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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Inn at the Red Oak, by Latta Griswold
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere 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
+
+
+Title: The Inn at the Red Oak
+
+Author: Latta Griswold
+
+Posting Date: December 8, 2011 [EBook #9856]
+Release Date: February, 2006
+First Posted: October 24, 2003
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE INN AT THE RED OAK ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Mary Meehan, David Garcia
+and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE INN AT THE RED OAK
+
+BY LATTA GRISWOLD
+
+1917
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: "It's a treasure right enough!" cried Dan.]
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+PART I
+THE OLD MARQUIS
+
+I THE MARQUIS ARRIVES AT THE INN
+
+II THE LION'S EYE
+
+III THE MARQUIS AT NIGHT
+
+IV THE OAK PARLOUR
+
+V THE WALK THROUGH THE WOODS
+
+
+PART II
+THE TORN SCRAP OF PAPER
+
+VI THE HALF OF AN OLD SCRAP OF PAPER
+
+VII A DISAPPEARANCE
+
+VIII GREEN LIGHTS
+
+IX RECOLLECTIONS OF A FRENCH EXILE
+
+X MIDNIGHT VIGILS
+
+
+PART III
+THE SCHOONER IN THE COVE
+
+XI THE SOUTHERN CROSS
+
+XII TOM TURNS THE TABLES
+
+XIII MADAME DE LA FONTAINE
+
+XIV IN THE FOG
+
+XV NANCY
+
+XVI MADAME AT THE INN
+
+XVII THE MARQUIS LEAVES THE INN
+
+
+PART IV
+THE ATTACK ON THE INN
+
+XVIII THE AVENUE OF MAPLES
+
+XIX THE ATTACK
+
+XX THE OAK PARLOUR
+
+XXI THE TREASURE
+
+
+
+
+The Inn at the Red Oak
+
+
+
+
+PART I
+
+THE OLD MARQUIS
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+THE MARQUIS ARRIVES AT THE INN
+
+
+By the end of the second decade of the last century Monday Port had
+passed the height of prosperity as one of the principal depots for the
+West Indian trade. The shipping was rapidly being transferred to New York
+and Boston, and the old families of the Port, having made their fortunes,
+in rum and tobacco as often as not, were either moving away to follow the
+trade or had acquiesced in the changed conditions and were settling down
+to enjoy the fruit of their labours. The harbour now was frequently
+deserted, except for an occasional coastwise trader; the streets began to
+wear that melancholy aspect of a town whose good days are more a memory
+than a present reality; and the old stage roads to Coventry and Perth
+Anhault were no longer the arteries of travel they once had been.
+
+To the east of Monday Port, across Deal Great Water, an estuary of the
+sea that expanded almost to the dignity of a lake, lay a pleasant rolling
+wooded country known in Caesarea as Deal. It boasted no village, scarcely
+a hamlet. Dr. Jeremiah Watson, a famous pedagogue and a graduate of
+Kingsbridge, had started his modest establishment for "the education of
+the sons of gentlemen" on Deal Hill; there were half-a-dozen prospering
+farms, Squire Pembroke's Red Farm and Judge Meath's curiously lonely but
+beautiful House on the Dunes among them; a little Episcopalian chapel on
+the shores of the Strathsey river, a group of houses at the cross roads
+north of Level's Woods, and the Inn at the Red Oak,--and that was all.
+
+In its day this inn had been a famous hostelry, much more popular with
+travellers than the ill-kept provincial hotels in Monday Port; but now
+for a long time it had scarcely provided a livelihood for old Mrs. Frost,
+widow of the famous Peter who for so many years had been its popular
+host. No one knew when the house had been built; though there was an old
+corner stone on which local antiquarians professed to decipher the
+figures "1693," and that year was assigned by tradition as the date of
+its foundation.
+
+It was a long crazy building, with a great sloping roof, a wide porch
+running its entire length, and attached to its sides and rear in all
+sorts of unexpected ways and places were numerous out houses and offices.
+Behind its high brick chimneys rose the thick growth of Lovel's Woods,
+crowning the ridge that ran between Beaver Pond and the Strathsey river
+to the sea. The house faced southwards, and from the cobbled court before
+it meadow and woodland sloped to the beaches and the long line of sand
+dunes that straggled out and lost themselves in Strathsey Neck. To the
+east lay marshes and the dunes and beyond them the Strathsey, two miles
+wide where its waters met those of the Atlantic; west lay the great
+curve, known as the Second Beach, the blue surface of Deal Bay, and a
+line of rocky shore, three miles in length, terminated by Rough Point,
+near which began the out-lying houses of Monday Port.
+
+The old hostelry took its name from a giant oak which grew at its
+doorstep just to one side of the maple-lined driveway that led down to
+the Port Road, a hundred yards or so beyond. This enormous tree spread
+its branches over the entire width and half the length of the roof.
+Ordinarily, of course, its foliage was as green as the leaves on the
+maples of the avenue or on the neighbouring elms, and the name of the Inn
+might have seemed to the summer or winter traveller an odd misnomer; but
+in autumn when the frost came early and the great mass of green flushed
+to a deep crimson it could not have been known more appropriately than as
+the Inn at the Red Oak.
+
+It was a solidly-built house, such as even in the early part of the
+nineteenth century men were complaining they could no longer obtain;
+built to weather centuries of biting southeasters, and--the legend
+ran--to afford protection in its early days against Indians. At the time
+of the Revolution it had been barricaded, pierced with portholes, and had
+served, like innumerable other houses from Virginia to Massachusetts, as
+Washington's headquarters. When Tom Pembroke knew it best, its old age
+and decay had well set in.
+
+Pembroke was the son of the neighbouring squire, whose house, known as
+the Red Farm, lay In the little valley on the other side of the Woods at
+the head of Beaver Pond. From the time he had been able to thread his way
+across the woodland by its devious paths--Tom had been at the Inn almost
+every day to play with Dan Frost, the landlord's son. They had played in
+the stables, then stocked with a score of horses, where now there were
+only two or three; in the great haymows of the old barn in the clearing
+back of the Inn; in the ramshackle garret under that amazing roof; or,
+best of all, in the abandoned bowling-alley, where they rolled
+dilapidated balls at rickety ten-pins.
+
+When Tom and Dan were eighteen--they were born within a day of each
+other one bitter February--old Peter died, leaving the Inn to his wife.
+Mrs. Frost pretended to carry on the business, but the actual task of
+doing so soon devolved upon her son. And in this he was subjected to
+little interference; for the poor lady, kindly inefficient soul that she
+was, became almost helpless with rheumatism. But indeed it was rather on
+the farm than to the Inn that more and more they depended for their
+living. In the social hierarchy of Caesarea the Pembrokes held
+themselves as vastly superior to the Frosts; but thanks to the
+easy-going democratic customs of the young republic, more was made of
+this by the women than the men.
+
+The two boys loved each other devotedly, though love is doubtless the
+last word they would have chosen to express their relation. Dan was tall,
+dark, muscular; he had a well-shaped head on his square shoulders; strong
+well-cut features; a face that the sun had deeply tanned and dark hair
+that it had burnished with gold. Altogether he was a prepossessing lad,
+though he looked several years older than he was, and he was commonly
+treated by his neighbours with a consideration that his years did not
+merit. Tom Pembroke was fairer; more attractive, perhaps, on first
+acquaintance; certainly more boyish in appearance and behaviour. He was
+quicker in his movements and in his mental processes; more aristocratic
+in his bearing. His blue eyes were more intelligent than Dan's, but no
+less frank and kindly. Young Frost admired his friend almost as much as
+he cared for him; for Dan, deprived of schooling, had a reverence for
+learning, of which Tom had got a smattering at Dr. Watson's establishment
+for "the sons of gentlemen" on the nearby hill.
+
+One stormy night in early January, the eve of Dan Frost's twenty-second
+birthday, the two young men had their supper together at the Inn, and
+afterwards sat for half-an-hour in the hot, stove-heated parlour until
+Mrs. Frost began to nod over her knitting.
+
+"Off with you, boys," she said at length; "you will be wanting to smoke
+your dreadful pipes. Nancy will keep me company."
+
+They took instant advantage of this permission and went into the deserted
+bar, where they made a roaring fire on the great hearth, drew their
+chairs near, filled their long clay pipes with Virginia tobacco, and fell
+to talking.
+
+"Think of it!" exclaimed young Frost, as he took a great whiff at his
+pipe; "here we are--the middle of the winter--and not a guest in the
+house. Why we used to have a dozen travellers round the bar here, and the
+whole house bustling. I've known my father to serve a hundred and more
+with rum on a night like this. Now we do a fine business if we serve as
+many in a winter. Times have changed since we were boys."
+
+"Aye," Tom agreed, "and it isn't so long ago, either. It seemed to me as
+if the whole county used to be here on a Saturday night."
+
+"I'm thinking," resumed Dan musingly, "of throwing up the business,
+what's the use of pretending to keep an inn? If it wasn't for mother
+and for Nancy, I'd clear out, boy; go off and hunt my fortune. As it is,
+with what I make on the farm and lose on the house, I just pull through
+the year."
+
+"By gad," exclaimed Tom, "I'd go with you, Dan. I'm tired to my soul with
+reading law in father's office. Why, you and I haven't been farther than
+Coventry to the county fair, or to Perth Anhault to make a horse trade.
+I'd like to see the world, go to London and Paris. I've wanted to go to
+France ever since that queer Frenchman was here--remember?--and told us
+those jolly tales about the Revolution and the great Napoleon. We were
+hardly more than seven or eight then, I guess."
+
+"I would like to go, hanged if I wouldn't," said Dan. "I'm getting more
+and more discontented. But there's not much use crying for the moon, and
+France might as well be the moon, for all of me." He relapsed then into a
+brooding silence. It was hard for an inn-keeper to be cheerful in
+midwinter with an empty house. Tom too was silent, dreaming vividly, if
+vaguely, of the France he longed to see.
+
+"Hark!" exclaimed Dan presently. "How it blows! There must be a big sea
+outside to-night."
+
+He strode to the window, pushed back the curtains of faded chintz, and
+stared out into the darkness. The wind was howling in the trees and about
+the eaves of the old inn, the harsh roar of the surf mingled with the
+noise of the storm, and the sleet lashed the window-panes in fury.
+
+"You will not be thinking of going home tonight, Tom?"
+
+"Not I," Pembroke answered, for he was as much at home in Dan's enormous
+chamber as he was in his own little room under the roof at the Red Farm.
+
+As he turned from the window, the door into the parlour opened, and a
+young girl quietly slipped in and seated herself in the chimney-corner.
+
+"Hello, Nance," Dan exclaimed, as she entered; "come close, child; you
+need to be near the fire on a night like this."
+
+"Mother is asleep," the girl answered briefly, and then, resting her
+chin upon her hands, she fixed her great dark eyes upon the glowing
+logs. She was Dan's foster-sister, eighteen years of age, though she
+looked hardly more than sixteen; a shy, slender, girl, lovely with a
+wild, unusual charm. To Tom she had always been a silent elfin
+creature, delightful as their playmate when a child, but now though
+still so familiar, she seemed in an odd way, to grow more remote.
+Apparently she liked to sit with them on these winter evenings in the
+deserted bar, when Mrs. Frost had gone to bed; and to listen to their
+conversation, though she took little part in it.
+
+As Dan resumed his seat, he looked at her with evident concern, for she
+was shivering as she sat so quietly by the fireside.
+
+"Are you cold, Nance?" he asked.
+
+"A little," she replied. "I was afraid in the parlour with Mother asleep,
+and the wind and the waves roaring so horribly."
+
+"Afraid?" exclaimed Tom, with an incredulous laugh. "I never knew you to
+be really afraid of anything in the world, Nancy."
+
+She turned her dark eyes upon him for the moment, with a sharp
+inquisitive glance which caused him to flush unaccountably. An answering
+crimson showed in her cheeks, and she turned back to the fire. The colour
+fled almost as quickly as it had come, and left her pale, despite the
+glow of firelight.
+
+"I was afraid--to-night," she said, after a moment's silence.
+
+Suddenly there came the sound of a tremendous knocking on the door which
+opened from the bar into the outer porch, and all three started in
+momentary alarm.
+
+Dan jumped to his feet. "Who's that?" he cried.
+
+Again came the vigorous knocking. He ran across the room, let down the
+great oaken beam, and opened the door to the night and storm.
+
+"Come in, travellers." A gust of wind and sleet rushed through the
+opening and stung their faces. With the gust there seemed to blow in the
+figure of a little old man wrapped in a great black coat, bouncing into
+their midst as if he were an India rubber ball thrown by a gigantic hand.
+Behind him strode in Manners, the liveryman of Monday Port.
+
+"Here's a guest for you, Mr. Frost. I confess I did my best to keep him
+in town till morning, but nothing 'd do; he must get to the Inn at the
+Red Oak to-night. We had a hellish time getting here too, begging the
+lady's pardon; but here we are."
+
+Good-naturedly he had taken hold of his fare and, as he spoke, was
+helping the stranger unwrap himself from the enveloping cloak.
+
+"He's welcome," said Dan. "Here, sir, let me help you." He put out his
+hand to steady the curious old gentleman, who, at last, gasping for
+breath and blinking the sleet out of his eyes, had been unrolled by
+Manners from the dripping cloak.
+
+He was a strange figure of a man, they thought, as Dan led him to the
+fire to thaw himself out. He was scarcely more than five and a half feet
+in height, with tiny hands and feet almost out of proportion even to his
+diminutive size. He was an old man, they would have said, though his
+movements were quick and agile as if he were set up on springs. His face,
+small, sharp-featured and weazened, was seamed with a thousand wrinkles.
+His wig was awry, its powder, washed out by the melting sleet, was
+dripping on his face in pasty streaks; and from beneath it had fallen
+wisps of thin grey hair, which plastered themselves against his temples
+and forehead. This last feature was also out of proportion to the rest of
+his physiognomy, for it was of extraordinary height, and of a polished
+smoothness, in strange contrast to his wrinkled cheeks. Beneath shone two
+flashing black eyes, with the fire of youth in them, for all he seemed so
+old. The lower part of his face was less distinctive. He had a small,
+Suddenly there came the sound of a tremendous knocking on the door which
+opened from the bar into the outer porch, and all three started in
+momentary alarm.
+
+Dan jumped to his feet. "Who's that?" he cried.
+
+Again came the vigorous knocking. He ran across the room, let down the
+great oaken beam, and opened the door to the night and storm.
+
+"Come in, travellers." A gust of wind and sleet rushed through the
+opening and stung their faces. With the gust there seemed to blow in the
+figure of a little old man wrapped in a great black coat, bouncing into
+their midst as if he were an India rubber ball thrown by a gigantic hand.
+Behind him strode in Manners, the liveryman of Monday Port.
+
+"Here's a guest for you, Mr. Frost. I confess I did my best to keep him
+in town till morning, but nothing'd do; he must get to the Inn at the Red
+Oak to-night. We had a hellish time getting here too, begging the lady's
+pardon; but here we are."
+
+Good-naturedly he had taken hold of his fare and, as he spoke, was
+helping the stranger unwrap himself from the enveloping cloak.
+
+"He's welcome," said Dan. "Here, sir, let me sharply-pointed nose; a
+weak mouth, half-hidden by drooping white moustaches; and a small sharp
+chin, accentuated by a white beard nattily trimmed to a point. He was
+dressed entirely in black; a flowing coat of French cut, black small
+clothes, black stockings and boots that reached to the calves of his
+little legs. These boots were ornamented with great silver buckles, and
+about his neck and wrists showed bedraggled bits of yellowed lace."
+
+He stood before the fire, speechless still; standing first on one foot
+then on the other; rubbing his hands the while as he held them to the
+grateful warmth.
+
+Nancy had in the meanwhile drawn a glass of rum, and now advancing
+held it toward him a little gingerly. He took it eagerly and drained
+it at a gulp.
+
+"_Merci, ma petite ange; merci, messieurs_" he exclaimed at last; and
+then added in distinct, though somewhat strongly accented English, "I ask
+your pardon. I forget you may not know my language. But now that this
+good liquor has put new life in my poor old bones, I explain myself. I am
+arrived, I infer, at the Inn at the Red Oak; and you, monsieur, though so
+young, I take to be my host. I have your description, you perceive, from
+the good postilion. You will do me the kindness to provide me with supper
+and a bed?"
+
+"Certainly, sir," said Dan. "It is late and we are unprepared, but we
+will put you up somehow. You too, Manners, had best let me bunk you till
+morning; you'll not be going back to the Port tonight? Nancy a fresh
+bumper for Mr. Manners."
+
+"Thankee, sir; I managed to get out with the gentleman yonder, and I
+guess I'll manage to get back. But it's a rare night, masters. Just a
+minute, sir, and I'll be getting his honour's bags.... Thank ye kindly,
+Miss Nancy."
+
+He drained the tumbler of raw spirit that Nancy held out. Then he opened
+the door again and went out into the storm, returning almost at once with
+the stranger's bags.
+
+Dan turned to his sister. "Nancy dear, go stir up Susan and Deborah. We
+must have a fire made in the south chamber and some hot supper got ready.
+Tell Susan to rout out Jesse to help her. Say nothing to Mother; no need
+to disturb her. And now, sir," he continued, turning again to the
+stranger, "may I ask your name?"
+
+The old gentleman ceased his springing seesaw for a moment, and fixed
+his keen black eyes on the questioner.
+
+"_Certainment, monsieur_--certainly, I should say," he replied in a high,
+but not unpleasant, voice. "I am the Marquis de Boisdhyver, at your
+service. I am to travel in the United States--oh! for a long time. I stay
+here, if you are so good as to accommodate me, perhaps till you are weary
+and wish me to go elsewhere. You have been greatly recommended to me by
+my friend,--quiet, remote, secluded, an _auberge_--what you call it?--an
+inn, well-suited to my habits, my tastes, my desire for rest. I am very
+_fatigué_, monsieur."
+
+"Yes," said Dan, with a grim smile, "we are remote and quiet and
+secluded. You are welcome, sir, to what we have. Tom, see that Manners
+has another drink before he goes, will you? and do the honours for our
+guest, while Nance and I get things ready."
+
+As he disappeared into the kitchen, following Nancy, the Marquis looking
+after him with a comical expression of gratitude upon his face. Tom drew
+another glass of rum, which Manners eagerly, if rashly, devoured. Then
+the liveryman wrapped himself in his furs, bade them good-night, and
+started out again into the storm for his drive back to Monday Port.
+
+All this time the old gentleman stood warming his feet and hands at the
+fire, watching his two companions with quickly-shifting eyes, or glancing
+curiously over the great bar which the light of the fire and the few
+candles but faintly illuminated.
+
+Having barred the door, Tom turned back to the hearth. "It is a bad
+night, sir."
+
+"But yes," exclaimed the Marquis. "I think I perish. Oh! that dreary
+tavern at your Monday Port. I think when I arrive there I prefer to
+perish. But this, this is the old Inn at the Red Oak, is it not? And it
+dates, yes,--from the year 1693? The old inn, eh, by the great tree?"
+
+"Yes, certainly," Pembroke answered; "at least, that is the date that
+some people claim is on the old cornerstone. You have been here before
+then, sir?"
+
+"I?" exclaimed Monsieur de Boisdhyver. "Oh, no! not I. I have heard from
+my friend who was here some years ago."
+
+"Oh, I see. And you have come far to-day?"
+
+"From Coventry, monsieur--Monsieur--?"
+
+"Pembroke," Tom replied, with a little start.
+
+"Ah! yes, Monsieur Pembroke. A member of the household?"
+
+"No--a friend."
+
+"I make a mistake," quickly interposed the traveller, "Pardon. I am come
+from Coventry, Monsieur Pembroke, in an everlasting an eternal stage, a
+monster of a carriage, monsieur. It is only a few days since that I
+arrive from France."
+
+"Ah, France!" exclaimed Tom, recalling that only a little while before he
+and Dan had been dreaming of that magic country. And here was a person
+who actually lived in France, who had just come from there, who
+extraordinarily chose to leave that delightful land for the Inn at the
+Red Oak in mid-winter.
+
+"France," he repeated; "all my life, sir, I have been longing to
+go there."
+
+"So?" said the Marquis, raising his white eyebrows with interest. "You
+love _ma belle patrie_, eh? _Qui Sait_?--you will perhaps some day go
+there. You have interests, friends in my country?"
+
+"No, none," Tom answered. "I wish I had. You come from Paris, sir?"
+
+"_Mais oui_."
+
+For some time they chatted in such fashion, the Marquis answering Tom's
+many questions with characteristic French politeness, but turning ever
+and anon a pathetic glance toward the door through which Dan and Nancy
+had disappeared. It was with undisguised satisfaction that he greeted
+young Frost when he returned to announce that supper was ready.
+
+"I famish!" the old gentleman exclaimed. "I have dined to-day on a
+biscuit and a glass of water."
+
+They found the kitchen table amply spread with food,--cold meats, hot
+eggs and coffee, and a bottle of port. Monsieur de Boisdhyver ate
+heartily and drank his wine with relish, gracefully toasting Nancy as he
+did so. When his meal was finished, he begged with many excuses to be
+shown to his bedroom; and indeed his fatigue was evident. Dan saw him to
+the great south chamber, carrying a pair of lighted candles before. He
+made sure that all had been done that sulky sleepy maids could be induced
+to do, and then left him to make ready for the night.
+
+Lights were extinguished in the parlour and the bar, the fires were
+banked, and the two young men went up to Dan's own room. There on either
+side of the warm hearth, had been drawn two great four-posted beds, and
+it took the lads but a moment to tumble into them.
+
+"It's queer," said Dan, as he pulled the comfort snugly about his
+shoulders, calling to Tom across the way; "it's queer--the old chap
+evidently means to stay awhile. What does a French marquis want in a
+deserted hole like this, I'd like to know? But if he pays, why the longer
+he stays the better."
+
+"I hope he does," said Tom sleepily. "He has a reason, I fancy, for he
+asked questions enough while you were out seeing to his supper. He seems
+to know the place almost as well as if he had been here before, though he
+said he hadn't. But, by gad, I wish you and I were snug in a little hotel
+on the banks of the Seine to-night and not bothering our heads about a
+doddering old marquis who hadn't sense enough to stay there."
+
+"Wish we were," Dan replied. "Good-night," he called, realizing that his
+friend was too sleepy to lie awake and discuss any longer their
+unexpected guest.
+
+"Good-night," murmured Tom, and promptly drifted away into dreams of the
+wonderful land he had never seen. As for Dan he lay awake a long time,
+wondering what could possibly have brought the old Marquis to the
+deserted inn at such a time of the year and on such a night.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+THE LIONS EYE
+
+
+Toward daylight the storm blew itself out, the wind swung round to the
+northwest, and the morning dawned clear and cold, with a sharp breeze
+blowing and a bright sun shining upon a snow-clad, ice-crusted world and
+a sparkling sapphire sea.
+
+Dan had risen early and had set Jesse to clear a way across the court and
+down the avenue to the road. The maids, astir by dawn, were no longer
+sulky but bustled about at the preparation of an unusually good breakfast
+in honour of the new guest.
+
+Mrs. Frost, who habitually lay till nine or ten o'clock behind the
+crimson curtains of her great bed, had caught wind of something out of
+the ordinary, demanded Nancy's early assistance, and announced her
+intention of breakfasting with the household.
+
+She was fretful during the complicated process of her toilette and so
+hurt the feelings of her foster-daughter, that when Dan came to take her
+into the breakfast room, Nancy found an excuse for not accompanying them.
+
+The Marquis was awaiting their appearance. He stood with his back-to the
+fire, a spruce and carefully-dressed little figure, passing remarks upon
+the weather with young Pembroke, who leaned his graceful length against
+the mantelpiece.
+
+The noble traveller was presented with due ceremony to Mrs. Frost, who
+greeted him with old-world courtesy. She had had, indeed, considerably
+more association with distinguished personages than had most of the dames
+of the neighbouring farms who considered themselves her social superiors.
+She welcomed Monsieur de Boisdhyver graciously, enquiring with interest
+of his journey and with solicitude as to his rest during the night. She
+received with satisfaction his rapturous compliments on the comforts that
+had been provided him, on the beauty of the surrounding country upon
+which he had looked from the windows of his chamber, and on her own
+condescension in vouchsafing to breakfast with them. She was delighted
+that he should find the Inn at the Red Oak so much to his taste that he
+proposed to stay with them indefinitely.
+
+They were soon seated at the breakfast-table and had addressed
+themselves to the various good things that black Deborah had provided.
+The native Johnny cakes, made of meal ground by their own windmill, the
+Marquis professed to find particularly tempting.
+
+Despite Mrs. Frost's questions, despite his own voluble replies, Monsieur
+de Boisdhyver gave no hint, that there was any deeper reason for his
+seeking exile at the Inn of the Red Oak than that he desired rest and
+quiet and had been assured that he would find them there. And who had so
+complimented their simple abode of hospitality?
+
+"Ah, madame," he murmured, lifting his tiny hands, "so many!"
+
+"But I fear, monsieur," replied his hostess, "that you, who are
+accustomed to the luxuries of a splendid city like Paris, to so many
+things of which we read, will find little to interest and amuse you in
+our remote countryside."
+
+"As for interest, madame," the Marquis protested, "there are the beauties
+of nature, your so delightful household, my few books, my writing; and
+for amusement, I have my violin;--I so love to play. You will not
+mind?--perhaps, enjoy it?"
+
+"Indeed yes," said Mrs. Frost. "Dan, too, is a fiddler after a fashion;
+and as for Nancy, she has a passion for music, and dreams away many an
+evening while my son plays his old tunes."
+
+"Ah, yes," said the Marquis, "Mademoiselle Nancy, I have not the pleasure
+to see her this morning?"
+
+"No," replied Mrs. Frost, flushing a trifle at the recollection of why
+Nancy was not present, "she is somewhat indisposed--a mere trifle. You
+will see her later in the day. But, monsieur, you should have come to us
+in the spring or the summer, for then the country is truly beautiful;
+now, with these snow-bound roads, when not even the stagecoach passes, we
+are indeed lonely and remote."
+
+"It is that," insisted the Marquis, "which so charms me. When one is
+old and when one has lived a life too occupied, it is this peace,
+this quiet, this remoteness one desires. To walk a little, to sit by
+your so marvellously warm fires, to look upon your beautiful country,
+_cest bou_!"
+
+He held her for a moment with his piercing little eyes, a faint smile
+upon his lips, as though to say that it was impossible he should be
+convinced that he had not found precisely what he was seeking, and
+insisting, as it were, that his hostess take his words as the compliment
+they were designed to be.
+
+Before she had time to reply, he had turned to Dan. "What a fine harbour
+you have, Monsieur Frost," he said, pointing through the window toward
+the Cove, separated from the river and the sea by the great curve of
+Strathsey Neck, its blue waters sparkling now in the light of the
+morning sun.
+
+"Yes," replied Dan, glancing out upon the well-known shoreline, "it is a
+good harbour, though nothing, of course, to compare with a Port. But it's
+seldom that we see a ship at anchor here, now."
+
+"There is, however," inquired the Marquis with interest, "anchorage for a
+vessel, a large vessel?"
