in the far distance, the passage was blocked by a gigantic figure
- that might have escaped from Grand Opera; it stood so stiff and motionless
- that he mistook it for a wax-work. It was garbed as a halberdier, in
- parti-colored hose and shining armor. Only when the eyes moved did he
- realize that he was gazing at one of the Palace-guards. When the password
- had been given, they were allowed to slip behind a curtain. In the
- ante-room he was told to wait. His escort vanished through the
- inner-doors. A moment later the doors reopened and his escort beckoned.
- </p>
- <p>
- He was aware of a blaze of light, lofty walls, tall windows, a tapestried
- room ornately furnished and a treacherously polished expanse of floor. A
- man was rising from behind an ormolu table. He was a man utterly simple
- and modern&mdash;the last man one would have expected to find in the pomp
- of medieval surroundings. His face was clean-shaven, bluff and
- wind-tanned. In his navy-blue suit he looked more like a yachtsman than
- the Governor of a State.
- </p>
- <p>
- He was approaching with his hand outstretched. &ldquo;I couldn't do less than
- receive you,&rdquo; he was saying.
- </p>
- <p>
- The words, though spoken pleasantly, sounded like a dismissal.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Perhaps your Excellency has forgotten the purpose of my errand?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not in the least. Let's sit down; we can talk more informally. The
- trouble is that you've come too late. Crises as acute as ours have a knack
- of settling themselves.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood accepted a cigarette that was proffered. He took his time while
- he lit it. &ldquo;Your solution is mustering in the Palace-yard. My
- food-supplies are no longer needed. Is that what you intend me to
- understand?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Exactly.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Your Excellency spoke just now of crises settling themselves. Did you
- mean that so many of your countrymen have died that at last there's
- sufficient food to go round?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Far from it. Our shortage is greater than ever.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I judged as much.&rdquo; Hindwood tapped his ash casually. &ldquo;I only arrived last
- night, but in the time I've been in Budapest I've seen the death-train,
- the bread-lines, the utter destitution. I've reason to believe that
- Bolshevism has collapsed and that millions of outcast Russians are
- marching. They're moving westward.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He paused, himself skeptical of the preposterous assertion he was about to
- make. Then he remembered the words he had learnt from Captain Lajos and
- repeated them like a lesson.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They're sweeping westward like a pestilence. They're loping like gaunt
- wolves. They're drawing nearer, like Death swinging his scythe. Poland
- will go down before them first. Its famished people will join them. Your
- turn will come next. The march will never halt till the empty bellies have
- been filled. They can't be filled till the whole of Europe has been
- swamped by revolution, unless&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; He paused again, waiting for
- encouragement. When the steady gray eyes still regarded him attentively,
- he continued, &ldquo;Unless I fill them.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Or unless,&rdquo; said his Excellency like a man commenting on the weather, &ldquo;I
- destroy them.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a deep quiet. So Varensky had been a true prophet. It was the
- end of the world they were discussing&mdash;the end of truth, justice,
- mercy, everything that was kind.
- </p>
- <p>
- Across the silence a bugle-call spurted like a stream of blood.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You see my position?&rdquo; his Excellency resumed reasonably. &ldquo;If I buy from
- you, I prolong the agony; worse still, I run my country further into debt.
- If I give the call to arms, many of us will die; but it's better to die
- fighting than from hunger. Besides, in the topsy-turvydom of war, who
- knows, we may find ourselves arrayed on the winning side.&rdquo; Hindwood was
- too stunned to think quickly. He was still refusing to believe the worst.
- &ldquo;I miss your point. Would your Excellency mind explaining?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My point's simple enough. The condition of Hungary and of the whole of
- Central Europe is due to two causes: the first that we made a world-war;
- the second that we lost it. The victors had a right to exact a penalty,
- but look at what they've done. We were exhausted; nevertheless, if they'd
- told us what we owed them, we'd have paid them. Instead of that, they
- cloaked revenge with idealism. They constituted themselves evangelists,
- fore-ordained to reform us. With their gospel of self-determination, they
- gave every racial hostility within our borders a voice. They carved us up
- into bickering factions, which they called nations, and bestowed on them
- the power to make themselves annoying behind new frontiers. They dipped
- their hands into our national resources and made gifts to their favorites.
- Transylvania was our granary; it went to Rumania. Bohemia was our
- coal-supply; the Czechs have it, Hungary is no longer self-supporting. We
- have our factories, but no fuel to run them; our skilled workmen, but no
- means of employing them. On every side we're fenced in by mushroom
- democracies drawing sustenance from what was once our body. The wrong they
- have done us is the motive of their hate. We European countries fall into
- three categories: the robbers, the receivers of stolen goods and the
- pillaged. There's no intercourse between us; confidence is at an end. Our
- currency has become worthless as the paper on which it's printed. There's
- no flow of trade. We each have too much of one commodity and none
- whatsoever of others&mdash;too many factories here, too much wheat there,
- too much coal in another place. We're rival storekeepers, overstocked in
- certain lines, who refuse to take down our shutters. If we could forget
- our quarrels and club together, we'd have all the means of life. We
- deserve our fate, you'll say. But no&mdash;it was the Allies' surgeons who
- carved us into impotence and on top of that imposed indemnities. We have
- nothing to eat, so we prefer to fight.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But what do you gain by it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- His Excellency smiled. &ldquo;Everything or nothing. We can't be worse off. The
- Russian menace may prove to be our salvation. The Red Terror has vanished;
- the Famine Terror has taken its place. If the starving hordes pouring
- westwards aren't halted, civilization will be blotted out by savagery. And
- who's to halt them? Not the Allies. Their common people are rebellious;
- they know that in the last war they were as much cheated and exploited as
- any of the enemy whom they routed. And not their politicians and
- profiteers; they're too bloated with their spoils. It's the story of Rome
- repeating itself. The obesity which follows victory has conquered the
- conquerors. Their fighting days are ended; they'll have to hire
- mercenaries. The only mercenaries available are the nations they have
- trampled. Hungary holds herself for hire at a price.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What price?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The restoration of her old frontiers.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood spoke eagerly. &ldquo;No one shall die. We've had enough of dying. I
- have a better solution&mdash;bread. My food-trains should be arriving
- tonight or to-morrow. I wired for them before I left Vienna. I'll build a
- wall of bread from the Black Sea to the Baltic.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And who'll pay you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No one.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The answer had been totally unexpected. His Excellency glanced sharply
- across his shoulder as though seeking advice. Hindwood followed his
- direction and saw to his amazement that the tapestry, hanging behind the
- ormolu table, was agitated. Throughout the interview an unseen audience
- had been present. His Excellency turned back.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You shall neither give nor sell. I may admire your humanity, but in
- Hungary I forbid you to build what you so picturesquely call your wall of
- bread. Austria, as I know, has already refused you; in Poland you will
- receive the same answer. Things have advanced too far for there to be any
- harm in telling you; moreover, I owe it to you to be frank. I represent a
- class which the democracy of the Allies has totally disinherited&mdash;the
- class of the landed gentry and the old nobility. However matters might
- improve in our respective countries, our lot would be in no way benefited.
- The Peace of the Allies uprooted aristocracy and planted in its stead a
- raw Republicanism. The estates of men like myself, whether Austrian,
- Polish, Russian or Hungarian, have been in our families for centuries.
- They were grants from Kings for loyalty and services. Now that our Kings
- have been sent into exile, our entire status is in jeopardy. Our rank and
- privileges have become a jest. To-morrow or the next day, where it has not
- happened already, we shall join our Kings in banishment; our wealth will
- be confiscated. The excuse of a new war is the chance of European
- Monarchists. Banded together, we may snatch back our authority and set up
- the thrones which the Allies have toppled. So long as the people starve,
- they will follow us. Monarchy is the symbol of their lost contentment;
- they'll fight for it if we make its restoration their battle-cry. But if
- once we were to allow you to give them bread&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood sprang to his feet. The time had come to play his winning-card.
- &ldquo;They would lay down their arms,&rdquo; he cried triumphantly. &ldquo;They shall lay
- them down. By to-morrow they shall be fed.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Again the tapestry rustled. For a moment it seemed that some one was about
- to disclose himself. Then all grew quiet.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I have given you your answer,&rdquo; said his Excellency.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood laughed. &ldquo;And I can force your hand. I shall appeal to the people
- over your head.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Without further ceremony, he swung round on his heel and departed.
- </p>
- <p>
- On regaining the hotel he went in search of Santa. She was not there. He
- betook himself to her room to await her coming. One hour, two hours
- slipped by. He began to be anxious. In the appearance of the room there
- was nothing to distress him; all her belongings were intact. When he made
- inquiries of the hotel staff, they professed entire ignorance of her
- whereabouts.
- </p>
- <p>
- Apart from the concern he felt for her safety, she was utterly essential
- to his plans. It was necessary that he should get in touch with Varensky;
- without Varensky and his four hundred veterans he was helpless. When his
- food-trains arrived, he would need them. He made repeated efforts to
- rediscover the mildewed barracks; every time he missed his direction. For
- fear of spies, he did not dare to ask; he remembered Santa's warning, that
- to be seen with Varensky meant death. Day faded. Darkness fell. She had
- not returned.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was nearing midnight when word reached him that the first of his trains
- was in the freight-yard. It had been given the right of way from Holland
- and had been rushed straight through under an armed guard. He was
- powerless to turn the information to account. Wearied with anxiety, he had
- begun to prepare for bed, when, without knocking, the door was burst open.
- Captain Lajos entered. His face was haggard. He was fierce and breathless.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You've heard?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I've heard nothing.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She's been captured.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;By whom?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Prince Rogovich.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood clapped his hand to his forehead. Either he or this man was mad.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's impossible. Rogovich is dead.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And I tell you he's at the Palace. He was there behind the tapestry this
- morning. She's with him now and he's torturing her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then why are you here, if you care for her so much?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That you may help me rescue her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER THE EIGHTH&mdash;THE VANISHING POINT
- </h2>
- <h3>
- I
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>PURRED into haste
- by the Captain's air of calamity. Hindwood had commenced to dress. During
- the few minutes that it took him to hurry into his clothes he thought
- furiously: with the result that by the time he was clad for departure, he
- seated himself obstinately on the edge of the bed. Meanwhile, in the
- belief that he was being followed, the Captain had led the way into the
- passage. He had now returned and stood filling the doorway, a turbulent
- figure in his gorgeous uniform of the Royal Hussars.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There's no time to lose.&rdquo; he rapped out.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood eyed him calmly. &ldquo;If you were sent to execute me, you can do it
- here as conveniently as anywhere else.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The sheer amazement which greeted this accusation seemed to disprove its
- accuracy. The Captain answered scornfully:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What devil of contrariness has put that thought into your head? If my
- errand were known, it would be I who would be executed. She's in love with
- you&mdash;that's why I sought you. It's the fact that you're my rival in
- her affections that makes you the one man in Budapest whom I can trust.
- There'll be bloodshed&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Go slower,&rdquo; Hindwood interrupted. &ldquo;Put yourself in my place. You know too
- much&mdash;far more than seems healthy. You know that this morning when I
- was with the Governor, there was an unseen listener behind the tapestry.
- You assert, that he was a man whom all the world believes to be dead. If
- you'll think back to our journey from Calais, you'll remember that the
- reason for his having been murdered formed your chief topic of
- conversation. Seeing that you know so much, you're probably aware that my
- interview with the Governor ended in a threat. To make that threat
- effective, the cooperation of the woman whom you first supposed to be my
- wife and afterwards discovered to be my secretary is absolutely necessary.
- On my return from the Palace she had vanished. Here again, you pretend to
- know more than I do; at close on midnight you come bursting into my room,
- demanding that I accompany you to her rescue.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Captain stared dully. &ldquo;Every second counts. What is it that you wish
- me to tell?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why you've hung on my trail from Calais until now.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Eh!&rdquo; His expression became embarrassed; then he raised his head with a
- fearless gesture. &ldquo;I see what you're driving at. I acknowledge that my
- movements are open to misinterpretation. But I didn't follow you; it was
- she whom I followed. As I told you in our first conversation, I was
- returning from England where I'd been sent by my Government to intercept
- Prince Rogovich with important despatches. The moment I clapped my eyes on
- your traveling companion, I recognized in her a startling resemblance; it
- was to a woman I had adored. She was far beyond me&mdash;the mistress of
- archdukes and for a brief while of an emperor. The nearest I ever came to
- touching her was when I was swept by her train at Court functions.&rdquo; He
- paused dramatically. &ldquo;During the war she was shot by the enemies of my
- country. Infamous things were said of her. If they were true, they would
- make no difference to my love. No difference, do you understand?&rdquo; Again he
- paused. &ldquo;What else?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood narrowed his eyes. &ldquo;Each time I've met you, you've harped on the
- same theme&mdash;Prince Rogovich. Up to now I've not thought it necessary
- to tell you: I knew this Prince Rogovich. Besides myself, there was
- probably only one other person who spoke with him before his end. What
- makes you so certain that it was a man, presumed to have been drowned in
- the English Channel, who spied on me this morning from behind the
- tapestry?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I was beside him. I'm his bodyguard&mdash;if you like, his secretary.
- I've just come from him. Can you have stronger proof than that?&rdquo; Suddenly
- the Captain's patience broke down. &ldquo;How many more questions? God knows
- what's happening.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood had risen. &ldquo;There are several. Why did he disappear?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He has not said.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What makes you require my help to rescue her?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He may kill me. It's not likely he'll kill both of us.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's his motive?&rdquo; Hindwood spoke more slowly. All his suspicion was
- emphasized in his words. &ldquo;What's his motive for kidnaping this woman who
- resembles&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How can I tell?&rdquo; The Captain was desperate. &ldquo;We talk and talk while time
- passes. I suppose his interest is the same in this woman as in all women.
- Perhaps he was the discarded lover of that other woman, and, like myself,
- has noticed the resemblance.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood picked up his hat. &ldquo;I'm coming.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Are you armed?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not in your sense. I shall fight with a different sort of weapon.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- II
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>t the door a
- closed vehicle was standing. To Hindwood it seemed the one that had
- flashed by him on the previous evening. He glanced between the wheels;
- there was no Russian wolf-hound. Even before he was seated, the lash had
- been laid across the horses' backs. The next moment they were galloping
- down the gloomy street. Leaning from the window, the Captain was urging
- the coachman to drive faster.
- </p>
- <p>
- When the pace had settled to a rapid trot, Hind-wood broke the silence.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You're an Hungarian officer; Prince Rogovich is a Polish statesman. You
- tell me you're his secretary. What's a Polish statesman doing in the Royal
- Palace, directing Hungary's affairs?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It isn't Hungary's affairs that he's directing; it's the campaign against
- Democracy. The present crisis has made Budapest the jumping-off point for
- the offensive which the Monarchists have been waiting to launch. The
- Monarchists are men of every country, who have sunk their nationalities
- and made a common cause.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And you&mdash;are you a Monarchist?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- His reply came muffled. &ldquo;I was. To-night I'm a traitor.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The horses, thrown sharply back on their haunches, swerved toward the
- pavement; the carriage jerked to a halt. Almost brushing the wheels in the
- narrow street, a column of soldiers shuffled past. Their rifles were slung
- at all angles. Their shoulders were bowed beneath their heavy packs. They
- crawled weakly, more like stragglers retreating than storm-troops
- advancing. Even in the darkness their bones showed pointed and their faces
- lean with famine.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Reservists,&rdquo; the Captain explained shortly. &ldquo;Mobilization has begun.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood strained through the gloom, touching his arm excitedly. &ldquo;Starving
- men being sent to kill men who are more starving. You've spoken of a woman
- you adored&mdash;a woman who was shot for hideous treacheries. Her
- treacheries were committed to prevent just such crimes as that. Don't
- interrupt me&mdash;not yet. You've expected me to believe an impossible
- story: that a man can return from the dead. If I were to tell you an
- equally improbable story, what difference would it make to your love? If I
- were to tell you that the resemblance was not mistaken and that the woman
- at the Palace is the same as she who was reported executed in the woods of
- Vincennes?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The last of the column had slouched into the blackness. The horses leapt
- forward impatiently.
- </p>
- <p>
- The question was repeated. &ldquo;What difference?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Captain's voice burst from him. &ldquo;God forgive me&mdash;none.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Neither of them dared to trust the other. Their respite was growing
- shorter. They had crossed the bridge above the Danube. In a moment the
- ascent to the Palace would commence. It was Hindwood who decided on
- boldness. If he were walking into an ambush, he could not make matters
- worse.
- </p>
- <p>
- He said, &ldquo;Weapons will be useless. Only to kill the Prince won't save her.
- If we manage to escape from the Palace, the streets are full of armed men.
- We should only rescue her to die with her. I have a plan. Do you know the
- barracks of the Russian refugees? If I were to write a note, would you
- guarantee to have it delivered?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- By the light of matches held by the Captain, he scrawled rapidly. The last
- sentence read, &ldquo;If you have not heard from me again by 2 A. M., consider
- that the worst has happened and carry out these instructions.&rdquo; He
- addressed the note to, &ldquo;<i>The Husband of Anna</i>.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Have it entrusted to a man who cannot read English.&rdquo; The Captain
- extinguished the final match.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I shall send it by the driver of this carriage.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- III
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>hey had alighted
- some distance short of the gateway where the sentries would be on guard.
- The message for Varensky had been handed over. The horses had been wheeled
- about; save for their trotting growing fainter down the slope, the night
- was without a sound. The moon shone fitfully. Stars were obscured. The
- city out of which they had climbed lay pulseless in an unillumined pit of
- blackness. The Palace, piled high above them, loomed sepulchral.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Captain groped his way beneath the wall of the ramparts, searching for
- something which at last he found. It pushed inwards at his touch. The door
- closed behind them.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the intenser darkness Hindwood stretched out his hands. They
- encountered the rough surface of clammy masonry. He was in some sort of a
- tunnel. The floor sloped gradually upwards. The atmosphere smelt dank. He
- spoke. Getting no answer, he held his breath. Going away from him he heard
- the stealthy hurrying of the Captain's footfall. Rather than be left,
- perhaps to be forgotten, he started forward at a blundering run. He came
- to steps. He was prepared to be attacked. It might be here that he would
- be hurled back. He climbed them almost on all fours, steadying himself
- with his hands. It seemed to him that he had been ascending for hours,
- when he heard footsteps returning. A match was struck; he saw the Captain
- staring down at him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We're in time.&rdquo; The match went out.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Catch hold of me. Tread softly.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- They passed through another door. The air was growing warmer. It was
- evident that they were traversing a secret passage which wound within the
- Palace walls. At a turn they heard a muttering of voices. The Captain
- whispered, &ldquo;Do nothing till I give the word.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- They approached more cautiously to where a needle of light stabbed the
- darkness. Hindwood caught the fragrance of tobacco smoke. As he stooped to
- the spy-hole, a purring voice commenced speaking almost at his elbow, &ldquo;My
- dear lady, you're mine&mdash;a fact which you don't seem to realize. I
- have only to press this button, which summons my attendants; I can snuff
- out your life with as little effort as I flick this ash.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He found himself peering into a room, furnished with oriental lavishness.
- He had a confused glimpse of beaten brass-work, shaded lamps, low tables,
- cushions piled about in place of chairs. It was a blaze of color. At the
- far end was a gilded throne and bound to it was Santa. Her hands were
- tightly corded. Her ankles were lashed so that she could not stir. Her
- face was pale as ivory. Only her eyes seemed alive; they flashed
- indomitably. Pacing up and down, never shifting his gaze from hers, was
- the black-bearded man who had disappeared from the <i>Ryndam</i>.
- </p>
- <p>
- She spoke defiantly. &ldquo;Summon your attendants. Do you think I fear death?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I know you don't, dear lady. That's why I've invented a more subtle
- revenge. If I were an ordinary man, I should detest the very sight of you;
- whereas, so magnanimous am I, that your attempt to murder me has added a
- novel piquancy to your fascination. I have been too much loved&mdash;too
- spontaneously, too adoringly. You afford me a contrast. I intend to keep
- you caged like a lioness. The hatred in your eyes will spur my affection.
- Always, even when I caress you, I shall have to be on my guard. Our
- courtship will be a perpetual adventure. The goal of desire will be
- forever out of grasp, yet forever within handstretch.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He stroked his black beard thoughtfully. &ldquo;With you I shall never know
- satiety. This continual hoping will keep me young. You, my dear, will be
- my secret source of romance. Every day I shall take you down, as one takes
- down a volume, and turn your latest pages which I alone may scan.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She strained at her bonds. &ldquo;It will be no romance.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He smiled with terrifying quietness.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Your value to me,&rdquo; he continued in his purring voice, &ldquo;is that you've
- cost me so much. Ugh! Every time I look at you I remember how it felt when
- I sank and sank. When I rose above the waves, I saw your lights, streaking
- like a golden snake into the blackness. I struck out after you hopelessly.
- I shouted. Then I found myself alone, with no one to take pity on me and
- not one chance in a million of being rescued. The millionth chance
- arrived.&rdquo; He stooped at her feet, kissing her tortured hands. &ldquo;And here we
- are met, under these auspicious circumstances, carrying on this pleasant
- conversation. What were you doing while I was drowning? Making love
- beneath the stars to your infatuated American&mdash;leaning on his arm,
- perhaps, warmly wrapped in your sables? And I was so cold! Did you give me
- a thought, I wonder?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She stared past him like a woman frozen. &ldquo;Let me know the worst.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Tapping her cheek with pretended kindness, he resumed his pacing.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why the worst? Is that flattering, when I've spoken of our courtship?
- We're well matched in wickedness, if in nothing else. You're wanted for
- the scaffold, whereas I should have been hung long ago if I'd received my
- deserts. I'd be interested to know what you'd do, if you were in my place.
- How much mercy would you show me? You must own that merely to kill a
- person who has tried to drown you is too brief a punishment. The
- punishment I've planned for you is one that'll make you pray every hour
- for extinction. For a woman who has dispensed annihilation so lavishly I
- can think of nothing more just than that, when her own life has become
- intolerable, she should be refused the boon of death.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She spoke humbly. &ldquo;There's nothing too bad that you can do to me. But I'm
- not the woman who tried to murder you. I'm changed. I've learnt something.
- I learnt it from a man.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He bowed towards her mockingly. &ldquo;Your American?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My American, who can never be mine. I've learnt that even when we don't
- acknowledge Him, there's a God in the world who acts through us. It was He
- who saved me from the woods of Vincennes. It was He who prevented you from
- drowning. He had some purpose&mdash;a divine moment for which He waited.
- That purpose has yet to be accomplished. Who are you or I&mdash;&mdash;?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I can tell you who you are,&rdquo; he snapped: &ldquo;a dancing-woman, with a price
- upon your head. As for myself,&rdquo; his pale face flooded with a strangely
- Satanic beauty, &ldquo;it would puzzle the wisest man to say who I am. To-night
- I am Prince Rogovich; tomorrow I may be Emperor. My puppets are mustering.
- By dawn they'll be marching. They're hungry; victory to them means bread.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But if one were to feed them&mdash;?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Your American again!&rdquo; He gazed down on her, showing his white teeth and
- laughing. &ldquo;What faith you have in the man! If your American is God's
- unaccomplished purpose, then God and all His angels are thwarted. The
- messenger I have sent to execute him will not fail; he has good reason to
- hate him. He's his rival for your affections. You were the bribe I offered
- him. You may rest assured the Captain's work will be done well. His turn
- comes next.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Jerking back her head, he stooped lower, drinking in her despair.
- &ldquo;Millionth chances come once, if then. Yours came at Vincennes. Cease
- hoping. Your American is&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's a lie.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood felt himself flung violently back. The wall turned inwards. There
- was a report&mdash;then silence.
- </p>
- <h3>
- IV
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>he Prince had
- pitched forward with his head in Santa's lap. His hands were clawing at
- her gown. As he struggled, he stiffened and slid back, till he lay across
- her feet, grinning up at her. The Captain, his revolver still smoking in
- his hand, threw himself to his knees, feeling for his victim's heart. He
- spoke dully.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The dream of Monarchy is ended.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The quietness was broken by a distant clamor. Momentarily it gathered
- volume and drew nearer.
- </p>
- <p>
- Throughout the Palace, which had seemed so wrapt in sleep, feet were
- running. From the Palace-yard rose the clatter of arms and the impatience
- of orders being shouted. On the door of the chamber an importunate tapping
- had commenced.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood looked up in the midst of freeing Santa. &ldquo;They'll beat in the
- panels. Find out what they want.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Captain dragged himself to the door which he did not dare to open. A
- rapid exchange of Hungarian followed. As Santa tottered to her feet with
- the last cord severed, the Captain tiptoed back.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Escape by the passage. The shot was heard. They insist on seeing Prince
- Rogovich.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To be butchered in the streets! I guess not.&rdquo; Hindwood shook his head.
- &ldquo;Escape does not lie in that direction. They shall see <i>him</i>. In ten
- minutes. At the window. Tell them.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Captain stood aghast, pointing down at the glazing eyes of the man he
- had murdered. &ldquo;They can't.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I say they can.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The answer was delivered. The tapping ceased abruptly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hang on to your nerves.&rdquo; Hindwood crouched above the body, dragging it
- into a sitting posture. &ldquo;We've exactly ten minutes to make it look like a
- man who hopes to become an emperor. The peace of the world may depend on
- it.&rdquo; He turned to the Captain. &ldquo;You who were his bodyguard, how would he
- have dressed if his ambition had been granted?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Too pale for speech, the Captain moved towards a chest; with trembling
- hands he drew forth a purple robe, ermine-lined and gold-woven with
- mythical beasts of heraldry. Dipping deeper, he laid beside it a scepter
- and an iron crown of twisted laurels.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood smiled grimly. &ldquo;So the scene had been rehearsed! How do these
- things go? You must help me put them on him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- When the Prince had been arrayed, &ldquo;Now the throne,&rdquo; he ordered. &ldquo;It'll
- take the three of us to move it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The gilded throne had been hauled from its alcove, so as to face the
- window. The dead man, in the tinsel of his dreams, had been seated on it.
- He was bound, to prevent him from lolling&mdash;bound with the cords with
- which he himself had secured Santa. His gold-encrusted robe was spread
- about him. Across his knees, with his right hand resting on it, was the
- scepter. On his head was the iron crown of laurels.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The lamps! Place them at his feet. Switch on all the lights, then
- vanish.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The curtains were flung back. A dazzling shaft pierced the outer darkness.
- There was a breathless silence as of worship; a superstitious rustling; a
- deafening acclamation, which echoed and roared about the Palace-yard.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0006" id="linkimage-0006"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0338.jpg" alt="0338m " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0338.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- It continued unabated for a full five minutes. It sagged and sank. Again
- it mounted. Then it paused expectant. It was for all the world like a
- triumph at the opera, when a singer only bows and an encore is demanded.
- It recommenced. This time there was a note of anger.
- </p>
- <p>
- The dead man grinned down at the applauding mob. He gave no sign to these
- men, prepared to die for him. Slowly it seemed to dawn on them that he did
- not care&mdash;that he had never cared for their wounds and hunger; that
- for men of his sort they were only beasts; that it made no difference
- whether they were conquered or victorious; he would sit there as all the
- kings and emperors before him, secure and immobile, sneering at their
- sacrifices and coining their sufferings into profit.
- </p>
- <p>
- They found contempt in his vacant stare; cruelty in his marble hands that
- clutched the scepter. Gesticulating and cursing, they hurled reproaches at
- him. They trampled the officers who tried to quell them. Shots were
- exchanged. Pandemonium was commencing.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood consulted his watch. It lacked but a few minutes till two
- o'clock. If he could hold the garrison in confusion, Varensky would have
- time to seize his chance.
- </p>
- <p>
- He turned to the Captain behind the curtain where they watched. &ldquo;What is
- it they want?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It was some acknowledgment at first; then a speech; now it's bread. Can't
- you hear them, 'Bread! Bread! Or we do not march.'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At that moment the hammering on the outer door re-started. Hindwood seized
- the Captain's arm. &ldquo;You must speak to them; they wouldn't understand me.
- You're in uniform. There's Santa. If you don't all is lost.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What shall I tell them?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Anything. Speak to them as the mouthpiece of Prince Rogovich. Say there's
- food in the freight-yards&mdash;two train-loads of it&mdash;and more
- arriving; that soon the warehouses of Budapest will be bulging.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Captain stepped forward, an heroic figure. Just as he appeared in the
- oblong of the window&mdash;whether it was the sight of his uniform that
- provoked the storm was not certain&mdash;a volley of bullets shattered the
- glass. He clapped his hand to his forehead. There was a second volley. The
- room was plunged in darkness. Hindwood darted forward. The pounding on the
- outer-door grew frantic. In the Palace-yard there was the silence of
- horror.
- </p>
- <p>
- Released by the knife of flying lead, the body of the Prince had doubled
- forward, as though to peer down at the man who had betrayed him. The
- Captain was beyond all help.
- </p>
- <p>
- As Hindwood leapt back in search of Santa, the door went down with a
- crash. In a second the darkness was filled to overflowing&mdash;halberdiers,
- Palace servants, wild-eyed officials. In the confusion he caught her hand
- and escaped unnoticed through the pressing throng. As they hurried through
- salons hung with priceless treasures, looting had started. The first of
- the mob were ruthlessly at work. At the foot of the marble staircase he
- glanced at his watch. &ldquo;It's exactly two o'clock,&rdquo; he murmured.
- </p>
- <h3>
- V
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>hey had passed
- beneath the gateway where sentries should have challenged. Their posts
- were deserted. As they struck the road, descending beneath the ramparts,
- Santa questioned, &ldquo;Why did you say, 'It's exactly two o'clock'?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Because of a note I sent Varensky.&rdquo; He changed the subject. &ldquo;How were you
- captured?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She hesitated. &ldquo;It was after we'd quarreled. I was afraid I'd lost you. A
- messenger arrived, saying you were with the Governor and wanted me. It was
- a lie; the person who wanted me was Prince Rogovich.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then Lajos betrayed you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No. He knew nothing of what happened on the <i>Ryndam</i>. He was
- infatuated with me and must have talked.&rdquo; She clutched his arm. &ldquo;You're
- putting me off. You said so strangely, 'It's exactly two o'clock.' What
- was in your note to Varensky?&rdquo; For answer he halted and pointed.
- </p>
- <p>
- Far below in the gulf of blackness, where a moment ago there had seemed to
- be nothing, life had begun to quicken. In the flash of multitudinous
- street-lamps, a city was being born. It kindled in vivid strokes, like
- veins of fire etched on the pavement of the night. As though an artist
- were completing his design, ten thousand windows opened their pin-point
- eyes, filling in blank spaces with rapid specks of gold. Seen from such a
- height, the effect was in miniature. The very sounds which rose up were
- little. At first they were no more than a sustained humming, as when a
- hive is about to swarm. They swelled to a melodious muttering. Then, with
- a rush of ecstasy, the storm of joy broke; the air pulsated with the
- maddening clash of chimes.
- </p>
- <p>
- She was clinging to him. &ldquo;What is it? Is it the thing for which we've
- hoped?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He glanced back across his shoulder at the huge pile, towering on the rock
- above him. Those madmen up there, destroying and pillaging, had they time
- to hear it? The Palace was glowing like a furnace. As he watched, a column
- of flame shot tall towards the sky.
- </p>
- <p>
- Seizing her hand, he broke into a run, making all the haste he could down
- the steep decline. Behind them the flames crept like serpents, licking the
- clouds and mounting higher. The heat was like the breath of a pursuer.
- Night had become vivid as day. There was no concealment. The crest of the
- ramparts was a gigantic torch. The Danube far below was stained red as
- wine. Their very shadows were lurid. And still the bells across the river
- pealed out their joy.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a galloping. Riderless horses, broken loose from the stables,
- thundered by. Then an automobile, driven by a man with a seared and
- wounded face. Others followed. The crowd on foot, fleeing from its
- handiwork, was not far behind. As an empty car, with an officer at the
- wheel, slowed down at a hairpin bend, Santa and he leapt aboard.
- </p>
- <p>
- The danger was outdistanced. They had crossed the Danube. They were
- scarcely likely now to be implicated in what had happened to Prince
- Rogo-vich. But they were still at the mercy of their reckless driver. In
- his panic he had not once looked around; he was unaware that he carried
- passengers. Hindwood knew very clearly where he wanted to go; it was
- probably the last place to which he would be taken. The streets of Pest
- near the river were solitary, but somewhere the mob was gathering. It
- might prove awkward to be found in the company of a uniformed Monarchist
- who was escaping.
- </p>
- <p>
- Having formulated his plan, he whispered it to Santa. &ldquo;While I tackle him,
- you grasp the wheel.&rdquo; Leaning forward, he flung his arm about the man's
- neck, jerking him backwards. The car swerved and mounted the pavement.
- Santa turned it into the road again. Taken by surprise, the man offered
- small resistance; the struggle was short. Hindwood toppled him out,
- climbed into the front seat and took his place.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The station. Where is it?&rdquo; he asked breathlessly. She glanced at him with
- a revival of her old suspicion. &ldquo;We're not leaving. Why the station?&rdquo; He
- could have laughed. &ldquo;Still the old, distrustful Santa! Little fool&mdash;the
- food-trains.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The first streets which they traversed were deserted; yet lamps were
- lighted and the air was clamorous with belfry-music. As they drew further
- into the city, they shot past groups and isolated individuals, crawling in
- the same direction. For the most part they were the kind of persons Santa
- had offered to show him that morning&mdash;people in rags or entirely
- stark, who hobbled from weakness or dragged themselves on all fours like
- dogs. It was as though the dead were rising from their graves to follow
- the Pied Piper of the Resurrection.
- </p>
- <p>
- They came to a square, where soldiers had been concentrated. Their packs
- and rifles littered the open space; the soldiers themselves had vanished.
- </p>
- <p>
- The traffic grew dense. It was all on foot. Hind-wood turned to Santa, &ldquo;We
- shall make better time if we leave the car.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- As they mingled with the crowd, he had a nightmare sensation of unreality.
- He had never rubbed shoulders with so many human beings so nearly naked.
- They themselves seemed to regard their conditions as normal. It was he who
- was odd. Their legs were mere poles; their arms laths. Their heads were
- misshapen like deflated footballs. With panting persistence they padded
- forward, too frail to be anything but orderly. The air was full of an
- earthy fragrance. Their bodies were clammy to the touch. He could push
- them aside like shadows. The hair was brittle as withered moss.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was the fashionable quarter of Budapest. Great arc-lights shone down on
- this flowing river of gray flesh. Behind plate-glass windows luxuries were
- displayed for the temptation of the bargain-snatching foreigner&mdash;feathers
- and furs, jewels and laces. Past them, with eyes enfevered by starvation,
- stole the noiseless populace. There was a woman whose sole clothing was a
- rag about her neck; she continued to live in Hindwood's imagination long
- after the sight of her was gone. And still, with thunderous merriment, the
- bells above the city pealed on.
- </p>
- <p>
- At a turn they came to the station. Further progress was blocked. Exerting
- his strength against the weakness of the mob, Hindwood edged his way
- forward. When he could go no farther, he swung round on Santa. &ldquo;Tell them
- that I own the food-trains and that I'm going to get them bread.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She had no sooner uttered her translation than a lane was cleared. As he
- passed, he was aware that parched lips stooped to kiss his hands, his
- garments, the very ground that he trod. He shuddered. The indecent
- self-abasement of such necessity inflamed his indignation. Ahead a cordon
- was drawn across the road. It was composed of Russian refugees. He
- recognized them by their baggy blouses and by the short-haired women of
- the Battalions of Death. From the tail of a wagon an orator was
- speechifying. His head was peaked like a dunce's cap. Beside him stood a
- woman, white as a lily with hair the color of raw gold.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood caught Santa's arm. &ldquo;For heaven's sake, what's he saying?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What he always says on such occasions. He's preaching his gospel of
- non-resistance and promising to die for them.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Who cares for whom he dies, when bellies are empty and bodies are naked?
- Tell them I'll clothe them and give them bread.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- As she translated what he had said, a cry went up which drowned Varensky.
- He found himself in the open space, clambering up to the wagon and
- dragging Santa up beside him. There was a deep silence.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Tell them,&rdquo; he commanded, &ldquo;that starvation is ended. I'll feed them on
- one condition: that they refuse to fight. Tell them I'll drive the Russian
- menace back without a single shot being fired. Tell them that I promise,
- on my honor as an American, to feed them all. Though food-trains are
- exhausted to-night, more will arrive to-morrow. More and more.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He paused, blinded with emotion at sight of the forest of thin hands
- strained up to him. Shooting out his fist tremendously, he threatened.
- &ldquo;And tell them that I won't feed a jack one of them, if there's another
- man, woman or child slaughtered, or a hint of rioting.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- VI
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">H</span>e had kept his
- word; as far as Hungary was concerned, every living soul had been
- nourished. For seven days and nights, sleeping only at odd intervals, he
- had sat in the barracks of the Russian refugees with the map of Europe
- staring down on him from the wall. Wherever a food-train had been
- despatched, the place had been marked by a little red flag. He had had a
- wireless-apparatus installed; from that bare room, heavy with mildew, he
- had sent out his S. O. S. calls to humanity. He had begged, threatened,
- argued, commanded until at last he knew that he had won his cause. What he
- did not know was that his own example had proved more convincing than many
- words. The simple drama of his personal conversion&mdash;that he should be
- giving what he had come to sell&mdash;had stirred men's consciences. It
- had given him the right to talk. Where once troops would have been
- hurried, food was being pushed forward. It was an experiment alarmingly
- novel; but his phrase caught on, &ldquo;The Barricade of Bread.&rdquo; It had been
- flashed across five continents. Wherever the printed word had power, it
- had kindled men's imaginations. By a world war-wrecked, confronted by yet
- another war, it had been hailed as the strategy that would end all wars.
- </p>
- <p>
- Loaf by loaf, sack by sack the barricade was rising. Those little red
- flags, pinned on the map, marked its progress. It was deepening and
- spreading in a flanking movement, just as formerly army corps had massed
- for offensives. Soon the barricade would be complete; it would stretch in
- an unbroken line from the Dardanelles to the Baltic. There would be
- fighting, probably to the east of Poland, where the Monarchists were
- marching in a forlorn attempt to defeat the famished hordes. That could
- not be prevented. But by the time the outcasts struck his main defense, he
- would be in a position to halt them.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was only now, when the situation was in hand, that he had leisure to
- realize what he had been doing. He was filled with depression in his hour
- of triumph. It was long past midnight. He felt gray and spent. The
- barracks were as quiet as a morgue. He wondered why; they had been so
- crowded with derelicts of valiant armies, men and girls, who, having
- failed to save Russia with the rifle, had been preparing to rescue her
- with knowledge. Then he recalled. He had sent them all away. They had been
- the new kind of soldier, by whose sacrifice his ideal had conquered. He
- saw again their uplifted faces, as he had summoned them one by one and
- ordered them on their perilous journeys. Wherever a red flag was pinned on
- the map, one of those derelicts was in command. The &ldquo;Little Grandmother,&rdquo;
- she had been the last. Beside himself and his wireless operators, there
- could be no one left except Varensky, Santa and Anna.
- </p>
- <p>
- He glanced at the window. It was a square of jet. During the early days
- and nights it had framed a heart of fire, where the Palace had smouldered
- on the heights of Buda. Like a subsided volcano, the Palace had burned
- itself out. It was as though the fury of his life were ended. He bowed his
- head in his arms, striving to reconjure what had happened.
- </p>
- <p>
- Flitting about the room, with his strangely catlike tread, Varensky had
- been forever entering and exiting. He had been his second self, silent and
- agile, anticipating his plans without a word spoken. It was Varensky who
- had marshaled his exiled compatriots and placed their services at his
- disposal. It was Varensky who had warned him of the strategic points where
- the barricade must be strengthened. It had been always Varensky to whom he
- had turned for advice and courage when things were darkest. Without
- Varensky he could have accomplished nothing. And yet it was Varensky whom
- he had dethroned. This should have been his moment. He had shouted him
- down, snatched control from him and earned the credit. The self-effacement
- of one whom he had despised as an egoist made him humble. In a rush of
- tenderness he discovered that he loved him. The peaked head was forgotten,
- and the face scared white as if it had seen a ghost. The timidity of his
- appearance no longer counted; the thing that mattered was the spirit,
- resolute and shining as a sword, that hid within the scabbard of the
- grotesque body.
- </p>
- <p>
- And now that he remembered, there had been grief in his green eyes&mdash;the
- grief of a man who had been cheated. Once again Varensky had drawn him
- near to Calvary; the chance to die had been stolen from him.
- </p>
- <p>
- And Anna&mdash;he could not guess how she felt or what she thought. In all
- those seven days and nights it seemed as though she had never looked at
- him. She had moved about him like a nun, ministering to his wants with her
- gaze averted. Vaguely he was aware that to him she was not what she
- appeared to others. The old legend had been revived; again, as in St.
- Petersburg after the fall of Czardom, wherever she passed people knelt. To
- him she was no saint; his desire was too human.
- </p>
- <p>
- Watching the three of them with sphinxlike wisdom, there had been Santa,
- her womanhood clamorous and ignored. What had she made of it? Had she
- found material for humor in their temporary heroism?
- </p>
- <p>
- And so he came back to his first question&mdash;what had he been doing? In
- constructing the barricade of bread, he had been preventing Varensky from
- dying; in preventing Varensky from dying, he had been raising a barricade
- between himself and Anna. Having bankrupted his pocket, he had bankrupted
- his heart. In spite of warnings, he had gone in search of the vanishing
- point, where the parallel rails of possibility and desire seem to join&mdash;the
- point at which, to quote Varensky's words, &ldquo;The safety of the journey
- ends.&rdquo; It was the goal of every man who wrecks himself in the hope that he
- may save a world.
- </p>
- <p>
- How long had he been sitting there brooding? He was cold. The square of
- window had turned from jet to gray. Furtively he glanced behind him. Anna
- was gazing down on him.
- </p>
- <h3>
- VII
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>he was dressed for
- a journey, muffled in furs. Her left hand was gloved; her right extended.
- His heart turned coward. Surely he had earned his reward. He commenced to
- rise, pushing back his chair. The steady blueness of her eyes held him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good-by,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I should have left without saying good-by, if I had
- not known I could trust you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But you can trust me. It's because you can trust me that you must stay.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I can't stay.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why not?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We made a bargain. Do you remember? That until we were free, we would
- play the game by him&mdash;that we would even guard him against himself.
- You told me once, 'I wouldn't be friends with a woman who couldn't be
- loyal.' I'm trying to be loyal.&rdquo; She caught her breath. &ldquo;He's gone.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Varensky?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She nodded.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Where?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To die for us.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- In the silence that followed, the heat of his temptation vanished. He felt
- accused by the quixotic magnanimity of this strange creature, half
- prophet, half charlatan, whose wife he had coveted.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Once I'd have been glad that he should die,&rdquo; he confessed slowly, &ldquo;but
- not now. Food has done far more than his sacrifice could have
- accomplished. Why should he be determined to die now?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She trusted herself to come closer, standing over him and giving him her
- hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Perhaps for our sakes. Perhaps for his own. Perhaps in the hope that his
- appearance may put a stop to what's left of the fighting. There was a
- wireless last night which he kept to himself. It said that skirmishing was
- developing between the Poles and the Russian refugees in the No Man's Land
- beyond Kovel. It was after he had read it that he went out. I waited for
- him to return&mdash;when I guessed. We've all misjudged him. Perhaps we're
- still misjudging him. Who can say why he's gone? There's nothing gained by
- attributing motives. He wants to give his life. He's promised he would so
- often; always he's been thwarted. He owes it to his honor. Kovel may be
- the world's last battle&mdash;his final chance.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- In the bare room the dawn was spreading. Hind-wood rose from his chair,
- stretching his cramped body and gazing at the map with its safe red line
- of flags.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Our work is ended,&rdquo; he said quietly. &ldquo;Within the next few hours stronger
- men will be here to take control&mdash;a commission of the best brains,
- picked from all the nations. God chose us to be His stopgap.&rdquo; He paused.
- &ldquo;After having been His instruments in averting a world-catastrophe to
- speak of things personal seems paltry. And yet my love for you fills all
- my thoughts. I leave Budapest a bankrupt. I shall have to start life
- afresh. Your love is literally my sole possession and I have no right to
- it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She was backing towards the door, retreating from him. He stepped over to
- the window, widening the distance that separated them.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you feel more secure now? You needn't fear me,&rdquo; he reproached her.
- &ldquo;Was it because I spoke of our love? We have no reason to be ashamed of
- it. We've played fair. How could we do less when Varensky has played so
- fair by us? It's for our sakes he's gone, that he may free us.&rdquo; Then,
- &ldquo;You're setting out alone on a journey. Would you mind telling me its
- object?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You know. To prevent him. To catch up with him. To bring him back.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And if he refuses?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To die with him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He smiled whimsically. &ldquo;The vanishing point! For you, with your high
- standard of honor, if you were to overtake it, your problem would be
- solved. But suppose the vanishing point eludes you. Suppose your husband
- agrees to live, have you thought of that? It means that you and I will
- never&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- With an imploring gesture she cut him short. &ldquo;It means that you and I will
- never learn to despise each other. It means that I shall always remember
- you at your greatest, as I've seen you in the last seven days,
- self-sacrificing, brave and noble&mdash;so self-forgetting that you could
- even forget the woman you adored.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He sank his head. In the gray square of window he looked old and haggard.
- &ldquo;It's true, and yet it's incredible: if we were to allow him to die, we
- should despise each other. In the long years&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; He glanced up.
- &ldquo;Though you were willing to let him and I won you, do you think I would
- want you? Not that way. I'd want you so little that I'm coming with you to
- help you to prevent him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- VIII
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">L</span>ong lines of
- neglected tillage! Deserted farms! Broken fences! A gray expanse of sky!
- Knots of peasants trekking always westward! Panting cattle, nearing the
- exhaustion point! Creaking carts! Dawn growing whiter; day growing golden;
- sunlight fading; night becoming flecked with stars! Always the rhythm of
- the engine, the plunging into the distance, the impatient urgency to
- thrust forward!
- </p>
- <p>
- It had been useless to think of traveling by trains; the railways were too
- congested. Moreover, they had strongly suspected that he had set out by
- car. If the No Man's Land beyond Kovel were his destination, then Cracow
- would lie midway on his journey. Cracow was one of the strong-points in
- the barricade, where a clump of red flags was flying. All the traffic was
- escaping from the danger. If he had chosen that route, there would be
- definite news of him. Any one traveling towards the danger could not help
- but be remarked.
- </p>
- <p>
- As they inquired of fugitives, they discovered that two cars were ahead of
- them. The first contained a madman, with eyes green as emeralds and a face
- white and set as a mask; the second, a dark-haired woman, beautiful as a
- fallen angel. The woman seemed to be in pursuit of the man. They were,
- perhaps, thirty miles apart. They had thundered by into the imperiled
- future as though the self-same devil rode behind them.
- </p>
- <p>
- What could be Santa's purpose? Anna and he argued the point, sometimes
- aloud, more often in their unuttered thoughts. All their old doubts
- concerning her rose up rampant. Was she a Bolshevist agent, hurrying back
- to sell the last of her secrets? Was her purpose to save or to betray
- Varensky?
- </p>
- <p>
- What had she ever wanted from him? Had she found a quality in his
- self-destroying idealism that had called forth her pitying worship? In her
- own dark way had she enshrined him in a mysterious corner of her heart?
- Had she recognized in him a childlike weakness that had compelled her
- protection? Had he stood in the twilight of her life for a door that might
- open into ultimate redemption?
- </p>
- <p>
- Or was it loneliness that had made her follow him&mdash;the sure knowledge
- that everything was ended? In those seven days, whilst they had made
- history together, had she seen something that had tortured her? That she
- was not wanted, as he was not wanted? Was it despair that had beckoned her
- into the chaos through which he hurried to destruction?
- </p>
- <p>
- When they reached Cracow it was to find the city deserted. The streets by
- which they entered were deathly silent; the doors wide open; the pavements
- strewn with furniture which owners had lacked time to rescue. Here and
- there were carts which had collapsed, and thin horses which had died in
- harness. Even cats and dogs had departed. Terror peered from behind the
- blankness of windows. It was like a city pillaged.
- </p>
- <p>
- Whatever optimisms they had entertained, they knew for certain now that
- war had started. Out of sight, across gray wastes to the eastward, gray
- ranks of skeletons, armed with nothing but disease, were approaching. The
- dread they inspired was so great that outcasts, only a shade less
- starving, had stampeded before them.
- </p>
- <p>
- At a turn they came to the railroad. Here their eyes met a different
- spectacle. From a freight-train on a siding men, white to the eyes with
- dust, were rolling barrels. They were volunteers recruited from the safer
- nations&mdash;the first of the new kind of army. They were piling flour
- where once they would have been stacking shells. Hindwood recognized the
- barrels' markings. His sense of tragedy lightened. Laughing down into his
- companion's eyes, he shouted, &ldquo;Mine! Look, Anna. Mine that I meant to
- sell!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A short-haired girl, in the tattered uniform of the Battalion of Death,
- was in charge. Coming up to the car, she saluted smartly. Yes, she had
- seen Varensky. It was three hours since he had passed. He had filled up
- with water and gasolene, gasolene having arrived on the supply-train. He
- had left for Brest-Litovsk, stating that his object was to gain a respite
- for the barricade-builders. He proposed to put himself at the head of the
- famine-march and to check the rapidity of its advance. After his
- departure, the other had panted up&mdash;the dark-haired woman&mdash;only
- an hour behind him.
- </p>
- <p>
- Wasting no time in conversation, Hindwood imitated Varensky's example. He
- was dazed for want of sleep&mdash;almost nodding. But the man he had to
- save was ahead of him. Having filled his tanks and made sure of his
- engine, he started forward.
- </p>
- <p>
- They were throbbing through empty streets again, when a strange sound
- thrilled the silence&mdash;a trumpet-call, which rang out sharply across
- the housetops and broke off suddenly.
- </p>
- <p>
- Had they come? He slowed down, prepared to wheel about.
- </p>
- <p>
- Seeing what was in his thoughts, Anna rested her hand on his arm
- reassuringly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's from the tower of St. Mary's. How often I've heard it! Ah, there it
- is again!&rdquo; Gazing up and bending forward, she listened. Then she spoke, as
- though addressing some one who walked above the city, &ldquo;Brave fellow!
- Though they've all deserted, you've stayed on.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To whom are you talking?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She explained quickly. Centuries ago the Church of St. Mary's had been an
- outpost of Christendom, used as a watch-tower against the invading Tartar;
- a soldier had been kept continually stationed there to give warning on a
- trumpet of the first approach of danger. In the fourteenth century, whilst
- arousing the city, the trumpeter had been struck in the throat by an
- arrow. His call had faltered, rallied and sunk. With his dying breath he
- had sounded a final blast, which had broken off short. The broken call had
- saved Cracow. Ever since, to commemorate his faithfulness, there had never
- been an hour, day or night, when his broken trumpet-call, ending abruptly
- in an abyss of silence, had not been sounded from the tower.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood leant across the wheel, staring dreamily before him. &ldquo;It might
- have been his voice&mdash;Varen-sky's. He's like that&mdash;a dying
- trumpeter, sounding a last warning. I almost believe in him. It's too late&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It may not be,&rdquo; she whispered.
- </p>
- <p>
- Night was falling. Straining his eyes to keep awake, he drove impetuously
- on, forcing a path through the opposing shadows.
- </p>
- <h3>
- IX
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">H</span>ow they had
- arrived it would have puzzled him to tell. He had vague memories of
- sunsets and dawns; of times when sleep had drugged him; of unrefreshed
- awakenings.
- </p>
- <p>
- They had reached Brest-Litovsk, the city fatal to the Russians, which the
- Czar had always superstitiously avoided. Like Cracow, it was deserted.
- Unlike Cracow, it was a pile of ruins. Seven times in seven years it had
- been bombarded and captured. Beneath an iron sky, it listened for the
- tramp of the latest conqueror.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood drew forth his map. It was over a hundred versts to Kovel; he
- doubted whether his gasolene would take him. There was nowhere where he
- could replenish his supply. Before him lay a No Man's Land from which
- everything had perished&mdash;behind a silence from which everything had
- escaped. To continue his pursuit was folly. There was no promise of
- success to allure him; of Varensky and Santa he had lost all trace. He
- glanced at his drowsing companion; he had pledged his word to her.
- Reluctantly he climbed into his seat and started forward.
- </p>
- <p>
- The suicidal stupidity of war&mdash;that was the thought that absorbed
- him. Every sight that his eyes encountered emphasized its madness. Yet
- beyond the horizon, where distance seemed to terminate, men were killing
- one another. He understood at last Varensky's passion to die. When all
- else had failed, to offer one's body was the only protest.
- </p>
- <p>
- The landscape was growing featureless. Rivers had overflowed. The labor of
- centuries was sinking beneath morass. Villages and post-houses had been
- destroyed; woods torn by shell-fire. Stationed along the route, like buoys
- guarding a channel, black and white verst-poles gleamed monotonously. On
- either side stretched a never-ending graveyard, marked by rough crosses or
- inverted rifles. Down this pitiless straight road had marched the seven
- invasions&mdash;Russian, German, Polish, Bolshevist, each with a dream of
- glory in its eyes. With the victory lost and the dream forgotten, they
- moldered companionably.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was half-way to Kovel that he first noticed what was happening; behind
- scrub and fallen trees it had probably been happening for some time. It
- was a gray wolf, grown bold, which first drew his attention. Like a dog,
- seeking its master, it came trotting down the road. After that they came
- in packs&mdash;not only wolves, but every other kind of untamed animal. It
- was as though they were fleeing before a drive&mdash;the tremendous drive
- of a famished nation. In their dread they seemed to have postponed their
- right to prey. Hunter and quarry journeyed side by side, their enmities in
- abeyance in their common terror of the enmity which stalked behind.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood had grown used to the spectacle, when suddenly he was startled by
- another sight&mdash;a child. A child so matted and neglected, that he
- scarcely recognized him as human. His feet were swathed in balls of rags.
- He limped painfully, walking among the animals and staring straight before
- him. At shortening intervals others followed, till at last they came in
- crowds.
- </p>
- <p>
- Beyond Kovel, where commences the crumbling trench-system in which the
- vanished Russo-German armies remained locked for so many years, he came
- across his first trace of Varensky&mdash;an abandoned car with a broken
- axle. Varensky must be on foot, not far ahead. He had passed another mile
- when his own car halted; the gasolene had given out. With the ceasing of
- the engine he caught another sound&mdash;the popping of rifle-fire. It
- dawned on him that the trenches of the dead battlefield were again
- inhabited. He had been driving straight into the heart of the fighting.
- </p>
- <p>
- The firing was drawing nearer. The Monarchists were falling back. A bullet
- whizzed over his head and pinged into a mass of rusted wire.
- </p>
- <p>
- All that followed happened in a flash. He had seized Anna and rushed with
- her to cover. From where he watched, he could see soldiers retreating, and
- the tops of steel helmets bobbing above the trenches. Of the advancing
- host he could see nothing.
- </p>
- <p>
- Suddenly from behind a mound, a man with a peaked head sprang up. He was
- dressed as a civilian. He commenced to run up the road towards the enemy,
- waving something white. Immediately, from another place of hiding, a woman
- leapt up and followed. It was as though on the instant truce had been
- declared; a tranquillity of amazement settled down.
- </p>
- <p>
- As he reached what appeared to be No Man's Land, he drew himself erect,
- with expanded chest, and commenced to sweep his arms in the gestures of
- oratory. It was dumb show; it was impossible to hear what was being said.
- While he was speaking, the woman caught up with him and flung herself upon
- him, making a shield of her body.
- </p>
- <p>
- Curiosity satisfied, both sides fired. The man and woman crumpled.
- Fighting recommenced.
- </p>
- <h3>
- THE END
- </h3>
- <div style="height: 6em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Vanishing Point, by Coningsby Dawson
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-
-
-Title: The Vanishing Point
-
-Author: Coningsby Dawson
-
-Illustrator: James Montgomery Flagg
-
-Release Date: November 19, 2015 [EBook #50499]
-Last Updated: March 12, 2018
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE VANISHING POINT ***
-
-
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-
-Produced by David Widger from page images generously
-provided by the Internet Archive
-
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-
-</pre>
-
-
- <div style="height: 8em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h1>
- THE VANISHING POINT
- </h1>
- <h2>
- By Coningsby Dawson
- </h2>
- <h4>
- Author of &ldquo;The Kingdom Round the Corner,&rdquo; &ldquo;The Garden Without Walls,&rdquo; etc.
- </h4>
- <h3>
- Illustrated By James Montgomery Flagg
- </h3>
- <h4>
- New York
- </h4>
- <h5>
- MCMXXII
- </h5>
- <h5>
- Copyright, 1922, by Cosmopolitan Book Corporation
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0001" id="linkimage-0001"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0001.jpg" alt="0001m " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0001.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0002" id="linkimage-0002"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0008.jpg" alt="0008m " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0008.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0003" id="linkimage-0003"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0009.jpg" alt="0009m " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0009.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- <i>&ldquo;When you gaze up a railroad track,&rdquo; said Varensky, &ldquo;there's always a
- point in the infinite distance where, just before they vanish, the
- parallel rails seem, to join. If a train were ever to reach that point
- it would mean death.</i>
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- <i>&ldquo;Life's like that&mdash;a track along which we travel on the parallel
- rails of possibility and desire. The lure of the idealist is to overtake
- the illusion, where possibility and desire seem to merge, and the safety
- of the journey ends.&rdquo;</i>
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0001"> <b>THE VANISHING POINT</b> </a>
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER THE FIRST&mdash;THE DISAPPEARANCE OF A
- PATRIOT </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER THE SECOND&mdash;THE RETURN OF SANTA
- GORLOF </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER THE THIRD&mdash;HE PLUNGES INTO ROMANCE
- </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER THE FOURTH&mdash;HE BECOMES PART OF THE
- GAME </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER THE FIFTH&mdash;THE GREEN EYES CAST A
- SPELL </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER THE SIXTH&mdash;THE ESCAPE </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER THE SEVENTH&mdash;THE CAPTURE </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER THE EIGHTH&mdash;THE VANISHING POINT </a>
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /> <br /> <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h1>
- THE VANISHING POINT
- </h1>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER THE FIRST&mdash;THE DISAPPEARANCE OF A PATRIOT
- </h2>
- <h3>
- I
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">P</span>RINCE ROGOVICH!
- Prince Rogovich!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Staring up at the clammy wall of the liner, blanched by searchlights,
- against which the little tug bumped and jostled, Philip Hindwood could
- hear the Prince's name being shouted in staterooms, along decks and
- passageways.