+
+"Yes, indeed," Tom interrupted, "in the old days when my father had his
+ships plying between Havana and the Port, he would often have them anchor
+in the Cove for convenience in lading them with corn from the farm."
+
+"And they were large ships?"
+
+"Full-rigged, sir; many of 'em, and drawing eight feet at least."
+
+"_Eh bien_! And the old Inn, madame, it dates, your son tells me,
+from 1693?"
+
+"We think so, sir, though I have no positive knowledge of its existence
+before 1750. My husband purchased the place in '94, and it had then been
+a hostelry for some years, certainly from the middle of the century. But
+we have made many additions. Danny dear, perhaps it will interest the
+Marquis if you should take him over the house. We are proud of our old
+inn, sir."
+
+"And with reason, madame. If monsieur will, I shall be charmed."
+
+"I will leave you then with my son. Give me your arm, Dan, to the
+parlour. Unfortunately, Monsieur le Marquis, affliction has crippled me
+and I spend the day in my chair in the blue parlour. I shall be so
+pleased, if you will come and chat with me. Tommy, you will be staying to
+dinner with us?"
+
+"Thank you, Mrs. Frost, but I must get to the Port for the day. Mother
+and Father are leaving by the afternoon stage, if it gets through. They
+are going to spend the winter in Coventry. But I shall be back to-night
+as I have promised Dan to spend that time with him."
+
+"We shall be glad to have you, as you know."
+
+Soon after Mrs. Frost had left the breakfast-room and Tom had started
+forth with horse and sleigh, Dan returned. The Marquis promptly reminded
+him of the suggestion that he should be taken over the Inn. It seemed to
+Dan an uninteresting way to entertain his guest and the morning was a
+busy one. However, he promised to be ready at eleven o'clock to show the
+Marquis all there was in the old house.
+
+As Dan went about the offices and stables, performing himself much of the
+work that in prosperous times fell to grooms and hostlers, he found
+himself thinking about his new guest. Dan knew enough of French history
+to be aware there were frequent occasions in France when partisans of the
+various factions, royalist, imperialist, or republican, found it best to
+expatriate themselves. He knew that in times past many of the most
+distinguished exiles had found asylum in America. But at the present, he
+understood, King Louis Philippe, was reigning quietly at the Tuileries
+and, moreover, the Marquis de Boisdhyver, mysterious as he was, did not
+suggest the political adventurer of whom Dan as a boy had heard his
+parents tell such extraordinary tales. In the few years immediately after
+the final fall of the great Bonaparte there had been an influx of
+imperialistic supporters in America, some of whom had even found their
+way to Monday Port and Deal. One of these, Dan remembered, had stayed
+for some months in '14 or '15 at the Inn at the Red Oak, and it was he
+whom Tom had recalled the night before as having told them stories of his
+adventurous exploits in the wars of the Little Corporal. But it was too
+long after Napoleon's fall to connect his present guest with the imperial
+exiles. He could imagine no ulterior reason for the Marquis's coming and
+was inclined to put it down as the caprice of an old restless gentleman
+who had a genuine mania for solitude. Of solitude, certainly, he was apt
+to get his fill at the Inn at the Red Oak.
+
+At eleven o'clock he returned to keep his appointment. He found the
+Marquis established at a small table in the bar by an east window, from
+which was obtained a view of the Cove, of the sand-dunes along the Neck,
+and of the open sea beyond. A writing-desk was on the table, ink and
+quills had been provided, a number of books and papers were strewn about,
+and Monsieur de Boisdhyver was apparently busy with his correspondence.
+
+"Enchanted" he exclaimed, as he pulled out a great gold watch. "Punctual.
+I find another virtue, monsieur, in a character to which I have already
+had so much reason to pay my compliments. I trust I do not trespass upon
+your more important duties." As he spoke, he rapidly swept the papers
+into the writing-desk, closed and locked it, and carefully placed the
+tiny golden key into the pocket of his gayly-embroidered waistcoat.
+
+"Not at all," Dan replied courteously, "I shall be glad to show you
+about. But I fear you will find it cold and dismal, for the greater part
+of the house is seldom used or even entered."
+
+"I bring my cloak," said the Marquis. "Interest will give me warmth. What
+I have already seen of the Inn at the Red Oak is so charming, that I
+doubt not there is much more to delight one. I imagine, monsieur, how gay
+must have been this place once."
+
+He took his great cloak from the peg near the fire where it had been hung
+the night before to dry wrapped himself snugly in it; and then, with a
+little bow, preceded Dan into the cold and draughty corridor that opened
+from the bar into the older part of the house.
+
+This hallway extended fifty or sixty feet to the north wall of the main
+part of the inn whence a large window at the turn of a flight of stairs
+gave light. On the right, extending the same distance as the hall
+itself, was a great room known as the Red Drawing-room, into which Dan
+first showed the Marquis. This room had not been used since father's
+death four or five years before, and for a long time previous to that
+only on the rare occasions when a county gathering of some sort was held
+at the inn. It had been furnished in good taste and style in colonial
+days, but was now dilapidated and musty. The heavy red damask curtains
+were drawn before the windows, and the room was dark and cheerless. Dan
+admitted the dazzling light of the sun; but the Marquis only shivered and
+seemed anxious to pass quickly on.
+
+"You see, sir," observed the young landlord, "it is dismal enough."
+
+"_Mais oui_--_mais oui_," exclaimed the Marquis.
+
+At the foot of the stairway the corridor turned at right angles and ran
+north. On either side opened a number of chambers in like conditions of
+disrepair, which had been used as bedrooms in the palmy days of the
+hostelry. This corridor ended at the bowling-alley, where as children Tom
+and Dan had loved to play. Half-way to the entrance to the bowling-alley
+a third hallway branched off to the right, leading to a similar set of
+chambers. Into all these they entered, the Marquis examining each with
+quick glances, dismissing them with the briefest interest and the most
+obvious comment.
+
+Dan saved the _piéce-de-resistance_ till last. This was a little room
+entered from the second corridor just at the turn--the only room indeed,
+as he truthfully said, that merited a visit.
+
+"This," he explained, "we call the Oak Parlour. It is the only room on
+this floor worth showing you. My father brought the wainscoting from an
+old English country-house in Dorsetshire. My father's people were
+Torries, sir, and kept up their connection with the old country."
+
+It was a delightful room into which Dan now admitted the light of day,
+drawing aside the heavy green curtains from the eastern windows. It was
+wainscoted from floor to cornice in old black English oak, curiously and
+elaborately carved, and divided into long narrow panels. The ceiling, of
+similar materials and alike elaborately decorated, was supported by heavy
+transverse beams that seemed solid and strong enough to support the roof
+of a cathedral. On one side two windows opened upon the gallery and court
+and looked out upon the Cove, on the other side stood a cabinet. It was
+the most striking piece of furniture in the room, of enormous dimensions
+and beautifully carved on the doors of the cupboards below and on the
+top-pieces between the mirrors were lion's heads of almost life-size.
+Opposite the heavy door, by which they had entered, was a large
+fireplace, containing a pair of elaborately ornamented brass and irons.
+There was not otherwise a great deal of furniture,--two or three tables,
+some chairs, a deep window-seat, a writing-desk of French design; but
+all, except this last, in keeping with the character of the room, and all
+brought across the seas from the old Dorsetshire mansion, from which
+Peter Frost had obtained the interior.
+
+"_Charmant_!" exclaimed the Marquis. "You have a jewel, _mon ami_; a bit
+of old England or of old France in the heart of America; a room one finds
+not elsewhere in the States. It is a _creation superbe_."
+
+With enthusiastic interest he moved about, touching each article of
+furniture, examining with care the two of three old English landscapes
+that had been let into panels on the west side of the room, pausing in
+ecstacies before the great cabinet and standing before the fireplace as
+if he were warming his hands at that generous hearth.
+
+"Ah, Monsieur Frost, could I but write, read, dream here...!"
+
+"I fear that would be impossible, sir," replied Dan. "It is difficult to
+heat this portion of the house; and in fact, we never use it."
+
+"_Hélas_!" exclaimed the Marquis, "those things which allure us in this
+world are so often impossible. Perhaps in the spring, in the summer, when
+there is no longer the necessity of the fire, you will permit me."
+
+"It may be, monsieur," Dan replied, "that long before the summer comes
+you will have left us."
+
+"_Mais non_!" cried M. de Boisdhyver. "Every hour that I stay but proves
+to me how long you will have to endure my company."
+
+Somewhat ungraciously, it seemed, young Frost made no reply to this
+pleasantry; for already he was impatient to be gone. Although the room
+was intensely cold and uncomfortable, still his guest lingered, standing
+before the massive cabinet, exclaiming upon the exquisiteness of the
+workmanship, and every now and then running his dainty fingers along the
+carving of its front. As Dan stood waiting for the Marquis to leave, he
+chanced to glance through the window to the court without, and saw Jesse
+starting out in the sleigh. As he had given him no such order he ran
+quickly to the window, rapped vigourously and then, excusing himself to
+the Marquis, hurried out to ask Jesse to explain his errand.
+
+The Marquis de Boisdhyver stood for a moment, as Dan left him, motionless
+in front of the cabinet. His face was bright with surprise and delight,
+his eyes alert with interest and cunning. After a moment's hesitation he
+stole cautiously to the window, and seeing Frost was engaged in
+conversation with Jesse, he sprang back with quick steps to the cabinet.
+He hastily ran the tips of his fingers along the beveled edges of the
+wide shelf from end to end several times, each time the expression of
+alertness deepening into one of disappointment. He stopped for a moment
+and listened. All was quiet. Again with quick motions he felt beneath the
+edges. Suddenly his eyes brightened and he breathed quickly; his
+sensitive fingers had detected a slight unevenness in the smooth
+woodwork. Again he paused and listened, and then pressed heavily until he
+heard a slight click. He glanced up, as directly in front of him the eye
+of one of the carved wooden lion's heads on the front of the board winked
+and slowly raised, revealing a small aperture. With a look of
+satisfaction, the Marquis thrust his fingers into the tiny opening and
+drew forth a bit of tightly folded yellow paper; he glanced at it for an
+instant and thrust it quickly into the pocket of his waistcoat. Then he
+lowered the lid of the lion's eye. There was a slight click again; and he
+turned, just as Dan reappeared in the doorway.
+
+"Excuse my leaving you so abruptly," said Frost, "but I saw Jesse going
+off with the sleigh, and as I had given him no orders, I wanted to know
+where he was going. But it was all right. Are you ready, sir? I am afraid
+if we stay much longer you will catch cold." This last remark was added
+as the Marquis politely smothered a sneeze with his flimsy lace
+handkerchief.
+
+"_C'est bien_, monsieur. I fear I have taken a little cold. Perhaps it
+would be just as well if we explore no further to-day."
+
+"If you prefer, sir," answered Dan, holding the door open for his guest
+to go out. Monsieur de Boisdhyver turned and surveyed the Oak Parlour
+once more before he left it. "Ah!" he exclaimed, "this so charming
+room--it is of a perfection! Dorsetshire, you say? ... To me it would
+seem French." They walked back rapidly along the dark cold corridors to
+the bar. All the way the Marquis, wrapped tightly in his great cloak,
+kept the thumb of his left hand in his waistcoat pocket, pressing
+securely against the paper he had taken from the old cabinet in the Oak
+Parlour.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+THE MARQUIS AT NIGHT
+
+
+The household of the Inn at the Red Oak soon became accustomed to the
+presence of their new member; indeed, he seemed to them during those
+bleak winter months a most welcome addition. Except for an occasional
+traveller who spent a night or a Sunday at the Inn, he was the only
+guest. He was gregarious and talkative, and would frequently keep them
+for an hour or so at table as he talked to them of his life in France,
+and of his adventures in the exciting times through which his country had
+passed during the last fifty years. He was the cadet, he told them, of a
+noble family of the Vendée, the head of which, though long faithful to
+the exiled Bourbons, had gone over to Napoleon upon the establishment of
+the Empire. But as for himself--Marie-Anne-Timélon-Armand de
+Boisdhyver--he still clung to the Imperial cause, and though now for many
+years his age and infirmities had forced him to withdraw from any part in
+intrigues aiming at the restoration of the Empire, his sympathies were
+still keen.
+
+When he talked in this strain, of his thrilling memories of the Terror
+and of the extraordinary days when Bonaparte was Emperor, Dan and Tom
+would listen to him by the hour. But Mrs. Frost preferred to hear the
+Marquis's reminiscences of the _ancien régime_ and of the old court life
+at Versailles. He had been a page, he said, to the unfortunate Marie
+Antoinette; he would cross himself piously at the mention of the magic
+name, and digress rapturously upon her beauty and grace, and bemoan, with
+tears, her unhappy fate. She liked also to hear of the court of Napoleon
+and of the life of the _faubourgs_ in the Paris of the day. On these
+occasions the young men were apt to slip away and leave the Marquis alone
+with Mrs. Frost and Nancy.
+
+For Nancy Monsieur de Boisdhyver seemed to have a fascination. She would
+listen absorbed to his voluble tales, her bright eyes fixed on his
+fantastic countenance, her head usually resting upon her hand, and her
+body bent forward in an attitude of eager attention. She rarely spoke
+even to ask a question; indeed, her only words would be an occasional
+exclamation of interest, or the briefest reply.
+
+During the day their noble guest would potter about the house or, when
+the weather was fine, stroll down to the shore, where he would walk up
+and down the strip of sandy beach in the lee of the wind hour after hour.
+Now and then he wandered out upon the dunes that stretched along the
+Neck; and once, Dan afterwards learned, he paid a call upon old Mrs.
+Meath who lived by herself in the lonely farmhouse on Strathsey Neck,
+that was known as the House of the Dunes.
+
+After supper they were wont to gather in Mrs. Frost's parlour or in the
+old bar before the great hearth on which a splendid fire always blazed;
+and when the Marquis had had his special cup of black coffee, he would
+get out his violin and play to them the long evening through. He played
+well, with the skill of a master of the art, and with feeling. He seemed
+at such times to forget himself and his surroundings; his bright eyes
+would grow soft, a dreamy look would steal into them, and a happy little
+smile play about the corners of his thin pale lips. Obligingly he gave
+Dan lessons, and often the young man would accompany him, in the songs
+his mother had known and loved in her youth, when old Peter had come
+wooing with fiddle in hand.
+
+But best of all were the evenings when the Marquis chose to improvise.
+Plaintive, tender melodies for the most part; prolonged trembling,
+faintly-expiring airs; and sometimes harsh, strident notes that evoked
+weird echoes from the bare wainscoted walls. Mrs. Frost would sit, tears
+of sadness and of pleasure in her eyes, the kindly homely features of her
+face moving with interest and delight. Nancy was usually by the table,
+her sharp little chin propped up on the palms of her hands, never taking
+her fascinated gaze from the musician. Sometimes Tom would look at her
+and wonder of what she could be thinking. For certainly her spirit seemed
+to be far away wandering in a world of dreams and of strange
+inexpressible emotions. For Tom the music stirred delicate thoughts
+bright dreams of beauty and of love; the vivid intangible dreams of
+awakening youth. He had not had much experience with emotion; the story
+of his love affairs contained no more dramatic moments than the stealing
+of occasional kisses from the glowing cheeks of Maria Stonywell, the
+beauty of the Tinterton road, as he had walked back to the old farm with
+her on moonlight evenings.
+
+They would all be sorry when Monsieur pleaded weariness and bade them
+good-night. Sometimes his music so moved the old Frenchman that the tears
+would gather in his faded blue eyes and steal down his powdered cheeks;
+and then, like as not, he was apt to break off suddenly, drop violin and
+bow upon his knees, and exclaim, "_Ah! la musique! mon Dieu, mon Dieu!
+elle me rappelle ma jeunesse. Et maintenant--et maintenant_!" And then,
+brushing away the tears he would rise, make them a courtly bow, and hurry
+out of the room.
+
+Dan alone did not fall under his spell. He and Tom would often talk of
+their strange guest after they were gone to bed in the great chamber over
+the dining-room.
+
+"I don't know what it is," Dan said one night, "but I am sorry he ever
+came to the Inn; I wish he would go away."
+
+"How absurd, old boy!" protested Tom. "He has saved our lives this
+frightful winter. I never knew your mother to be so cheerful and
+contented; Nancy seems to adore him, and you yourself are making the most
+of his fiddle lessons."
+
+"I know," Dan replied, "all that is true, but it is only half the truth.
+Mother's cheerfulness is costing me a pretty penny, for I can't keep her
+from ordering the most expensive things,--wines, and the like,--that we
+can't afford. Maybe Nance adores him, as you say,--she is such a strange
+wild child; but I have never known her to be so unlike herself. We used
+to have good times together--Nance and I. But this winter I see nothing
+of her at all." For the moment Dan forgot his complaint in the tender
+thought of his foster-sister. "It probably is absurd," he added
+presently, "but I don't like it; I don't like him, Tom! He plays the
+fiddle well, I admit but he is so queer and shifty, nosing about, looking
+this way and that, never meeting your eyes. It's just as though he were
+waiting, biding his time, for--I don't know what."
+
+"Nonsense, Dan; you're not an old woman."
+
+"It may be, Tom, but I feel so anyway. The place hasn't seemed the same
+to me since that Frenchman came. I wish he would go away; and apparently
+he means to stay on forever."
+
+"I think you would miss him, if he were to go," insisted Pembroke, "for
+my part I'm glad he is here. To tell the truth, Dan, he's been the life
+of the house."
+
+"He has fascinated you as he has fascinated Mother and Nance," Dan
+replied. "But it stands to reason, boy, that he can't be quite all
+right. What does he want poking about in a deserted old hole like Deal?"
+
+"What he has said a thousand times; just what he so beautifully
+gets--quiet and seclusion."
+
+"Perhaps you are right and I am wrong; but all the same I shall be glad
+to see the last of him."
+
+The night was one of bright moonlight at the end of February. The bedroom
+windows were open to the cold clear air. Tom was not sleepy, and he lay
+for a long time recalling the dreams and emotions that had so stirred him
+earlier in the evening, as he had listened to the Marquis's playing. He
+kept whistling softly to himself such bars of the music as he could
+remember. Dan's chamber faced west, and Tom's bed was so placed that he
+could look out, without raising his head from the pillow, over the court
+in the rear of the Inn and into the misty depths of Lovel's Woods beyond
+the offices and stables.
+
+As he lay half-consciously musing--it must have been near midnight--his
+attention was suddenly riveted upon the court below. It seemed to him
+that he heard footsteps. He was instantly wide awake, and jumped from the
+bed to the window, whence he peered from behind the curtain into the
+courtyard. Close to the wall of the Inn, directly beneath the window, a
+shadow flitted on the moonlight-flooded pavement, and he could hear the
+crumbling of the snow. Cautiously he thrust his head out of the window.
+Moving rapidly along near to the house, was a little figure wrapped in a
+dark cloak, which looked to Tom for all the world like the Marquis de
+Boisdhyver.
+
+For the moment he had the impulse to call to him by name, but the
+conversation he had so recently had with Dan flashed into his mind, and
+he decided to keep still and watch. The figure moved rapidly along the
+west wall of the Inn almost the entire length of the building, until it
+arrived at the entrance of the bowling-alley which abutted from the old
+northern wing. Reaching this it paused for a moment, glancing about; then
+inserted a key, fumbled for a moment with the latch, opened the door, and
+disappeared within.
+
+Tom was perplexed. He could not be sure that it was the Marquis; but
+whether it were or not, he knew that there was no reason for any one
+entering the old portion of the Inn at midnight. His first thought was to
+go down alone and investigate; his second was to waken Dan.
+
+He lowered the window gently, drew the curtains across it, and
+bending over his friend, shook him gently by the shoulder. "Dan, Dan,
+I say; wake up!"
+
+"What's the matter?" exclaimed Dan with a start of alarm, as he sat
+up in bed.
+
+"Nothing, nothing; don't make a noise. I happened to be awake, and
+hearing footsteps under the window, I got up and looked out. I saw some
+one moving along close to the wall until he got to the bowling alley. He
+opened the door and disappeared."
+
+"The door's locked," exclaimed Dan. "Who was it?"
+
+"He had a key, whoever he was then. To tell the truth, Dan, it looked
+like the Marquis; though I couldn't swear to him. I certainly saw
+some one."
+
+"You have not been asleep and dreaming, have you?" asked his friend,
+rubbing his eyes.
+
+"I should say not. I'm going down to investigate; thought you'd like to
+come along."
+
+"So I shall," said Dan, jumping out of bed and beginning to dress. "If
+you really have seen any one, I'll wager you are right in thinking it's
+the old marquis. That is just the sort of thing I have imagined him
+being up to. What he wants though in the old part of the house is more
+than I can think. He has pestered me to get back there ever since I
+showed him over the place the day he arrived. Are you ready? Bring a
+candle, and some matches. Ill just take my gun along on general
+principles. I don't care how soon we get rid of the Marquis de
+Boisdhyver, but I shouldn't exactly like to shoot him out with a load of
+buckshot in his hide."
+
+Tom stood waiting with his boots in hand. Dan went to his bureau and took
+out his father's old pistol, that had done duty in the West India trade
+years ago, when pirates were not romantic memories but genuine menaces.
+
+"Sh!" whispered Dan as he opened the door. "Let's blow out the candle.
+It's moonlight, and we will be safer without it. Be careful as you go
+down stairs not to wake Mother and Nancy."
+
+Tom blew out the candle and slipped the end into his pocket, as he
+tiptoed after Dan down the stairs. At every step the old boards seemed to
+creak as though in pain. As they paused breathless half-way down on the
+landing, they heard no sound save the loud ticking of the clock in the
+hall below and the gentle whispering of the breeze without. The moon
+gave light enough had they needed it, but each of them could have found
+his way through every nook and corner of the Inn in darkness as well as
+in broad day-light. They crept down the short flight from the landing,
+paused and listened at the doors of Mrs. Frost's and Nancy's chambers,
+and then slipped noiselessly into the bar where the logs still glowed on
+the hearth.
+
+"Shall we," asked Tom in a low tone, "go down the corridor or
+around outside?"
+
+"Best outside," Dan whispered. "If we go down the corridor we are like to
+frighten him if he is the Marquis, or get a bullet in our gizzards if he
+is not. Should he be inside, he'll have a light and we can find just
+where he is. I have a notion that it's the Marquis and that he'll be in
+the Oak Parlour. We'd better creep along the porch."
+
+Very softly he unlocked the door, and stepped outside. Tom was close
+behind him. They crept stealthily along next the wall well within the
+shadow of the roof, pausing at every window to peer through the
+cracks of the shutters. But all were dark. As they turned the corner
+of the porch at the end of the main portion of the inn from which
+the north wing extended, Dan suddenly put his hand back and stopped
+Tom. "Wait," he breathed, "there's a light in the Oak Parlour. Stay
+here, while I peek in."
+
+With gun in hand he crept up to the nearest window of the Oak Parlour.
+The heavy shutters were closed, but between the crack made by the warping
+of the wood, he could distinguish a streak of golden light. He waited a
+moment; and, then at the risk of alarming the intruder within, carefully
+tried the shutter. To his great satisfaction it yielded and swung slowly,
+almost noiselessly, back upon its hinges; the inside curtains were drawn;
+but a slight gap had been left. Peering in through this, Dan found he
+could get a view of a small section of the interior,--the end of the
+great Dorsetshire cabinet on the farther side of the room and a part of
+the wall. Before the cabinet, bending over its shelf, stood the familiar
+form of the Marquis de Boisdhyver, apparently absorbed in a minute
+examination of the carving. But Dan's attention was quickly diverted from
+the figure of the old Frenchman, for by his side, also engaged in a
+similar examination of the cabinet, stood Nancy. For a moment he watched
+them with intent interest, but as he could not discover what so absorbed
+them he slipped back to Tom, who was waiting at the turn of the porch.
+
+"It's the Marquis," he whispered in his friend's ear.
+
+"What is he up to?"
+
+"I don't know. Apparently he is examining the old cabinet. But, Tom,
+Nancy is with him and as absorbed in the thing as he is. Look!" he
+exclaimed suddenly. "They've blown out the light."
+
+As he spoke, he pointed to the window, now dark. "Come," he said, making
+an instant decision, "let's hide ourselves in the hall and see if they
+come back."
+
+"But Nancy--?"
+
+"No time for talk now. Come along."
+
+They ran back along the porch, slipped into the bar, and thence into the
+hall. Dan motioned to Tom to conceal himself in a closet beneath the
+stairway, and he himself slipped behind the clock. Hardly were they
+safely hidden thus, than they heard a fumble at the latch of the door
+into the bar. Then the door was pushed open, and the Marquis stepped
+cautiously in the hall. He paused for a moment, listening intently. Then
+he held open the door a little wider; and another figure, quite enveloped
+by a long black coat, entered after him. They silently crossed the hall
+to the door of Nancy's chamber. This the Marquis opened; then bowed low,
+as his companion passed within. They were so close to him that Dan could
+have reached out his hand and touched them. As Nancy entered her room,
+Dan distinctly heard Monsieur de Boisdhyver whisper, "More success next
+time, mademoiselle!"
+
+There was no reply.
+
+The Marquis turned, stole softly up the stairs, and in a moment Dan heard
+the click of the latch as he closed his door. He slipped out from his
+hiding place, and whispered to Tom.
+
+In a few moments they were back again in their bedroom.
+
+"Heavens! man, what do you make of it?" asked Tom.
+
+"Make of it!" exclaimed Dan, "I don't know what to make of it. It's
+incomprehensible. What the devil is that old rascal after, and how has he
+bewitched Nance?"
+
+"Perhaps," suggested Tom, more for Nancy's sake than because he believed
+what he was saying, "it is simply that he is curious, and knowing that
+you don't want him in the old part of the Inn, he has persuaded Nancy to
+take him there at night."
+
+"Nonsense! that couldn't possibly account for such secrecy and caution.
+No, Tom, he has some deviltry on foot, and we must find out what it is."
+
+"That should be simple enough. Ask Nance."
+
+"Ah!" exclaimed his friend, "you don't know Nance as well as I. You may
+be sure he has sworn her to secrecy, and Nance would never betray a
+promise whether she had been wise in making it or not."
+
+"Then go to the old man himself and demand an explanation."
+
+"He'd lie ..."
+
+"Turn him out."
+
+"I could do that, of course. But I think I would rather find out what he
+is up to. It has something to do with the old cabinet in the Oak Parlour.
+I'll find out the mystery of that if I have to hack the thing into a
+thousand pieces. What I hate, is Nance's being mixed up in it."
+
+"We can watch again."
+
+"Yes; we'll do that. In the meanwhile, I am going to investigate that old
+ark myself. There's something about, something concealed in it, that he
+wants to get. When I took him in there the day after he came, he
+couldn't keep his eyes off it. If you can get Nance out of the way
+tomorrow afternoon, I'll send the Marquis off with Jesse for that
+long-talked-of visit to Mondy Port; and I'll give Jesse instructions not
+to get him back before dark. And while they are away, I'll investigate
+the Oak Parlour myself. Can you get Nance off?"
+
+"I might ask her to go and look over the Red Farm with me. She might like
+the walk through the woods. I could easily manage to be away for three or
+four hours."
+
+"Good! You may think it odd, Tom, that I should seem to distrust Nance. I
+don't distrust her, but there has always been a mystery about her. Mother
+knows a good deal more than she has even been willing to tell to me, or
+even to Nance, I guess. I know nothing except that she is of French
+extraction, and I have sometimes wondered since she has been so often
+with the old Marquis this winter, if he didn't know something about her.
+It flashed over me to-night as I saw them in that deserted room. Whatever
+is a-foot, I am going to get at the bottom of it. We will watch again
+to-morrow night. I heard him whisper as he left Nance, 'More success next
+time!' This sort of thing may have been going on for a month."
+
+They undressed again, and Dan put his gun away in his bureau. "We may
+have use for that yet, Tommy," he said. "It would do me good, after what
+I have seen to-night, to put a bit of lead into the Marquis de Boisdhyver
+as a memento of his so delightful sojourn at _L'Auberge au Chene Rouge_."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+THE OAK PARLOUR
+
+
+The two young men felt self-conscious and ill-at-ease the next morning at
+the breakfast table, but apparently their embarrassment was neither
+shared nor observed. Mrs. Frost had kept her room, but Nancy and the
+Marquis were in their accustomed places; the old gentleman, chattering
+away in a fashion that demanded few answers and no attention; Nancy,
+speaking only to ask necessary questions as to their wants at table and
+meeting the occasional glances of Dan and Tom without suspicion. Tom
+could scarcely realize in that bright morning light, that only seven or
+eight hours earlier he and his friend had spied upon their companions
+prowling about in the abandoned wing of the inn.
+
+Monsieur de Boisdhyver assented readily enough when Dan proposed that
+Jesse should take him that day to Monday Port. He was curious to see the
+old town, he said, having heard much of it from his friend; much also
+from his celebrated compatriot, the Marquis de Lafayette.
+
+Tom took occasion during the discussion to ask Nancy if she would walk
+across the woods with him after dinner, that he might pay a visit to the
+Red Farm and see that all was going well in the absence of his parents.
+He felt that the tones of his voice were charged with unwonted
+significance; but Nancy accepted the invitation with a simple expression
+of pleasure. When Mrs. Frost was informed of the plans for the day, she
+came near thwarting Dan's carefully laid schemes. She had counted upon
+Jesse to do her bidding and had, she declared, arranged that Nancy should
+help her put together the silken patches of the quilt upon which she was
+perennially engaged. Her foster-daughter's glance of displeasure at this
+was tinder to the old lady's temper, and Dan entered most opportunely.
+
+"So!" she was exclaiming, "I am always the one to be sacrificed when it
+is a question of some one's else pleasure."
+
+"Mother, Mother," Dan protested good-naturedly, as he bent over to kiss
+her good-morning, "aren't you ever willing to spend a day alone with me?"
+
+"Danny dear," cried the old lady, as she began to smile again, "you know
+I'm always willing. Of course, if Tom wants Nancy to go, the quilt can
+wait; it has waited long enough, in all conscience. There, my dear," she
+added, turning to the girl, "order an early dinner, and since you are
+going to the Red Farm, you might as well come back by the dunes and
+enquire for old Mrs. Meath. We have neglected that poor woman shamefully
+this winter."
+
+"Yes, Mother,--if we have time."
+
+"Take the time, my dear," added Mrs. Frost sharply.
+
+"Yes, Mother."
+
+The Marquis started off with Jesse at eleven o'clock, as eager for the
+excursion as a boy; and by half-past twelve Nancy and Tom had set out
+across the woods for the Red Farm. Dan was impatient for them to be gone.
+As soon as he saw them disappear in the woods back of the Inn, he made
+excuses to his mother, and hurried to the north wing. He found the door
+of the bowling alley securely locked, which convinced him that either the
+Marquis or Nancy had taken the key from the closet of his chamber. Having
+satisfied himself, he went directly to the Oak Parlour.
+
+It was cold and dark there. He opened the shutters and drew back the
+curtains, letting in the cheerful midday sun, which revealed all the
+antique, sombre beauty of the room, of the soft landscapes and the
+exquisite carving of the Dorsetshire cabinet. But Dan was in no mood to
+appreciate the old-world beauty of the Oak Parlour. In that cabinet he
+felt sure there was something concealed which would reveal the mystery of
+the Marquis's stay at the inn and possibly the nature of his influence
+over Nancy. Whatever had been the object of the Marquis's search, it had
+not been found: his parting words to Nancy the night before showed that.
+
+Dan took a long look at the cabinet first, estimating the possibility of
+its containing secret drawers. Hidden compartments in old cabinets,
+secret chambers in old houses, subterranean passageways leading to
+dungeons in romantic castles, had been the material of many a tale that
+Dan and Tom had told each other as boys. For years their dearest
+possession had been a forbidden copy of "_The Mysteries of Udolpho_"
+which they read in the mow of the barn lying in the dusty hay. However
+unusual, the situation was real; and he felt himself confronted by as
+hard a problem as he had ever tried to solve in fiction. He knew
+something about carpentry, so that his first step, after examining the
+drawers and cupboards and finding them empty, was to take careful
+measurements of the entire cabinet, particularly of the thicknesses of
+its sides, back, and partitions. It proved a piece of furniture of
+absolutely simple and straightforward construction. After long
+examination and careful soundings he came to the conclusion that a secret
+drawer was an impossibility.
+
+Suddenly an idea occurred to him and he returned to the sitting-room.
+"Mother," he said, "I have been looking over the old cabinet in the Oak
+Parlour, thinking perhaps that I would have it brought into the
+dining-room. I wonder, if by chance, there are any secret drawers in it.
+
+"Secret drawers? What an idea!" exclaimed Mrs. Frost.
+
+"You never knew of any did you?"
+
+"No.... Stop, let me think. Upon my word, I think there was something of
+the sort, but it has been so long ago I have almost forgotten."
+
+"Try to remember, do!" urged Dan, striving to repress his excitement.
+
+"It was not a secret drawer, but there were little hidden
+cubby-holes--three or four of them. I remember, now, your father once
+showed me how they opened. They were little places where the Roman
+Catholics used to hide the pages of their mass-books and such like in the
+days of persecution in England."
+
+"Yes, yes," said Dan, "that makes it awfully interesting. Did father
+ever find anything in them?"
+
+"No, I think not; but, dear me, it was over thirty years ago we brought
+that old cabinet from England,--long before you were born, Dan."
+
+"Can you remember how to open the secret places? I have been looking it
+over, but I can't see where they can be, much less how to get into them."
+
+"There were four of them, I think; all in the carving on the front, in
+the eyes of the lions it seems to me, and in the lion's mouth, or in the
+leaves somewhere. One spring that opened them I recollect, was under the
+ledge of the shelf, another at the back of the cabinet and,--but no, I
+really can't remember where the others were."
+
+Dan was impatient to try his luck at finding them, and hurried back to
+the Oak Parlour. He ran his fingers many times under the ledge of the
+shelf before he heard the click of a tiny spring, and, looking up, saw
+the lion's eyelid wink and slowly open. With an exclamation of
+satisfaction, he thrust his fingers into the tiny aperture, felt
+carefully about, and was chagrined to find it empty. "More success next
+time, _monsieur le marquis_!" he muttered.
+
+At length he found the spring that released the eyelid on the carved lion
+on the other side of the panel. He glanced into the little opening and,
+to his delight, saw the end of a bit of paper tucked away there. He dug
+it out with the blade of his pocket knife and unfolded it. It was yellow
+and brittle with age, covered with writing in a fine clear hand. But he
+was annoyed to discover, as he bent closely over to read it, that it was
+written in French, still worse, part of the paper was missing, for one
+side of it was ragged as if it had been torn in two.
+
+Remembering with relief, that Pembroke had acquired a smattering of
+French at Dr. Watson's school for the sons of gentlemen, he put the paper
+carefully away in his pocket to wait for Tom's assistance in deciphering
+it. Then he set to work to find the missing half.
+
+He fumbled about at the back of the cabinet for a spring that would
+release another secret cubby-hole, and was rewarded at last by an
+unexpected click, and the seemingly solid jaws of the lion fell apart
+about half-an-inch. But the little aperture which they revealed was
+empty. Further experiment at last discovered the fourth hiding place, but
+this also contained nothing.
+
+It occurred to him then that the Marquis had already discovered the other
+half of the paper, and like himself was searching for a missing portion.
+As he stood thinking over the problem, he suddenly noticed that the room
+was in deep shadow, and realized that the sun had set over the ridge of
+Lovel's Woods. The Marquis would soon be returning. Carefully closing the
+four openings in the carving he pushed the old cabinet back against the
+wall, closed the shutters and drew the curtains. Then with a last glance
+to see that all was as he found it, he went out and closed the door the
+precious bit of paper in his inside pocket.
+
+He went directly to Mrs. Frost's parlour. "Mother," he said, "please
+don't tell anyone that I have been in the north wing today. I have good
+reasons which I will explain to you before long. Now, I shall be deeply
+offended if you give the slightest hint."
+
+"Gracious! Dan, what is all this mystery about?"
+
+"You will never know, mother, unless you trust me absolutely. Mind! not
+a word to Tom, Nancy or the Marquis."
+
+"Very well, Danny. You know I am as safe with a secret as though it had
+been breathed into the grave."
+
+Dan did not quite share his mother's confidence in her own discretion,
+but he knew he could count on her devotion to him to keep her silent even
+where curiosity and the love of talk would render her indiscreet. He also
+knew, and had often deplored it, that fond as she was of Nancy she was
+not inclined to take the girl into her confidence.
+
+Having said all he dared to his mother, Dan went to his room and
+carefully locked up the mysterious paper. He returned to the first
+floor just as the Marquis and Jesse drove up in the sleigh to the door
+of the inn.
+
+Monsieur de Boisdhyver was enthusiastic about all that he had seen--the
+headquarters of General Washington, the house in which the Marquis de
+Lafayette had slept, the old mill in the parade, the fort at the Narrows,
+the shipping, the quaint old streets.... "But, O Monsieur Frost," he
+exclaimed, "the weariness that is now so delightful! How soundly shall I
+sleep to-night!"
+
+Dan smiled grimly as he assured his guest of his sympathy for a good
+night and a sound sleep; thinking to himself, however, that if the
+Marquis walked, he would not walk unattended. He had no intention of
+trusting too implicitly to that loudly proclaimed fatigue.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+THE WALK THROUGH THE WOODS
+
+
+While Dan Frost was hunting for the secret places of the old cabinet, Tom
+and Nancy were picking their way across the snowcovered paths of Lovel's
+Woods to the Red Farm. These woods were a striking feature in the
+landscape of the open coast country around Deal. Rising somewhat
+precipitously almost out of the sea, three ridges extended far back into
+the country, with deep ravines between. They were thickly wooded, for the
+most part with juniper and pine. In some places the descent to the
+ravines was sheer and massed with rocks heaped there by a primeval
+glacier; in other parts they dipped more gently to the little valleys,
+which were threaded with many a path worn smooth by the dwellers on the
+eastern shore. Nearly two miles might be saved in a walk from the Inn to
+Squire Pembroke's Farm by going across the Woods rather than by the
+encircling road.
+
+As they were used to the frozen country Tom and Nancy preferred the
+shorter if more difficult route. They had often found their way together
+through the tangled thickets of the Woods or along the shores of the
+Strathsey River, in season accompanied by dog and gun hunting fox and
+rabbit or partridge and wild duck. In Tom's company Nancy seemed to
+forget her shyness and would talk freely enough of her interests and her
+doings. He had always been fond of her, though until lately she had
+seemed to him hardly more than a child. This winter, as so frequently he
+had watched her sitting in the firelight listening to the old Marquis's
+playing and dreaming perhaps as he also dreamed, he realized that she was
+growing up. A new beauty had come into her face and slender form, her
+great dark eyes seemed to hold deeper interests, she was no longer in the
+world of childhood. The mystery enveloping her origin, which for some
+reason Mrs. Frost had never chosen to dispel, gave a certain piquancy to
+the interest and affection Tom felt for her. In the imaginative tales he
+had been fond of weaving for his own amusement, Nancy would frequently
+figure, revealed at last as the child of noble parents, as a princess
+doomed by some strange fate to exile. He thought of these things as from
+time to time he glanced back at her, holding aside some branch that
+crossed the path or giving her his hand to help her over a boulder in the
+way. The red scarf about her neck, red cap on her dark hair, flashing in
+and out of the tangled pathway against the background of the snow-clad
+woods, gave a bright note of colour to the scene.
+
+They were obliged for the most part to walk in single file until the last
+ridge descended over a mass of rocks to the marshes along Beaver Pond.
+Then having given her his hand to help her down, he kept hold of it as
+they went along the free path to the open meadows. The feeling of Nancy's
+cool little hand in his gave Tom an odd and conscious sense of pleasure.
+
+"You have been uncommonly silent, Nance, even for you," he said at last.
+
+"Oh, I'm always silent, Tom," she replied. "It is because I am stupid and
+have nothing to say."
+
+"Nonsense, my dear, you always have a lot to say to me. But you are
+forever reading, thinking ... what's it all about?"
+
+"Oh, I think, Tom, because I have little else to do; but my thoughts
+aren't often worth the telling. In truth there is no one, not even you,
+who particularly cares to hear them. Tom," she said, "I am restless and
+discontented. Sometimes I wish I were far away from the Inn at the Red
+Oak and Deal, from all that I know,--even from you and Dan."
+
+Pembroke suddenly realized that he could not laugh at these
+fancies, as he had so often done, and dismiss as if they were the
+vagaries of a child.
+
+"Why are you restless and discontented, Nancy?" he asked seriously.
+
+"Aren't you ever?" she questioned for reply. "Don't you ever get weary
+with the emptiness of it all, the everlasting round, the dullness? Don't
+you ever want to get away from Deal, and know people and see things and
+be somebody?"
+
+"I do that, Nance. I mean to go as soon as I am a lawyer. I won't poke
+about Deal long after that, nor Monday Port either. I mean to set up in
+Coventry."
+
+"Coventry!" exclaimed the girl with an accent of disdain. "That is just a
+provincial town like the Port, only a little more important because it is
+the capital of the state."
+
+"Being the capital means a lot," protested Tom in defense of his
+ambitions of which for the first time he felt ashamed. "Men are sent to
+Congress from there. Nance, girl, ours is a wonderful country; we are
+making a great nation."
+
+"Some people may be. None of us are, Tom. I wonder at you more than I do
+at Dan, for you have had more advantages. As for me, I am only a girl;
+there's nothing for girls but to sit and sew, and prepare meals for men
+to eat, and wait until some one comes and chooses to marry them. Then
+they go off and do the same thing some place else."
+
+"But what have you to complain of, Nancy? you have the kindest brother, a
+good mother, a comfortable home...."
+
+"The kindest brother, yes. But you know Mrs. Frost is not my mother. She
+doesn't care for me and I can't care for her as if she were. I have never
+loved any one but Dan."
+
+"You can't help loving Dan," said Tom, thinking of his good friend.
+"But then, little girl, you love me too." And he pressed the hand in
+his warmly.
+
+Nancy quickly withdrew her hand. "I am not a little girl. I have been
+grown up in lots of ways ever so long."
+
+"But you love me?"
+
+"I like you. Oh, Tom, the life we all lead is so futile. If I weren't a
+girl, I should go away."
+
+They had reached the stile by now that led into the meadow which sloped
+down from the clump of poplars a hundred rods or so above, in the midst
+of which the Red Farmhouse stood. Instead of helping his companion over
+the steps in the wall, Tom stopped and stood with his back to them.
+"Let's stay here a minute, Nance, and have it out."
+
+"Have what out?" she asked a trifle sharply.
+
+"You haven't any queer wild plan in your head to go away, have you?"
+
+"I don't know--sometimes I think I have. I dare say there are things
+somewhere a girl could find to do."
+
+"But Mrs. Frost--?"
+
+"Oh, Mother would not miss me long--she'd have Dan."
+
+"But Dan would miss you."
+
+"Yes, Dan might. I couldn't go, if Dan really needed me here. I think
+sometimes he doesn't. But, Tom, if you were in my position, if you didn't
+know who your parents were, if all your life you had been living on the
+charity of others--good and kind as they are, wonderful even as Dan has
+always been--you couldn't be happy. I'm not happy."
+
+"But, Nance, what has come over you?"
+
+"No--nothing in particular; I have often felt this way."
+
+"But, dear, I couldn't let you go. I'd mind a lot, Nance."
+
+She looked at him with a sudden smile of incredulity. "You, Tommy?"
+
+"You can't go--you musn't go," Tom repeated, as he drew nearer to her.
+
+Suddenly he reached out and seized her hands. "Don't you realize it?--I
+love you, Nance; I've always loved you!" He drew her close to him. She
+did not resist nor did she yield, but still with her eyes she questioned
+him. "Kiss me, Nancy," he whispered. She let him press his lips to hers
+but without responding to the pressure, as though she still were
+wondering of the meaning of this sudden unforeseen passion. But at last,
+caught up in its intensity, she gave him back his kisses. He took her
+face then between his hands and looked into it with a gaze that in itself
+was a caress. "Oh my sweetheart!" he said softly.
+
+Slowly she disengaged herself. "Tom, Tom," she said, "this is
+foolishness. We musn't do this."
+
+"Why not?" demanded Pembroke. "I tell you I love you!"
+
+"No--not that way, not that way. I didn't mean that. Why, you foolish
+boy, haven't we kissed each other hundreds of times before?"
+
+"No, Nancy, not like that--not like this," he added, as again he put his
+arm around her and drew her face to his. And again she yielded. "Say
+it--say it, Nance--you love me."
+
+She drew back from him. "I think I must, Tom. I don't think I could let
+you kiss me that way if I didn't. But now come ... Tom ... dear Tom ...
+do come ... don't kiss me again."
+
+"But say it," he insisted, "say you love me."
+
+"Please help me over the stile."
+
+He gave her his hand and she sprang lightly to the top of the steps. In a
+second he was by her side, both of them balancing somewhat uncertainly on
+the top of the stone wall. "I won't let you down till you say it."
+
+"Please--".
+
+"No--you love me?"
+
+"Yes--there--I love you--now--".
+
+"No, kiss me again."
+
+"Tom--no." But the negative was weak and Pembroke took it so.
+
+"Now," he said, as they began to cross the meadow, "we must tell Mrs.
+Frost and Dan."
+
+"Tell them what?"
+
+"Why, that we are in love with each other, and that you are going to
+marry me. What else?"
+
+"No, no," exclaimed Nancy, "You must say nothing. I am not in love. I
+don't mean to marry you."
+
+"But why not? You are. You do."
+
+"Are--do--?"
+
+"In love--you do mean to marry me."
+
+"No--Tom, listen--you know your father and mother would hate it. You have
+at least two years before you can practice. We couldn't marry--we can't
+marry. Oh, there are things I must do, before I can think of that."
+
+"Not marry me? Good Lord, what does it mean when people are in love with
+each other, what does it mean when a girl kisses a fellow like that?"
+
+"I don't know! what it means--madness, I guess. Do you think I could
+marry as I am, not knowing who I am?"
+
+"Oh, what do I care who your parents were! We'll find out. I swear we
+will. Good Lord, I love you, Nancy; I love you!"
+
+"Please, please don't make me talk about it now."
+
+"But soon--?"
+
+"Yes, soon--only promise you'll say nothing to Dan or to Mother till we
+have talked again. I must think; it is all so queer and unexpected; I
+never dreamed that you cared for me except as a little girl."
+
+"I didn't know I did. But come to think of it, Nance, it has been you as
+much as Dan that has brought me to the Inn at the Red Oak. Why it was you
+I wanted to walk and talk and play with."
+
+"Please,--dear Tom--G--ive me time to think what it all means. Now be
+careful, there's the farmer. You have a lot to do, and we have been
+lingering too long. Mother wants us to go back by the dunes and enquire
+for old Mrs. Meath; so we must hurry."
+
+The sun had set before they started on the homeward journey in one of
+the squire's sleighs. As they turned the bend at the beach and started
+across the dune road close to the sea, a great yellow moon rose over
+Strathsey Neck.
+
+Tom had been so preoccupied with his own emotions and the unexpected and
+absorbing relation in which he found himself with Nancy, that he had
+altogether forgotten why he had asked her to go off with him that
+afternoon. As they skimmed along over the snow-packed road across the
+sands, Tom spied another sleigh on the Port road, the occupants of which
+he recognized as Jesse and the Marquis. Suddenly the memory of the night
+before flashed over him. He pointed with his whip in their direction.
+"There's the old Marquis coming back from Monday Port," he said.
+
+Nancy looked without comment, but Tom thought the colour deepened in
+her cheeks.
+
+"See here, Nance," he exclaimed impulsively; "has the Marquis anything to
+do with the mood you were in this afternoon? Has he said anything to make
+you discontented?"
+
+He was sure that now she paled.
+
+"What makes you ask?"
+
+"Oh--a number of things. I've seen you with him more or less; felt he had
+some influence over you."--Tom was blundering now and knew it.--
+
+She looked at him coldly. "I have been with the Marquis very little save
+when others have been about. He has no influence over me. I don't care to
+discuss such queer ideas."
+
+"Oh, all right ... I dare say I'm mistaken ... I only thought..."
+He hesitated... "If you care for me, I don't mind what you think of
+the Marquis."
+
+"Remember, Tom--you promised to say nothing until I gave you leave.
+You're not fair..."
+
+"But you do love me?"
+
+Nancy was silent.
+
+"There is nothing between you and the old Frenchman--no mystery?"
+
+There was no reply. Nancy sat with compressed lips and drawn brows,
+gazing fixedly at the distant House on the Dunes at the end of their
+road. For a long while they drove on in silence.
+
+At the House on the Dunes they chatted for a while with old Mrs. Meath,
+who lived there alone with a maid-of-all-work. She was a source of much
+anxiety to Mrs. Frost, who sent several times each week to learn if all
+was going well. But Mrs. Meath was a Quaker and apparently never gave a
+thought to loneliness or fear.
+
+"They will never guess," she said to Nancy and Tom as they sat in the
+tiled kitchen talking with her, "what I am going to do."
+
+"Not going to leave the House on the Dunes, Mrs. Meath?"
+
+"Deary me! no; but I am going to take a boarder."
+
+"Really?--you are setting up to rival the Inn, eh?" said Tom.
+
+"No", Tommy, nothing of the sort. But I am offered good pay for my front
+room, and as Jane Frost is always nagging me about living here alone, I
+thought I'd take her."
+
+"And who pray is your new boarder?" asked Nancy.
+
+"That is the funny part of it," replied Mrs. Meath, "I know nothing but
+her name--Mrs. Fountain. Everything has been arranged by a lawyer man
+from Coventry, and she is coming in a few days. Tell thy mother, Nancy
+dear, that she need worry about me no longer."
+
+"I will, Mrs. Meath. I think it is a splendid idea, and I hope you will
+like the lady. Mother will be so glad that you have some one with you."
+
+Soon they were on their way across the dunes and marshes to Tinterton
+road and home. Dan was preoccupied, not with the news that was so
+exciting to Mrs. Meath, but with the recollection of his conversation
+with Nancy as they had driven toward the house. Despite her implicit
+denial he knew there was a secret between the Marquis de Boisdhyver and
+herself. He could not imagine what it might be, and it was evident
+that she did not mean to tell him at present. But his anxieties on this
+or kindred subjects were not relieved by his companion during the
+remainder of the drive. Moreover his attempts to speak again of his
+newly discovered passion were received coldly--so coldly indeed that he
+had no heart for pleading for such proofs as she had given him earlier
+in the afternoon that she shared his emotion. So despite the splendid
+moon, the bright cold night, the merry jangle of the sleigh bells, the
+drive back was not the unmixed joy Tom had promised himself; and he
+felt his role of a declared and practically-accepted lover anything but
+a satisfactory one.
+
+Finally they reached the Inn and entered the bar where they found the
+Marquis sitting alone before a cheerful fire. All of Tom's suspicious
+jealousies returned with fresh force, for Nancy rapidly crossed the room,
+spoke a few words to the old gentleman in an inaudible tone of voice, and
+passed quickly on to her own apartments.
+
+
+
+
+PART II
+
+THE TORN SCRAP OF PAPER
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+THE HALF OF AN OLD PAPER
+
+
+That evening Mrs. Frost made a particular request for music. Poor Dan,
+impatient to be alone with Tom and show him the torn scrap of paper that
+he had found that afternoon was forced to bring out his fiddle and
+accompany the Marquis. Tom, for first part, was more concerned with his
+own relations with Nancy than with the mysterious possibilities of the
+previous night. The poignant notes of the violin set his pulses to
+beating in tune with the throbbing of the music and transported him again
+into the realms of youthful dreams. They were quaint plaintive songs of
+old France that the Marquis chose to play that evening, folk tunes of the
+Vendée, love songs of olden time.
+
+From where he sat in the shadow Tom got a full view of Nancy seated on
+the oaken setlle near the fire. Her brows were drawn a little in deep
+thought, her lips for the most part compressed, though ever and anon
+relaxing at some gentler thought. Her hands were clasped, her head was
+bent a little, but her body was held straight and tense. Her eyes, dark
+and lustrous in the light of the flaming logs, always fixed upon the
+musician, not once wandering in his direction.
+
+What was the influence, the fascination that strange old Frenchman seemed
+to exert? It seemed to Tom impossible that there could be a secret which
+she felt necessary to hide from them, her lifelong friends. But apart
+from what he knew had taken place the night before as he looked back over
+the past month, he was conscious that there had been a change in Nancy, a
+change that mystified him. It was the danger in this change, he told
+himself, that had awakened in him the knowledge of his love.
+
+But then as he looked across at her so lovely, in the firelight, he felt
+again the thrill as when first he had taken her hand that afternoon. In
+that moment all the dreams, the vague longings of his boyhood had found
+their reality.
+
+Suddenly, while he was thinking thus, the Marquis laid his violin upon
+his knees. "Ah, _ma jeunnesse_!" he exclaimed in a dramatic whisper, "_et
+maintenant_--_et maintenant_!"
+
+For a moment no one spoke or stirred. They looked at him curiously as
+they always did when he brought his playing to an end in such fashion.
+Then he rose. "_Bon soir, madame; bon soir, messieurs; bon soir,
+mademoiselle_"
+
+Tom saw his little faded blue eyes meet Nancy's with a look of swift
+significance. Then he bowed with a flourish that included them all.
+
+"A thousand thanks, Monsieur le Marquis," murmured Mrs. Frost, "how much
+pleasure you give us!"
+
+They all rose then, as the Marquis smiled his appreciation and withdrew.
+
+"Give me your arm, Dan," the old lady said. "It must be past my bedtime.
+Come, Nancy."
+
+"Yes, mother." The girl rose wearily, stopping a moment at the
+mantelpiece to snuff the candles there. Tom seized his opportunity, and
+was by her side. She started, as she realized him near her.
+
+"Nance, Nance, I must have a word with you," he exclaimed in a tense
+whisper, "don't go!"
+
+"Nance, come," called Mrs. Frost from the hall.
+
+"Yes, Mother, I am coming ... I must go, Tom. Don't delay me. You know
+how Mother is ..."