- </p>
- <p>
- It had been midnight when they had drifted like a gallivanting hotel, all
- portholes ablaze, into the starlit vagueness of Plymouth Harbor. The <i>Ryndam</i>
- did not dock there; she only halted long enough to put off the English
- passengers and to drop the English mail. There had been three passengers
- to land, of whom Hindwood had been the first; the rest were disembarking
- at Boulogne or Rotterdam. They had been met just outside the harbor by the
- tug, and the transshipping of the mail had immediately commenced. The last
- bag had been tossed over the side; the immigration officials had completed
- their inspection. Santa Gorlof, the second passenger for England,
- radiantly smiling above her sables, had come down the gangplank. It was
- for the third passenger that the liner delayed and the tug still waited.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Prince Rogovich! Prince Rogovich!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The cries were becoming more insistent and impatient. They broke on the
- stillness with the monotony of despair. To judge by the sound, every soul
- aboard the liner had taken up the search, from the firemen in the
- stoke-hole to the Marconi men on the top deck. Even the thud of the
- engines seemed ominous, like the pounding of a heart stifled with
- foreboding. Across the velvety expanse of water, as though they had a
- secret they were trying to communicate, shore lights winked and twinkled.
- They seemed to be signaling the information that, no matter how long the
- search was maintained, Prince Rogovich would not be found that night.
- </p>
- <h3>
- II
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">E</span>xcept for this
- last disturbing incident, it had been a pleasant voyage&mdash;the most
- pleasant Philip Hindwood could remember. They had left New York in the
- brilliant clearness of blue September skies. The clear blueness had
- followed them. The slow-going, matronly <i>Ryndam</i> had steamed on an
- even keel through seas as tranquil and reflective as the proverbial
- mill-pond. Her company had been dull, consisting mainly of American
- drummers and Dutch Colonials returning from Java. But he had no grounds
- for complaint; he had chosen her for her dullness. He had wanted to lay up
- a store of rest before plunging into the strenuous excitements which were
- the purpose of his journey.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had gone aboard her in an unsociable frame of mind, determined to talk
- to nobody; the success of his errand depended on his silence. He believed
- that he was half a year ahead of the times. When his rivals had caught up
- to where he was at present, he would have made himself a world power and
- dictator.
- </p>
- <p>
- But the dullness of the ship's company had exceeded expectations. Because
- of this he had broken his compact and allowed his privacy to be invaded by
- two vivid personalities. The first had been Prince Rogovich&mdash;the
- second, Santa Gorlof.
- </p>
- <p>
- Prince Rogovich had evidently boarded the ship with precisely the same
- intentions as himself. All his meals had been served in his stateroom; it
- had not been until the evening of the third day that he had appeared on
- deck. He was a man of commanding height, lean of hip and contemptuous of
- eye, with the disquieting, haughty reticence of an inscrutable Pharaoh.
- There was something alluring and oriental about the man, at once sinister
- and charming. Behind his silky black beard he hid a face which was deathly
- white; its pallor was not of ill-health, but of passion. It was easy to
- believe all the rumors about him, both as regarded his diabolical
- cleverness and his sensual cruelty. His enemies were legion. Even among
- his countrymen he could count few friends, although he was reckoned their
- greatest patriot. In Poland he was suspected as much as he was admired,
- and was accused of intriguing in order that he might set up a throne for
- himself. The object of his flying visit to America had been to consult
- financial magnates on the advisability of floating an international loan
- in the interests of Poland. There were men the world over and in Russia
- especially, who would have paid a king's ransom for advance information as
- to what answer the financiers had returned.
- </p>
- <p>
- Though Hindwood would not have claimed as much, he and the Prince were two
- of a kind, equally magnificent in their dreams, equally relentless in
- their means of realization, and equally insatiable in their instinct for
- conquest. Their difference lay in the fact that the Polish aristocrat had
- already attained the goal toward which the self-made American was no more
- than striving.
- </p>
- <p>
- Their first meeting had happened in the early hours of the morning.
- Hindwood, being unable to sleep, had partly dressed and gone on deck.
- There, in the grayness of the dawn, he had espied a tall figure slowly
- pacing, accompanied by a snow-white Russian wolfhound. It was the
- remarkable grace of the man that had first held him, his faculty for
- stillness, his spectral paleness, his padded tread. But the moment he had
- approached him, the sense of his grace had been obscured by an atmosphere
- of menace. So sinister was his beauty that it had required an effort to
- pass him twice. Secretly Hindwood had observed him. He was like his hound,
- treacherously languid, insolently fastidious, and bred to the point of
- emaciation. But his languor was the disguise of a hidden fierceness, which
- betrayed itself in his red, curved lips and the marble coldness of his
- stare. It was at the third time of passing, when he had all but gone by
- him, that he had heard his name spoken.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mr. Hindwood.&rdquo; Then, as he had turned, &ldquo;You're the famous railroad
- expert. Am I right? It's fortunate we should have met. I missed you in
- America. So you, too, are among the sleepless!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Then and there had started the first of those amazing conversations, which
- had held Hindwood fascinated for the remainder of the voyage. It had made
- no difference that in his heart he had almost hated the man&mdash;hated
- his ruthlessness, his subtlety, his polished immorality; the moment he
- commenced to talk, he surrendered to his spell. Their encounters had taken
- place for the most part between midnight and sunrise. To be his companion
- was like eavesdropping on the intimate counsels of all the cabinets of
- Europe or like reading your daily paper a year before it was published for
- the rest of mankind. On matters which did not concern him the Prince could
- be brilliantly confessional; indiscretion was the bait with which he lured
- his victims to reveal themselves. The secrets which were his own he kept.
- Never once did he drop a hint that would indicate the success or failure
- of his recent mission. The single time that, Santa Gorlof had asked him
- point-blank, his dark eyes had become focusless as opals, and his white
- face, under its silky covering of beard, unnoticing and sphinx-like. It
- was then that Hindwood had recognized the resemblance to Pharaoh in his
- tyrannic immobility and silence.
- </p>
- <p>
- And Santa Gorlof! There was a woman&mdash;mysterious, exotic, well-nigh
- mythical! Compared with her the Prince was an open book. From the start
- she had made no attempt to explain herself, had referred neither to her
- past nor her future, had offered no credentials. She had imposed herself
- on Hind-wood like a goddess who expected to be worshiped. She had swept
- him off his feet, beaten aside his caution, and reached his heart before
- he was aware.
- </p>
- <p>
- But was it his heart? How often, in the past few days, he had asked
- himself that question! He didn't want to believe that it was his heart. He
- was a man who rode alone; his aloneness was the reason for his swiftness.
- He had been tricked once by a woman. That was when he was a boy; now he
- was a man nearing forty. She had cheated him so cruelly that, though she
- had been dead many years, the bitterness still rankled. Behind the beauty
- of all women his skepticism detected the shallow loveliness of the one
- false woman who had stolen his idealism, that she might trample on it.
- </p>
- <p>
- He did not love Santa. He had assured himself a thousand times that he did
- not love her. She was too dangerous, too incalculable. He had spent long
- hours of wakeful nights in completing the inventory of her bad points. And
- yet, while he had been with her, his veins had run fire; while he had been
- apart from her, all his pleasures had seemed tasteless. Who was she?
- Whence had she come? Whither was she going? What had been her business on
- the <i>Ryndam</i>, and what had Prince Rogovich known about her? The
- Prince had known something&mdash;something which had given him power over
- her. At a glance from him, her caprice had vanished and she had become
- downcast as a child. He had muttered a few unintelligible words, probably
- in Polish, and her pride had crumbled.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood was at a loss to account for these signs of a secret
- understanding. It had been he who had introduced them. It had been Santa
- who had confessed to curiosity about the Prince and had begged for the
- introduction. The moment he had made them acquainted, they had seemed to
- become delighted with each other's company&mdash;so delighted that there
- had been times when he himself had felt excluded. A half-humorous rivalry
- for Santa's favors had sprung up between the Prince and himself. This
- atmosphere of jealousy had been accentuated by the behavior of the
- wolfhound; Santa's mere approach had been sufficient to rouse him into
- fury. He had become so dangerous that he had had to be sent below whenever
- she was present.
- </p>
- <p>
- And yet, despite her manifest efforts to hold the Prince enchanted, behind
- his back she had expressed the most vigorous aversion. She had spoken of
- his reputation for treachery and the whispers that went the rounds of his
- heartlessness toward women. During the final days of the voyage she had
- partly atoned for this inconsistency by appealing to Hindwood to protect
- her against the Prince's far too pressing attention. She had declared
- herself to be in some kind of danger&mdash;though what kind, whether moral
- or physical, she had left him to conjecture. She had rather flattered him
- by her appeal; nevertheless, he had been considerably surprised to observe
- how little interest she had still displayed in protecting herself. During
- the whole of that last day, while they had been approaching the white line
- of Cornish coast, she had scarcely devoted to him a glance or a word;
- every minute she had spent with His Highness, whom she professed to regard
- with so much terror. She had created the impression of employing every
- trick at her disposal in a frantic attempt to secure him as her conquest.
- </p>
- <p>
- If, as many of the passengers had asserted, the presence of Santa Gorlof
- and the Prince on the same boat had been no accident, then what had been
- the object of their elaborately planned deception? Were they lovers who
- had chosen this secret method of traveling in order to avoid a scandal? Or
- was she one of the many women whom he was reported to have abandoned, who
- had seized the leisure of an Atlantic voyage as an opportunity for
- reinstating herself in his affection?
- </p>
- <p>
- As Hindwood listened in the darkness to the Prince's name being shouted
- and waited for the tug to cast off, the surmise strengthened into
- certainty that he had been the dupe of a piece of play-acting, the purpose
- of which he could not fathom.
- </p>
- <h3>
- III
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">P</span>hilip!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He had been so absorbed in his thoughts that he had not noticed how she
- had stolen up behind him. Without removing his arms from the rail, he
- turned slowly and surveyed her.
- </p>
- <p>
- An enviable woman! And her age? Perhaps thirty. She was probably a Slav&mdash;either
- Russian or Polish. Her face was smooth as marble, high cheekboned and
- golden in complexion. Her eyes were almond-shaped, heavy-lidded, and of
- the palest gray. Her lips were passionate and always a little parted,
- revealing a line of perfect whiteness like a streak of snow between the
- curling edges of two rose-petals. But it was her hair that was her glory&mdash;abundant
- as night, blue-black as steel, and polished as metal. She wore it simply,
- gathered back from her forehead and caught in a loose knot, low against
- her neck. There was an air of indefinable aristocracy about her; perhaps
- it was the slightness of her figure and the alert composure of her
- carriage. And then there was a touch of the exotic, wistfully sad, yet
- exceedingly mocking. Like so many Slavs, behind the European there lurked
- a hint of the Asiatic. If her eyes had been darker, she might easily have
- passed for a Hindoo princess.
- </p>
- <p>
- Her fascination, quite apart from her beauty, lay in the fact that she was
- so ravishingly feminine. To be a woman was her proud profession&mdash;and
- in this again she was Asiatic. What hours she must have spent over
- pampering her body! She was sleek and groomed as a race-horse. Physically
- she was the last word in feminine perfection. Her string of pearls was
- worth more than most men earn in a lifetime. Her sables represented the
- year's income of a millionaire. There was no item of her attire that was
- not sumptuous and that had not been acquired regardless of expense. To
- have achieved her luxuriance of beauty must have dissipated a fortune.
- Whose fortune? Surely, not hers!
- </p>
- <p>
- His mind was haunted by misgivings as he watched her. He had so nearly
- allowed himself to care for her. It was only her lightness and willful
- inconsiderateness that had prevented. But now that he had been prevented,
- her employment of his Christian name struck him as singularly
- inappropriate. It made him suspect a trap. It put him in a mood to
- interpret any tenderness on her part as strategy, as a signal that
- something was wanted.
- </p>
- <p>
- While he eyed her in silence, she drew nearer and leaned across the rail.
- Her shoulder pressed him. He was aware of the tingling sensation of her
- warmth, like a little hand caressing. He caught her fragrance, secret and
- somnolent as the magic of hidden rose-gardens in Damascus.
- </p>
- <p>
- She spoke. Her voice was deep and foreign; it seemed too deep to be pent
- in so slight a body. It was harsh in many of its tones, as though there
- had been times when it had been parched with thirst. It conjured visions
- of caravans creeping across molten deserts. It was hypnotic, barbaric. In
- listening to it, he lost sight of the exquisite sophistication of her
- appearance. His imagination reclothed her, loosening her hair, veiling her
- face, shrouding her in a robe of gold and saffron, slipping sandals on her
- feet and making her ankles tinkle with many bangles.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You don't like me any more. Is it not so?&rdquo; she questioned softly. &ldquo;My
- master is offended.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He shook himself irritably, as though he were flinging off the yoke of her
- attraction. &ldquo;I'm not offended. I was thinking.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;About what?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Prince Rogovich.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And why should my master be thinking of Prince Rogovich?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He leaned still further across the rail in an instinctive effort to avoid
- her. There was seduction in the feigned humility with which she addressed
- him, as though he were a Pasha and she a slave-girl.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Because,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;it would be indecent for me to be thinking of
- anything else. He may be dead. There's no knowing. This time last night I
- could walk and talk and laugh with him. He was full of plans. He was
- something real that I could touch. To-night he has vanished.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Vanished!&rdquo; She repeated the word with a sigh which was almost of
- contentment.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I was wondering,&rdquo; he continued, and then halted. &ldquo;You were wondering?&rdquo;
- she prompted.
- </p>
- <p>
- Drawing himself erect, he faced her. Her bantering tone had roused his
- indignation. Yet, even in his revulsion, he thrilled to the sweetness of
- her luring eyes, glinting at him palely through the shadows.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He was more your friend, much more your friend, than mine,&rdquo; he reproached
- her. &ldquo;There's probably been a tragedy. Yet you don't seem to care. One
- might even believe you were glad.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not glad. Not exactly.&rdquo; She spoke smilingly, averting her eyes. &ldquo;But as
- for caring&mdash;why should I?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He laughed quietly. &ldquo;Yes, why should you? Why should you care what happens
- to any man?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But I hated him,&rdquo; she protested. &ldquo;He had given me cause to hate him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You had a strange way of showing it. You made yourself most amazingly
- charming. He could never have guessed&mdash;no one could ever have guessed
- who watched you with him, that you&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah, no. Only you and I&mdash;we knew. It wasn't our business to let
- everybody guess.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Suddenly she seemed to divine what was troubling him. Darting out her
- hand, she seized his wrist in a grip of steel. That such strength lay
- hidden in so frail a hand was unexpected. Her attitude instantly changed
- to one of coaxing.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You're jealous. Don't be jealous. It had to be, and it's ended. In a
- sense it was for your sake that it had to happen.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Leisurely he freed himself, bending back her fingers and taking pleasure
- in demonstrating that his strength was the greater.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I've no idea what you're talking about,&rdquo; he said coldly. &ldquo;Your feelings
- toward Prince Rogovich are none of my concern. If, by the thing that had
- to happen, you refer to the shameless way in which you made love to him, I
- can not conceive any possible set of circumstances that would make it
- necessary for you to make love for my sake to another man.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He had turned and was sauntering away from her. She went after him
- breathlessly, arresting him once more with the secret strength of her
- slim, gloved hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To make love to him! I didn't mean that.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- What it was that she had meant, she had no time to tell. The siren of the
- <i>Ryndam</i> burst into an earsplitting blast, impatient, repeated, and
- agonizing. At the signal gangplanks were withdrawn from the tug and run
- back into dark holes in the side of the liner. Ropes were cast off and
- coiled. Engines began to quicken and screws to churn. The narrow channel
- which had separated the two vessels commenced to widen. On the <i>Ryndam</i>
- the band struck up. Above its lively clamor the sound of Prince Rogovich's
- name being shouted could still be heard. As Hindwood stared up at the
- floating mammoth, scanning the tiers of faces gaping down, even at tills
- last moment he half expected to see the Prince come rushing out. Instead a
- sight much stranger met his eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- The tug was backing away to get sufficient clearance to turn in the
- direction of land. She had not quite cleared herself, when signs of
- frenzied disturbance were noticeable on the promenade deck. The musicians
- were dropping their instruments and fleeing. Passengers were glancing
- across their shoulders and scattering in all directions. In the vacant
- space which their stampede had created, the infuriated head of the
- Prince's wolfhound reared itself. For a couple of seconds he hung there
- poised, glaring down; then suddenly he seemed to descry the object he was
- searching. Steadying himself, he shot straight out into the gulf of
- blackness. In a white streak, like the finger of conscience pointing, he
- fell, just missing the deck of the tug, where Hindwood and his companion
- were standing. He must have struck the side, for as he reached the water
- he sank.
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0008.jpg" alt="0008m " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0008.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- It was over in less time than it takes to tell, but it had seemed to
- Hindwood that as the hound had leaped, his burning gaze had been fixed on
- Santa Gorlof.
- </p>
- <h3>
- IV
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>he made no sound
- while the danger lasted, but the moment the hurtling, white body had
- fallen short, she rushed to the side, peering down into the yeasty scum of
- churned-up blackness. She was speaking rapidly in a foreign language,
- laughing softly with malicious triumph and shaking a small, clenched fist
- at the night. It was thus that a woman at Jezreel must have looked, when
- she painted her face and tired her hair and leaned out of her palace
- window, jeering at the charioteer who had been sent to slay her. The
- passionate eloquence of Santa's gestures thrilled as much as it shocked
- Hindwood; it made her appearance of lavish modernity seem a disguise. And
- yet he admired her more than ever; it was her courage he admired. Putting
- his arm about her roughly, &ldquo;Enough,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;You're coming inside.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She darted back her head in defiance like a serpent about to strike. Then
- recognition of him dawned in her eyes. She ceased to struggle and relaxed
- against his breast. It was only for a second. Slipping her arm
- submissively into his, &ldquo;Very well. If you say so,&rdquo; she whispered.
- </p>
- <p>
- Guiding her steps across the slippery deck, he pushed open the door of a
- little saloon and entered. The atmosphere was blue with wreaths of smoke
- and heavy with the smell of tobacco. At a table in the center, beneath a
- swinging lamp, the immigration officers were dealing cards and settling
- their debts with pennies. They were too absorbed in their petty gambling
- to notice what was going on about them. In a corner, outside the circle of
- light, he found a trunk and ordered her to sit down. The meekness with
- which she complied flattered his sense of her dependence. He might really
- have been a Pasha and she his slave-girl.
- </p>
- <p>
- He did not understand her. She cozened and baffled him. People and things
- which he did not understand were apt to rouse his resentment, especially
- when they were women. His distrust of the sex was inherent. But as he
- watched this woman drooping in the shadows, his pity came uppermost. She
- was so alone, so unprotected. The hour was late&mdash;long past midnight.
- Her storm of emotion had exhausted her. It was absurd that he should have
- allowed himself to become so jealous. He could never have made her his
- wife. The chances were, she would not have accepted him; she belonged to a
- more modish world. And if she had, she would have driven him from his
- course with her whims and tempests. She would have wrecked his career with
- her greed for wealthy trappings. He and she were utterly different. They
- had nothing in common but their physical attraction.
- </p>
- <p>
- He was seeing things clearly. With each fresh whiff of land, affairs were
- regrouping themselves in their true perspective. He had been the
- shuttlecock of a shipboard flirtation. He had magnified infatuation into a
- grand passion. On many a previous voyage he had been the amused spectator
- of just such profitless expenditures of sentiment. And here he was, a
- victim of the same foolishness! The futility of the ending was the
- adventure's condemnation. Probably she was indulging in similar
- reflections! Within an hour of stepping ashore they would have lost sight
- of each other forever. After so much intimacy and misplaced emotion, they
- would walk out of each other's life without regret. Partly out of
- curiosity, but more out of courtesy, he seated himself beside her for what
- he intended should be their last conversation.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What happens next?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She clutched her furs more closely about her. &ldquo;I don't know.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But you must know,&rdquo; he persisted. &ldquo;What I meant was, where is your
- destination?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;London.&rdquo; Then she added wearily, &ldquo;You could have discovered by examining
- my labels.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her fatigue made him the more determined to be helpful. &ldquo;I didn't ask out
- of impertinence, but because I thought it would be London. Probably
- there'll be no train to London to-night. If the Prince had been with us,
- they'd have put on a special, but you and I are the only passengers, and
- neither of us is sufficiently important. Besides, after this delay, it'll
- be nearly daylight before we clear the Customs.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then I'll have to sleep in Plymouth.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Perhaps you'll be met by friends?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He had no sooner hazarded the suggestion than an obvious conjecture
- flashed through his mind. The marvel was that it had not flashed earlier.
- <i>She might be married.</i> If the conjecture proved correct, it would
- put the final punishing touch of satire to this wild-goose romance.
- </p>
- <p>
- Sweeping him with her pale, derisive eyes, &ldquo;Friends!&rdquo; she murmured. &ldquo;You
- may set your mind at rest. I shall be met by no friends.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- After that there was silence, a silence interrupted at intervals by the
- exclamations of the players as they thumped down their cards and raked in
- their pennies.
- </p>
- <p>
- For relief he reverted to the subject uppermost in both their minds. &ldquo;I
- wonder what became of him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I wonder.&rdquo; Her tone betrayed no interest.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I've been trying to think back,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;trying to remember when last I
- saw him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I believe I last saw him alive just after&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She spun round, as though jerked on wires. &ldquo;Alive! Who suggests that he
- isn't alive?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No one. I'm the first. But if he isn't found by to-morrow, the suggestion
- will be on the lips of all the world.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I doubt it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You do?&rdquo; Hindwood smiled. &ldquo;Men of the Prince's eminence are not allowed
- to vanish without a stir. I'm only hoping that you and I are not involved
- in it. We were the only people with whom he associated on the voyage.
- We're likely to be detained and certain to be questioned. For all we know
- the air's full of Marconi messages about us at this moment.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her face had gone white. &ldquo;About us? What had we to do with it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nothing. But when a tragedy of this sort occurs, we're all liable to be
- suspected.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She gazed at him intently. &ldquo;Then you think there was a tragedy?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I feel sure of it. It's my belief that he either fell or was pushed
- overboard. Somewhere out there in the darkness he's bobbing up and down.
- It's almost as though I could see him. I couldn't feel more sure if&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She shuddered and pressed against him. &ldquo;You're trying to frighten me. I
- won't be frightened. It's all nonsense what you're saying. Why should any
- one want to push him over?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm sorry,&rdquo; he apologized. &ldquo;I didn't mean to frighten you. Perhaps we're
- wasting our breath and already he's been found.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, but why should any one want to push him over?&rdquo; she urged.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I can't answer that. But he wasn't liked. One could be fascinated by his
- personality, but one couldn't like him. Take yourself&mdash;weren't you
- telling me a few minutes ago how intensely you hated him?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She nodded. &ldquo;He was the sort of man every woman had the right to hate.&rdquo;
- After a pause she faced him, completely mistress of herself. &ldquo;When did you
- last see him?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm not certain.&rdquo; Hindwood hesitated. &ldquo;As far as I remember, it was after
- dinner in the lounge. He was giving some instructions about his baggage.
- When did you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;After dinner in the lounge.&rdquo; Her eyes met his and flickered. &ldquo;It must
- have been shortly after eight, for I spent till ten in my stateroom
- finishing my packing.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Before she had made an end, he knew that she had lied. Several times after
- dinner he had walked past her stateroom, hoping for a last encounter. Her
- trunks and cases had been piled in the passage, already locked and
- strapped. He had tried to discover from the stewardess her whereabouts and
- had been told that since dining she had not returned. He had gone on deck
- in search of her, hunting everywhere. It must have been shortly after ten
- that he had come across two shadowy figures in the bows. They were
- whispering together. They might have been embracing. The man's figure had
- been too dim for him to identify, but he could have sworn that the woman's
- was hers.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had reached this point in his piecing together of evidence, when he
- noticed that the card-players were pushing back their chairs.
- </p>
- <p>
- Santa touched his arm gently. &ldquo;I think we're there.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The next moment the soft bump of the tug against the piles confirmed the
- news of their arrival.
- </p>
- <h3>
- V
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>t began to look as
- if all hope of rest would have to be abandoned. At the moment of landing
- the dock had been almost festive. There had been a group of railway
- officials, mildly beaming and fussily important, who had approached
- Hindwood as he stepped ashore, with &ldquo;Prince Rogovich, if we are not
- mistaken?&rdquo; There had been another group of newspaper reporters who, having
- addressed him as &ldquo;Your Highness,&rdquo; and having discovered their error, had
- promptly turned their backs on him.
- </p>
- <p>
- There had been a Major in uniform, with a monocle in his eye, who had
- pranced up, tearing off a salute and announcing, &ldquo;I'm detailed by the
- Foreign Office, your Excellency.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- When they had learned that the Prince had unaccountably avoided Plymouth,
- their atmosphere of geniality faded. The special train, which was to have
- borne him swiftly to London, was promptly canceled. Within ten minutes,
- muttering with disgust, all the world except two porters had dribbled off
- into the night.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the waiting-room where, pending the inspection of the Customs officers,
- Hindwood and Santa were ordered to remain, their reception was no more
- enlivening. At first, when they had entered, a lunch-counter had been
- spread, gleaming with warmth and light. Before mirrors, girl attendants
- had been self-consciously reviewing their appearance with smiles of
- brightest expectation. Their expectancy had been quickly dulled by the
- news of the Prince's non-arrival. They had scarcely spared time to supply
- the wants of the two travelers before they had started to close up. The
- ticket clerk had copied the girls' example. As he had pulled down the
- shutter of his office he had briefly stated, &ldquo;No train till the
- eight-thirty in the morning.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- After that they had been left&mdash;he and this strange woman&mdash;in the
- drafty gloom of the ill-lighted dockstation. The two porters had huddled
- down and snored among the baggage; Santa, closing her eyes, had appeared
- to join them in their slumbers.
- </p>
- <p>
- At last a solitary Customs officer had arrived. He volunteered no
- explanation for his delay. He was evidently newly risen, half awake, and
- in a mood of suppressed irritation. His examination was perfunctory.
- Having completed his barest duty, he likewise made his exit. It was then,
- when all their troubles seemed ended, that the porters had informed them
- that it was necessary for passengers to see their luggage weighed and
- personally to supervise its being loaded in the van for London.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood turned to his companion. &ldquo;You're tired. You'd better be off to
- bed. I'll see this through for you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Half an hour later, when he had complied with all formalities and was free
- to seek a bed himself, he remembered that he hadn't inquired where she
- would be staying and that he didn't know the name of a hotel. Wondering
- where he should sleep and how he could reach her with the receipts for her
- trunks, he wandered out into the yard of the station. The first grayness
- of dawn was spreading. A chill was in the air. Behind the sepulchers of
- muted houses a cock was crowing. He gazed up and down. Near the gate a
- horse-drawn cab was standing. Its lamp burned dimly, on the point of
- flickering out. The driver sat hunched on the box; the horse hung
- dejectedly between the shafts. They both slumbered immovably.
- </p>
- <p>
- Crossing the yard, he shook the man's arm. &ldquo;Hi! Wake up. I want you to
- drive me to a good hotel.&rdquo; The man came to with a jerk. &ldquo;A good 'otel!
- That's wot the lady wanted. You must be the gen'leman I wuz told to wait
- for.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood nodded. &ldquo;So you've driven the lady already! Then you'd better
- take me to wherever you took her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He had opened the door and was in the act of entering when the horse
- started forward, making him lose his balance. As he stretched out his
- hands to steady himself, what was his surprise to discover that the cab
- was already tenanted!
- </p>
- <h3>
- VI
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span> beg your pardon.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was no reply to his apology. He repeated it in a tone of more
- elaborate courtesy, &ldquo;I <i>beg</i> your pardon.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- When he was again greeted with silence, he added: &ldquo;I thought it was empty.
- I didn't do it on purpose. I hope you're not hurt.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- In the mildewed square of blackness, rank with the smell of stables, he
- held his breath, trying to detect whether sleep would account for the
- taciturnity of the other occupant. He could detect nothing; all lesser
- sounds were drowned in the rattle of their progress. Groping, he felt a
- woman's dress. Hollowing his hand to shade the flame, he struck a match.
- For a brief moment his eyes met hers, opened wide and gazing at him.
- Instantly she leaned forward, pursing her lips. The flame went out.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's the meaning of this?&rdquo; He had been startled and spoke with
- sharpness.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There was only one cab, so I&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; She yawned luxuriously. &ldquo;So I
- waited. I didn't want to lose you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was his turn to be silent. After a pause, while she gave him a chance
- to reply, she continued: &ldquo;You'd have been stranded if I'd taken the only
- cab. And then I didn't want to lose you. Not that losing me would have
- meant anything to you&mdash;not now. It wouldn't, would it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was no escape. However she chose to accuse him, he would be forced
- to listen. But it couldn't be far to the hotel. Speaking reasonably, he
- attempted to appease her. &ldquo;I've given you no occasion for supposing&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She laughed softly. &ldquo;Don't you think so? On the boat you were burning up
- for me. You were molten&mdash;incandescent. Now you're dark and dank&mdash;through
- with me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She caught her breath. Though he could not see her, he knew that her
- small, clenched fists were pressed against her mouth. Again she was
- speaking.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why is it? If you'd only give me a reason! While I've been sitting here
- alone, I've kept asking myself: 'Why is it? Am I less beautiful, less
- kind, less good? Does he think that he's discovered something evil about
- me? What have I done that he should have changed so suddenly?'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- With a cry of pain, she turned. &ldquo;What have I done? It's just that you
- should tell me. If you'll take me back, I'll be anything for you. I'll try
- so hard to be more beautiful.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You couldn't be more beautiful.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was said without enthusiasm. The suspicion still possessed him that she
- was play-acting. Last evening she had practiced these same wiles on the
- man who had vanished. Did she intend that he should vanish, too? It was
- horrible that he should ask himself such a question, and yet he could not
- rid his imagination of the snow-white hound, plunging to death and
- pointing at her like the finger of conscience. The happenings of that
- night had been sufficiently dramatic, so why this second rehearsal? He was
- too humble in his self-esteem to believe that his own attractions could
- account for such a storm of passion.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Santa, you're exaggerating.&rdquo; He spoke cautiously. &ldquo;You never belonged to
- me. Until now you've given no hint that you wanted to belong to me. On the
- contrary, you've trifled with me and shown a distinct preference for
- another man. It's preposterous for you to talk about my taking you back
- when I never had you. We've been companions for a handful of hours. We've
- liked being together&mdash;at least, I have. But to create such a scene is
- absurd. Nothing warrants it. In the ordinary course of events, our liking
- might strengthen into love&mdash;there's no telling. But everything'll end
- right here and now if you force matters. What d'you know about me? About
- you I know even less. If any one were to ask me, I couldn't tell him
- whether you were a Pole or a Persian, or whether you were single,
- divorced, or married. I haven't the least idea of your social standing or
- why, while appearing so prosperous, you travel without a maid and by
- yourself. For all I know&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A man needs to know nothing about a woman,&rdquo; she interrupted, &ldquo;except that
- he loves her. She might be a thousand things; if he loved her, none of
- them would count. If she were bad, he would hope to make her good with his
- own goodness. Men always expect women to do that; why shouldn't a woman
- expect it of a man? If you loved me&mdash;and you did love me&mdash;no
- matter how wicked you thought me, even though you believed I'd killed some
- one, you wouldn't care. You'd find some splendid motive and persuade
- yourself that I'd done it for the best.&rdquo; She broke off. Then she added,
- &ldquo;Of course, I haven't.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Haven't!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Haven't killed somebody.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was an extraordinary disclaimer&mdash;as though it were always within
- the bounds of possibility that nice, conventional women might have killed
- somebody. She had said it as casually as another woman might have said, &ldquo;I
- don't powder,&rdquo; or &ldquo;I don't smoke.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He scarcely know whether to be shocked or amused. He was loath to take her
- seriously. Behind the thinning darkness he was trying to discover her
- expression, when his calmness was swept away by a new disturbance. She had
- slipped to her knees in the narrow space. By the dim light that streaked
- the panes he could just make out her figure, bowed against him. The next
- moment her tears were falling, and she was kissing his hands.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You mustn't, Santa.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He tried to withdraw his hands. She clung to them. Failing in that, he
- attempted to raise her face. She kept it obstinately averted. The bumping
- of the cab on the uneven paving jostled her against him; he feared lest
- inadvertently he might bruise her. The situation was grotesque. It stirred
- both his pity and his anger. If this were play-acting, then it was
- laughter and not sobbing that was shaking her. But if her grief were real&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- At that thought the shy, lonely tenderness of the man overwhelmed him.
- Here at last was a fellow-creature who needed his affection. She was so
- fragile, so capricious, so rapturous!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Poor Santa! I didn't mean&mdash;&mdash; Somehow I've hurt you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She didn't speak, but she stayed her sobbing.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Let me see your face.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He stooped lower. The scent of her hair was in his nostrils. His reluctant
- arms went about her. Their embrace strengthened.
- </p>
- <p>
- With a moan she lifted up her face, white and ghostly as the dawn that was
- all about them. In a frenzy of silent longing their lips met.
- </p>
- <h3>
- VII
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">W</span>ith a jerk the cab
- drew up against the pavement. Tossing the reins on the horse's back, the
- driver was lumbering down. That Santa might have time to compose herself,
- Hindwood leaned quickly out, slamming the door behind him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Where've you brought us?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's a good 'otel,&rdquo; the man grumbled, on the defensive, staring at the
- gray cliff of shrouded windows. &ldquo;It was a good 'otel you wanted. And then
- it's h'opposite the London Station where the train starts in the marnin'.
- It'll give the missis ten minutes extry in bed.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The missis!&rdquo; Hindwood frowned. &ldquo;If you refer to the lady who's with me,
- she's not my 'missis.'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The man became sly. Stretching a fat finger along his nose, he edged
- nearer and whispered: &ldquo;Between you and me that's h'alright. Wot wiv
- drivin' so many gentry from the Contingnong me own morals are almost
- foreign.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood turned from him coldly. &ldquo;You're on the wrong tack. And now how
- does one get into this hotel? Will they admit us at such an hour?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;H'at h'all hours. H'absolutely h'at h'all hours.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If that's the case,&rdquo; he thrust his head inside the cab, &ldquo;you stay here,
- Santa. I'll go and find out.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- In a few minutes he was back. &ldquo;They'll take us. Go inside and wait while I
- settle with the driver.&rdquo; When he joined her at the desk, he found it
- necessary to make the same explanation that he had already made to the
- cabman. The night-porter had allotted them one room, taking it for granted
- they were married. He had to be informed that two were required.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D'you want 'em on the same floor and next to each other?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;On the roof if you like,&rdquo; Hindwood answered impatiently, &ldquo;only let us get
- to bed. We're, or rather <i>I'm</i> catching the eight-thirty train to
- London in the morning, and it's nearly daylight now. How about you?&rdquo; He
- turned to Santa. &ldquo;What train are you catching?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The same as you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then we might as well breakfast together?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She nodded.
- </p>
- <p>
- Turning again to the night-porter, he said, &ldquo;Put us both down for a call
- at seven.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The man was leading the way upstairs. As they followed, Santa whispered,
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You see, you were mistaken.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You threatened that we'd be detained and questioned. You frightened me
- terribly. We weren't.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No. We weren't.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She slipped her arm through his companionably. &ldquo;I feel so relieved and
- happy. I don't believe there was a tragedy. The Prince changed his mind at
- the last moment; he's landing at Boulogne or Rotterdam. It may even have
- been a strategy to mislead some enemy who was waiting for him here in
- Plymouth.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Perhaps. I never thought of that.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Their rooms were on different floors. The porter showed the way to hers
- first. Now that they had to separate, Hindwood would have given much for a
- private word with her. Discreetly, outside her door, in the presence of
- the night-porter, they parted.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then we meet at breakfast,&rdquo; he reminded her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;At breakfast,&rdquo; she assented. &ldquo;And let's hope that we don't oversleep
- ourselves.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- VIII
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>t seemed to him
- that his head had just touched the pillow when he was awakened by his door
- being pounded. Sitting up in bed, he consulted his watch. Seven exactly!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm awake,&rdquo; he shouted. With that he jumped out of bod to prevent himself
- from drowsing.
- </p>
- <p>
- His first thought was of her; again he was going to meet her. The prospect
- filled him with excitement, but not with gladness. His dreams had been
- troubled by her; there had been no moment since he had closed his eyes
- that he had been without her. The wildness of that kiss, bestowed in the
- dark by a woman humbling herself, had set his blood on fire. It was not
- right that a man should be kissed like that, and yet he longed to
- reexperience the sensation.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Any woman could have done it,&rdquo; he argued. &ldquo;This isn't love; it's nothing
- peculiar to Santa. Any reasonably beautiful woman could have done it by
- acting the way she acted. I had consoled myself that I was immune from
- women. I was starving, and I didn't know it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- His sane mind warned him that it would be wise to avoid further
- encounters. She was too alluring for him to withstand. There were too many
- things about her that were unaccountable. There was her frenzied display
- of infatuation for both himself and the Prince, all within the space of
- twelve hours.
- </p>
- <p>
- He was brushing his hair and viewing his reflection in the shabby mirror,
- when he reached this point. He stopped brushing and regarded his
- reflection intently. What could any woman discover in those features to go
- mad over? It was a hard face, cleanshaven, bony, and powerful, roughened
- by the wind and tanned by the sun. It was the mask of an ascetic, which
- concealed rather than revealed the emotions. And yet once it had been
- sensitive; you could trace that in the kindly blueness of the eyes and the
- faint tenderness of the full-lipped mouth. The hair was a rusty brown,
- growing thin about the temples; the nose was pinched at the nostrils with
- long-endured suffering&mdash;the brow furrowed. He smiled in amused
- disapproval and went on with his brushing. Not the face of an Apollo!
- Nothing to rave about!
- </p>
- <p>
- And yet, despite his looks, here was at least one woman who, for whatever
- reason, was desperate to marry him. On the drive through the dawn from the
- dock to the hotel she had left no doubt of her intentions. It inflamed his
- curiosity. Though he was nearing forty, with the exception of that one
- disastrous affair, women were still for him an untried adventure. But in
- the case of Santa, to indulge his curiosity further might lead to
- penalties. She was liable to repeat last night's performance; the journey
- to London would probably provide her with a fitting opportunity. If it
- did, could he muster the cruelty to refuse her?
- </p>
- <p>
- On one point his mind was made up: he would not marry her. He had no time
- to waste on marriage. With her it would be folly. Moreover, while her
- breaking down of reticences had spurred his eagerness, it had forfeited
- his respect. It had robbed him of his prerogative of conquest. It had
- changed him from the hunter into the hunted. He was all but trapped.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Trapped!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He was fastening his bag. He pressed the catch into the lock and stood up.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Trapped! Not yet. Not exactly.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Immediately his mind began to race, devising plans for eluding capture. He
- didn't need to keep his breakfast appointment with her. He could miss the
- eight-thirty and travel to London later. He could slip out unnoticed and
- take up his abode in another hotel. Once he had lost her, he would have
- put himself beyond temptation. She would have no clew to his whereabouts,
- nor he to hers.
- </p>
- <p>
- As he passed slowly down the stairs, he was still undecided as to how he
- should act. On arriving in the hall, he loitered by the hotel desk, half
- determined to call for his reckoning and make a bolt for it. While he
- dallied, the yearning to see her for a last time swam uppermost. After
- all, he owed something to the only woman who had paid him the compliment
- of loving him. He would not speak to her, would not let her know that he
- was there. He would peep into the room unseen and remember her always as
- waiting for him.
- </p>
- <p>
- Bag in hand, he strode along the passage to the coffee-room, where
- breakfast was being served. The baize doors were a-swing with scurrying
- waiters. Stooping, he peered through the panes. Pushing the doors slightly
- open, he gazed more steadily. The room was littered with ungroomed people,
- their heads bowed, their elbows flapping, like a flock of city sparrows
- snatching crumbs from beneath the hoofs of passing traffic. Nowhere could
- he espy her, his rarer bird of the dainty plumage.
- </p>
- <p>
- He grew ashamed of his furtiveness. Why should he be afraid of her? She
- shouldn't be disappointed. She should find him gallantly expecting her.
- Resigning his bag to a solicitous bell-boy, he drew himself up to his lean
- western height and entered.
- </p>
- <h3>
- IX
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>eated at a table,
- lie had watched the swing-doors for a full half-hour. He had finished his
- breakfast. If he were to catch the eight-thirty, it was time for him to be
- moving. He began to flirt with the idea of postponing his journey; it was
- evident she had overslept herself.
- </p>
- <p>
- At the desk, while he settled his account, he had it on the tip of his
- tongue to inquire for her, but he was daunted by the presence of the
- night-porter. The man kept eyeing him with a knowing grin, as though he
- were expecting just such a question.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I won't gratify him,&rdquo; Hindwood thought. &ldquo;The fellow knows too much. It's
- fate, if I miss her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He crossed the road to the station. Having secured a seat in a first-class
- smoker, he roamed up and down the platform. Every few minutes he consulted
- his watch as the hands circled nearer to the half-hour. He bought papers
- at the news-stand and returned to buy more papers; from there, while not
- seeming to do so, he could obtain a clear view of the hotel. And still
- there was no sign of her.
- </p>
- <p>
- When it was almost too late, he threw caution to the winds. At a gait
- between a run and a walk, he recrossed the road and dashed up the hotel
- steps. As he confronted the clerk behind the desk, he was a little
- breathless; he was also aware that the night-porter's grin had widened.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There's a lady staying here. She was to have traveled with me to London.
- I'm afraid she's not been wakened.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A lady!&rdquo; The clerk looked up with the bored expression of one who was
- impervious to romance. &ldquo;A lady! Oh, yes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She's a passenger from the <i>Ryndam</i>,&rdquo; he continued. &ldquo;Her name's Miss
- Gorlof. Send some one to her room to find out at once&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The night-porter interrupted. Addressing the clerk, he said: &ldquo;The
- gentleman means the foreign-looking lady wot I told you about&mdash;the
- one in all the furs.&rdquo; Then to Hindwood, &ldquo;She was called for at six this
- mornin'. A gentleman in goggles, who couldn't speak no English, arrived in
- a tourin' car and drove off with 'er.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Drove off with her. But&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Realizing that too much emotion would make him appear ridiculous, he
- steadied his voice and asked casually, &ldquo;I suppose she left a note for me?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The clerk glanced across his shoulder at the rack. &ldquo;Your name's Mr.
- Hindwood, isn't it?&rdquo; He raised his hand to a pigeonhole lettered &ldquo;H&rdquo;. &ldquo;You
- can see for yourself, sir. There's nothing in it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then perhaps it was a verbal message. She would be certain to leave me
- her address.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The clerk turned to the night-porter. &ldquo;Did she?&rdquo; The night-porter beamed
- with satisfaction. &ldquo;She did not.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He had achieved his dramatic effect.
- </p>
- <h3>
- X
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">H</span>e was the last
- passenger to squeeze through the barrier. As he scrambled into his
- carriage, the train was on the point of moving. Spreading one of his many
- papers on his knees, he lit a cigarette. He believed he was behaving as
- though nothing had happened. &ldquo;That I can take it like this proves that she
- was nothing to me,&rdquo; he assured himself.
- </p>
- <p>
- Ten minutes later he discovered that he had not read a line and that the
- cigarette had gone out.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I suppose I'm a bit upset,&rdquo; he admitted, &ldquo;though goodness knows why I
- should be. The matter's ended exactly as I wanted.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- But had it? What had he wanted? Does a man ever know what he wants where a
- woman is concerned? He desires most the thing which he most dreads. During
- the voyage he had wanted to win her from Prince Rogovich. On the tug he
- had wanted to forget her. In the cab he had wanted to go on kissing her
- forever. That morning he had wanted to save his freedom. On the station,
- like a maddened schoolboy, his terror had been lest he might lose her.
- </p>
- <p>
- As a result he had lost her. Somewhere through the sunny lanes of Devon
- she was speeding with the gentleman who &ldquo;couldn't speak no English&rdquo; and
- wore goggles. In which direction and for what purpose he could not guess.
- </p>
- <p>
- He smiled bitterly. It was a situation which called for mirth. He had
- accused her of having trapped him at a time when she herself had been
- escaping from him. He had complained that her affection was too ardently
- obvious at a moment when she was proving herself most coldly elusive.
- While he had been resenting the way in which he was being hunted, she had
- already abandoned him to hunt to his heart's content.
- </p>
- <p>
- His reflections were broken in upon by a weakeyed old clergyman seated
- opposite to him in the far corner.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Excuse me, but I see by your labels that you've just landed. May I ask
- whether your vessel was the <i>Ryndam</i>?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It was.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then there's an item in the local paper which should interest you. It has
- to do with Prince Rogovich, the great Polish patriot. He was your fellow
- passenger, if I'm not mistaken.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood was disinclined for conversation. He made his tone brusk that he
- might discourage further questions. &ldquo;You're not mistaken, and I guess I
- know what you're going to tell me: that after all the preparations made
- for his reception, the Prince didn't land at Plymouth but, without
- notifying any one, traveled on either to Boulogne or Rotterdam.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But that wasn't what I was going to tell you,&rdquo; the old gentleman
- continued in his benevolent pulpit manner. &ldquo;Oh, no, I was going to tell
- you something quite different. After the <i>Ryndam</i> left Plymouth, the
- Captain had her searched from stem to stern. Not a trace of the Prince
- could be found.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Extraordinary! I suppose the news was received by wireless. Does the
- paper suggest an explanation?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;None whatsoever. I thought you'd be interested. Perhaps you'd like to
- read for yourself.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The paper contained the bare fact as the clergyman had stated it. &ldquo;A
- complete search was made. All his personal belongings were found intact,
- but of the Prince himself not a trace.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood closed his eyes and pretended to sleep that he might protect
- himself from further intrusions. He wanted to argue his way through this
- problem and to acquit Santa of any share in what had happened. And yet, if
- an investigation were held and he himself had to tell all he knew, things
- would look black for her. Was that why&mdash;&mdash;?
- </p>
- <p>
- He tried to crush the ugly thought, but it clamored to be expressed. Was
- that why she had made love to him&mdash;that her kiss might seal his lips
- with silence?
- </p>
- <p>
- The train was slowing down. He opened his eyes. In the cheerfulness of
- sunshine life took on a more normal aspect. Towering above crowded roofs
- of houses, a tall cathedral pricked the blueness of the sky.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Where are we?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The clergyman was collecting his bundles. &ldquo;Exeter&mdash;where I alight.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- As soon as he had the carriage to himself, before any one could enter, he
- reached up to the rack and quickly removed the <i>Ryndam</i> labels from
- his bag. Having done that, he stepped to the platform and went in search
- of papers. The torn labels were still in his hand. Surreptitiously he
- dropped them between the train and the platform, some distance lower down
- than his own carriage. He realized the stealth he had employed only when
- Exeter was left behind.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ridiculous!&rdquo; he shrugged his shoulders. &ldquo;It's getting on my nerves.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- In his most recently acquired batch of papers he found no reference to the
- topic which absorbed him. At the time when the London press had been
- published, the disappearance of the Prince had not been known to the
- world.
- </p>
- <p>
- Throughout the journey, at every fresh stopping-place, he repeated the
- performance, dashing down platforms in quest of newsboys and purchasing
- copies of every journal on sale. He caught himself continually eyeing his
- bag to make sure that he really had removed all labels. He began to feel
- as if he himself were the criminal. In his intentions he was already an
- accessory after the fact. Whether Santa was innocent or guilty, at all
- costs he had determined to shield her.
- </p>
- <p>
- Through the late summer afternoon, as he drew nearer to London, his
- suspense began to die. He was getting the later editions now; none of them
- so much as mentioned the affair. In Plymouth and Bristol it had probably
- been of local importance. He took courage to smile. What a coward dread
- can make of an honest man!
- </p>
- <p>
- Afternoon was fading into the gold of evening when they steamed into
- Paddington. By making haste he could just reach the American Embassy
- before closing time. It was likely that several communications had been
- addressed to him there. He had cabled ahead to the Ritz for a reservation.
- It wouldn't take him far out of his direction to call at the Embassy on
- the way to his hotel.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the stir and bustle of familiar London, the nightmare of the voyage
- grew vague. He stepped from the carriage like a man awaking. It thrilled
- him with happy surprise to discover the old gray city, plumed with smoke
- and smiling, waiting unchanged beneath his feet to welcome him. The very
- smell of mingled gasoline and horses from the cab-ranks was reassuring.
- Every sight that his eyes encountered made him feel respectable.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Any luggage, sir?&rdquo; It was a porter accosting him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes. Two trunks. At least, I guess they're on this train.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Which van, sir?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The one from Plymouth.&rdquo; Then, with conscious bravado, he added: &ldquo;I'm from
- the <i>Ryndam</i>. You'll recognize them by the Holland-American tags.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The porter had gone to secure a barrow. While Hindwood waited, gazing
- about him idly, his eyes were startled by a news-placard bearing the
- following legend:
- </p>
- <h3>
- DISAPPEARANCE OF A PRINCE
- </h3>
- <h3>
- FOUL PLAY SUSPECTED
- </h3>
- <p>
- He swayed, as though he had been struck by a bullet. He glanced round
- feverishly, fearing lest he might espy another placard stating, &ldquo;Santa
- Gorlof Arrested.&rdquo; But no&mdash;for the moment she was safe. He thanked God
- for the touring-car and the forethought of the foreign gentleman who could
- speak no English.
- </p>
- <p>
- Quickly he began to readjust his plans. If he went to claim his trunks,
- there was no telling by whom he might be met&mdash;newspaper men,
- detectives, officials from the Foreign Office. Moreover, Santa's trunks
- were in the van. When he had explained himself, he might be called upon to
- account for her absence. There was only one thing for him to do: for her
- sake he must get out of England. If he delayed, he might be prevented. It
- would be unwise for him to go to the Ritz; he must spend the night at some
- obscure hotel. The only place to which he might be traced was the Embassy;
- but he would have to risk that&mdash;it was of the utmost importance that
- he should pick up his communications.
- </p>
- <p>
- He was on the point of making good his escape, when the porter trundled up
- with his barrow.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hi, mister! Where are you goin'? I'll be needin' you to identify 'em.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I know you will.&rdquo; Hindwood turned on him a face which was flustered. &ldquo;But
- I've just remembered I have an engagement. I'll send for them later. It'll
- make no difference to you; here's what I should have paid you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The man, having inspected it carefully, pocketed the half-crown. &ldquo;It won't
- take long,&rdquo; he suggested; &ldquo;me and the barrow's ready. And it won't cost
- you nothink, seein' as how you've paid me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No time.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Without more ado, he made a dash for the nearest taxi. &ldquo;As fast as you
- like,&rdquo; he told the driver; &ldquo;the faster, the bigger your fare.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He fled out of the station at a forbidden rate, but after half a mile the
- taxi halted against the curb. Lowering the window, he looked out.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's the matter? Something wrong with your engine?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We ain't been follered. You can calm down,&rdquo; the driver assured him
- soothingly. &ldquo;Wot's wrong is that you ain't told me no address.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Stupid of me! The American Embassy.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At the Embassy, having explained his errand, he was requested to wait.
- Then, rather to his surprise, instead of having his letters handed to him,
- he was shown into a handsome room where, at the far end, a gray-haired man
- was seated, sorting papers behind a large mahogany table.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood crossed the room and held out his hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm Philip Hindwood, the railroad expert. I guess you've heard of me. I
- called in case there was some mail for me. I had no intention of troubling
- you personally.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm glad you've come,&rdquo; said the gray-haired man gravely. &ldquo;If you hadn't
- troubled me, I should have had to trouble you. There have been inquiries
- for you. They have to do with a woman who goes by the name of Santa
- Gorlof. The police thought you might know something about her. It seems
- she's wanted.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER THE SECOND&mdash;THE RETURN OF SANTA GORLOF
- </h2>
- <h3>
- I
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>O Santa was
- &ldquo;wanted!&rdquo; Why she was wanted Hindwood did not dare to question. And the
- police thought he could tell them something! He could, but it would be
- something to put them off her track. After kissing a woman, it wasn't
- likely he'd betray her. She might have committed every crime on the
- calendar; it would make no difference. He had learned his code of honor on
- the outskirts of civilization, where law is more often defied than obeyed.
- By his standards of chivalry, after what had passed between them, he had
- no option but to play the game by her. What did they think he knew? Why
- should they think he knew anything?
- </p>
- <p>
- He masked his anxiety with seeming unconcern. Without his assistance, they
- could make little headway. He must let fall no hint that would suggest a
- sentimental interest in her fortunes. He would be spied on&mdash;probably
- he had been spied on already. For all he knew, the clergyman in the train,
- the porter at Paddington, the taxi-driver who had assured him that he
- wasn't followed, were detectives. Henceforward he must live his life
- normally and in public, doing everything to disarm suspicion. Any
- divergence from his usual habits, such as staying in obscure quarters or
- canceling engagements that he might escape to the Continent, would create
- the impression that he was possessed of guilty knowledge. If he had to
- speak of her, he must refer to her as a charming acquaintance and profess
- horror that such a charge should have been brought against her.
- </p>
- <p>
- Following this line, he left the Embassy with the promise that he would
- consult with the police at their earliest convenience. From there he drove
- to the Ritz, adhering to arrangements made before this sinister thing had
- happened. To avoid being waylaid, he went straight to his rooms, having
- ordered his trunks to be fetched from the station and his dinner to be
- served in his apartment.
- </p>
- <p>
- The suite allotted him was one which he had occupied on several previous
- occasions. It soothed his ruffled pride to discover that his preferences
- had been remembered. From the front windows he could gaze down Piccadilly;
- from the side he could watch the green park, a lake of jade, imprisoned
- between walls of granite. In the panes facing westward a fairy city hung
- poised, tipped with flame and ensanguined by the sunset.
- </p>
- <p>
- Leisurely he set to work to bathe and shave, stretching out the ritual and
- reveling in the recovery of his self-respect. Slowly the sunset faded.
- Before he had made an end, the golden September dusk was drifting down. In
- the twilight he stretched himself on the bed, waiting for his trunks with
- his wardrobe to arrive. He felt that he could face the police with much
- more calmness if he was clad in the respectability of evening dress.
- </p>
- <p>
- He must have dozed, for the room was completely dark when he was brought
- to his feet by the sharp ringing of the telephone. As he fumbled for the
- receiver, he thought, &ldquo;Well, I've a good reason for not seeing them.
- Pajamas aren't dignified.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Aloud he said: &ldquo;Yes. Quite correct&mdash;Mr. Hind-wood. Yes, the Mr.
- Hindwood who's just landed from the <i>Ryndam</i>. You traced me by my
- trunks! You were expecting I'd claim them in person! The man from the Ritz
- is there! That's all right. Thank you for telling me. What was my reason?&mdash;Certainly
- not. I was avoiding no one. What did you say you were?&mdash;A
- newspaper-man!&mdash;I guess not. I've nothing to tell&mdash;no. That's
- final.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He had scarcely hung up when the bell commenced ringing again. The next
- half-hour was spent in refusing to be interviewed by invisible persons. It
- seemed as though every journalist in London were waiting in queue to get
- on to him. Some were suave, some bullying; all were persistent. Didn't he
- know that he owed it to the public to say something? If a list of
- questions was submitted to him, would he make a written statement?
- </p>
- <p>
- To cut the clamor short, he instructed the hotel operator to allow no one
- to speak with him who would not state his business. For the rest of the
- evening he was &ldquo;out&rdquo; to any one who had to do with the press. After that
- the telephone grew quiet.
- </p>
- <p>
- He switched on the lights. As he did so, he noticed that he was trembling
- with excitement. He was furious. This assault had made him aware of the
- unseen wall of hostility by which he and Santa were surrounded. She hadn't
- a chance; the whole of organized society was against her. The odds were
- brutally unfair. Nothing that she had done could warrant such
- unsportsmanly cruelty. So far it had not been proved that she had done
- anything, yet every one was willing to prejudge her. The pursuit was
- cowardly. Whether he loved her did not matter. It was a problem in
- knight-errantry: to protect her he was willing to risk all that he was and
- had.
- </p>
- <p>
- The arrival of his trunks gave him something else to think about. When he
- was dressed, he felt ready for every emergency. After all, he was not the
- criminal.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had his dinner spread against a window from which he could watch the
- arc-lights of Piccadilly strung across the night like a rope of pearls. He
- tried to be persuaded that he was enjoying himself. If the police didn't
- call on him within the hour, he would saunter out to a music-hall and rub
- shoulders with the crowd.
- </p>
- <p>
- But would he? To what purpose? He would have to go alone, as he always
- went. It would be different if she were with him. The last nine days had
- spoiled him for loneliness; they had taught him the romance of a woman's
- friendship. And yet, not friendship&mdash;she had asked for his affection.
- All his life he had craved to give his love to some woman. Until he had
- met Santa, his craving had been denied. No woman had seemed to care.
- Because of that, in spite of success, he had reckoned himself a failure.
- He had attained everything&mdash;power, position, wealth&mdash;everything
- except his desire. There had been moments on the voyage when it had seemed
- to him that his goal was in sight.
- </p>
- <p>
- If she were to tap on his door, how would he greet her? If she did, it
- would be like her; she could always be counted on to do the unexpected. He
- told himself that he would ask her no questions. He would not upbraid her.
- He would comfort her in the way that she understood best. When the police
- came to interrogate him, he would place his arm about her and answer:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Gentlemen, if it is Santa Gorlof you are seeking, she is here. I have
- asked her to be my wife.&rdquo; The scene as he conjured it was worthy of Dumas;
- he was thrilled by the gallantry of his imagination. His ponderings were
- cut short by a sharp rap. He sprang to his feet; it almost seemed that his
- dream was to be realized. The rap was repeated. Outside the door a page
- was standing.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There's a gentleman downstairs. He won't give his name. He says you left
- word, sir, at the American Embassy, that you would be willing to see him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Show him up.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- II
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">L</span>eaving the door
- ajar, he drew a chair to his desk and commenced rummaging through a pile
- of documents. He planned to create the impression that he regarded this
- visit as of small importance. He was anxious, even at the risk of
- appearing vulgar, to be discovered in the rôle of an American money-lord,
- every second of whose time represented dollars&mdash;the kind of man who
- was too influential to be bulldozed by the police methods of a country
- whose citizenship he did not share. He urged himself into a mood of
- contempt by recalling the beefy caricatures which pass currency in English
- fiction for veracious portraits of Scotland Yard detectives. This fellow
- would look like a constable off duty. When he sat down, he would bulge at
- the neck and mop his forehead with a multicolored handkerchief. He would
- be awed by elegance into sulky stupidity&mdash;but would become pompously
- affable when offered a cigar.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;May I enter?&rdquo; The door creaked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Surely. Come in. But you must excuse me for a moment.&rdquo; Hindwood spoke
- without turning. He pretended to be sorting the last of his documents. The
- cultured tone of the voice had surprised him. Perhaps, after all, his
- guest might not be a detective.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sorry to keep you. Time's valuable. My stay in England is short. There,
- that's finished. What can I do for you?&rdquo; He pushed back his chair and rose
- to face his guest.
- </p>
- <p>
- If the man's intonation had surprised him, his appearance amazed him still
- more. He could have passed for the colonel of a crack cavalry regiment.
- His bearing was erect and dapper. His dark lounge suit, with the light
- stripes running through it, was so smartly tailored that one was apt to
- suspect that he was corseted. His hair was white, his cheeks tanned, his
- manner cheerful and commanding. He was of less than medium height. With
- his bristling mustache and pointed imperial he bore a distinct resemblance
- to Lord Roberts of Kandahar.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood held out his hand with undisguised relief. &ldquo;Won't you sit down,
- sir? I'm afraid I must have seemed discourteous. The truth is, I was
- expecting some one quite different. The boy didn't announce your name or
- business.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The stranger accepted his hand with an ironic smile. He did not sit down.
- Instead he asked a question. &ldquo;Wouldn't it be wise to shut the door?&rdquo;
- Without waiting for permission, he went to the door and closed it. Before
- he closed it, he glanced out into the passage. Having regained the middle
- of the room, he gazed searchingly about him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No one here who can listen?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Again taking matters into his own hands, he made a swift and thorough
- investigation, peering into the bathroom, stabbing draperies with his cane
- as with a sword, feeling behind clothes in cupboards. He left no corner
- uninspected in which an eavesdropper might be secreted. Last of all he
- approached the window near which Hindwood had dined. For a few seconds he
- stood there, staring down into the well of blackness and the mysterious
- fairyland of shifting lights. Laying aside his hat and gloves, but still
- retaining his cane, he remarked:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Beautiful! Very beautiful! Exquisite with the witchery of a woman's face,
- which masks a hidden wickedness!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood had been regarding him in silence. &ldquo;I have yet to learn your name
- and business,&rdquo; he reminded him.
- </p>
- <p>
- The stranger chuckled. &ldquo;My name! I have almost forgotten it. I assume so
- many. As for my business, I'm a secret service agent in the employ of the
- British Government.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Have you credentials?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A letter.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He produced from his breast pocket an envelope, containing this message,
- typed on American Embassy notepaper, &ldquo;This will serve to introduce the
- gentleman who is anxious to consult you on the subject of which we spoke
- this afternoon.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Satisfactory?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Quite. Perhaps now you'll be seated. If you smoke, I can recommend these
- cigars.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Again the stranger, with unruffled urbanity, betrayed his alert
- independence. &ldquo;If you have no objection, I prefer my own.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;As you like.&rdquo; Hindwood was determined to conduct the interview along the
- lines of social politeness. Selecting a cigar himself, he notched the end.
- &ldquo;I'm entirely at your disposal. There's little I can tell. I suppose the
- subject on which you're anxious to consult me is what happened on the <i>Ryndam</i>?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes and no.&rdquo; The stranger puffed leisurely for a few moments. &ldquo;The answer
- is yes, if by 'what happened on the <i>Ryndam</i> you mean Santa Gorlof.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- III
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>anta Gorlof?&rdquo;
- Hindwood feigned surprise. &ldquo;A very charming lady!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The shrewd face puckered in a smile. The gray eyes grew piercing beneath
- the beetling, white brows. &ldquo;So I've been given to understand. She has a
- way with the men, has our Santa. Even Prince Rogovich, old hand that he
- was, fell for her. I believe that's your expressive phrase in America. He
- fell for her in every sense, especially when she pushed him overboard.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood frowned. He realized that a cat-and-mouse game had commenced, in
- which he had been allotted the rôle of mouse. He resented the levity with
- which Santa's name had been mentioned. If the man was in earnest, the
- matter was too terrible for jest. Though he had harbored the same
- suspicion, to hear it stated as a fact appalled him. The charge sounded
- dastardly, spoken in that pleasant voice by this courtly English gentleman
- who was old enough to be her father.
- </p>
- <p>
- With an effort he kept command of his composure. &ldquo;Of course you're
- joking?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not in the least.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then, in plain American, you're accusing a beautiful and fascinating
- woman of murder.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Of what else?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood shrugged his shoulders. &ldquo;Pardon my density. I didn't catch on. It
- was your appearance misled me; you look so much a gentleman.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I flatter myself that there are occasions when I am.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then I guess we'll have to reckon this occasion an exception. I might
- remind you that it's a woman you're accusing and that the penalty for
- murder is death. Scarcely a subject to make merry over with a play upon
- words!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And you're reminding me,&rdquo; the stranger added gently, &ldquo;that, if she's a
- woman, you and I are men. You're trying to tell me that, if my supposition
- is correct, then all that ravishing caprice that we know as Santa Gorlof
- will have to be ruthlessly blotted out. Possibly you're picturing, as so
- many of her victims have pictured before you, the wealth of happiness that
- might be yours if you could win her for yourself.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood's hand trembled as he flicked his ash. &ldquo;My dear sir,&rdquo; he drawled,
- &ldquo;I'm not twenty. I'm a hard-bitten man of the world. You credit me with
- too much romance. In your profession you're trained to spin theories.
- Please leave me out; stick to your assertion. You come to me, accusing a
- woman of my acquaintance&mdash;I can hardly call her a friend&mdash;of
- having committed murder. The charge sounds preposterous. Why you should
- come to me at all I can not guess. Before we go further, I have a right to
- ask a question: is this mere conjecture or can you prove it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I can prove it.&rdquo; The stranger paused, studying the despair his words had
- caused. &ldquo;I can prove it.&rdquo; Then he added, &ldquo;If you'll help.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If I'll perjure myself.&rdquo; Scowling, Hindwood leaped to his feet. &ldquo;That was
- what you meant. At your time of life I should have thought you could have
- found a less infamous way of gaining your livelihood. There's your hat,
- and there's the door.&rdquo; The mocking old gentleman went through the dumb
- show of clapping his applause. He settled himself more deeply in his
- chair. When he spoke, it was with the lazy good-humor of a man at his
- club. &ldquo;You fill me with admiration. Your last attitude was superb. I have
- only one criticism to offer of your play-acting; by letting your cigar go
- out, you betrayed the perturbation you were trying to disguise. It's been
- dead three minutes.&rdquo; He raised his hand, delaying interruption. &ldquo;Don't be
- angry. I'm not doubting your momentary sincerity. But think back and then
- own that you also have suspected that she's guilty.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Never.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Humph! Your memory must be faulty. Allow me to prompt you with a few
- facts.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Then and there, without hesitation or boasting, he detailed to Hindwood
- all his actions, from his departure from the <i>Ryndam</i> to the moment
- when he had arrived at the Embassy. Hindwood listened to the narration
- dumfounded.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;So you see,&rdquo; he concluded, &ldquo;if I can tell you so much as this, there is
- probably much more that I could tell. You've been infatuated by a
- she-wolf. What she did to Prince Rogovich, she has done to at least a
- dozen of her admirers. She would have done the same to you. Because there
- have been moments when you thought you loved her, you're unwilling to hand
- her over to justice. You're even willing to risk your own good name in her
- defense. It's sports-manly of you, but she's undeserving of your loyalty.
- When you know the truth, you'll thank your lucky stars that I came
- to-night.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- IV
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">H</span>indwood's face had
- gone ashen&mdash;not through fear for his own safety, but for hers. He was
- determined not to believe a word of what he had heard, and yet he was
- curious to learn. There was such an air of complete conviction about the
- stranger; it was impossible to doubt the integrity of his intentions. What
- he hoped was to discover some flaw in his logic. Sinking back into his
- chair, he stared in silence at the man who believed he knew everything.
- </p>
- <p>
- Remembering that his cigar had gone out, he commenced searching through
- his pockets for a match.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They're at your elbow,&rdquo; the stranger informed him. &ldquo;No, not there. On the
- table. I've upset you more than I intended.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Again they lapsed into silence.
- </p>
- <p>
- At last Hindwood said: &ldquo;I owe you an apology. I've been insulting, but the
- blame is partly yours. You didn't explain yourself; you withheld your
- identity. I was expecting a kind of policeman. But I think you understand.
- Anyhow, I regret my rudeness. Now tell me, who are you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm Major Cleasby, formerly of the Indian Army. My main hobby is studying
- the Asiatic.&rdquo; Hindwood looked up sharply. He remembered the impression
- Santa had made on him, that if her eyes had been darker, she could have
- passed for a Hindoo princess.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't see what studying the Asiatic has to do with the disappearance of
- Prince Rogovich,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;If we're going to arrive anywhere, what we
- need is frankness. I think you ought to understand my side of the affair.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Major nodded.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then, to start with, I'm unmarried&mdash;not that I'm a woman-hater, but
- my life has been too packed with important undertakings to leave me much
- time to spare on women. I've been a kind of express, stopping only at
- cities and rushing by all the villages. On the <i>Ryndam</i> I was forced
- to come to rest; it so happened that Santa Gorlof was the village at which
- I halted. The <i>Ryndam</i>, as you know, isn't one of these floating
- palaces; she doesn't attract the flashy type of traveler. The company on
- this last voyage was dull&mdash;dull to the point of tears. The Prince and
- Santa Gorlof were the two exceptions. I got to know her first and the
- Prince later. It was I who introduced her to him. We were each of us a bit
- stand-offish at first; we drifted together against our wills, in an
- attempt to escape from boredom. Then we began to expect each other, till
- finally&mdash;We were two men and a woman, with nothing to distract us;
- it's an old story&mdash;the usual thing happened. I suppose you'd call it
- a three-cornered flirtation in which the Prince and I were rivals.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;At first Santa was strictly impartial; toward the end it was the Prince
- she favored. I'm afraid I got huffy, which was distinctly childish, for
- none of us was serious. We were two men and a beautiful woman at loose
- ends, rather dangerously amusing ourselves. At Plymouth, if things had
- terminated normally, we should have come to our senses and gone our
- separate ways. At most we should have said good-by on reaching London. In
- none of our dealings had there been the least hint of anything serious&mdash;nothing
- that would suggest a love-affair. Speaking for myself, my interest in
- Santa had been on the wane for several days before we landed. I should
- have parted with her on the dock without compunction, if this
- extraordinary disappearance hadn't occurred. It was that that again drew
- us together. Neither of us was willing to believe the worst; we both tried
- to persuade ourselves that he'd changed his plans at the last moment. At
- the same time we were both a little anxious lest we might be bothered with
- questions and detained. Probably it was to avoid any such annoyance that
- she dodged her breakfast engagement with me and escaped so early this
- morning.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Major thrust himself forward, resting his chin on the handle of his
- cane. &ldquo;That wasn't her reason.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You're presuming her guilt. Why wasn't it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You forget the foreigner who wore goggles and pretended he couldn't speak
- English. She couldn't possibly have sent him word. The necessity for her
- escape must have been foreseen and the means prearranged.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood puzzled to find some more innocent explanation. &ldquo;He might have
- been her husband.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He wasn't.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You speak as though you knew everything.&rdquo; Then, with a catch in his
- breath, &ldquo;She isn't arrested?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If she were, I shouldn't tell you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then what makes you so positive that he wasn't her husband?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Major drew himself erect, smiling palely. &ldquo;Because <i>I</i> am her
- husband.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- V
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">H</span>indwood rose and
- moved over to the window. He felt mentally stifled. He leaned out, gazing
- down into the pool of blackness, along whose floor, like the
- phosphorescence of fishes, lights drifted and darted. The sight of so much
- coolness quieted him. When he turned, the Major had not moved a muscle; he
- was sitting as he had left him, erect and palely smiling.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You'll not be surprised when I tell you, Major Cleasby, that your last
- piece of information completely overwhelms me. You come to me in the rôle
- of a secret service agent, and now you claim to be her husband.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm both.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you mean me to understand that you're accumulating the evidence that
- will convict your wife?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Convict her and, I regret to say, hang her. Stated baldly, that is my
- purpose.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood perched himself on the window ledge and regarded his guest
- intently. He didn't look a monster; he looked in all respects a kindly,
- well-bred gentleman, and yet, if what he had just heard was correct, there
- were few monsters in history who could compare with him. Hindwood tried to
- picture him as Santa's husband. He couldn't. He was thankful that he
- couldn't. For a reason which he did not distress himself to analyze, he
- didn't wish to believe that she had ever had a husband. As for the hints
- about her criminal record and her many lovers, he utterly rejected them.
- Was it likely that a woman so royal and aloof could have stooped to the
- gutter? But if these accusations were not true, what was their object?
- Either it was a case of mistaken identity and there were two Santa
- Gorlofs, or the object was to infuriate him with jealousy so that he would
- blurt out all he knew.
- </p>
- <p>
- He eyed the Major doubtfully. He wasn't insane. He didn't look a rascal.
- And yet, what husband in his senses&mdash;&mdash;? He began to notice
- details.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Major was less old than he had fancied at first; he was more worn than
- aged. Illness or tragedy might have whitened him. It was even possible
- that he had made himself up for the part he was playing. His eyes were
- clear, and his hands virile. With the mustache and imperial removed&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Major Cleasby, you ask me to accept a great deal on your bare word,&rdquo; he
- said politely. &ldquo;You come to me with nothing to introduce you but the most
- briefly formal letter. The moment you enter my room, before you'll have
- anything to do with me, you inspect every hiding-place as though I were a
- counterfeiter or an anarchist. You boldly announce to me that ever since I
- landed in England you've had me followed and observed. You use the results
- of your spying as a kind of blackmail to induce me to present you with the
- sort of evidence for which you're searching. You trick me into telling you
- about a shipboard flirtation with a woman whom you say you want convicted
- of murder. No sooner have I told you, than you declare that you yourself
- are married to her. I ought to refuse to allow this interview to go
- further without calling in a lawyer. I don't mean to be offensive, but
- your kaleidoscopic changes put a strain on my credulity. I can't believe
- your story that you're a secret service agent endeavoring to get your wife
- executed. When men tire of matrimony, they find less ingenious methods of
- recovering their bachelorhood.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Major smiled with his patient air of affability. &ldquo;It isn't my
- bachelorhood that I'm trying to recover. It's my&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If you don't mind,&rdquo; Hindwood cut in, &ldquo;I'd like to finish my say first.
- One of the things that you may not have learned is that I'm here on a
- mission of international dimensions. It concerns more than one of the
- governments of Europe. I can't afford to have my name mixed up in a
- scandal and, what's more, I can bring influences to bear to prevent it
- from being introduced. You may be anything you like; whatever you are cuts
- no ice. I'm through with you and with whatever you may imagine took place
- on the <i>Ryndam</i>. You seem to think that I'm concealing a guilty
- knowledge that would enable you to bring this Gorlof woman to trial.
- You're on the wrong tack. I have no such knowledge. The longer you stay
- here, the more you waste my time.&rdquo; The Major was on the point of answering
- when the telephone rang shrilly. Grateful for a diversion, Hindwood
- crossed the room. As he unhooked the receiver, he glanced across his
- shoulder, &ldquo;Excuse me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Is this Mr. Hindwood?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was the hotel operator asking.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There's a call for you, sir. It's from some one who's not on a newspaper.
- Will you take it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Certainly.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a pause while the connection was being made; then a foreign
- voice, a woman's, questioned, &ldquo;Eees thees Meester Hindwood? Eef you
- please, one meenute. A lady wants to talk wiz you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Coming across the distance, subdued and earnest, he caught the tones of a
- voice which was instantly familiar.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't be startled. Don't answer me. There's a man with you. Tell him
- nothing. If you ever loved me, even for a second, don't believe a word he
- says.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She had not been arrested! A wave of joy swept over him. The uncertainty
- as to whether she was arrested had been crushing him.
- </p>
- <p>
- He waited, hoping she would speak again.
- </p>
- <p>
- Shattering the spell with a touch of bathos, the operator inquired,
- &ldquo;Number?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- With that he rang off. As he raised his head, he had the uncomfortable
- sensation that the Major had turned away from watching him.
- </p>
- <h3>
- VI
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>o you want to be
- rid of me!&rdquo; The Major glanced across his shoulder, at the same time making
- no effort to remove himself.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood crossed the room thoughtfully and seated himself. &ldquo;I've made no
- secret of it from the moment you entered.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Major laughed genially. &ldquo;I don't blame you. You think I'm a wronged
- husband trying to get even, or else an unscrupulous detective baiting
- traps with falsehoods. The situation's unpleasant&mdash;for you,
- especially.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm glad you realize it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I assure you I do. You've given yourself away completely.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You think so?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't think; I know. What you've told me proves beyond a doubt that
- you're possessed of exactly the knowledge that would bring Santa Gorlof to
- trial.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You're imaginative.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm observant. You're wondering what makes me so certain. The
- explanation's simple: I've studied Santa's tactics. Her strategy's the
- same in every instance. When a man suspects her guilt, she does what she
- did to you: seals his mouth with kisses.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This is too much.&rdquo; Hindwood brought his fist down with a bang. &ldquo;Do you go
- or do I have to force you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This time I'll try one of yours.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- With astounding assurance the Major helped himself to one of Hindwood's
- cigars, which he had previously rejected. Without bravado he lighted it
- and, having ascertained that it was drawing, continued: &ldquo;If you used
- force, you'd regret it. You'd make certain of the unwelcome publicity
- you're so anxious to avoid; you'd miss a stranger story than any Arabian
- tale that ever was concocted. You think you can still touch bottom; as a
- matter of fact you're already out of sight of land. You sit there looking
- an average, successful American; actually you've become an heroic figure,
- adrift upon an ocean so romantic and uncharted that it beats upon the
- cliffs of every human passion.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood shifted uneasily. &ldquo;So you're a fortuneteller in addition to being
- an ill-used husband and a detective!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Ignoring his sarcasm, the Major proceeded: &ldquo;Some time ago you accused me
- of ingenuity in the means I had adopted to recover my bachelorhood. It's
- not my bachelorhood, but my own and my country's honor that, with your
- help, I'm endeavoring to recover. That sounds extravagant? But consider&mdash;what
- motive could be sufficiently extravagant to compel a man to bend all his
- energies toward bringing the woman whom he loves to the scaffold? Because
- I say it calmly, you doubt that I love her. What man could help loving
- her? She's the last of a long line of false, fair women who've stirred up
- madness and left behind a trail of ruin.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Rising wearily, Hindwood turned his back and commenced fingering the
- documents on his desk. &ldquo;There'll be nothing gained by carrying this
- discussion further.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- With a question the Major recaptured his attention. &ldquo;Did it ever strike
- you that she's partly Asiatic?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood swung round, surprised into truth. &ldquo;What makes you ask it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- VII
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">E</span>ven to myself,&rdquo;
- the Major sighed, &ldquo;the story which I am about to tell sounds incredible.
- My reason for confiding it to a stranger is that, when you have heard it,
- you may dispense with chivalry and become stern enough to do your duty. To
- protect a woman, whatever her age or looks, is an instinct as primitive as
- religion. When she happens to be beautiful and the object of your
- affection, not to protect her is a kind of blasphemy. You and I, though
- you deny it, are both in love with Santa. I am her husband, while you are
- no more than her chance-met admirer. Yet you, in her hour of danger, are
- prepared to shield her with your honor, whereas I am among the most
- relentless of her pursuers.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The best part of my life has been spent in India. I went there with my
- regiment when I was little more than a boy. The fascination of an ancient
- civilization took possession of my imagination. I became a student of it
- and soon acquired a knowledge of native habits which was more fitting to a
- secret agent than to a soldier. I learned to speak many dialects and could
- pass myself off as an Asiatic with the minimum amount of disguise. Instead
- of frequenting clubs and idling away my leisure in the usual round of
- social futilities which make up the average Anglo-Indian's life, I formed
- the practice of slipping out into the night and losing my identity in the
- teeming, Oriental shadow-world by which I was surrounded.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;On one of my wanderings&mdash;when or where it is not necessary to
- particularize&mdash;I strolled into a temple and saw a young girl dancing.
- As perhaps you know, girls are dedicated to the worship of certain gods
- and goddesses at a very early age. They are for the most part deities who
- symbolize fecundity; the ritual with which they are celebrated is gross.
- The temple girls are chosen for their beauty and are trained by the
- priesthood to perform sensual dances, which are as old as time. They are
- not nuns or priestesses; their social status, if they may be said to have
- any in a land where woman is at best a plaything, approximates to that of
- temple slaves. They are taken from their parents at an age when sahibs'
- children are in nurseries. From the moment they are dedicated, their minds
- and souls are left to stagnate; they are treated like performing animals&mdash;fed
- and drilled and degraded that they may employ their bodies with the utmost
- grace.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This girl, the moment I saw her, impressed me as being the most
- fascinating human creature I had ever set eyes on. I had pressed in with
- the crowd from the evil-smelling, moonlit street. The temple was dim with
- the smoke of swaying censers. Its walls seemed vast with the flash of gold
- and jewels. At the far end, scarcely discernible, a huge god squatted,
- gloating and sinister. From somewhere in the shadows, swelling into
- frenzy, came the pounding of drums and the clash of barbaric music. Across
- the open pavement, between the god and the spectators, a chain of girls
- coiled and twisted like a snake.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;At the time I entered, the dance was nearly ended. It had evidently been
- going on for a long while. One by one the girls were slipping down
- exhausted. There they lay disordered, with their hair twined about them
- and their slim, bronze bodies twitching.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But one girl danced on, ever quickening her pace, till she alone
- remained. She was like a streak of flame, a will-o'-the-wisp, a spring
- petal blown before the wind: she seemed the symbol of everything that is
- young and pagan. Her childish face was masked in an unchanging smile. Her
- lips were parted; her body gleamed golden among the muted lights. She
- stooped and darted like a lizard across her fallen comrades; with one leap
- she floated through the air, perched for a moment on the knees of the god,
- and vanished into his bosom. Instantly the censers were extinguished, and
- I was carried out into the evil-smelling street by the rush of the
- perspiring crowd.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;From that night it was as though I were bewitched. There was never an
- hour when that drifting blossom of a girl was absent from my mind. I
- idealized her into a nobility that was more than earthly. I flung aside
- all sense of caste and race. I forgot that I was a sahib and over thirty,
- whereas she was a dancing girl and little more than a child. I excused my
- infatuation on the ground of magnanimity, telling myself that if I could
- possess her, I could save her from certain degradation. Above all, I
- wanted to wipe out her houri's smile and to cause the soul to appear in
- her eyes. Every hour that I could spare, I disguised myself as a native
- and haunted the temple. At rare intervals I caught glimpses of her. And so
- six months went by.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Gradually my desire strengthened into determination. I was insane with
- chivalry&mdash;utterly quixotic, as quixotic as you are now. I had raised
- her to such a pinnacle of worship that a liaison was not to be
- contemplated. What I planned was to carry her off and marry her. When you
- remember the gulf which the Anglo-Indian places between himself and the
- races he governs, you can estimate the measure of my madness. Such an act
- would entail resigning from my regiment and inviting social ostracism on
- every hand. It meant ruin, but to my impassioned mind no price seemed too
- high to pay.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There was an old priest who, unknown to me, had observed my comings and
- goings. One evening he addressed me by name. While I was hesitating as to
- what could be his motive, he volunteered to obtain the girl for me if I
- would reward him with a sufficient bribe.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Three nights later, as I waited, a door in the temple wall opened, and a
- muffled figure emerged. Without a word, obeying the instructions I had
- received, I turned away, and she followed. Through the sleeping city we
- crept, like a pair of shadows.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;In the European quarter I had secretly rented a bungalow which had long
- been deserted. It stood in a wilderness of overgrown shrubberies; a high
- wall went about it. Not until the rusty gate had closed behind us did I
- dare to acknowledge her presence; then, taking her in my arms, I carried
- her up the path to the unlighted house. We entered. There were just the
- two of us; I had not risked engaging servants. In the darkness I set her
- down and lighted a lamp. As the flame quickened and I knelt beside her,
- she uncovered her face. So far, I had seen her only distantly. It was the
- moment for which I had waited. Her face was white.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Major passed his hand across his forehead. His lips tightened. He
- betrayed every sign of a man doing his best to conceal an overpowering
- emotion. He leaned back and gazed up at the ceiling, blowing out a cloud
- of smoke. When he had watched it disperse, he turned to Hindwood with a
- deprecating smile.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I hope I don't bore you. I'll omit the ardors and ecstasies of my
- love-affair and stick to the bare outline. What I discovered was that she
- was an Eurasian. She was fourteen years of age&mdash;a woman by Indian
- standards, but still a child by ours. Her eyes were gray, and her
- complexion was so light that, with any one but an expert, she could have
- passed for a European. There are millions of darkhaired women with her
- coloring to be found in any Latin country. Given the proper manners and a
- European setting, scarcely a soul would have suspected her. Certainly no
- one would dare to voice his suspicions who met her as my wife.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Her history I pieced together from many conversations. Her father had
- been a tea-planter&mdash;an Englishman of good family. Her mother had been
- a Burmese. They both had died in a cholera epidemic; their half-caste
- child had been picked up from the highways and placed in the temple.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Seeing that I was out to be chivalrous, I made up my mind to do the thing
- thoroughly. I hurried up a furlough that was due me and, taking her to
- France, placed her in a convent. My reason for choosing France was that,
- when she became my wife, there would be fewer chances of discovery if she
- passed as French instead of English. In the south, especially in Provence,
- there are many women of her type descended from the Saracens. If you've
- been to Arles, you must have noticed them. At the end of three years, when
- she was seventeen, I returned, married her, and took her back to India. If
- any one detected the deception, no one was bold enough to proclaim it.
- Every circumstance argued against such a surmise. She had forgotten much
- of the English she had known, and pretended to speak only French. I had
- coached her in her part; she acted it to perfection. By no hint or sign
- did she let the knowledge escape her that she could understand a word of
- any native dialect. So far as I am aware, she was accepted at her face
- value, as a young Provençal whom I had courted in her own country.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;For some time my romantic folly brought us nothing but happiness. We
- invented a legend to account for her family, which, through continual
- repetition, we almost came to believe ourselves. No two people were ever
- more in love. Despite our difference in age and the racial gulf which
- divided us, no man and woman ever seemed more wisely mated. Apparently
- whatever shameful knowledge she had acquired in the temple had been
- blotted out by her superimposed refinement. Even to me she betrayed no
- hint of grossness; she appeared to be as sweet and innocent as the girl I
- claimed her to be&mdash;the girl I said I had surprised in the passionless
- tranquility of a French convent.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Her devotion to myself was pathetic&mdash;it verged on adoration. She was
- continually contriving new ways of rewarding me for the horrors from which
- I had saved her. To me the ground she trod was sacred. I delighted in
- making myself her slave. We competed with each other in generosity. With
- each of us the other's slightest whim was law. She was unbelievably
- beautiful, the most mysteriously beautiful woman in India. I was more than
- twice her years and the envy of every man who saw her. Her beauty seemed
- only the outshining of her goodness. Save for an accident, I should never
- have known otherwise.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We had been married two years when she bore me a child. Our dread, when
- we knew that she was to become a mother, was that our offspring might
- reveal the Asiatic strain. We took every precaution to hide the fact, if
- this should happen. But even this was spared us. Our boy was blue-eyed and
- flaxen-haired as any Anglo-Saxon. She worshiped him. He seemed to
- symbolize Heaven's blessing on the lie we practiced. He was never out of
- her sight. In her fear lest he might develop some native characteristic,
- she refused to have an <i>ayah</i> and cared for him entirely. Wherever
- she went, she kept him with her; he slept in our room at night. So
- perfectly had she drilled herself that, up to this point, I can not recall
- an instance in which she had fallen below the level of a well-born white
- woman. It was the finest instinct in her nature that proved her undoing&mdash;her
- mother-love that trapped her into the self-revelation which produced our
- tragedy.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Our child was a sturdy little fellow of nearly two, just beginning to run
- about, when suddenly he died. We had a house-party at the time. His mother
- was playing tennis. While she was playing, he was strangled and thrown
- down a well by a native servant who believed he had been slighted. My
- wife, missing the child, went in search of him in panic and caught the
- native in the act of getting rid of the body. Instantly she reverted to
- what her mother had been before her. Snatching the man's knife, she killed
- him before any of her guests could restrain her. In the abandonment of her
- grief, she became an out and out Burmese woman, scattering dust on her
- hair, beating her breasts, and rending her clothes with the wildest
- lamentations. The fiction of her French origin was utterly destroyed.
- There was no longer any doubt among those who witnessed her that I was
- married to an Eurasian.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Our position at once became intolerable. A halfcaste is despised the
- world over, but in India especially. That night every servant left. None
- of our friends came near us. We sat alone with our grief in a deserted
- house. As her calmness returned, she grew tragically contrite&mdash;not
- contrite from any moral sense, but because she had given away our secret.
- She seemed incapable of appreciating that she had done any wrong in
- depriving justice of its victim. When I tried to explain to her that she
- had committed a crime, she shook her head impatiently, insisting that she
- had done what any mother ought to do under the circumstances. When I
- pressed the subject she became persuaded that I, too, was blaming her, and
- then that I had never properly loved either her or her child. And yet I
- think I never loved her more tenderly than at that moment.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A week later, after miserable days and nights of suspense, we received
- our sentence. Native sedition was running high. The Government did not
- dare to bring the wife of a British officer to trial. Such a course would
- have proved too damaging to the prestige of Anglo-Indian officialdom. I
- was promised that the scandal would be hushed up and I should be given a
- new employment, if I would agree to ship her out of India at once and to
- see to it that she never returned. What it amounted to for me was
- perpetual separation and for her perpetual banishment.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I have often tried to arrive at a sane conclusion as to how far I am the
- author of what she has become. Had I shared her banishment there can be
- little doubt that her white blood would have kept control of her poisoned
- heritage. Unfortunately I had a living to earn. Professionally I was
- broken. My savings were inconsiderable. I had her to maintain. I was past
- mid-life and by leaving India would have sacrificed the pension that was
- already in sight. Moreover, I knew of no way of marketing my training in
- any country outside India. So I played safe and bowed to authority. I
- resigned from my regiment and was transferred to the department of
- military intelligence. After knowing the security of a home and wife, at
- past forty I became a secret agent, a spy and a wanderer, a friendless and
- unfriendly man, unsociable and socially unacceptable. As for my wife, aged
- only twenty-one, she was exiled to England, a stranger in a gray, chill
- country, bankrupt in her happiness, with no one to defend her, taking with
- her the temptation of her unusual beauty and the treacherous inheritance
- of her intermingled blood.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There seemed no justice in the world for either of us. The offending
- cause of our punishment was the protective motherhood which had prompted
- her to slay the killer of our child. But, to use your terse Americanism,
- we were 'up against' blind angers and racial prejudices, which no amount
- of bucking on our part could change. So far as she was concerned, even
- before her life had started, she had been condemned. The initial sin had
- been her parents' when they had allowed themselves to create her. Before
- she had seen daylight, the uncharity of mankind had proclaimed her a
- half-caste and a pariah. From her inherited fate I had tried to snatch her
- when I had bought her from the temple. You may say that my recklessness
- was nothing more than selfishness, pharisaically parading as chivalry; in
- allowing her to bear me a child, I had only reduplicated the crime of her
- parents. Nevertheless, I had tried to rescue her and could have succeeded,
- had not her mother-love ensnared her. She was betrayed by the purest
- instinct in her nature; she was shown no more leniency than if it had been
- the basest. There lay the cruelty that rankled. She was judged not by
- motives, but by results. She would have been pardoned and applauded, had
- she been a full-blooded white woman.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;In spite of all these accumulated injustices, I believe she would have
- retained the strength to go straight had there been any limit to our
- separation. There was none. For all the comfort that I could be to her, I
- might just as well have been dead or divorced from her. I was all that
- remained out of the ruin that had overtaken her, yet the most to which she
- could look forward, save for brief meetings at long intervals, was that I
- would be restored to her in my useless old age, when the glorious
- floodtide of her youth hud receded. You see I am sufficiently unbiased to
- be able to plead her case.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Major rose and, going over to the window, stood with his back toward
- Hindwood, gazing out into the night. Some minutes had elapsed, when he
- turned quietly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Where had I got to? Ah, yes! To where I had to send her to England! I
- accompanied her to Calcutta to see her safely on the liner. Shall I ever
- forget that journey? It had the gloom of a funeral and the frenzy of an
- elopement. Actually my rôle was that of a policeman deporting a miscreant
- who happened to be his wife. We tried to pack into moments the emotions of
- a lifetime. As background to our love-making was the poignant memory of
- the puzzled child, whom seven years earlier I had escorted on the same
- journey, <i>en route</i> for France, where she was to be made over into a
- sahib's lady. In her wondering attitude toward the fortunes that assailed
- her, she was little changed. She was still startlingly unsophisticated&mdash;a
- child-woman, dangerously credulous and deceivingly unversed in masculine
- wiles. I had taught her to be so dependent that I dared not imagine how
- she would do without me. She was so artless. She took such pleasure in
- admiration. Love was so necessary to her; it was the breath of her life.
- Its misuse had been the breath and the means of life of her Burmese mother
- before her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Her complete lack of comprehension that I in any way shared her sacrifice
- formed the most distressing part of my ordeal. She assumed that she was
- being exiled by ray choice. She persisted in talking as if she could stay,
- if I would only change my mind. Though she did not accuse me in words, she
- believed that I was ridding myself of her because she had disgraced me&mdash;that
- I was pushing her across the horizon, where she would be forgotten and out
- of sight. Up to the last moment she pleaded with and coaxed me, as though
- it were I who was refusing to repeal her sentence. The ship cast off,
- bearing her from me with her broken heart and her embittered memories of
- the newly-dug grave, while I turned back to ferret through the gutters of
- Asia, that I might earn the wherewithal to provide for her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;At first she wrote many times a day; then every day; then regularly to
- catch each outgoing mail. In the whole of England she knew nobody. In her
- anger against British justice she wished to know nobody. She was
- inconsolable, bruised in spirit, and crushed in her pride. After the pomp
- and hubbub of the East, she found London drab and melancholy. From her
- lodgings in Kensington she poured out her soul on paper. Much of what she
- wrote consisted of memories, the tender trifles which a mother treasures
- about her child.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Gradually, almost imperceptibly, there came a change. A querulous note
- crept in, a questioning of motives. Why had I sent her as far away as
- England? Why had I sent her away at all? If it were true that it was not I
- who had exiled her, why had I not accompanied her? Was it because I was
- tired and ashamed of her? It would have been kinder to have left her to
- dance in the temple. Then a new suspicion grew up, which betrayed an evil
- that I had never traced in her. With whom was I living? Some white woman?
- Was that why I had rid myself of her?
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What answers could I make? It was like arguing with a spiteful child. Our
- misunderstandings were as wide as the distance that separated us. She
- implored and finally demanded that I should join her. The more I stated
- obstacles, the more convinced she became that I was cruel, like all the
- sahibs who were torturing her&mdash;the proud sahibs who thought nothing
- of a murdered baby, when it was only the child of a half-caste woman.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;From then on her heart hardened, till at last I failed to recognize in
- her any resemblance to the gentle wife who had been so much my companion.
- She wrote vaguely about revenge, a revenge that should embrace the whole
- white race. Contempt should be repaid with despising, hatred with blows,
- blood with blood. Her beauty should be the weapon. She seemed to have gone
- mad. Suddenly her letters ceased. My remittances were returned; they had
- failed to reach her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;For what follows I have but one explanation. By some species of
- unconscious hypnotism, so long as I had exerted physical influence over
- her, I had had the power to make the European in her predominate. As my
- influence weakened with time and distance, she relapsed into the woman she
- always would have been, if I had not found her: a smiling menace to the
- nobilities of both the races from which she was descended, a human jackal
- following the hunt. That sounds harsh? Then listen to the conclusion of my
- story.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;One day, six months after I had lost touch with her, I was glancing
- through an illustrated weekly when, on turning a page, I found her
- portrait gazing up at me. She was photographed in almost the attitude and
- attire in which I had first caught sight of her in the temple. The very
- setting was similar; behind her the huge god squatted, gloating and
- sinister&mdash;on her face was the unchanging houri's smile. On reading
- the text I discovered that she had leaped into instant fame as an exponent
- of Indian dancing. You will remember that in the last two years before the
- war the dance craze was at its height. She had been acclaimed a great
- artist; everything she said, did, and wore was fulsomely praised and
- described. There was no false reticence about either her or her admirers;
- she was frankly advertised as being possessed of the most beautiful body
- in Europe. She had given herself a French name and was announced as being
- of French ancestry. According to her printed biography, her father had
- been an orchid-hunter who had taken her with him on all his expeditions.
- On his last, in India, he had died; she had been kidnaped for her beauty
- and sold into the service of a Hindoo temple. From this bondage she had
- been rescued by an Englishman of title who had chivalrously restored her
- to her family in Marseilles. There was much more to the same effect&mdash;a
- jumble of perverted truth and romantic lies, precisely the kind of
- adventurous nonsense which appeals to the sensation-seeking public.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;From then on, <i>via</i> the press, I was always getting news of her.
- London, Paris, Berlin, St. Petersburg, each in turn went mad over her. She
- captivated a continent. Kings and emperors commanded her to appear before
- them. Her tours were royal triumphs. Little by little ugly rumors began to
- spread. There was a Parisian banker who, when he had lavished his all upon
- her, committed suicide, leaving his wife and children penniless. There was
- another scandal; it had to do with a Russian general who had betrayed his
- country. At his court-martial he poisoned himself when her name was
- introduced into the evidence. As though a conspiracy of silence had broken
- down, now that she began to be gossiped about, scandals gathered thick and
- fast. Each new one was more infamous than the last; out of each she
- emerged unpitying and smiling. It was only her victims who suffered. Her
- progress was marked by a trail of death and ruin. Nevertheless, infatuated
- by the exquisiteness of her body, men fluttered about her unceasingly,
- like moths, shriveling their souls in the flame of her fascination. When
- the peace of the world was violated by the Germans&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood leaned forward, tapping the Major's knee. &ldquo;I can spare you your
- eloquence. The rest of your story is common property. The woman you
- describe stole the Allies' anti-submarine defense plans from her lover. He
- was a British naval officer, temporarily in Paris. She was caught
- red-handed. There was a sentimental agitation in her favor&mdash;an
- attempt to argue that as a physical masterpiece of feminine perfection she
- ought to be exempted. It accomplished nothing. She was a German spy, who
- had sold men's lives for profit. She received and deserved no more mercy
- than a rag-picker. After having been encouraged in her sins because of her
- unrivaled loveliness, she was led out at dawn in the woods of Vincennes,
- where the body which had maddened thousands of eyes was riddled with
- bullets.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Major's lips were smiling crookedly. &ldquo;How could she have been riddled
- with bullets,&rdquo; he questioned, &ldquo;when you crossed the Atlantic in her
- company?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood shrugged his shoulders. &ldquo;If you insist on propounding conundrums,
- it's up to you to supply the answers.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I can supply them. The person executed in the woods of Vincennes was not
- a woman.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's a daring assertion. Who was it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A distinguished French officer, a man who had been crippled in defending
- his country and held the highest awards for gallantry. In pre-war days he
- had been an old flame of hers, whom she had abandoned with more than her
- ordinary callousness. On hearing of her predicament, he begged to be
- allotted the duty of seeing that her sentence was properly executed. The
- reason he gave was that he might clear himself of the taint of ever having
- associated with a traitress. He was put in charge of the guard on her last
- night. Making use of his opportunity, he exchanged clothing with her and&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood stifled a yawn. &ldquo;You expect me to believe this?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Major mastered his anger. &ldquo;I expect you to believe nothing. I'm here
- to state facts and to warn you that your friend, who now calls herself
- Santa Gorlof, is the same woman. My appeal to you for assistance in
- bringing her to justice is both personal and patriotic. I am her husband;
- my honor is involved. I am also an Englishman; all her intrigues, even
- this last, in which Prince Rogovich met his fate, are aimed against the
- friends of England&mdash;one of whom, I may remind you, is your own great
- nation. All I can say is that each man has his separate standard of
- loyalty. For me, an old soldier, my devotion to my country is more
- important than my compassion for an erring woman.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood rose. Uncomfortably, against his will, he had been impressed by
- the stoical dignity of his persistent guest. &ldquo;You deserve that I should be
- frank with you. Here's the truth&mdash;I accept very little of what you've
- told me. Either you've mistaken my traveling companion for another woman,
- or else you've been trying to prejudice me with a fantastic story. But
- even though I accepted your supposed revelation, I should refuse to help
- you. On your own showing, you're endeavoring to bring the mother of your
- child to the scaffold. I should respect you more if you left her fate to
- other hands. Disbelieving you, as I do, I regard the introduction of Miss
- Gorlof's name into the discussion as rank impertinence. Your coupling of
- my name with hers increases the cowardice of your discourtesy. If you had
- convinced me and I were eager to assist you, I couldn't. I know nothing
- about her&mdash;our acquaintance was the most casual. In all probability
- I've seen her for the last time; I haven't the vaguest notion where she's
- to be found. If your half-caste vampire actually escaped the bullets in
- the woods of Vincennes, I advise you to search for her in another
- direction. You may take my word for it that if Santa Gorlof learns of your
- activities, you'll find yourself in trouble. I reckon myself some judge
- when it comes to character.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Major drew out his silk handkerchief from his breast pocket and
- flicked a speck of dust from his immaculate white spats. With the utmost
- deliberation he recovered his hat and gloves. For a few seconds he gazed
- out of the window thoughtfully; then, turning slowly, he crossed the room.
- With his hand on the door knob, he glanced back solemnly. He passed his
- fingers across his lips and cleared his throat. &ldquo;When she has added you to
- her list of victims, if she gives you time before she kills you, remember
- that I warned you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- When Hindwood had recovered sufficiently from his surprise to follow him
- out into the passage, every sign of his unwelcome visitor had vanished.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had scarcely closed the door and reseated himself, when again there
- came a tapping.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER THE THIRD&mdash;HE PLUNGES INTO ROMANCE
- </h2>
- <h3>
- I
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">H</span>INDWOOD consulted
- his watch; the hour was nearing midnight. He was surprised to discover how
- the time had flown. The tapping outside his door continued. There was
- nothing hurried about it, nothing impatient. On the other hand, there was
- nothing humble. It was a secret, intimate kind of tapping, like the
- signaling of a woman to her lover. It would cease for a minute, so that he
- began to hope that he was to be left in quiet; then it would recommence.
- </p>
- <p>
- He sat obstinately at bay, almost holding his breath, not daring to move
- lest he should betray that he had noticed. He was determined not to admit
- this new disturber. He had had enough of danger warnings and revengeful
- husbands. The only danger that he greatly dreaded was the loss of a second
- night's rest.
- </p>
- <p>
- The sound was getting on his nerves. It was so irritatingly discreet and
- importunate. At first he had tried to believe that his caller was a hotel
- employee, but a servant would have taken silence for an answer a good five
- minutes ago. If it had been any one who had a right to be there, the
- tapping would have been bolder. Whoever it was, it was some one who had
- correctly estimated his mood.
- </p>
- <p>
- <i>Tap-a-tap, tap-a-tap</i>. An interval, and then, <i>tap-a-tap</i>.
- </p>
- <p>
- Getting stealthily to his feet, he tiptoed to the threshold and flung wide
- the door.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I beg your pardon.&rdquo; He caught her arm as she stumbled back. &ldquo;I guess I
- startled you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Shish!&rdquo; She pressed a finger to her lips. &ldquo;Let me inside, so that I can
- sit down.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Giving her his arm, he led her to a chair. Having returned and closed the
- door, he surveyed her at his leisure.
- </p>
- <p>
- She had the appearance of a peasant woman dressed in her Sunday best, yet
- so great was her dignity, she did not seem out of place in her
- surroundings. She was very aged; her figure was shapeless and bowed. Her
- gray hair was cropped like a boy's; she wore spread over it, knotted at
- the throat, a neatly folded kerchief of white linen. She was clad in a
- black gown of the utmost plainness. Nothing distracted attention from her
- face, which was as stoical with endurance as a gladiator's. You could
- almost trace the riverbeds her tears had worn. The fist of fate had
- punched it flat. It was a ruin to which violence had done its worst, but
- had failed to destroy its gentleness. And he had expected Santa. Instead
- of feminine frailty, spurring weak desires, there had come this woman,
- iron of will, broken in body, ravished by years, with her tremendous
- impression of moral strength. As she sat before him, her gnarled hands
- resting on her cane, pushing back the weight of her ancient shoulders, she
- raised to him the dim valiance of her eyes. &ldquo;What can I do for you?&rdquo; he
- questioned. &ldquo;Nothing.&rdquo; She swung her head from side to side with the
- brooding fierceness of a decrepit lioness. &ldquo;It is you whom I have come to
- help.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I!&rdquo; he smiled. &ldquo;I think you are mistaken.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I am never mistaken.&rdquo; She gazed at him intently. &ldquo;I have come to help you
- to act generously. You have it in your power to save a woman, perhaps at
- the sacrifice of yourself.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He laughed quietly. &ldquo;You mean Santa Gorlof. I wonder when I'm to hear the
- last of her. A secret service man has spent the past two hours instructing
- me what I can do for her. You must have met him. He had scarcely left when
- you began to tap. He tried to convince me that if I didn't protect myself
- by giving him information which would lead to her arrest, my name would be
- added to her list of victims. A pleasant sort of threat! I'm afraid he
- found me, as you will probably find me, disappointing. I'm not possessed
- of any incriminating information, and I don't place any faith in her list
- of victims. She struck me as being a very gracious and fascinating woman.
- Beyond that I have no opinion about her, either for or against.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The old head sank further forward; the dim eyes became searching. &ldquo;Then
- you told him nothing?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I knew nothing to tell.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There followed a deep silence, during which they gazed fixedly at each
- other. She sighed contentedly, nodding her approval. &ldquo;So you are in love
- with her! That makes things easier. Even to me you lie&mdash;to me who am
- her friend!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I deny that I am in love with her, but what makes you think so?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She thinks so.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then you come directly from her?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He had been unable to keep back the eagerness from his voice. Instantly he
- realized his indiscretion. Pulling up a chair, he seated himself opposite
- her, that he might lose nothing of her changes of expression.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You're the second unconventional visitor,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;whom I've received
- this evening. The object of both your visits seems to be the same&mdash;to
- associate my name with that of a lady to whom I am comparatively a
- stranger. We may have conversed together a couple of dozen times; when we
- parted, I never expected to hear from her. Within the space of twenty-four
- hours a man who claims to be her husband comes to me accusing her of every
- infamy. No sooner has the door closed behind him than you enter, asserting
- that I am in love with her. You must pardon me if I begin to suspect a
- plot. For all I know, you may be my first visitor's accomplice, employing
- a more disarming method to get me to commit myself. You tell me you are
- Santa Gorlof's friend; you might equally well say you are her grandmother&mdash;you
- offer me no proof. If she's really in trouble, I'm sorry. But I fail to
- see any way in which I can serve her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If there were no way, I should not have troubled you, especially at this
- late hour. As for her being in danger, she has always been in danger. She
- was born into the world like that. I am old&mdash;very old. I have no
- traces of it left, but I, too, was once beautiful.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The trembling hands fumbled at the white linen kerchief, loosening the
- knot against her neck. &ldquo;Ah, yes, I was beautiful. But I did not come to
- you to speak of that. My friend, you are good; I saw that the moment I
- entered. I said to myself, 'There is the man who could understand our
- Santa and make her honorable like himself.' The world has given her no
- chance&mdash;no, never. The husband who should have cared for her tossed
- her aside like an old shoe when, like all animals robbed of their young,
- she struck out in self-defense. I see you have heard that&mdash;how her
- child was murdered and she was sent into exile for taking justice into her
- own hands. Doubtless you have heard much else. She is a woman who would
- have done no harm to any one if she had been allowed to remain a mother.
- But because they scoffed at her motherhood, all her goodness has turned to
- wickedness. Using her body as a decoy, she has slain men of the race that
- persecuted her. Because she could not get her child back, she has become
- an outlaw, making society pay for her loneliness.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She paused, watching her effect.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood had not removed his eyes from hers. His face was troubled. &ldquo;I
- don't think you know what has been told me. The man who introduced himself
- to me as her husband said that she was a half-caste, a temple
- dancing-girl, who to revenge herself had poisoned white men's happiness
- and during the war had become an international spy, working against the
- Allies. He made the assertion that she was responsible for the vanishing
- of Prince Rogovich. If these things are so, how can I, a decent,
- self-respecting man&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Bending forward, the old lady clutched his hand. &ldquo;It was decent,
- self-respecting men who made her what she is to-day.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He released his hand quietly. &ldquo;You have not denied any of the accusations
- which are brought against her. And yet, remembering her face, I can not
- believe that she is bad. You want me to save her. If by that you mean that
- you want me to pledge myself not to give evidence against her, you may
- tell her from me that I have no evidence.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't mean that.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then what?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I want you to declare to me that you love her. No, listen. There is still
- something in her that is pure. You have made her conscious of it. You can
- undo the wrong that has been done her and make her the woman she should
- be, if you choose.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood rose from his seat and paced the room. Suddenly he halted and
- swung round. &ldquo;How did you know that I desired her? Until you came, I
- scarcely realized it myself. Why should you have appointed yourself to
- tempt me&mdash;you, who are so old? Between sane people, what would be the
- use of my telling you that I loved her? Though I refused to believe any of
- the libels against her which even you seem to credit, there are two facts
- which it does not seem possible to escape: that she is married and that
- the police are on her track. I have been warned that when she traps men,
- she commences by appealing to their chivalry. That's what's happening now.
- Do you see where you place me? If she is falsely accused, I brand myself a
- coward by running away from her. If she is guilty, I endanger my good name
- by having any more to do with her. What I am waiting to hear you say is
- that this is a case of mistaken identity&mdash;that she is willing and
- able to prove it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Will you help me out of my chair?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- When she was on her feet, she let go his arm and commenced to move across
- the room.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Where are you going?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To give her your message.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I've told you nothing.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You've told me that you love her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She was on the point of leaving. With quiet decision he put his back
- against the door, preventing her from opening it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Madam,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;old as you are, you owe me some consideration. Before
- you go, I at least have a right to ask your name.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She smiled wistfully. The harshness in her face was replaced by a glow of
- tenderness. &ldquo;Yes, you have the right. I am called 'the Little
- Grandmother.' I am a readjuster of destinies&mdash;the champion of the
- down-trodden. I fight for those for whom the world has ceased to care.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But what have you to do with Santa?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She has been oppressed.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And because she has been oppressed, you overlook any crimes she may have
- committed?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I am not God, that I should judge. If people's hearts are empty, I reckon
- them my children.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Let me ask you one more question. Did Santa tell you that she loved me?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The old head shook sorrowfully. &ldquo;To act nobly it is not necessary to be
- loved in return. Let me go. Do not try to follow me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Standing aside, he opened the door. &ldquo;And we meet again?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- As she hobbled out, she glanced across her shoulder. In her gesture there
- was the ghostly grace of the proud coquette who was vanishing and
- forgotten. &ldquo;Will you want to,&rdquo; she whispered, &ldquo;to-morrow?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- II
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">N</span>ow that she was
- gone he realized that under the hypnotic influence of her presence he had
- revealed far more than he had intended. He should never have allowed her
- to escape him. He should have insisted on accompanying her. She had
- afforded him his only clue to Santa's whereabouts.
- </p>
- <p>
- At all costs he must see Santa. His peace of mind depended on it. The
- thought of her would haunt him. He would never rest until he had arrived
- at the truth. Probably, until he had seen her, he would never be free from
- the mischief-making intrusions of anonymous intriguers. He dodged the
- theory of her guilt, preferring to persuade himself that a conspiracy was
- afoot, the object of which might be blackmail. More likely it was a clever
- move on the part of financial rivals to thwart his plans by discrediting
- him. If he could meet Santa, he would know for certain whether she was a
- decoy or a fellow-victim. Whatever his intellect might suspect, his heart
- resolutely acquitted her.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was too late to overtake the Little Grandmother, but he was determined
- to do his best to trace her. In the passage he discovered a solitary
- individual collecting boots and shoes, which had been placed for cleaning
- outside the neighboring doors.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An old lady left my room a few moments ago. She had short hair and a
- white handkerchief tied over her head. No doubt you saw her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The man rose from his stooping posture. &ldquo;An old lady with short hair! You
- say she had a handkerchief tied over it? It doesn't sound like the Ritz.
- No, I did not see her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Of the man at the elevator he made the same inquiry, only to be informed
- that several old ladies had been carried up and down.
- </p>
- <p>
- Descending to the foyer, he presented himself at the desk.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Isn't it your rule to have all callers announced before they're shown in
- on your guests?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Most decidedly.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then how did it happen that an old lady, a rather curious old lady, with
- short hair and a white handkerchief over her head like a shawl, was
- allowed to' find her way into my room?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If you'll give me the particulars, I'll have the staff on duty
- questioned.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- As he turned away, he threw back across his shoulder: &ldquo;I shan't be going
- to bed yet. If you discover anything you might report it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Half an hour later he was summoned to the telephone. &ldquo;About your visitor,
- sir; no one saw her.&rdquo; Far into the early hours of the morning he sat
- cogitating. What steps ought he to take to protect himself? He could place
- his case in the hands of the police, but if he did, he might stir up a
- hornet's nest. Most certainly he would be compelled to postpone his
- business on the Continent and to prolong his stay in England. But more
- disastrous than personal inconvenience, in going to the police he might be
- the means of putting Santa's enemies on her track. They would expect him
- to make a clean breast of everything; he would find difficulty in
- inventing convincing motives to explain the shiftiness of his conduct
- since landing.
- </p>
- <p>
- If he could speak to Santa, he would know how to act. If she were really
- implicated in the Rogovich affair, his best way of helping her would be to
- clear out of England. But if she could assure him of her innocence, he was
- prepared to stay and back her to the limit of his capacity. Across the
- jet-black sky the silver moon drifted like a water-lily&mdash;a parable of
- Santa, moving immaculately among rumors of darkest misdoings. Whatever she
- had done had not quenched her purity. If she had done the worst of which
- she was accused, her perverted mother-love still clothed her with the
- tatters of a tragic goodness.
- </p>
- <p>
- He jerked himself irritably back to reality. How could a woman who had
- spread death with her beauty still retain her purity? He had been warned
- that she trapped men by appealing not to their baseness, but to their
- chivalry. What wild-eyed feat of chivalry was this that he was performing?
- It was best to dispense with casuistry. The accumulated slanders to which
- he had listened had spurred his curiosity. They had changed a modishly
- attractive woman into a romantic figure&mdash;a figure which, if it were
- not noble, at least possessed the virtue of lonely courage.
- </p>
- <p>
- He would allow himself four days in England. If he had not heard from her
- by then, he would go about his business. Having to this extent set a limit
- to his difficulties, he took himself off to bed.
- </p>
- <h3>
- III
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">H</span>is first anxiety
- next morning was to scan the papers. He had all the London dailies brought
- to him and read them before he dressed. For the most part they told him
- nothing new, merely recording, with varying degrees of sensationalism, the
- indisputable fact that Prince Rogovich had vanished. One or two hinted at
- foul play. Several suggested accidental drowning. The bulk of them, and
- among these were the most reputable, presumed that the Prince had had
- private reasons for avoiding England and landing at a Continental port <i>incognito</i>.
- Santa Gorlof's name was not mentioned. He found nothing to confirm the
- warnings of last night or to alarm himself on her account.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was later, while eating breakfast with the <i>Times</i> propped up
- before him, that he came across an item which set him viewing what had
- happened from a new angle. He was skipping through a sketch of the
- Prince's career, when he stumbled on the following paragraph: &ldquo;It will be
- remembered how last summer the Polish women's sense of injustice
- concentrated in a silent protest. For an entire week, day and night, never
- less than a thousand mothers, each carrying a dead child in her breast,
- camped about the Rogovich Palace in Warsaw.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Glancing back, he read more carefully the information which led up to the
- paragraph: &ldquo;During the two years following the close of the war, Poland,
- together with most of Central Europe, has suffered intensely from famine.
- Children have contributed by far the largest proportion to the toll of
- death. For much of this, so far as Poland is concerned, Prince Rogovich
- has been held accountable. The national wealth which he has squandered on
- equipping armies might have been spent more profitably in purchasing
- foodstuffs. The trip to America, from which he was returning at the time
- of his mysterious disappearance, is said to have had as its object the
- floating of a loan which would enable his Generals to maintain their
- offensives for at least another twelve months. While the land-owning party
- in Poland, supported by French diplomacy, backed him up, his imperialistic
- policies were bitterly condemned by Polish mothers who had to watch their
- children perishing from starvation in order that frontiers might be
- extended. Already the death-rate was so high that it was impossible to
- supply sufficient coffins. At mid-day the main streets of Warsaw were
- jammed with funerals. Many of these funerals consisted of only two
- persons: a man and woman, themselves weak from want of nourishment,
- staggering under the puny load of a bundle wrapped in paper, containing
- the body of the latest son or daughter to die of hunger.&rdquo; Then followed
- the brief description of how the thousand Polish mothers had camped for a
- week in protest about the Prince's palace.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood looked up from his paper, gazing across the flashing gulf of
- sunlight to where the azure sea of distant sky beat against the embattled
- strand of housetops. If Santa had pushed the Prince overboard, had that
- been her motive&mdash;that Polish children might no longer die of hunger?
- Perhaps always, if indeed she had killed men, her purpose had been to act
- as the scourge of the enemies of children. The memory of her own dead
- child had urged her. Mistakenly, but none the less valiantly, she had
- constituted herself the avenger of all mothers who had been despoiled by
- masculine callousness.
- </p>
- <p>
- What round-about journeys he was willing to undertake if only he might
- excuse her! Even though he were compelled to admit her guilt, he was
- determined to adjudge her magnanimous. At any rate, she had not been
- apprehended.
- </p>
- <p>
- With a lighter heart than he had experienced for some hours, he dismissed
- her from his thoughts and set out to fulfill his round of engagements.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was three o'clock when he returned. Immediately, on entering his room
- he noticed that a sheet of writing-paper had been pinned conspicuously to
- the pillow of his bed. Its evident purpose was to attract his attention.