+
+"What difference will it make if you wait a moment? Good Lord! Nance, I
+have been trying all evening to get a word with you, and you have not so
+much as given me a glance. Don't go--please don't go! Oh, Nancy dear,--I
+love you so!"
+
+He seized her hands and kissed them passionately. "Nance, Nance ...
+please ..." His arms were about her.
+
+"Tom, you make it so hard ... Remember, you promised me ... No word
+of love until I can think, until I have time to know ... Please, Tom,
+let me go."
+
+"I can't let you go. Oh sweetheart dear."
+
+"Tom, we musn't--Dan, Mother! ..."
+
+Unheeding her protest, he put his arms around her. An instant he felt
+her yield, then quickly thrusting him aside, she ran from the room,
+leaving him standing alone there, trembling with excitement, chagrin,
+happiness, alarm.
+
+In a moment his friend returned and Tom pulled himself together. "Come
+on," said Dan, "I have a lot to tell you."
+
+"Did you find anything this afternoon?" exclaimed Pembroke.
+
+"Sh! for heaven's sake be careful. Don't talk here. Let's go upstairs."
+
+A few minutes later they were closeted in Dan's chamber. The curtains
+were tightly drawn and a heavy quilt was hung over the door. Good Lord!
+thought Tom, could it be possible that these precautions in part at least
+were taken against Nancy. The world seemed to have turned upside down for
+him in the last twenty-four hours.
+
+"Aren't we going to keep watch to-night?" he asked.
+
+"Yes, but later. They are just getting to bed--or pretending to. Look
+here, this may throw light on the mystery. I found this paper in a secret
+cubby-hole in the old cabinet in the Oak Parlour. Draw a chair up to the
+table so that you can see."
+
+"The cabinet," he continued, as he took the paper out of his strong-box
+and began to unfold it, "was brought from some old manor house in
+England. It has four little secret cubby-holes, opened by hidden springs,
+that Mother says were probably used by the Roman Catholics to hide pages
+of their mass-books during the days of persecution. She remembered
+fortunately a little about them. They were all empty but one, and in that
+I found this torn scrap of paper."
+
+He handed the yellowed bit of writing to Tom, who flattened it out on the
+table before him.
+
+"Why it's written in French," Pembroke exclaimed, as he bent over to
+examine it.
+
+"Yes, I know it is," said Dan. "I can't make head or tail of it. Besides
+it seems to be only a part of a note or letter. I could hardly wait to
+give you a chance at it. You can make something of it, can't you?"
+
+"I don't know--I guess I can. It's hard to read the handwriting. The
+thing's torn in two--haven't you the rest of it?"
+
+"No, I tell you; that's all I could find; that's all, I am sure, that can
+be in the cabinet now. My theory is that the old marquis has somehow come
+across the other half and is still looking for this. God only knows who
+hid it there.
+
+"How the deuce could the Marquis know about it. Ah! look--it's signed
+somebody, something _de Boisdhyver_--'_ançois_--that's short for
+François, I guess. Evidently 't wasn't the Marquis himself. Wonder what
+it means?"
+
+For goodness' sake, try to read it."
+
+"Wait. Get that old French dictionary out of the bookcase downstairs,
+will you? I'll see if I can translate."
+
+Dan crept softly out, leaving Tom bent over the paper. Again he smoothed
+it out carefully on the table, bringing the two candles nearer, and tried
+to puzzle out the faint fine handwriting.
+
+"I can make out some of it," he remarked to Dan, when his friend returned
+with the dictionary. "Let me have that thing; there are a few words I
+don't know at all, but I'll write out as good a translation as I can."
+
+While Tom was busy with the dictionary, Dan placed writing materials to
+his hand, and sat down to wait as patiently as he could. His curiosity
+was intensified by Pembroke's occasional exclamations and the absorption
+with which he bent over the task.
+
+"There!" Tom exclaimed after half-an-hour's labour, "that's the
+best I can do with it. You see the original note was evidently torn
+into two or three strips and we have only got the righthand one, so we
+don't get a single complete sentence--, but what we have is mighty
+suggestive. Listen--This is what it says: Make great efforts ... gap ...
+glorious, I am about to leave' ... gap ... 'to offer my' ... gap ...
+'that I should not return' ... gap ... 'directions' ... gap ... 'this
+paper which I tear' ... gap ... 'the explanation' ... something
+missing ... 'to discover' ... that's the end of a sentence. The next one
+begins, 'This treasure' ... than another gap ... 'jewels and money' ...
+'secret chamber' ... 'one can enter' ... something gone here ... 'by the
+_salon de chene_'--that's the Oak Parlour, I suppose ... something
+missing again ... 'by a spring' ... 'hand of the lady in the picture' ...
+'chimney on the north side of the' ... 'side a panel which reveals' ...
+'one will find the directions' ... more missing ... 'of the treasure in a
+golden chest' ... That's the end of it. And, as I said before it is
+signed,--'ançois de Boisdhyver.' There, you can read it. That's the best
+I can make of it."
+
+Dan bent over his friend's translation. "Whoever wrote it was
+about to leave here to offer something to somebody, and if he did
+not return, apparently he is giving directions, in this paper, which
+he tears in to two or three parts, how to discover--a treasure?--jewels
+and money, I guess,--that he is about to hide or has hidden in a secret
+chamber, which is entered in some way from the Oak Parlour--? ... pushes
+a spring,--Something to do with the hand of the lady in the picture,
+near the chimney on the north side of the room ... then a panel which
+reveals ...where? ... the directions will be found, for getting the
+treasure, in a golden chest in the secret chamber? How's that for a
+version? I reckon the other half doesn't tell as much ...'ançois de
+Boisdhyver!--That can't be the Marquis, for none of his names end
+'ançois; do they? Let's see, what are they?--Marie, Anne, Timélon,
+Armand ... Tom,"--and Dan faced his friend excitedly,--"that old devil is
+after treasure! Who the deuce is 'ançois de Boisdhyver, and how did he
+come to leave money in the Oak Parlour? Hanged if I believe there's any
+secret chamber! By gad, man, if I didn't hurt when I pinch myself, I'd
+think I was asleep and dreaming. What do you make of it?"
+
+"Pretty much what you do. Somebody sometime,--a good many years ago,
+concealed some valuables here in the Inn. It must be some one who is
+connected with our marquis, for the last names are the same. These are
+directions, or half the directions, for finding it. The Marquis knows
+enough about it to have been hunting for this paper. Who the devil is
+the Marquis?"
+
+"The Lord knows. But how does Nance come in?"
+
+"Blamed if I can see; wish I could! This accounts for the Marquis's
+mysterious investigations, anyway. Probably he's no right to the paper.
+Maybe he isn't a Boisdhyver at all. I'll be damned if I can understand
+how he has got Nance to league with him."
+
+"And now what the deuce are we going to do about it?" asked Dan.
+
+"Hunt for the treasure ourselves, eh?"
+
+"Well, why not? but to do that we've got to get rid of the Marquis. He'll
+be suspicious if we begin to poke about the north wing. Hanged if I
+wouldn't like to have it all out with him!"
+
+"Yes, but we'd better think and talk it over before we decide to do
+anything. We can watch them. We'll watch to-night any way, and plan
+something definite to-morrow."
+
+"I tell you one thing, Tom, I am going to make Mother tell me all she
+knows about Nancy. Perhaps she is mixed up in some way with all this. But
+it's time to keep watch now. We'll put out the candles and I'll watch for
+the first two hours. If you go to sleep, I'll wake you up to take the
+next turn. How about it?"
+
+"Hang sleep!" Tom replied.
+
+"All right, but we must blow out the light. Lucky it's clear. Let's
+whisper after this."
+
+Tom threw himself on the bed, while Dan sat near the window and kept his
+eyes fixed on the door of the bowling-alley. They talked for some time in
+low tones, but eventually Tom fell asleep. Dan waked him at twelve for
+his vigil, and he in turn was wakened at two. During the third watch they
+both succumbed to weariness.
+
+Tow awoke with a start about four, and sprang to the window. The moon was
+sinking low in the western sky, but its light still flooded the deserted
+courtyard beneath. He heard the patter of a horse's hoofs on the road
+beyond and the crunching of the snow beneath the runners of a sleigh.
+Well, he thought, as he rubbed his eyes, it was too near morning for
+anything to happen, so he turned in and was soon asleep, as though no
+difficult problems were puzzling his mind and heart and no mysteries were
+being enacted around him.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+A DISAPPEARANCE
+
+
+When Dan came downstairs in the morning Mrs. Frost called him to the door
+of her bedroom. "What on earth is the matter with Nancy?" she exclaimed;
+"I have been waiting for her the past hour. No one has been near me since
+Deborah came in to lay the fire. Call the girl Danny; I want to get up."
+
+"All right, mother. She has probably overslept; she had a long walk
+yesterday."
+
+"But that is no excuse for sleeping till this time of day. Tell her
+to hurry."
+
+"It is only seven, mother."
+
+"Yes, Danny, dear, but I mean to breakfast with you all this morning if I
+ever succeed in getting dressed."
+
+Dan crossed the hall and knocked at Nancy's door. There was no response.
+He knocked again, then opened the door and looked within. Nancy was not
+there, and her bed had not been slept in.
+
+He went back to his mother. "Nancy is not in her room," he said. "She
+has probably gone out for a walk. I'll go and look for her."
+
+He went to the kitchens to enquire of the maids, but they had not seen
+their young mistress since the night before.
+
+"Spec she's taken dem dogs a walkin'," said black Deborah unconcernedly.
+"Miss Nance she like de early morn' 'fore de sun come up."
+
+Dan went out to the stables. The setters came rushing out, bounding and
+barking joyously about him.
+
+"Have you seen Miss Nancy this morning, Jess?" he asked.
+
+"No, Mister Dan, ain't seen her this mornin'. Be n't she in the house?"
+
+"She doesn't seem to be. Take a look down the road, and call after her,
+will you? Down, Boy; down, Girl!" he cried to the dogs.
+
+Dan began to be thoroughly alarmed. If Nancy had gone out, the dogs would
+certainly have followed her. She must be within!
+
+He went back into the house, and searched room after room, but no trace
+of her was to be found. He returned at last to his mother's chamber.
+
+"I can't find Nancy," he said. "She must have gone off somewhere."
+
+"Gone off! why, she must have left very early then. I have been awake
+these two hours--since daylight--; I would have heard every sound."
+
+"Well, she isn't about now, Mother. She will be back by breakfast time, I
+don't doubt. Just stay abed this morning, I will send her to you as soon
+as she comes."
+
+"I shall have to, I suppose. Really, Dan, it is extraordinary how
+neglectful of me that child can sometimes be. She knew--"
+
+"Mother, don't find fault with her. She is devoted to you, and you know
+it."
+
+"I daresay she is. Of course she is, and I am devoted to her. Where would
+she be, I wonder, if it hadn't been for me? Good heavens! Dan, can
+anything have happened to her?"
+
+"No, no--of course not,--nothing."
+
+"Search the house, boy; she may be lying some place in a faint. She isn't
+strong--I have always been worried--"
+
+"Don't get excited, Mother. We will wait until breakfast time. If she
+doesn't turn up then, you may be sure I shall find her."
+
+He looked at his watch. It was already nearly eight o'clock, so he
+decided to say nothing to Pembroke until after breakfast. He found the
+Marquis and Tom chatting before the fire in the bar.
+
+"Shall we have breakfast?" said Dan. "Mother will not be in this
+morning."
+
+"Ah!" exclaimed the Marquis, as they took their seats at table, "that is
+a disappointment. And shall we not wait for Mademoiselle Nancy?"
+
+"My sister has stepped out, monsieur; she may be late. Shall I give you
+some coffee?"
+
+"If you please--. We have another of these so beautiful days, eh? This so
+glorious weather, these moonlight nights, this snow--_C'est merveilleux_.
+Last night I sat myself for a long time in my window. Ah _la nuit_--the
+moon past its full, say you not?--the sea superbly dark, superbly blue,
+the wonderful white country! As I sat there, messieurs, a sight too
+beautiful greeted my eyes. A ship, with three great sails, appeared out
+on the sea and sailed as a bird up the river to our little cove, _Voila,
+mes amis_"--he waved his hand toward the eastern windows--"She is
+anchored at our feet."
+
+The two young men looked in the direction in which the marquis pointed,
+and to their astonishment they saw, riding securely at her moorings in
+the cove, a large sailing vessel. She was a three-masted schooner of
+perhaps fifteen hundred tons, a larger ship than they had seen at anchor
+in the Strathsey for many a year.
+
+"By all that's good!" exclaimed Tom, "that is exactly the sort of ship my
+father used to have in the West Indie trade, a dozen or fifteen years
+ago. What is she? I wonder; and why is she anchored here instead of in
+the Port?"
+
+The Marquis shrugged his shoulders. "That I can tell you not, my friend;
+but I am happy that she is anchored there for the hours of beauty she
+has already given to me. On this strange coast of yours one so rarely
+sees a sail."
+
+"No, they go too far to the south... But what is she?" asked Dan. "We
+must find out." He went to the cupboard, and got out his marine glass and
+took a long look at the stranger.
+
+"What do you make her out?" asked Tom.
+
+"There are men on deck, some swabbing out the roundhouse. One of them is
+lolling at the wheel. She flies the British flag."
+
+"Do you, perhaps, make out the name?" asked the Marquis.
+
+"I don't know--yes," Dan replied, twisting the lens to suit his eyes
+better and spelling out the letters, "S,O,U,T,H,E,R,N,C,R--the
+_Southern Cross_. By Jingo, Tom, we'll have to go down to the beach and
+have a look at her."
+
+Tom took the glasses; turning them over presently to the Marquis. "She is
+a good fine boat, eh?" exclaimed M. de Boisdhyver, as he applied his eye
+to the end of the glass.
+
+"She certainly is," said Dan.
+
+They sat down at length and resumed their breakfast. The ship had
+diverted Tom's attention for the moment from the fact that Nancy had
+not appeared.
+
+"Where is Nance, Dan?" he asked at length, striving to conceal his
+impatience.
+
+"I don't know," Dan replied. "I think she has gone over to see Mrs. Meath
+and stayed for breakfast."
+
+"Madame Meath--?" enquired the Marquis.
+
+"At the House on the Dunes," Dan answered, a trifle sharply.
+
+"A long walk for Mademoiselle on a cold morning," commented Monsieur
+Boisdhyver, as he sipped his coffee.
+
+In a few moments Dan rose. "Going to the Port to-day, Tom?"
+
+"Not till later, any way; I am going down to the beach to have a look at
+that ship."
+
+"Wait a little, and I'll go with you," He turned to the door and motioned
+Tom to follow him.
+
+Outside he took his friend's arm and drew him close. "Tom, something's
+up; Nancy's not here."
+
+"Nancy's not here;" exclaimed Pembroke. "What do you mean? Where is she?"
+
+"To tell the truth, I don't know where she is; her bed has not been slept
+in. I thought at first she had gone for a walk with the dogs as she does
+sometimes, but Boy and Girl are both in the barn. It's half-past eight
+now, and she ought to be back,"
+
+"Good Lord! man, have you searched the house?"
+
+"I've been over it from garret to cellar."
+
+"And you can't find her?"
+
+"Not a sign of her."
+
+"Have you been through the north wing?"
+
+"Yes, all over it. I have been in every room in the house, boy. Nance
+isn't there. You heard nothing in the night, did you?"
+
+"Nothing."
+
+"When did you go to sleep?"
+
+"Perhaps about half-past three. Come to think of it, I awoke at four
+with a start, for I heard a sleigh on the Port Road. After that I
+went to bed."
+
+"The sleigh hadn't been at the Inn?"
+
+"It couldn't have been--I'd have heard of it if it had; you see it woke
+me up just going along the road."
+
+"I don't suppose we need worry. But it is queer--none of the servants
+have seen her since last night."
+
+"My God, what can have happened to her?" cried Tom.
+
+"Sh, boy! We have nothing to go on, but I wager that old French devil
+knows more than he will tell."
+
+"Then, we'll choke it out of him."
+
+"No, no, don't be a fool! She may be back any minute. I'll get the sleigh
+and go over to the House on the Dunes. In the meanwhile don't show that
+you are anxious! I'll be back inside of an hour, and we can have a look
+at the ship. If Nance isn't with Mrs. Meath, why I am sure I'll find her
+here. Let's not worry till we have to."
+
+Tom assented to this proposition somewhat unwillingly. Despite his
+friend's reassuring words, he did not feel that Nancy would be found at
+the House on the Dunes or that she would immediately return. He
+remembered her telling him of her desire to go away. He remembered how
+strangely she had received the declaration of his love, and he feared
+almost as much that she had fled from him, as that the Marquis, weird and
+evil as he began to think him, had any hand in her disappearance.
+
+After Dan's departure in the sleigh, Tom wandered about restlessly. When
+half an hour passed and Frost did not return, he went out to look down
+the road and see if he were coming. The white open country was still and
+empty, and the only sign of life was the great three-masted ship riding
+at anchor in the cove, with seamen lolling about her deck.
+
+As Tom stood under the Red Oak, the Marquis stepped out of the front
+door. He was wrapped in his great coat, about to take his morning walk up
+and down the gallery.
+
+"Why so pensive, Monsieur Pembroke? Is it that you are moved by the
+beauty of the scene--, the land so white, the sea so blue, and the
+_Southern Cross_ shining as it were in a northern sky!"
+
+Tom grunted a scarcely civil reply, and turning away to avoid further
+conversation, strolled down the avenue of maples toward the road.
+
+Monsieur de Boisdhyver raised his eyebrows slightly, and began his walk.
+By and by, still more impatient, Pembroke walked back toward the house.
+If Dan did not return soon, he determined he would go after him. As he
+came up to the gallery again the Marquis paused and spoke to him. "And
+Mademoiselle, she has not returned?" he asked.
+
+"No!" Pembroke replied sharply. "She has gone to the House on the Dunes
+and her brother has driven over to fetch her."
+
+"Ah! pardon," exclaimed Monsieur de Boisdhyver; "I did not know... But it
+is cold for me, Monsieur Pembroke; I seek the fire."
+
+Tom did not reply. The Marquis went inside, and presently Tom could see
+him standing at the window, the marine glass in his hands, sweeping the
+countryside.
+
+Pembroke passed an anxious morning. Ten o'clock came; half-past; eleven
+struck. Nancy had not appeared, or was there a sign of Dan. Unable to be
+patient longer, he set out on the Port Road to meet his friend.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+GREEN LIGHTS
+
+
+The smoke was curling from the chimneys of the House on the Dunes as Dan
+drove up the long marsh road from the beach. He had half convinced
+himself that Nancy would be there, and he hoped that she herself would
+answer his knock. When at length the door was opened it was not by Nancy
+nor by Mrs. Meath, but by a stranger whom he had never seen before.
+
+"Yes?" a pleasant voice questioned, but giving an accent to the
+monosyllable that made Dan think instantly of France.
+
+He found himself facing a charming woman, her bright blue eyes looking
+into his with a smile that instantly attracted him. She was well-dressed,
+with a different air from the women he knew. And she was undeniably
+pretty--of that Dan was convinced, and the conviction overwhelmed him
+with shyness. He stood awkward and ill-at-ease; for the moment forgetting
+his errand. "I suppose," he stammered, "--I beg your pardon--but I
+suppose you are Mrs. Heath's new boarder,--Mrs. Fountain?"
+
+"Yes," replied the strange lady with an amused smile, "that is what I
+imagine that I am called. My name is Madame de La Fontaine. And you--?"
+
+"I?--Oh, yes--of course--I am Dan Frost from the Inn over yonder. I came
+to see Mrs. Meath to ask if my sister Nancy is here."
+
+"Alas!" replied Madame de La Fontaine, "poor Mrs. Meath she this morning
+is quite unwell. She is in her room, so that I am afraid you cannot see
+her. But, I may tell you, there is no one else here, just myself and my
+servants."
+
+"You have not seen or heard anything then of my sister, Nancy Frost?"
+repeated Dan.
+
+"Nancy Frost?--your sister?--No, monsieur. I am arrived only last night
+and have seen no one."
+
+"I had hoped my sister would be here. I am sorry about Mrs. Meath;
+perhaps I can be of some service. If you should need me at any time, I
+can almost always be found at the Inn at the Red Oak."
+
+"The Inn at the Red Oak?" repeated Madame de La Fontaine, "and is
+that near by?"
+
+"It is about a mile and a half by the road," Frost replied, "but you can
+see it plainly from the doorstep here."
+
+The foreign lady stepped out in the crisp February air. "Can you point it
+out to me? I may need your assistance some time."
+
+"You see the woods and the oak at the edge of them," said Dan, pointing
+across the Dunes. "That great tree is the Red Oak, the rambling old
+building beneath it is the Inn."
+
+"Ah! one can see quite plainly from one house to the other, is it not
+so?"
+
+"Quite," Dan replied.
+
+"Thank you, monsieur. I trust there will be no need for assistance. But
+it makes one glad to know where are neighbours, especially--" she added,
+"while poor Mrs. Meath is ill."
+
+As she spoke she turned to the door with the air of dismissing him, but
+on second thoughts she faced him again. "I wonder, Mr. Frost, will you do
+me a favour?"
+
+"I shall be delighted," Dan exclaimed.
+
+"My luggage arrived last night," said Madame de La Fontaine, "upon the
+ship that is at anchor in the bay. They are to bring my boxes ashore. But
+before that I desire to give directions to the captain at the beach, and
+I cannot well do so by my servant. Will you be kind enough to walk with
+me and show me the way?"
+
+Dan forgot about Nancy in his eagerness to assure this unusually
+attractive lady that he was at her disposal. She disappeared within, and
+he heard her give some quick, sharp directions in French to a maid. Then
+in a moment she reappeared on the little porch, bonneted and wrapped for
+a walk in the cold.
+
+As they set out across the Dunes, she kept up a rapid fire of questions
+that might have seemed inquisitive to one more accustomed to the world
+than Dan. He found himself in the course of that quarter of an hour
+talking quite freely with the charming stranger.
+
+"No, I did not make the journey from France in the _Southern Cross_," she
+replied to one of his interrogations, "that would have been
+uncomfortable, I fear. But she brings over my boxes. She is arrived
+somewhat sooner than I was promised."
+
+"Do you expect to signal her from the beach?"
+
+"But yes."
+
+"How will they know who you are?"
+
+"Oh, they have instructions. You must think all this curious!" she
+commented with a smile. "You must think me an odd person."
+
+The possible oddness of Madame de La Fontaine made less impression upon
+Dan than did her charm. He was conversing easily with a very lovely
+woman, and all else was forgotten in that agreeable sensation.
+
+As they emerged from the Dunes upon the little beach of the Cove, Dan
+observed on the deck of the _Southern Cross_ a sailor watching them
+through a glass. Madame de La Fontaine drew her handkerchief from beneath
+her cloak and waved it toward the ship.
+
+"This is the signal," she explained, "that they were instructed to look
+out for. If I am not mistaken Captain Bonhomme will come to the shore for
+my directions. You speak French, monsieur?"
+
+"Not at all," Dan replied.
+
+"Ah!" sighed the lady, "you lose a great deal."
+
+"I might have learned some this winter," said Dan; "for we have had a
+French gentleman as our guest at the Inn."
+
+"Indeed! And who, may I ask, is your French gentleman?"
+
+"His name is the Marquis de Boisdhyver. Do you, by any chance, know him?"
+
+"The Marquis de Boisdhyver?" repeated Madame de La Fontaine. "I know the
+name certainly; it is an old family with us, monsieur. But I do not
+recall that I have ever had the pleasure of meeting any one who bore
+it... But see! they are lowering the boat."
+
+They were now at the edge of the surf. Madame de La Fontaine again waved
+a hand in the direction of the clipper. Dan saw a small boat alongside
+her, into which several sailors and an officer, as it seemed, were
+clambering over the rail. They pushed off, and began to row vigorously
+for the shore.
+
+The French lady stood watching them intently. Within a few moments the
+little boat was beached, the officer sprang out, advanced to Madame de La
+Fontaine, and saluted. She exchanged sentences with him in French of
+which Dan understood nothing. Then the seaman touched his cap, got into
+his small boat, and gave orders to push off.
+
+"He understands no English," remarked Madame de La Fontaine. "I gave
+directions about my boxes. We may return now, monsieur; or doubtless I am
+able to find my way back alone."
+
+"Oh no," exclaimed Dan gallantly, "I will go with you."
+
+The lady smiled graciously. As they walked back across the Dunes, she
+kept up a lively conversation, no longer asking him questions, nor, he
+observed, giving him the opportunity to ask any.
+
+At the door of the House on the Dunes she dismissed him finally. "I am
+but too grateful, Monsieur, for your kindness. I hope that we shall meet
+again while I dwell in your beautiful country. In the meantime, I trust
+you will find your sister."
+
+Dan flushed, how could he have forgotten Nancy! Taking the hand that his
+new acquaintance offered, he hurried away. He met Tom on the Port Road
+about half a mile from the Inn and was truly worried to find that Nancy
+had not returned; he explained briefly his own delay in his expedition
+with the strange lady to the beach.
+
+"It is certainly odd, though perhaps not so odd as stupid, that they
+should have anchored in the Cove just to disembark one woman's boxes. It
+would have been much simpler to go to the Port, as every well-bred
+skipper does, and had the French woman's stuff carted out. At any rate,
+we'll go down this afternoon and have a look at her."
+
+By the time they reached the Inn it was noon, and still there was no word
+of Nancy. The dinner was a silent one, as the Marquis tactfully did not
+disturb his companions' preoccupation, and Mrs. Frost, who was unusually
+nervous, did not appear.
+
+After the meal the two young men started for the beach. At Tom's
+suggestion they got a little dory from the boathouse and rowed out to the
+clipper. The wind had shifted to the southeast, but still there was not
+enough of a sea to give them any trouble; and in a few minutes they were
+under the bows of _The Southern Cross_. Dan hailed a seaman who was
+leaning over the gunwale and watching them with idle curiosity. If the
+man replied in French, it was in a variety of that tongue that Tom's
+limited attainments did not understand, and, annoyed by the
+incomprehensible replies, he asked for "le captaine". At
+length,--possibly attracted by the altercation at the bows,--the
+authoritative-looking person who had come ashore in the morning in
+response to Madame de La Fontaine's signal, now appeared at the gunwale
+and glanced below at the two young men in the dory. His expression
+betrayed no sign that he recognized Frost. Indeed he vouchsafed no
+syllable of reply to the questions Dan asked in English or to those that
+Tom ventured to phrase in Dr. Watson's French.
+
+He was not, they thought, an attractive person; his countenance was
+swarthy, his eyes were black his hair was black, his heavy jaw was
+shadowed by an enormous black mustachio. A kerchief of brilliant red tied
+about his throat gave him the appearance of the matador in a Spanish
+bullfight rather than the officer of an English merchantman. He glanced
+at the dory occasionally, shook his head silently in response to the
+requests to go aboard, and at length when that did not serve to put an
+end to them, he shrugged his shoulders and disappeared. The seaman
+continued to lean over the gunwale and spat nonchalantly as though that
+were the measure of their appreciation of this unasked-for visit.
+
+"I move we skip up the rope," said Tom, "and explain ourselves at close
+quarters."