- On approaching it, he saw that the message which it contained was printed
- in large letters and unsigned. It read:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>If you wish to see her, follow but do not speak to the widow.</i>&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It didn't make sense. What widow? The &ldquo;her&rdquo; whom he could see by following
- the widow referred presumably to Santa. But who had pinned the sheet of
- paper to his pillow? How had this person gained access to his rooms? That
- morning, when he went out, he had locked his door and left his key at the
- hotel desk. He had in his possession confidential papers of almost state
- importance. If their secrets were shared, he might just as well pack up
- and return to America. His sense that he was the storm-center of a
- conspiracy strengthened.
- </p>
- <p>
- Seizing his hat and gloves, he hurried down-stairs. He had just time to
- lodge a complaint with the management before keeping his next appointment.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had alighted from the elevator and was about to cross the foyer, when a
- woman rose from a chair near by and passed immediately in front of him. He
- jerked himself up with a murmured apology; then noticed that she was
- gowned in the heaviest widow's mourning. A coincidence, he thought, and
- yet not so very extraordinary! He was proceeding on his journey, when his
- eyes chanced to follow her. She had halted uncertainly, as though she had
- forgotten something; by the poise of her head, he guessed that behind her
- veil she was gazing at him. More to satisfy his curiosity than as the
- preface to an adventure, he also halted. Somewhat ostentatiously he drew
- from his pocket the sheet of note-paper which he had found pinned to his
- pillow. Unfolding it, he reread its printed message:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If you wish to see her, follow but do not speak to the widow.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He looked up. Slowly, almost imperceptibly, the veiled figure nodded. He
- made a step, as if to approach her. Instantly she turned and passed out.
- </p>
- <p>
- Without further consideration, in his eagerness to see what she would do
- next, he followed.
- </p>
- <h3>
- IV
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">H</span>e had expected
- that outside the hotel, in the throng of anonymous traffic, she would wait
- for him. Without giving any further sign that she was aware of him, she
- moved quietly through the fashionable crowd of Piccadilly and turned into
- the sunlit leisure of St. James Street. The unconscious gaiety of her way
- of walking was strangely out of keeping with her garments of bereavement.
- Hindwood's curiosity was piqued. In a shamefaced way he was overwhelmingly
- interested. He felt himself capable of a great romance. For the moment he
- was almost grateful for the annoyances that had presented him with so
- thrilling an opportunity.
- </p>
- <p>
- What was he meant to do? The message had forbidden him to accost her. He
- had been ordered merely to follow. How long and whither? At the Foreign
- Office a high official was waiting for him, expecting every minute to hear
- him announced. To wander through London after an unknown woman was the
- trick of a gallant or a moonstruck boy. He was neither. He was a man of
- discretion, who aimed at becoming the advisor of statesmen and yet his
- conduct was open to every misinterpretation. He began to feel himself a
- scoundrel. For a man whose emotions had always been shepherded, the
- sensation was exciting and not wholly unpleasant.
- </p>
- <p>
- If he could only learn something about her! Crossing to the opposite
- pavement, he hurried his pace till he was abreast of her.
- </p>
- <p>
- She was young. Her figure was slight and upright. She was about the same
- build as Santa, but seemed taller. If she were indeed Santa, this
- impression of added height might be due to the somberness of her attire.
- She was so carefully veiled that even her hair was hidden; there was no
- feature by which he could identify her. He tried another experiment.
- Recrossing the street to a point some distance ahead, he loitered before a
- shop, making a self-conscious pretense of studying its wares. He heard the
- rustle of her crêpe as she drew near him. She went by him so closely that
- she almost touched him. He was conscious of the faint fragrance of her
- perfume. In the window he caught the dim reflection of her figure. At the
- moment that she was immediately behind him, she moved her head in a
- backward gesture, seeming to indicate that he should follow. When he
- turned to obey, she was drifting through the September sunshine,
- completely self-absorbed and unnoticing.
- </p>
- <p>
- Traveling the yard of St. James Palace, she entered the Mall. There she
- hesitated, giving him time to catch up with her. A taxi was crawling by.
- She hailed it. Addressing the driver, but glancing directly at himself,
- she said in a sweet, distinct voice:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Victoria Station. The Brighton platform.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- V
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">W</span>as she Santa? The
- voice had sounded different, yet, had his life depended on it, he could
- not have decided. There was only one way of finding out&mdash;by joining
- her on the Brighton platform. This would mean missing his appointment at
- the Foreign Office. He was prepared to make the sacrifice, but he had no
- guarantee that the chase would end there. It was possible that she would
- still refuse to satisfy his curiosity and compel him to accompany her
- further. His rôle was that of the incautious fly. But who was the
- master-spinner of this web in which it was intended that he should become
- entangled? Was it the Little Grandmother? He had asked her whether they
- would meet again. In the light of present happenings, her answer took on a
- sinister meaning, &ldquo;Will you want to to-morrow?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- As he stood there in the sunshine of the Mall, with the thud of
- fashionable equipages flashing by, a sullen conviction grew up within him
- that he was becoming afraid. An empty taxi hove in sight. He beckoned.
- Before it had halted, he was standing on the running-board.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To Victoria Station. The Brighton platform.&rdquo; The driver took his brevity
- for a sign that a train was to be caught by the narrowest of margins. He
- made such speed that they drew up against the curb just as the widow's
- vehicle was departing. She threw him a furtive glance from behind her
- veil, then turned and moved away as though he were the completest
- stranger. Imitating her discretion, he followed at a distance.
- </p>
- <p>
- Halting before the ticket-office, she produced her purse. He edged nearer;
- it was necessary that he should learn her destination.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A first-class single to Seafold,&rdquo; he heard her say.
- </p>
- <p>
- When his turn came, he repeated her words, adding: &ldquo;How long before it
- starts?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Five minutes,&rdquo; the clerk told him.
- </p>
- <p>
- As he gathered up his change, he was surprised to observe how little was
- left out of his pound. He had supposed Seafold would prove to be a suburb.
- By the cost of his ticket he estimated that it must be a journey of at
- least sixty miles. Was it worth the taking? Could he return that same
- evening? He might get stranded. If that happened, he was unprepared to
- spend the night. These considerations were swept aside when he noticed
- that the widow had once more vanished.
- </p>
- <p>
- Accosting a porter, &ldquo;The Seafold platform?&rdquo; he asked breathlessly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Same as the one for Brighton.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That tells me nothing. There's no luggage. Show me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Before he had passed the barrier, he was aware that the train was crowded.
- In third-class compartments passengers were standing. To discover any one
- under these circumstances would be a labor of patience. Carriage-doors
- were being banged and locked. Even at this final moment his habitual
- caution reasserted itself. What else but folly could result from an
- adventure so recklessly undertaken?
- </p>
- <p>
- The porter caught him by the arm. &ldquo;'Ere you are, mister. 'Op in. You're
- lucky.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- No sooner had he squeezed himself into the remaining seat than, with a
- groaning jerk, the train started.
- </p>
- <h3>
- VI
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">L</span>ucky! The luckiest
- thing that could have happened to him would have been to be left behind.
- Here he was, following a woman whose face he had not seen, to a place
- which, up to a few moments ago, he had not known existed. Even to believe
- that he was following her required optimism; he had no proof that she was
- on the train. Probably it had been part of her strategy to send him
- scurrying on this fool's errand, in order that her accomplices might be
- undisturbed while they ransacked his rooms in his absence.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'll make an end of this nonsense,&rdquo; he told himself, &ldquo;by alighting at the
- next stopping-place.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- But where was the next stopping-place? He glanced along the double row of
- his fellow-passengers, barricaded behind their papers. He wanted to ask
- his question and watched for an opportunity. At last, losing patience, he
- nudged the man beside him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Excuse me, sir; I'm a stranger. I've made a mistake. My ticket's to
- Seafold, wherever that may be, and I&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- With his nose still glued to the page, the man muttered: &ldquo;That's all
- right. You don't need to worry. It's where you're going.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But it isn't all right,&rdquo; Hindwood contradicted with a shade of annoyance.
- &ldquo;I don't want to go to Seafold; I want to return to London. What I'm
- trying to ask you is where can I get out?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Lewes, if you think it's worth while.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why shouldn't I think it's worth while?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The paper rustled testily and was raised a few inches higher. &ldquo;Because
- Lewes is almost at Seafold. It's the junction where you change&mdash;the
- one and only stop between here and Brighton.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Turning away disgustedly, he watched the swiftly changing landscape.
- Everything that met his eyes was beautiful, with a domestic, thought-out,
- underlying tenderness. It had all been planned, that was what he felt, by
- the loving labor of countless generations. In a homeless man like himself
- the sight created a realization of forlornness. He had traveled five
- continents and had planted his affections nowhere. It was the same with
- his human relations. He could reckon his acquaintances by the thousand,
- yet there was no one to whom he was indispensably dear. By a mental
- transition, the implication of which he scarcely appreciated, he began to
- think of Santa.
- </p>
- <p>
- They were slowing down. He was surprised to discover that an hour had gone
- by. The man at his side folded up his paper. Now that they were about to
- part, he considered it safe to be friendly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We're coming into Lewes,&rdquo; he said with a smile. &ldquo;The Seafold train will
- be waiting just across the platform. You can't miss it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood thanked him brusquely.
- </p>
- <p>
- What to do next? If he were fortunate in catching an express, he could be
- in London in time to dine. As he stepped out, he saw the Seafold local
- waiting. What good would it do him to go to Seafold? Yet to quit now would
- be humiliatingly unadventurous. He was moving slowly towards the stair,
- when he was arrested by a voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If you wouldn't mind? It was stupid of me to drop it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He turned sharply. She was leaning out of a carriage window which he was
- in the act of passing.
- </p>
- <p>
- Without giving him time to question, she explained: &ldquo;My ticket&mdash;it
- slipped from my hand. There it is behind you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The moment he had stooped and returned it, she withdrew herself. It had
- happened so quickly that he had no chance to guess at the features behind
- the heavy veil. With a promptitude of decision which almost deceived
- himself, as though he had never harbored any other intention, he opened
- the door and clambered into the carriage next to hers.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's that,&rdquo; he thought, smiling tolerantly at his relieved sense of
- satisfaction. And then, &ldquo;It was no accident. She saw that I was giving up
- the chase. She did it to keep me going. What's her game?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Whatever her game was, he was well on the road to enlightenment. The
- engine was puffing through a valley, across salt-marshes intersected by
- dykes and sluggish streams, where derelict boats lay sunken in the mud,
- rotting among the wild-flowers. Grazing sheep made the quiet plaintive
- with their cries. Gulls, disturbed by the train's impetuous onrush, rose
- and drifted lazily into the peace that slumbered further inland. Of a
- sudden, with a gesture of exaltation, the gleaming chalk-cliffs of the
- coast leaped into sight and beyond them the dull flash of the Channel.
- </p>
- <p>
- He was clamorous with excitement. Curiosity beat masterfully on the door
- of the future. He had to find out. Why had he been brought here? What had
- Santa to do with it? Who was the woman in the next compartment?
- </p>
- <p>
- They had halted several times. Each time he had watched carefully to see
- whether she was eluding him. Again their speed was slackening. They were
- entering a little, sandy town, dotted with red-brick villas, bleached by
- the wind and sun. He caught glimpses between the houses of a battered
- esplanade, of concrete breakwaters partly destroyed, of a pebbly beach
- alternately sucked down and quarrelsomely hurled back by the waves. Over
- all hung the haunting fragrance of salt, and gorse, and wild thyme.
- </p>
- <p>
- They had come to a standstill. Passengers were climbing out and greeting
- friends. A porter flung wide the door of his carriage, shouting, &ldquo;Seafold!
- Seafold!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Having watched her alight, he followed. She was a few paces ahead, picking
- her way daintily through the crowd. Again she was all discretion and gave
- no hint that she had noticed him. Outside the gate, cabmen offered
- themselves for hire. She shook her head denyingly and passed on with her
- tripping step. Not until the station had been left behind did he remember
- that he ought to have inquired at what times the trains departed for
- London. Too late! His immediate business was keeping her in sight.
- </p>
- <p>
- With the unhesitating tread of one familiar with her surroundings, she
- chose what seemed to be the most important street. It was narrow and
- flanked by little, stooping cottages, most of which had been converted
- into shops which cater to the needs of tourists. It was the end of the
- season. A few remaining visitors were sauntering aimlessly up and down.
- Natives, standing in groups, had the appearance of being fishermen. Some
- of them nodded to her respectfully; without halting, she passed them with
- a pleasant word. At the bottom of the street she turned into a road,
- paralleling the sea-front, which led through a waste of turf and sand into
- the wind-swept uplands of the open country. Just where the country met the
- town there stood a lath-and-plaster house, isolated, facing seaward,
- creeper-covered, surrounded by high hedges. It was more pretentious than
- any he had seen as yet. Giving no sign that she was aware she was
- followed, she pushed open the rustic gate, passed up the red-tiled path,
- produced a latch-key, and admitted herself. There, in the bare stretch of
- road, having lured him all the way from London, without a single backward
- glance or any sign that would betray her recognition of his presence, she
- left him.
- </p>
- <h3>
- VII
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">J</span>ust what I might
- have expected,&rdquo; he said aloud.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Did you speak ter me, mister?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He swung round to find a freckled, bare-legged urchin gazing up at him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I didn't. Who are you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A caddy from them links over there.&rdquo; He pointed a grubby finger along the
- road to where, half a mile away, the level of the seashore swept up into a
- bold, green headland.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then I guess you're the sort of boy I'm looking for. Who lives in this
- house?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A Madam Something or other. 'Er name sounds Russian.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What does she look like?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Dunno. She's a widder and covers 'erself up. Not but what she 'as
- gentlemen friends as visits 'er.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You seem a sharp boy. Can you tell me how long she's lived here?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Maybe a year; off and on that's ter say. I don't recolleck.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Is she by herself?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There's an old woman in the garden sometimes as looks a 'undred. She
- wears a white hanky tied round 'er 'ead.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I think that's all I want to ask you. Here's something for you. Oh yes,
- do you happen to know about the trains to London?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The last one's gorn, mister, if that's what yer means. It's the one that
- our gents at the golf-links aims ter catch.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then I'm out of luck. Good evening, sonny, and thank you for your
- information.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The bare legs showed no signs of departing; the freckled face still gazed
- up.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's interesting you. My way of speaking? I'm American.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The boy shook his head. &ldquo;We 'ad Canadian soldiers 'ere during the war;
- they're pretty near Americans.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then what is it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's that you're the second gent to-day to slip me a shilling for telling
- 'im about this 'ouse. And it's something else.&rdquo; He sank his voice to a
- whisper. &ldquo;Don't look round. There's been some one a-peeking from be'ind a
- bedroom winder most of the time as we've been talkin'. I'd best be goin'.
- Good evenin', mister.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Not to attract attention by loitering, Hindwood set off at a businesslike
- pace down the road toward the headland. As he drew further away from the
- house, he walked more slowly; he was trying to sort out his facts. The
- woman who lived there had a Russian name. Santa Gorlof! She dressed like a
- widow. That would be to disguise herself. The news about the gentlemen
- friends who visited her was quite in keeping with the character which the
- Major had bestowed on her, but not at all welcome. She had lived there for
- a year, off and on. Her companion was an old woman, nearly a hundred&mdash;the
- Little Grandmother! But who was this man who earlier in the day had bribed
- the boy that he might obtain precisely the same information? He reminded
- himself that the police were hunting for her. The man might be a
- detective. If justice had already run her to earth, Seafold was the last
- place in which he ought to be found. If the boy had been accurate about
- the trains, there was no escape till the morning. Even though he were to
- hire an automobile, he would be placing his visit to Seafold on record.
- Self-preservation rose up rampant. What a fool he'd been to involve
- himself in so perilous an affair!
- </p>
- <p>
- And yet, once more and for the last time, he longed to see Santa's face.
- Why was it? Was it because her hearsay wickedness fascinated him? It was
- not because he loved her. It was not to gratify morbid curiosity&mdash;at
- least not entirely. Perhaps it was because he pitied her and, against his
- will, discovered a certain grandeur in her defiance. She had played a lone
- hand. Like a beast of prey in the jungle, she was surrounded; at this
- moment she must be listening for the stealthy tread of those who were
- encompassing her destruction, yet she had not lost her cunning. She was
- fighting to the end. Probably this time, as when the firing-squad waited
- for her in the woods of Vincennes, she was planning to employ a man as her
- substitute&mdash;<i>himself</i>. The fact remained that in her desperate
- need, she had appealed to him for help. There was the barest chance that
- she was innocent&mdash;a victim of false-appearing circumstances. He
- wanted to judge her for himself by tearing aside the widow's veil and
- gazing on her destroying beauty.
- </p>
- <p>
- Turning off the road, he struck across the links, climbing toward the
- towering headland. The wind, coming in gusts, rustled the parched gorse
- and brittle fronds of bracken. Behind his back the sun was setting,
- flinging a level bar of gold across the leaden sea. In sudden lulls, when
- the wind ceased blowing, the air pulsated with the rhythmic cannonading of
- waves assaulting the wall of cliffs. When he listened intently, he could
- hear the <i>ha-ha</i> of their cheering and their sullen moan as they were
- beaten back. It was strange to think that two weeks ago he had been in New
- York, intent on nothing but acquiring a fortune. Women had not troubled
- him. Why should he now permit this woman, chance-met on ship-board, to
- divert him&mdash;a woman who could never be closer to him?
- </p>
- <p>
- He had reached the summit of the promontory. Etched against the sky-line,
- his figure must be visible for miles. The sun sank lower and vanished.
- Gazing through the clear atmosphere, far below him he could discern every
- detail of the house to which he had been tempted. It looked a fitting nest
- for an old poet. It held no hint of terror. At the same time it was
- strategically well situated for occupants who wished to keep an eye on all
- approaches.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had been watching for any sign of movement, when a curious thing
- happened. Though no figure appeared, from one of the upper windows a white
- cloth fluttered. He shaded his eyes with his hand. The signal was
- repeated. He tapped his breast and pointed, as much as to say, &ldquo;Shall I
- come?&rdquo; The cloth was shaken vigorously. On repeating the experiment, he
- obtained the same result. When he nodded his head in assent, the
- fluttering ended.
- </p>
- <p>
- So every step of his progress had been observed by some one spying through
- a telescope from behind the curtained windows! The first moment he had
- afforded an opportunity by looking back, the signaling had commenced. That
- so much secrecy should be employed seemed to betoken that Santa's case was
- desperate. That she should have run the risk of tempting him down from
- London must mean that he possessed some peculiar facility for rendering
- her a much needed service.
- </p>
- <p>
- The imminence of the danger, both to her and to himself, was emphasized by
- this latest precaution. She had not dared to admit him to the house or
- even to acknowledge his presence, until she had made certain that he, in
- his turn, was not followed.
- </p>
- <p>
- This thought, that he might be followed, filled him with an entirely new
- sensation; it peopled every clump of gorse and bed of bracken with
- possible unseen enemies. The rustling of the wind, the cry of a sea-bird,
- made him turn alertly, scanning with suspicion every hollow and mound of
- the wild, deserted landscape. It seemed unwise to allow his actions to
- announce his intentions too plainly. What his intentions were he was not
- very certain. His immediate inclination was to shake himself free from the
- whole mysterious complication.
- </p>
- <p>
- Continuing his ramble, he assumed a careless gait, descending the further
- side of the promontory and bearing always slightly inland, so that his
- course might lead back eventually to the road from which he had departed.
- As dusk was gathering, he found himself entering an abandoned military
- camp. The bare hutments, with their dusty windows and padlocked doors,
- stretched away in seeming endless avenues of ghostly silence. The Maple
- Leaf, painted on walls and sign-boards, explained the village boy's
- reference to Canadian soldiers. He had reached the heart of it, when he
- was possessed by the overpowering sensation that human eyes were gazing at
- him. Pulling himself up, he glanced back across his shoulder, crooking his
- arm to ward off a blow. Realizing what he was doing, he relaxed and stared
- deliberately about him. Nothing! No sign of life! Yet the certainty
- remained that human eyes were watching.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nerves!&rdquo; he muttered contemptuously.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was dark when, leaving the camp, he struck the road. Stars were coming
- out. Far away along the coast the distant lights of a harbor blinked and
- twinkled. He hurried his steps. His mind was made up. He would get
- something to eat in Seafold, discover a garage, hire a car and be back in
- London by midnight. To confirm his will in this decision, he began making
- plans for the morrow.
- </p>
- <p>
- To enter the town he had to pass the house. As its bulk gathered shape,
- his feet moved more slowly. Long before he came opposite it, he had caught
- the fragrance of the myrtle in its hedges. The windows which looked his
- way were shrouded. He paused for a moment outside the rustic gate. He was
- saying good-by to adventure. He was too old. His season for pardonable
- folly was ended. The prose of life had claimed him.
- </p>
- <p>
- Prolonging the pretense of temptation, he pushed open the gate. A hand
- touched his&mdash;a woman's. The desire to play safe faded. Weakly
- capitulating, he allowed himself to be led up the path and across the
- shadowy threshold. The door of the darkened house closed behind him. She
- was slipping the bolts into place.
- </p>
- <h3>
- VIII
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">H</span>e listened. He
- could not see her face&mdash;only the blurred outline of her figure.
- Except for the sound of her movements, the silence was unbroken. At the
- end of a passage, leading from the hall, a streak of gold escaped along
- the carpet.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Santa!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- No answer.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Santa, why have you brought me?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Gliding past him down the passage, she darted into the lighted room,
- leaving the door ajar behind her. He followed gropingly. As he entered, he
- was momentarily confused by the sudden change from darkness.
- </p>
- <p>
- She was addressing him in a small, strained voice. &ldquo;There's no need to be
- afraid.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He looked about him, searching for the inspirer of fear. There was no one
- save themselves. Then he noticed how she trembled. She was making a brave
- effort to appear collected, but it was plain that she was wild with
- terror. Her eyes were wide and dilated. She stood on the defensive, backed
- against the fireplace, as though she were expecting violence. Her right
- hand was in advance of her body. It held something which caught the glow
- of the flames&mdash;a nickel-plated revolver, cocked and ready for
- immediate action. His reception was so different from anything he had
- anticipated that he stared with an amused expression of inquiry.
- </p>
- <p>
- At last he asked, &ldquo;You knew from the start that I thought you were Santa?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Biting her lip to prevent herself from crying, she nodded. Far from being
- Santa, she was fair as any Dane, with China-blue eyes and the complexion
- of a wild rose. He noted the little wisps of curls which made a haze of
- gold about her forehead. She wore turquoise earrings. They were her only
- adornment. She herself was a decoration. She was like a statue of the
- finest porcelain, so flawless that she seemed unreal. Had it not been for
- her widow's mourning, he would have said that she was untouched by
- passionate experience. She had an appearance of provoking innocence, which
- made the paleness of her beauty ardent as a flame.
- </p>
- <p>
- Speaking quietly, &ldquo;I'm not easily frightened,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;and you, while
- you keep me covered with that revolver, have no reason to be afraid. Any
- moment you choose you can kill me&mdash;you've only to press the trigger.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Tears of horror sprang into her eyes. &ldquo;But I don't want to kill you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0004" id="linkimage-0004"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0136.jpg" alt="0136m " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0136.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then why don't you lay it aside?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Because&mdash;&rdquo; She gazed at him appealingly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Because I'm alone. I may need it to protect myself.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;From me? No. I should think you can see that.&rdquo; Was the house really
- empty? He listened. It was possible that some one might steal up from
- behind. He did not dare to turn. His only chance of preventing her from
- shooting him was to keep her engaged in conversation.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If you feel this way, why did you go to such elaborate pains to force me
- to visit you to-night? You must have known that I didn't want to come. It
- isn't I who have intruded.&rdquo; He smiled cheerfully. &ldquo;At the risk of
- appearing rude, I'll be frank with you. When you crossed my path at the
- Ritz, I was on the point of keeping a most important engagement. When I
- followed you out of the hotel, it was because of a message I'd found
- pinned to my pillow, 'Follow the widow.' So it wasn't you in particular
- that I was following; I'd have followed any widow. I expected that you'd
- speak to me as soon as we were in the street. I'd no intention of giving
- up my appointment. You didn't; you led me on, further and further, a step
- at a time. I don't mind telling you that when I found myself in the train,
- I was extremely annoyed. By the time I'd arrived at Lewes, I'd fully made
- up my mind to abandon the chase. Then you spoke to me. I'd wasted so much
- of my afternoon that I didn't like being beaten. You'd roused my
- curiosity. Here in Seafold, you dodged me and left me standing in the road
- like a dummy. That used up the fag-end of my patience; I was mad clean
- through. I didn't care if I never saw you again. When you signaled me on
- the headland, I signaled back that I was coming. I wasn't. I was tired of
- being led on and eluded. When you caught me at the gate, I was flirting
- with temptation, but I'd already laid my plans to be back in London by
- midnight. So you see you can scarcely blame me for being here. The shoe's
- on the other foot entirely. You've put me to great inconvenience merely to
- tell me, it would seem, that you don't want to shoot me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then why not throw the thing away? You're far more scared of it than I
- am.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Because I may have to use it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;On whom?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A sweet, slow smile turned up the edges of her mouth. &ldquo;My orders were to
- keep you here, if once I'd managed to persuade you inside.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He laughed outright. &ldquo;You hate having me here, and you'd hate to see me
- go. Isn't that the way the land lies? I'm more or less in the same fix: I
- didn't want to come, and I don't want to stay. The fact remains that we're
- both here. Why not make the best of it? If you'll stop brandishing that
- weapon, I'll feel much more comfortable. I'm not trying to escape.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You might.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- For the first time he dared to shift his position. &ldquo;Don't be alarmed,&rdquo; he
- warned her. &ldquo;That's easier. I was stiff. Now, if you'll listen, I've a
- proposal to make. You're treating me like a burglar, which isn't fair. You
- may know, but I've not the least idea how long you intend to hold me
- prisoner. I guess you're waiting for some one else to arrive, but that's
- neither here nor there. Before the third person comes, you may have shot
- me&mdash;of course, by accident. Revolvers go off if you keep them too
- long pointed. You know nothing about firearms, and I'm beginning to be
- rather fond of life. Here's what I propose: if you'll put it away, I'll
- give you my parole not to come within two yards of you or to attempt to
- escape. If I want my parole back, you shall have a full five minutes'
- notice.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If I thought that I could trust you&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You can. Is it a bargain?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Without answering, placing her weapon on the mantelpiece, she turned her
- back on him. She seemed waiting to hear him advance further into the room.
- He did not stir.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is it, Mr. Hindwood?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's that I've just remembered one thing for which our armistice has not
- provided. You'd better pick up your gun again. It's that I haven't dined.
- I wonder whether you'd let me into the village&mdash;&rdquo; He left his
- sentence unended. He suddenly perceived that she was shaken with sobbing.
- In his concern, he forgot his compact as to distance and hurried over to
- her side. She swung round, her face blinded with tears. As she stumbled
- past him, she muttered: &ldquo;You've beaten me. You're not afraid. I couldn't
- shoot you now if I wanted.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- IX
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>iptoeing to the
- threshold, he turned the handle and peeped into the passage. As before,
- everything was in darkness.
- </p>
- <p>
- He was free to go. There was nothing to stop him&mdash;nothing except his
- honor. It was easy to argue that even his honor did not prevent him. He
- had canceled his parole when he had reopened negotiations by telling her
- to pick up her revolver. She had left it behind her on the mantel-shelf.
- He took it in his hand and examined it. It was a repeater. Every chamber
- was loaded. He whistled softly&mdash;so she had meant business! Setting
- the hammer at half-cock, he slipped the weapon in his pocket. He was
- master of the situation now.
- </p>
- <p>
- Why didn't he go? Two hours of steady driving, three at the most, and he
- could be in London. He reminded himself that at this very moment his
- private papers might be in the process of being ransacked. What if they
- were? The possibility left him utterly indifferent. He couldn't save them
- after the lapse of another three hours.
- </p>
- <p>
- No, the truth was that since his voyage on the <i>Ryndam</i> all the
- emphases of his life were becoming altered. The importance of money and
- power no longer seemed paramount. After nearly forty years of living, he
- had awakened to the fact that it was women who shed a radiance of glamour
- in an otherwise gloomy world. Of all human adventures they were the most
- enthralling and the least certain of rewarding.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was curiosity that had enticed him into his present entanglements; his
- curiosity had yet to be satisfied. With a revolver in his pocket, he felt
- that he now possessed the means of extracting the right answers to his
- questions. He had suffered mild inconveniences, but so far he hadn't done
- so badly. He had established mysterious relations with two beautiful
- women. One of them was already under the same roof; the other, he
- believed, was momentarily expected. He began to figure himself as a poet,
- a dreamer, a potential storm-center of romance.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And all because she has blue eyes!&rdquo; he hinted.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then he remembered that Santa's eyes were gray, and that up to the last
- half-hour it had been Santa whom he had supposed that he was following.
- </p>
- <p>
- He gazed about him, making an inspection of the room, trying to guess at
- the characters of its inhabitants. It was square and small. Its walls were
- lined ceiling-high with shelves overloaded with books of a learned
- appearance. A work-basket stood on a mahogany desk with mending, scissors,
- and reels of cotton strewn near it. A piano had been crushed into a
- corner, looking flippantly out of place amid these scholarly surroundings.
- Below the mantelshelf was a rack containing a row of pipes. Set about
- wherever a space allowed were vases of freshly cut flowers.
- </p>
- <p>
- The contradictions of the room suggested that it had once been a man's
- den, but had now been taken over by a woman. This seemed to indicate that
- the owner of the house was actually a widow.
- </p>
- <p>
- Almost the whole of the wall confronting the door was occupied by a tall
- French window, which opened directly on a lawn. Shrubs grew waist-high
- about it. Instinct told him that this was the likeliest approach for the
- other person, by whose order his kidnaping had been plotted. He felt
- convinced that this person would prove to be a woman, but he was taking no
- chances. With the night behind her, she could spy on him for hours without
- being detected. She might be spying on him now.
- </p>
- <p>
- Assuming a listless manner, he seated himself to one side of the
- fireplace. Out of the tail of his eye, without seeming to do so, he
- watched the shadowy panes. His right hand was thrust into his pocket,
- gripping the revolver.
- </p>
- <p>
- After the lapse of some minutes, he heard in the passage the widow's
- returning footsteps. Outside the door she halted, fumbling at the handle.
- Giving up the attempt, she called to him to open. Just as he was rising, a
- face, tense with eagerness, lifted itself out of the bushes, peering in on
- him.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER THE FOURTH&mdash;HE BECOMES PART OF THE GAME
- </h2>
- <h3>
- I
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HE face hung there
- against the darkness for a second; then the leaves closed over it as it
- was stealthily withdrawn. In the utterness of his astonishment, Hindwood
- all but gave himself away. It was not the face he had expected.
- </p>
- <p>
- Masking his excitement with a yawn, he turned his back on the window and
- stepped toward the door, opening it sufficiently to thrust his head into
- the passage, but not wide enough to permit the watcher in the bushes to
- learn anything of the person with whom he talked. He found his captress
- standing just beyond the threshold, carrying a tray, which accounted for
- her awkwardness.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You won't have to dine in the village,&rdquo; she explained. Then, catching his
- strange expression, &ldquo;What has happened?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Some one was to come to-night,&rdquo; he whispered: &ldquo;the person who gave orders
- for my kidnaping. Isn't that so? She was to enter through the window from
- the lawn, while you held me prisoner at the revolver's point.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Is she here?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, but a man who is her enemy&mdash;a Major Cleasby. He's hiding
- directly in her path. He supposed you were she when you tried the door. He
- showed his face. Is there any way in which we can warn her?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The widow set down her tray. Her eyes met his searchingly. &ldquo;If the man
- were there, you wouldn't want to save her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why not? You think I've invented the man in the bushes in order that
- Santa may be scared away? I'm no more afraid of Santa than I was of you.
- Besides, in your absence I've stolen your revolver. Ah, that convinces
- you! The man's her husband and a secret service agent. I can feel his eyes
- in my back. If you don't warn her, she'll be caught. There must have been
- some prearranged signal. What was it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Instead of answering, she pressed nearer, glancing fearfully across her
- shoulder into the unlighted hall. Her voice came so faintly that he could
- only just hear her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She wouldn't spare us. Why should you and I&mdash;? You don't know what
- she intended.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He smiled grimly. &ldquo;I can guess. I was to have been her scapegoat for the
- Rogovich murder. She was staging a new version of what happened in the
- woods of Vincennes. Whether she escaped or was brought to trial, I was to
- have been arrested. By that time she would have clothed me with the
- appearance of her guilt. I was to have figured as her lover and the
- Prince's rival. The motive for my crime was to have been jealousy. The old
- story&mdash;an innocent man dying in her stead!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If you think you know that, why should you, unless you are her lover?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Because she's a woman.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her hands seized his, coaxing him from the doorway into the darkened
- passage. &ldquo;For the love of God, go!&rdquo; she implored. &ldquo;I give you back your
- parole.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Drawing her to him, he held her fast. &ldquo;Don't struggle. He might hear you.
- You decoyed me. You trapped me. Why this change? What makes you so
- concerned for my safety?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I didn't know,&rdquo; she panted, &ldquo;the kind of man you are.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What kind?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her heart beat wildly. She lay against him unstirring, her face averted.
- The moment he released her, she burst forth into new pleading.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;For my sake. I beg of you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Into the grimness of his smiling there stole a gleam of tenderness. &ldquo;And
- leave you? I guess not. What's the signal?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The piano.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Come, then,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;you shall play for me. While you play, if we mask
- our expressions, we can talk of what we choose. Outwardly, to deceive the
- man in the bushes, we must act a part. I'm an old friend. I've dropped in
- unexpectedly. You've provided me with supper. While I eat, we chatter and
- laugh. You sit at the piano and sing for me occasionally. When the hour
- for Santa's arrival is past, I take my leave. If you're brave, we can
- carry the farce through. Are you game?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- For answer she picked up the tray and stepped into the room, smiling back
- at him as he followed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm your humble servant, as always, Mr. Hind-wood, but I have only two
- hands and they're occupied. If you'll bring up that table&mdash;yes, set
- it before the fire. That's right. You must be comfortable, if I'm to sing
- for you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- II
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>he won't come
- now.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The words reached him in a sigh. The pale hands fluttered from the
- keyboard. The fair head dropped. Almost instantly she straightened
- herself, banishing her appearance of weariness. &ldquo;Don't think that I'm
- showing the white feather. It's only that I'm exhausted. She won't come
- now. I'm sure of it.&rdquo; Then, bending forward with a nervous tremor, &ldquo;I
- daren't look round. Has he gone?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood pushed back his chair from before the hearth. For the moment he
- did not answer. He was striving to restore the spell which the intrusion
- of her fear had broken. Glancing at her sideways, he regarded her quietly
- where she sat at the piano in her widow's garb. Through the window at her
- back he caught a glimpse of the garden, shadowy and patched with
- moonlight. Above the silence he heard the rumble of waves, sifting the
- pebbles on the shore. Who was she, this woman who possessed the magic to
- enchant him? Who had been her husband? What kind of man? Had she loved
- him? How long since he had died? There were so many questions.
- </p>
- <p>
- She had persuaded him into following her, well knowing that he believed
- her to be Santa. She had met his discovery of her impersonation with a
- threat. When the luck was all in her favor, with the panic of a stricken
- conscience she had thrown in her hand. For the past two hours, in this
- cozy room, she had surrounded him with shy intimacies of affection, to the
- end that the unseen spectator, listening outside the panes, might be
- beguiled. Apparently the deception had succeeded; the spectator had given
- no sign. It had succeeded too well for Hindwood. It had roused in him the
- longing that, behind her pretense of friendship, there might lurk a
- genuine emotion of liking. He had tried to forget that the scene was
- stage-set. He had wanted to believe that it was real.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Has he gone?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a break in her voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- He pulled himself together. &ldquo;Do you wish me to make certain?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Rising, he lounged over to the piano as though to select a sheet from the
- pile of music. In a flash he turned, wrenching wide the doors of the
- French-window, and was across the step in a bound. Nothing rose from the
- shadows to disturb the peace of the night. Stooping by the bushes, he made
- a hurried examination.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Come,&rdquo; he called. Then, seeing how she pressed her hands against her
- mouth, &ldquo;There's no need to fear.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- When she was standing by his side, he explained: &ldquo;To-morrow you might
- think that I'd tricked you. I want you to see for yourself. Here's where
- he was hiding when he peered in on me. The ground's trampled. The bushes
- are bent back.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He may be still here,&rdquo; she whispered, &ldquo;in the garden&mdash;somewhere.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood smiled reassuringly into her upturned face. &ldquo;He wouldn't do you
- any harm if he were. Remember he's a secret service agent. As a matter of
- fact, he ought to make you feel safe.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Safe!&rdquo; She knotted her hands against her breast. &ldquo;Shall I ever feel safe?
- Oh, if I could confess&mdash;to you, to any one!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If it would help&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Without giving him a chance to finish his sentence, she plucked at his
- sleeve with the eagerness of a child. &ldquo;Would you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Let me?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- III
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>hey had reentered
- the room, fastening the window securely behind them. When that was done,
- they had drawn the curtains across the panes. She had flung herself into a
- chair beside the fire and was waiting impatiently for him to join her. But
- he hovered in the center of the room, fingering his watch and looking
- troubled.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's delaying you?&rdquo; she asked without turning.
- </p>
- <p>
- He slipped his watch into his pocket. &ldquo;I had no idea it was so late.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Does that matter? Till morning there are no trains.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I was thinking of hotels.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They'll be shut.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Precisely. So what am I&mdash;&mdash;?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Stay with me,&rdquo; she said lazily.
- </p>
- <p>
- The room became profoundly silent. The darkened house seemed to listen.
- Had he plumbed a new depth in this drama of betrayal at the moment when he
- hoped he had discovered loyalty? He had been deceived by women before. Had
- he not allowed Santa to deceive him, he would not have been here. He might
- tell himself that this woman was different. If a man did not tell himself
- that each new woman was different, the mischief of love would end.
- </p>
- <p>
- He caught sight of her flaxen head and became ashamed of his reflections.
- It wasn't possible, if the soul was foul, that the flesh should be so
- fair. She had the wonder of the dawn in her eyes. Nothing that she had
- said or done could belie the frankness of her innocence. Standing behind
- her chair, he gazed down in puzzlement at her graciousness.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There are conventions. We may have met unconventionally, but neither of
- us can afford to ignore them.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Without looking up, she answered, &ldquo;If you were as alone as I am, you could
- afford to ignore anything.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Perhaps I am.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then you understand.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I think I understand.&rdquo; He spoke gently. &ldquo;I suppose no man can ever be so
- lonely as a woman, especially as a woman who has lost her happiness, but
- I, too, have been lonely. Everybody has. The cowardice which comes of
- loneliness is responsible for nearly every wickedness. Most thefts, and
- cheatings, and even murders are committed in an effort to gain
- companionship. But you can't elude loneliness by short-cuts. Wherever you
- go, it's with you from birth to death. Brave people make it their friend.
- Cowards let it become their tempter. Loneliness is no excuse for
- wrong-doing, nor even for surrendering to the appearance of it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Preaching?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No. Trying to share with you my experience. Until this afternoon, you
- didn't know that I existed. All your life up to the last five minutes,
- you've been able to do without me. Don't be greedy and spoil everything
- before it's started. There's tomorrow.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why wait for to-morrow when I trust you now?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He stooped lower. She had become irresistibly dear. In a rush he had found
- the clue to her character&mdash;her childishness. She couldn't bear to
- postpone the things she wanted.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Trust me! I wonder! You're the first woman to have the daring to tell me.
- I'm not sure that I feel complimented; at this hour of night one has to be
- a little cold to be trusted like that. But I trust you&mdash;which is
- strange after all that's happened. The person I distrust is myself. You're
- beautiful. The most beautiful&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Am I more beautiful than Santa?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He caught the vision of her blue eyes glinting up at him. There was
- nothing roguish in their expression. They were pathetic in their
- earnestness. Her throat was stretched back, white and firm. Her lips were
- vivid and parted. Her question sounded like the ruse of a coquette, yet
- she seemed wholly unaware of her attraction.
- </p>
- <p>
- He drew himself erect, staring at the wall that he might forbid himself
- the danger of looking at her. His voice came harsh and abrupt. &ldquo;Your
- confession can keep till morning. One can say and unsay anything. It's
- deeds that can never be unsaid.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He had reached the door. She spoke dully. &ldquo;You despise me.&rdquo; And then, &ldquo;All
- my life I've waited for to-morrows. Go quickly.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Glancing across his shoulder he saw her, a mist of gold in a great
- emptiness. Slowly he turned back.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Can't you guess the reason for my going? I reverence you too much.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Clutching at his hands, she dragged herself to her feet. &ldquo;It's friendship
- that I'm asking. What's the use of reverence? Like me a little. You'd do
- more for Santa. Only to like me wouldn't cost you much.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- IV
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span> should have died
- if you'd left me.&rdquo; He was feeling both amused and annoyed at his
- surrender; at the same time he was on the alert for developments. She had
- extinguished the lamps. The sole illumination was the firelight. For what
- reason she had done it, whether as an aid to confession or as a
- discouragement to watchers, she allowed him to guess. Whatever the reason,
- the precaution was wise, but it increased the atmosphere of liaison. He
- had pushed back his chair to the extreme corner of the hearth, so that he
- was scarcely discernible. She sat where the glow from the coals beat up
- into her face. He saw her profile against a background of darkness.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Died!&rdquo; He pursed his lips in masculine omniscience. &ldquo;You'd have gone to
- your bed and had a good night's rest.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I shouldn't. I was in terror. I used to be afraid only by night; now it's
- both day and night. You're never afraid. You weren't afraid even when I&mdash;&mdash;.
- How do you manage it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;By doing things, instead of thinking about the things that can be done to
- me. I've learned that what we fear never happens&mdash;fear's a waste of
- time. Fear's imagination playing tricks by pouncing out of cupboards. It's
- the idiot of the intellect, gibbering in the attic after nightfall. IPs a
- coward, spreading cowardice with false alarms. It's a liar and a libeller;
- life's a thousand times kinder than fear would have us paint it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She sighed happily. &ldquo;It was kind to me to-night.&rdquo; He waited for her
- confession to commence. She leaned back, her eyes half shut, watching the
- red landscape in the dancing flames. Time moved gently. Night seemed
- eternal. Her contentment proved contagious. Neither of them spoke. Nothing
- mattered save the comfort of her presence. In a hollow of the coals he
- invented a dream cottage to which he would take her. It had a scarlet wood
- behind it and mountains with ruby-tinted caves. As the fire settled, the
- mirage faded.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Does it strike you as comic,&rdquo; he questioned, &ldquo;that you and I should sit
- here after midnight and that I shouldn't even know what to call you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Varensky. Anna Varensky.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Russian?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She nodded.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But are you Russian?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm Ivan Varensky's wife.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You say it proudly, as though I ought to know who Ivan Varensky was.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She turned her head slowly, wondering at him. &ldquo;There's only one Ivan
- Varensky: the man who wanted to be like Christ.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood jerked himself into wakefulness. &ldquo;I'm afraid I need
- enlightenment. I don't&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You do,&rdquo; she contradicted patiently, &ldquo;or rather, you will when I've
- helped you to recall him. How hurt he would be, poor Ivan, that a man of
- your standing should so soon have forgotten him! He hoped to make such a
- noise in the world. After Czardom had fallen, he aimed to be a savior,
- healing men with words. But he wanted to be crucified at once. He cared
- more for Calvary than for the road that led up to it. He was an
- emotionalist, impatient of Gethsemane; it was the crown of thorns that he
- coveted. Having only words with which to save humanity, he dashed all over
- Russia in special trains, speechifying at every halting-place, foretelling
- his approaching end. He had no time to waste; he believed his days were
- numbered. His message was always the same, whether he was addressing the
- Duma, armies marching into action, or a handful of peasants: he was about
- to die for Russia. Then suddenly Trotzky and Lenine came. They were men
- who did things; they overthrew his government. Worse, still, they refused
- to fulfill his prophecies; instead of executing him, they bundled him into
- exile. To be forced to live, when he had pledged himself to die, was a
- more cruel crucifixion than any he had anticipated. He found himself
- nailed to the cross of ridicule with no one to applaud his sacrifice. He
- was left with nothing to talk about, for the thing he had talked about had
- not happened. He was an idealist, an inspirer, a prophet, but because
- death had avoided him, there was no gospel to write. Having climbed the
- long road to Calvary, he had the tragedy to survive. Don't think I'm
- belittling him. I loved him. It was a proud, but not an easy task to be
- the wife of a man who wanted to be like Christ.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She collapsed into silence, sitting lost in thought, her arms hanging
- limply by her sides. He wondered what pictures she was seeing in the fire&mdash;armed
- men marching, revolution, palaces going up in dame.
- </p>
- <p>
- Of course he remembered the Varensky she had described&mdash;the Varensky
- who, in the darkest hour of the war, had hurled himself like a
- knight-errant to the rescue of the Allies. It was he who was to have
- consolidated Russia, leading its millions in an endless tide to the defeat
- of the enemies of righteousness. It was freedom he had promised; freedom
- to everybody. He had preached that every man was good in himself, that the
- things that made men bad were laws. Therefore he had swept all laws aside.
- He had done away with compulsion, repealed death penalties, thrown prisons
- wide. For a day and night he had held the stage, a shining figure, adored
- by despairing eyes. Then the slaves whom he had released from restraints
- had surged over him. He had vanished, trampled beneath ungrateful feet,
- and Russia had become a mob.
- </p>
- <p>
- So this was Varensky's wife! He felt awed. The romantic heroism of her
- husband's failure clothed her with a wistful sacredness. Three years ago
- he could not have approached her. He would scarcely have dared to have
- regarded her as a woman. The hysteria of the moment had canonized her.
- Streets through which she drove in Petrograd had been lined with kneeling
- throngs. There had been something medieval in the spontaneity of her
- worship. It had been rumored that she was a bride immaculate; that her
- purity was the secret of her husband's strength. Her face made the story
- credible. It had the virgin innocence of a saint's. And here he was
- allowed to sit beside her, with three years gone, sharing her hearth in
- this obscure place of hiding!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You were a Russian Joan of Arc,&rdquo; he declared enthusiastically. &ldquo;How well
- I remember all the legends one read about you. And Varensky&mdash;&mdash;
- It doesn't matter that he failed; his was the most gallant figure of the
- entire war. When every nation was embittered, he set us an example of how
- not to hate. He refused to kill, when all of us were slaying. He had the
- courage of meekness; in that at least he followed Christ. What became of
- him? There was a report&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There have been many reports,&rdquo; she interrupted sadly. &ldquo;Lest the latest be
- true, I wear mourning. I wear mourning for him always. Before his fall I
- was his perpetual bride; since his fall I am his perpetual widow. He
- wishes to be dead, so to please him&mdash;&mdash;-&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then he's still alive?&rdquo; Immediately he was conscious of the indecency of
- his disappointment.
- </p>
- <p>
- She gazed into the darkness with a mild surprise. &ldquo;I do not know. I never
- know. That's the torture of it. He was always less a man than a spirit. I
- begin to think he can not die.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You want him&mdash;&mdash;?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- If she had heard his uncompleted question, she ignored it. With folded
- hands she stared into the red heart of the fire. Behind her, across the
- walls and ceiling as flames leaped and flickered, shadows took fantastic
- shapes. When she spoke, as though she were talking to herself, her words
- came softly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He was such a child&mdash;so dear, so vain, so intense, so sensitive. Why
- did he marry me, if it was only to resign me? He treated me as he treated
- Russia. We were both waiting for him to take us in his arms. But it was
- always ideals&mdash;things one can't embrace&mdash;that drew out his
- affections. Had he loved humanity less and individuals more, he could have
- gone so far. There was something monstrous about his self-abnegations.
- Perhaps he denied himself the things for which he did not care. He wanted
- to seem nobler than any one else. Through egotism he missed his chance.
- Had he planned to live, he could have killed his enemies and prevented
- revolution. There was a time when he could have crushed both Lenine and
- Trotzky. But he had to be too noble. 'No,' he said, 'if their ideal is
- more right than mine, it will conquer. Truth can not be silenced by
- slaughter.' It was his inhuman magnanimity that defeated him. So Lenine
- and Trotzky grew strong and crushed him. Because he had planned to die,
- millions are starving, and Russia is in chaos.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But he doesn't own it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;In his heart&mdash;yes. Like a General who has blundered, the vision of
- lost battlefields is forever in his eyes&mdash;the forests of white
- crosses! His egotism is gone. He wants to make atonement; to perish seems
- the only way. Any one who would delay him, even though she were a woman
- who loved him, is his enemy. In his remorse he hounds death as other men
- avoid it. He's head of the counterrevolution and goes continually into
- Russia for the overthrow of Bolshevism. Not that he hopes for success, but
- that he may be put against a wall and shot.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And always he returns?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Always until this last time.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her voice sank away in a whisper. He eyed her with misgiving. What was it
- she desired?
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I read something of this. He's been missing for a long time?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A long time.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Coming out of the shadows, so that she could see his face, he drew his
- chair close to hers.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And what has this to do with your confession?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- V
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>he flinched, as
- though he had made a motion to strike her. &ldquo;My confession! Ah, yes! I
- forgot.&rdquo; She tried to smile. Stretching out her hand, she touched him in a
- timid appeal for understanding. Taking it between his own he held it fast.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Like that,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;as though it were a bird that's tired. It isn't its
- own nest, but it's safe and warm; let it rest till it grows stronger.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You're good,&rdquo; she faltered. &ldquo;Most good men are hard.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Maybe,&rdquo; he laughed. &ldquo;But I'm not good. On the other hand, I don't suppose
- I'm bad. I'm simply a man who's always had to fight, so I know what it's
- like to be up against it. You're up against it at present. You can see
- nothing before you but a high stone wall with no way round it. I've been
- there, and I've found that when you can't get round a wall, there's
- usually a door. What do you say? Shall we look for a door together?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I have.&rdquo; She sank her head. &ldquo;Every day and night in three interminable
- years I've looked for it. I'm like a person lost in a fog, standing still,
- listening, running, falling.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Scared to death?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She nodded.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then don't be scared; stop running. Wait for your fear to catch up with
- you. If you face it, it'll shrink to nothing. The feet of a pursuer are
- like an army. What's causing your panic? Varensky? The thought that he may
- not return?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That he may?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That he may go on wasting me forever.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She waited for him to say something. When he remained silent, she bent
- forward staring vacantly into the hearth. &ldquo;Perhaps I'm a coward and
- unfaithful. Perhaps if he'd been successful&mdash;&mdash; I know what he
- thinks of me: that I'm a fair-weather wife. But I'm not. If it would help
- him, I'd give my life for him. He doesn't want my life. He doesn't want my
- body. He wants the one thing that I can't give him&mdash;that I should
- believe in him. There are people who still believe in him&mdash;the Little
- Grandmother. There are others, like Prince Rogovich, who pretended to
- believe in him that he might use him as a cat's-paw. He says good-by to me
- for the last time and vanishes. I wait in retirement for news of his
- execution. At the end of two months, three months, half a year, he comes
- back. Then the rehearsing for his martyrdom commences all afresh. If there
- were anything I could do! But to be wasted for no purpose!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She turned her head wearily, glancing at him sideways. &ldquo;You called me the
- Joan of Russia. I was almost. There was a time when not to be loved and
- not to be a mother seemed a small price to pay for sainthood. It was my
- happiness against the happiness of millions. But now&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; Her
- eyes filmed over.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But now&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;?&rdquo; he prompted.
- </p>
- <p>
- She brushed her tears away with pitiful defiance. &ldquo;I want to be a woman&mdash;to
- be everything in some man's life.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Perhaps you are in his, but he doesn't show it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She seemed to listen for laughter. Then, &ldquo;No,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;When I try to be
- a woman, I play Satan to him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And that's the wall?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not all of it. There's Santa.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- In the swift march of his emotions he had almost forgotten Santa. As
- though she had been drowning and he had turned back from rescuing her, the
- mention of her name stung him with reproach.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What of Santa?&rdquo; he asked in a low voice.
- </p>
- <h3>
- VI
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>he's in love with
- my husband.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He let go her hand. &ldquo;Do you mind if I smoke? Perhaps you'll join me? No?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He took his time while he lit his cigarette. Then, speaking slowly, &ldquo;I
- can't believe all the evil that I've heard about this woman. And yet I
- ought. Every fresh person has told me something increasingly vile. To make
- a case against her, I have only to take all the trouble she's caused me. I
- meet her on a liner and part with her on landing; from that moment I have
- no peace. I'm pestered by strangers accusing and defending her. My room is
- entered by spies. I find an anonymous note pinned to my pillow. I'm lured
- out of London into the heart of the country on the pretext that she's in
- danger and I can help her. You know the rest. Until the happenings of
- tonight, the most probable explanation seemed to be that she had taken a
- secret fancy to me and had turned to me in her distress, when she found
- herself suspected of a crime. That theory won't hold water any longer.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It might.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It couldn't. You tell me she's in love with your husband.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Santa can be in love with as many men as serve her purpose. The only
- loyalty to which she's constant is the memory of her dead child.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He shook himself irritably. &ldquo;Nothing that you' or any one has told me
- explains her. She left on me an impression of nobility which absolutely
- contradicts all this later information. Until I met you, it almost seemed
- there was a conspiracy on foot to poison my mind. What she is said to have
- done may all be true, but I can't help searching behind her actions for a
- higher motive. You'd clear matters up if you'd tell me frankly how it is
- that you come into the picture.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The picture!&rdquo; She shrank back from him like a timid child.
- </p>
- <p>
- Controlling himself, he spoke patiently. &ldquo;Do I need to be explicit? You
- ought to hate her. She's in love with your husband. When, a few hours ago,
- it was a case of warning her of the trap she was walking into, you were
- reluctant to give the signal. 'She wouldn't spare us,' you said; 'so why
- should you and I&mdash;&mdash;?' And yet you're her accomplice. It was you
- whom I followed. It was you who, when you'd got me into this room, tried
- to hold me at the revolver's point.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She buried her face in the hollow of her arm. Her voice came muffled. &ldquo;It
- was I.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He waited for her to say more. She made no sound&mdash;not even of
- sobbing.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It was a dangerous game to play,&rdquo; he reminded her. &ldquo;You didn't know your
- man or how he would take it. You must have had some strong motive. You
- might have killed me without even intending. What a risk you ran, doing a
- thing like that singlehanded! For a moment, when I first entered,
- everything was touch and go.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And still she made no reply.
- </p>
- <p>
- The fire had burned low. He emptied coals on it. To bridge the
- embarrassment of her silence, he went over to the window, pulling aside
- the curtains, and stood gazing out at the glory of the night. The moon
- rode high. Trees were clumped and motionless. The crooning of waves made a
- continual lullaby.
- </p>
- <p>
- She was married, and she was wasted. She was not wanted, and she was not
- released. She had a husband who refused to live and could not contrive to
- die. As a substitute for passion she had tried sainthood; it had not
- satisfied.
- </p>
- <p>
- He let the curtains fall. Turning, he gazed back at the black-garbed
- figure bowed in the half-circle of firelight. Her golden hair had broken
- loose. It poured across her shoulders and gathered at her feet in a pool.
- At the moment she looked more a Magdalene than a saint. And this was the
- woman who had made men brave by her purity&mdash;to whom a nation had
- turned in its agony!
- </p>
- <p>
- A flood of pity swept over him. Poor, narrow shoulders to have borne such
- a burden! Poor, virgin feet to have come so long a journey! Poor, mortal
- hands to have given such a blessing! She had been robbed and cast aside.
- </p>
- <p>
- The cruelty of idealists! She was their victim. What did they attain?
- Idealists slew happiness on the altar of dreams that a future happiness
- might result from it. Though their dreams were mistaken, they lost
- nothing; they snatched their sensation of godlike righteousness. But who
- could restore the happiness of others which their frenzy had destroyed?
- </p>
- <p>
- If this time Varensky had had the decency to die, she was free. He himself
- could take her. But would she want him? He had no attractions. All that he
- could offer would be to serve her. He couldn't place her back on her
- pinnacle of fame. Instead of crowds, he would be her only worshiper. Would
- that satisfy a woman who had been a saint for a day? He could promise her
- rest and protection. He could take her feet in his hands and guide them
- over rough places. And if she wanted to be a woman&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- Crossing the room on tiptoe, he stood over her. Sinking to his knee, he
- placed a hand on her shoulder.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Won't you look up? I'm not here to hurt you. I wouldn't even judge you.
- Life's been hard.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- When she gave no sign, he spoke again.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm a man and a stranger. You're a wife. But you've told me so much.
- You're wounded. You can't go on by yourself.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She moved. He knew now that she was listening.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There's that door in the wall we were going to find. Perhaps we've found
- it. Let me be your friend. It would be foolish and wrong for me to tell
- you that I&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She raised her head. Her hair fell back, and her eyes gazed out at him
- with hungry intensity. &ldquo;Don't say it,&rdquo; she implored. &ldquo;Varensky&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But if he's dead? If I can bring you sure proof?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- For answer she pressed his hand against her bosom.
- </p>
- <h3>
- VII
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">H</span>e seated himself
- at her feet, his arms clasped about his knees as if crouched before a
- camp-fire. How much meaning had she read into his implied confession? He
- felt happy; happier than ever before in his life, and yet, if she were the
- cause of his happiness, the odds were all against him. She had promised
- him nothing. She could promise him nothing. All he knew of her was what
- she had told him. His elation might prove to be no more than an emotion
- that would fade in the chill light of morning.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It would be foolish and wrong for me to tell you&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; The words
- had risen to his lips unpremeditated. He had not realized that he cared
- for her until they were uttered. He had merely felt an immense compassion,
- an overwhelming desire to comfort her. That he should care for her at all
- was preposterous. It was paying her no compliment. Love that was worth the
- having required a more permanent incentive than physical beauty. Her mind
- and her character were a riddle to him. If his passion was no passing mood
- and she were indeed a widow, it would be her mind and her character that
- he might one day marry. He ought to have foreseen that something of this
- sort would be sure to happen between a man and woman left alone after
- midnight.
- </p>
- <p>
- But the triumphant self whom she had roused in him grinned impudently at
- this cautious moralizing. He gloried in the magnificent unwisdom of his
- indiscretion. He was surprised and delighted at this newly-discovered
- capacity for recklessness. When experience was growing stale, he had
- broken through limitations and found himself gazing on an unguessed
- landscape where adventure commenced afresh. He could still feel the
- softness of her flesh against his hand. That sudden act of tenderness had
- altered all their relations.
- </p>
- <p>
- He glanced up at her shyly. She, too, was dreaming. Her lips were smiling
- uncertainly; there was a far-away, brooding expression in her eyes. The
- blackness of her mourning merged with the shadows, making her seem
- disembodied; all he could see distinctly was the golden torrent of her
- hair framing the pallor of her face.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They knelt to you in Petrograd. I don't wonder.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Poor people! It did them no good. I never want any one else to do it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But I kneel to you. I crouch at your feet.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I would rather be loved than worshiped.&rdquo; She restrained him gently. &ldquo;Not
- yet.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then, until I may love, I kneel to you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You ought to find me repellent. No, let me speak. I own to you that I'm
- married, and here I sit with you alone, not knowing whether my husband
- lives or is buried. I must be wicked&mdash;more wicked than I guessed.
- Ivan was right; he used to tell me I played Satan to him. These hands,
- which look so soft and white, are cruel. This face, which seems so gentle,
- is a lie. This hair, which makes a pillow for your head, is a snare. One
- good man has already cast me aside. Rather than love me, he preferred
- death. And you are good. How near I came to killing you!&rdquo; She bent over
- him, taking his face between her hands. &ldquo;<i>You!</i> Do you understand?&rdquo;
- She had drawn his head back against her knees. Her lips all but touched
- him. He could feel the fanning of her breath. Her voice came pantingly, as
- though she dreaded her own question: &ldquo;What can you see in me?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Blue eyes, like a glimpse of heaven.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Tell me truly.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What can I see?&rdquo; He stared up adoringly. &ldquo;A woman who's still a child. A
- woman who's been cheated. A woman whose arms are empty. A woman who sits
- outside a tomb, dreaming of life.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not of life,&rdquo; she corrected softly; &ldquo;of being allowed to live for a man.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;For me, perhaps?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She smiled vaguely.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Without knowing what kind of a man I am?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you know me?&rdquo; She sat upright, gazing straight before her. &ldquo;You don't
- even know why I brought you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It seems strange to tell you now. It seems like a forgotten sadness, so
- forgotten that it might belong to some one else. And yet once it hurt. I
- brought you that I might win back my husband. Don't stiffen. Look up and
- see how I'm smiling. I was never his in your sense. I was an image in a
- niche, whose hands he kissed. I was a mascot, bringing him good luck. The
- woman part of me he postponed superstitiously till his cause should be
- won. It will never be won now.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But he warned you before he married you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She shook her head. &ldquo;He made sure of me. At first I was proud to be
- included in his sacrifice. Then failure made it all absurd. I was sorry
- for him. I knew only one way to comfort him. But because he had failed, he
- became the more determined to deny himself. Instead of comforting him, I
- became his tempter. Then Santa&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood pulled himself together and bent forward, glowering into the
- fire. &ldquo;I can't understand all this talk of sacrifice. It sounds so
- confoundedly unpractical. As far as I can make out, your husband's idea of
- virtue was to abstain from everything that makes life worth living. He
- didn't profit any one by abstaining. All he did was to narrow himself. If
- he'd wanted to be an ascetic, why couldn't he have done the thing
- thoroughly and played the game? There was no need to drag you into it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There was no need,&rdquo; she assented quietly, &ldquo;but to have me and to
- withstand me made him appear more dedicated. He tantalized himself with
- the thought of me and used me as a knife with which to gash himself. I was
- a part of the road to Calvary he was treading in order that Russia might
- be saved. It gratified his pride to make the road spectacular. Then, when
- we were in exile and he was no longer a power, Santa came, the ruthless
- idealist&mdash;his very opposite.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ruthless, perhaps! But I shouldn't call her an idealist.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She is&mdash;an idealist who, to gain her ends, stoops to any baseness.
- She's an avenging angel, beautiful and sinister. She's one of the few
- revolutionaries who knows what she wants; because she knows, she gets it.
- Varensky never knew. His head was in the clouds. He lost sight of his
- purpose in a mist of words.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What does she want?&rdquo; As he asked the question, he glanced back at her
- where she gleamed like a phantom.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She wants&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; There was a pause during which the only sound
- was the struggle of the distant surf. &ldquo;She wants to make men pay for what
- they do to children. All her crimes&mdash;&mdash; She's a mother, robbed
- of her young; in her own fierce way, she's taken all the children of the
- world to her breast.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But men don't do anything.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She caught his tone of puzzlement. &ldquo;Oh yes. Each generation commits
- ferocious sins against the coming generation that can't protect itself.
- It's children who pay for wars and every social injustice. Men live like a
- marauding army, pillaging the land between birth and death. They pass on
- and leave to children the settlement of their reckless debts. Take this
- latest war; five million children in Europe alone are dying of starvation
- at this moment. Santa's marked down the men who are responsible for their
- suffering; silently, one by one, she drugs them with her beauty and exacts
- the penalty.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Prince Rogovich?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Probably. He was raising funds for a new carnage.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But where do I come in? You said that you'd brought me here to help you
- win your husband.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She's in love with Ivan. To be loved by Santa is like witnessing the
- signature to one's death warrant. Perhaps she's a Bolshevik agent&mdash;the
- only people to whom the Bolsheviks are merciful are children. Perhaps
- she's really in love with him. She plays with him like a cat with a
- mouse.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And he?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He's indifferent, as he is to every woman. Yet because she's treacherous
- and he wants to die, he takes her with him on many of his journeys. I
- hoped that if I could give you to her, she might spare him. That was
- before I knew you. I was beside myself with suspense. Ivan has been gone
- so long; to do her bidding seemed like giving him his last chance of life.
- She's in danger and in hiding. You're the one person who can prove her
- guilt. I thought that if I put you in her power, I'd place her under an
- obligation, so that&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And now?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She covered her face with her hands. &ldquo;God forgive me, it's your safety
- that counts&mdash;not Ivan's.&rdquo; He knelt against her, plucking her hands
- aside. &ldquo;Look at me,&rdquo; he commanded. &ldquo;So long as your husband lives, his
- safety comes first. In saving me, you might betray him. If, in snatching
- our happiness, we connived at his death, his shadow would always stand
- between us. I'm still your prisoner; I've not taken back my parole. Here's
- your revolver.&rdquo; He drew it from his pocket and laid it on her knees.
- &ldquo;Fulfill your bargain.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Take me to Santa.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But Ivan&mdash;already he may be&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Until we know, we'll play the game by him.&rdquo; When she hesitated, he added,
- &ldquo;I wouldn't be friends with any woman who couldn't be loyal.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her hands groped after the revolver and found it. Forcing back her tears,
- she answered, &ldquo;Nor would I with any man.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Rising to his feet, he helped her to rise. &ldquo;Take me to her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- VIII
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>s they stepped
- into the garden, the first restlessness of morning was in the air. The
- moon had vanished. Stars were going out. Along the low level of sea-line
- dawn cast a sickly shadow. It was as though night were an indigo curtain
- behind which silver forms were moving.
- </p>
- <p>
- She led the way across the lawn, through a door in the wall, and out on
- the short, crisp turf. She had thrown a cloak about her and pulled the
- hood over her head. It made her look cowled and elfin. It was the hour
- when everything is fantastic.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had an oppressive sense of unreality, as though this were all a dream
- from which he would shortly rouse. He stood aloof from recent happenings
- and surveyed his share in them in an elderly, derisive fashion. What were
- all these promises that he had been exchanging like a gallant? He tried to
- recall his exact words. To what extent had he committed himself? He had
- crossed the Atlantic that he might multiply his fortune&mdash;for no other
- reason. He was neither an idealist nor a sentimentalist; he had realized
- the chance that a bankrupt Europe offered and had come to take advantage
- of it. What would these derelicts of the catastrophe think of him if they
- guessed his real purpose? They were willfully, even contemptibly,
- unpractical; yet their perverted unselfishness troubled his conscience. To
- spend half one's years in exile, like the Little Grandmother, might not
- correct injustice, but at least it was a brave protest. To plan to die,
- like Varensky, because he had failed to rescue humanity, was a counsel of
- despair, but it had its gleam of nobility. To assassinate, like Santa, men
- whose statesmanship you did not comprehend was the madness of a zealot,
- but she at least staked her life against theirs. Into none of these
- undertakings did profit enter. It was disquieting to find himself among
- people so determined to convert the world to altruism. The world had been
- like this always; it would be like this to the end. If they were once to
- sense who he was, they would regard him as their enemy. He was walking
- into danger with his eyes wide open. His wisest plan would be to sink into
- the shadows and take the first train back to sanity. To do that he would
- have to leave her.
- </p>
- <p>
- And why not? What did he owe her? What was she to him? She belonged to
- another man. Waiting for him to die, or to make sure of his death, might
- prove a tedious business&mdash;a humiliating one, most certainly. And yet
- to leave her now&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- She had been going on ahead&mdash;or was it his steps that had been
- lagging? She had halted. As he came up, he felt the firm surface of the
- road beneath his tread.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the gloom she laid her hand on his arm. &ldquo;If you've promised too much&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- That determined him. &ldquo;I keep my promises,&rdquo; he answered shortly.
- </p>
- <p>
- Walking side by side, they struggled on against the mass of
- all-surrounding vagueness. It seemed like a strong, gray tide pressing on
- their breasts, against which they made no headway.
- </p>
- <p>
- What was to be the upshot of it? She was guiding him to Santa. His lips
- twisted. It would take more than Santa to inspire him with terror. England
- wasn't the jungle. A man couldn't disappear unnoticed. Supposing in the
- next half-hour Santa were to do away with him, what would she gain by it?
- She would have silenced his testimony in the Rogo-vich affair, but she
- would have added to the evidence. If she were the woman she was painted,
- she would be too wary to do that. No, she would not attempt to kill him.
- Then what was her urgency?
- </p>
- <p>
- Gradually night was fading. The paleness from the sea was spreading. It
- drove like smoke, in billowy banks of vapor, creeping low along the
- ground. Live things were waking. In separate, plaintive warnings,
- early-risen birds were calling. Across the road ahead rabbits scurried.
- Against the formless vacancy of sky the rounded shoulders of the uplands
- became discernible. He took notice of their direction. She was leading him
- to the abandoned camp.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Madame Varensky.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She started. &ldquo;Not that.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm sorry. It was the only name I knew to call you. What do they usually&mdash;&mdash;?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Anna.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She came close like a child and stood gazing up at him.
- </p>
- <p>
- He stooped and spoke gently. &ldquo;You're a wild rose. Once more let me look
- into your eyes. It's so strange that you should care for me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;More strange to me,&rdquo; she said.
- </p>
- <p>
- He placed his hands on her shoulders. &ldquo;There's something that I want you
- to remember. If harm comes to either of us, believe always that it was
- only good that I intended.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Whatever you brought me would be good,&rdquo; she murmured.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I wish it might.&rdquo; He tumbled the hood back so that he could see her hair.
- &ldquo;When a man loves a woman who's already married, it doesn't often bring
- happiness. It wouldn't be right that it should. It isn't our fault that
- this has happened, but it will be if we misuse it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We shan't misuse it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There's something else.&rdquo; He groped after his words. &ldquo;Before I came to
- you, I'd been foolish. There's no sense in regretting; if I hadn't been
- foolish, we shouldn't have met. I thought that I was following Santa; you
- can guess&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She inclined her head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And there's one thing more. If your husband comes back, promise me you'll
- forget.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She strained against him, so their lips were nearly touching. &ldquo;Never.&rdquo; She
- spoke fiercely. And again, &ldquo;Never. Though it's years and you forget.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- His hands slipped from her shoulders, lower and lower, till his arms
- closed about her. &ldquo;Rest,&rdquo; he whispered, &ldquo;if it's only for a moment, poor,
- tired little bird.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Through the ghostly twilight of the autumn dawn they entered the deserted
- camp. Before one of the hutments she halted and tapped. She tapped again.
- There was no answer. Cautiously raising the latch, she peered into the
- room. Beckoning to him, she slipped across the threshold.
- </p>
- <h3>
- IX
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>he hut was empty.
- The floor was deep in dust. The ceiling was meshed with cobwebs. Nailed
- across the window, just as the soldiers had left it, a dingy curtain hung.
- Striking a match, he held it above his head. At the far end he made out
- signs of occupancy. On a shelf was a loaf of bread and near by a pitcher.
- In a corner, spread on the bare boards for a bed, was a wrap. He stooped;
- it was Santa's cloak of sables.
- </p>
- <p>
- The match went out. He turned. &ldquo;How long has she been here?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;From the time she knew she was suspected.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She knew she was suspected at Plymouth. What made her motor all across
- England to this?&rdquo; He glanced round with pity at the poverty-stricken
- forlornness.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She wanted to be near.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What? It would be better to tell me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To the road out.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He lit a cigarette and considered. &ldquo;So there are more people in it,&rdquo; he
- said at last, &ldquo;than just the few that I have met! It's an organization. I
- might have guessed. There are the people who helped the little old lady to
- visit me undetected. There are the people who entered my room in my
- absence. There's the foreign gentleman, who couldn't speak English, who
- called for Santa in his car. But if this hut is on the road out, why was
- she delaying?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;For you, perhaps.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But she was risking her freedom every second. Why for me, Anna?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Before he had given her time to answer, his mind had leaped to a new
- conjecture. &ldquo;What if she's captured?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Suddenly the tragedy of this strange woman, temple-dancer, revolutionary,
- avenger of children, became vivid. Her pain stung him as though he had
- suffered it himself. He lived again the hunted hours that must have been
- hers while she had listened in this dusty room. He remembered her
- fascination, the grayness of her eyes, the fastidiousness of her dress.
- What a contrast to these surroundings! How often she must have crouched by
- that window, watching from behind the shabby curtain for the approach of
- the pursuer! The men she had killed did not matter. Probably they had
- deserved their death. His pity was reserved for her. She had been the
- pampered darling of princes. Her whims had been commands to lovers who
- themselves were rulers.
- </p>
- <p>
- No present had been too costly to purchase the ecstasy of her
- complaisance. Her body had been a jewel, guarded, coveted, irrepeatable in
- its beauty. Crimes had been committed for its possession. And this was her
- end! He heard in memory the hoarse pleading of her voice, trying vainly to
- convince him that love could make her good.
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman at his side was speaking. &ldquo;We heard no sound. She was armed. If
- they'd tried to take her, she'd have defended herself.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- His thoughts came back. &ldquo;Last night. Yes. If they'd taken her in the
- garden. But they might have known she would be armed. Perhaps they
- followed her. If they traced her to this hut, they might have waited till
- she was sleeping&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She shook her head. &ldquo;It isn't that. She's grown tired of delaying. She's
- gone by the road out.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He frowned. &ldquo;That's the second time you've used the phrase. Can't you tell
- me plainly?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If it's not too late, I'll show you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She darted out of the hut. When he joined her in the open, she was waiting
- impatiently to secure the door behind him. The moment it was fastened, she
- set off at a run. She raced like a boy, with none of a woman's
- awkwardness. With an occasional backward glance, up the long deserted
- avenue of the camp she fled. At first he was content to follow for the
- pleasure he had in watching her. She was so swift and young. She was like
- a deer in her slenderness. Sudden eagerness had transformed her. The hood
- had slipped back to her shoulders; the wind of her going fluttered in her
- hair.
- </p>
- <p>
- Outside the camp she bore to the left in a direction leading further
- afield. Over gorse and bracken dew had flung a silver net. The turf was a
- tapestry sewn with jewels. Larks were springing up. The keen fragrance of
- seaweed mingled with the honeyed perfumes of the land.
- </p>
- <p>
- He caught up with her. &ldquo;Why?&rdquo; he panted.
- </p>
- <p>
- She had no breath to waste in words. Turning on him a flushed and laughing
- face, she pointed ahead.
- </p>
- <p>
- Just short of the cliff-edge, where the sheer drop began, she sank to her
- knees, clasping her breast. While she recovered, he gazed about him. He
- discovered no sign of the thing she was pursuing. The sea was blanketed in
- mist. Above the blurred horizon, the red eye of the sun stared at him.
- From the foot of the cliff came the lapping of waves. No other sound.
- </p>
- <p>
- She had risen. He was about to speak. She pressed a finger to her lips.
- Taking him by the hand, she led him to the edge.
- </p>
- <p>
- At first, as he gazed down, he saw only the crumbling face of the chalk.
- Then he made out a winding path descending; it seemed no broader than a
- track that a goat might follow.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Listen.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She dragged excitedly on his arm.
- </p>
- <p>
- Distinctly, above the lapping of waves, he heard the click of oars working
- in oar-locks. Beneath the fog a vessel was hiding. It had dropped a boat
- which was pulling toward the land.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The road out,&rdquo; she whispered.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But Santa&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She nodded. &ldquo;It's not so difficult as it looks. It was used by smugglers.
- We use it&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She broke off. Oars were being shipped. The prow grounded. There was a
- muttering of men's voices. Some sort of discussion. A pause. Then oars
- were put out again. The rowing recommenced, growing fainter and fainter.
- </p>
- <h3>
- X
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">G</span>one!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She pressed against him in her gladness.
- </p>
- <p>
- Seeing the relief in her eyes, he questioned, &ldquo;What does this mean to you,
- Anna?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Safety.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Anything else?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Freedom, perhaps.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You mean you think that Santa had received word of your husband and that
- that was why&mdash;&mdash;?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't want to think or mean; I only want to feel. It's as though I'd
- been living in a prison and the door had been flung wide. I wasn't one of
- them. They condemned me. In their hearts they despised me. I was too weak.
- I couldn't bear their cross.&rdquo; She clenched her hands against her cheeks
- till the knuckles showed white. &ldquo;What's the good of being crucified? It's
- so much better to live and be glad for people.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And Santa,&rdquo; he asked, &ldquo;where she's going, what will happen to her?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She raised her face. &ldquo;Pain. She'll be hounded and hunted. She's getting
- too well known. Prince Rogovich thought he recognized her. She'll be
- always escaping, rushing from hiding to hiding, till one day&mdash;&mdash;
- To have been loved so much and to be pushed out of life&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Behind the mist they heard the creak of ropes running over pulleys. A
- gasoline engine was started. For an instant the shadow of a trawler loomed
- through the wall of opaqueness. The tiller was thrust over. She vanished.
- They stood very silently, listening and watching. In imagination Hindwood
- followed the vessel's course. It was not of the vessel he was thinking,
- but of the woman on board her. &ldquo;To have been loved so much and to be
- pushed out of life&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; If he had had the chance, what could he
- have done for her? She had fascinated him; but he had not loved her. She
- was past reclaiming. Love with a woman of her kind would have meant
- passion&mdash;nothing more. A fierce flame, self-consuming! A slow
- degrading of an emotion that was fine! Yet he was filled with pity and
- unreasoning remorse. Some day her enemies would overtake her&mdash;good,
- respectable men like Major Cleasby; the good men who by the injustice of
- their prejudices had made her what she was.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's a chapter ended,&rdquo; he said quietly.
- </p>
- <p>
- Slipping his arm through hers, as though she already belonged to him, he
- was turning inland toward the peace of the rolling country, when his step
- was arrested. He caught the sound of labored breathing and the rattle of
- sliding chalk. Hands groped above the edge of the cliff, searching for a
- holding. They were followed by the head and shoulders of a man with a face
- intensely white, in which a pair of pale green eyes smoldered. Lower down
- and out of sight a woman spoke. The voice was Santa's.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER THE FIFTH&mdash;THE GREEN EYES CAST A SPELL
- </h2>
- <h3>
- I
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">H</span>INDWOOD stood
- rooted to the ground. He had thrust Anna behind him. She was tugging at
- his hand with the tenacity of terror. He scarcely dared breathe while he
- watched the green-eyed man dragging himself inch by inch to safety. To go
- to his assistance might cause his death. Any move that startled him might
- fling him back over the precipice. In falling he would sweep away the
- unseen woman who must be clinging to the face of the cliff below him.
- </p>
- <p>
- To Hindwood it seemed that he was present at a fantastic rehearsal of the
- Day of Resurrection. When the last trumpet blew, it would probably be
- precisely in some such fashion that the sea would give up its dead. It
- would happen about sunrise, when mankind was still abed. It would commence
- very quietly, when clouds were hanging low and the first of the barnyard
- cocks were crowing. Without warning, graves would open, and all the tired
- people, who had been so long resting, would begin to stir. Like the sound
- of falling rain, they would patter through the drowsing country, searching
- for their ancient dwellings. At first they would walk alone, then in
- groups, later in crowds. By the time the living looked out of their
- windows there would be no standing room on earth. Across seas and oceans
- the drowned would come swimming. They would wade through waves and clamber
- up cliffs, just as this man was doing.
- </p>
- <p>
- The vision became so probable that Hindwood glanced behind him to make
- sure that it was not happening. In a shimmering expanse of dew and autumn
- coloring lay the sweet, green landscape of living men, the kindly
- hedgerows, the sheltering valleys, the friendly villages. Everything was
- gentle and unaltered. It was only at this barrier, which the green-eyed
- stranger was struggling to surmount, that the tranquillity ended. At its
- brink eternity commenced, a pulsating oblivion of mist and grayness across
- which the rising sun peered curiously.
- </p>
- <p>
- The stranger was too occupied with his danger to be aware that he was
- being observed. Clutching at tufts and digging with his fingers, he was
- easing himself out of the abyss. Little by little he was gaining ground
- till at last, pulling his knees clear of the edge, he sprawled exhausted
- on the turf. But it was only for a moment. Twisting about, still lying
- flat, he reached down to his companion. As she appeared, he retreated,
- steadying her efforts and dragging her with him. Side by side they
- collapsed, breathing heavily and staring in dazed defiance at the death
- they had avoided.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood made a step to approach them. He found himself tethered. Anna was
- gazing up at him, silently imploring. Her hair seemed a mass of solid
- gold, weighing her down. The blue veins in her temples stood out beneath
- her fairness. Her throat was milk-white and stretched back. Her lips were
- parted, revealing the coral of her mouth. It was as though she had been
- caught from behind by an assailant and brutally jerked back. With little
- endearing motions she caressed Hindwood's hand. He tried to fathom her
- necessity; in the presence of her weakness there was nothing that he would
- not have granted.
- </p>
- <p>
- The man with the green eyes had recovered. In the act of rising he had
- caught sight of them. His jaw had dropped open. If it was possible, his
- complexion had gone a shade whiter. His expression bore testimony to the
- medley of his emotions, the chief of which was astonishment. He made an
- oddly pathetic figure, with his scratched hands and torn clothing,
- crouching in that hunted attitude. He had lost his hat in the ascent. His
- brown hair was lank with perspiration. He was a lean man and graceful as a
- greyhound. Even in his present ungainly posture there was a hint of
- something swift and gallant in his bearing. One forgot that he was a
- vagabond who had eluded formalities and completed an illegal landing; he
- looked more like a champion unhorsed in a tourney. His brow was wide and
- noble, but the top of his head was shaped like a deformity and rose into a
- point like a dunce's cap. His eyes were well-spaced and piercing; they
- penetrated with a sense of power. His mouth was thin-lipped and sensitive&mdash;too
- sensitive for a man's. His face was narrow and smooth as a girl's. He had
- a haggard appearance of perpetual suffering, which the extremeness of his
- pallor served to enhance. He was indefinably tragic. He might have sat
- equally well for a portrait of Lucifer or of Harlequin overtaken by his
- folly.
- </p>
- <p>
- Very wearily he lifted himself from the ground and stumbled toward them.
- As he did so, Santa uttered a nervous cry and turned&mdash;after which she
- watched broodingly what happened.
- </p>
- <p>
- Paying no attention to Hindwood, the man made straight for Anna. Bending
- over her humbly, he whispered unintelligible words. Her terror left her.
- Making no sound, she raised to him eyes eloquent with compassion.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What did he say?&rdquo; Hindwood questioned.
- </p>
- <p>
- She was prepared to reply, when the stranger stayed her with a gesture. &ldquo;I
- was apologizing in Russian for having returned.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood glanced at the ragged edge of the cliff and shrugged his
- shoulders. &ldquo;An apology's scarcely necessary. You're to be congratulated.
- You seem to have recognized this lady. Who are you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The stranger drew himself erect. A grim smile played about his mouth.
- &ldquo;Ivan Varensky, at your service.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0005" id="linkimage-0005"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0187.jpg" alt="0187m " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0187.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <h3>
- II
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">H</span>indwood stared at
- him with a frown. He was contrasting this Ivan Varensky with the leader of
- men whose deeds of three years ago had so deeply stirred him. One picture
- stood out ineffaceably. It was of a sea of panic-stricken soldiers,
- patriotism forgotten, arms flung away, in wild retreat, and of Ivan
- Varensky driving forward alone, as though he, by his single courage, could
- turn back the enemy. And this was the man&mdash;the white knight of
- Russia, the scape-goat, the magician of words! Had he met him three years
- ago, he would have knelt to him. Now all he could do was to frown.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was necessary to say something. He spoke gruffly. &ldquo;You've chosen an odd
- method of returning. We had news you were dead.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I was,&rdquo; the green eyes narrowed, &ldquo;nearly. I'm always nearly dying. Isn't
- that so, Anna? And then I come back. This last time, as you observed, I
- had the discourtesy to forget. I was thinking of Santa. Actually I
- struggled to survive. Believe me, that's unlike me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The forbearance of his manner was rebuking. Making an effort to be genial,
- Hindwood held out his hand. &ldquo;It's a strange way to meet. I've long been
- your admirer. It was a close call&mdash;as close as a man could have.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Varensky winced as the powerful grip closed about his fingers. They were
- long and pointed, more like a woman's than a man's. &ldquo;A close call!&rdquo; He
- smiled. &ldquo;You're American? It wasn't&mdash;not for me. I could tell you&mdash;
- But perhaps one day, when I've become past history, Anna will do that.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- As he mentioned his wife, he gave her a look at once tender and furtive&mdash;a
- look which acknowledged without rancor the truth of the situation. She
- started forward, but his eyes held her. She stopped half-way.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;However you return,&rdquo; she said chokingly, &ldquo;and however often, you know
- that I'm glad. It's the certainty that I shall lose you&mdash;that however
- often you return I shall never have you&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She bowed her head. From the edge of the cliff, without a trace of
- emotion, the other woman watched her.
- </p>
- <p>
- Tilting her face with his bruised fingers, Varensky regarded her
- earnestly. &ldquo;As if I wasn't aware of that!&rdquo; And then, &ldquo;Let's be going.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Side by side, but always separate, they moved across the downs. There was
- no backward glance. Hindwood followed them with his eyes till they sank
- into a hollow. The last he saw was the raw gold of her hair and the
- conical top of his pointed head, growing more distant above the bracken.
- </p>
- <h3>
- III
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>nd I, too, have to
- apologize. I failed to keep my appointment.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He swung round at the mockingly spoken words, to find that Santa had
- stolen up behind him. Until now he had had no time to notice her. His
- anger was so intense that it held him silent. After all that she had done
- and had intended to do to him, she had the effrontery to jest! Did she
- think that he was as much her dupe as the fool who had died for her in the
- woods of Vincennes?
- </p>
- <p>
- But his anger was short-lived and left him sternly cold. She was changed.
- Her fastidious elegance was a thing of the past. She was commonly attired
- as any fisher-girl. Her cheap blouse was rent at the neck; its sleeves
- were stained and in tatters. Her rough skirt had been nearly trodden off.
- She was tom and disheveled. She had suffered even more from her adventure
- than had Varensky. Her hat lay crushed at her feet in the grass. With her
- wounded hands she &ldquo;was doing her best to twine the thick coils of her hair
- into place. She stood confessed for what she was, a fugitive from justice.
- The wildness of the landscape made a fitting setting. She looked
- startlingly untamed. She might have passed for a peasant Ophelia, except
- that her gray eyes were calm and her manner nonchalant.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There are a good many things, besides missing your appointment, for which
- you have to apologize.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I can explain&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He cut her short. &ldquo;Between you and me no explanations are necessary.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She jerked back her head, flattening her hands against her sides like a
- soldier standing at attention. &ldquo;Why not?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He took his time to answer. &ldquo;Because you're nothing to me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her face went white, then flamed scarlet, as though he had struck her with
- his open palm. &ldquo;Nothing to you!&rdquo; She spoke slowly. &ldquo;I, Santa Gorlof, am
- nothing to you! You're the first man to whom I ever offered my heart. I
- would lie down in the mud that you might walk over me. I'd let you beat me
- like a dog if I might only follow you. I'd starve that you might be fed,
- go thirsty that you might drink, break my body that you might not suffer.
- I would die if it would give you pleasure.&rdquo; Seeing that her rhetoric was
- having no effect, she sank her voice. &ldquo;When I could have escaped, I waited
- for you. I risked my freedom for one last sight of you.&rdquo; She clutched at
- her breast, choking down a sob. &ldquo;And you tell me that I'm nothing to you!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He was determined to remain unmoved by her emotion. Regarding her stonily,
- he asked: &ldquo;What right had you to believe that you were anything to me?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She laughed forlornly. &ldquo;No right at all.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If I had ever cared for you,&rdquo; he continued, &ldquo;in your present predicament
- it would all be ended.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She raised her brows contemptuously. &ldquo;Of course.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You see, I've found out the sort of woman you are.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What sort?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Need I recall?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He turned away, searching hollows and clumps of bushes for bobbing heads
- of watchers. Her captors might be closing in on her. Her indifference to
- her danger was disconcerting. With eyes still fixed on the distant
- landscape, he revealed his thoughts.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Your talk of love is paltry. It's tragic farce. You have a husband.
- You're liable to be jailed at any moment.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He expected she would retort. When she maintained silence, he glanced down
- at his feet, ashamed of what he felt himself compelled to tell her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Love! If it were true, and if your affection were desired, you have no
- love to offer. Nothing that is you is yours. Your hours are numbered. Your
- body and your life are forfeit. The man who is your husband is leading the
- hue-and-cry against you. If you think you can persuade me to go to the
- scaffold for you, rid yourself of the thought. There'll be no repetition
- of the woods of Vincennes. The victim in that case was your lover; I'm
- not.&rdquo; He met her eyes. &ldquo;You never deceived me for a second. From the
- moment we left the <i>Ryndam</i>, I knew who it was had pushed Prince
- Rogovich overboard.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If you knew,&rdquo; she asked quietly, &ldquo;why didn't you have me arrested?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It was none of my business.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But you were kind after we'd landed. At the hotel you arranged to
- breakfast with me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I couldn't bring myself to believe you were guilty.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And yet, after you had believed, you followed me to Seafold.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The detective instinct.&rdquo; He spoke testily. &ldquo;Morbid curiosity.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No.&rdquo; She said it wistfully. Her face softened. &ldquo;You followed me because,
- even against your will, you still cared for me. You pitied me. You were
- chivalrous. You refused to condemn me unheard. You hoped there was some
- mistake. You followed me to make sure.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And you've made me sure.&rdquo; He rapped out the words. &ldquo;Since you insist on
- the truth, I came to Seafold hoping to find you innocent. If I had I
- should have fought for you. Whereas&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Whereas?&rdquo; she prompted nervously.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I found you'd done to me what you've done to every other man who ever
- befriended you&mdash;betrayed me and had me lured into an ambush where,
- for all I know, you'd given orders for me to be shot.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But you weren't.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No thanks to you. Your husband was ahead of you, hidden in the bushes,
- waiting for you. If we hadn't given the signal that warned you&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But you gave it.&rdquo; She spoke triumphantly. &ldquo;I'd trapped you, and yet you
- didn't want me to be caught. To have shown generosity at a moment when you
- thought that I was threatening your life, you must still have been fond of
- me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Thought!&rdquo; He drew back from her, revolted by her insincerity. &ldquo;You left
- no room for thought. You were diabolically explicit. You knew that I could
- prove your guilt. You meant to kill me in order that I might be silenced.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her eyes filled. She stretched out her arms beseechingly. They fell
- hopelessly as he retreated from her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't misjudge me,&rdquo; she implored. &ldquo;I'm a woman who's finished. A woman,
- as you reminded me, whose hours are numbered&mdash;my body and my life are
- forfeit. It's true what you said: nothing that I am belongs to me. If you
- like to put it that way, I'm a woman who has nothing to offer. And yet I
- love you&mdash;the first man with whom I was ever in love, now when it's
- too late. You don't believe me; you're thinking of the many others. Let it
- pass. I had to see you once more. I couldn't come to you; you were
- surrounded by my enemies. To persuade you to come to me, I had to trick
- you. Until it was safe to visit you, I had to have you held by force. I
- compelled Anna, Madame Varensky to&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He made an impatient gesture. &ldquo;Enough! I'm wondering to how many men
- you've made that speech before. I've heard all about your appeals to
- chivalry. If you were a man&mdash;&mdash; Unfortunately you're not, so I
- have a sentimental compunction about abandoning you. What are your plans?
- When I saw the ship I hoped you had escaped.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I had.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And you came back! Why?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Varensky was landing from the boat that had been sent to take me off.&rdquo;
- She was laying claim to some obscure nobility, making a final bid for his
- admiration.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The mist's clearing,&rdquo; he said brusquely. &ldquo;In another half-hour you'll be
- visible for miles. If you're seen here, you'll be taken.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I won't.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You think not?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She smiled languidly. It was her arch, mysterious way of smiling that had
- first attracted him. &ldquo;Why don't you go?&rdquo; she whispered in her hoarse,
- parched voice. &ldquo;You loathe and despise me. You grudge me every moment
- we're together. I've done what was right; I'm willing to pay the penalty.
- I've earned a rest. I'm tired&mdash;you can't guess how tired.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Now that she wanted him to go, he gazed at her with a new interest. If the
- trackers were hot upon his trail, what would be his sensations? Would he
- be able to be courteous and to talk calmly? Whatever might be her crimes,
- she had courage. What if it were true that by some tortuous process of
- reasoning she did actually believe she had done right? And what if it were
- true that she had intended him no harm, but had only attempted to win him
- by violence? The uneasy doubt took shape in his mind that he might have
- misjudged her. It would be a splendid memory to have, if she were wrongly
- executed&mdash;this gleaming morning, the larks singing, the blue-patched
- sky, the valiant sun, the rosy-tinted dew, and himself fleeing from the
- forlornness of a woman! Every man's hand was against her. She believed she
- had done right.
- </p>
- <p>
- He regarded her less coldly. She was perfect as on the day when all Europe
- had gone wild over her. And this masterpiece of loveliness, which had been
- known as Santa Gorlof, was doomed to be destroyed!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Go.&rdquo; She stamped her foot hysterically. &ldquo;You torture me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He faced her obstinately. &ldquo;What are you proposing? You've some plan in
- mind. Madame Varen-sky called this 'the road out.' Is it possible for you
- to take it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I know a shorter route.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You're certain?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Please leave me. You must leave me. I'm a woman who has nothing to offer.
- You're a man who has everything to lose.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He squared his lips. &ldquo;I don't like the sound of this shorter route. I want
- to know more about it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- As he made a step toward her, she dodged and broke from him, dashing
- toward the cliff. On the very edge he caught her. She struggled
- dangerously, but he stumbled back with her crushed against him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You little fool!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She lay quiet, her face pressed against his cheek. Then she fell to
- sobbing.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What difference would it make? Why wouldn't you let me do it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- IV
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">W</span>hy wouldn't he? It
- was the question he himself was asking. He had done nothing humane in
- preventing her. He had merely spared his own feelings. If she had
- succeeded, he would have found himself in an ugly situation. He would have
- been suspected of a crime similar to hers. There would have been no
- evidence to hang him, but he could never have established his innocence.
- He looked down at the woman shuddering in his arms, for all the world as
- though he were her lover. He had been within an ace of inheriting her
- isolation.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I didn't let you do it&mdash;&rdquo; He hesitated. Then he took the plunge.
- &ldquo;Because I intend to save you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She stirred. She glanced up at him. As her eyes met his, their expression
- of wonder gave way to one of gratitude. She strove to reach his lips, but
- he restrained her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Promise me you'll live.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If you'll help me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- How much she implied oy &ldquo;help me,&rdquo; he did not stop to question.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We've no time to lose.&rdquo; He spoke hurriedly. &ldquo;Where's the safest place of
- hiding?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My old one. A hut&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I know,&rdquo; he interrupted. &ldquo;I'll go ahead to make sure the way is clear;
- you follow at a distance. Keep me in sight. If I look back, take cover.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Without more ado, he turned away, retracing his steps to the camp.
- </p>
- <p>
- He attempted to walk jauntily, like a nature-lover who had risen early to
- enjoy the first freshness of the morning. Here and there he stooped to
- pluck a blackberry. He pulled a sprig of heather for his lapel. He
- flattered himself that, if he were being watched, his conduct was
- artistically normal.
- </p>
- <p>
- For all his display of carelessness, he advanced warily. There was nothing
- in the billowy expanse of greenness that escaped him. Somewhere within a
- radius of four miles the Major was waiting to make his pounce. He might be
- crouched in the next patch of bracken. He might be lying behind the
- nearest mound. The dapper, gallant-appearing old gentleman, who bore such
- a striking resemblance to Lord Roberts, assumed the terror of nemesis in
- his imagination. He seemed everywhere and nowhere. He would pop up, suave
- and neatly bespatted, at the moment when he was least expected.
- </p>
- <p>
- He gazed straight before him, not daring to look back, but he never lost
- consciousness of the fateful woman following him stealthily as a shadow.
- And always there was the memory of the other woman with the gentle eyes
- and shining hair.
- </p>
- <p>
- He reached the camp. It looked lonely as a graveyard. Rows of hutments,
- bleached to a bluish whiteness, gleamed in the morning sunshine. The downs
- curled above it like an emerald wave on the point of breaking.
- </p>
- <p>
- Passing along the bare avenue of silent dwellings he pushed open the door
- of Santa's place of refuge. Tiptoeing across the dusty floor, he knelt by
- the window, peering out.
- </p>
- <p>
- Seconds ticked into minutes. Ten minutes elapsed, twenty, half an hour.
- There was no sign of life. He strove to calm his fears. If she had been
- caught, it simplified matters. But such arguments failed to pacify him. He
- pictured her as he had seen her on the <i>Ryndam</i>&mdash;a splendid
- animal, proud, fastidious, mildly contemptuous; and then as he had seen
- her that morning, broken, desperate, defiant.
- </p>
- <p>
- Out there in the happy sunshine they might be carrying her away. They
- would drag her through the public streets as a criminal. They would lock
- her in a cell. They would hale her to a court to be gaped at. They would
- paw over her private life. They would pry into the intimacies of her
- love-affairs. Nothing that was hers would be sacred. Then, when the sport
- grew tedious, an old man, turned moralist by reason of decrepitude, would
- don a black cap and intrust her to the mercy of Almighty God.
- </p>
- <p>
- He staged her arrest as though he had seen it happen. He had strolled
- straight through her pursuers' ambush. They had let him pass. Directly she
- had appeared, they had risen out of the brush. Twisting her arms behind
- her, they had snapped handcuffs on her slender wrists. She had struggled,
- sinking to the ground, faint with terror. They had jerked her to her feet,
- half carrying her, pushing her forward.
- </p>
- <p>
- He raged impotently. What brutes men were! Nothing that she had done to
- his sex was bad enough. He thrust the vision from him. Each time it
- returned.
- </p>
- <p>
- The door creaked. He leaped as if he had been shot. She pressed a finger
- to her lips. Coming close, so that he could feel the rise and fall of her
- bosom, &ldquo;He's here,&rdquo; she whispered.
- </p>
- <h3>
- V
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">W</span>ho?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She was puzzled by his stupidity. Then, &ldquo;You know,&rdquo; she murmured. &ldquo;He saw
- me in the distance and started to run toward me. I dropped to my knees and
- circled, approaching the hut from the back.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But he couldn't have recognized you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He's on my track.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Alone?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I saw no one else.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood's forehead wrinkled as he reckoned the cost. &ldquo;If he comes alone,
- we can deal with him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You mean&mdash;?&rdquo; She did not finish her sentence.
- </p>
- <p>
- He smiled sternly, thinking how far he had drifted from his moorings.
- &ldquo;Scarcely. What made you ask?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He's my husband.&rdquo; Her answer was enigmatic.
- </p>
- <p>
- They held their breath. She was clinging to him. There had been no sound,
- nothing that could have warned them. Pushing her from him, he stole toward
- the window. Not fifty yards away, rigid like a hound at fault, stood the
- Major. Slowly, scarcely turning his head, he was running his eye along the
- double line of hutments. There was nothing in his expression that would
- tell what he had found. As though he sensed that he was watched, he
- started forward at a rambling pace. He tried no doors. He peered through
- no panes. His bearing was that of a mildly interested tourist who had
- stumbled on the camp by accident. He passed out of sight inoffensively,
- idly slashing at the grass.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was some time before either of them dared to whisper. Then Hindwood
- straightened himself and drew back.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He's gone.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To return,&rdquo; she said tragically.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If he returns alone, what of it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He may catch me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That doesn't follow. We may catch him instead.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her eyes grew long and narrow like a cat's. &ldquo;What would we do with him?&rdquo;
- she asked softly.
- </p>
- <p>
- He regarded her warily. &ldquo;He told me he loved you,&rdquo; he said irrelevantly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Love wouldn't stand in his way&mdash;nothing personal. For what he holds
- to be right, he'd mutilate himself. He'd kill the thing he loved best.&rdquo;
- She sank her voice. &ldquo;We all would.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All&mdash;&rdquo; He paused and began again. &ldquo;With idealists like the Major,
- yourself and Varensky, human relations don't count. That was what you were
- trying to tell me, wasn't it? To achieve individual ideals, you'd
- sacrifice your own and everybody's happiness.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her expression became wooden as an idol's.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You'd sacrifice mine, for instance?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- When she refused to answer, he made his inquiry more intrusive.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My life, perhaps? No obligation of loyalty or gratitude would hinder you?
- Be honest.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He recognized the struggle which his words had occasioned. Her sleepy look
- had vanished. She believed he was preparing to desert her. She was
- mustering the courage to invent a falsehood. Already her hands were lying.
- They were wandering over him, patting and caressing. He clasped them in
- his own, holding her at arm's length. Her eyes met his; they grew steady
- and absorbed him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Even though you were all I had, if your life caused suffering to
- children, I would kill you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He laughed at her solemnity over having told the truth.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;With you it's children; with the Major it's patriotism; with Varensky
- it's freedom. With me it's nothing. I follow no will-o'-the-wisp&mdash;which
- is lucky for you. You're terribly tired; get some rest while you can. I'll
- watch. I'm no idealist; you can trust me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- VI
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>he had wrapped
- herself in her sable cloak and curled herself on the floor in the corner
- remotest from the window. When he judged she was sleeping, he stole to her
- side and stood gazing down. Her rags were hidden. Except for the weary
- disorder of her hair, she was almost the fashionable beauty of his
- Atlantic voyage.
- </p>
- <p>
- He looked closer. Fatigue had uncovered something hidden in her
- countenance, traces of lost girlhood. Her body seemed smaller, her
- features less decided. The mask of intrigue had fallen. He caught a
- glimpse of the slim, pathetic child whom the Major had discovered, swaying
- like lilac-bloom in the perfumed dusk of the Hindoo temple.
- </p>
- <p>
- Her feet peeped out from beneath the costly fur. Such doll's feet&mdash;so
- little to have come so long a journey! Her ankles were cut by the climb up
- the cliff. Her shoes were broken. As though the curtain had gone up in the
- theater of his brain, her feet began to act their story. He saw them tiny
- and brown, pattering about the shaded bungalow where the English
- tea-planter had lived with her Burmese mother. He saw them lost and
- wandering along the roads of India. He saw them in the temple, flashing
- like a swallow's flight across mosaic pavements. He followed all their
- progress, as they carried her through triumphs and bereavements to this
- moment.
- </p>
- <p>
- She sighed and moved languidly. The robe fell back, revealing her hands.
- They were grazed and wounded.
- </p>
- <p>
- Pouring water on his handkerchief from the pitcher, he bathed them gently.
- Just as he had finished, she opened her eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You won't leave me?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You'll find me sitting here,&rdquo; he assured her, &ldquo;just like this when you
- waken.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Smiling faintly, she drowsed off obediently as a child.
- </p>
- <p>
- All day she lay huddled in the corner, oblivious and spent with
- exhaustion. This must be the first long sleep she had snatched for several
- days and nights. Crouched beside the window, he guarded her. The Major
- might return. Varensky might send help. He himself could do nothing till
- after nightfall. The only food was the broken loaf of bread on the shelf
- beside the pitcher. He did not dare to touch it; when she woke, she would
- be hungry. The downs poured in a steady blaze of light. A fly drummed
- against the panes. On distant hillsides sheep were grazing; he envied them
- their freedom.
- </p>
- <p>
- He could go if he liked. As the monotony dragged on, the temptation
- strengthened. He was under no obligation to make himself an outlaw. If he
- were to slip away, he would not rouse her. Within the hour he could be
- speeding up to London. Once there he would be of importance&mdash;the one
- man, at least in some statesmen's estimate, who could solve the European
- situation. For this woman he was sacrificing the happiness of millions.
- The fleshpots of Egypt could be his for the claiming. If he stayed and she
- were arrested, he would be held as her accomplice. Self-interest and
- altruism urged him to escape. He owed nothing to her. Women had always
- been for him an enemy country, forbidden and enticing. They had been what
- darkest Africa was to the explorer, a forest-world of treacherous
- loveliness. In imagination he had always been approaching their borders,
- fascinated by the gleam of uplifted faces. But like Varensky, whose life
- was a constant challenging of terror, in this one matter he had been
- cowardly. Since the first false woman of his early manhood&mdash;?
- </p>
- <p>
- Why was it, this sudden clamor to possess the thing which all his years he
- had avoided? Was it because he felt the rising tide of loneliness and knew
- that the years were gaining on him? All this autumn day, as the silver
- clearness of morning faded into the deep gold of afternoon, he sat
- motionless, considering. Up to now he had maintained his pride, flattering
- himself that it was he who was doing the refusing. He had told himself
- arrogantly that he would succeed first&mdash;succeed immensely; after that
- he could have any woman for the asking. But could he? He was losing his
- faculty for sharing. Merely to marry a woman was not to win her. The
- illusion of ecstasy!
- </p>
- <p>
- He glanced over to the corner where she lay sleeping. She was the symbol
- of the feminine half of the world whom he had disregarded. It was she who
- had roused him, with her parched voice and instinctive passion.
- </p>
- <p>
- He studied her&mdash;her golden face, her cruel lips, her thin, sweet
- profile. He noticed the delicate firmness of her arms, the fineness of her
- throat, the tenderness of her molding. At every point she made him aware
- of his incompleteness.
- </p>
- <p>
- Across the downs, like a fisherman drawing in his nets, the sun was
- setting. The hut was vague with dusk. Like the crescent of a young moon,
- Santa had wakened and was rising.
- </p>
- <h3>
- VII
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">Y</span>ou promised to
- save me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I will if I can.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She knotted her hands in mental anguish.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You must. Any moment he may return. Have you thought of nothing?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Leaning across his shoulder she lifted the ragged curtain, peering out at
- the fading landscape; as she gazed, her face stiffened and her eyes became
- fixed in a leaden stare. Not more than thirty yards distant, with his back
- toward them, the Major was standing. He had followed their trail still
- closer.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We can't escape,&rdquo; she panted. &ldquo;He'll be there all night, to-morrow,
- forever.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We can. Stop here and trust me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Rising stealthily, leaving the door ajar behind him, he slipped out of the
- hut. In the twilight he halted, breathing in the sweet evening fragrance.
- Without further secrecy, he strode toward the Major.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good evening. I've been expecting you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At the first word the Major spun round, alertly on the defensive.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I have your prisoner,&rdquo; he continued. &ldquo;I found I had no taste for being
- added to her list of victims. I'll be glad if you'll take her off my
- hands. She's in there.&rdquo; He jerked his thumb across his shoulder.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Major eyed him fiercely. &ldquo;How d'you mean, you were expecting me?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood laughed. &ldquo;I caught sight of you last night in Varensky's garden
- and this morning on the downs. I didn't let you know, because there were
- things I was anxious to investigate.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;For instance?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The purpose of her game.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And you've satisfied yourself?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;At the risk of my life&mdash;yes. When you warned me against being
- romantic, I thought you were merely jealous. Fortunately or unfortunately,
- whichever way you like to put it, I know now that everything you told me
- was correct.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Humph!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Major twirled his mustaches thoughtfully.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the last of the daylight he looked like a lean, white cat.
- </p>
- <p>
- His coolness began to wear on Hindwood's nerves. &ldquo;I suppose your men are
- hidden. Let's make an end.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I have no men.&rdquo; The Major spoke slowly. &ldquo;You forget that this woman is my
- wife. I wished to spare her as much as possible by making the arrest
- myself!&rdquo; His eyes narrowed shrewdly. &ldquo;How did you manage to secure her?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Luck. She had an accident. It's too long a story. She can't get away. I'm
- through; I've done my share.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- As he turned to go, the older man stretched out a delaying hand. His iron
- discipline wavered. &ldquo;It's not a cheerful task. If you'll be so good as to
- stay&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If you feel like that&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I daren't allow myself to feel. It's something I owe my country.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- As though afraid that he would weaken, the Major set out at a run across
- the turf. Outside the hut he waited. As Hindwood caught up with him, he
- whispered:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Two men against one woman! For an old soldier it isn't gallant.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He was on the point of entering, when he felt himself flung violently
- forward. Hindwood's arm was crooked about his throat, shutting off his
- breath. Bursting into the hut, he was hurled to the floor and found
- himself struggling in the darkness. He was being pressed down and down. A
- voice spoke, the accents of which a minute ago had been friendly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Close the door. Get something to bind him. Anything that will hold. Tear
- strips off your dress.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- VIII
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>t was over. The
- Major had been trussed and gagged. He had been handcuffed with his own
- manacles. His revolver had been removed and his pockets searched. He
- leaned propped against the wall like a jointed doll, his body making an
- exact right angle with his legs. The angry vigilance of his eyes was his
- only sign of life. There was no means of making a light, even if it had
- been safe to employ it. Now that the fight was ended, they sat staring
- into the gloom, anonymous as three shadows.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was Hindwood who broke the silence. &ldquo;I've been guilty of an outrage,
- Major; I guess that's what you'd like to tell me. But you gave me no
- choice. Where I come from, women and children are held sacred. It was up
- to some man to protect her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He paused instinctively, as though he expected a reply. He looked to Santa
- where she crouched, motionless and scarcely discernible, in her corner.
- What were they thinking, this husband and wife, so brutally reunited? His
- sense of discomfort urged him to continue.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't run off with the idea that I approve of what she's done. And I'm
- not in love with her. If she were a man, I don't suppose I'd raise a
- finger to save her. But she's a woman: inconsistently, that makes all the
- difference. I couldn't stand for seeing her dragged away to the kind of
- shame&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Again he paused. The lack of response was maddening. Scrambling to his
- feet, he bent over the Major.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To be frank, now that I've got you, I don't know what to do with you. If
- you'll promise to keep quiet, I'll remove the gag.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No.&rdquo; Santa had not stirred. In the darkness she was little more than a
- voice. &ldquo;Let me speak while he's forced to listen. Put him where I can see
- him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Taking his prisoner by the shoulders, Hindwood dragged him to the window.
- With a jerk he tore the ragged curtain from its nails. The downs were a
- sea of purple dusk. The moon hung like a lantern in an unruffled sky.
- Against the square of glass, the Major's face showed hawk-like.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You've changed.&rdquo; She spoke softly. &ldquo;Do you remember when last we parted?
- On the docks at Calcutta. It hurt. Since then we've both gone down the
- ladder. For both of us it was the end of goodness. I must have known it. I
- waved till long after you were out of sight; then I wept till my heart was
- shriveled up. How long I've waited to tell you what you've made me suffer!
- You made me feel that I'd never been your wife, only a half-caste
- plaything. But you'd put a white soul into my body. It was a greater
- wickedness than anything I have done. Now that I'm what you've made me,
- father of my dead child, you seek me out to be my judge.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her hoarse voice died away. Like the protest of an uneasy conscience, the
- Major's handcuffs clinked together.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You think that you're just,&rdquo; she began again. &ldquo;You come of a race which
- admires justice. Ah, but justice is not kindness! You knew what I was when
- you brought me from the temple&mdash;a wanton slave-girl. What had I
- learned of righteousness? It wasn't for my virtue that you bought me. It
- was for my pomegranate lips, my golden body, my little, caressing hands.
- Afterward, as an incentive to desire, it pleased you to bring the soul
- into my eyes. You made me long to be perfect. You seemed so strong and
- wise; I wanted to be like you. Without you I was afraid. You were my God.
- I felt brave when I touched you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her voice sank. &ldquo;After the little one came, I was no longer frightened. He
- was so nearly white. He was yours and mine. My blood seemed cleansed. I
- saw the world through the innocence of his eyes. The evil of the East
- ceased to call to me. But when he was killed and you put me from you&mdash;&mdash;
- Murderer of a woman's faith,&rdquo; she addressed the silent face, &ldquo;the soul in
- me was dying.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She rocked in the shadows. &ldquo;My crimes are yours, and you came to condemn
- me. You robbed me of everything but my body. My heart was famished; to
- feed it, I sold my beauty at a price. At first, for men's money; then, for
- their honor; at last, for their lives.&rdquo; She had risen. &ldquo;You wonder why for
- their lives? They were men like you, outwardly just, who destroyed belief
- in goodness. Because of men like you women's hearts are broken and
- children go naked.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood leaped to his feet, blocking her path. She leaned past him,
- staring down into the bandaged face.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, husband without pity, god whom I worshipped, I burn in hell because
- of your justice.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Slipping to her knees, she came into the square of light. &ldquo;Am I not
- beautiful? Is there another like me? Would it not have been happier to
- have been kind? See what you have spoiled.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- IX
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>here was the
- rustling of footsteps in the grass outside. Letting in a flood of
- moonlight, the door was pushed gently open.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;May we enter?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Without waiting for a reply, a man padded noiselessly across the
- threshold. By his peaked head and the litheness of his body, Hindwood
- recognized him as Varensky. Behind him, with the mildness of attendant
- angels, Anna and the Little Grandmother followed. Just inside the room he
- halted.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's this?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The bound face in the square of window had riveted his attention.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Her husband.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But why&mdash;?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood spoke again. &ldquo;He had come to take her to be hanged.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The pale face smiled contemptuously. &ldquo;Hanging's only a way of dying. Was
- that any reason for making him suffer?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Without further argument, taking command of the situation, he stepped
- quickly to the Major's side. Stooping, he cut the bonds and removed the
- gag.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You're free&mdash;free to go where you like and to get us all into
- trouble. We shall be here for at least an hour, so you'll have time. I
- landed without permission in your England this morning. That's a cause for
- police interference. My name's Ivan Varensky.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Major rose painfully, blinking at the lean, green-eyed stranger as
- though he had discovered in him a jester. &ldquo;There are still the handcuffs,&rdquo;
- he muttered.
- </p>
- <p>
- When the handcuffs had been knocked off, Varen-sky repeated, &ldquo;You're free
- to go.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Major shook himself and resumed his strutting air, like a brave old
- rooster who had all but had his neck wrung. &ldquo;If it makes no difference,
- I'll stay.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- With his left eye shut and his head on one side, Varensky regarded him
- comically. &ldquo;No difference! It may. You're a secret service agent; I'm a
- revolutionary. You uphold laws; I defy them. You're the servant of force;
- I hate every form of compulsion. What difference it makes depends on
- yourself&mdash;whether you propose to stay as a spy or as a man of honor.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;As a sportsman who abides by the rules of the game.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Varensky shrugged his narrow shoulders. &ldquo;As a sportsman who hunts women?&rdquo;
- He turned tenderly to Santa. &ldquo;You're famished. We'll cover up the window
- and make a light.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- When candles which they had brought had been kindled and the meal spread,
- Santa and Hindwood sat down on the floor, facing each other. While they
- ate there was dead silence. Hindwood kept catching glimpses of her eyes.
- What was to be the end of her? Her expression was stunned. They both knew
- what this silence betokened: when the meal was over, her fate was to be
- decided. He was aware of each separate personality, as though each were
- making an effort to explain itself. What was to be hoped for from the
- verdict of such a jury? Every one in the hut, except Anna and himself, was
- a fanatic. He did not try to see their faces; all he saw was their hands
- as they ministered to him. The hands of Varensky, half clown's, half
- martyr's. The wrinkled hands of the old noblewoman, worn with service, who
- had lived with outcasts and spent her years in exile. The hands of Anna,
- guilty with yearning.
- </p>
- <p>
- Varensky spoke without looking up. It was as though he were carrying on a
- conversation already started. &ldquo;We can't restore life, so what right have
- we to destroy it? To be merciful&mdash;that's the only way.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- His green eyes sought the Major's. &ldquo;We could have killed you to-night&mdash;but
- we didn't. Have you wondered why? By letting you go, we've put ourselves
- in your power. To-morrow you can drag us all to jail. You're a hard man.
- You exact an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth. You came here
- to-night to exact a life. If we had judged you by your own standards, we
- should have been justified in giving you no quarter. If we had, what good
- would it have done? You'd only have been dead. And if you'd managed to
- capture Santa, what good would that have done? To have had her executed
- wouldn't have made her a better woman.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He reached out and took her unwilling hand, bending back the fingers one
- by one. &ldquo;They're beautiful. See how cleverly they work. There's not a
- scientist living can reproduce their mechanism. No one knows how they grew
- to be like that.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- His tone became tender. &ldquo;Santa's been bad. She's been treacherous and
- cruel: a faithless wife and a menace. Merely to punish her wouldn't undo
- her evil. Only she can do that.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- For the first time the Major spoke. &ldquo;At what are you driving?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Varensky made no attempt to answer him. He seemed not to have heard. He
- sat cross-legged on the floor, folding and unfolding Santa's fingers,
- while his grotesque shadow squatted on the wall behind him. He looked like
- a kindly, embarrassed boy, trying to say something to the sulky girl so
- that it should not sound too wounding.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I wonder whether Santa's husband ever saw a woman when she was dead.
- There's no light in her eyes. She can't say that she's sorry. Last week I
- saw hundreds in the ditches about Kiev. They weren't lovely. We mustn't
- let our Santa become like that.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He turned to the Major with a slow smile. &ldquo;Must we? You wouldn't like to
- think of the woman you had loved&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Major took a step into the room and stood biting his lips, glooming
- down at Varensky.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You and I, sir, view our duty from hostile standpoints. I care for this
- woman infinitely more than you can ever care. But I care still more for my
- country. She's betrayed it a score of times. Shall I, because I am her
- husband, stand by and allow her to betray it? Had I accomplished the
- purpose that brought me here to-night, my heart would have been broken. To
- have put handcuffs on her wrists and to have sworn away her life, do you
- think it would have cost me nothing? The very judge who sentenced her
- would have shunned me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Little Grandmother looked up. She spoke gruffly. &ldquo;And what would have
- been the use of your suffering? Society would have been revenged. It would
- have washed its hands, like Pontius Pilate. It would have smiled smugly,
- believing she was wrong and it was right. It would have gone on its way,
- manufacturing more criminals like her. The old evils that have made her
- what she is would have continued, while she&mdash;&rdquo; She snapped her
- fingers furiously. &ldquo;Like the women in the ditches about Kiev.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- When the room had grown silent, Varensky covered the Major with his
- mocking stare.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You must excuse our Little Grandmother. She feels these things intensely.