+
+"Thanks, no," replied Dan. "Either of those two amiable gentlemen
+looks capable and willing of pitching us overboard. The water is too
+cold for bathing."
+
+"Very well," said Tom, "I will yield to your sober judgment for the
+moment; but I propose to see the inside of that ship sooner or later
+unless she weighs anchor in the hour and sails away. But we ought to be
+getting to town to make enquiries about Nancy. For Heavens' sake, Dan,
+where do you suppose she can be?"
+
+They rowed back to the beach, stowed the dory in the boathouse, and set
+out in the sleigh for Monday Port. Diligent enquiry there, in likely and
+unlikely places, proved fruitless. It was nightfall when they returned
+to the Inn.
+
+They were greeted by the Marquis in the bar. "Mademoiselle Nancy, she has
+not been found?"
+
+"No," said Dan. "I take it from your question that she has not come home
+yet either."
+
+"She is not come, no. Perhaps she stays at the House on the Dunes?"
+
+"I do not know," Dan answered tartly. "I expect her every moment, but it
+is idle to conceal from you, Monsieur, that we are much concerned as to
+her absence."
+
+The Marquis grew sympathetic,--optimistically sympathetic. Tom clutched
+at his re-assuring words, but Dan was even more irritated by the silence
+that Monsieur de Boisdhyver had maintained throughout the day.
+
+Directly after supper Dan went into his mother's parlour, leaving the
+others to their own devices. The Marquis settled himself near the fire
+and was soon absorbed in reading an old folio; Tom wandered restlessly
+about, now up and down the long bar, now in the corridors, now on the
+gallery and in the court without.
+
+The night, after the bright day, had set in raw and cold; a damp breeze
+blew from the southwest, and gave promise both of wind and rain. From his
+position under the Red Oak, Tom could see the red and green lights of
+_The Southern Cross_ at her moorings in the Cove below, and across the
+Neck the lighted windows of the House on the Dunes. Over all else the
+night had cast its black damp mantle.
+
+As he stood watching, deeply anxious for the welfare of the girl he
+loved, he noticed a new light appear in one of the upper windows of the
+House on the Dunes--not yellow as is the light of candles, but green like
+the light on the port side of the clipper in the Cove. Had he not seen
+the lights from the other windows he could have thought it was another
+ship on the ocean side of the Neck.
+
+He looked for a long time at the tiny spark in the distance, wondering
+what whim had induced Mrs. Meath to shade her candles with so deep a
+green. As he strolled back toward the Inn, he glanced through the windows
+of the bar where the Marquis still read by the fireside. Suddenly the
+old gentleman, as Tom curiously watched him, laid his book down on the
+table and rose from his chair. He looked about the room and then advanced
+to the window. Tom instinctively slipped behind the trunk of the great
+oak. Monsieur de Boisdhyver stood for several moments peering into the
+darkness. Then he turned away and crossed the room to the door into the
+front hall. It flashed through Tom's mind that possibly the Marquis had
+started on another of his mysterious tours. He ran down again into the
+court far enough from the house to command a view of the entire facade,
+and watched curiously, particularly the north wing. All was dark, save
+for the lights below.
+
+Suddenly he saw the flicker of a candle in one of the windows, not of the
+north wing, but of the south. A moment's glance, and he made sure that it
+was the room occupied as a sleeping apartment by Monsieur de Boisdhyver.
+
+The Marquis was standing by the window, with his face pressed close to
+the pane, peering out into the night. He still held the candle in his
+hand. To Dan's surprise, he placed it carefully on the broad window-sill,
+and drew down the dark shade to within a foot of the sill, blotting out
+all save a narrow band of light. Then the Marquis disappeared for several
+moments into the interior of the room. Dan was about to turn back into
+the house, when again Monsieur de Boisdhyver came to the window. He did
+not raise the shade, but inserted between the windowpane and the candle a
+strip of dark green paper. It was translucent and had the effect of
+sending a beam of green light southward, across the meadows and the
+dunes, to meet--Tom suddenly realized--the rays of the green light from
+the House on the Dunes.
+
+Was it a signal being exchanged, and between whom? The coincidence of
+green lights from the Inn and the House on the Dunes, at the same moment,
+was too marked to be without significance. To what end was the Marquis de
+Boisdhyver exchanging mysterious signals with some one in that lonely
+farmhouse, and what did they mean?
+
+Tom repressed his agitation and remained for some time watching the two
+green lights that glowed toward one another over the dark landscape.
+
+Suddenly the light in the House on the Dunes was extinguished; then,
+momentarily it shone again, but quickly went out and left the great sweep
+of dunes in darkness. Two minutes later the same thing took place in the
+window of the south chamber of the Inn. The light flashed and was gone,
+flashed again and shone no more.
+
+Tom went in, by a rear entrance, to the bar. The Marquis was seated by a
+table, absorbed in reading. He started as Tom entered. "Still no word of
+Mademoiselle?" he piped.
+
+"Still no word, monsieur," Pembroke answered laconically. He also
+seated himself in the candle light and took up the last issue of the
+_Port News_.
+
+"Do you know what has become of Dan?" Pembroke asked presently.
+
+"Monsieur Frost he has been closeted with madame his mother for the past
+half-hour. You have no further plans for seeking Mademoiselle? For
+myself, I grow alarmed."
+
+"I know nothing but what you know, monsieur. Nancy has not returned.
+There has been no word of her. We shall have to wait." With tremendous
+effort to conceal his agitation and annoyance, Tom resumed his reading.
+
+Monsieur de Boisdhyver glanced at him for a moment with a little air of
+interrogation, then shrugged his shoulders slightly and turned again to
+his French paper.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+MRS. FROST'S RECOLLECTIONS OF A FRENCH EXILE
+
+
+After the long day of fruitless search and enquiry for the vanished
+Nancy, supper being over and Tom having gone outside, Dan joined his
+mother in the blue parlour.
+
+Mrs. Frost was weary with waiting and anxiety, but as Dan threw himself
+on a couch near her chair, she watched him patiently.
+
+"There is no clue, Dan?" she ventured at last.
+
+"No clue, mother, not the slightest. Nancy seems to have vanished as
+completely as if she had dissolved into air. As you know, the house has
+been thoroughly searched; the servants carefully questioned; and
+enquiries have been made at every conceivable place in Monday Port. I
+have been to the House on the Dunes, and to the farmhouses on every road
+round about. No one has seen or heard of her. She has taken French leave,
+but for what reason I can't imagine."
+
+"Nancy has not been happy for some time, Dan," said Mrs. Frost.
+
+"No, I have fancied that she was not. But why? Do you suppose she has
+left us deliberately? or--". He paused uncertain whether or not to give
+voice to his suspicions.
+
+"Or what?" asked his mother.
+
+"Or she has been forced away against her will."
+
+"Against her will!" the old lady exclaimed. "Who could have forced her?
+and for what reason? Do you think she may have been kidnapped?"
+
+"Either kidnapped or decoyed away."
+
+"But who could have designs upon Nancy? It is more reasonable to suppose
+that she left of her own accord. I confess that would not altogether
+surprise me."
+
+"I don't know, mother, but I have my fears and suspicions. There may be
+some one who has a deep interest in Nancy, who for reasons of his own,
+which I don't yet understand, may wish to control her movements. I wish
+you would tell me all you know of Nancy's origin. You have never told
+me;--you have never told her, I fancy,--who she really is and how you
+came to adopt her as your own child. I have never been curious to know,
+in fact I have not wanted to know, for she has always been to me
+precisely what a sister of my own blood would be. But now, it may help
+me to understand certain strange things that have happened in the last
+few days."
+
+For a moment Mrs. Frost was silent. "No, I have never spoken to you or
+to Nancy of her early history, Dan; simply because, to all intent she
+has been our own. I have always wished that she should feel absolutely
+one with us; and I think she always has, until this winter. But of late
+I have noticed her discontent, her growing restlessness, and I have
+sometimes wondered if she could be brooding over the mystery of her
+early years. But she has never asked me a direct question; and I have
+kept silent."
+
+"I think now, mother," Dan replied, "it is your duty to tell me all
+you know."
+
+"I have no reason, my dear, to keep anything from you. I should have told
+you years ago, if you had asked me. There is not much to tell. You may
+remember when you were a boy about six or seven years old, a French exile
+came to the Inn, a military gentleman, who had left France in consequence
+of the fall of the great Napoleon."
+
+"Yes, I remember him distinctly," said Dan. "He used to tell stories to
+Tom and me of his adventures in the wars. Tom was speaking of him only
+the other day."
+
+"Well," continued Mrs. Frost, "this gentleman called himself General
+Pointelle. I learned afterwards it was not his real name. Who he actually
+was, I have not the slightest idea. He brought with him a little girl two
+years old, a sweet little black-eyed girl, to whom I, having lost your
+only sister at about that age, took a great fancy. The General also had
+two servants with him, a valet, and a maid. The maid, a pretty young
+thing, took care of the child. They arrived in mid-summer, on a
+merchantman that plied between Marseilles and Monday Port. I do not know
+why General Pointelle came to this part of the country, or why he chose
+to stay at the Inn; at any rate he came, and he engaged for an indefinite
+period the best suite of apartments in the old north wing. He had the Oak
+Parlour--"
+
+"The Oak Parlour!" exclaimed Dan.
+
+"Yes," replied Mrs. Frost, "that was part of the suite reserved usually
+for our most distinguished guests. The general used that for a
+sitting-room and the adjoining chamber as a bed-room. The maid and child
+occupied connecting rooms across the hall. The valet, I believe, was in
+some other part of the house. General Pointelle proved himself a
+fascinating guest, and his little daughter Eloise was a favourite with
+all the household. The maid, pretty as she certainly was and apparently
+above her station, I somehow never trusted. I have always believed that
+the relations between the general and herself were not what they should
+have been. But Frenchmen look at such things differently, I am told; and
+it was not to our interests to be over-curious.
+
+"They had been with us about two months when one fine morning we awoke to
+find that General Pointelle, his valet, and the charming Marie had
+disappeared, and little Eloise was crying alone in her big room. You have
+probably guessed the child was Nancy."
+
+"Yes," Dan agreed, "but do you mean that the father actually
+abandoned her?"
+
+"Practically. He left a note for me and a little bag of gold amounting to
+two thousand dollars to be used for the child. If you will hand me that
+old secretary there, I will show you the letter."
+
+Dan placed the old-fashioned writing-desk on the table beside her, and
+waited anxiously while she fumbled in her pocket for the key. She
+unlocked the desk, and after searching a few moments amongst innumerable
+papers, drew out an old letter. This she unfolded carefully and handed
+to Dan. It was written in English, in a fine running hand. He read it
+attentively.
+
+"_The Inn at the Red Oak, Deal_:
+
+"14 October, '814.
+
+"Madame:
+
+"Political circumstances over which I have no control, patriotic
+considerations which I cannot withstand, demand my immediate return to
+France. In the conditions into which I am about to be plunged the care of
+my dear little daughter becomes an impossibility. Inhuman as it must seem
+to you, lacking in all sense of Christian duty as it must appear to you,
+I entrust, without the formality of consulting you, my beautiful little
+Eloise to your humane and tender care. With this letter I deposit with
+you the sum of two thousand dollars in gold, which will go a little way
+at least to compensate you for the burden I thus unceremoniously, but of
+necessity, thrust upon you. I appeal to and confide in the goodness of
+your heart, of which already I have such abundant testimony, that will
+take pity upon the misfortune of a helpless infant and an equally
+helpless parent. May you be a mother to the motherless, and may the
+Heavenly Father bless you for what you shall do.
+
+"I embark, madame, upon a dangerous and uncertain mission. Should that
+mission prove successful and restore the fortunes of my house, I will
+return and claim my daughter. Should fate overwhelm me with disaster, I
+must beg that you will continue to regard her and love her as your own.
+The issue will have been decided within five years. Permit me to add but
+one thing more,--in the event that I fall in the cause I have embraced, I
+have made arrangements whereby communications shall be established with
+you, madame, that will redound to your own good fortune and that of the
+little Eloise.
+
+"All effort to thwart my plans or to establish my identity in the
+meantime, will, I must warn you, be fruitless.
+
+"Adieu, madame: accept the assurance of my gratitude for all that you
+have already done to sweeten exile and of my earnest prayer for the
+blessing of God upon your great good heart.
+
+"I remain, madame, for the present, but always, under whatever name,
+
+"Your grateful and sincere servant,
+
+"GASTON POINTELLE,"
+
+As Dan, with gathering brows, concluded the reading of this
+extraordinary letter, Mrs. Frost resumed her story.
+
+"We always imagined that the general and his companions had sailed in a
+French vessel that lay at that time in the Passage and left that morning
+at dawn. There was nothing to do but adopt little Eloise Pointelle for my
+own. I changed her name, at your father's suggestion, to Nancy Frost;
+knowing that Pointelle was not the general's real name. For five years we
+looked to see our guest return; and afterwards for years, we hoped to
+receive some communication that would prove, as he promised, of advantage
+to Nancy and ourselves. But from the night General Pointelle left our
+house to this day, I have not heard one word to show that he still
+existed or, indeed, that he ever had existed. We brought Nancy up as our
+own daughter, though, never concealing from her the fact that she was not
+of our blood. Indeed, Dan, I have loved her dearly."
+
+"Certainly, you have always treated her with the greatest kindness. But
+this is quite extraordinary, Mother. I think it will throw light on
+Nancy's present disappearance."
+
+"Do you think the father is alive, Dan? that he has communicated
+with her?"
+
+"Not that, mother; I am really in the dark. But I believe that the
+Marquis de Boisdhyver has some connection with your General Pointelle,
+and that his stay with us this winter has something to do with Nancy."
+
+In response to Mrs. Frost's questions, he told of the meetings of Nancy
+and the marquis, but decided to say nothing about the paper that he had
+found in the Oak Parlour.
+
+"I want you to be careful, Mother, to give no hint to the Marquis that we
+suspect him in any way. Tom and I are trying to solve the mystery, and
+secrecy is of the greatest importance. It is a more complicated business
+than we imagined. I must go now and find Tom. May I keep this letter?"
+
+"Yes, but keep it under lock and key. I have guarded it for sixteen
+years; and it is the only evidence I possess of Nancy's origin."
+
+Dan returned to the bar, where he found the Marquis and Tom still reading
+their papers.
+
+"Ah!" exclaimed Monsieur de Boisdhyver, "I trust, Monsieur Frost, you
+bring us the good news at last of the return of Mademoiselle."
+
+"Unfortunately, I do not, monsieur," Dan replied. "Our efforts to find
+out what has become of her have been entirely unsuccessful. I am very
+anxious, as you may imagine."
+
+"And to what mishap do you attribute Mademoiselle's so unceremonious
+departure?"
+
+"I do not attribute it to any mishap," replied Dan. "I think that my
+sister has gone off on a visit to some friends, and that her messages to
+us have been miscarried. I feel certain that to-morrow we will be
+completely reassured."
+
+"Ah! I hope so with all my heart," exclaimed the Marquis fervently. "It
+is a matter of deep distress to me--monsieur. But if--to-morrow passes
+and still you do not hear--?"
+
+"God knows, sir. We must do everything to find her."
+
+"We shall find her," cried Tom, as he sprang to his feet, unable longer
+to repress his anxiety or his irritation. "And if we do not find her safe
+and well, woe to the man who has harmed her."
+
+"Bravo!" cried the Marquis. "Permit me to adopt those words to express
+my own sentiments. I applaud this determination, monsieur, _de tout
+mon coeur_."
+
+Tom glared at the little old man with an expression of illconcealed rage.
+He was about to blurt out some angry reply, when a warning gesture from
+Dan checked him. Without speaking, he flung himself out of the room.
+
+"Poor Tom!" said Dan quickly, to cover Pembroke's attitude toward the
+Marquis, "this takes him especially hard. He is in love with Nancy."
+
+"_Eh bien_! I sympathize with his good taste. It is that that accounts
+for his vigour of his expressions, so much more _emphatique_ than our
+good host."
+
+"More emphatic, perhaps," said Dan, "though I do not feel less strongly."
+
+The Marquis made a little bow, as he rose to retire. "If, chance,
+monsieur could require my assistance--"
+
+"Thank you," said Dan quickly. "In that case, sir, I shall be only too
+happy to call upon you." He rose also, and courteously held the candle
+till the Marquis had reached the top of the stairs.
+
+Tom waited his friend impatiently in their common chamber. And when at
+last, having closed the house for the night, Dan joined him, he told at
+once of the signals which he supposed had been exchanged between the
+Marquis at the Inn and someone at the House on the Dunes. In return Dan
+repeated what he had learned about Nancy from Mrs. Frost.
+
+"There is no doubt in my mind," said Dan, "that the Marquis knows all
+about Nancy's disappearance and where she is, and further I believe that
+Nancy's disappearance is part of a plot with the Marquis here, Madame de
+la Fontaine at the House on the Dunes, and that schooner riding at anchor
+in the Cove. I have a plan, Tom."
+
+"Go ahead for heaven's sake. If we don't do something, I'll go in and
+choke the truth out of that old reprobate. He applauds my sentiments, eh!
+Good God! If he knew them!"
+
+"Yes, yes," said Dan. "But the time for choking has not come. You nearly
+gave yourself away to-night, you will ruin our plans, and involve Nancy
+in some harm. She is probably in that old villain's power. Now listen to
+me. The first thing to do is to discover Nancy's whereabouts. The second
+is to get at the bottom of the Marquis's plot and the secret of the torn
+scrap of paper. We will find the clew to both, I think, if we can
+discover the meaning of the signals between the Marquis and the lady in
+the House on the Dunes."
+
+"Right!" cried Tom. "But how?"
+
+"One of us must stay at the Inn and watch the Marquis to-night, and the
+other investigate the House on the Dunes. I have already been there and
+made the acquaintance of the lady, so I had better do that, and you stay
+here. Do you agree?"
+
+"Yes, of course; though I envy you the chance to be out and doing."
+
+"You will be doing something here. I want you to hide yourself in the
+hallway near the Marquis's door and watch all night--till dawn anyway.
+He cannot get out of his room without coming into the hall, and we must
+know what he does to-night. If the Marquis can spend a sleepless night,
+we can afford to do so. I don't know what I can do at the House on the
+Dunes but I shall take the pistol, and you can keep my gun. To-morrow I
+will get more arms, for I shouldn't be surprised if we needed them. Is
+everything clear?"
+
+"Perfectly," said Tom. "I'll watch as soon as you are off."
+
+"Good-night, old boy, good luck."
+
+"Good-night," and Dan slipped out of the room and down the dark stairs.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+MIDNIGHT VIGILS
+
+
+As soon as Dan had gone Tom blew out his light and slipped into
+the hallway.
+
+This portion of the Inn was simple in design. A long corridor ran through
+the middle of the house to meet a similar passage at the southern end
+extending at right angles to the main hall. The South Chamber, occupied
+by the Marquis de Boisdhyver, opened into the southwest passage, but the
+door was well beyond the juncture of the two corridors. It was Pembroke's
+intention to conceal himself in the bedroom next the Marquis's chamber,
+from the door of which he could look down the entire length of the main
+hall, and by stepping outside get a view of the branch hallway into which
+the door of this room and that of the Marquis actually opened. A further
+advantage was that the windows of this room, like those of the South
+Chamber, looked out upon the Dunes and the Cove.
+
+As Tom stepped from his chamber, the house seemed utterly deserted; save
+for the roaring of the wind without and an occasional creak or crack in
+the time-worn boards, there were no sounds.
+
+The night was not a dark one, although the wind was rising and rain was
+threatening; for a full moon lurked behind the thick veil of cloud and
+something of its weird weak light relieved the darkness even of the great
+corridor of the Inn.
+
+Tom stole softly down the hallway and gained the room next the Marquis's.
+He took his position in a great chair, which he drew near the open door,
+and laid his gun on the floor near at hand. No one could enter the hall
+without his seeing him. Every few moments he would tiptoe to the doorway,
+thrust his head into the corridor, and listen intently for any sound in
+the South Chamber.
+
+It was a lonely and unpleasant vigil. The night was wild, the storm was
+rising, the old Inn was moaning as though in distress; and, despite his
+natural courage, fantastic terrors and dangers thrust themselves upon his
+excited imagination. He would much have preferred, he felt, to be out in
+the open as Dan was, even facing real dangers and greater difficulties.
+Deeper than by these imaginary fears of the night, he was racked with
+anxiety to know what had become of the girl he loved. Had she been
+decoyed away by the evil genius of the place; was she in danger? Had she
+disappeared of her own free will; and didn't she really love him?
+
+He was not in the least sleepy; but after a while the vigil began to tell
+upon his nerves. He found it almost impossible to sit still and wait,
+perhaps in vain. He made innumerable trips across the room to the windows
+to look out into the bleak night. The landscape was blotted out. Not a
+light showed from the House on the Dunes; only the two lamps on the
+schooner at anchor in the Cove gleamed across the night. Eleven o'clock,
+twelve o'clock struck solemnly from the old clock on the stairs.
+
+Once as he was looking out of the window, it seemed to him that the green
+light on the _Southern Cross_ was moving. But it was impossible that she
+should weigh anchor in the teeth of the rising storm. He was mistaken.
+Nay, he was sure. But it was rising, slowly, steadily, as though drawn by
+an invisible hand, to about the height of the masthead. There at last it
+stopped, and swung to the wind, to and fro, to and fro; high above its
+red companion, high above the deck.
+
+And then, suddenly, as if to answer this mysterious manoeuvre, the green
+light, that earlier in the evening had glowed from a north window of the
+House on the Dunes, now flashed from an east window of the old farmhouse;
+flashed, then gleamed steadily. The light on the _Southern Cross_ was
+lowered slowly, then raised again. The light in the House on the Dunes
+vanished; soon flashed again and then vanished once more. Slowly the
+light in the schooner descended to its normal position. A moment later
+the green light appeared on the north side of the House on the Dunes,
+where it had been earlier, and shone there steadily.
+
+Was it a signal to the Marquis de Boisdhyver? Tom tiptoed to the
+partition between his room and the South Chamber, and put his ear to the
+wall to listen. Not a sound reached him. He turned to the door to go into
+the corridor, and stood suddenly motionless. For there, advancing ever so
+cautiously down the hall, carrying a lighted candle in his hand, was the
+old Marquis. He was clad in night dress and cap, with a gayly-coloured
+dressing-gown worn over the white shirt. Slowly, silently, pausing every
+instant to listen; he stole on, gun in hand, and Tom followed him as
+cautiously and as quietly. Instead of turning to the right at the
+partition that divides the north and south wings of the Inn and going
+down stairs, the Marquis turned to the left, into the short hall that led
+directly to the great chamber occupied by Tom and Dan.
+
+By the time Pembroke in pursuit had reached the turn and dared to peep
+around the corner of the wall, the Marquis was at the door of Dan's room.
+He stood there, ear bent close to the panel, intently listening.
+
+Tom waited breathless. Not satisfied, Monsieur de Boisdhyver turned about
+and went into an adjoining chamber, the door of which stood open.
+Pembroke was about to advance, when the Marquis emerged again into the
+corridor, having left his lighted candle in the empty room. This
+manoeuvre, whatever advantage it had for the Marquis, was fortunate for
+Pembroke, for it left the end of the little hall, where he stood
+watching, in deep shadow. He could now step boldly from behind the
+concealing wall without fear of immediate detection.
+
+Again the Marquis stood and listened at the door of Dan's room, then
+cautiously turned the knob. The door yielded and opened an inch or so.
+Monsieur de Boisdhyver put his ear to the crack. Dissatisfied with the
+absolute silence that must have met him, he pushed open the door a little
+further and thrust his head inside. In a moment he disappeared within.
+
+Tom realized that the Marquis would soon discover the fact that the
+room was empty. He looked about quickly for a place of concealment that
+would command a view of all the halls. Fortunately the partition that
+divided the long corridor between the north and south wings was hung
+with heavy curtains. Deciding instantly, Pembroke slipped behind them,
+and ruthlessly slit an opening in the thick green stuff, through which
+he could peek out. He was just in time, as the Marquis came out of
+their bedroom and softly closed the door. He stood irresolute; then,
+with even greater caution, re-entered the room in which he had left his
+candle. To Tom's chagrin, the candle was suddenly extinguished and the
+Inn left in darkness.
+
+For some moments, there was absolute silence. Then Tom could hear
+faintly,--or feel rather than hear--the Marquis cautiously finding his
+way back. Luckily, the old Frenchman was groping his way next the other
+wall. Pembroke slipped from behind the curtains and stole softly in
+pursuit. As he reached the south end of the corridor, he heard the latch
+of the Marquis's door click softly. Alarmed by discovering that they were
+not in bed, thought Tom, he had abandoned whatever purpose he had in mind
+for his midnight prowl.
+
+After waiting a little and hearing no more, Tom went again to the window.
+The rain had begun now and the wind was blowing a gale. Suddenly Pembroke
+discerned a light shining from the window next the very one from which he
+was peering into the darkness,--the steady glow of a deep red light.
+
+"Another signal!" he murmured; then waited to see if it would be answered
+by the House on the Dunes. Perhaps fifteen minutes passed, and then,
+suddenly, there gleamed through the rain and dark, a tiny bit of red
+flame, just where the House on the Dunes must be. A little later the red
+lamp on the _Southern Cross_ performed a fantastic ascension to what
+Pembroke took to be the masthead.
+
+The red light in the neighbouring window was extinguished. Almost
+instantly the red spark on the Dunes disappeared, and in a few moments
+the schooner's lamp began its descent. Simultaneously they glowed again
+and the ship's light danced upward; then the two red lights on shore
+vanished and the lamp on the _Southern Cross_ sank to its proper place
+and stayed there.
+
+Of one thing Tom was sure: The Marquis, the lady at the House on the
+Dunes, and the skipper of the schooner in the Cove, were in collusion. Of
+another thing he felt almost equally certain: the red light was a signal
+of danger, and the message of danger flashed across the night was the
+fact that he and Dan were not safe asleep in bed.
+
+For a long time he watched, keen with excitement; listened patiently;
+started at every sound. But nothing more unusual did he hear that night
+than the roar of the wind, the dash of the brawling southeaster against
+the panes, and the groans of the old house, shaken by the storm. Toward
+morning he crept back to bed and fell instantly into a deep and
+dreamless sleep.
+
+While Tom was thus watching and sleeping a somewhat different experience
+had fallen to the lot of Dan Frost. He had no definite plan in making a
+midnight visit to the vicinity of the House on the Dunes, but he hoped to
+discover some clue to the surrounding mysteries. From time to time during
+the day he had taken his field glasses to one of the upper rooms of the
+Inn, and scanned the countryside but nothing unusual seemed astir in the
+white world without. The _Southern Cross_ had lain on the surface of the
+little cove all day, swaying with wind and tide, no sign of activity upon
+her decks. It was after ten when he started forth. The night was not
+quite dark, for the full moon was shining somewhere behind the thick veil
+of clouds. Earlier in the evening Dan had intended to go boldly to the
+House itself and demand an interview with old Mrs. Meath; but he
+reflected that he would probably be met with the excuse that Mrs. Meath
+was ill, and he did not know how he could force himself in, particularly
+past the barrier of Madame de la Fontaine's charming manner.
+
+It was an unpleasant walk with the wind in his face, and it was nearly
+eleven before he turned into the long dune road, which branched from the
+Port Road near the Rocking Stone and led directly to the old farmhouse on
+Strathsey Neck. To his chagrin it appeared that all lights had been
+extinguished as if the inmates of the house had gone to bed.
+
+The old farmhouse loomed before him, dark and forbidding. On either side
+there were outhouses, and in the rear quite near the house a barn. There
+was not a tree on the place; indeed, there was little vegetation upon the
+entire Neck, save the grass of the middle meadows which in summer
+furnished scant nourishment for the cattle and a flock of sheep. Now all
+was bleak and covered with snow, and a freshening gale swept out of the
+great maw of the Atlantic.
+
+Keeping close to the fence, Frost began to make a complete circuit of
+the farmhouse. As he turned a corner of the south end, or rear of the
+house, he was relieved to see a light burning in the kitchen. He stole
+cautiously to a position within the shadow of the barn from which he
+could get a glimpse of the interior. In the kitchen standing before a
+deal table, he saw a young woman--not Jane, Mrs. Heath's
+maid-of-all-work, but a stranger,--with her hands deep in a bowl of
+dough. Her back was toward him, but he guessed that she was Madame de la
+Fontaine's maid, whom he had seen in the morning. The door into the
+dining-room beyond stood open, and by craning his neck, Dan could see
+that the room was lighter, but he could not discover whether or not it
+were occupied. The shutters of the dining-room were so closely barred
+and the curtains so tightly drawn that not a ray of light penetrated to
+the outside.
+
+The girl in the kitchen proceeded busily about her work. She was
+evidently engaged, despite the lateness of the hour, in mixing bread.
+
+Once while he waited patiently, to what end he hardly knew, Madame de la
+Fontaine entered the kitchen. She was clad in black and held in her hands
+what Dan took to be a ship's lamp. She stood for a moment in the doorway
+and spoke to the servant maid. The girl stopped her work, and taking a
+strip of paper, ignited it at a candle and lighted the lamp, which Madame
+de la Fontaine held up for her. It glowed instantly with a deep green
+flame, such as Tom had described as shining from a window of the House on
+the Dunes in the early evening.
+
+As soon as her lamp was lighted Madame de la Fontaine left the room.
+Supposing that she was about to give a signal, Dan's heart leaped at the
+prospect of some result to his eavesdropping, and he stole carefully
+around to the front of the house. Presently from an upper window in the
+east side of the house, not the north as he had expected, he saw the
+green light sending forth its message across the Dunes--to whom? Probably
+the signal could be seen from the Inn, but it more likely was intended
+for the schooner in the Cove. Sure enough, as he watched, Dan saw the
+phenomenon of the ascending lamp on the _Southern Cross_, which at that
+identical moment Tom Pembroke was watching from his post of vantage in
+one of the south windows of the Inn.
+
+A little later the signal was removed from the east window of the
+farmhouse and placed in a north window. Dan looked to see the answering
+gleam from the Inn at the Red Oak. But none came. Crouched in a corner of
+the fence, he waited perhaps for half-an-hour.
+
+Suddenly a signal gleamed from the Inn, but this time it was not green as
+he expected, but red. In a few moments a form appeared in the window of
+the farmhouse, and a white hand, which he supposed was that of Madame de
+la Fontaine, took hold of the lamp and reversed it, so that now it showed
+red. The light in the Inn vanished, reappeared, vanished again. The same
+thing happened to the light in the House on the Dunes. And looking
+eastward, Dan saw the ship's red lamp perform its fantastic ascent and
+descent. Soon all was left in darkness. Frost slipped back to his post
+near the barn and looked again into the kitchen.
+
+Madame de la Fontaine was standing in the doorway as before. The maid,
+turning away from the table, came at that moment to the window, and
+raised the sash, as though she were overheated. Presently, leaving the
+window open, she turned to her mistress, and Dan could hear the sharp
+staccato of her voice as she said something in what seemed to him her
+barbarous French.
+
+Impelled by curiosity, he crept closer to the house. He was within six
+feet of the window, standing on the tip of his toes. Suddenly he felt
+himself pinioned from behind; his arms were gripped as in a vise, a hand
+grasped his throat and began to choke him, and a sharp knee was planted
+with terrific force in the small of his back. He made a gurgling sound as
+he went backward, but there was no opportunity for struggling. He
+recovered from the shock to find himself stretched at full length in the
+wet snow. Some one was sitting upon him, struggling to thrust a gag into
+his mouth; some one else was binding his hands and feet.
+
+He could just distinguish, in the sickly moonlight and the dim rays of
+the candle from the kitchen, the faces of his assailants. One was the
+murderous looking Frenchman, the skipper of the _Southern Cross_, the
+other he took to be a common seaman.
+
+Attracted by the scuffle, the French maid had thrust her head out of the
+window and was addressing the combatants in vigorous French. Neither then
+nor later did Madame de la Fontaine appear. When Frost was safely bound
+and gagged, Captain Bonhomme arose, said a few words to his companion,
+and disappeared into the farmhouse. Dan's guard searched him rapidly,
+confiscated his revolver and knife, and then resumed his seat upon his
+legs. Inside the kitchen Dan could hear the sounds of an animated French
+dialogue, in which he imagined from time to time that he detected the
+silvery tones of Madame de la Fontaine's voice. Perhaps fifteen minutes
+elapsed. Captain Bonhomme came out of the house, strode to the spot where
+Dan was lying, and addressed him in excellent English.
+
+"Monsieur; for purposes which it is superfluous to explain, it is decided
+to extend to you for a while the hospitality of my good ship the
+_Southern Cross_--a hospitality, I may say, that your unceremonious
+eavesdropping has thrust upon you. I will release your feet; and then,
+monsieur, you follow my good Jean across the sands. If you are quiet, no
+harm shall come to you. If you resist, _cher monsieur_, it will be of
+painful duty that I entrust the contents of this revolver into--_mais
+non! Vous comprenez, n'est-ce pas?--Bien_!"
+
+He gave a sharp order to the seaman. The handkerchief about Dan's ankles
+was untied, and he was roughly assisted to his feet.
+
+"The snow is wet, eh! Yes, for the good wind is moist. Now, _Allons_!"
+
+Jean led the way, and Dan, deciding that he had no choice in the matter,
+followed obediently. The captain brought up the rear. As they went out
+through the gate, Dan turned for a moment and looked back at the house.
+He could see the French maid still at the kitchen window. At the same
+moment Captain Bonhomme glanced back and ceremoniously raised his hat.
+
+"_Bonsoir, mam'zelle_."
+
+"_Bonsoir, monsieur_," was the sharp reply, and the window was lowered
+with a bang.
+
+They went on in silence across the Dunes to the beach. There, drawn up
+above high water line, they found a skiff. The captain and Jean shoved
+off, sprang in, and the little boat plunged into the combing waves. They
+reached the _Southern Cross_ without misadventure. The captain blew a
+call upon a boatswain's whistle. A rope was lowered and Jean made the
+skiff fast to the ladder at the schooner's side. The captain took out
+his revolver and held it in his hand, while Jean unloosed the cords that
+bound Dan's wrists.
+
+"Now up, _mon ami_."
+
+For a moment Dan thought of risking a scuffle in the unsteady skiff, but
+discretion proved the better part of valour, and he climbed obediently on
+to the deck. The seaman stood close by till the captain and Jean had
+clambered up after him. A few words in French to his men, then Captain
+Bonhomme, beckoning to Dan to follow, led the way down the companion. He
+opened the door of a little cabin amidships and bade Frost enter.
+
+"You will find everything required for your comfort, monsieur," he said,
+"and I trust you will make yourself at home, as you say; and enjoy a good
+night and a sound sleep. We can discuss our affairs in the morning."
+
+And with the words, he closed the door, turned the key in the lock, and
+left Dan to his reflections.
+
+
+
+
+PART III
+
+THE SCHOONER IN THE COVE
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+THE SOUTHERN CROSS
+
+
+Dan spent a miserable night. He had soon satisfied himself that escape
+was impossible. A child could not have squeezed through the port hole,
+and the stoutness of the door--barred, he fancied, as well as locked on
+the outside,--seemed to indicate that this particular cabin had been
+constructed for the purpose of keeping an enemy out of mischief.
+
+Young Frost's reflections, as at length he stretched himself upon the
+bunk, were anything but agreeable. The reconnoitre at the House on the
+Dunes had established nothing but what they already practically
+knew--that the Marquis, the lady, and the captain of the schooner were
+working together. If they were responsible for Nancy's disappearance, as
+Dan was convinced, he had not succeeded in getting a scrap of evidence
+against them. And to cap the climax, he had stupidly allowed himself to
+be captured. The method of his capture seemed to him quite as ignominious
+as the fact.
+
+He was not particularly alarmed for his own safety. He did not doubt that
+eventually he would escape, though at the moment he could not imagine
+how; or, failing in that, he supposed he would be released,--honorably
+discharged, as it were,--when it was too late for him to interfere with
+the designs of the conspirators. And this was the bitterest reflection of
+all: that a carefully-planned conspiracy was on foot, and no sooner had
+he and Tom realized it than through sheer stupidity he must not only make
+it clear to the Marquis and his colleagues that they were being watched,
+but must let himself fall into their power. Poor Tom! thought Dan
+ruefully as he tossed upon the little bunk, there must fall upon him now
+the brunt of whatever was to be done for Nancy's rescue, for the
+thwarting of whatever nefarious designs this gang of French desperados
+were concocting.
+
+Escape! A dozen times and more he sprang from his bed to press his face
+against the thick glass of the little port and to rage futilely that he
+could not elongate his six feet of anatomy, and slip through. In vain he
+would throw his weight against the door, without so much as shaking it.
+And then he would sink back upon the bunk and determine to conserve his
+strength by snatching a bit of sleep. And he would wait--since he must
+wait--till morning.
+
+The gale had lashed itself into a fury; the rain was pouring in
+torrents; and the ship rolled distressingly in the rising sea. It was
+near dawn before Dan succeeded in getting to sleep at all, but from then
+on for several hours he slept heavily. When he awoke the storm, like
+many storms that come out of the south, had exhausted itself. The rain
+had ceased, the wind had fallen, and it was evident from the motion of
+the ship, that the sea was going down. Dan sprang to the port hole and
+peered out, and was thankful to realize that the peep hole of his prison
+gave upon the shore.
+
+Though it had stopped raining, the clouds were still grey and lowering,
+and the morning light was weak and pale. The Dunes, beyond the disturbed
+waters of the little cove, looked dirty and bedraggled. The snow had been
+washed off the hillocks, the little streams that here and there emptied
+into the Cove had swollen to the size of respectable brooks, and the high
+water of the night had strewn the beach with brown tangled seaweed. There
+was no sign of human life in evidence. Dan could just see the upper story
+of the House on the Dunes, but no other habitation save the deserted
+fisherman's huts that straggled along the beach.
+
+His watch showed half-past seven when the evil-visaged Jean unbarred the
+door, opened it about a foot, and thrust in upon the floor a tray of
+food. Dan sprang forward and succeeded in getting his foot into the
+opening, so that Jean could not close the door. He was prepared to fight
+for his liberty. Despite Jean's superior strength, Dan had the advantage
+in that his own body acted as a lever, and for a moment it seemed that he
+was to be successful; but the Frenchman, with a violent execration,
+suddenly let go his hold on the knob, the door swung in, and Dan fell
+back on all fours upon the floor. By the time he had recovered himself
+for another dash, he was confronted by Jean, a disagreeable leer upon his
+unpleasant countenance and a cocked pistol in his hand.
+
+Dan stood in his tracks. "I want to see Captain Bonhomme!" he demanded,
+making up in the tone of his voice for the vigor his movements
+suddenly lacked.
+
+"_Je ne parle pas englais_," was the irritating reply, as Jean, menacing
+the prisoner with the pistol, reached for the door and closed it with a
+snap. Dan had the chagrin of hearing the key turn in the lock and the
+heavy bar fall into place across the panels.
+
+He sat down ruefully, but after a moment or so took up the tray and
+placed it on the bunk before him. He made a bad breakfast off thick
+gruel, black bread and villainous coffee, and then kicked his heels
+impatiently for an hour or more.
+
+Eventually Jean reappeared, this time pistol in hand, and behind him, to
+Dan's relief, Captain Bonhomme. The captain entered the little cabin,
+leaving the door open behind him while Jean stood in the passage on duty
+as guard. The swarthy unattractive face of Captain Bonhomme wore this
+morning an expression of sarcastic levity that was more irritating to
+Frost than its ferocious anger had been the night before.
+
+"_Bon jour, monsieur_," said the captain in a tone of obnoxious
+pleasantry. "I trust the night has gone well with you."
+
+"You will oblige me," snapped Dan for reply, "by omitting your
+hypocritical courtesy. I demand to know what you mean by this
+proceeding,--capturing me like a common thief and imprisoning me on this
+confounded ship?"
+
+Captain Bonhomme's countenance quickly lost its factitious cheerfulness.
+"Monsieur," he replied sharply, "I did not come to you to bandy words. If
+you will reflect on the occupation you were indulging last night at the
+moment we surprised you, you will comprehend that it was certainly to be
+inferred that, if you were not a thief, you were an eavesdropper; which,
+to my way of thinking, is as bad. If you address me again in that
+insulting tone, I shall leave you till such a time as you may be willing
+to listen at least with common courtesy to what I have to say. You are,
+young gentleman, a prisoner on my ship and very much in my power. You
+have grossly offended a distinguished countrywoman who is under my
+protection in your barbarous country. Madame de la Fontaine, however, has
+been good enough to interest herself in your behalf and to beg that I
+shall not unceremoniously pitch you overboard to feed the fishes as you
+so richly deserve."
+
+Dan bit his lips, but for the moment kept silent.
+
+"I am come this morning," continued Captain Bonhomme, "not for the
+pleasure of entering upon a discussion, but to inform you that a little
+later in the morning, when this infernal wind of yours has blown itself
+out, Madame de la Fontaine proposes to come aboard. For reasons of her
+own, she does you the honor to desire a conversation with you. I have to
+ask that you will meet my distinguished patroness as the gentleman you
+doubtless profess to be, and that you will give me your word not to
+attempt to escape while Madame is on board the ship."
+
+"I shall not give my word," protested Dan, "under any circumstances to a
+pirate such as I take you to be."
+
+"_Eh bien, monsieur_; in that case, you will appear before Madame in
+irons. From your window, so admirably small, you will see at what hour
+Madame comes aboard. If in the meantime you have decided to give us your
+word of honour, well and good; if you continue to display your freedom of
+choice by the exercise of your stupidity, also, well and good. And now,
+_an revoir_." Captain Bonhomme smiled grimly, bowed again with insulting
+politeness, and left Dan alone in the cabin.
+
+An hour, two hours passed. The wind had abated, the sun was struggling to
+dissipate the murky bank of cloud that hung from zenith to the eastern
+horizon. From his coign of vantage at the little port hole Dan saw Madame
+de la Fontaine pick her way across the Dunes and come upon the little
+beach. A small boat had put off from the schooner and was being rowed to
+shore by two seamen. The French lady gathered her skirts about her
+ankles, and stepped lightly into the skiff, as the men held it at the
+edge of the surf. The little boat was then pushed off and rowed briskly
+toward the _Southern Cross_.
+
+Half-an-hour passed before the door of Dan's cabin was opened again, and
+Captain Bonhomme, attended by the faithful Jean, reappeared. In the
+skipper's hand was a pair of irons.
+
+"Monsieur," said the captain, holding up the irons, "Madame de la
+Fontaine does you the honour of desiring an interview in the saloon. May
+I venture to enquire your pleasure?"
+
+The ignominy of appearing before his charming acquaintance of the day
+before manacled like a criminal, was too much for Dan's vanity. "I give
+you my word of honour," he said gruffly.
+
+"Ah, monsieur," murmured the captain, "permit me to applaud your good
+taste. But let us be exact: until you are returned to this cabin and are
+again under lock and key, that is to say until Madame is safely upon
+shore again,--you give me your word of honour as a gentleman to make no
+attempt to escape?"
+
+"Yes, yes," said Dan, striving to conceal his irritation. "But spare me,
+I beg, your explanations. As you know, I am practically helpless. We
+understand each other. I trust that Madame de la Fontaine will give me an
+explanation of the outrage that you have refused."
+
+"_Sans doute, sane doute_!" exclaimed the captain. He waved his
+hand toward the door. "_Aprés vous, monsieur_. Our worthy Jean will
+lead the way."
+
+Without more ado they left the little cabin that had served as
+Dan's prison and traversed a narrow passageway aft to the door of a
+little saloon.
+
+In the saloon, seated in a deep arm chair by the side of the table, was
+Madame de la Fontaine. She was clad in some soft green gown, with furs
+about her neck and wrists, and a little bonnet, adorned by the gay
+plumage of a tropical bird, worn close upon her head. At first glance she
+was as bewitchingly beautiful, as entirely charming, as she had seemed to
+Dan the day before. He blushed to the roots of his hair and for the
+moment quite forgot the extraordinary predicament in which he was placed.
+Madame de la Fontaine rose, a bright smile beaming from her soft blue
+eyes, and waited for Dan to approach.
+
+"Good morning, Mr. Frost. This is charming of you. And now, Captain
+Bonhomme, if you will be so kind,--" she turned with her delightful smile
+to the skipper. "_Eh bien_, Jean!" This last remark was uttered in a
+sharp tone of command, very different from the silvery accents in which
+she had spoken to Frost and the captain. Dan wondered at it.
+
+The disagreeable impression was but momentary, for the lady turned
+again to Dan, engaged him with her frank and pleasant glance, and young
+Frost forgot everything in the presence of the most charming woman he
+had ever met.
+
+Captain Bonhomme and his watchdog had disappeared, closing the saloon
+door behind them. Dan and Madame de la Fontaine were alone.
+
+"Will you not seat yourself, monsieur?" she said. "We shall then talk so
+much more at our ease."
+
+"Thank you," Dan murmured vaguely, and advancing a step or two nearer,
+seated himself in the first chair within reach.
+
+"Ah, not there, Mr. Frost," the lady protested with a little laugh
+of amusement. "It will never be that we are able to talk at so
+great a distance." She indicated a more comfortable chair at much
+closer quarters.
+
+Dan obediently changed his seat, and waited for Madame de la Fontaine to
+begin the conversation. But she continued for a moment silently to regard
+him with a naive air of interest and of unconcealed admiration.
+
+"May I ask," said Dan at length, disturbed by this scrutiny, and rising
+to a courtesy that was in reality beyond him, "for what reason you have
+done me the honour to wish to speak with me?"
+
+"_Vraiment_," replied Madame de la Fontaine; "after the events of last
+night there is need that we should have some conversation. You are very
+young and I have reason to be grateful to you for courtesy and kindness,
+so I have yielded to impulse, against my judgment, to interfere with
+Captain Bonhomme who has great anger with you."
+
+"You are very kind, madame," Dan replied with dignity. "I am to infer
+then that my liberty or my further unwarranted imprisonment on this ship
+is to be determined by you?"
+
+"_Mais non, Monsieur_. It is true only that I have a little influence
+with Captain Bonhomme. Last night you were watching me, so it interests
+me to know why."
+
+"I was watching Mrs. Heath's house," Dan answered.
+
+"Ah! but I and my maid were alone in the room into which you so
+unceremoniously looked, monsieur!"
+
+"Yes, madame, but why should you infer that my motive in looking into
+that room was interest in your affairs?"
+
+"I do not altogether assume that, Mr. Frost," the lady protested. "I
+infer simply--but, pardon! you were to say--?"
+
+"Merely to ask you, madame, what Captain Bonhomme proposes to do with me,
+should you not be so good as to use your influence in my behalf?"
+
+For reply the lady shrugged her shoulders a trifle. "I have fear,
+monsieur," she said after a moment, "that Captain Bonhomme will take you
+for a sail, perhaps a long sail, on the _Southern Cross_."
+
+"Then," said Dan, "since there is no doubt in my mind of your influence
+with the captain, I beg that you will have him release me."
+
+"It is that that I desire, monsieur; and yet--?" Madame de la Fontaine
+paused and glanced at her companion with a charming little air of
+interrogation.
+
+"And yet?" repeated Dan, flushing a little as he looked into the lovely
+blue eyes that met his so frankly.
+
+"I confess, monsieur, I must first discover if you are really deserving
+of my efforts. I care to know very much why you watched me last night
+at the House on the Dunes. For what reason do you watch me at midnight?
+a stranger, a woman? Why is it that my affairs give you interest? I
+would know."
+
+Her voice, her countenance expressed now only her sense of injury, an
+injury which, as it were, she was striving not to regard also as an
+insult. Under the persistent searching of her soft glance, Dan felt
+himself very small indeed.
+
+"Answer me, if you please," she said. This time Dan detected just a trace
+of the sharpness with which she had dismissed the obsequious Jean. It
+gave him courage and a sense of protection from the fascination he knew
+that this strange woman was successfully exerting over him.
+
+As he replied, his glance encountered hers with frankness. "Madame de la
+Fontaine, I told you yesterday morning, my sister, Nancy Frost, has
+disappeared. We searched for her all day in vain. Not a trace of her has
+been found. But certain strange events have led me to suspect that
+certain persons have had something to do with her disappearance and must
+know her whereabouts. I will be frank Madame. One of the persons whom I
+so suspect is yourself."
+
+"I!--_mon Dieu_! and why is it that you believe this, Monsieur?"
+
+"I suspect you, madame, because I suspect the Marquis de Boisdhyver."
+
+"Ah! the French gentleman who is staying with you at the Inn at the Red
+Oak, is it not so?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"But--why me?"
+
+"Because, madame, I discovered that you and the Marquis de Boisdhyver
+have been in secret communication with each other."
+
+"_C'est impossible. Te me comprende pas, monsieur_. Will you tell me why
+it is that you can think that this Marquis de Bois--what is the name?"
+
+"De Boisdhyver."
+
+"_Merci_. Why is it that you can think that the Marquis de Boisdhyver and
+I have been in secret communication?"
+
+"Lights, green and red lights, have been used as signals; by the Marquis
+at the Inn; by you, madame, from the House on the Dunes; and by some
+one,--Captain Bonhomme, I suppose,--from this ship."
+
+"Lights, you have seen lights?"
+
+"Several times last night, Madame. My suspicions were aroused. I was
+determined to find my sister. I resolved to learn the meaning of those
+mysterious signals. My method was stupid: I blundered, and as you have
+several times so gently hinted, I am in your power."
+
+For a moment Madame de la Fontaine was silent, then she looked quickly
+up; a half-vexed, half-amused expression curling her pretty lips.
+
+"Look at me, monsieur," she said. "Do you know what you tell me? That I
+am an adventuress?"
+
+Dan flushed suddenly as he met her steadfast gaze. "I have stated only a
+suspicion, madame, to account for my own stupid blundering. But if you
+think that my suspicions are extraordinary, don't you think that our
+present situation and conversation are also extraordinary, and that they
+might rather confirm my suspicions?"
+
+Madame de la Fontaine dropped her eyes with a perceptible frown of
+displeasure; but again she looked up, smiling.
+
+"_C'est drole_, monsieur, but I find you very attractive? You are at once
+so naive and so clever?"
+
+Dan, finding nothing to reply to this unexpected remark, bit his lips.
+
+"Will you not trust me?" she asked him suddenly, and putting out her hand
+she touched his own with the tips of her fingers.
+
+Poor Frost tingled at this unaccustomed contact. "I--I--" he stammered
+awkwardly. "I have certainly no desire to distrust you, madame."
+
+"And yet it is that you do distrust me."
+
+"But what would you have me do?"
+
+"Ah!" Her hand spontaneously closed upon his with a clasp that delighted
+and yet disconcerted him. "I hope that we shall make each other to
+understand."
+
+"What would you have me do?" Dan repeated.
+
+"Monsieur, let me make to you a confession. I understand your
+suspicions; I understand your desire to find if they are true. You have
+reason; Monsieur le Marquis de Boisdhyver and I have exchanged the
+mysterious signals that you have witnessed. Why should I deny that which
+already you know? Monsieur de Boisdhyver and I are occupied with affairs
+of great importance, and it is necessary that all is kept secret. But I
+believe, that it is that I can trust you, monsieur."
+
+"And Nancy--?" exclaimed Dan.
+
+"_Pas si vite, pas si vite_!" said the lady, laughing gayly, Dan's hand
+still in her friendly pressure. "All in good time, _mon ami_. It is
+necessary before I confide in you our little secret that I consult
+Monsieur le Marquis."
+
+Dan's face betrayed his disappointment. "But you do know about Nancy," he
+insisted; "you will assure me--"
+
+"Of nothing, dear boy,"--and she withdrew her hand. "But it had been so
+much better for us all if only Monsieur le Marquis had at the first
+confided in you."
+
+Madame de la Fontaine had risen now and was holding out her hand to
+say good-bye.
+
+"It is necessary that I return to the shore. I will see Monsieur le
+Marquis this afternoon, and immediately afterward--"
+
+"But, madame, surely," Dan exclaimed, "I am to accompany you?"
+
+"Ah! monsieur," she replied with a charming little smile, "for the
+present you must rest content to be _mon captif_. We must quite clearly
+understand each other before--well. But you are too impetuous, Monsieur
+Dan. For the moment I leave you here."
+
+"But Madame de la Fontaine," cried Dan, "I cannot consent--"
+
+"No! no!" she said, as with a gay laugh, she placed a cool little hand
+across his mouth to prevent his finishing his sentence.
+
+What absurd impulse fired his blood at this sudden familiarity, Dan did
+not know; but, quite spontaneously, as though all his life he had been in
+the habit of paying such gallantries to charming ladies, he kissed the
+soft fingers upon his lips. Madame de la Fontaine quickly withdrew them.
+
+"Ah, _mon ami_;" she said, "I expected not to find here _une telle
+galanterie_."
+
+"I have offended you," murmured Dan, blushing furiously.
+
+"Ah, _pas du tout_!" said Madame de la Fontaine. "You are a dear boy,
+monsieur Dan, and I--well, I find you charming."
+
+As she said this, to Dan's complete confusion, Madame de la Fontaine
+lightly brushed his cheeks with her lips, and passing him rapidly, went
+out of the door of the saloon.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+TOM TURNS THE TABLES
+
+
+Owing to his long watch during the greater part of the night, Pembroke
+slept heavily until late the next morning. Indeed, he did not waken until
+Jesse, alarmed that neither Dan nor he had appeared, knocked on their
+door. He sprang up quickly then, and began to dress hastily. Dan's bed
+had not been slept in, and Tom wondered how the night had gone with him.
+
+In a few moments he was down stairs and in the breakfast-room. He found
+the Marquis de Boisdhyver already at table, pouring out his coffee, which
+Deborah had just placed before him. Mrs. Frost had not appeared.
+
+Tom murmured an apology for being late, and delayed the black woman, who
+was on the point of leaving the room, by a question.
+
+"Where is Mr. Dan?"
+
+"Sure an, Mass' Tom, I ain't seen him dis mornin' yet. Ain't he done
+over-slept hisself like you?"