- More than half her years have been spent in prison.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Major pulled himself together. &ldquo;She needs no excusing. What is it that
- you want of me?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- X
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>anta's life. It's
- of no use to you.&rdquo; He smiled in the midst of his earnestness. &ldquo;I'm a boy
- begging for a broken watch. You were going to throw it away. I have dreams
- that I could repair it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Major twitched irritably. &ldquo;And you talk like a boy. How can I give you
- what doesn't belong to me? At every port in Europe the police are
- watching. For me to forgive her wouldn't help. It isn't against me that
- she's offended; it's against the laws of civilization.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I know.&rdquo; Varensky nodded soothingly. &ldquo;You're only one of the many agents
- of social vengeance. What I ought to have asked you was to give me the
- part of her life that does belong to you. She's in your clutches. Let her
- escape. Keep silent and drop your pursuit.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And if I do?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Varensky tucked his legs closer under him and bent forward. &ldquo;Perhaps I
- could turn her into a saint.&rdquo; A note of passionate pleading crept into his
- voice. &ldquo;She loves children. It was how her wickedness started. She was
- blind and mistaken, and all her crimes were committed for children. A
- woman who loves children must be good. She's done abominable things. She
- could become magnificent if she would do good with an equal violence.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Major glanced at the subject of these prophecies, sitting in their
- midst, rebelliously silent. He said wearily: &ldquo;Mere words! You offer me no
- proof!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The white face seemed to grow till it filled the room. The green eyes
- glowed like emeralds. They were uncanny and hypnotic. Language came in a
- torrent. &ldquo;It isn't her body&mdash;it's her soul. If she were to die now,
- what would happen to her? I tried to save the soul of a nation. Let me do
- for Santa what I couldn't do for Russia&mdash;prove that mercy restores
- where punishment destroys. There's been too much killing. The world grows
- worse instead of better. It's been going on for ages, this hanging and
- guillotining and bludgeoning. It's reformed nothing. It's the might is
- right of the jungle, the justice of apes and cavemen. Revenge, whether
- it's carried out by tooth and claw or by law-courts and armies, never
- heals anything; it always leaves a bruise. The face of Europe is bruised
- beyond recovery by our last display of justice. Its fields are rotten with
- corpses. Shall we add one more to the many&mdash;a woman's?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He paused, trembling like a leaf. When the Major only frowned, he sank
- back exhausted.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If you'd seen what I've seen&mdash;&rdquo; His head sagged stupidly. &ldquo;If you'd
- seen what I've seen&mdash;miles of men, all slaughtered; women dead of
- starvation, children hunting in packs like wolves. And all because there's
- no mercy. If you'd seen, you couldn't kill anything.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The candles ceased to gutter. Shadows huddled motionless. The very silence
- seemed accused.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood rose. He could endure the tension no longer. &ldquo;I know nothing
- about her soul and not much about her guilt. All I know is that she's a
- woman at the end of her tether who's been handed one of the rawest of raw
- deals. That the world's been hard on her won't excuse her. We can't alter
- the world over night. If she's caught, as she may be at any moment, it'll
- be all up with her. I don't care what she's done or how much I lose by it,
- I'm not going to stand by and see her taken.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Major swung round. &ldquo;Nor am I. But how to avoid it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood showed his suspicion of this sudden conversion. &ldquo;Tell me,&rdquo; he
- answered cautiously, &ldquo;have you handed in any reports, I mean officially&mdash;about
- my knowledge of Santa?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Beyond the fact that you crossed on the same boat with her, you've not
- been mentioned.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And there's no one in your service, besides yourself, who has the least
- idea of her whereabouts?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No one.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then it can be managed.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He was dimly conscious of the pale expectancy of the faces lifted up to
- him. He felt that he was on the edge of a whirlpool into which he was
- being slowly dragged. Even at this last moment he made an effort to resist
- it. Then it seemed to him that in the heart of its eddies he saw a woman.
- She grew distinct; her face was Anna's.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Let me explain,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I'm neither humanitarian nor idealist. I have
- no fantastic hopes of turning sinners into saints. I'm head of a group of
- American financiers, and I'm in Europe to employ its starving peoples.
- Don't misunderstand me. The result of my mission may be philanthropic, but
- its purpose is to make a profit. Since the war Europe's become a
- bargain-counter where everything's exposed for sale&mdash;everything
- except food. I can supply food. With food I can purchase, for a fraction
- of their value, railroads, factories, labor. I tell you this so that you
- may not doubt me when I say that I have it in my power to protect her.
- Once out of England, no escaping criminal could find a safer place of
- refuge than in my company. I have influence with all governments; with
- food I can stop revolution. None of them dares suspect me. I propose that
- I should take Santa with me. I travel on diplomatic passports; with me
- she'll have no trouble in crossing frontiers.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The silence that greeted his offer lengthened. At a loss to account for
- it, he glanced from face to face.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Have I offended?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was Santa who replied. Leaping up in their midst, tattered and
- disheveled, she threatened them like dogs whom she would beat aside.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Beasts!&rdquo; A sob caught her breath. &ldquo;Is it impossible even for you, who
- call yourselves my friends, to believe any good of me? I swear before
- heaven he has no love for me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- XI
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">B</span>ack in London he
- lost no time in completing arrangements for departure. Every boat that
- left for France without him lessened Santa's chance of safety. And yet,
- though he worked frantically, canceling appointments and clearing up
- correspondence, he couldn't bring home to himself the reality of the
- situation. The hut on the downs and all that had happened there seemed
- something that he had read or imagined. Only the face of Anna stood out in
- memory, clear-cut and actual. It seemed impossible to believe that he,
- Philip Hindwood, was in league with revolutionaries. That he was in league
- was proved to him when he set about procuring the passport and visés
- necessary for Santa to accompany him. By the time he obtained them, he had
- abused confidence and perjured himself beyond hope of pardon. They were
- made out in the name of &ldquo;Edith Jones, spinster; American-born subject;
- aged thirty years; confidential secretary to Philip Hindwood, whom she is
- accompanying.&rdquo; All her permits were marked <i>Special</i> and <i>Diplomatic</i>.
- It wasn't until the bustle was over and he was seated in the train for
- Dover, that the true proportions of his entanglement dawned on him.
- </p>
- <p>
- At Dover she was to meet him. That had been the understanding. From then
- on, day in, day out, he would never be without her. No matter what strange
- country he traversed, she would sit beside him, reminding him of his
- complicity in her crimes. He would have to talk with her, eat with her,
- pretend to consult with her, just as if she were what he had claimed her
- to be&mdash;his confidential secretary. Would she have the sense to act
- discreetly? Would she expect him to make love to her? He glowered out of
- the window at the fleeting landscape. Any folly was possible to a woman
- with her record.
- </p>
- <p>
- What made him most furious was the easy way in which he had allowed her to
- twist him round her fingers. It was the woods of Vincennes all over again.
- He was going into disordered countries, where governments were toppling
- and anarchy was rife. When she felt herself beyond the reach of danger,
- what was to prevent her from getting rid of him? Russia, if he got so far,
- was the kind of nightmare in which anything might happen. In Russia murder
- was one of the fine arts. He remembered Anna's suspicion that Santa was a
- Bolshevist agent. It added nothing to his comfort.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had given way to idealism. It was the madness of a moment. It was
- listening to Varensky that had worked the mischief. Varensky had said
- something about idealism. What was it? That idealism was the vanishing
- point&mdash;the last outpost between Man and Eternity. His words came
- back.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;When you gaze up a railroad track, there's always a point in the infinite
- distance where, just before they vanish, the parallel rails seem to join.
- If a train were ever to reach that point, it would mean death. Life's like
- that&mdash;a track along which we travel on the parallel rails of
- possibility and desire. The lure of the idealist is to overtake the
- illusion, where possibility and desire seem to merge, and the safety of
- the journey ends.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- For him the safety of the journey had ended the moment it had started. If
- Varensky had meant anything by the vanishing point, he had meant that
- death is the unconscious goal of all idealists. Hind-wood shrugged his
- shoulders. It seemed highly probable when you took Santa with you on your
- travels.
- </p>
- <p>
- The smell of the sea was in the air. They were slowing down, grinding
- their way to the docks through the town of Dover.
- </p>
- <p>
- He didn't want to see her. He would make no effort to find her. She might
- have been prevented from joining him&mdash;perhaps arrested.
- </p>
- <p>
- After the train had halted, he took his time. No one whom he recognized
- was on the platform. Directing a porter to attend to his baggage, he went
- quickly to the embarkation office to get his permit for going aboard. As
- he was entering, he felt his arm touched timidly, and turned.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm here.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I see you are.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Didn't you expect me?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He made an effort to act courteously. &ldquo;Of course. There are formalities to
- be gone through. You'd better stick close to me. Don't attract attention.
- Let me do the talking.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- They fell into line behind a queue of passengers, winding slowly toward a
- table where officials were receiving and inspecting passports. He stood
- well in front of her, doing his best to hide her. When his turn came and
- the official held out his hand, he presented her passport with his own
- perfunctorily.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mine and my secretary's.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The official was on the point of returning them, when a stockily-built man
- leaned across his shoulder and whispered something. Both of them looked
- up, staring hard at Santa.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Which is Miss Jones?&rdquo; the official asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This lady at my side.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;So you're Miss Jones, an American citizen?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Before she could reply, Hindwood had interposed. &ldquo;I've already told you
- she's Miss Jones. If you'll look, you'll see that her passport's marked <i>Diplomatic</i>
- as well as mine.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The two men consulted together in lowered tones. Then the passport was
- O.K.'d and restored.
- </p>
- <p>
- Picking it up, together with the embarkation permits, Hindwood strolled
- leisurely towards the gangplank. Directly they were on board he hurried
- Santa to her cabin and shut the door.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You'll stay here till we sight France. I'm giving no one else the
- opportunity for suspecting a likeness.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER THE SIXTH&mdash;THE ESCAPE
- </h2>
- <h3>
- I
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HE steamer had no
- sooner reached Calais than a new cause for alarm presented itself. During
- the channel crossing Hindwood had been keyed up to the last point of
- tension. Every moment he had expected to be tapped on the shoulder and
- informed that his secretary's identity had been discovered. He had spent
- most of his time surreptitiously mounting guard in the neighborhood of
- Santa's cabin. If the same man chanced to pass him twice, he had at once
- jumped to the conclusion that he was being shadowed.
- </p>
- <p>
- The hesitancy at Dover over O.K.'ing Santa's passport had robbed him of
- whatever sense of security he had possessed. It had compelled him to
- acknowledge the ruin that faced him, should he be exposed while
- engineering the flight of so notorious a criminal. As the Major had warned
- him, she was being sought by the police of every country.
- </p>
- <p>
- If the worst should happen, he would find no apologists. It would be
- useless for him to plead a chivalrous motive. She had been the lodestar of
- masculine passions too often. Though he managed to escape a prison
- sentence, he would emerge from the catastrophe broken in character&mdash;a
- paltry creature, half knave, half fool, who had gambled away his integrity
- and made himself a laughing stock. Already in imagination he was reading
- the scare headlines which would advertise his shame to the world. He would
- be regarded as a malefactor&mdash;hustled behind bars and herded for trial
- with blackmailers and pickpockets.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dogged by these persistent dreads, when the ship was inside Calais harbor
- he rapped on her door and having heard her bid him enter, slipped across
- the threshold, announcing tersely:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We're there.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Since she joined him, he had held no conversation with her. She made no
- attempt to break through his silence. Rising obediently, while she
- adjusted her hat, she watched him in the mirror with the eyes of a
- reproachful dog. Without sign or sound, as he turned away impatiently, she
- followed. No sooner did they appear on deck than the new cause for alarm
- started.
- </p>
- <p>
- A handsome and distinguished-looking foreigner began taking immediate
- notice of her. He was so quick to pick her out in the throng that it
- seemed he must have been watching for her. Whoever and whatever he was, he
- was manifestly a man of breeding&mdash;the kind of man who might have been
- her companion in the old, wild days of her triumphant folly. He was about
- thirty-five, tall, dark, finely-built, and of military bearing. He had a
- closely-trimmed mustache, bold, black eyes, and a Latin type of
- countenance. That was all that Hindwood permitted himself to observe;
- changing his position promptly, he shut Santa out from the stranger's line
- of vision. But the man was not to be balked. With an air of complete
- unconcern, he fell into line immediately behind them, treading closely on
- their heels as they passed up the gangplank. On the way to the Customs he
- managed to get ahead, so that he could glance back several times at Santa.
- </p>
- <p>
- After their baggage had been inspected it was necessary for them to file
- through a stuffy room where passports were examined. It was here that
- Hindwood was fully prepared to be caught. The officials at Dover had
- probably cabled a warning; the inquisitive stranger might prove to be
- their emissary. Quite the contrary occurred. The French official, catching
- sight of the magic words <i>Diplomatic</i> and <i>Special</i>, scrutinized
- no further and returned the papers with a courteous apology. Making the
- most of his luck, Hindwood hurried Santa out onto the platform, down the
- long train labeled Stuttgart, Warsaw, etc., and into the <i>wagons-lits</i>
- which went express to Vienna.
- </p>
- <p>
- Before leaving London he had reserved two separate compartments in the
- name of &ldquo;Philip Hindwood and party.&rdquo; Now that he claimed them, he found to
- his annoyance that they were adjoining and connected by a private door. It
- was an indiscretion that he had not intended. Having seen Santa safely
- settled, he set off to superintend the placing on board of their bags.
- </p>
- <p>
- He was gone perhaps five minutes. As he reentered the corridor of his
- section, the first sight that met his eyes was the handsome stranger
- engaged in earnest talk with the <i>wagon-lits</i> conductor. Some money
- passed. Next thing the stranger's belongings were being transferred from
- lower down the train to the compartment on the further side from Santa's.
- Hindwood entered his own compartment, shaded the windows that looked out
- on the corridor and made fast his door.
- </p>
- <p>
- What was the game? Was this a fresh example of Santa's irresistible charm?
- And if it was, was he to be subjected to this kind of impertinence
- throughout the entire journey? Or was the man a secret service agent in
- the employ of some foreign Government, who, believing he had recognized
- her, was keeping her in sight till she should have crossed the frontier
- into his own country, where he would have power to arrest her?
- </p>
- <p>
- In his anger he tried to blame Santa; she must have unconsciously
- exercised her talent for attraction. Strangers didn't follow women unless&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- But he had to own himself unjust. She was dressed with the utmost
- plainness, in a tailored costume, minus furs or any lavishness. There was
- nothing to complain of in her deportment. It was as modest as could have
- been expected had she really been &ldquo;Edith Jones, aged thirty, American-born
- citizen, confidential secretary.&rdquo; The fault lay in something beyond her
- control&mdash;her beauty. It refused to be subdued. It shone out the more
- conspicuously in the absence of adornment. It constituted itself an
- unforeseen embarrassment, if not a menace. The further he traveled into
- continental countries, the less he would be believed when he stated that
- she was Miss Jones and no more than his secretary. Already more people
- than the obtrusive stranger had stared at her. She had only to appear to
- make herself the focus of attention. Sooner or later, to-day, to-morrow, a
- month hence, some one would catch sight of her who had known her in the
- past. She had been feted in too many cities, her portrait had been too
- widely published, for her features not to be remembered. These distressing
- reflections were cut short by the shrill tootings of tin horns which
- announce the departure of a train in France. When Calais had been left
- behind and they were rushing past stripped orchards and harvested fields,
- he unlatched the dividing door. She was sitting lost in thought, staring
- out of the window with a wistful expression.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Come into my compartment. I'd like to talk.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The jerk with which she turned betrayed the strain under which she was
- laboring. He watched the undulating grace with which she rose, the
- calculated delicacy of her every movement. Though she had dressed in rags,
- nothing could have disguised her.
- </p>
- <p>
- When he had closed the door, she remained standing.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Please sit down,&rdquo; he said with cold politeness. &ldquo;We're safe for the
- moment. As you see, I've lowered the blinds. No one can spy on us. You've
- noticed him?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Drawing off her gloves, she smoothed them out mechanically, maintaining
- her silence.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Tell me,&rdquo; he urged, &ldquo;what do you make of him?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nothing.&rdquo; Her voice was flat and toneless. &ldquo;Wherever I go, it's always
- the same. You ought to know&mdash;on the <i>Ryndam</i> you were like it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He passed over the implied accusation. &ldquo;Then you don't think he's a&mdash;&mdash;?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I've not troubled to think.&rdquo; She glanced drearily aside. &ldquo;Men are brutes.
- If you'd left me alone on the cliff&mdash;I wish you had. It would have
- been all ended.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She said it without spite&mdash;almost without reproach. In the presence
- of her melancholy, he recovered something of his compassion.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But I didn't leave you, and nothing's gained by recrimination. The point
- is this fellow next door. What's his purpose? How are we going to manage
- him?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Easily. Fling me to him as you'd toss a dog a bone. You'll be rid of your
- share of the danger.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't want to be rid of you.&rdquo; He passed his hand across his forehead,
- mastering his impatience.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't pretend I shan't be glad&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To be quit of me,&rdquo; she prompted.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To be relieved of the risk of you,&rdquo; he corrected. &ldquo;But not until I've
- fulfilled my promise.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She smiled. &ldquo;You promised you'd save me. I can't be saved. Varensky's talk
- about redeeming me was visionary. I was born to be what I am.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He relaxed and sat forward, exerting himself to make the conversation less
- unfriendly. &ldquo;Of course I know why you speak this way: it's because of my
- recent treatment of you. We were nearly found out at Dover; the anxiety of
- it's getting on my nerves. I promised to give you your chance; my promise
- stands. The least I can ask of you as a sportswoman is to play up to me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her whole demeanor changed. The golden face flashed. &ldquo;I will.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then if this man is only an impudent admirer, how are we to shake him?
- It's my business for the present to protect you. If this is the sort of
- thing that always happens, it's possible that it'll occur again. I daren't
- resent his conduct. Ordinarily I should know what to do with him. How is
- the repetition of the annoyance to be avoided?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A slow flush mounted from her throat to her cheeks. &ldquo;You won't take my
- suggestion, so I don't think I'll make it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Let's have it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Not looking at him, she muttered: &ldquo;He'll try to scrape acquaintance. When
- he does, introduce me to him as your wife.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But to do that&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He fell silent. He was thinking of Anna. For the first time he was
- conscious of his aloneness with this woman.
- </p>
- <p>
- Not wishing to wound her, he procrastinated.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To do that might only add to our complications.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It might.&rdquo; Her gray eyes struggled to meet his gaze. &ldquo;It isn't likely. He
- won't believe you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then what would be gained?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You'd have told him, without insult, that he wasn't wanted.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He glanced out of the window at the rushing landscape. At last he spoke.
- &ldquo;If there's no other way&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She rested her thin, fine hand on his gently. &ldquo;You're generous. If the day
- ever comes when you despise yourself as I despise myself to-day, remember
- that once you were able to make a wicked woman believe in goodness&mdash;to
- make her long with all her heart to be like you.&rdquo; Her eyes became misty.
- &ldquo;At this moment I'm not far from redemption.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Lunch was announced. He gave orders to have it served in his compartment.
- While they ate, he outlined to her his plans. He had asked her how long
- she expected to be with him.
- </p>
- <p>
- Her reply was discomfortingly vague. &ldquo;As long as you can endure me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Inside of two months,&rdquo; he told her, &ldquo;I think I can promise you immunity.
- At present, according to information, Central Europe's starving. With
- winter comes the crisis. I've forseen that. For some time I've been
- shipping food to Holland. It's lying there in warehouses in immense
- quantities. I have an entire fleet secretly at work, plying back and forth
- across the Atlantic. When the famine becomes too acute, I'm prepared to
- strike my bargain. I'll take railroads and concessions in exchange for
- bread. Other upstarts have carved out kingdoms with armies; I intend to
- conquer mine with food. There never was a war or any social uprising that
- wasn't caused by an empty stomach. Within three hours of my terms having
- been accepted, my trains will be streaming out of Holland. Where they
- halt, the flames of revolution will be quenched. If I haven't
- miscalculated, I shall be unofficial President of the United States of
- Europe.&rdquo; He paused to watch his effect. &ldquo;I've nominated myself,&rdquo; he
- smiled.
- </p>
- <p>
- His smile was unreturned. She was regarding him with an expression of
- horror. Their rôles seemed reversed. It was evident that to her way of
- thinking it was he who had become the criminal and she who was looking
- down on him from a higher moral level.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But they're starving.&rdquo; Her voice shook passionately. &ldquo;If you have these
- stores, why don't you feed them? They're dying. So many of them are
- children!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You don't understand.&rdquo; He tried to make his tones reasonable. &ldquo;I've
- invested all my fortune in the venture. I'm a business man. In business
- one man's calamity is another's opportunity. The same is true of nations.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Seeing that she still looked grieved, he patted her shoulder. &ldquo;Don't
- worry. We'll rustle through. Your life will be spared.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I wasn't thinking of my life.&rdquo; She spoke contemptuously.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then of what?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Of the women dead of hunger in the ditches about Kiev.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- As she rose to leave, she glanced back from the doorway. &ldquo;There was a
- message I had to deliver to you. Varensky's setting out on his last
- journey. He hopes to see you in Budapest. He told me to say, 'Soon you can
- have her.'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- II
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>hrusting its
- war-scarred head into the clouds, Amiens had been left behind: they were
- skirting the old battle-line. Though seasons had come and vanished,
- memories of tragedy were still apparent. Shell-torn walls had been
- patched, but the patches served to emphasize the ruin. One could trace in
- the landscape crumbling trench-systems and the rusty red of entangled
- wire. Here and there, in gleaming plots, white crosses grew in humble
- clusters. In fancy he pictured the hosts who had died. The unprofitable
- patience of their sacrifice! Had they known what was to be the result,
- would they have gone to their death so gladly? The result of their
- idealism was hunger. He recalled his awkward phrase&mdash;the world's
- hunger had proved to be his opportunity. Santa's horror disturbed his
- memory. He was inclined to go to her and explain. Everything had to be
- purchased by labor. Anything one possessed was the wage of labor. To give
- things away did harm. It wasn't business. It set a premium on laziness.
- Even to give food to a starving nation did harm; it made that nation a
- pauper. The most primitive of all laws was that bread should be earned by
- the sweat of the brow&mdash;that if a man did not toil, neither should he
- eat. The only righteous way to feed starving people was to set them to
- work. So his thoughts ran on, building up the argument.
- </p>
- <p>
- But he did not go to her. It was Varensky's message that deterred him: &ldquo;He
- told me to say, 'Soon you can have her.'&rdquo; Did Santa know what was meant&mdash;that
- the message referred to Anna? She must know. What difference would this
- make to her? She also loved, and she was a panther-woman.
- </p>
- <p>
- The countryside grew blurred with dusk. The stiff, white crosses faded out
- of sight. Forgetting his danger, he fell asleep, wondering whether Anna
- would be with her husband at Budapest.
- </p>
- <h3>
- III
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">W</span>hen he awoke, he
- was in total darkness. Glancing through the window, he discovered that the
- world outside was weakly lit with straggling rows of street-lamps. They
- seemed to be marching in the same direction as the train; in the far
- distance they rushed together, making night hollow with their flare. His
- first thought was of Santa; a thousand things might have happened.
- </p>
- <p>
- As he groped at the handle of the dividing door, he caught the sound of
- laughter.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;May I enter?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Santa whom his eyes encountered was no longer the fugitive from
- justice. She was mysteriously changed. There was animation in her
- countenance and seduction in her voice. She was again the enchantress of
- men, reckless and tender, who had all but captured his heart on the
- Atlantic voyage. He looked to see what had caused this transformation.
- Lolling in the entrance was the handsome stranger.
- </p>
- <p>
- Before Hindwood could speak, she was addressing him gaily. &ldquo;So you've
- wakened! I didn't like to disturb you. You've almost made me miss my
- dinner. If you're ready now&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The stranger interrupted. &ldquo;I've not dined. But I have my place reserved.
- If there should prove to be no room, perhaps you would flatter me by
- occupying my place instead.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Santa shook her head graciously. &ldquo;It's good of you, but my husband and I
- will take our chance.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She was the only one whom her claim that Hind-wood was her husband left
- undisturbed. The two men glared at each other in astonishment. It was the
- stranger who recovered first.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If I had known that this lady was your wife, I should have asked your
- permission before I made my offer. I shall be very happy if you will
- permit me to do you both this service. I ought to introduce myself.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He fumbled in his pocketbook and produced a card on which was engraved,
- &ldquo;Captain Serge Lajos, Hungarian Royal Hussars.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My name is Hindwood&mdash;Philip Hindwood.&rdquo; Hindwood returned the
- compliment surlily. &ldquo;I agree with my wife; we both prefer that you retain
- your place and that we be allowed to take our chance.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Santa rose eagerly to prevent the giving of further offense. Her smile was
- for the Captain. &ldquo;We waste time talking. You'll join us, Captain? We'll
- take our chance together.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Without risking a reply, she led the way, Hindwood following and the
- Captain coming last. There was no opportunity for speech in the swaying
- corridor. When the dining-car was reached, they were shown immediately to
- a vacant table.
- </p>
- <p>
- At first they sat in silence, watching how the lights flashing by the
- panes were strengthening into a golden blur.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Where are we?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was Hindwood who had decided to be amiable.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Entering Paris.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;So late as that!&rdquo; He consulted his watch. &ldquo;We go through without
- changing, they told us.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There's no change till Vienna.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Captain's answers were mechanical. He seemed to be brushing aside a
- presence that annoyed him. His puzzled eyes were fixed on Santa.
- </p>
- <p>
- Suppressing his irritation, Hindwood made another effort at friendliness.
- &ldquo;I didn't notice you till we were getting into Calais. I guess we must
- have traveled together from London.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Captain Lajos, if that really was his name, seemed to be thinking of
- something else. He let some seconds elapse. When he spoke, it was without
- looking up. &ldquo;I noticed you from the first. I can prove it. Your wife
- didn't join you till Dover.&rdquo; Then he seemed to repent of his intrusive
- rudeness and changed the subject. &ldquo;I was glad to see the last of London.
- I'd been sent to meet some one who failed to arrive. It was all in the
- papers. You probably know as much about the circumstances as I do. The
- person was Prince Rogovich.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Santa's face went white. Her lips became set in an artificial smile.
- Beneath the table her hand clutched Hindwood's. For all that, it was she
- who took up the challenge.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We've not been reading the papers lately.&rdquo; Above the clatter of the
- wheels, her trembling voice was scarcely audible. &ldquo;My husband and I have
- been very busy and&mdash;&mdash; But your friend, why was he so unkind as
- to disappoint you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Captain had turned to her as though greedy for her sympathy. His dark,
- bold eyes drank up her face.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He wasn't unkind. He was&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; He shrugged his shoulders and
- spread abroad his hands. &ldquo;Until something is proved, I suppose the best
- way to express it would be to say that he was unavoidably delayed. He left
- New York on a liner and disappeared on the evening that he should have
- landed.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood bent forward, attempting to divert attention from Santa. He
- tapped the Captain's hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Excuse me for intruding on a conversation which you evidently intend to
- include only my wife, but there are no points of call on an Atlantic
- voyage. If your friend started from New York and the ship was not lost,
- how could he have been delayed?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How? That's the question.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Captain's hostility was unmistakable, and yet the odd thing was that
- it exempted Santa.
- </p>
- <p>
- While the first course was being served, Hindwood racked his brains to
- discover the motive which lay behind the Captain's attitude. Was he a
- police-agent, amusing himself and biding his time? Was he doubtful of
- Santa's identity and cultivating her acquaintance as a means of making
- certain? Was he merely a disappointed male, infuriated at finding a
- husband in possession?
- </p>
- <p>
- Santa was speaking again. She had made good use of the respite to compose
- herself. &ldquo;It must have been terribly anxious for you waiting. I suppose
- you were there to meet him at the port where he ought to have arrived?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood held his breath. She was practically asking the man whether he
- had been one of the welcoming group of officials on that night when the <i>Ryndam</i>
- had reached Plymouth. If he had been, he must have seen them. He must
- remember them. He might even know their biographical details, their
- business, and that they were not married. At all events, if that were the
- case, it would explain the keenness of his interest.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, I wasn't at Plymouth.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- They both shot upright in their chairs and sat rigid. For a moment they
- had no doubt that the Captain had declared his hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then he postponed the crisis by adding, &ldquo;You see, my friend, as you call
- him, was traveling by the Holland-American Line, so Plymouth was where he
- should have landed. We had a special train arranged to hurry him to
- London. The first warning I received of the disaster was at Paddington,
- when I was informed that the special train had been canceled.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then it was a disaster?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Santa asked the question in an awed tone which, under the circumstances,
- was not altogether feigned. Getting a grip on herself, she leaned across
- the table, making her eyes large and tender. &ldquo;We're fellow-travelers,
- chance-met. My husband and I are Americans; when we part from you, it's
- almost certain we shall never meet again. I'm not seeking your confidence,
- but you're worried. If it would help you to tell&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Captain shook his head gravely. He appeared to be worshiping her in
- everything save words, though it was possible that his adoration was
- mockery. &ldquo;There's nothing to tell. Not yet. I wish there were. There may
- be something at Paris. The English police are working. They promised to
- keep in touch with me by telegram.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- With amazing daring Santa persisted, &ldquo;But what do you suppose happened?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Before answering the Captain arranged his knife and fork neatly on his
- plate. He looked up sharply like a bird of prey. &ldquo;Murder. To your dainty
- ears that must sound shocking. I have reasons for this belief which, for
- the present, I'm not at liberty to share.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- During the pause that followed Hindwood was on tenterhooks lest, with her
- next question, she should betray herself. To prevent her, he flung himself
- into the gap.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I agree with you,&rdquo; he said with weighty dullness. &ldquo;I agree with you that
- some sort of accident strikes one as extremely likely. You mentioned that
- a special had been chartered to bring your friend to London. That would
- indicate that he was a person of consequence.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He was.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The words sounded like an epitaph. They were spoken with the impatience of
- a door being banged.
- </p>
- <p>
- Turning to Santa, the Captain was on the point of saying something
- further, when the waiter approached with the information that at the next
- stop the dining-car would be cut off. They became aware that they were the
- only diners left. The train was slowing down. The noise of its progress
- had changed to a hollow rumbling, which told them that a bridge was being
- crossed. Shifting their gaze, they discovered Paris, sparkling like a pile
- of jewels strewn in the lap of night. Below them in slow coils, mysterious
- with luminous reflections, wound the Seine. Hindwood's instant thought was
- that somewhere out there beneath the darkness, the woods of Vincennes were
- hiding.
- </p>
- <p>
- Having paid their bill, they commenced the return journey through
- corridors dense with eager passengers. Before their section had been
- reached, the train was in the station. At the first open door, the Captain
- sprang to the platform and was lost.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Where's he gone?&rdquo; Santa whispered.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood glanced at her palely. &ldquo;To get his telegram. To get&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Seizing her arm, he hurried her back to his compartment, where behind
- locked doors they could spend in private whatever of freedom remained.
- </p>
- <h3>
- IV
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>he jig's up.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hoping that he was creating an impression of calmness, he lit a cigarette.
- She raised her face to his with a softness in her eyes that he had never
- noticed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If it is,&rdquo; she pleaded, clutching at his hands, &ldquo;swear you hadn't the
- least idea who I really am. Disown me. Act as though my arrest had come to
- you as an utter shock.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He seated himself beside her. &ldquo;But, my dear Santa, that wouldn't help
- you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Help me! Of course not,&rdquo; she agreed with rapid vehemence. &ldquo;If I'm caught,
- I'm beyond helping. It's of you I'm thinking&mdash;you, with your
- generosity and your splendid plans. If I dragged you down, as I dragged
- down all the others, my heart would break. I never meant you any harm. You
- do believe me?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I do now.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Say you know that I've loved you,&rdquo; she urged. And, when he hesitated,
- &ldquo;Quickly. Time's running short. Let me hear you say just once, 'Santa, I
- know that you've loved me.'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Santa, I know&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You wouldn't kiss me?&rdquo; She asked the question scarcely above her breath.
- &ldquo;There've been so many who paid to kiss me. You wouldn't give me the best,
- that would be the last?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- When his lips touched hers, she smiled.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They may come now.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Minutes dragged by like hours. Every sound was magnified into something
- monstrous. A dozen times they imagined they heard police clearing the
- corridor, preparatory to bursting in the door. What they heard was only
- newly-arrived passengers and porters disposing of their baggage. At last
- suspense became its own anesthetic.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Did he tell you his destination?&rdquo; Hindwood whispered.
- </p>
- <p>
- Not daring to speak, she shook her head.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why did you get into conversation with him?&rdquo; Her lips scarcely moved. He
- had to listen acutely.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I didn't. He pretended to have mistaken his compartment. I was crying. He
- saw.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why were you crying?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Because of you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And you told him?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not exactly.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What did he say? I heard you laughing when I entered. How did he
- commence?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He said I was too beautiful to be unhappy&mdash;it's the way every man
- starts. Then he said that he'd recognized me, just as though he'd been
- looking for me always. And then he tortured me by wondering whether our
- paths had ever crossed.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And you answered?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Never&mdash;unless he'd seen me in America.&rdquo; Hindwood fell silent.
- Without warning he leaped to his feet. Before he could escape, she was
- clinging to him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't leave me to face them.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm not.&rdquo; He freed himself from her grasp. &ldquo;If I've guessed right, you
- won't have to face them.&rdquo; With that he was gone.
- </p>
- <p>
- A quarter of an hour elapsed: he had not returned. Nothing that she
- dreaded had happened. With a lurch the train jerked forward. Farewells
- were being shouted. Station-lamps streamed past, the scarcer lights of
- freight-yards, then at last the glow-worm warmth of a city under darkness.
- </p>
- <p>
- The door opened. She rose trembling, steadying herself against the wall.
- When she saw who it was, she sank back. &ldquo;Tell me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We were on the wrong track.&rdquo; He spoke leisurely. &ldquo;Captain Lajos wasn't
- lying. I followed him. He met his man with the telegram. He suspects us so
- little that he showed it to me. It read, 'No further developments.'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Thank God.&rdquo; She pressed her handkerchief to her lips. And then, &ldquo;Why
- should he have shown it to you? It was to put us off our guard.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He sat down in the seat opposite. &ldquo;I think not. He's changed his tactics.
- He's made up his mind to be friendly. It's you he's after, but in a
- different fashion. He thinks he's in love with you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But he threatened&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No. It was our own guilty conscience. Here's how I figure it out. He
- probably has seen you before. He can't remember where. It may have been in
- the days when you were dancing. It was the vague recollection of you that
- piqued his curiosity and got him staring. When he found you alone and
- crying, he thought he'd stumbled on an adventure. My entering upset his
- calculations. I became for him the cruel husband; he hated me on the spot.
- My dear Santa, our meeting with him is the luckiest thing that could have
- happened.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Dabbing her eyes, she tried to laugh. &ldquo;I don't see it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's as plain as a pike-staff.&rdquo; He bent forward, lowering his voice. &ldquo;He
- was mixed up with Prince Rogovich. He's one of the people who's hunting
- for you. In his company you won't be suspected. He'll get you across all
- the frontiers.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She was still reluctantly incredulous. &ldquo;But the things he said at dinner.
- He played with us like a cat.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He wasn't playing with us.&rdquo; Hindwood became eager in his determination to
- convince her. &ldquo;He was playing into our hands. He knows all the things that
- we want to know. Every move the police make is telegraphed to him. It was
- the frankness with which he let us into his secrets that was so alarming.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then how must we act?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The way we have been acting. Until it's safe to be rid of him, we must
- keep him believing that we're married, and none too happily. I'm afraid
- it's up to you to keep him lulled by pretending&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't;&rdquo; she closed her eyes. &ldquo;It's like going back to the ugly past.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's beastly, I know.&rdquo; He spoke seriously. &ldquo;But what else&mdash;&mdash;?
- Any moment he may recall where last he saw you. Sleep over it. We can
- decide in the morning.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- V
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>ll night he had
- been haunted by the oppressive sense that, if he did not watch, something
- terrible would, happen. It was shortly after dawn when he rose. Stepping
- into the corridor he found that he had the train to himself. It seemed as
- depopulated as an early morning house and, despite the clamor of its
- going, as silent. He placed himself near Santa's door and stood staring
- out at the misty landscape streaking past like a trail of smoke. It was
- here that Santa found him when she slipped from her compartment.
- </p>
- <p>
- He turned quickly. &ldquo;He's not up yet.&rdquo; Then, noticing her pallor and the
- shadows under her eyes, &ldquo;You haven't slept?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not much.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Making your decision, I suppose?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She bit her lip nervously. &ldquo;I shall have to pretend&mdash;&mdash; It'll
- only be pretending. You'll understand?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It won't last long,&rdquo; he comforted her. &ldquo;If we've been running on time, we
- must be in Alsace-Lorraine already. Within the next few hours we'll be out
- of France and into Germany. You'll feel safer there, won't you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- What he was really asking was whether it wasn't true that during the war
- she'd been a German spy.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Shall I?&rdquo; was all she answered.
- </p>
- <p>
- They fell silent. Without mentioning it, each guessed the motive which had
- occasioned the other's early rising. They dared not let the Captain out of
- their sight. While they could not see him, they had no peace of mind.
- Whereas yesterday his companionship had seemed to spell death, to-day it
- spelt protection. Yesterday they had done everything to elude him; to-day
- it would probably be he who would do the avoiding. It was essential that
- they should have won his confidence before they arrived on German soil.
- There was little time to lose. He had not appeared when the first sitting
- for breakfast was announced.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the restaurant car they dawdled over their meal and sat on long after
- it was ended. They had even begun to discuss the possibility of his having
- left the train during the night, when with an eagerness kindred to their
- own he entered. Hindwood waved to him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm afraid we've finished. But won't you seat yourself at our table? I've
- no doubt my wife will join you in a cup of coffee. While you breakfast, if
- it's not objectionable, I'll smoke a cigarette.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Captain Lajos beamed like a pleased boy. If one wasn't prejudiced in his
- disfavor, it was possible to find him likable. &ldquo;I shall be delighted,&rdquo; he
- said in an embarrassed tone. &ldquo;Journeys are tedious nowadays. Once every
- one who counted was gay and prosperous; one was never at a loss to find a
- friend. To-day, in this bankrupt world, the only travelers are
- money-lenders and pawn-brokers.&rdquo; He laughed. &ldquo;I may as well confess: I
- didn't think you were up yet&mdash;that's what made me late. I was so
- tired of my own society that I was waiting for you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- As he said, &ldquo;I was waiting for you,&rdquo; his eyes flashed on Santa.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was she who spoke. &ldquo;I fancy we've been just as bored with ourselves and
- even more eager to meet you. What you told us last night sounded so
- mysterious and romantic. I could hardly sleep for thinking about it. To
- have a Prince for one's friend and to travel so far to welcome him, only
- to find&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; She clasped her hands childishly. &ldquo;Life can be so
- drab&mdash;how drab, a man of your kind can never know. American husbands,
- no matter what they possess, take a pride in always working.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He disappointed her curiosity with a crooked smile. &ldquo;Whether you're a
- Prince or a millionaire, there's nothing romantic about being murdered.&rdquo;
- Then her allurement kindled the longing in his eyes. &ldquo;You're wanting me to
- confide the secrets that I warned you I couldn't share. Surely you must
- know something of Prince Rogovich?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No. Truly.&rdquo; She returned his searching gaze with apparent frankness.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood jogged her elbow. &ldquo;My dear, I've remembered. When we sailed there
- was a Prince Rogovich in the States, doing his best to raise a loan&mdash;I
- think it was for Poland. It was rumored that the money was to be
- squandered on military adventures. I guess he didn't find many takers.
- You're in the Hungarian Hussars, Captain, but you must excuse me for
- stating that on our side of the Atlantic we've seen all we want of
- armies.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Santa clicked her tongue impatiently. &ldquo;That's all very well, but it
- doesn't explain why the Prince&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It might,&rdquo; Hindwood insisted mildly. &ldquo;Discouraged men often commit
- suicide. He was coming home. He'd failed in his object&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He hadn't.&rdquo; The Captain glanced quickly behind him to see whether any one
- could have heard him. He continued in a voice that was little above a
- whisper, &ldquo;Only a few of us knew. He was coming home in triumph.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Leaning across the table with suppressed excitement, Santa made the appeal
- of pretty women throughout the ages. &ldquo;I wish you'd trust me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood pushed back his chair. &ldquo;It's time for a cigar. Perhaps you'll
- join me later. If you'll excuse me&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- They paid him scant attention. The last he saw of them they were gazing
- enraptured into each other's eyes.
- </p>
- <h3>
- VI
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>t was well over an
- hour since he had returned to his compartment. He had left his door wide,
- so that he could inspect every one who passed along the corridor. They
- couldn't have slipped by without his noticing. He was becoming almost as
- distrustful of Santa as he was of the stranger. Already the rôle of
- unwanted husband was growing irksome. The thing that baffled him most was
- her morbid curiosity. It was revolting to think of her, with her disarming
- air of refinement, encouraging her admirer to conjecture the details of a
- crime which she herself had committed. But how had she committed it? He
- himself did not know. He had just begun to contrive the scene in his mind
- when they entered. Her face was lit with a new intensity. At a glance he
- was aware that whatever she had learned had quickened her emotions. The
- Captain followed grudgingly, like a dog hanging back on a chain.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Captain Lajos has been telling me,&rdquo; she commenced. &ldquo;But we'd better have
- the door closed. He's been telling me things that you ought to know. He's
- so concerned for my sake that he's offered to repeat them.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Captain seated himself opposite to Hind-wood and regarded him gravely.
- &ldquo;The things that I've been telling your wife are not my secrets. I must
- ask you to give me your solemn promise.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You may take that for granted.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And there's one other point. I didn't offer to repeat them; it was Mrs.
- Hindwood who urged me. I'm making this plain because I don't want you to
- think I'm offering you my advice uninvited.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood lit a fresh cigar, fortifying himself against whatever shock was
- pending. &ldquo;I give you full credit for your motives.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then let me ask you a question. Have you noticed that there are scarcely
- any women on this train?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I believe you're right. But until you mentioned it I hadn't noticed.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, if you'll watch, you'll see that I'm correct. There are women and
- children in plenty on trains moving westward. But on trains moving
- eastward, where we're going&mdash;no.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood watched the man intently, wondering at what he was driving.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Would you be surprised,&rdquo; he continued, &ldquo;if I were to tell you that one of
- the chief reasons for the women's absence is this affair of Prince
- Rogo-vich?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You rather harp on Prince Rogovich, don't you?&rdquo; Hindwood flicked his ash.
- &ldquo;After a time one ceases to be surprised at anything. But aren't you
- presuming too much in insisting on his having been murdered? All that's
- known by your own account is that he's vanished. In any case, what can he
- possibly have to do with the scarcity of women on trains running
- eastward?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Everything.&rdquo; The Captain's face darkened with earnestness. &ldquo;What I'm
- trying to tell you is that you're taking your wife into danger. Every man
- who can afford it, in the countries to which you're going, is hurrying his
- women-folk to France, England, Spain, America&mdash;anywhere westward for
- safety. They can feel the storm rising, the deluge of catastrophe that
- can't be held back much longer. When it bursts, it'll tear everything
- established from its moorings and sweep across Europe in a wave of
- savagery.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And this deluge that you speak of&mdash;what had Prince Rogovich to do
- with it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He was keeping it from bursting.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood smiled. &ldquo;Alone?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No man's single strength could accomplish that. He was one of the most
- powerful of the resisting forces. When society's tottering, it's the
- little added strain that upsets the equilibrium. Remember how the last war
- started, with an obscure assassination.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood crossed his knees and dug himself back into the cushions. &ldquo;Your
- information, to say the least of it, is strangely melodramatic. If I
- understand you aright, you're urging me to discontinue my journey. Can't
- you be more explicit?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I can.&rdquo; The Captain betrayed a hint of temper. &ldquo;I suppose I shall have to
- if I'm to convince you. The stability of the whole of Central and Eastern
- Europe has been upset by the repartitioning of the Peace Treaty. The
- situation as it exists to-day is intolerable. The ruin which the war
- commenced has been completed by the pacification. The old social order has
- been overthrown; in its place we have a dozen rash experiments. In Russia,
- instead of the Czar, we have Bolshevism. In what was once the
- Austro-Hungarian Empire we have a series of Republics, which are nothing
- more than old racial hatreds entrenched behind newly created frontiers. In
- Poland, which was prisoner to three nations for two centuries, we have a
- released convict, vengeful with a sense of past injustice. Instead of
- reconstruction, we have disorganization. Trade is at a standstill. Money
- is valueless. Confidence is gone. Poverty has made a clean sweep of class
- distinctions. Mob-rule has usurped the rights of authority. Like a lean
- wolf, famine gallops through the desolation in ever widening circles.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But Prince Rogovich?&rdquo; Hindwood recalled him. &ldquo;What had he to do with it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He was the leader of the monarchist party in Europe&mdash;the organizer
- of a secret movement to set up again the thrones which war has toppled.
- Incidentally he was to have established a new throne for himself in
- Poland. Behind him he had the landowning classes and the old aristocracy,
- which the new regime of haphazard democracy has beggared. He was biding
- his time till the crisis should become sufficiently acute for him to
- strike his blow. He had his armies ready. All he lacked was munitions. The
- floating of the loan in America completed his program.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But you said that the fact that he was returning in triumph was known
- only to a few. If only a few knew it, why should his death have caused
- this sudden exodus of women on trains running westward?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;For two reasons: because he was the recognized strong man of the buffer
- states which lie between Russian anarchy and civilization; and because the
- crisis of starvation, for which he had been waiting, is now in sight.
- While Bolshevism was making its drives against Poland, Central Europe was
- compelled to hold together. Now that Bolshevism is crumbling, that
- compulsion is relaxed. All the way from Siberia to the frontiers of
- Germany millions are perishing from lack of food. Presently the Russian
- millions will commence to march westward to the lands of plenty. They'll
- march like Death, swinging his scythe. They'll sweep on like a pestilence.
- They'll lope like gaunt wolves, savage and relentless. The starving
- peoples of Central Europe, who would once have resisted them, will join
- them. Prince Rogovich, had he lived, could have prevented them.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How?&rdquo; It was Santa.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He would have declared a new war, with the return to monarchy as his
- battle-cry. He had his nucleus armies in readiness; they would have sprung
- from their hiding-places overnight. There would have been a tremendous
- rally to him as the only man unscrupulous enough to handle the situation.
- He would have made his bargain with the Allies.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And then?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He would have trained his guns on the lean hordes of Russia and would
- have blown them back across their borders.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Again Santa spoke. Her voice came low and haltingly. &ldquo;He would have made
- the world pass through the fires of Moloch for a second time. The person
- who murdered him must have known it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood turned to her. There was a startled expression in his eyes. He
- was quite certain she had known it. He was seeing the real Santa for the
- first time. She was a Charlotte Corday, who had dipped her hands in blood
- that she might prevent a more colossal crime.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I begin to see,&rdquo; he muttered.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Captain took the words as addressed to himself. &ldquo;I'm glad you do. It
- must be obvious to you now that where you're going is no place for a
- woman. If you'll accept my advice, you'll turn back at the next
- stopping-place.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Impossible.&rdquo; Hindwood recalled himself to the part he was playing.
- &ldquo;You're a soldier; you'd be ashamed to run away at the first hint of
- danger. In a sense I also am a soldier, a soldier of business. I, too,
- have my marching orders and my duty.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then if you won't turn back yourself, send Mrs. Hindwood back.&rdquo; The man's
- voice shook. &ldquo;You're taking her to almost certain death. She's too
- beautiful&mdash;I beg it of you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- To his amazement Hindwood found himself liking the stranger. &ldquo;My wife's
- beauty has no bearing on the problem. We're exceedingly grateful to you,
- Captain Lajos; but to act on your warning&mdash;it's out of the question.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Captain shot him a dark look, then let his gaze rest on Santa. When
- she kept her eyes averted, he pretended to lose interest in the subject.
- The train was slowing down. He cleared the pane with his glove.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's the frontier.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood rose and hurriedly commenced to gather together his belongings.
- Sitting perfectly still with an air of quiet criticism, the Captain
- watched him. When the last bag had been strapped and made ready for
- removal, &ldquo;Why are you doing that?&rdquo; he inquired.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The German Customs. I suppose we'll have to get out and go through the
- old jog-trot of being inspected.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You don't need to; you can have it done here. Excuse me, if I seem
- officious. I was immediately behind you at Calais and couldn't help
- noticing that your passports are the same as mine&mdash;diplomatic. The
- advantage of a diplomatic passport in crossing frontiers is that the
- officials have to come to you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I didn't know. If that's the case&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He resumed his seat with a sickening sensation. The Captain's presence was
- stifling him. He longed to escape, if it were only for five minutes. He
- felt choked with lies. It seemed impossible that the Captain should not be
- aware of the atmosphere of falsehood.
- </p>
- <p>
- Passengers were already filing down the corridor and being herded by
- soldiers on the platform. As carriages were emptied, doors were locked and
- sealed. Evidently nothing was to be left to chance; while the passengers
- were held prisoners in the waiting-rooms, the train was to be searched
- from end to end. To a guilty conscience there was something exceedingly
- intimidating about this military display of thoroughness.
- </p>
- <p>
- The <i>wagon-lits</i> conductor looked into the compartment. Seeing the
- three of them seated there, he burst into a frantic protest. Captain Lajos
- annihilated him with the ferocity of his explanation. When the conductor
- had retreated, the Captain turned to Hindwood.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Like most of your compatriots, I see you're not strong on languages. If I
- can be of use to you, I'll act as your interpreter.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My wife is&mdash;&rdquo; Then he remembered that he knew nothing of Santa's
- linguistic attainments. &ldquo;You're very thoughtful of our comfort,&rdquo; he
- substituted.
- </p>
- <p>
- Guttural voices sounded. Two crop-headed ex-drill-sergeants presented
- themselves. Without waste of words they rasped out a peremptory order.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They want to see your passports,&rdquo; the Captain interpreted.
- </p>
- <p>
- While the passports were being examined, there was silence. Again
- questions were asked and again the Captain interpreted.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Are you carrying fire-arms?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Have you any contraband?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you intend to stay in Germany?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a pause. The passports were folded and on the point of being
- returned when another unintelligible conversation started.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Captain smiled. &ldquo;They're punctilious. As a matter of form, they want
- to hear you assert that you're the Philip Hindwood to whom this passport
- was issued.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Most certainly. They can prove that by comparing my face with the
- attached photograph.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Captain turned to Santa with the utmost suavity. &ldquo;And that you're the
- Edith Jones, Mr. Hindwood's secretary.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Having exploded his bomb, he rose. For a moment he seemed to hesitate as
- to whether he should expose them. Then, making a stiff bow, he murmured,
- &ldquo;That's all.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Directly he had departed, Hindwood locked the door behind him. &ldquo;He shall
- ferret out no more of our secrets.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- From then on, they traveled in a state of siege. Several times they
- thought they heard a tapping. Whether it was the Captain's, they did not
- allow themselves to discover. They opened to no one whom they had not
- summoned.
- </p>
- <h3>
- VII
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>oon after the
- train restarted, Santa rested her hand on his arm. &ldquo;You think better of me
- now. I'm so tired, I should cry if you spoke to me. Let me sleep on your
- couch. I'm afraid to be alone.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He covered her with his rug and did his best to make her comfortable. She
- was utterly exhausted. In a few minutes her eyes closed and she was
- breathing gently.
- </p>
- <p>
- Several hours elapsed. She was still sleeping. He was glad not to have to
- talk. His mind was filled with a tremendous picture: &ldquo;There was a certain
- rich man, which was clothed in purple and fine linen, and fared
- sumptuously every day. And there was a certain beggar named Lazarus, which
- was laid at his gate full of sores.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He saw the world that he was leaving, self-satisfied, callous,
- well-nourished. He saw the world to which he was going, out of which he
- had planned to make a profit&mdash;a world picked clean by the crime of
- war and peopled by living skeletons. When its pain had passed beyond
- endurance, the outcast world would attack the world which was comfortable.
- It would come crawling like a beggar to a rich man's door. When it found
- the door barred, it would go mad. It had nothing to lose by violence. With
- its bare hands it would storm the dwelling.
- </p>
- <p>
- How would the comfortable world defend itself? The Captain said with
- cannon. From a safe distance it would blow the empty bellies into
- nothingness. But bread was cheaper than high explosives. Why not fill the
- empty bellies instead of shattering them?
- </p>
- <p>
- He recalled the fields round Amiens, starred with miniature forests of
- stiff, protesting crosses. Why had those crosses been planted if it had
- not been to teach the living world to share?
- </p>
- <p>
- A barricade of bread could prevent further bloodshed. It always could have
- prevented it. The gray tide of wolf-men could be halted by a barricade of
- bread. Strange that no one had ever thought of it! There had never been a
- war that a barricade of bread could not have halted. Back and forth across
- the Atlantic his food-ships were plying. In Holland his warehouses were
- bulging&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- He glanced at the sleeping face of Santa&mdash;sweet and sad as an
- avenging angel's. Her solution of injustice was simple: to slay the
- wrong-doer before he could do his wrong. It was her own suffering that had
- taught her this cruel mercy. If she, a half-caste, disinherited at birth,
- could so risk her soul's salvation for humanity&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- He drew himself up sharply. He was turning visionary. At this rate he
- would end as a second Varensky. All his plans for capturing power would be
- thwarted. He had seen nothing as yet that would corroborate the Captain's
- disastrous prophecies.
- </p>
- <p>
- At Stuttgart he watched the Captain receive another telegram. If the man
- had lied to him, what was his purpose? How much did he know? How much did
- he infer? Had his discovery that they were not married been an accident or
- had he led up to it by strategy? When Vienna was reached, it would be
- necessary to throw' him off their track.
- </p>
- <p>
- They were winding through blue valleys of the Bavarian Tyrol, steeped in
- the contentment of autumnal sunshine. Like eagles' nests, built high above
- pine-forests, he caught glimpses of <i>chalets</i> perched on narrow
- ledges. Here and there they passed villages, mere clusters of dolls'
- houses, childish and make-believe as memories of fairyland. He began to
- smile at his mood of pessimism. Were Santa to waken, she would refute the
- Captain's bogey stories. He bent over her, tempted to rouse her. At last
- he shook her shoulder.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Santa, don't be frightened. I want to ask you a question. What the
- Captain said wasn't true?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She gazed up at him bewildered, dreams still in her eyes; then turned her
- face drowsily back to the pillow. &ldquo;What wasn't true? I don't understand.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The part about Prince Rogovich and blowing those starving wretches back
- with cannon.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She settled herself wearily. &ldquo;I'm so terribly tired. I don't want to be
- reminded.&rdquo; And then, &ldquo;It was why I killed him; so that he shouldn't.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- VIII
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">D</span>arkness had long
- since gathered when they crossed the starvation-line into Austria. Perhaps
- it was no more than imagination, but he immediately became conscious of a
- vague depression. Glancing through the misty panes, he espied no signs of
- life&mdash;only bare fields, pollarded trees like gallows, and the sullen
- profiles of shrouded houses. No trains flashed by, going in the opposite
- direction. Wayside stations were shuttered. Night was a stagnant tank. In
- the all-pervading silence the sound of their own going was the only
- clamor.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was not until they were nearing Vienna that any lights broke the
- monotony of the blackness&mdash;even these, like lanterns of lonely
- grave-diggers, were faint and rare. Shadowy apartment-houses and rotting
- factories looked less like habitations than monstrous sepulchers. It was
- difficult to believe that this pulseless carcass had once been the
- Bacchante among modern metropolises&mdash;that even at this moment
- memories of its rhythm were setting the feet of happier streets to music.
- He caught the vision of other cities after nightfall; New York, a tall
- white virgin, sheathed in jewels; London, a grimy smith, striking sparks
- from a giant anvil; Paris, a wanton goddess, smiling through the dusk, her
- face lit up by fire-fly constellations. How impossible it would be to
- approach any one of them without becoming aware of its presence! Yet a man
- might easily travel through Vienna without suspecting that it lay cowering
- behind the darkness.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was after midnight when the train halted in the empty cathedral of the
- Bahnhof. Directly the doors were opened, lean men poured into the
- compartments, whining for the privilege of handling the baggage. Hindwood
- delayed until he had allowed the Captain sufficient time to make his exit,
- then he thought it safe to assist Santa to the platform. Once again,
- despite the lateness of the hour, it was necessary to go through tedious
- formalities. The question asked most pressingly, as at the German
- frontier, was whether they were possessed of fire-arms.
- </p>
- <p>
- At last they were free to go in search of beds. As they stepped into the
- station-yard, they got their first glimpse of Austria's destitution.
- Huddled against the walls was a collection of human derelicts which seemed
- more in keeping with Dante's &ldquo;Inferno&rdquo; than the city which had set the
- world waltzing to <i>The Merry Widow</i>. They were of all conditions and
- ages, from grandparents to toddling children, from artisans to
- aristocrats. In the scant light they lifted up greenish faces which
- snarled, while their extended hands demanded charity. The police beat them
- back, like huntsmen separating hounds from their quarry. They retreated
- whimpering into the shadows.
- </p>
- <p>
- From the line of worn-out vehicles which were waiting, Hindwood selected a
- creaking taxi. Having seen Santa seat herself, he ordered the man to drive
- to the Hotel Bristol.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Pretty awful,&rdquo; he groaned, as he sank back against the musty cushions.
- </p>
- <p>
- She stifled a sob. &ldquo;It was nothing. It's worse than that.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He spoke again. &ldquo;I didn't see the Captain. I think we're rid of him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I wouldn't be optimistic.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Down the long, deserted Mariahilfer Strasse they bumped and rattled. It
- was ungarnished and forbidding as an empty house. The few people whom they
- met scuffled out of sight at sound of intrusion, looking less like human
- beings than vermin. Over all there hung a sense of evil, as though a crime
- lay undiscovered behind the silence.