+
+"No; but I dare say he is about the place somewheres. All right, Deb;
+bring my breakfast quickly, please."
+
+"You will pardon me," said Monsieur de Boisdhyver, "for having begun
+without you?"
+
+"Oh, certainly," said Tom; "Don't know what was the matter, but I slept
+unusually soundly last night; that is, after I got to sleep, for the
+storm kept me awake for hours."
+
+"_Et moi aussi_," said the Marquis. "What wind! I am but thankful it
+has exhausted itself at last. And Monsieur Frost, he has also
+over-slept, you say?"
+
+"No. He got up early without disturbing me. I guess he will be in any
+minute now."
+
+The Marquis stirred his coffee and slowly sipped it.
+
+Tom made a hasty breakfast, and then went outside to reconnoitre. He
+discovered no trace of his friend. There was but one inference in his
+uneasy mind: Dan had met with some misadventure at the House on the
+Dunes. At last, after wandering about aimlessly for some time, he decided
+to tell Jesse of his uneasiness.
+
+"If Mr. Dan is not back by dinner time, I shall go over to the House on
+the Dunes and try to find out what has become of him. Heaven knows what
+has become of Miss Nancy. I don't like that schooner, Jess, and its ugly
+crew, lying there in the Cove. It's all a darn queer business."
+
+"They're certainly a rough-looking lot, Mr. Tom, as I saw when I was on
+the beach yesterday. And she don't appear to have any particular business
+anchoring there. I hope they've nothing to do with Miss Nancy's and Mr.
+Dan's being away."
+
+"I don't know, Jess, what to think. But listen here I want you to go into
+the Port this morning and engage Ezra Manners to come out here and stay
+with us for a week or so. Don't tell him too much, but I guess Ezra won't
+balk at the notion of a scrap. Bring him out with you, and offer to pay
+him enough to make sure of his coming. And I want you to go to Breeze's
+on the Parade and get some guns and powder, enough to arm every blessed
+soul of us in the Inn. Charge the stuff to me. And be careful how you
+bring it back, for I don't want any one here to know about it,
+particularly the old Frenchman. Understand? You ought to get back by
+dinner-time, if you start at once. I'll stay here till you return."
+
+"I'll start right off, sir. Guess I'll have to drive, for the
+rain'll have washed the snow off the roads. I'll be back by halfpast
+twelve, Mr. Tom."
+
+"All right," said Pembroke. "Be sure not to let any one know what you
+are doing."
+
+"Sure I won't, sir. I've been pretty much worried myself about Miss
+Nancy. Didn't seem a bit like Miss Nance to go off without sayin' a word
+to anybody.
+
+"Well, hurry along now, Jesse."
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+Tom's next task was to try to explain to Mrs. Frost without alarming her.
+She happily jumped to the idea that Dan had gotten trace of Nancy, had
+gone to fetch her, and would return with her before nightfall. So Tom
+left her quite cheerfully knitting in her room for the day.
+
+From time to time during the morning Tom wandered into the bar always to
+find Monsieur de Boisdhyver absorbed in his writing before the fire. The
+morning passed--a long restless morning for Pembroke--and nothing had
+happened. Dan had not returned. He tried to think out a plan of action.
+He went into the north wing of the Inn and barricaded the door leading
+from the bowling alley into the hallway. He made sure that all other
+doors and windows were fastened, and he put the key of the door that
+opened from the bar into the old wing into his pocket. Then he looked at
+the doors and windows in the south wing.
+
+About noon, as he was standing at an upper window anxiously scanning the
+landscape for any sign of his friend, Tom saw the Marquis, wrapped in his
+great black cloak, emerge from the gallery, go down the steps by the Red
+Oak, and walk rapidly down the avenue of maples. He went along the Port
+Road, to the point where a little road branched off and led to the beach
+of the Cove; here he turned and walked in the direction of the beach.
+With the field glass Tom could follow him quite easily as he picked his
+way through the slush.
+
+Beyond, on the waters of the Cove, the _Southern Cross_ rode at anchor. A
+small boat had put off from the schooner, two seamen at the oars, and a
+woman seated in the stern. The boat reached the shore, the lady was
+lifted out upon the sands, the men jumped in again, pushed off and rowed
+briskly back to the schooner. Tom could not distinguish the lady's
+features, but from the style of her dress, cut in so different a fashion
+than that the ladies of Caesarea were wont to display, and from the
+character of her easy graceful walk, he judged that that was the Madame
+de la Fontaine, of whom Dan had told him the day before. The lady,
+whoever she might be, advanced along the beach and turned into the road
+down which the Marquis de Boisdhyver was going to meet her. Tom could see
+her extend her hand, and the old gentleman, bending ceremoniously, lift
+it to his lips. Then leaning against a stone wall beside a meadow of
+bedraggled snow, they engaged in animated conversation. The lady talked,
+the Marquis talked. They shrugged their shoulders, they nodded their
+heads, they pointed this way and then that. Poor Tom felt he must know
+what was being said. At last, their conference ended, they parted as
+ceremoniously as they had met, the lady starting across the Dunes and the
+Marquis retracing his steps toward the Inn.
+
+In the meantime, fortunately before the Marquis reached the Port Road,
+Jesse had returned, accompanied by the able-bodied Ezra Manners, and
+laden with the supply of arms and ammunition that Pembroke had ordered.
+
+Within half-an-hour Tom and Monsieur de Boisdhyver were seated together
+in the dining-room.
+
+"Ah, and where is Monsieur Dan?" asked the Marquis, with an affectation
+of cheerfulness. "Is he not returned?"
+
+"Not yet, monsieur," Tom replied grimly.
+
+"But you have heard from him?"
+
+"Oh, yes," was Tom's answer; "I have heard from him of course."
+
+"And from Mademoiselle Nancy, I trust, also?"
+
+"Yes, from Nancy also."
+
+"Ah, I am so relieved, Monsieur Pembroke. I was most anxious for their
+safety. One knows not what may happen. We shall have a charming little
+reunion at supper, _n'est-ce pas_?"
+
+"Delightful," said Tom, but in a tone of voice that did not encourage the
+Marquis to ask further questions or to continue his comments.
+
+After dinner, Tom slipped the field glass beneath his jacket, and ran
+upstairs to take another view of the countryside. To his great
+satisfaction he saw a dark spot moving across the snowy dunes and
+recognized the lady of the morning. Apparently she was on her way to the
+Cove again.
+
+He took a loaded pistol, ran down stairs, gave Jesse strict orders to
+keep his eye on the Marquis, saddled his horse, and galloped off madly
+for Mrs. Meath's house.
+
+When he reached the gate of the farmhouse, Tom hitched his horse to the
+fence, went rapidly up the little walk, and knocked boldly and loudly on
+the front door. Repeated and prolonged knocking brought no response. He
+tried the door and found it fastened. He walked about the house. Every
+window on the ground floor was tightly closed and barred. There was no
+sign of life. He knocked at the door of the kitchen, but with no result.
+He tried it, and found it also locked. Determined not to be thwarted in
+his effort to see Mrs. Meath, he kicked vigourously against the door with
+his great hob-nailed boots. Unsuccessful in this, he detached a rail from
+the top of the fence and used it against the door as a battering-ram. At
+the first crash of timbers, the sash of a window in the second story,
+directly above the kitchen, was thrown open, and a dark-eyed,
+dark-haired, excessively angry-looking, young woman thrust her head out.
+
+"_Qui va la_?" she exclaimed.
+
+"Well," said Tom, smiling a little in spite of himself, for the young
+woman was in a state of great indignation. "I want to see Mrs. Meath. I
+may say, I am determined to see Mrs. Meath."
+
+"_Peste! Je ne parle pas anglais_!" snapped the damsel.
+
+"Very well then, mademoiselle, I'll try you in French," said Tom. And in
+very bad French indeed, scarcely even the French of Dr. Watson's school
+for the sons of gentlemen, Pembroke repeated his remarks.
+
+"_Je ne comprend pas_," said the young woman.
+
+Tom essayed his explanation again, but whether the youthful female in the
+window could or would not understand, she kept repeating in the midst of
+his every sentence "_Je ne parle pas anglais_," till Tom lost his temper.
+
+"_Bien_, my fine girl," he exclaimed at last; "I am going to enter this
+house. If you won't open the door, I will batter it down. Understand?
+_Comprenez-vous_?"
+
+"_Je ne parle pas anglais_."
+
+"As you will." He raised the fence-rail again and made as if to ram the
+door. "_Ouvrez la porte_! Do you understand that?"
+
+"_Bete_!" cried the girl, withdrawing her head and slamming down
+the window.
+
+Tom waited a moment to see if his threats had been effective, and was
+relieved by hearing the bar within removed and the key turned in the
+lock. The door was opened, and the young woman stood on the sill and
+volleyed forth a series of French execrations that made Tom wince,
+though he did not understand a word she was saying. Despite her protests,
+he brushed her aside and stalked into the house. He went rapidly from
+room to room, upstairs and down, from garret to cellar, the girl
+following him with her chorus of abusive reproach. She might have held
+her peace, thought Tom, for within half-an-hour he was convinced that
+there was not a person in the House on the Dunes save himself and his
+excited companion. All he discovered for his pains was that old Mrs.
+Meath was also among the missing.
+
+"_Ou est Madame Meath_?"
+
+"_Madame Meath! Que voulez vous? Je ne connais pas Madame Meath_...." And
+infinitely more of which Tom could gather neither head nor tail.
+
+Satisfied at last that there was nothing to be gained by further search
+or parley with the woman, he thanked her civilly enough and went out. He
+unhitched his horse, vaulted into the saddle, and dashed back, as fast as
+his beast could be urged to carry him, to the Inn. He was certain now
+that the schooner held the secret of his vanished friends, and it
+occurred to him to play their own game and turn the tables on Monsieur
+the Marquis de Boisdhyver.
+
+Arrived at the Inn, Tom turned his horse, white with lather, over to
+Jesse; made sure that the Marquis was in the bar; and then, with the help
+of Manners, rapidly made a few preparations.
+
+It was about five o'clock when, his arrangements completed, he returned
+to the bar, where Monsieur de Boisdhyver was quietly taking his tea. Tom
+bowed to the old gentleman, seated himself in a great chair about five
+feet away, and somewhat ostentatiously took from his pocket a pistol,
+laid it on the arm of his chair, and let his fingers lightly play upon
+the handle. The old marquis watched Pembroke's movements out of the
+corner of his eye, still somewhat deliberately sipping his tea. Manners,
+meanwhile, had entered, and stood respectfully in the doorway, oddly
+enough also with a pistol in his hand.
+
+Suddenly Monsieur de Boisdhyver placed his teacup on the table, and
+leaning back in his chair, surveyed Tom with an air of indignant
+astonishment.
+
+"Monsieur Pembroke," he said, "to what am I to attribute these so unusual
+attentions? Is it that you are mad?"
+
+"You may attribute these unusual attentions, marquis, to the fact that
+from now on, you are not a guest of the Inn at the Red Oak, but a
+prisoner."
+
+"Ah!" exclaimed the Marquis with a start, as he made a spasmodic motion
+toward the pocket of his coat. But if his intention had been to draw a
+weapon, Tom was too quick for him. The Marquis found himself staring into
+the barrel of a pistol and heard the unpleasant click of the trigger as
+it was cocked.
+
+The old gentleman paled, whether with fright or indignation, Tom was not
+concerned to know. "You will please keep perfectly still, marquis."
+
+"Monsieur Pembroke," exclaimed the old gentleman, "_C'est_ abominable,
+outrageous, _Mon Dieu_, what insult!"
+
+"Manners," said Tom, "kindly search that gentleman and put his firearms
+out of his reach."
+
+"Monsieur, _c'est extraordinaire_. I protest."
+
+"Quick, Ezra," replied Tom, "or one of us is likely to know how it feels
+to have a bullet in his skin. Up with your hands, marquis."
+
+Monsieur de Boisdhyver obeyed perforce, while Manners quickly searched
+him, removed a small pistol from his coat pocket and a stiletto from his
+waistcoat, and handed them to Tom.
+
+"I thought as much," said Pembroke, slipping them into his pocket. "Now,
+sir, you will oblige me by dropping that attitude of surprised
+indignation."
+
+"Monsieur," said the Marquis, "What is it that you do? Why is it that you
+so insult me?"
+
+"Monsieur, I will explain. You are my prisoner. I intend to lock you up
+safely and securely until my friend and his sister return, unharmed, to
+the Inn. When they are safe at home, when Madame de la Fontaine has taken
+her departure from the House on the Dunes, and when the _Southern Cross_
+has sailed out of the Strathsey, we shall release you and see you also
+safely out of this country. Is that clear?"
+
+"_Mais, monsieur_--"
+
+"I am quite convinced that you know where Nancy is and what has happened
+to Dan. As my friends are probably in your power or in the power of your
+friends, so, dear marquis, you are in mine. If you wish to regain your
+own liberty, you will have to see that they have theirs. Now kindly
+follow Manners; it will give him pleasure to show you to your apartment.
+There you may burn either red or green lights, and I am sure the
+snowbirds and rabbits of Lovel's Woods will enjoy them. After you,
+monsieur."
+
+"Sir, I refuse."
+
+"My dear marquis, do not make me add force to discourtesy. After you."
+
+The Marquis bowed ironically, shrugged his shoulders, and followed
+Manners up the stairs. He was ushered into a chamber on the west side of
+the Inn, whose windows, had they not been heavily barred, would have
+given him a view but of the thick tangles of the Woods.
+
+"I trust you will be able to make yourself comfortable here," said Tom.
+"Your meals will be served at the accustomed hours. I shall return myself
+in a short time, and perhaps by then you will have reconciled yourself to
+the insult I have offered you and be prepared to talk with me."
+
+With that Tom bowed as ironically as the Marquis had done, went out and
+closed the door, and securely locked and barred it outside. Monsieur de
+Boisdhyver was left to his reflections.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+MADAME DE LA FONTAINE
+
+
+For several hours after his return to the little cabin Dan had ample
+leisure in which to think over his extraordinary interview. There could
+be no doubt that the conspirators, for such he had come to call them to
+himself, were determined and desperate enough to go to any lengths in
+accomplishing their designs. Whether his suspicions and activity in
+seeking Nancy had precipitated their plans, his unexpected capture seemed
+to embarrass his captors as much as it did himself. At least, he gathered
+this from Madame de la Fontaine's conversation. Whatever might be the
+motive of the lady's proposed confidence, poor Frost could see nothing
+for it but to await their disclosure and then seize whatever advantage
+they might open to him. Notwithstanding the fact that Dan had cautioned
+himself against trusting the flattery of his charming visitor,
+notwithstanding that he told himself to be forewarned, even by his own
+suspicions, was to be forearmed, he was in reality unconscious of the
+degree to which he had proved susceptible to the lady's blandishments, if
+indeed she had employed blandishments and had not merely given him the
+evidence of a good heart upon which his youth and naiveté had made a
+genuine impression.
+
+Dan's experiences with girls up to this time had been limited. His
+emotional nature had never, as yet, been deeply stirred. But no one could
+be insensible to Madame de la Fontaine's beauty and charm, and her
+delightfully natural familiarity; and, finally, her fleeting kiss had
+seemed to Dan but evidence of a warm impulsive heart. To be sure, with
+all the good will in the world, he could not acquit her of being
+concerned in a mysterious plot--indeed, had she not admitted so
+much?--though, also, he must in justice remember that he knew very little
+of the nature of the plot in question.
+
+As he paced restlessly back and forth the length of his prison, he tried
+to think clearly of the accumulating mystery. Was there a hidden treasure
+and how did the Marquis know about it? What part had the _Southern Cross_
+to play with its diabolical looking captain, and what could have become
+of Nancy? Then why had Madame de la Fontaine--but again his cheek would
+burn and remembrance of the bewitching Frenchwoman blotted out all else.
+
+At half-past twelve Captain Bonhomme appeared again. This time he invited
+Dan to partake of luncheon with him on the condition once more of a
+parole. And Dan accepted. He and the Captain made their luncheon
+together, attended by the faithful Jean; and, though no mention was made
+to their anomalous position, the meal was not altogether a comfortable
+one. Captain Bonhomme asked a great many questions about the country, to
+which Frost was inclined to give but the briefest replies; nor, on his
+part, did he show more disposition to be communicative in response to
+Dan's questions about France. Jean regarded the situation with obviously
+surly disapproval. When the meal was finished, Frost was conducted back
+to his little cabin.
+
+About two o'clock he saw the small boat put off for shore, and glancing
+in that direction, he was relieved to see Madame de la Fontaine already
+waiting upon the beach. Within half-an-hour he was again in her
+presence in the Captain's saloon, where their conversation had taken
+place in the morning.
+
+The lady received him graciously. "Ah! monsieur Dan, I fear you have had
+a weary day of it; but it was impossible for me to return sooner."
+
+"It is very kind of you to return at all," replied Dan, gallantly enough.
+
+"Now, Monsieur, you are anxious, I know, that I keep my promise of
+the morning."
+
+"Most anxious," said Dan.
+
+"Without doubt. Come here, my friend, sit near me and listen attentively
+to a long story."
+
+"You have consulted with the Marquis?"
+
+"_Mais oui_. It was difficult, but I have brought him to my way of
+thinking. I am certain that it was an error in the first place not
+taking you into our confidence. _Eh bien_! Tell me, do you know how
+your foster-sister came to be in the charge of your mother at the Inn
+at the Red Oak?"
+
+"Yes, I know what my mother has told me. The child was abandoned to her
+rather than left in her charge."
+
+"_Mais non_" said Madame de la Fontaine; "General Pointelle was impelled
+to act as he did by the strongest motives,--nothing less than the
+tremendous task, undertaken for his country, to liberate the Emperor
+Napoleon from Elba. General Pointelle was a soldier,--more, he was a
+maréchal of the Empire; the greatest responsibilities devolved upon him.
+It was impossible for him to be burdened with a child."
+
+"But why, madame, did he not take my mother into his confidence?"
+
+"Secrecy was imperative, monsieur. Even to this day, you do not know who
+General Pointelle actually was. His was a name well-known in France,
+glorious in the annals of the Empire; a name, too, familiar to you in a
+somewhat different connection. 'General Pointelle' was the
+_nom-de-guerre_, as it were, of François, Marquis de Boisdhyver, maréchal
+de France."
+
+"François! you say, _François_!" exclaimed Dan.
+
+"_Mais oui_, monsieur; but that should hardly astonish you so much as the
+fact that he was a Boisdhyver. Why are you surprised?"
+
+"Simply, madame," exclaimed Dan hastily, "by the fact that it is the same
+name as that of our Marquis."
+
+"Not quite," corrected the lady; "our Marquis--as you say--is
+Marie-Anne-Timélon-Armand de Boisdhyver, the General's younger brother."
+
+"Ah! and therefore Nancy's uncle?"
+
+"Yes, the uncle of Nancy Frost, or of Eloise de Boisdhyver."
+
+"I see," said Dan. "I begin to see."
+
+"_Eh bien_, monsieur. General Pointelle--the maréchal de
+Boisdhyver,--left the Inn at the Red Oak upon a mission for the Emperor,
+then at Elba. _Hélas_! that mission ended with disaster after the Hundred
+Days; for, as you know, the Emperor was sent in exile to St. Helena; and,
+as you may not know, the Maréchal de Boisdhyver was killed on the plains
+of Waterloo. _Allons_; when he left Deal, he concealed in a hidden
+chamber, which one enters, I believe, from a room you call the Oak
+Parlour, a large treasure, of jewels and gold. This treasure, saved from
+the _debacle_ in France, he had brought with him to America, and he hid
+it in the Inn, for the future of his little daughter Eloise. You remember
+that your mother was to hear something of advantage to her and the child,
+did not the General return. It was the secret of the treasure and the
+directions to find it. Well, Monsieur, at Waterloo, you must know, the
+Maréchal and his brother, the present Marquis, fought side by side.
+François de Boisdhyver fell, nobly fighting for the glory of France;
+Marie-Anne had the good fortune to preserve his life, but was taken
+prisoner by the English. Before the Maréchal received his death wound,
+the two brothers spoke with each other for the last time. In that
+moment, monsieur, the Marquis François revealed to the Marquis Marie-Anne
+that he had abandoned his daughter in America and that he had concealed
+in your old inn a treasure sufficient to provide for her future. He
+charged his brother to go to America, if he survived the battle; claim
+the little Eloise; rescue the treasure, and return with her to France and
+restore the fallen fortunes of the House of Boisdhyver.
+
+"It took the Marquis Marie-Anne a long time to carry out his brother's
+dying injunctions," said Dan.
+
+"Ah! but yes. You do not realize that the Marquis Marie-Anne, after the
+fall of Napoleon, spent many years in a military prison in England, for I
+have already told you that he fell into the hands of the enemy on the
+field of Waterloo. When at last he was released, he was aged, broken, and
+in poverty. His brother, in those dreadful moments on the battlefield,
+had been able to give him but the briefest description of the Inn at the
+Red Oak and the hidden treasure. He did not tell him where the treasure
+was, but only how he might obtain the paper of instructions which the
+Maréchal had concealed in a curiously-carved old cabinet in the Oak
+Parlour. The Maréchal, monsieur, loved the mysterious, and chose the
+device of tearing into two parts this paper of directions and concealing
+them in different hiding-places of the cabinet. Those directions, after
+many years, grew vague in the younger brother's memory.
+
+"_Eh bien_, the Marquis was at last able to make the journey to this
+country. You must remember he had nothing wherewith to prove his story,
+if he gave you his confidence at once; and so, he decided, to investigate
+quietly alone. But he won the confidence of Mademoiselle Nancy,--that is,
+of his niece, Eloise de Boisdhyver,--and revealed to her the secret of
+her identity and the mysterious story of the treasure. You follow me in
+all this, Monsieur Dan?"
+
+"Perfectly, madame," Frost replied. "But as yet you have told me nothing
+of your own connection with this strange history."
+
+"Pardon, dear boy," rejoined Madame de la Fontaine; "I was about to do
+so, but there is so much to tell. My own connection with the affair is
+quite simple. I am an old friend, one of the oldest, of Monsieur le
+Marquis de Boisdhyver, and, when I was a very young girl, I knew the
+Maréchal himself. It has been my happiness to be able to prove my
+friendship for a noble and a fallen family. One day last summer, Monsieur
+de Boisdhyver told me his brother's dying words, and it was I, Monsieur
+Dan, who was able to give the money for this strange expedition. The poor
+Marquis had lost quite all his fortune."
+
+"I understand," said Frost. "But, yet, madame, I do not see the necessity
+for the secrecy, the mystery, for these strange signals at night, for
+these midnight investigations, for this schooner and its rough crew, for
+Nancy's disappearance, for my own imprisonment here."
+
+"Please, please," murmured Madame de la Fontaine, as she held up her
+hands in smiling protest. "You go too fast for me. _Un moment, mon ami,
+un moment_. It was sixteen years ago that the Maréchal de Boisdhyver was
+a guest at the Inn at the Red Oak. You forget that the Marquis de
+Boisdhyver had no proof of his right to the treasure, save his own story,
+save his account of his brother's instructions on the field of Waterloo.
+By telling all he might have awakened deeper suspicions than by secrecy."
+
+"That, I must say," Dan interrupted, "would hardly be possible."
+
+"So!" exclaimed Madame de la Fontaine, with an accent of displeasure.
+"_Ecoutez_! Monsieur le Marquis was to come a month in advance, as he did
+come; take up his quarters at the Inn; reconnoitre the ground; and win,
+if possible, the confidence and aid of mademoiselle. He fortunately
+succeeded in this last, for he found it otherwise impossible to enter
+into the old wing of the Inn and examine the Oak Parlour. With the
+assistance of Eloise, this was accomplished at last, and the paper of
+directions was found; at least, found in part.
+
+"Then I, having impressed the services of Captain Bonhomme and his ship
+the _Southern Cross_, set sail and arrived at the House on the Dunes only
+a few days ago, as you already know. The signals that you saw flashing at
+night were to indicate that all was well."
+
+"The green light, I suppose," commented Dan, "was to indicate that; and
+the red--"
+
+"Was the signal of danger. Because the Marquis discovered last night that
+you were not in the house; he flashed the warning that made Captain
+Bonhomme go to the House on the Dunes. Quite recently the manners of your
+friend, Mr.--eh--?"
+
+"Pembroke?"
+
+"Yes, Mr. Pembroke--led the Marquis to believe that he was being
+watched.
+
+"I understand," said Dan, "but nothing you have told me so far, madame,
+accounts for Nancy's disappearance, and I am as anxious as ever to know
+where she is."
+
+"Mademoiselle is perfectly safe, Monsieur Dan; I assure you. She left the
+Inn because she had fear of betraying our plans, particularly as she
+loved your friend, Mr. Pembroke."
+
+"It is still strange to me, madame, that Nancy should distrust her oldest
+and best friends. But now you will let me see her?"
+
+"Of course I shall soon, very soon, my dear boy. I have told you all, and
+now you will aid me to find the treasure that is your foster-sister's
+heritage, will you not?"
+
+"Why certainly I want Nancy to have what is hers," replied Dan.
+
+"Bravo, my friend. We are to count you one of us, I am sure."
+
+"Just a moment," said Dan, resisting the temptation to touch the little
+hand that had been placed impulsively upon his arm. "May I ask one more
+question?"
+
+"A thousand, my dear, if you desire."
+
+"Why then, since until last night everything has gone as you planned it,
+why has not the treasure already been discovered?"
+
+"Because, _mon ami_; the Marquis has only been able to visit the Oak
+Parlour at night. And also it was decided to wait until I arrived."
+
+"With the schooner?" suggested Dan.
+
+"With the schooner, if you will. And you may remember that it was only
+the day before yesterday that I reached your so hospitable countryside."
+
+"Ah! I understand; so then all that you desire of me, madame, is that I
+shall permit the Marquis or anyone else whom you may select for the
+purpose, to make such investigation of the Oak Parlour as is desired."
+
+"Yes, my friend; and also there is yet another thing that we desire."
+
+"But suppose, madame, that I cannot agree to that?"
+
+"Ah! _cher ami_, but you will. I confess--you must remember that the
+Marquis de Boisdhyver has been a soldier--that my friends have not agreed
+with me entirely. It has seemed to them simpler that we should keep you a
+prisoner on this ship, as we could so easily do, until our mission is
+accomplished. But,--I like you too much to agree to that."
+
+Dan flushed a trifle, but he was not yet quite sure enough to fall in
+entirely with his charming gaoler's suggestions. "Madame de la Fontaine,"
+he said after a moment's reflection, "I am greatly obliged to you for
+explaining the situation to me so fully. I shall be only too happy to
+help you, particularly in anything that is for the benefit of Nancy."
+
+"I was sure of it. Now, my friend, there is a service that you can
+immediately render."
+
+"And that is?" asked Dan.
+
+"To entrust to me the other half of the paper of directions written by
+François de Boisdhyver, which you found in a secret cubby-hole in the
+old cabinet."
+
+"What makes you think that I was successful in finding that, when the
+Marquis failed?"