- </p>
- <p>
- As they turned into the Ring, which circles the inner city, Santa woke
- into animation. Leaning from the window, she pointed. &ldquo;Do you see that
- huge pile like a palace, with all the statues and the steps going up to
- it? That's the Opera House. I danced there once at the command of the
- Emperor.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then you're known here?&rdquo; He clutched her hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- She shook her head sadly. &ldquo;I was the toast of Europe then. Whereas to-day&mdash;&mdash;
- It makes a difference.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- In the Kârtner-Ring they drew up before a blazing entrance. Laughing
- people were passing in and out, women muffled in costly wraps, accompanied
- by men in evening-attire.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's this?&rdquo; The change was so sudden that it shook his sense of
- reality. &ldquo;This doesn't look like&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She placed her lips close to his ear as she alighted.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It looks like asking for revolution. 'After me, the deluge'&mdash;you
- remember? The men aren't Austrians. They're foreign vultures here to
- snatch bargains&mdash;human bargains as well. But the women&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Inside the doors of the hotel every reminder of famine had been blotted
- out. Its white marble halls and stairways were richly carpeted. Its
- furnishings in gilt and satin had been carried out with the utmost
- lavishness. The costal of its chandeliers glittered with a dazzling
- intensity. From the restaurant drifted the wild gayety of a gipsy
- orchestra, enfever-ing the atmosphere with the yearning of elusive
- romance. Whispering to the beat of the music came the glide of dancing
- footsteps. Flunkeys with powdered heads, tricked out in plush breeches
- like marionettes, hurried to and fro on all-absorbing errands.
- </p>
- <p>
- After Santa had been shown to her ornate room, he stepped out into the
- gloomy street to assure himself. It was all true, in spite of the lie
- which he had witnessed. The pinched faces were still there, and the
- enfeebled bodies crawling through the shadows.
- </p>
- <p>
- As he reentered the white glare which shone from the hotel, he glanced
- back with a sense of impending ruin. For a second time his mind was filled
- with a tremendous picture: &ldquo;And there was a certain rich man and a beggar
- named Lazarus, which was laid at his gate, desiring to be fed. Moreover,
- the dogs came and licked his sores.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He caught the vision of his food-ships piling up stores in Holland. At the
- thought, as he crept between the sheets in his comfortable bed, he
- sickened.
- </p>
- <h3>
- IX
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">H</span>e had returned
- from a disturbing interview with the Austrian ministers responsible for
- considering his proposals. He was passing the hotel desk, when it occurred
- to him that some one might have left a message. On inquiry two were handed
- out to him, one a telegram, the other a letter. Ripping open the telegram,
- a glance told him it was in German and had been dispatched from Budapest.
- He had slipped it into his pocket, thinking, &ldquo;I'll have to get Santa to
- translate that,&rdquo; when he unfolded it again to see by whom it had been
- sent. The sender's name was a single word, &ldquo;Anna.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- His heart gave a bound. She was near to him! He could see her again within
- a handful of hours. For a moment nothing else seemed to matter&mdash;neither
- Santa's safety, nor the agony of hunger by which he was surrounded. His
- blood ran hot with yearning. How had she reached Budapest so quickly? What
- was her object? To have accomplished the journey she must have set out
- from England ahead of him or else have left on the same day, traveling by
- the alternative route via Belgium. While he had been journeying in the
- company of Santa, going through the mummery of pretending he was married,
- Anna had been paralleling his footsteps. Was Varensky with her? But if she
- were alone...
- </p>
- <p>
- Mechanically, as he entered the elevator, he slit the flap of the letter.
- It had evidently been left personally, for it bore no postmark and was
- hastily scrawled on the stationery of the hotel. The hand was unknown to
- him. The note read:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Yesterday you avoided me. I have told her everything. I am more sure
- than ever you ought to send her back. I must leave you now for a little
- while. When we meet again, I hope it will be as friends</i>.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Lajos</i>.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At last they had got rid of him! But what was it he had told her? And what
- made him so sure that they would meet again? The man wrote as if he were
- confident that he could lay his hands on them at any moment.
- </p>
- <p>
- Stepping out of the elevator, Hindwood made directly for Santa's room. He
- recalled it vaguely as he had seen it the night before, with its Empire
- furniture, painted cupids, silken hangings, and tall mirrors&mdash;its
- knowing air of having been the illicit nest of innumerable short-lived
- love-affairs. Its gaudy luxury, so glaringly in contrast with the
- embittered need of the outside world, had stirred his anger. In reply to
- his knock, her hoarse voice bade him enter. Before he was across the
- threshold, he was aware of the intoxicating fragrance of roses.
- </p>
- <p>
- Just inside the room, frowning with bewilderment, he halted. There were
- stacks of them&mdash;sheaves of them everywhere. They were scattered on
- the floor. They were arranged in vases. They lay strewn about in boxes.
- They were of all shades and varieties.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's the meaning?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She beckoned to him to join her at the tall window against which she was
- standing.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We missed this last night.&rdquo; She pointed.
- </p>
- <p>
- Following her direction, he saw that the window looked down obliquely on
- the imposing architecture of the Opera House. The mellow October sunlight
- drifted softly across gray roofs and fell in an orange splash into the
- deep fissure of the street below. Along the pavements the tide of traffic
- wandered nervelessly. On a neighboring ledge, two plump pigeons were
- engaged in an ardent courtship.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What did we miss? I see nothing.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Then he noticed the panting of her bosom and that her expression was
- tender with tremulous emotion.
- </p>
- <p>
- Drawing her fine fingers across her eyes, she shuddered. &ldquo;Stupid of me! I
- forgot; they would bring back nothing to you&mdash;the scent of the roses
- and then the Opera House, looking the same as ever. I've been dreaming of
- other mornings, when I woke after nights of triumph. Perhaps it was this
- room that set me remembering. It's not the first time I've slept in it.&rdquo;
- As she caught his eyes reading her memories, she flushed guiltily. &ldquo;Yes,
- in those days I was never lonely.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But the roses!&rdquo; he reminded her impatiently. &ldquo;How did you get them? At
- the price things cost in Vienna, some one must have spent a fortune.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She placed a hand on his arm appealingly. &ldquo;Don't begrudge me. He must have
- known. I think he did it for my burial.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her words sent a chill through him. He shifted his weight uncomfortably.
- &ldquo;We're in too tight a corner to waste energy on sentiment. If we're going
- to make a fight for it, we've got to keep our heads clear. Who gave them
- to you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She pressed her forehead against the warm pane. The gold of the world
- outside cast a sheen of gold on her profile. Her unwanted loveliness hurt
- him. It reproached him. It recalled to him the ache of his old desire in
- the days before he had known that he could have her. And now that he could
- have her for the asking....
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Captain Lajos gave them to me. They've been arriving ever since we
- parted. He waited till you'd gone; then he came to me. He came to tell me
- why he'd followed me. He was persuaded I was your mistress. This morning
- he did something noble&mdash;very noble for a man of his sort to a woman
- of mine; he begged me to become his wife.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Without knowing anything about you? He must be mad.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't say that.&rdquo; She closed her eyes painfully. &ldquo;I shan't trouble you or
- any one much longer. I shall soon be so still. When one's sure of that,
- it's good to be loved just once again, even though&mdash;&rdquo; She turned
- slowly and faced him. &ldquo;I don't need to tell you who it is that I love
- truly. This man&mdash;he's nothing. No man ever will&mdash;&mdash; You see
- I've lived for men and admiration&mdash;for things like&mdash;&rdquo; She
- pointed to the roses. &ldquo;It's new to me to be neglected. So it's comforting
- to know that a man can still desire me, even though I'd rather kill myself
- than go with him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He broke the silence that had settled between them. &ldquo;You mustn't talk like
- this. You've years of life before you. I'll get you away safely.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She smiled. &ldquo;No.&rdquo; Then she changed the subject. &ldquo;What happened to you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You mean at my conference?&rdquo; He seated himself beside her dressing-table.
- &ldquo;The worst that could have happened&mdash;nothing. Some change has taken
- place for which I can't account. When I sent my suggestions from America,
- they were hailed with enthusiasm. I was a saviour&mdash;everything that's
- splendid and extravagant. But now&mdash;&mdash; The Government's
- paralyzed. It isn't a Government; it's a passenger. 'You've let us starve
- too long. It doesn't matter now&mdash;' that's what I was told this
- morning. The ministers with whom I consulted spoke as if they were sitting
- on the edge of a volcano, waiting to be blown up. They're so sure that an
- eruption's inevitable that they don't consider it worth while to make an
- effort to save themselves. I couldn't rouse them. When I pressed them for
- the cause of their lethargy, they prophesied a new war, in very much the
- same words as Captain Lajos&mdash;a war in which the well-fed are to be
- pillaged by the starving.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But did you tell them that you could ship food into Austria at once?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I told them. I assured them that I could put Austria back on her feet in
- twelve months. I offered to provision her and to supply coal for her
- factories, if they'd give me control of the railroads and a per capita
- percentage on the total increase of national industry. 'Provision us with
- pleasure' was their attitude; 'we'll raise no official objection.' 'Very
- kind of you,' I replied; 'but where do I come in. I'm no philanthropist.'&rdquo;
- He brought his fist down with a bang on the dressing-table. &ldquo;There's a
- nigger in the wood-pile. Upon my soul, I believe those fellows are
- determined that I shan't prevent their nation from dying. If I shipped
- them the food as a gift, they'd burn it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She came over from the window and stood gazing down at him. &ldquo;You're right.
- They would if they dared. Can't you guess?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I can't. Their currency's hardly worth the paper it's printed on. People
- are dropping dead in the streets&mdash;I saw them. Their gaols are packed
- with children turned criminals through hunger. There'll be no crops next
- year; the grain's consumed that should have been saved for the sowing.
- They've butchered all their live-stock. The brains of the country are in
- exile. The intellectual classes have been wiped out. And here I come with
- my offer to save them, and they reject it. Without the help of some
- outside force like myself, things can only go from bad to worse.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Precisely.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He glanced up, irritated by the promptitude of her agreement. &ldquo;Precisely!
- Why do you say that?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's what they want&mdash;things to go from bad to worse. The worse
- things get, the more certain they are of revolution. They're afraid your
- food would postpone it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Afraid! Why on earth?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Because they hope to snatch more out of the catastrophe of revolution
- than you can offer them. These ministers with whom you've been dealing are
- the tools of the exiled monarchists. They belong to the party in all
- countries which made the last war possible and all wars before it. What do
- they care for the people? They never have cared. Let the brutes starve,'
- they say, 'if it suits our purpose. We can always breed more.' They regard
- the people as their serfs, to be fooled with patriotism when danger
- threatens and to be kept in chains to toil for them when peace has been
- restored. If the people go hungry long enough, they'll reason that the
- loss of their kings is the cause. They'll rise up and recall them. They'll
- start to die for them afresh. It'll happen in all the outcast countries.
- In the wholesale scramble, it'll be every nation for itself. The strong
- will struggle to expand their frontiers, and the weak will go to the wall.
- The deluge of blood&mdash;&rdquo; She sank to her knees, seizing his hands
- imploringly. &ldquo;If you'll sacrifice your stores of food, you can stop it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But if I do that, without guaranties, I'm bankrupt. I get nothing.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You'll get more than I got when, to accomplish the same purpose, I
- murdered Prince Rogovich. I'll get the scaffold. You'll earn the thanks of
- humanity. You'll go down to the ages....&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He could see only the wide greyness of her eyes, pleading, coercing,
- unbalancing his judgment.
- </p>
- <p>
- He jumped to his feet, shaking off their spell. &ldquo;I'm no dreamer&mdash;no
- Varensky,&rdquo; he said gruffly. &ldquo;I have to make a profit.&rdquo; Then, defending
- himself from her unspoken accusation, &ldquo;We're only guessing. We have no
- facts. There are other famished countries&mdash;Hungary and Poland. What
- Austria refuses, they may accept.&rdquo; He dug his hand into his pocket. &ldquo;That
- reminds me. Here's a telegram from Budapest. I can't understand it. It's
- in German.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She was crouched on the floor. As he stooped to give it to her, she caught
- sight of the signature.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;From Anna. Varensky must be with her. Then the crisis is nearer than I
- thought.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Read it. Tell me what it says,&rdquo; he urged.
- </p>
- <p>
- She looked up palely, wilted with disappointment. &ldquo;'<i>Come at once. I
- need you</i>.' That's all.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Does she give no address?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She wouldn't risk it. I know where to find her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then we'll start&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But what about&mdash;?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He did not hear her. The blood was hammering in his temples. He left her
- forgotten, seated among her roses. The music of a wild exultation was
- maddening his heart.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER THE SEVENTH&mdash;THE CAPTURE
- </h2>
- <h3>
- I
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>O Anna had turned
- to him out of all the world!
- </p>
- <p>
- She had felt so sure of him that she had not even stated the reason for
- her urgency&mdash;only &ldquo;<i>Come at once. I need you</i>.&rdquo; That she should
- have relied so implicitly on his compliance put him on his honor not to
- disappoint her. She must have known that her telegram would find him
- involved in important business. The earliest she could have counted on
- seeing him must have been to-morrow. He was determined, if it were humanly
- possible, to exceed her best expectations; he would see her to-night.
- Having phoned for the hotel porter to be sent to him, he immediately
- commenced to pack. He recalled the message that Santa had delivered him:
- &ldquo;Varensky's setting out on his last journey. He told me to say, 'Soon you
- can have her.'&rdquo; Did Anna's telegram mean that Varensky's final journey was
- ended?
- </p>
- <p>
- He was throwing his belongings together when the porter entered.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You wanted me, sir?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes. What's the first train&mdash;the fastest to Budapest?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The first, if it's still running, starts from the Nord-Bahnhof within the
- hour. But&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then order me a taxi. I'll be ready in ten minutes. Have my bill made up.
- Send some one to my secretary's room to fetch down her baggage.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Certainly. But&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood glanced at the man coldly. &ldquo;I'm in too much of a hurry for
- conversation.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A little later, as he was pocketing his change, having settled his
- account, the cashier addressed him.
- </p>
- <p>
- He shook his head. &ldquo;Don't understand.&rdquo; Then, catching sight of Santa, he
- beckoned. &ldquo;The fellow's trying to say something. Find out what's troubling
- him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The cashier repeated more earnestly the words that he had previously
- uttered.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He wants to know whether you really think you can leave Vienna,&rdquo; Santa
- translated.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's to prevent?&rdquo; Then he caught her arm, lowering his voice. &ldquo;Perhaps
- they're on to you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Kârtner-Ring was extraordinarily deserted. Against the curb a wheezing
- taxi was standing&mdash;the only one in sight. Its engine was running. The
- bags had been piled on the front seat beside the driver, evidently very
- much to his annoyance; he was doing his best to tumble them back on to the
- pavement. The hotel porter was vigorously restraining him. An altercation
- was in progress which threatened any minute to develop into a fight.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's the matter?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The porter replied across his shoulder, still holding the bags in place.
- &ldquo;He doesn't want to drive you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Tell him I'll give him five times the legal fare.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- When the offer had been translated, the man seemed mollified.
- </p>
- <p>
- The porter opened the door. &ldquo;Quietly. Jump in before he changes his mind.
- He promises to do his best.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;His best! I should think so.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- As the cab moved off, Hindwood missed the porter's parting words. He
- turned to Santa. &ldquo;Do they always come this hold-up game with foreigners in
- Vienna?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It isn't a hold-up game. He didn't want to drive us. He was afraid.
- Something's wrong. Look how empty the streets are. Didn't you see how
- white and scared every one was in the hotel? The cashier would have told
- us; you wouldn't even let me listen to him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Jealous!&rdquo; he thought. &ldquo;It'll be awkward having to take care of both her
- and Anna.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- They had driven for ten minutes in silence when Santa spoke again. &ldquo;It's a
- queer way he's taking us.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How queer?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;So round-about.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;As long as he keeps going, we don't need to worry.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But why should he turn up all the side-streets?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't know. It'll be time to grow nervous when he stops.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At that moment he stopped, but it was only for a second. Spinning his cab
- about, he spurted off in a new direction. Glancing from the window as he
- turned, they saw that the main thoroughfare ahead was blocked by what
- appeared to be a procession. Street after street he tried, working round
- in a circle, never getting any nearer. At last, growing desperate, he took
- the plunge, tooting his horn and forcing his way through the outskirts of
- the seething mob. By the time Hindwood had ordered him to turn back it was
- too late; for a hundred yards behind them, from pavement to pavement, the
- thoroughfare was packed with pedestrians and vehicles, all headed in the
- one direction. To get out and walk, even if they had been willing to
- sacrifice their baggage, was out of the question. The crowd in front was
- more dense than the crowd behind. The air was full of shrieks of fainting
- women and the shiver of plate-glass as shop-windows gave way under the
- pressure. To escape the crush, which was momentarily increasing, people
- were clambering to the roof of the taxi and standing thick along the
- running-boards.
- </p>
- <p>
- Santa was speaking in a torrent to the strangers clinging to the doors.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Can't you stop long enough to tell me what's happening?&rdquo; Hindwood
- interrupted.
- </p>
- <p>
- She apologized. &ldquo;I forgot for the moment that you can't speak German.
- They're as puzzled as we are. All they know is that they're doing what
- every one else is doing. They don't know the cause. The same thing's
- happening at every station. A panic's struck Vienna&mdash;a foreboding of
- disaster. It's a case of nerves. In some places looting has started. Every
- one's escaping&mdash;the entire population. It's anything to get westward
- to France, Switzerland, Germany, away from this nightmare of starvation.
- They're storming the trains in the Bahnhof, trying to compel the engineers
- to&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Turning from him, she commenced to ply more questions in her hurried flow
- of German.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was all clear now&mdash;the porter's hesitancy, the cashier's
- earnestness, the driver's reluctance. They had been trying to prevent him
- from hurrying a woman into danger. He had been too obsessed by the thought
- of reaching Anna even to pay attention. For confirmation of what Santa had
- told him, he had only to glance at the surrounding throng. The lean
- multitude was absurdly prepared for its futile exodus. Irrespective of
- class, every individual was burdened with whatever he or she had had time
- to rescue of the household goods. They carried bundles beneath their arms
- and sacks on their backs. Everything on wheels had been commandeered. Some
- pushed perambulators, piled high with ill-assorted belongings; others had
- harnessed themselves to carts. None of them could have considered whether
- his or her presence would be allowed in a happier country. Obviously over
- night the half of Vienna could not have procured the necessary permits to
- travel.
- </p>
- <p>
- On the outskirts those who were most desperate, because furthest from the
- station, had begun to charge. Hindwood watched the stampede&mdash;how
- terror was transforming forlorn human beings into animals. They were of
- all kinds and sorts, mechanics, waiters, slum-dwellers, merchants,
- shop-girls,' demi-mondaines, with here and there a sprinkling of patrician
- faces from the palaces of the bankrupt aristocracy. There were lonely men
- and women, but for the most part they were grouped in families, the
- children dragging at their mother's skirts and the youngest in the
- father's arms. They pushed, jostled and fought, trampling the weak in
- their frenzy to get forward.
- </p>
- <p>
- Suddenly the madness of self-preservation froze with horror. At the end of
- the street, far up the pale river of gray faces, horsemen were advancing,
- standing tall in their stirrups, smiting with their swords. Santa flung
- herself to the floor. &ldquo;Down. Keep down. The children&mdash;oh, my God!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Like a volley of hail, bullets commenced to patter. They whipped the
- street from end to end, hissing in their flight and thudding as they found
- their target. The taxi tossed and rocked like a rowboat in a mill-race.
- The mob had given way; like water from a burst dam, it roared between the
- tall, confining houses. It swept backwards weeping, bleeding, desperate,
- exhausted, wilder in its retreat than it had been in its advance. Behind
- it came the cavalry, riding it down, firing and stabbing. In five minutes
- nothing was in sight, save upset vehicles, scattered belongings, dead
- lying awkwardly in the October sunshine and wounded crawling weakly in
- search of refuge.
- </p>
- <p>
- Reaching through the shattered window, Hindwood tapped the driver's
- shoulder. &ldquo;Drive on.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At the touch the man crumpled. There was a crimson blot in the center of
- his forehead.
- </p>
- <p>
- Santa sat up, staring furiously. &ldquo;If you'd not refused them bread&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I didn't.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You did. You were only willing to sell.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her eyes were blazing. Her hands were clenched. Her tears fell slowly. In
- the terrific silence which followed so much clamor, the street itself
- seemed to accuse him. Picking up their bags, he led the way to the
- station. Scenes such as the one he had witnessed might be happening in
- Budapest. There was no time to be lost.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Find out whether it's possible to send a wire.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Where to?&rdquo; she asked suspiciously.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To Amsterdam.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What for?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you need to ask?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- After a hurried conversation with a scared official, she turned. &ldquo;If it's
- to do with food, they'll accept it. The lines may be cut at any moment.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He dashed off his telegram. &ldquo;<i>Crisis sooner than expected. Without delay
- start food-trains under armed guard for Budapest and Vienna</i>.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It might spell bankruptcy for him&mdash;the ruin of all his plans. He
- rebelled against the improvidence of philanthropy, yet dimly he discerned
- the proportions of his chance. If he would, he could teach the world how
- wars could be stopped. As he watched the message being dispatched, he
- wondered why he had sent it. Was he frightened by the sight of bloodshed,
- or angered, like Varensky, by an unjust display of force? Or had he sent
- it because this maelstrom of human agony swirled between him and the woman
- he loved, and food might prove to be the only means by which she could be
- rescued? He sought to explain his actions by business motives: if his food
- trains were actually on the spot, he could strike a better bargain with
- tottering governments.
- </p>
- <h3>
- II
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>he express for
- Budapest was several hours late. When at last it got under way, it carried
- few passengers. It was plunging straight into the heart of the danger,
- from which all the world which possessed the price of a fare was escaping.
- </p>
- <p>
- Santa listened to and reported on the conversation of fellow-travelers.
- They were Hungarian officers returning to their regiments, to whom a fight
- spelt opportunity; they were husbands and fathers, careless of their own
- safety in their dread of what might be happening to their families; they
- were merchants and men of wealth, anxious to be at hand for the defense of
- their possessions. As the talk went on, the greatness of the risk grew
- increasingly obvious; it bred an atmosphere of free-masonry. Strangers
- accosted each other, exchanging views on the hazards; they crowded about
- the entrance of any compartment where a speaker seemed possessed of
- accurate information. Most of what was said was no more than conjecture;
- much of it was utterly contradictory. One man asserted that the Bolsheviks
- were attacking all along the Russian front; another that Bolshevism had
- collapsed and the peasants were massacring. Another knew for certain that
- throughout Central Europe the Reds were rising; yet another that the
- Monarchists had sprung to arms and were marching. Every rumor or invention
- was accepted with equal credulity. Anything was possible. No one knew for
- certain either the magnitude or the cause of the rumored disaster. Only
- one fact seemed indisputable: somewhere further eastward had occurred a
- catastrophe of shattering proportions&mdash;a catastrophe in the tragedy
- of which each one of them would shortly be involved.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood turned away from the babel of voices to the autumn landscape
- gliding past the windows. It consisted as far as eye could stretch of
- unboundaried, level fields, gridironed by straight, military roads, marked
- by avenues of pollarded trees, intersecting always at right angles. The
- fields were neglected. They told their own story of seed consumed, which
- should have been saved for sowing, and of cattle slaughtered. Over
- everything, despite the brilliant blueness of the sky, there hung an
- atmosphere of melancholy. Down white-penciled highways little groups were
- trekking, always in the one direction. They appeared crushed and harmless,
- more like insects, scarcely human. They limped forlornly, dragging carts
- and carrying children. They were the advance-guard of the army of
- starvation. Hindwood remembered the Captain's prophecy. &ldquo;They'll march to
- the lands of plenty like Death swinging his scythe, like a pestilence,
- like gaunt wolves.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At the frontier, where the train crossed from Austria into Hungary, he
- gained his first lesson in the resistlessness of necessity. There had been
- an unequal battle, in which only one side had been armed. It appeared that
- the Austrian guards had tried to turn back the Hungarian fugitives. They
- had fired their rifles till their ammunition was exhausted; then they had
- sickened of the slaughter. Opposition had made no difference; the tide of
- fugitives had still pressed on. Misery had proved more potent than
- explosives; it had made death, if not desirable, at least negligible. Its
- meek persistence had conquered. The Austrian soldiery had revolted against
- their officers and stood with grounded arms, watching the stream of
- poverty trickling through the barrier of corpses.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Like water finding its own level,&rdquo; Hindwood thought. It would be like
- this the world over, if something were not done at once to check it. The
- outcast nations lay one behind the other, like terraced avalanches, in an
- ascending scale of destitution&mdash;behind the Austrians the Hungarians,
- behind the Hungarians the Poles, behind the Poles the Russians, each a
- degree more agonized in its privation. Now that the movement had started
- it would go on, sliding, filtering, settling, until the peoples of the
- earth had regained an economic level. The Dives nations, which had refused
- to share, would try to hold the Lazarus nations at bay by force. They
- would spray them with cannon. They would charge them with bayonets. They
- would bomb them, gas them, dig labyrinths of trenches. In the end, as had
- happened here, though the pariah portion of humanity was weaponless, the
- meek persistency of its misery would conquer. Careless of oblivion, it
- would press on. He alone could give the Dives nations a seventh hour
- chance; at the price of his financial ruin, he could prevent the deluge of
- famine from spreading by damming it with a wall of bread.
- </p>
- <p>
- Darkness had fallen. The carriages were unlighted. The train was moving
- cautiously, jerking, stopping, starting, like a live thing scenting
- carnage. Scattered through the night camp-fires were burning. In the gloom
- conversation dragged on wearily with reiterated guesses.
- </p>
- <p>
- He felt his hand clasped.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is it?&rdquo; he whispered. &ldquo;Frightened? You won't be caught now. You're
- as safe as the rest of us. No one'll have time to remember you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I wasn't thinking of myself.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then&mdash;?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Of you&mdash;that perhaps you were born for such a time as this.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; He drew his breath. The echo of his own thought! &ldquo;And perhaps you,
- too,&rdquo; he suggested.
- </p>
- <p>
- She twisted herself, leaning her breast against his arm. Glancing down
- through the darkness, he caught the tenderness in her eyes and the
- gleaming smoothness of her cheek and throat.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I wish I could believe it,&rdquo; she said softly; &ldquo;to stand beside you, making
- you strong.... You could never love me; but to stand beside you, when you
- rescue the world, that would mean redemption.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;When I rescue the world!&rdquo; He laughed quietly. &ldquo;I'm no Varensky. I came
- here to make money.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She swept aside his cynicism. &ldquo;You were born for this moment. And I, an
- outcast woman whom the world has hunted, will help you. Perhaps I shall
- give my life for you.&rdquo; She spoke exultantly. &ldquo;I, whom you have rejected.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You exaggerate. Things may not be as bad as they appear. What we've seen
- may be no more than a local disturbance.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She refused to argue. &ldquo;Be kind to me while we're together.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- On the outskirts of Budapest they came to a halt. The air was tainted with
- a nauseating odor. Standing on a siding was a long line of freight-cars in
- process of being shunted. By the light of lanterns swung by men on the
- tracks, it was possible to see that the freight-cars were inhabited.
- Figures hung out of them thin as skeletons, entirely naked or clad in
- flapping rags. The passengers of the express had crowded to the windows,
- pointing, commenting, gesticulating.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood turned to Santa. &ldquo;What is it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She answered bitterly. &ldquo;The death train.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But the people aren't dead.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not yet. They're families ruined by the war and by the peace. Some of
- them saw their homes burned by the Cossacks; others had their farms stolen
- to pay the Allies' debts. They're nobody's business. When you've reached
- the end of your tether in Hungary, you join the death train and die by
- inches. You have no food, no sanitation. Wherever you halt, you spread
- contagion. When things have grown too bad in one place, you're dragged to
- another.&rdquo; She swallowed down a sob. &ldquo;The train's full of children&mdash;and
- you tell me that you came here to make money.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- On arrival at Budapest they found the station picketed by soldiers. They
- were immediately conducted under an armed guard to an office where the
- purpose of their journey was investigated. When Hindwood had explained
- their errand&mdash;that it had to do with the food-supply&mdash;he was
- treated with courtesy and given his choice of hotels. Santa chose the
- Ritz. A military order was made out for their rooms. A safe-conduct was
- handed them. A rickety conveyance, with a lean horse between the shafts,
- was allotted to them. They were launched into a city quenched of lights,
- with a soldier seated beside the driver for protection.
- </p>
- <p>
- The wide avenues down which they drove were deserted. They were still
- unaware of what had happened. They had not dared to ask, lest any slip of
- the tongue might lead to trouble. There were no signs of revolution in the
- thoroughfares. They were hushed and reverent as the aisles of a cathedral.
- Every few hundred yards a mounted gendarme rode out to challenge them;
- then, seeing the soldier on the box, backed into the shadows. Only one
- disquieting incident occurred. The uneasiness which it caused was due to
- guilty memories rather than to any actual menace. As they were turning
- towards the Danube, they heard a sharp trotting behind them. A closed
- brougham swept past, drawn by a pair of high-stepping horses. The equipage
- was one which must formerly have belonged to the Royal Palace; it was the
- ghost of a forgotten splendor. Hindwood rose in his seat to watch it
- vanish. Then he saw something that made him catch his breath. Running
- between its wheels was a snow-white Russian wolfhound.
- </p>
- <p>
- Santa heard his commotion. &ldquo;What's the excitement?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nothing.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- By the time she had raised herself to follow his glance, the hint of peril
- was gone. The next moment they were drawing up at the hotel.
- </p>
- <h3>
- III
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>gain as the door
- swung to behind them, they were greeted by sounds of merriment and
- dancing, only here the abandon was wilder than at Vienna. Hindwood saw at
- a glance that this was no assemblage of alien hucksters, drawn from all
- the world to gather bargains. As regards the men, they were devil-may-care
- and smart, of the same type as Captain Lajos&mdash;the sort who would
- follow the game to the last throw of the dice. Many of them had made no
- attempt to disguise their profession; they were clad in gorgeous uniforms
- of Hungarian regiments long since ordered disbanded by the Allies. Their
- breasts were ablaze with Imperial decorations. They strode the marble
- floors with the clink of spurs and the rattling of swords. While they
- drugged the midnight hours with laughter and debauch, their faces were
- feverish with listening expectancy&mdash;the expectancy of an event for
- which they waited.
- </p>
- <p>
- The women looked like captives of a raid. Some hung back timidly; some
- were bold with wine; all were weary and pinched with hunger. Like the men,
- they seemed only to be acting a part. In the midst of recklessness they
- would give way to distaste, as though remorseful of this way of combating
- starvation.
- </p>
- <p>
- With the stench of the death train still in his nostrils, Hindwood stared
- at the spectacle in pity and disgust. &ldquo;Fiddling while Rome is burning,&rdquo; he
- muttered.
- </p>
- <p>
- His elbow was jogged by a black-coated individual with the appeasing
- manners of a tailor.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I understand English. What is it you desire?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood swung round. &ldquo;So much the better. I want what one usually wants
- at a hotel&mdash;accommodation.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The man rubbed his hands. &ldquo;Sorry, sir. We're full up. Every room, in fact
- every lounge is taken.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You'll have to find something. I have a military order.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Having read it the man returned the slip of paper. &ldquo;That's different.
- You're here on Government business&mdash;for the same purpose as these
- other gentlemen, I take it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood replied non-committally. &ldquo;Yes, on Government business.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;In that case I'll give you a room in the basement&mdash;a servant's, my
- last. It's all I have to offer.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But two rooms are necessary. I have my secretary with me&mdash;this
- lady.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The man shrugged his shoulders. &ldquo;To demand the impossible is useless.
- To-morrow&mdash;who knows? If things happen, I may be able to give you
- more rooms than you require. For the present...&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Seeing that nothing was to be gained by arguing, Hindwood consented to the
- arrangement.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The room will be my secretary's. If you'll lend me blankets, I'll find a
- place in the passage.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The room proved to be poor in the extreme&mdash;nothing but four bare
- walls and an iron cot. When he had turned the key he tiptoed over to
- Santa.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's this monstrous thing for which they're waiting&mdash;this
- something that may happen to-morrow?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She placed her hands in his, as though she felt the need of protection.
- Her golden face was tragic. &ldquo;War.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- His common sense revolted. Though everything seemed to prove her guess
- correct, he refused to accept it. &ldquo;War! It can't be. What would any one
- gain by it? It was war that produced all this hideous mess&mdash;the death
- train and all that. Besides, how can people fight who can scarcely crawl?
- They have one foot in the grave already. Ten well-fed men could defeat a
- battalion. Whatever's in the wind, it isn't war. To launch a war requires
- money.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;With you it's always money. To launch this kind of a war requires nothing
- but despair.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Stepping back from him tempestuously, she flung herself full length on the
- cot. Her face was hidden, buried in the pillow. While she lay there tense,
- the sound of dance-music, advancing and retreating, tapped dreamily
- against the walls. It spoke to him of romance, of a woman he could love,
- and of passion snatched perilously before life ended, in a mysterious city
- after nightfall.
- </p>
- <p>
- She had raised herself and was regarding him feverishly. Her red lips were
- parted as with thirst.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I know you so well,&rdquo; she was saying softly; &ldquo;I know you because I love
- you. You refuse to believe it's war because you wouldn't be able to sell
- and bargain. But it is war&mdash;the sort of war we saw at the frontier: a
- war in which weaponless millions will march to the overthrow of embattled
- thousands.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You're unjust.&rdquo; He spoke patiently. &ldquo;I'm unwilling to believe it's war
- because I can't see any reason for it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Any reason!&rdquo; Her eyes became twin storms. &ldquo;Would you require a reason if
- you'd seen your children die for lack of bread? You'd perish gladly, if
- you could first tear the throat out of one person who was too well
- nourished.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He went and stood beside her, stooping over her, placing his hand against
- her forehead. &ldquo;You're burning. You've been through too much. Get some
- rest. To-morrow we'll find Anna and perhaps Var-ensky; it's more than
- likely they'll be able to tell us.&rdquo; He paused. &ldquo;I know what makes you so
- relentless; it's your own dead child&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her arms shot up, dragging him down and nestling his face against her
- breast. &ldquo;Oh, my man, it's not that. It's that I'm jealous for you&mdash;so
- afraid you may deceive yourself and miss your chance.&rdquo; He stumbled back
- from the temptation of her yielding body and the comfort of her fragrant
- warmth.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My chance is yours; we may both have been born for this moment.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Long after he had stretched himself outside her door, he felt that in the
- austerity of the four bare walls she still crouched watching from her bed.
- </p>
- <h3>
- IV
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">H</span>e slept
- restlessly. The music and the dancing rarely halted. Once when he roused,
- it was with the suffocating sense that a man was bending over him,
- fumbling at the handle of Santa's door. As he sat up, he was convinced
- that the man looked back just before he vanished around the corner.
- </p>
- <p>
- When he finally wakened, it was in the chill of dawn. He was surrounded by
- a ghostly stillness. Rising softly, he slipped down the passage and out
- into the public rooms of the hotel. It was as though a wizard had waved
- his wand. The merry-makers lay strewn about carelessly, wherever sleep had
- overtaken them. In the pale light of morning, robbed of animation, their
- faces showed waxlike and wan. Swords, which had clattered martially,
- sprawled grotesquely by crumpled bodies. Uniforms looked tarnished,
- dresses shabby. Girls, with their lips parted and their hair disordered,
- lay with heads stretched back in their lovers' arms. Over all was spread
- the weariness of folly.
- </p>
- <p>
- Tiptoeing from group to group, he searched for the man who had tried
- Santa's door. Nowhere could he find him. Returning to her room, he tapped
- lightly. He was afraid to make more noise in that atmosphere of menace.
- Receiving no answer, he pushed the door stealthily and peered across the
- threshold. He had feared lest he might find her gone; there she lay curled
- up in her cot, her hair poured across her pillow, her face cushioned
- against her hollowed arm. Gray light falling from a narrow window clothed
- her with a lonely pathos. Bending over her, he shook her shoulder.
- &ldquo;Santa.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She sat up with a start.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Has it happened?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not yet. They're sleeping like the dead.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then why&mdash;?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There's someone who knows us here. He tried your door. It makes me think
- we're watched. We can slip out now and hunt up Varensky. If we wait till
- later, we'll be followed.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her pupils dilated, obscuring the grayness of her eyes; they became black
- pools, mirroring her terror. &ldquo;To be caught with Varensky would mean
- death.&rdquo; He seated himself on the edge of her cot. &ldquo;I didn't think you knew
- what fear was. Don't be frightened. I'll protect you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Dear!&rdquo; All of a sudden she had become intensely calm. &ldquo;Did you think I
- was afraid for myself? Before many days, perhaps before to-day is out,
- it'll be you who'll need protecting. I beg you, don't go near Varensky.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Let me go myself,&rdquo; she implored. When he glanced away without replying,
- she rushed on impetuously. &ldquo;Some one's got to take risks. I don't count.
- Your life must be spared.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- With an effort he brought his gaze back. &ldquo;There's Anna.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Instead of the explosion he had expected, her voice became gravely tender.
- &ldquo;I forgot. You care for her as I care for you. I'm sorry.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her feet slipped to the floor; he saw them marble white against the bare,
- scrubbed boards&mdash;beautiful as hands, the feet of a dancer. As he
- retreated, she smiled bravely, &ldquo;You shan't wait long.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- V
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>o far as they were
- aware, no one had noticed their departure. The deep breathing of the
- motley throng had been like the beat of a muffled engine. Even the
- night-porter, who should have been on guard, had collapsed across his desk
- with his face buried in his arms.
- </p>
- <p>
- They had stepped out of the hotel into a pulseless street where mists from
- the Danube hung like cobwebs. Hindwood could not rid himself of the
- suspicion that they were followed. He glanced back repeatedly, drawing
- Santa sharply into doorways in attempt after attempt to trap the tracker.
- If a tracker there was, he never revealed himself. At last Hindwood
- realized that precautions were profitless. The cessation of their own
- footsteps gave ample warning. A pursuer had only to halt when they halted,
- to escape detection behind the fog.
- </p>
- <p>
- They scarcely dared talk, and then only in brief whispers. It puzzled him
- how she could keep her direction. It was like tunneling a passage through
- chalk, which crumbled, yielded, and caved in as one went forward. The
- whole world dripped sullenly&mdash;unseen gutters, unseen trees,
- treacherous pavements. And there was always the drifting whiteness,
- pricking one's eyes as with little darts.
- </p>
- <p>
- She had gone too far and turned back, feeling her way along the wall.
- Before a large double-door she paused and knocked. She rapped three times
- peculiarly before a grill was slipped back and a question asked. The
- answer which she gave appeared to be the countersign. A smaller door in
- the doubledoor was opened and they entered.
- </p>
- <p>
- The person who had admitted them was a new type to Hindwood: flat
- featured, fair-headed, blue-eyed, clad in a loose khaki shirt, which
- bulged like a blouse, and in a pair of baggy breeches which were tucked
- into high-boots, roomy as pouches. But it was the expression of the man
- that was most impressive&mdash;his brooding appearance of enormous
- patience. Santa spoke rapidly in a language which was neither German nor
- French. The man nodded and led the way across a gloomy courtyard, up
- stairs rotten with decay, into a stone corridor lined with stout
- forbidding doors.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Is it a prison?&rdquo; Hindwood whispered.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Little better. It's a barracks inhabited by the brains of outcast Russia&mdash;students,
- for the most part, male and female, who have escaped from the Red Terror.
- Russia has no use for brains at present. Brains are too dangerous.
- Wherever the Bolshevist finds them, he blows them out. Many of these
- exiles are survivors of Denikin's and Kolchak's armies. Having tried to
- save their country with rifles, they're now preparing themselves to rescue
- her with knowledge. They're learning to be doctors, engineers and lawyers,
- so that they may become the soul of the Russia of the future. Meanwhile
- they live anyhow, sleep anywhere and starve abominably. They're not wanted
- in Hungary or in any European country. They're suspected and hounded. The
- only reason they've been allotted this mildewed dwelling is in order that
- they may be watched.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The guide had thrown open a door and stood signing to them, trying to
- catch their attention.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was a grim sight that met their eyes, similar to the one they had left
- behind at the hotel only a thousand times more sordid. The windows were
- locked and heavily barred. The air was poisonous. The room was stripped of
- furnishings. On bare boards innumerable human beings, without a shred of
- bedding, sprawled, drugged with sleep, herded together in indecent
- proximity. There was scarcely space to walk between them. They were of
- both sexes. Here and there a child lay folded in a parent's arms. The men
- were of all ages, but for the most part young and still in the tattered
- uniforms of their defeated armies. The women were scarcely distinguishable
- from the men. Their heads were cropped. They wore odd garments of mixed
- masculine and feminine attire, such as could be purchased for next to
- nothing at any rag-shop. Some retained the soldier-garb of the Battalions
- of Death. As Hindwood gazed across the pool of mud-colored faces, &ldquo;Heaven
- help us, if this is the soul of the future Russia!&rdquo; he thought.
- </p>
- <p>
- Suddenly his interest shifted. In the corner remotest from the door, his
- eye had caught the shining of golden tresses. Their owner's face was
- turned away from him; they seemed to weigh her down and were piled beneath
- her head in a cushion. On her left lay an aged peasant woman; on her right
- a man with a death-white face and a head that was peaked like a dunce's
- cap. The guide was already stooping over the man, touching him with a
- strange reverence. The man sat up. His green eyes opened. Hindwood
- experienced the same sensation of discomfort he had felt, when he had
- first seen them peering at him above the edge of the cliff at Seafold.
- </p>
- <p>
- Varensky had risen. With his peculiarly catlike motion, he was picking a
- path towards them. He held out his hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It was brave of you to come.&rdquo; And then to Santa, &ldquo;Of you, too. But of you
- it was expected.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood bristled like a dog. He was distrustful of romantic attitudes.
- &ldquo;Let's get down to facts. You know as well as I do that it wasn't any
- lofty motive that brought me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No?&rdquo; The eye-brows arched themselves comically. &ldquo;Then what?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Your wife's message.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah! I understand. She didn't tell me. You see, she thinks I'm going to
- get myself killed at last; probably she wants you to help stop me. Not
- that I'm of the least use to her&mdash;don't think that. But she's the
- soul of honor. My death would mean her freedom; because of that she'd do
- anything in her power to prevent&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood drew himself erect. &ldquo;These are matters which it's not decent for
- us to discuss.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The narrow shoulders flew up into a shrug. &ldquo;Why on earth not? When things
- are so, there can be nothing indecent in being frank about them. Is it
- less indecent for you to love my wife than for me to tell that I know you
- love her? There'd be no sense in your loving her unless you both hoped&mdash;I
- won't finish what I was going to say; your feelings are so sensitive.&rdquo; He
- rested his hand not unkindly on Hindwood's arm. &ldquo;Don't you realize, my
- dear fellow, that you're to be congratulated? This happening which means
- catastrophe for countless millions, for you and Anna spells opportunity.
- Be honest. You would not have risked visiting me, if you had not realized
- that.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood sought for spitefulness in Varensky's tones. All he found was the
- surge of a quiet happiness.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;One would think that I wanted you to die!&rdquo; he exclaimed blankly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, don't you? Why shouldn't you?&rdquo; Varen-sky smiled sadly. &ldquo;If I could
- love Anna or any other woman the way you do&mdash;&mdash; But no&mdash;to
- me such affections have been denied. I love people only in crowds, by tens
- of thousands and by nations; in my heart there's no room for more human
- passions. I'm God's instrument; the hour of my testing is at hand. These
- mildewed walls inclose my Gethsemane.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He flung his arms apart grotesquely; they formed with his body the shape
- of a cross. The fire of fanaticism blazed in his eyes. &ldquo;To-morrow I shall
- be crucified.&rdquo; He drew a shuddering breath.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A born actor!&rdquo; was Hindwood's silent comment&mdash;&ldquo;An egoist who craves
- the lime-light.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And yet, to his chagrin, he found himself impressed. He was so deeply
- stirred that he dared not trust himself to speak for a moment; when he
- did, it was with calculated coldness.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You think only of yourself. It's not you alone; even those of us who make
- no claim to be God's instruments, stand more than a sporting chance of
- being crucified, as you call it. There are Santa and Anna, for instance;
- there's the collection of wretched down-and-outs gathered in this
- building; there are the scarecrows I saw in the death train; there are all
- the teeming swarms of human lice crawling westward along a thousand roads.
- In the presence of an agony so widespread, I can't muster a tear for your
- individual tragedy. It's no time for theatrics.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- For an instant Varensky's gaunt face quivered. Making an effort, with an
- air of mocking courtliness he mastered his injured pride.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I was mistaken and I ask your pardon. We all have our plans to make
- ahead. I supposed you were here to ascertain approximately the hour at
- which I proposed to&mdash;&mdash; Shall we say, depart?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You were badly mistaken,&rdquo; Hindwood cut in contemptuously. &ldquo;I'm here to
- find out if there's any possible way in which we can save the situation.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Varensky stared. He became rigid as though he were carved from marble.
- &ldquo;We!&rdquo; he repeated haughtily.
- </p>
- <p>
- While Hindwood was searching for a clue to his amazement, his next words
- supplied it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I thought it was I who was to save the world.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Splendid! You have a plan?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Varensky's eyes filmed over. &ldquo;Yes. But if I were to tell you, you wouldn't
- understand.&rdquo; Coming out of the clouds, he placed his hand tolerantly on
- Hind-wood's shoulder. &ldquo;Splendid, you said. So you want me to have a plan?
- Let's sit down and talk more quietly. These people are tired&mdash;in
- sleep they forget. So you also have ambitions to become a saviour?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was like the night in the hut all over again, when they had talked of
- Santa's redemption. There he sat, this discredited dictator, half-saint,
- half-charlatan, his knees drawn sharply up to his chin, his white face
- peering over them. The stale air sighed with the breathing of sleepers. A
- child whimpered and was hugged closer to the breast. In the far corner lay
- the desired woman. Gazing eagerly into both their eyes was the oriental
- countenance of the other woman, for whom neither of them cared.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A saviour! No. I have no ambitions in that direction. But I have a
- scheme,&rdquo; Hindwood admitted.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Bread. I came to sell bread for trade-concessions. In Austria I found the
- Government unwilling to purchase. This morning, when I consult with
- Hungarian officials, I may be met with the same refusal. What's the game?
- Why should men in control of hungry nations refuse my help? For six months
- they've been urging me to come to them. Something's happened&mdash;the
- signs of it are everywhere. Trains running westward are packed with women.
- The last sight we had of Vienna was a street-riot and people brutally shot
- down. And again at the frontier there were piles of dead&mdash;not only
- men: women and children who had been butchered to prevent them from
- escaping. Budapest's under military law. By some error, Santa and I on
- arrival were mistaken for conspirators in an army plot. We're billeted at
- what appears to be its headquarters&mdash;a place jammed with carousing
- officers of supposedly disbanded regiments. What's in the air? What is
- this dreadful news which some people rejoice over, from which others flee
- in panic, but which no one dares to mention? If you can tell me, I shall
- know how to act.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If I can tell you&mdash;! Suppose I were to tell you the worst, how would
- you act then?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That depends. I'm no more unselfish than anybody else. At a pinch I could
- forget my own interests and ruin myself for the public welfare. Here's how
- I stand. I have enough food at my command to keep Europe for several weeks
- from actual starvation. If the crisis is genuine, that ought to give time
- for the conscience of the civilized world to be aroused. But even if the
- world's conscience should prove too sluggish, I still have a personal
- fortune which would keep hunger at bay for several months. I'm no
- philanthropist&mdash;I should make myself penniless reluctantly. I'm in no
- sense your rival for the honors of Calvary. My mission in Europe is to
- sell at a profit. So if you can do better&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What you're telling me,&rdquo; Varensky interrupted, &ldquo;is that, if by personal
- sacrifice you could avert a world disaster, you'd be willing to give
- something for nothing.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Precisely. But I must first be convinced that the circumstances warrant
- it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There's one point you've overlooked.&rdquo; Varen-sky's green eyes narrowed.
- &ldquo;Up to the moment you entered this room, I was fully persuaded that I was
- the man on whom the privilege of paying the price must fall. I'd coveted
- the privilege. All my life I'd worked for it. If you rob me of it, have
- you reckoned the cost?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;In money?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;In something more valuable. If I live, you can never be Anna's husband.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood hated the man for his subtlety. He was being deliberately
- tempted. He threw a glance toward the sleeping woman in the corner whose
- fate, as well as his own, he was deciding. Close to him, drawing nearer,
- he saw the pleading eyes of Santa. He gave his answer.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I may be the man who was born for this moment. Play fair by me; tell me
- what's happened.&rdquo; Varensky rocked himself slowly back and forth. Suddenly
- he came to rest.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm the thing that's happened. I'm responsible for everything. I've never
- learnt to let bad alone; in trying to make things better, I make them
- worse. It was my hand that shot down the crowd at Vienna. It was I who
- butchered the women and children at the frontier. I'm the force which
- drives behind the human lice who crawl westward along a thousand roads.
- You think me mad; but listen. Every freedom gained entails a new bondage.
- I helped to free Russia from the Czar; in so doing, I prepared the way for
- Bolshevism. I've fought Bolshevism with my dreams, my happiness, with
- everything I possess. Bolshevism is overthrown. What have I produced?
- Chaos.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Overthrown! Then that's the meaning of it.&rdquo; Santa had half risen.
- </p>
- <p>
- Varensky turned his death-white face on her, chilling her enthusiasm.
- &ldquo;It's collapsed like a pack of cards. With it have vanished the last of
- the restraints. Every Russian's his own master now to choose his own ditch
- in which to perish. We've destroyed a vision that turned out to be a
- nightmare, but we've set up nothing in its stead. We, who are idealists,
- have worked the final disillusion. We've made two hundred millions
- hopeless. They're fleeing from the emptiness. The contagion of their
- despair is spreading. You saw its results in Vienna. It runs ahead of
- them; they're already on the march. They've broken into Poland. They're
- drawing nearer. How to stop them&mdash;&mdash;?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood's lips had squared themselves. &ldquo;I can stop them. My food-trains
- will be here by tomorrow. What hungry men need is not political programs,
- but bread.&rdquo; Then he added thoughtfully, &ldquo;I can stop them, if I'm not
- prevented. There's some one who's playing a different game; he's some one
- who wants the world to starve. That's what Austria's refusal meant; that's
- the meaning of these secret signs of rejoicing. He's bigger than any
- nation. Who is he?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Varensky shook his head. &ldquo;There was a man.&rdquo; He looked knowingly at Santa.
- &ldquo;He was drowned.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood jumped to his feet as though there was no time to be lost. &ldquo;I'm
- going to find out. I have an appointment with the Governor of Hungary. If
- he rejects my offer, I shall demand&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And if he refuses&mdash;&mdash;?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I shall play my winning-card. Don't ask me what it is. But if I play it,
- I shall need your help. You've talked of crucifixion: I may provide you
- with the chance. How many of these&mdash;&mdash;?&rdquo; He pointed to the
- sleeping outcasts.
- </p>
- <p>
- Varensky's eyes were shining. &ldquo;I've four hundred: three hundred veterans
- of Denikin's and Kolchak's armies and a hundred girl-soldiers of the
- Battalions of Death.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Have them warned.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- As he turned on his heel, he saw that Anna had wakened. She cried out
- after him. He dared not face her. Leaping down the stairs, he went at a
- run across the courtyard. It was only when the door into the street had
- closed behind him, that he realized that Santa was panting at his elbow.
- </p>
- <h3>
- VI
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">M</span>ists were
- clearing. The sun had emerged fiery above a mountain-range of clouds. As
- they hurried in search of their hotel, they caught glimpses of the Danube,
- spanned by many bridges, and on the further bank the palace-crowned
- heights of Buda. The ancient city looked imperially beautiful. There was a
- touch of the East about it, a lavishness and rose-tinted whiteness. Its
- quays and pavements shone wet, as though they had been daubed with
- lacquer. It seemed incredible that behind its gold-splashed walls the
- ghosts of hunger gathered.
- </p>
- <p>
- During their absence from the Ritz, a transformation had been effected.
- All signs of disorder had been banished. In place of the untimely
- Bacchanalians, stiff-bosomed waiters stood guard over neat tables with a
- solicitous air which was bewilderingly normal. Even the breakfast menu
- gave the lie to starvation.
- </p>
- <p>
- They took their seats in silence, eating without interest whatever was set
- before them. Hindwood's sensations were those of a man who has given way
- to his emotions at a theatre. It was as though the lights had gone up,
- shaming him in public. There had been nothing to warrant his surrender to
- sentiment. He totaled up the accumulated incentives: he had witnessed a
- street-riot, people slain at the frontier, the hideous contrast between
- the death train and dancing&mdash;and last of all Varensky. But these
- things in themselves constituted no argument; the cause that lay behind
- them was still conjectural. As for Varensky, whatever he had said was
- unreliable. His wish was parent to his thought. He was a man born to stir
- up turbulences, which he considered it his mission to pacify. He was
- dangerous as a forest-fire: one spark of his wild idealism made the whole
- world lurid. In the breath of adversity he became a sheet of flame,
- destructive and self-destroying. His goal was the vanishing-point, in the
- No Man's Land between desire and things attainable.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood writhed at remembering the ease with which his judgment had been
- unseated. In his weakness he had given a promise, which it would be folly
- to fulfill and dishonorable to withdraw. He glanced across at Santa. How
- was she taking this return to normality?
- </p>
- <p>
- She met his eyes with passionate adoration. &ldquo;It was god-like of you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He pretended ignorance. &ldquo;What?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Your self-denial. You've given up everything&mdash;Anna, ambition, money&mdash;all
- the things you worship.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He assumed a judicial expression. &ldquo;Perhaps not. It mayn't be necessary.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But it will.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If it is,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I shall stick to my contract. But I've reason to
- believe we've exaggerated.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Would to God we had!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her fervor disturbed him. He leaned across the table. &ldquo;You don't mean to
- tell me you accept this bogey story about starving millions marching?
- There's a sense of security this morning. Surely you must have felt it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She shook her head. &ldquo;We've had a meal&mdash;that's all. Within a mile from
- here I could show you a hospital where five hundred babies sit shivering
- like monkeys. They're wrapped in paper; they've never known what it was
- not to be hungry from the day they were born. I could take you to the
- workmen's quarter, where naked men and women would squirm at your feet
- like dogs; they're too weak to walk. I could lead you past the
- bread-lines, already forming&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He stayed her by covering her hand. &ldquo;I'm not denying it. When countries
- make wars they have to pay penalties.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The storm that was brewing betrayed itself in her eyes. &ldquo;What are you
- denying?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't let's make a scene,&rdquo; he urged. &ldquo;My promise holds if I find that
- circumstances warrant it. In a little while I'm seeing the Governor of
- Hungary; after that I'll be sure. While I'm gone, I have one request to
- make of you: keep your room and talk to nobody.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She rose from the table in suppressed defiance.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;For your own safety. It was lucky I slept across your threshold last
- night. Your door was tried.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Her smile accused him. &ldquo;By whom?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If I'm not mistaken, by the man who afterwards tracked us through the
- fog.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She turned away as though she were finished with him. When she found that
- he was following, she delivered a parting shot. &ldquo;You told me this to
- frighten me. Did you think you could make me your accomplice in
- cowardice?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- VII
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>o these were the
- rewards of knight-errantry! In his anger he was glad to be rid of her. He
- was free at last. She'd been nothing but an embarrassment. If she were to
- attempt a reconciliation, he would turn his back on her. It wasn't likely
- that he'd put his neck into the same noose twice.
- </p>
- <p>
- Little by little from resenting her, he began to suspect her. Had she been
- using him as a cat's-paw in a deeper game? Every man with whom she had
- ever associated, she had destroyed; could she be expected, to show more
- mercy to a man by whom she had been rejected? Her husband's words came
- back: &ldquo;When she has added you to her list of victims, if she gives you
- time before she kills you, remember that I warned you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Everything to do with her became distorted when interpreted in the light
- of treachery. The pathos of her unrequited affection had been a mask; her
- humanitarianism had been a cloak for her designs. When he retraced his
- relations with her, it seemed glaringly probable that from the start she
- had been the agent of his financial rivals, placed by them on board the <i>Ryndam</i>
- with the definite intention of accomplishing his ruin. Except for her
- final error in tactics, she would have attained her object. He had escaped
- by the narrowest of margins.
- </p>
- <p>
- But the other people who had come upon the scene, where did they stand?
- Were they her puppets, jumping whichever way she pulled the wires, or were
- they her active co-conspirators? Varensky and the Little Grandmother were
- undoubtedly her puppets; she employed their enthusiasms to serve her
- purposes. Anna was her victim&mdash;a woman wronged and cheated,
- infinitely dear to him and tragic. It was Captain Lajos who troubled him.
- The more he thought about him, the more certain he became that the Captain
- and Santa were hand in glove. The farce which they had enacted on the
- train had been prearranged with a view to intimidating him. His most
- unnerving information, concerning the menace of starving millions, had
- come from the Captain. And there was a further fact, which had been
- disquieting him all morning: it was Captain Lajos who had tried Santa's
- door last night.
- </p>
- <p>
- What did they think to gain by their plotting? Having pondered the
- conundrum, he decided that their object was to thwart his schemes for
- grasping world-power, and that the means they had chosen were to compel
- him to give for nothing the hoards of food which he had intended that
- Europe should buy.
- </p>
- <p>
- Well aware that this theory was far from covering all the facts, he was
- still feeling his way through a quagmire of surmise, when a visitor was
- announced. In the foyer he found an officer, resplendently uniformed,
- waiting to escort him to his audience at the Royal Palace. He was whizzed
- away in a handsome car. As he traveled, his companion entertained him with
- anecdotes, grimly humorous, of Bela Kun's reign of terror.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Experiments of that sort soon disprove themselves,&rdquo; he said cheerfully.
- &ldquo;We live through them and go on again.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And your country is going on again?&rdquo; Hindwood inquired.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Emphatically. Signs of revival are already apparent.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But what about Russia? How's revival possible without security?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The officer laughed carelessly. &ldquo;I catch your meaning; you've heard this
- latest about Bolshevism's downfall. In our part of the world we pay no
- heed to rumors; they're inventions of political opportunists or of
- gamblers in the international exchange. Even if this latest is true, it's
- the best thing that could have happened.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood twisted in his seat that he might lose nothing of his companion's
- expression. &ldquo;The best thing in the long run&mdash;that's granted. But
- meanwhile, because of the breakdown in organization, over a hundred
- million Russians are likely to die.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Again the officer laughed, stretching his long legs. &ldquo;The fittest will
- survive. One has to die somehow. The last war was fought because the world
- was too crowded. Famine's nature's cure for overpopulation.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The remark sounded singularly ill-timed, coming from a man whose country
- was also starving. Hindwood frowned. &ldquo;A heartless cure and, thank
- goodness, not the only one.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not more heartless than civilized society's, which encourages armed
- nations to strangle each other with every filthy invention of science.
- When you forbid Nature to correct matters in her own way, sooner or later
- you find yourself with a war on your hands. The matter's very simple: so
- many mouths to fill and so many rations. When the mouths are in excess of
- the rations, some one has to go short. The people who are selected to go
- short can either drop in their tracks or fight. If they fight and win, the
- result's the same&mdash;some one else has to go without. The adjustment's
- automatic.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The thought of death,&rdquo; Hindwood suggested quietly, &ldquo;especially of other
- people's death, doesn't seem to trouble you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's natural. Killing and dying are my trade.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Brutal as was the point of view, after Santa's sentimental fallacies,
- there was something honest and direct about these bald assertions.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood spoke again. &ldquo;What applies to Russia, applies equally to Hungary.
- My errand at the Palace is to offer sufficient food to keep your country
- alive. According to your theory, I'm interfering with Nature's laws. I'm
- doing something economically immoral. I ought to leave you to your fate.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- To his amazement he was met with a polite concurrence. &ldquo;That's how I
- regard it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was impossible to credit the man's sincerity. Hindwood glanced aside,
- irritated and shocked. He was seeking a motive for such disinterested
- frankness. There was nothing more to say.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had been so much absorbed in the conversation that he had not noticed
- their direction. They were skimming high above the Danube, crossing a
- bridge that spanned the sunlit gulf in giant strides. Behind lay Pest,
- modern as a second Paris; in front lay Buda, ancient and scarcely
- Christian, still bearing the marks of its Turkish occupation. On reaching
- the further bank, the ascent to the Palace begun to climb.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was just as they were reaching the top that Hindwood was for a second
- time startled by the ghost of memory. Peering down on him from the
- ramparts, with its head between its paws, was a snow-white Russian
- wolf-hound. The next moment they had passed beneath an arch, between
- saluting sentries, and had halted in the Palace-yard.
- </p>
- <h3>
- VIII
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>he Yard was an
- immobile sea of faces. As far as eye could reach, soldiers were drawn up
- in close formation. It was clear that this was no ceremonial parade. The
- men were in full marching order; their field-kitchens were smoking in the
- background. They had the look of troops equipped for action, expecting to
- take the offensive at any moment. This much he saw as he was hurried into
- the Palace, before the great doors clanged behind him.
- </p>
- <p>
- He found himself on the threshold of a magnificence that he had not
- imagined existed. Everywhere his eyes rested, they encountered riches
- accumulated through the centuries. Pictures and tapestries gazed down on
- him from the walls, chronicling the glory of the bygone Hapsburgs. Suits
- of mail, gold-inlaid and gem-studded, stood like knights of old, leaning
- on their swords. He followed his escort up a marble staircase, along
- endless corridors, from which doors opened into silent apartments, giving
- yet fresh vistas of royal splendors.
- </p>
- <p>
- At last, in the far distance, the passage was blocked by a gigantic figure
- that might have escaped from Grand Opera; it stood so stiff and motionless
- that he mistook it for a wax-work. It was garbed as a halberdier, in
- parti-colored hose and shining armor. Only when the eyes moved did he
- realize that he was gazing at one of the Palace-guards. When the password
- had been given, they were allowed to slip behind a curtain. In the
- ante-room he was told to wait. His escort vanished through the
- inner-doors. A moment later the doors reopened and his escort beckoned.
- </p>
- <p>
- He was aware of a blaze of light, lofty walls, tall windows, a tapestried
- room ornately furnished and a treacherously polished expanse of floor. A
- man was rising from behind an ormolu table. He was a man utterly simple
- and modern&mdash;the last man one would have expected to find in the pomp
- of medieval surroundings. His face was clean-shaven, bluff and
- wind-tanned. In his navy-blue suit he looked more like a yachtsman than
- the Governor of a State.
- </p>
- <p>
- He was approaching with his hand outstretched. &ldquo;I couldn't do less than
- receive you,&rdquo; he was saying.
- </p>
- <p>
- The words, though spoken pleasantly, sounded like a dismissal.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Perhaps your Excellency has forgotten the purpose of my errand?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not in the least. Let's sit down; we can talk more informally. The
- trouble is that you've come too late. Crises as acute as ours have a knack
- of settling themselves.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood accepted a cigarette that was proffered. He took his time while
- he lit it. &ldquo;Your solution is mustering in the Palace-yard. My
- food-supplies are no longer needed. Is that what you intend me to
- understand?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Exactly.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Your Excellency spoke just now of crises settling themselves. Did you
- mean that so many of your countrymen have died that at last there's
- sufficient food to go round?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Far from it. Our shortage is greater than ever.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I judged as much.&rdquo; Hindwood tapped his ash casually. &ldquo;I only arrived last
- night, but in the time I've been in Budapest I've seen the death-train,
- the bread-lines, the utter destitution. I've reason to believe that
- Bolshevism has collapsed and that millions of outcast Russians are
- marching. They're moving westward.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He paused, himself skeptical of the preposterous assertion he was about to
- make. Then he remembered the words he had learnt from Captain Lajos and
- repeated them like a lesson.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They're sweeping westward like a pestilence. They're loping like gaunt
- wolves. They're drawing nearer, like Death swinging his scythe. Poland
- will go down before them first. Its famished people will join them. Your
- turn will come next. The march will never halt till the empty bellies have
- been filled. They can't be filled till the whole of Europe has been
- swamped by revolution, unless&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; He paused again, waiting for
- encouragement. When the steady gray eyes still regarded him attentively,
- he continued, &ldquo;Unless I fill them.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Or unless,&rdquo; said his Excellency like a man commenting on the weather, &ldquo;I
- destroy them.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a deep quiet. So Varensky had been a true prophet. It was the
- end of the world they were discussing&mdash;the end of truth, justice,
- mercy, everything that was kind.
- </p>
- <p>
- Across the silence a bugle-call spurted like a stream of blood.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You see my position?&rdquo; his Excellency resumed reasonably. &ldquo;If I buy from
- you, I prolong the agony; worse still, I run my country further into debt.
- If I give the call to arms, many of us will die; but it's better to die
- fighting than from hunger. Besides, in the topsy-turvydom of war, who
- knows, we may find ourselves arrayed on the winning side.&rdquo; Hindwood was
- too stunned to think quickly. He was still refusing to believe the worst.
- &ldquo;I miss your point. Would your Excellency mind explaining?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My point's simple enough. The condition of Hungary and of the whole of
- Central Europe is due to two causes: the first that we made a world-war;
- the second that we lost it. The victors had a right to exact a penalty,
- but look at what they've done. We were exhausted; nevertheless, if they'd
- told us what we owed them, we'd have paid them. Instead of that, they
- cloaked revenge with idealism. They constituted themselves evangelists,
- fore-ordained to reform us. With their gospel of self-determination, they
- gave every racial hostility within our borders a voice. They carved us up
- into bickering factions, which they called nations, and bestowed on them
- the power to make themselves annoying behind new frontiers. They dipped
- their hands into our national resources and made gifts to their favorites.
- Transylvania was our granary; it went to Rumania. Bohemia was our
- coal-supply; the Czechs have it, Hungary is no longer self-supporting. We
- have our factories, but no fuel to run them; our skilled workmen, but no
- means of employing them. On every side we're fenced in by mushroom
- democracies drawing sustenance from what was once our body. The wrong they
- have done us is the motive of their hate. We European countries fall into
- three categories: the robbers, the receivers of stolen goods and the
- pillaged. There's no intercourse between us; confidence is at an end. Our
- currency has become worthless as the paper on which it's printed. There's
- no flow of trade. We each have too much of one commodity and none
- whatsoever of others&mdash;too many factories here, too much wheat there,
- too much coal in another place. We're rival storekeepers, overstocked in
- certain lines, who refuse to take down our shutters. If we could forget
- our quarrels and club together, we'd have all the means of life. We
- deserve our fate, you'll say. But no&mdash;it was the Allies' surgeons who
- carved us into impotence and on top of that imposed indemnities. We have
- nothing to eat, so we prefer to fight.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But what do you gain by it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- His Excellency smiled. &ldquo;Everything or nothing. We can't be worse off. The
- Russian menace may prove to be our salvation. The Red Terror has vanished;
- the Famine Terror has taken its place. If the starving hordes pouring
- westwards aren't halted, civilization will be blotted out by savagery. And
- who's to halt them? Not the Allies. Their common people are rebellious;
- they know that in the last war they were as much cheated and exploited as
- any of the enemy whom they routed. And not their politicians and
- profiteers; they're too bloated with their spoils. It's the story of Rome
- repeating itself. The obesity which follows victory has conquered the
- conquerors. Their fighting days are ended; they'll have to hire
- mercenaries. The only mercenaries available are the nations they have
- trampled. Hungary holds herself for hire at a price.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What price?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The restoration of her old frontiers.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood spoke eagerly. &ldquo;No one shall die. We've had enough of dying. I
- have a better solution&mdash;bread. My food-trains should be arriving
- tonight or to-morrow. I wired for them before I left Vienna. I'll build a
- wall of bread from the Black Sea to the Baltic.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And who'll pay you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No one.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The answer had been totally unexpected. His Excellency glanced sharply
- across his shoulder as though seeking advice. Hindwood followed his
- direction and saw to his amazement that the tapestry, hanging behind the
- ormolu table, was agitated. Throughout the interview an unseen audience
- had been present. His Excellency turned back.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You shall neither give nor sell. I may admire your humanity, but in
- Hungary I forbid you to build what you so picturesquely call your wall of
- bread. Austria, as I know, has already refused you; in Poland you will
- receive the same answer. Things have advanced too far for there to be any
- harm in telling you; moreover, I owe it to you to be frank. I represent a
- class which the democracy of the Allies has totally disinherited&mdash;the
- class of the landed gentry and the old nobility. However matters might
- improve in our respective countries, our lot would be in no way benefited.
- The Peace of the Allies uprooted aristocracy and planted in its stead a
- raw Republicanism. The estates of men like myself, whether Austrian,
- Polish, Russian or Hungarian, have been in our families for centuries.
- They were grants from Kings for loyalty and services. Now that our Kings
- have been sent into exile, our entire status is in jeopardy. Our rank and
- privileges have become a jest. To-morrow or the next day, where it has not
- happened already, we shall join our Kings in banishment; our wealth will
- be confiscated. The excuse of a new war is the chance of European
- Monarchists. Banded together, we may snatch back our authority and set up
- the thrones which the Allies have toppled. So long as the people starve,
- they will follow us. Monarchy is the symbol of their lost contentment;
- they'll fight for it if we make its restoration their battle-cry. But if
- once we were to allow you to give them bread&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood sprang to his feet. The time had come to play his winning-card.
- &ldquo;They would lay down their arms,&rdquo; he cried triumphantly. &ldquo;They shall lay
- them down. By to-morrow they shall be fed.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Again the tapestry rustled. For a moment it seemed that some one was about
- to disclose himself. Then all grew quiet.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I have given you your answer,&rdquo; said his Excellency.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood laughed. &ldquo;And I can force your hand. I shall appeal to the people
- over your head.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Without further ceremony, he swung round on his heel and departed.
- </p>
- <p>
- On regaining the hotel he went in search of Santa. She was not there. He
- betook himself to her room to await her coming. One hour, two hours
- slipped by. He began to be anxious. In the appearance of the room there
- was nothing to distress him; all her belongings were intact. When he made
- inquiries of the hotel staff, they professed entire ignorance of her
- whereabouts.
- </p>
- <p>
- Apart from the concern he felt for her safety, she was utterly essential
- to his plans. It was necessary that he should get in touch with Varensky;
- without Varensky and his four hundred veterans he was helpless. When his
- food-trains arrived, he would need them. He made repeated efforts to
- rediscover the mildewed barracks; every time he missed his direction. For
- fear of spies, he did not dare to ask; he remembered Santa's warning, that
- to be seen with Varensky meant death. Day faded. Darkness fell. She had
- not returned.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was nearing midnight when word reached him that the first of his trains
- was in the freight-yard. It had been given the right of way from Holland
- and had been rushed straight through under an armed guard. He was
- powerless to turn the information to account. Wearied with anxiety, he had
- begun to prepare for bed, when, without knocking, the door was burst open.
- Captain Lajos entered. His face was haggard. He was fierce and breathless.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You've heard?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I've heard nothing.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She's been captured.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;By whom?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Prince Rogovich.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood clapped his hand to his forehead. Either he or this man was mad.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's impossible. Rogovich is dead.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And I tell you he's at the Palace. He was there behind the tapestry this
- morning. She's with him now and he's torturing her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then why are you here, if you care for her so much?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That you may help me rescue her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER THE EIGHTH&mdash;THE VANISHING POINT
- </h2>
- <h3>
- I
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>PURRED into haste
- by the Captain's air of calamity. Hindwood had commenced to dress. During
- the few minutes that it took him to hurry into his clothes he thought
- furiously: with the result that by the time he was clad for departure, he
- seated himself obstinately on the edge of the bed. Meanwhile, in the
- belief that he was being followed, the Captain had led the way into the
- passage. He had now returned and stood filling the doorway, a turbulent
- figure in his gorgeous uniform of the Royal Hussars.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There's no time to lose.&rdquo; he rapped out.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood eyed him calmly. &ldquo;If you were sent to execute me, you can do it
- here as conveniently as anywhere else.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The sheer amazement which greeted this accusation seemed to disprove its
- accuracy. The Captain answered scornfully:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What devil of contrariness has put that thought into your head? If my
- errand were known, it would be I who would be executed. She's in love with
- you&mdash;that's why I sought you. It's the fact that you're my rival in
- her affections that makes you the one man in Budapest whom I can trust.
- There'll be bloodshed&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Go slower,&rdquo; Hindwood interrupted. &ldquo;Put yourself in my place. You know too
- much&mdash;far more than seems healthy. You know that this morning when I
- was with the Governor, there was an unseen listener behind the tapestry.
- You assert, that he was a man whom all the world believes to be dead. If
- you'll think back to our journey from Calais, you'll remember that the
- reason for his having been murdered formed your chief topic of
- conversation. Seeing that you know so much, you're probably aware that my
- interview with the Governor ended in a threat. To make that threat
- effective, the cooperation of the woman whom you first supposed to be my
- wife and afterwards discovered to be my secretary is absolutely necessary.
- On my return from the Palace she had vanished. Here again, you pretend to
- know more than I do; at close on midnight you come bursting into my room,
- demanding that I accompany you to her rescue.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Captain stared dully. &ldquo;Every second counts. What is it that you wish
- me to tell?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why you've hung on my trail from Calais until now.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Eh!&rdquo; His expression became embarrassed; then he raised his head with a
- fearless gesture. &ldquo;I see what you're driving at. I acknowledge that my
- movements are open to misinterpretation. But I didn't follow you; it was
- she whom I followed. As I told you in our first conversation, I was
- returning from England where I'd been sent by my Government to intercept
- Prince Rogovich with important despatches. The moment I clapped my eyes on
- your traveling companion, I recognized in her a startling resemblance; it
- was to a woman I had adored. She was far beyond me&mdash;the mistress of
- archdukes and for a brief while of an emperor. The nearest I ever came to
- touching her was when I was swept by her train at Court functions.&rdquo; He
- paused dramatically. &ldquo;During the war she was shot by the enemies of my
- country. Infamous things were said of her. If they were true, they would
- make no difference to my love. No difference, do you understand?&rdquo; Again he
- paused. &ldquo;What else?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood narrowed his eyes. &ldquo;Each time I've met you, you've harped on the
- same theme&mdash;Prince Rogovich. Up to now I've not thought it necessary
- to tell you: I knew this Prince Rogovich. Besides myself, there was
- probably only one other person who spoke with him before his end. What
- makes you so certain that it was a man, presumed to have been drowned in
- the English Channel, who spied on me this morning from behind the
- tapestry?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I was beside him. I'm his bodyguard&mdash;if you like, his secretary.
- I've just come from him. Can you have stronger proof than that?&rdquo; Suddenly
- the Captain's patience broke down. &ldquo;How many more questions? God knows
- what's happening.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood had risen. &ldquo;There are several. Why did he disappear?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He has not said.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What makes you require my help to rescue her?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He may kill me. It's not likely he'll kill both of us.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's his motive?&rdquo; Hindwood spoke more slowly. All his suspicion was
- emphasized in his words. &ldquo;What's his motive for kidnaping this woman who
- resembles&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How can I tell?&rdquo; The Captain was desperate. &ldquo;We talk and talk while time
- passes. I suppose his interest is the same in this woman as in all women.
- Perhaps he was the discarded lover of that other woman, and, like myself,
- has noticed the resemblance.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood picked up his hat. &ldquo;I'm coming.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Are you armed?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not in your sense. I shall fight with a different sort of weapon.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- II
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>t the door a
- closed vehicle was standing. To Hindwood it seemed the one that had
- flashed by him on the previous evening. He glanced between the wheels;
- there was no Russian wolf-hound. Even before he was seated, the lash had
- been laid across the horses' backs. The next moment they were galloping
- down the gloomy street. Leaning from the window, the Captain was urging
- the coachman to drive faster.
- </p>
- <p>
- When the pace had settled to a rapid trot, Hind-wood broke the silence.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You're an Hungarian officer; Prince Rogovich is a Polish statesman. You
- tell me you're his secretary. What's a Polish statesman doing in the Royal
- Palace, directing Hungary's affairs?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It isn't Hungary's affairs that he's directing; it's the campaign against
- Democracy. The present crisis has made Budapest the jumping-off point for
- the offensive which the Monarchists have been waiting to launch. The
- Monarchists are men of every country, who have sunk their nationalities
- and made a common cause.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And you&mdash;are you a Monarchist?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- His reply came muffled. &ldquo;I was. To-night I'm a traitor.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The horses, thrown sharply back on their haunches, swerved toward the
- pavement; the carriage jerked to a halt. Almost brushing the wheels in the
- narrow street, a column of soldiers shuffled past. Their rifles were slung
- at all angles. Their shoulders were bowed beneath their heavy packs. They
- crawled weakly, more like stragglers retreating than storm-troops
- advancing. Even in the darkness their bones showed pointed and their faces
- lean with famine.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Reservists,&rdquo; the Captain explained shortly. &ldquo;Mobilization has begun.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood strained through the gloom, touching his arm excitedly. &ldquo;Starving
- men being sent to kill men who are more starving. You've spoken of a woman
- you adored&mdash;a woman who was shot for hideous treacheries. Her
- treacheries were committed to prevent just such crimes as that. Don't
- interrupt me&mdash;not yet. You've expected me to believe an impossible
- story: that a man can return from the dead. If I were to tell you an
- equally improbable story, what difference would it make to your love? If I
- were to tell you that the resemblance was not mistaken and that the woman
- at the Palace is the same as she who was reported executed in the woods of
- Vincennes?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The last of the column had slouched into the blackness. The horses leapt
- forward impatiently.
- </p>
- <p>
- The question was repeated. &ldquo;What difference?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Captain's voice burst from him. &ldquo;God forgive me&mdash;none.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Neither of them dared to trust the other. Their respite was growing
- shorter. They had crossed the bridge above the Danube. In a moment the
- ascent to the Palace would commence. It was Hindwood who decided on
- boldness. If he were walking into an ambush, he could not make matters
- worse.
- </p>
- <p>
- He said, &ldquo;Weapons will be useless. Only to kill the Prince won't save her.
- If we manage to escape from the Palace, the streets are full of armed men.
- We should only rescue her to die with her. I have a plan. Do you know the
- barracks of the Russian refugees? If I were to write a note, would you
- guarantee to have it delivered?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- By the light of matches held by the Captain, he scrawled rapidly. The last
- sentence read, &ldquo;If you have not heard from me again by 2 A. M., consider
- that the worst has happened and carry out these instructions.&rdquo; He
- addressed the note to, &ldquo;<i>The Husband of Anna</i>.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Have it entrusted to a man who cannot read English.&rdquo; The Captain
- extinguished the final match.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I shall send it by the driver of this carriage.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- III
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>hey had alighted
- some distance short of the gateway where the sentries would be on guard.
- The message for Varensky had been handed over. The horses had been wheeled
- about; save for their trotting growing fainter down the slope, the night
- was without a sound. The moon shone fitfully. Stars were obscured. The
- city out of which they had climbed lay pulseless in an unillumined pit of
- blackness. The Palace, piled high above them, loomed sepulchral.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Captain groped his way beneath the wall of the ramparts, searching for
- something which at last he found. It pushed inwards at his touch. The door
- closed behind them.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the intenser darkness Hindwood stretched out his hands. They
- encountered the rough surface of clammy masonry. He was in some sort of a
- tunnel. The floor sloped gradually upwards. The atmosphere smelt dank. He
- spoke. Getting no answer, he held his breath. Going away from him he heard
- the stealthy hurrying of the Captain's footfall. Rather than be left,
- perhaps to be forgotten, he started forward at a blundering run. He came
- to steps. He was prepared to be attacked. It might be here that he would
- be hurled back. He climbed them almost on all fours, steadying himself
- with his hands. It seemed to him that he had been ascending for hours,
- when he heard footsteps returning. A match was struck; he saw the Captain
- staring down at him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We're in time.&rdquo; The match went out.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Catch hold of me. Tread softly.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- They passed through another door. The air was growing warmer. It was
- evident that they were traversing a secret passage which wound within the
- Palace walls. At a turn they heard a muttering of voices. The Captain
- whispered, &ldquo;Do nothing till I give the word.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- They approached more cautiously to where a needle of light stabbed the
- darkness. Hindwood caught the fragrance of tobacco smoke. As he stooped to
- the spy-hole, a purring voice commenced speaking almost at his elbow, &ldquo;My
- dear lady, you're mine&mdash;a fact which you don't seem to realize. I
- have only to press this button, which summons my attendants; I can snuff
- out your life with as little effort as I flick this ash.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He found himself peering into a room, furnished with oriental lavishness.
- He had a confused glimpse of beaten brass-work, shaded lamps, low tables,
- cushions piled about in place of chairs. It was a blaze of color. At the
- far end was a gilded throne and bound to it was Santa. Her hands were
- tightly corded. Her ankles were lashed so that she could not stir. Her
- face was pale as ivory. Only her eyes seemed alive; they flashed
- indomitably. Pacing up and down, never shifting his gaze from hers, was
- the black-bearded man who had disappeared from the <i>Ryndam</i>.
- </p>
- <p>
- She spoke defiantly. &ldquo;Summon your attendants. Do you think I fear death?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I know you don't, dear lady. That's why I've invented a more subtle
- revenge. If I were an ordinary man, I should detest the very sight of you;
- whereas, so magnanimous am I, that your attempt to murder me has added a
- novel piquancy to your fascination. I have been too much loved&mdash;too
- spontaneously, too adoringly. You afford me a contrast. I intend to keep
- you caged like a lioness. The hatred in your eyes will spur my affection.
- Always, even when I caress you, I shall have to be on my guard. Our
- courtship will be a perpetual adventure. The goal of desire will be
- forever out of grasp, yet forever within handstretch.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He stroked his black beard thoughtfully. &ldquo;With you I shall never know
- satiety. This continual hoping will keep me young. You, my dear, will be
- my secret source of romance. Every day I shall take you down, as one takes
- down a volume, and turn your latest pages which I alone may scan.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She strained at her bonds. &ldquo;It will be no romance.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He smiled with terrifying quietness.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Your value to me,&rdquo; he continued in his purring voice, &ldquo;is that you've
- cost me so much. Ugh! Every time I look at you I remember how it felt when
- I sank and sank. When I rose above the waves, I saw your lights, streaking
- like a golden snake into the blackness. I struck out after you hopelessly.
- I shouted. Then I found myself alone, with no one to take pity on me and
- not one chance in a million of being rescued. The millionth chance
- arrived.&rdquo; He stooped at her feet, kissing her tortured hands. &ldquo;And here we
- are met, under these auspicious circumstances, carrying on this pleasant
- conversation. What were you doing while I was drowning? Making love
- beneath the stars to your infatuated American&mdash;leaning on his arm,
- perhaps, warmly wrapped in your sables? And I was so cold! Did you give me
- a thought, I wonder?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She stared past him like a woman frozen. &ldquo;Let me know the worst.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Tapping her cheek with pretended kindness, he resumed his pacing.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why the worst? Is that flattering, when I've spoken of our courtship?
- We're well matched in wickedness, if in nothing else. You're wanted for
- the scaffold, whereas I should have been hung long ago if I'd received my
- deserts. I'd be interested to know what you'd do, if you were in my place.
- How much mercy would you show me? You must own that merely to kill a
- person who has tried to drown you is too brief a punishment. The
- punishment I've planned for you is one that'll make you pray every hour
- for extinction. For a woman who has dispensed annihilation so lavishly I
- can think of nothing more just than that, when her own life has become
- intolerable, she should be refused the boon of death.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She spoke humbly. &ldquo;There's nothing too bad that you can do to me. But I'm
- not the woman who tried to murder you. I'm changed. I've learnt something.
- I learnt it from a man.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He bowed towards her mockingly. &ldquo;Your American?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My American, who can never be mine. I've learnt that even when we don't
- acknowledge Him, there's a God in the world who acts through us. It was He
- who saved me from the woods of Vincennes. It was He who prevented you from
- drowning. He had some purpose&mdash;a divine moment for which He waited.
- That purpose has yet to be accomplished. Who are you or I&mdash;&mdash;?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I can tell you who you are,&rdquo; he snapped: &ldquo;a dancing-woman, with a price
- upon your head. As for myself,&rdquo; his pale face flooded with a strangely
- Satanic beauty, &ldquo;it would puzzle the wisest man to say who I am. To-night
- I am Prince Rogovich; tomorrow I may be Emperor. My puppets are mustering.
- By dawn they'll be marching. They're hungry; victory to them means bread.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But if one were to feed them&mdash;?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Your American again!&rdquo; He gazed down on her, showing his white teeth and
- laughing. &ldquo;What faith you have in the man! If your American is God's
- unaccomplished purpose, then God and all His angels are thwarted. The
- messenger I have sent to execute him will not fail; he has good reason to
- hate him. He's his rival for your affections. You were the bribe I offered
- him. You may rest assured the Captain's work will be done well. His turn
- comes next.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Jerking back her head, he stooped lower, drinking in her despair.
- &ldquo;Millionth chances come once, if then. Yours came at Vincennes. Cease
- hoping. Your American is&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's a lie.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood felt himself flung violently back. The wall turned inwards. There
- was a report&mdash;then silence.
- </p>
- <h3>
- IV
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>he Prince had
- pitched forward with his head in Santa's lap. His hands were clawing at
- her gown. As he struggled, he stiffened and slid back, till he lay across
- her feet, grinning up at her. The Captain, his revolver still smoking in
- his hand, threw himself to his knees, feeling for his victim's heart. He
- spoke dully.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The dream of Monarchy is ended.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The quietness was broken by a distant clamor. Momentarily it gathered
- volume and drew nearer.
- </p>
- <p>
- Throughout the Palace, which had seemed so wrapt in sleep, feet were
- running. From the Palace-yard rose the clatter of arms and the impatience
- of orders being shouted. On the door of the chamber an importunate tapping
- had commenced.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood looked up in the midst of freeing Santa. &ldquo;They'll beat in the
- panels. Find out what they want.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Captain dragged himself to the door which he did not dare to open. A
- rapid exchange of Hungarian followed. As Santa tottered to her feet with
- the last cord severed, the Captain tiptoed back.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Escape by the passage. The shot was heard. They insist on seeing Prince
- Rogovich.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To be butchered in the streets! I guess not.&rdquo; Hindwood shook his head.
- &ldquo;Escape does not lie in that direction. They shall see <i>him</i>. In ten
- minutes. At the window. Tell them.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Captain stood aghast, pointing down at the glazing eyes of the man he
- had murdered. &ldquo;They can't.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I say they can.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The answer was delivered. The tapping ceased abruptly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hang on to your nerves.&rdquo; Hindwood crouched above the body, dragging it
- into a sitting posture. &ldquo;We've exactly ten minutes to make it look like a
- man who hopes to become an emperor. The peace of the world may depend on
- it.&rdquo; He turned to the Captain. &ldquo;You who were his bodyguard, how would he
- have dressed if his ambition had been granted?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Too pale for speech, the Captain moved towards a chest; with trembling
- hands he drew forth a purple robe, ermine-lined and gold-woven with
- mythical beasts of heraldry. Dipping deeper, he laid beside it a scepter
- and an iron crown of twisted laurels.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood smiled grimly. &ldquo;So the scene had been rehearsed! How do these
- things go? You must help me put them on him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- When the Prince had been arrayed, &ldquo;Now the throne,&rdquo; he ordered. &ldquo;It'll
- take the three of us to move it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The gilded throne had been hauled from its alcove, so as to face the
- window. The dead man, in the tinsel of his dreams, had been seated on it.
- He was bound, to prevent him from lolling&mdash;bound with the cords with
- which he himself had secured Santa. His gold-encrusted robe was spread
- about him. Across his knees, with his right hand resting on it, was the
- scepter. On his head was the iron crown of laurels.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The lamps! Place them at his feet. Switch on all the lights, then
- vanish.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The curtains were flung back. A dazzling shaft pierced the outer darkness.
- There was a breathless silence as of worship; a superstitious rustling; a
- deafening acclamation, which echoed and roared about the Palace-yard.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0006" id="linkimage-0006"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0338.jpg" alt="0338m " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0338.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- It continued unabated for a full five minutes. It sagged and sank. Again
- it mounted. Then it paused expectant. It was for all the world like a
- triumph at the opera, when a singer only bows and an encore is demanded.
- It recommenced. This time there was a note of anger.
- </p>
- <p>
- The dead man grinned down at the applauding mob. He gave no sign to these
- men, prepared to die for him. Slowly it seemed to dawn on them that he did
- not care&mdash;that he had never cared for their wounds and hunger; that
- for men of his sort they were only beasts; that it made no difference
- whether they were conquered or victorious; he would sit there as all the
- kings and emperors before him, secure and immobile, sneering at their
- sacrifices and coining their sufferings into profit.
- </p>
- <p>
- They found contempt in his vacant stare; cruelty in his marble hands that
- clutched the scepter. Gesticulating and cursing, they hurled reproaches at
- him. They trampled the officers who tried to quell them. Shots were
- exchanged. Pandemonium was commencing.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood consulted his watch. It lacked but a few minutes till two
- o'clock. If he could hold the garrison in confusion, Varensky would have
- time to seize his chance.
- </p>
- <p>
- He turned to the Captain behind the curtain where they watched. &ldquo;What is
- it they want?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It was some acknowledgment at first; then a speech; now it's bread. Can't
- you hear them, 'Bread! Bread! Or we do not march.'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At that moment the hammering on the outer door re-started. Hindwood seized
- the Captain's arm. &ldquo;You must speak to them; they wouldn't understand me.
- You're in uniform. There's Santa. If you don't all is lost.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What shall I tell them?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Anything. Speak to them as the mouthpiece of Prince Rogovich. Say there's
- food in the freight-yards&mdash;two train-loads of it&mdash;and more
- arriving; that soon the warehouses of Budapest will be bulging.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Captain stepped forward, an heroic figure. Just as he appeared in the
- oblong of the window&mdash;whether it was the sight of his uniform that
- provoked the storm was not certain&mdash;a volley of bullets shattered the
- glass. He clapped his hand to his forehead. There was a second volley. The
- room was plunged in darkness. Hindwood darted forward. The pounding on the
- outer-door grew frantic. In the Palace-yard there was the silence of
- horror.
- </p>
- <p>
- Released by the knife of flying lead, the body of the Prince had doubled
- forward, as though to peer down at the man who had betrayed him. The
- Captain was beyond all help.
- </p>
- <p>
- As Hindwood leapt back in search of Santa, the door went down with a
- crash. In a second the darkness was filled to overflowing&mdash;halberdiers,
- Palace servants, wild-eyed officials. In the confusion he caught her hand
- and escaped unnoticed through the pressing throng. As they hurried through
- salons hung with priceless treasures, looting had started. The first of
- the mob were ruthlessly at work. At the foot of the marble staircase he
- glanced at his watch. &ldquo;It's exactly two o'clock,&rdquo; he murmured.
- </p>
- <h3>
- V
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>hey had passed
- beneath the gateway where sentries should have challenged. Their posts
- were deserted. As they struck the road, descending beneath the ramparts,
- Santa questioned, &ldquo;Why did you say, 'It's exactly two o'clock'?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Because of a note I sent Varensky.&rdquo; He changed the subject. &ldquo;How were you
- captured?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She hesitated. &ldquo;It was after we'd quarreled. I was afraid I'd lost you. A
- messenger arrived, saying you were with the Governor and wanted me. It was
- a lie; the person who wanted me was Prince Rogovich.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then Lajos betrayed you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No. He knew nothing of what happened on the <i>Ryndam</i>. He was
- infatuated with me and must have talked.&rdquo; She clutched his arm. &ldquo;You're
- putting me off. You said so strangely, 'It's exactly two o'clock.' What
- was in your note to Varensky?&rdquo; For answer he halted and pointed.
- </p>
- <p>
- Far below in the gulf of blackness, where a moment ago there had seemed to
- be nothing, life had begun to quicken. In the flash of multitudinous
- street-lamps, a city was being born. It kindled in vivid strokes, like
- veins of fire etched on the pavement of the night. As though an artist
- were completing his design, ten thousand windows opened their pin-point
- eyes, filling in blank spaces with rapid specks of gold. Seen from such a
- height, the effect was in miniature. The very sounds which rose up were
- little. At first they were no more than a sustained humming, as when a
- hive is about to swarm. They swelled to a melodious muttering. Then, with
- a rush of ecstasy, the storm of joy broke; the air pulsated with the
- maddening clash of chimes.
- </p>
- <p>
- She was clinging to him. &ldquo;What is it? Is it the thing for which we've
- hoped?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He glanced back across his shoulder at the huge pile, towering on the rock
- above him. Those madmen up there, destroying and pillaging, had they time
- to hear it? The Palace was glowing like a furnace. As he watched, a column
- of flame shot tall towards the sky.
- </p>
- <p>
- Seizing her hand, he broke into a run, making all the haste he could down
- the steep decline. Behind them the flames crept like serpents, licking the
- clouds and mounting higher. The heat was like the breath of a pursuer.
- Night had become vivid as day. There was no concealment. The crest of the
- ramparts was a gigantic torch. The Danube far below was stained red as
- wine. Their very shadows were lurid. And still the bells across the river
- pealed out their joy.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a galloping. Riderless horses, broken loose from the stables,
- thundered by. Then an automobile, driven by a man with a seared and
- wounded face. Others followed. The crowd on foot, fleeing from its
- handiwork, was not far behind. As an empty car, with an officer at the
- wheel, slowed down at a hairpin bend, Santa and he leapt aboard.
- </p>
- <p>
- The danger was outdistanced. They had crossed the Danube. They were
- scarcely likely now to be implicated in what had happened to Prince
- Rogo-vich. But they were still at the mercy of their reckless driver. In
- his panic he had not once looked around; he was unaware that he carried
- passengers. Hindwood knew very clearly where he wanted to go; it was
- probably the last place to which he would be taken. The streets of Pest
- near the river were solitary, but somewhere the mob was gathering. It
- might prove awkward to be found in the company of a uniformed Monarchist
- who was escaping.
- </p>
- <p>
- Having formulated his plan, he whispered it to Santa. &ldquo;While I tackle him,
- you grasp the wheel.&rdquo; Leaning forward, he flung his arm about the man's
- neck, jerking him backwards. The car swerved and mounted the pavement.
- Santa turned it into the road again. Taken by surprise, the man offered
- small resistance; the struggle was short. Hindwood toppled him out,
- climbed into the front seat and took his place.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The station. Where is it?&rdquo; he asked breathlessly. She glanced at him with
- a revival of her old suspicion. &ldquo;We're not leaving. Why the station?&rdquo; He
- could have laughed. &ldquo;Still the old, distrustful Santa! Little fool&mdash;the
- food-trains.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The first streets which they traversed were deserted; yet lamps were
- lighted and the air was clamorous with belfry-music. As they drew further
- into the city, they shot past groups and isolated individuals, crawling in
- the same direction. For the most part they were the kind of persons Santa
- had offered to show him that morning&mdash;people in rags or entirely
- stark, who hobbled from weakness or dragged themselves on all fours like
- dogs. It was as though the dead were rising from their graves to follow
- the Pied Piper of the Resurrection.
- </p>
- <p>
- They came to a square, where soldiers had been concentrated. Their packs
- and rifles littered the open space; the soldiers themselves had vanished.
- </p>
- <p>
- The traffic grew dense. It was all on foot. Hind-wood turned to Santa, &ldquo;We
- shall make better time if we leave the car.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- As they mingled with the crowd, he had a nightmare sensation of unreality.
- He had never rubbed shoulders with so many human beings so nearly naked.
- They themselves seemed to regard their conditions as normal. It was he who
- was odd. Their legs were mere poles; their arms laths. Their heads were
- misshapen like deflated footballs. With panting persistence they padded
- forward, too frail to be anything but orderly. The air was full of an
- earthy fragrance. Their bodies were clammy to the touch. He could push
- them aside like shadows. The hair was brittle as withered moss.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was the fashionable quarter of Budapest. Great arc-lights shone down on
- this flowing river of gray flesh. Behind plate-glass windows luxuries were
- displayed for the temptation of the bargain-snatching foreigner&mdash;feathers
- and furs, jewels and laces. Past them, with eyes enfevered by starvation,
- stole the noiseless populace. There was a woman whose sole clothing was a
- rag about her neck; she continued to live in Hindwood's imagination long
- after the sight of her was gone. And still, with thunderous merriment, the
- bells above the city pealed on.
- </p>
- <p>
- At a turn they came to the station. Further progress was blocked. Exerting
- his strength against the weakness of the mob, Hindwood edged his way
- forward. When he could go no farther, he swung round on Santa. &ldquo;Tell them
- that I own the food-trains and that I'm going to get them bread.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She had no sooner uttered her translation than a lane was cleared. As he
- passed, he was aware that parched lips stooped to kiss his hands, his
- garments, the very ground that he trod. He shuddered. The indecent
- self-abasement of such necessity inflamed his indignation. Ahead a cordon
- was drawn across the road. It was composed of Russian refugees. He
- recognized them by their baggy blouses and by the short-haired women of
- the Battalions of Death. From the tail of a wagon an orator was
- speechifying. His head was peaked like a dunce's cap. Beside him stood a
- woman, white as a lily with hair the color of raw gold.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood caught Santa's arm. &ldquo;For heaven's sake, what's he saying?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What he always says on such occasions. He's preaching his gospel of
- non-resistance and promising to die for them.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Who cares for whom he dies, when bellies are empty and bodies are naked?
- Tell them I'll clothe them and give them bread.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- As she translated what he had said, a cry went up which drowned Varensky.
- He found himself in the open space, clambering up to the wagon and
- dragging Santa up beside him. There was a deep silence.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Tell them,&rdquo; he commanded, &ldquo;that starvation is ended. I'll feed them on
- one condition: that they refuse to fight. Tell them I'll drive the Russian
- menace back without a single shot being fired. Tell them that I promise,
- on my honor as an American, to feed them all. Though food-trains are
- exhausted to-night, more will arrive to-morrow. More and more.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He paused, blinded with emotion at sight of the forest of thin hands
- strained up to him. Shooting out his fist tremendously, he threatened.
- &ldquo;And tell them that I won't feed a jack one of them, if there's another
- man, woman or child slaughtered, or a hint of rioting.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- VI
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">H</span>e had kept his
- word; as far as Hungary was concerned, every living soul had been
- nourished. For seven days and nights, sleeping only at odd intervals, he
- had sat in the barracks of the Russian refugees with the map of Europe
- staring down on him from the wall. Wherever a food-train had been
- despatched, the place had been marked by a little red flag. He had had a
- wireless-apparatus installed; from that bare room, heavy with mildew, he
- had sent out his S. O. S. calls to humanity. He had begged, threatened,
- argued, commanded until at last he knew that he had won his cause. What he
- did not know was that his own example had proved more convincing than many
- words. The simple drama of his personal conversion&mdash;that he should be
- giving what he had come to sell&mdash;had stirred men's consciences. It
- had given him the right to talk. Where once troops would have been
- hurried, food was being pushed forward. It was an experiment alarmingly
- novel; but his phrase caught on, &ldquo;The Barricade of Bread.&rdquo; It had been
- flashed across five continents. Wherever the printed word had power, it
- had kindled men's imaginations. By a world war-wrecked, confronted by yet
- another war, it had been hailed as the strategy that would end all wars.
- </p>
- <p>
- Loaf by loaf, sack by sack the barricade was rising. Those little red
- flags, pinned on the map, marked its progress. It was deepening and
- spreading in a flanking movement, just as formerly army corps had massed
- for offensives. Soon the barricade would be complete; it would stretch in
- an unbroken line from the Dardanelles to the Baltic. There would be
- fighting, probably to the east of Poland, where the Monarchists were
- marching in a forlorn attempt to defeat the famished hordes. That could
- not be prevented. But by the time the outcasts struck his main defense, he
- would be in a position to halt them.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was only now, when the situation was in hand, that he had leisure to
- realize what he had been doing. He was filled with depression in his hour
- of triumph. It was long past midnight. He felt gray and spent. The
- barracks were as quiet as a morgue. He wondered why; they had been so
- crowded with derelicts of valiant armies, men and girls, who, having
- failed to save Russia with the rifle, had been preparing to rescue her
- with knowledge. Then he recalled. He had sent them all away. They had been
- the new kind of soldier, by whose sacrifice his ideal had conquered. He
- saw again their uplifted faces, as he had summoned them one by one and
- ordered them on their perilous journeys. Wherever a red flag was pinned on
- the map, one of those derelicts was in command. The &ldquo;Little Grandmother,&rdquo;
- she had been the last. Beside himself and his wireless operators, there
- could be no one left except Varensky, Santa and Anna.
- </p>
- <p>
- He glanced at the window. It was a square of jet. During the early days
- and nights it had framed a heart of fire, where the Palace had smouldered
- on the heights of Buda. Like a subsided volcano, the Palace had burned
- itself out. It was as though the fury of his life were ended. He bowed his
- head in his arms, striving to reconjure what had happened.
- </p>
- <p>
- Flitting about the room, with his strangely catlike tread, Varensky had
- been forever entering and exiting. He had been his second self, silent and
- agile, anticipating his plans without a word spoken. It was Varensky who
- had marshaled his exiled compatriots and placed their services at his
- disposal. It was Varensky who had warned him of the strategic points where
- the barricade must be strengthened. It had been always Varensky to whom he
- had turned for advice and courage when things were darkest. Without
- Varensky he could have accomplished nothing. And yet it was Varensky whom
- he had dethroned. This should have been his moment. He had shouted him
- down, snatched control from him and earned the credit. The self-effacement
- of one whom he had despised as an egoist made him humble. In a rush of
- tenderness he discovered that he loved him. The peaked head was forgotten,
- and the face scared white as if it had seen a ghost. The timidity of his
- appearance no longer counted; the thing that mattered was the spirit,
- resolute and shining as a sword, that hid within the scabbard of the
- grotesque body.
- </p>
- <p>
- And now that he remembered, there had been grief in his green eyes&mdash;the
- grief of a man who had been cheated. Once again Varensky had drawn him
- near to Calvary; the chance to die had been stolen from him.
- </p>
- <p>
- And Anna&mdash;he could not guess how she felt or what she thought. In all
- those seven days and nights it seemed as though she had never looked at
- him. She had moved about him like a nun, ministering to his wants with her
- gaze averted. Vaguely he was aware that to him she was not what she
- appeared to others. The old legend had been revived; again, as in St.
- Petersburg after the fall of Czardom, wherever she passed people knelt. To
- him she was no saint; his desire was too human.
- </p>
- <p>
- Watching the three of them with sphinxlike wisdom, there had been Santa,
- her womanhood clamorous and ignored. What had she made of it? Had she
- found material for humor in their temporary heroism?
- </p>
- <p>
- And so he came back to his first question&mdash;what had he been doing? In
- constructing the barricade of bread, he had been preventing Varensky from
- dying; in preventing Varensky from dying, he had been raising a barricade
- between himself and Anna. Having bankrupted his pocket, he had bankrupted
- his heart. In spite of warnings, he had gone in search of the vanishing
- point, where the parallel rails of possibility and desire seem to join&mdash;the
- point at which, to quote Varensky's words, &ldquo;The safety of the journey
- ends.&rdquo; It was the goal of every man who wrecks himself in the hope that he
- may save a world.
- </p>
- <p>
- How long had he been sitting there brooding? He was cold. The square of
- window had turned from jet to gray. Furtively he glanced behind him. Anna
- was gazing down on him.
- </p>
- <h3>
- VII
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>he was dressed for
- a journey, muffled in furs. Her left hand was gloved; her right extended.
- His heart turned coward. Surely he had earned his reward. He commenced to
- rise, pushing back his chair. The steady blueness of her eyes held him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good-by,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I should have left without saying good-by, if I had
- not known I could trust you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But you can trust me. It's because you can trust me that you must stay.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I can't stay.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why not?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We made a bargain. Do you remember? That until we were free, we would
- play the game by him&mdash;that we would even guard him against himself.
- You told me once, 'I wouldn't be friends with a woman who couldn't be
- loyal.' I'm trying to be loyal.&rdquo; She caught her breath. &ldquo;He's gone.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Varensky?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She nodded.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Where?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To die for us.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- In the silence that followed, the heat of his temptation vanished. He felt
- accused by the quixotic magnanimity of this strange creature, half
- prophet, half charlatan, whose wife he had coveted.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Once I'd have been glad that he should die,&rdquo; he confessed slowly, &ldquo;but
- not now. Food has done far more than his sacrifice could have
- accomplished. Why should he be determined to die now?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She trusted herself to come closer, standing over him and giving him her
- hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Perhaps for our sakes. Perhaps for his own. Perhaps in the hope that his
- appearance may put a stop to what's left of the fighting. There was a
- wireless last night which he kept to himself. It said that skirmishing was
- developing between the Poles and the Russian refugees in the No Man's Land
- beyond Kovel. It was after he had read it that he went out. I waited for
- him to return&mdash;when I guessed. We've all misjudged him. Perhaps we're
- still misjudging him. Who can say why he's gone? There's nothing gained by
- attributing motives. He wants to give his life. He's promised he would so
- often; always he's been thwarted. He owes it to his honor. Kovel may be
- the world's last battle&mdash;his final chance.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- In the bare room the dawn was spreading. Hind-wood rose from his chair,
- stretching his cramped body and gazing at the map with its safe red line
- of flags.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Our work is ended,&rdquo; he said quietly. &ldquo;Within the next few hours stronger
- men will be here to take control&mdash;a commission of the best brains,
- picked from all the nations. God chose us to be His stopgap.&rdquo; He paused.
- &ldquo;After having been His instruments in averting a world-catastrophe to
- speak of things personal seems paltry. And yet my love for you fills all
- my thoughts. I leave Budapest a bankrupt. I shall have to start life
- afresh. Your love is literally my sole possession and I have no right to
- it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She was backing towards the door, retreating from him. He stepped over to
- the window, widening the distance that separated them.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you feel more secure now? You needn't fear me,&rdquo; he reproached her.
- &ldquo;Was it because I spoke of our love? We have no reason to be ashamed of
- it. We've played fair. How could we do less when Varensky has played so
- fair by us? It's for our sakes he's gone, that he may free us.&rdquo; Then,
- &ldquo;You're setting out alone on a journey. Would you mind telling me its
- object?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You know. To prevent him. To catch up with him. To bring him back.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And if he refuses?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To die with him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He smiled whimsically. &ldquo;The vanishing point! For you, with your high
- standard of honor, if you were to overtake it, your problem would be
- solved. But suppose the vanishing point eludes you. Suppose your husband
- agrees to live, have you thought of that? It means that you and I will
- never&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- With an imploring gesture she cut him short. &ldquo;It means that you and I will
- never learn to despise each other. It means that I shall always remember
- you at your greatest, as I've seen you in the last seven days,
- self-sacrificing, brave and noble&mdash;so self-forgetting that you could
- even forget the woman you adored.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He sank his head. In the gray square of window he looked old and haggard.
- &ldquo;It's true, and yet it's incredible: if we were to allow him to die, we
- should despise each other. In the long years&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; He glanced up.
- &ldquo;Though you were willing to let him and I won you, do you think I would
- want you? Not that way. I'd want you so little that I'm coming with you to
- help you to prevent him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- VIII
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">L</span>ong lines of
- neglected tillage! Deserted farms! Broken fences! A gray expanse of sky!
- Knots of peasants trekking always westward! Panting cattle, nearing the
- exhaustion point! Creaking carts! Dawn growing whiter; day growing golden;
- sunlight fading; night becoming flecked with stars! Always the rhythm of
- the engine, the plunging into the distance, the impatient urgency to
- thrust forward!
- </p>
- <p>
- It had been useless to think of traveling by trains; the railways were too
- congested. Moreover, they had strongly suspected that he had set out by
- car. If the No Man's Land beyond Kovel were his destination, then Cracow
- would lie midway on his journey. Cracow was one of the strong-points in
- the barricade, where a clump of red flags was flying. All the traffic was
- escaping from the danger. If he had chosen that route, there would be
- definite news of him. Any one traveling towards the danger could not help
- but be remarked.
- </p>
- <p>
- As they inquired of fugitives, they discovered that two cars were ahead of
- them. The first contained a madman, with eyes green as emeralds and a face
- white and set as a mask; the second, a dark-haired woman, beautiful as a
- fallen angel. The woman seemed to be in pursuit of the man. They were,
- perhaps, thirty miles apart. They had thundered by into the imperiled
- future as though the self-same devil rode behind them.
- </p>
- <p>
- What could be Santa's purpose? Anna and he argued the point, sometimes
- aloud, more often in their unuttered thoughts. All their old doubts
- concerning her rose up rampant. Was she a Bolshevist agent, hurrying back
- to sell the last of her secrets? Was her purpose to save or to betray
- Varensky?
- </p>
- <p>
- What had she ever wanted from him? Had she found a quality in his
- self-destroying idealism that had called forth her pitying worship? In her
- own dark way had she enshrined him in a mysterious corner of her heart?
- Had she recognized in him a childlike weakness that had compelled her
- protection? Had he stood in the twilight of her life for a door that might
- open into ultimate redemption?
- </p>
- <p>
- Or was it loneliness that had made her follow him&mdash;the sure knowledge
- that everything was ended? In those seven days, whilst they had made
- history together, had she seen something that had tortured her? That she
- was not wanted, as he was not wanted? Was it despair that had beckoned her
- into the chaos through which he hurried to destruction?
- </p>
- <p>
- When they reached Cracow it was to find the city deserted. The streets by
- which they entered were deathly silent; the doors wide open; the pavements
- strewn with furniture which owners had lacked time to rescue. Here and
- there were carts which had collapsed, and thin horses which had died in
- harness. Even cats and dogs had departed. Terror peered from behind the
- blankness of windows. It was like a city pillaged.
- </p>
- <p>
- Whatever optimisms they had entertained, they knew for certain now that
- war had started. Out of sight, across gray wastes to the eastward, gray
- ranks of skeletons, armed with nothing but disease, were approaching. The
- dread they inspired was so great that outcasts, only a shade less
- starving, had stampeded before them.
- </p>
- <p>
- At a turn they came to the railroad. Here their eyes met a different
- spectacle. From a freight-train on a siding men, white to the eyes with
- dust, were rolling barrels. They were volunteers recruited from the safer
- nations&mdash;the first of the new kind of army. They were piling flour
- where once they would have been stacking shells. Hindwood recognized the
- barrels' markings. His sense of tragedy lightened. Laughing down into his
- companion's eyes, he shouted, &ldquo;Mine! Look, Anna. Mine that I meant to
- sell!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A short-haired girl, in the tattered uniform of the Battalion of Death,
- was in charge. Coming up to the car, she saluted smartly. Yes, she had
- seen Varensky. It was three hours since he had passed. He had filled up
- with water and gasolene, gasolene having arrived on the supply-train. He
- had left for Brest-Litovsk, stating that his object was to gain a respite
- for the barricade-builders. He proposed to put himself at the head of the
- famine-march and to check the rapidity of its advance. After his
- departure, the other had panted up&mdash;the dark-haired woman&mdash;only
- an hour behind him.
- </p>
- <p>
- Wasting no time in conversation, Hindwood imitated Varensky's example. He
- was dazed for want of sleep&mdash;almost nodding. But the man he had to
- save was ahead of him. Having filled his tanks and made sure of his
- engine, he started forward.
- </p>
- <p>
- They were throbbing through empty streets again, when a strange sound
- thrilled the silence&mdash;a trumpet-call, which rang out sharply across
- the housetops and broke off suddenly.
- </p>
- <p>
- Had they come? He slowed down, prepared to wheel about.
- </p>
- <p>
- Seeing what was in his thoughts, Anna rested her hand on his arm
- reassuringly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's from the tower of St. Mary's. How often I've heard it! Ah, there it
- is again!&rdquo; Gazing up and bending forward, she listened. Then she spoke, as
- though addressing some one who walked above the city, &ldquo;Brave fellow!
- Though they've all deserted, you've stayed on.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To whom are you talking?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She explained quickly. Centuries ago the Church of St. Mary's had been an
- outpost of Christendom, used as a watch-tower against the invading Tartar;
- a soldier had been kept continually stationed there to give warning on a
- trumpet of the first approach of danger. In the fourteenth century, whilst
- arousing the city, the trumpeter had been struck in the throat by an
- arrow. His call had faltered, rallied and sunk. With his dying breath he
- had sounded a final blast, which had broken off short. The broken call had
- saved Cracow. Ever since, to commemorate his faithfulness, there had never
- been an hour, day or night, when his broken trumpet-call, ending abruptly
- in an abyss of silence, had not been sounded from the tower.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood leant across the wheel, staring dreamily before him. &ldquo;It might
- have been his voice&mdash;Varen-sky's. He's like that&mdash;a dying
- trumpeter, sounding a last warning. I almost believe in him. It's too late&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It may not be,&rdquo; she whispered.
- </p>
- <p>
- Night was falling. Straining his eyes to keep awake, he drove impetuously
- on, forcing a path through the opposing shadows.
- </p>
- <h3>
- IX
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">H</span>ow they had
- arrived it would have puzzled him to tell. He had vague memories of
- sunsets and dawns; of times when sleep had drugged him; of unrefreshed
- awakenings.
- </p>
- <p>
- They had reached Brest-Litovsk, the city fatal to the Russians, which the
- Czar had always superstitiously avoided. Like Cracow, it was deserted.
- Unlike Cracow, it was a pile of ruins. Seven times in seven years it had
- been bombarded and captured. Beneath an iron sky, it listened for the
- tramp of the latest conqueror.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood drew forth his map. It was over a hundred versts to Kovel; he
- doubted whether his gasolene would take him. There was nowhere where he
- could replenish his supply. Before him lay a No Man's Land from which
- everything had perished&mdash;behind a silence from which everything had
- escaped. To continue his pursuit was folly. There was no promise of
- success to allure him; of Varensky and Santa he had lost all trace. He
- glanced at his drowsing companion; he had pledged his word to her.
- Reluctantly he climbed into his seat and started forward.
- </p>
- <p>
- The suicidal stupidity of war&mdash;that was the thought that absorbed
- him. Every sight that his eyes encountered emphasized its madness. Yet
- beyond the horizon, where distance seemed to terminate, men were killing
- one another. He understood at last Varensky's passion to die. When all
- else had failed, to offer one's body was the only protest.
- </p>
- <p>
- The landscape was growing featureless. Rivers had overflowed. The labor of
- centuries was sinking beneath morass. Villages and post-houses had been
- destroyed; woods torn by shell-fire. Stationed along the route, like buoys
- guarding a channel, black and white verst-poles gleamed monotonously. On
- either side stretched a never-ending graveyard, marked by rough crosses or
- inverted rifles. Down this pitiless straight road had marched the seven
- invasions&mdash;Russian, German, Polish, Bolshevist, each with a dream of
- glory in its eyes. With the victory lost and the dream forgotten, they
- moldered companionably.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was half-way to Kovel that he first noticed what was happening; behind
- scrub and fallen trees it had probably been happening for some time. It
- was a gray wolf, grown bold, which first drew his attention. Like a dog,
- seeking its master, it came trotting down the road. After that they came
- in packs&mdash;not only wolves, but every other kind of untamed animal. It
- was as though they were fleeing before a drive&mdash;the tremendous drive
- of a famished nation. In their dread they seemed to have postponed their
- right to prey. Hunter and quarry journeyed side by side, their enmities in
- abeyance in their common terror of the enmity which stalked behind.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hindwood had grown used to the spectacle, when suddenly he was startled by
- another sight&mdash;a child. A child so matted and neglected, that he
- scarcely recognized him as human. His feet were swathed in balls of rags.
- He limped painfully, walking among the animals and staring straight before
- him. At shortening intervals others followed, till at last they came in
- crowds.
- </p>
- <p>
- Beyond Kovel, where commences the crumbling trench-system in which the
- vanished Russo-German armies remained locked for so many years, he came
- across his first trace of Varensky&mdash;an abandoned car with a broken
- axle. Varensky must be on foot, not far ahead. He had passed another mile
- when his own car halted; the gasolene had given out. With the ceasing of
- the engine he caught another sound&mdash;the popping of rifle-fire. It
- dawned on him that the trenches of the dead battlefield were again
- inhabited. He had been driving straight into the heart of the fighting.
- </p>
- <p>
- The firing was drawing nearer. The Monarchists were falling back. A bullet
- whizzed over his head and pinged into a mass of rusted wire.
- </p>
- <p>
- All that followed happened in a flash. He had seized Anna and rushed with
- her to cover. From where he watched, he could see soldiers retreating, and
- the tops of steel helmets bobbing above the trenches. Of the advancing
- host he could see nothing.
- </p>
- <p>
- Suddenly from behind a mound, a man with a peaked head sprang up. He was
- dressed as a civilian. He commenced to run up the road towards the enemy,
- waving something white. Immediately, from another place of hiding, a woman
- leapt up and followed. It was as though on the instant truce had been
- declared; a tranquillity of amazement settled down.
- </p>
- <p>
- As he reached what appeared to be No Man's Land, he drew himself erect,
- with expanded chest, and commenced to sweep his arms in the gestures of
- oratory. It was dumb show; it was impossible to hear what was being said.
- While he was speaking, the woman caught up with him and flung herself upon
- him, making a shield of her body.
- </p>
- <p>
- Curiosity satisfied, both sides fired. The man and woman crumpled.
- Fighting recommenced.
- </p>
- <h3>
- THE END
- </h3>
- <div style="height: 6em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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