+
+"Because, at first having forgotten his precise directions after so many
+years, the Marquis could not find the fourth and last hiding-place in the
+cabinet, in which he knew the Maréchal had placed the other half of the
+torn scrap of paper. Another time he did find the cubby-hole, and it was
+empty. So knowing he was watched by you and Mr. Pembroke, he decided
+that you must have found it. Is it not so, that you have it?"
+
+"It is certainly not in my possession at this moment," said Dan.
+
+"No, but you have it?"
+
+"And if I have?"
+
+"It is necessary for our success."
+
+"Then, my first service, is to put you into complete possession of
+the secret?"
+
+"If you will so express it."
+
+"Very well, madame, I will do so; but, on one condition."
+
+"And what is that, my friend?"
+
+"That I be allowed to see Nancy, and that she herself shall ask me to do
+as you desire."
+
+For a moment Madame de la Fontaine was silent. "_Eh bien_," she said at
+last, "you do not trust me?"
+
+"But, dear madame, think of my situation, it is hard for me."
+
+"Ah! I know it, believe me. _C'est difficile_. But I hoped you would
+trust me as I have you."
+
+"Indeed, madame," exclaimed Dan, "I must try to think of everything,
+the mystery, this extraordinary mission upon which you are engaged, the
+fact that I am quite literally your prisoner. When I think about you,
+I know only you are beautiful, that you are lovely, and that I am happy
+near you."
+
+She looked at him for a moment with a glance of anxious interrogation,
+as if to ask were it safe for her to believe these protestations. "You
+say, my friend," she asked at length, "that you care a little for me,
+for just me? _C'est impossible_. If Claire de la Fontaine could
+believe that, understand me, monsieur, it would be very sweet and very
+precious to her."
+
+"I do care," cried Dan.
+
+"Ah!" she exclaimed. "You have touched my heart. I am not a young girl,
+_mon ami_, but I confess that you have made me to know again the dreams
+of youth."
+
+"Only let me prove that I care," cried Dan, considering but little now to
+what he committed himself.
+
+"Let me prove," cried she, "that I too believe in you. I must first see
+the Marquis, and then, tonight, if it can be arranged, you shall receive
+from Eloise de Boisdhyver's own lips the request I have made of you. But
+if, for any reason, this cannot be arranged for to-night, you must be
+patient till morning; you must trust me to the extent of remaining on
+this ship. I cannot act entirely on my own judgment, but I assure you
+that in the end my judgment will prevail. And now, _au revoir_."
+
+She placed her hand in his, and responded to the impulsive pressure with
+which he clasped it. Their eyes met; in Dan's the frankest expression of
+her conquest of his emotions; in her's a glance at once tender and sad,
+above all a glance that seemed to search his spirit for assurance that he
+was in earnest. Suddenly fired by her alluring beauty, Dan drew her to
+him and bent his head to hers.
+
+"Ah! my friend," she murmured, "you are taking an unfair advantage of the
+fact that this morning I too rashly yielded to an impulse."
+
+"I cannot help it," Dan stammered. "You bewitch me." He bent lower to
+kiss her cheek, when he suddenly thrilled to the realization that his
+lips had met hers.
+
+A moment later Madame de la Fontaine was gone and Captain Bonhomme had
+reappeared in the doorway.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+IN THE FOG
+
+
+Tom Pembroke was as good as his word. He returned to the little room, in
+which he had confined the Marquis, within an hour after he had left him.
+It was then nearly supper-time and dusk was fast settling upon the gloomy
+countryside. An unwonted calm had fallen upon land and sea after the
+sharp blow of the previous night, but the sky was still gray and there
+was promise of more rain, if not of wind.
+
+To Tom's indignation and alarm, though scarcely to his surprise, there
+had been no sign or word from Dan or Nancy. Shortly after he had left the
+Marquis, he saw, by aid of the field-glass, Madame de la Fontaine,
+attended by two seamen, leave the schooner and return to the House on the
+Dunes. He smiled a little as he thought of the account the lively young
+maid-servant would give of his recent visit. But withal, he felt very
+much as if he were playing a game of blind man's buff and that he was
+"it." He was impatient for his interview with the Marquis, though he was
+but little hopeful that an hour's confinement would have been sufficient
+to bring the old gentleman to terms. Nor was he to be surprised.
+
+He found Monsieur de Boisdhyver huddled in a great arm chair near the
+fire that that been kindled on the hearth of his prison. The Marquis
+glanced up, as Tom entered, but dropped his eyes at once and offered him
+no greeting. Tom placed his candle on the table and, drawing up a chair,
+seated himself between the Marquis and the door.
+
+"Well, sir," he said at last, "as I promised you, I have returned within
+an hour. Have you anything to say to me?"
+
+"Have I anything to say to you!" exclaimed the Marquis. "For why,
+monsieur? If I venture to express my astonishment and indignation at the
+way I am treated, you subject me to a barbarity that could be matched no
+where else in the civilized world than in this extraordinary country. My
+life is menaced with firearms. My protests are sneered at. I have left
+but one inference--you have gone mad."
+
+"No, marquis," said Pembroke, "I am not mad. I am simply determined that
+the mysteries by which we have been surrounded and of which you are the
+center, shall cease. You have a free choice: put me in the way of getting
+my friend and his sister back to the Inn, or resign yourself to a
+prolonged confinement in this room."
+
+"But monsieur I have nothing to communicate to you concerning the
+disappearance of your friends."
+
+"Pardon me, marquis," returned Pembroke; "you have much to communicate to
+me. Perhaps you are not aware that I know the motive of your coming to
+the Inn at the Red Oak; that I know the reason for your prolonged stay
+here; that I know of the influence that you have acquired over Nancy
+Frost; and that I have been a witness of your midnight prowlings about
+the Inn. Nor am I in ignorance of your connection with the
+rascally-looking captain of the schooner at anchor in the Cove and with
+the mysterious woman, who has taken possession of the House on the Dunes.
+I am convinced that you know what has become of Dan as well as what has
+happened to Nancy. And, believe me, I am determined to find out."
+
+"_Bien_!" exclaimed Monsieur de Boisdhyver, "permit me to wish you good
+luck in your undertaking. I repeat, Monsieur Pembroke, I have no
+information to give to you. I do not know to what extent I have been
+watched, but I may say with truth that my actions do not in the least
+concern you."
+
+"They concern my friends," said Tom. "Dan, as you know, is more to me
+than a brother; and as for his sister Nancy, I hope and expect to make
+her my wife."
+
+"In that case," rejoined the Marquis with ill-concealed irony, "I may be
+permitted to offer to you my congratulations. But even so, monsieur,
+there is nothing that I can do to facilitate your matrimonial plans."
+
+"You refuse then to come to terms?" asked Pembroke.
+
+The Marquis raised his hands with a gesture of despair. "What shall I
+say, monsieur? If you insisted upon my flying from here to yonder beach,
+I might have all the desire in the world to oblige you, but the fact
+would remain that I was without the means of doing so. Since you are so
+little disposed to accept my protestations, I will no longer make them,
+but simply decline your proposal. And, pardon me, but so long as I am
+submitted to the indignity of this confinement, it would be a courtesy
+that I should appreciate if you would spare me your company."
+
+"Very good," said Tom. "Your meals will be served regularly; and you may
+ask the servant for anything necessary. I shall not visit you again until
+you request me to do so."
+
+"_Merci_," said the Marquis drily. He rose from his seat as Dan turned
+toward the door, and bowed ironically.
+
+Pembroke went downstairs to have his supper with Mrs. Frost. He said what
+he could to pacify her, not altogether with success, for as darkness fell
+the old lady became increasingly apprehensive.
+
+"I know you are anxious, Mrs. Frost," said Tom, "but you must not worry.
+Try to believe that all will come out right. I am going out after supper,
+but I shall leave Jesse and Ezra on guard, and you may be sure everything
+will be safe."
+
+It was some time before Mrs. Frost would consent to his leaving the Inn.
+If she had yielded to her inclinations, she would have spent the evening
+in hysterics with Tom at hand to administer comfort. Pembroke, however,
+deputed that office to black Deborah, and immediately after supper set
+about his business.
+
+He gave the necessary instructions to Jesse, Ezra and the maids, saw that
+everything was closely locked and barred, supplied himself with arms and
+ammunition, and slipped out into the night. Having saddled Fleetwing, he
+swung himself on the young hunter's back, and trotted down the avenue to
+the Port Road. The night was intensely dark and still. The moon had not
+yet risen, and a thick fog rolled in from the sea, shrouding the
+countryside with its impenetrable veil.
+
+At the Beach Road Pembroke dismounted, tied his horse to a fence rail,
+and proceeded thence on foot toward the Cove. Stumbling along through the
+heavy sand, he made his way to the boathouse at the northern end of the
+little beach. There he ventured to light his lantern, unlocked the door
+and stepped within. On either side of the entrance were the two sailboats
+that he and Dan used in summer and to the rear was the old-fashioned
+whaleboat with which they did their deep fishing. Over it, in a rudely
+constructed rack, was the Indian birch-bark canoe which Dan had purchased
+in the mountains a few years before. As the sea had fallen to a dead
+calm, he decided to use this canoe, which he could paddle quite
+noiselessly, and pulling down the little craft from its winter
+resting-place, he carried it to the water's edge. The sea, so angry the
+night before, now scarcely murmured; only a low lazy swell, at regularly
+recurring intervals, slapped the shore and hissed upon the sands. Tom
+pushed the nose of the canoe into the water, leaped lightly over the
+rail, and with his paddle thrust it off the beach. He was launched
+without mishap.
+
+Not the faintest gleam of light showed the position of the _Southern
+Cross_, but estimating as well as he could the general direction, he
+paddled out through the enshrouding fog. For ten minutes or so, he pushed
+on into the strange, misty night. Then suddenly he found himself
+alongside an old fisherman's yawl that had been rotting all winter at her
+moorings, and he knew from her position that he could not be far from the
+_Southern Cross_.
+
+A few more strokes to leeward, and a spot of dull light broke through the
+darkness. He headed directly for it. To his relief it grew brighter; when
+suddenly, too late to stop the progress of his canoe, he shot under it,
+and the bow of his craft bumped with a dull thud against the timber side
+of the schooner. Its dark outlines were just perceptible above him; and
+at one or two points there gleamed rays of light in the fog, green and
+red from the night lamps on the masthead, and dull yellow from the port
+holes in the rear. A second after the contact the canoe receded, then the
+wash of the sea drew her toward the stern. Another moment and Pembroke
+felt his prow scrape gently against the rudder, which prevented further
+drifting. Apparently, since he heard nothing from the deck above, he had
+reached his goal without attracting attention.
+
+He kept perfectly still, however, for some little time, until satisfied
+that there was no one at the wheel above, he pushed the canoe softly back
+to the rope ladder, that a day or so before he had seen hanging over the
+side. It was the work of a moment to make his little boat fast to the
+lower rung. Then slipping over the rail, he climbed stealthily up till
+his head protruded above the gunwhale. The immediate deck seemed
+deserted; but he was sure that some one was keeping the watch, and
+probably near the point where he was, that is to say, where access to the
+deck was easiest. But the fog and the darkness afforded him protection,
+as he climbed over the gunwhale and, without making a sound, moved toward
+the stern, crossed the after-deck and found the wheel. As he had
+surmised, it was deserted. The watch evidently was forward. Beneath him,
+sending its ineffectual rays obliquely into the fog, shone the light from
+the little cabin below.
+
+Determined to get a look through the port, he climbed over the gunwhale
+again, fastened a stern-sheet about his waist and to a staple, and at the
+risk, if he slipped or if the rope gave way, of plunging head foremost
+into the icy waters of the Cove, he let himself down until his head was
+on a level of the port.
+
+Through the blurred glass he peered into a tiny cabin. There with back
+toward him, just a few feet away stood Nancy Frost. He steadied himself
+with an effort, and looking again saw that she was alone. A moment's
+hesitation, and he tapped resolutely on the pane with his finger tips. At
+first Nancy did not hear, but presently, aroused by the slight tapping,
+she glanced with a frightened expression toward the door, and stood
+anxiously listening. Tom continued to knock on the window, not daring to
+make it louder for fear of being heard above. The alarm deepened on
+Nancy's face, and in sheer pity Tom was tempted to desist; but at that
+instant her attention was riveted upon the spot whence the tapping came.
+At last, still with the expression of alarm on her face, she came slowly
+toward the port. She hesitated, then pressed her face against the pane
+over which Tom had spread his fingers. At whatever risk, of frightening
+her or of danger to himself, as she drew back, he pressed his own face
+against the outside of the little window glass. She stared at him as if
+she were looking at a ghost.
+
+He moved his lips to form the word "Open." At length, in obedience to
+this direction, Nancy cautiously unloosened the window of the port and
+drew it back.
+
+"Good heavens, Tom!" she whispered. "Is it you?"
+
+"Yes, yes," Pembroke whispered back. "But for God's sake, speak softly.
+I'm in a devilishly unpleasant position, and can hang here but a minute.
+Tell me quickly--are you here of your own free will or are you a
+prisoner?"
+
+"How can you ask?" she exclaimed. "For the love of heaven, help me
+to escape."
+
+"That's what I'm here for," was Toms reply. "Now, quick; are you only
+locked in or barred as well? I've brought some keys along."
+
+"Only locked, I think."
+
+"Where does that door lead?"
+
+"Into a little passage off the companion-way. Give me your keys. They
+have but one man on watch. The captain is on shore to-night, apt to
+return at any moment. And you?"
+
+"I have a canoe tied to the ladder on the shore side. If the captain
+returns, I'm caught. Try those keys." He slipped into her the bunch of
+keys that he had brought along. "I was sure you were here, and against
+your will."
+
+"Dan, too, is locked up on board."
+
+"I thought as much; but you first. Hurry."
+
+Nancy sprang to the door, trying one key after another in feverish haste.
+At last, to Tom's infinite relief, he saw the key turn in the lock, and
+the door open.
+
+"On deck," she whispered; "at the ladder. I'm not likely to be caught."
+Then she waved her hand and disappeared into the passage.
+
+Tom pulled himself up, unloosed the rope, and stole along the rail toward
+the ladder. For a few moments, which seemed like a thousand years, he
+stood in anguished suspense waiting for Nancy. Then suddenly she came out
+of the mist and was at his side. They stood for a moment like disembodied
+spirits, creatures of the night and the fog. The next instant a hand shot
+out and grasped the girl's shoulder.
+
+"_Peste! mam'zelle_," a rough voice hissed, "_ou allez-vous_?"
+
+As the man spoke Tom swung at him with the butt of his revolver, and
+without a murmur the figure fell to the deck.
+
+"Quick now," Pembroke whispered, "down the ladder."
+
+Instantly Nancy was over the rail and Tom was climbing down after her. As
+he knelt in the bow and fumbled with the painter, the plash of oars
+sounded a dozen yards away.
+
+"_Ho! Croix du Midi_!" came a hail through the fog.
+
+"Curse it!" muttered Tom; "the painter's caught." He drew out his knife,
+slashed the rope that bound them to the schooner, got to his place
+amidships, and pushed the canoe free. The lights of a small boat were
+just emerging from the dark a dozen feet away. But the canoe slid by
+unobserved, in the fog. They heard the nose of the small boat bump
+against the schooner; then an oath, and a man's voice calling the watch.
+
+"They've found my painter," whispered Tom, "and in a second they'll find
+the sailor on their deck."
+
+The lights of the _Southern Cross_ grew dim; vanished; the sound of angry
+voices became muffled. They were half-way to shore when they heard the
+noise of oars again. Evidently some one had started in pursuit. For a
+moment Tom rested, listening intently; but the sound was still some
+distance away. Probably, he thought, they were heading directly for the
+shore, whereas he, at a considerable angle, was making for the boathouse
+at the north end of the beach. In ten minutes he had beached the canoe
+within a rod of the point from where he embarked.
+
+"I can't hear them," whispered Tom, after a moment's listening. "They've
+made for shore down the beach. They can't find us in the dark. I've got
+Fleetwing tied to a fence in the meadow yonder. Come."
+
+It was the work of a moment to stow the canoe, lock the boathouse, run
+across the sands, and mount Nancy in front of him on the back of his
+trusty hunter. A second later Fleetwing's hoofs were striking fire on the
+stones that the high tides had washed into the beach road. In the
+distance there was a cry, the sharp ring of a pistol shot; but they were
+safe on their way, racing wildly for the Inn. The escape, the adventure
+had thrilled Nancy. Tom's arms were around her, and her hands on his that
+grasped the bridle. At last they were in the avenue, and Tom pulled in
+under the great branches of the Red Oak. He slipped from the back of the
+horse and held out his arms to Nance.
+
+"We are safe, girl," he whispered.
+
+"You are sure? Oh, thank God, thank God! Quick, let us in! Can they be
+following?"
+
+"No, no. They won't follow. It's all right. Easy,--before we go
+in--please, dear--once--kiss me."
+
+"Oh, Tom, Tom," she whispered, as she lifted her face to his.
+
+"I have you at last, sweetheart," he murmured. "You love me?"
+
+"Ah!" she cried, "with my whole heart and soul."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+NANCY
+
+
+It was after eleven before Nancy rejoined Tom in the bar. She seemed more
+like herself as she slipped in and took her accustomed seat beside the
+blazing logs.
+
+"Oh, I am all right, thank you," she insisted, declining the glass of
+wine that Pembroke poured out for her. "I wonder, Tom, if you killed that
+poor wretch on the deck?"
+
+"Don't know," Tom answered. "I hope so. But what the deuce, Nance, has
+been happening? I can wait till to-morrow to hear, if you are too tired
+to tell me; but I do want awfully to know."
+
+"I am not tired," Nancy replied, "and I shan't sleep a wink anyway. If I
+close my eyes I'll feel that hand on my shoulder and hear the thud of
+that man's fall on the deck. I can't bear to think that this miserable
+business will bring bloodshed."
+
+"But tell me, Nance, who is the Marquis--what happened--how did they get
+you away?"
+
+"Ah! the Marquis," exclaimed Nancy with a shudder. "I am glad you have
+him locked up. I can't bear to think of him, but I'll tell you what I
+know. You remember, Tom, he tried to be friends with me from the first;
+and he seemed to fascinate me in some unaccountable way. Then he
+questioned me about my identity, and began to drop hints that he knew
+more than he cared to let appear to the others, and my curiosity was
+excited. I have always known of course that there was some mystery about
+my being left to Mrs. Frost's care. She has been kind, good, all that she
+should be; but she wasn't my mother. Well, the Marquis stirred all the
+old wonder that I had as a child, and before long quite won my
+confidence. He told me after a time that I was the daughter of his elder
+brother, the Marquis François de Boisdhyver, who in 1814 stayed here at
+the Inn at the Red Oak under the name of General Pointelle. I was not
+altogether surprised, for I have always believed that I was French by
+birth, and his assertion that I was his niece seemed to account for his
+interest in me. My father, if this Marquis de Boisdhyver was my father,
+was one of the Emperor Napoleon's marshals and was a party to the plot to
+rescue the Emperor from Elba. He was obliged to return to France, and
+since it was impossible for him to take me with him--I was a little girl
+of two at the time--he left me with Mrs. Frost. Thinking of my future, he
+hid a large treasure in some secret chamber off the Oak Parlour."
+
+"I know," Tom interrupted.
+
+"What? You mean there is a treasure?"
+
+"I think there is; but go on. I will tell you afterwards."
+
+"Then he set sail for France, took part in the great events of the
+Hundred Days, and fell at Waterloo. It was on the field of Waterloo that
+he met his younger brother--our Marquis--and told him about the child
+left in America and about the treasure hidden in the Inn at the Red Oak."
+
+"Well," Nancy continued, having answered a volley of questions from Tom,
+"the Marquis--I mean our old Marquis--was held for many years in a
+military prison in England. Upon his release he was poor and unable to
+come to America to seek his little niece and the fortune that he believed
+to be hidden in the Inn. Tom, at first I didn't believe this strange
+story about a treasure; but gradually I became convinced; for the Marquis
+believed in it thoroughly, and for proof of it he showed me a torn scrap
+of paper that he found in the cabinet in the Oak Parlour the day after
+he arrived at the Inn. It seems the old marshal had torn the paper in two
+and hidden the parts in different cubby-holes of that old Dorsetshire
+cabinet. He couldn't find an opportunity to hunt for the other half, so
+at last he persuaded me to help him in the search. Of course, he swore me
+to secrecy, and I was foolish enough to give him my promise. I got the
+key to the bowling alley from the ring in Dan's closet, and two or three
+times went with him at night after you all were asleep."
+
+"I know you did," said Tom.
+
+"How could you know it--has the Marquis--?"
+
+"No, Dan and I saw you. I woke one night, happened to look out of the
+window and saw the Marquis going into the bowling alley. It was
+moonlight, you know. I woke Dan, we slipped down stairs, saw a light in
+the Oak Parlour, peeped through the shutters and saw you and the old
+Marquis at the cabinet."
+
+"When was this?" asked Nancy.
+
+"The night--before our walk in the woods."
+
+"And you did not tell me! What could you think I was doing?"
+
+"I didn't know. How could I know? It was that which first made me
+suspicious of the Marquis. We made up our minds to watch. But that day in
+the woods--well, I forgot everything in the world but just that I was in
+love with you."
+
+"Ah!" exclaimed Nancy, flushing.
+
+"But tell me," asked Tom, "What did you find in the cabinet?"
+
+"We found nothing. I began to think that the Marquis had deceived me. I
+didn't know what to believe. I didn't know what to do. I threatened each
+day to tell Dan. And then came our walk. When we came in that night--do
+you recall?--we found the Marquis sitting in the bar before the fire, and
+I went over and spoke to him."
+
+"Yes, I remember," Tom answered.
+
+"I had made up my mind that I must take you all,--mother and you and
+Dan,--into my confidence. I told him so. He begged me to wait until the
+next day and promised that he would tell you then himself. I was
+beginning to think he might be a little crazy, that there was no hidden
+treasure."
+
+"I'm sure there is," said Tom. "There was another half of that torn scrap
+of paper, hidden in one of the cubby-holes of the old cabinet. Dan found
+it. It's the directions, sure enough, for finding the treasure."
+
+"Ah! but what has it all to do with me?"
+
+"I don't know; something I fancy, or the Marquis would not have told you
+as much as he did. But here is the other half. You can tell whether it is
+part of the paper he showed you."
+
+He drew from his pocket the yellowed bit of paper and spread it on the
+table before them. Nance bent over and examined it closely.
+
+"I believe it is the other half. See, it is signed ...'ançois de
+Boisdhyver'. I remember perfectly that the signature of the other was
+missing, except for the letters 'F-r-' It is, it must be, François de
+Boisdhyver, who, the Marquis says, was my father. Then look! here are the
+words '_trésor', 'bijoux et monaie_'. I remember in the other there were
+phrases that seemed to go with these--'_trésor caché' 'lingots d'or_'.
+Ah! do you suppose there really is a fortune hidden away in the Inn all
+these years?"
+
+"Yes, I think so," said Tom. "And I feel certain you have some claim to
+it, or they wouldn't have made such an effort to involve you in their
+plot. But, please, Nance, tell me the rest. You got to the night of your
+disappearance."
+
+"It was a horror--that night!" exclaimed Nancy. "It must have been about
+twelve that the Marquis came and tapped at my door. For some reason I was
+restless and had not gone to bed. I slipped out into the hall with him
+and we came in here to talk. He begged me to make one more expedition
+with him to the Oak Parlour. But I refused--I insisted that I must tell
+Dan. Suddenly, Tom, without the slightest warning, I felt my arms
+pinioned from behind, and before I could scream, the Marquis himself had
+thrust a handkerchief in my mouth, and I was gagged and bound. Everything
+was done so quickly, so noiselessly, that not a soul in the house could
+have heard. They carried me out of the Inn and into the avenue of maples.
+From there on I was forced to walk. We went to the beach. I was put into
+a small boat and rowed out to the schooner, and there they locked me up
+in the little cabin in which you found me."
+
+"What time did you say it was?" asked Tom.
+
+"About twelve--after midnight, perhaps; I don't know for sure. The
+Marquis went to the beach with us and pretended to assure me that I was
+in no danger; that I would be released in good time, and that he would
+see me again. As a matter of fact for three days I have seen no one but
+Captain Bonhomme. He brought my meals, and was inclined to talk about
+anything that come into his head. Last night he told me that Dan was also
+a prisoner on the _Southern Cross_, if that would be of any consolation
+to me. Then he said he had to go ashore and locked me up. Several times I
+was taken on deck for exercise, but the captain kept close by my side."
+
+"And you haven't seen or heard from the Marquis again?"
+
+"No! nor do I want to see him. But, Tom, what is the meaning of it all?
+How are we going to rescue Dan? What are we going to do? We can't keep
+the Marquis a prisoner indefinitely."
+
+Tom gave her his own version of the last few days. He told her of what he
+and Dan had suspected, of Dan's proposal to visit the House on the Dunes
+and his disappearance, of his own investigations there, and his
+determination to play the same game with the Marquis as hostage.
+
+"But what to do next, I confess I don't know," he continued. "At present
+it seems to be stale mate. For to-night, any way, we are safe, I think,
+for I shall take turns in keeping guard with Jesse and Ezra. I have the
+idea that to-morrow, when they realize something has happened to the
+Marquis we shall hear from Madame de la Fontaine or from the schooner. In
+the morning I am going to take you and Mrs. Frost to the Red Farm for
+safety. I intend to fight this thing out with that gang, whatever
+happens. If there is treasure, according to their own story, it belongs
+to you. If I don't get a proposal from them, I shall make the offer,
+through Madame de la Fontaine, of exchanging the Marquis for Dan.... But
+I must go now, Nance, and relieve one of the men. We must all get some
+sleep to-night, and it's already after twelve. Go to bed, sweetheart, and
+try to get some rest. One of us will be within call all night, watching
+right there in the hall; so don't be afraid."
+
+"It was my wretched curiosity that got us into all this trouble."
+
+"Not a bit of it! The trouble was all arranged by the Marquis; he was
+simply waiting for the schooner. Now that I have you back again, my heart
+is fairly light. We shall get Dan to-morrow, I am sure."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+MADAME AT THE INN
+
+
+In the morning the fog lifted, a bright sun shone from a cloudless sky,
+the marshes sparkled with pools of melted snow and the long-promised thaw
+seemed definitely to have set in. Soon after breakfast Tom sent Jesse to
+the Red Farm with directions for the people there to make preparations
+for Mrs. Frost and Nancy, whom he proposed to drive over himself in the
+course of the afternoon.
+
+About the middle of the morning as Tom and Nancy stood on the gallery
+discussing the situation, Tom drew her attention to a small boat putting
+off from _The Southern Cross_. They examined it through the glass, and
+Nancy recognized the figure of Captain Bonhomme sitting amongst the
+stern-sheets.
+
+"You may depend upon it," said Tom, "he is going to the House on the
+Dunes to report your disappearance to Madame de la Fontaine. The most
+curious thing about this whole business to me is the mixing-up in it of
+such a woman as Dan described Madame de la Fontaine to be."
+
+"It is strange," Nancy agreed, "but from the bits of talk I've overheard,
+I should say that she was the prime mover in it all."
+
+"In a way I am rather glad of that," said Tom, "for with a woman at the
+head of things there is less chance of their resorting to force to gain
+their ends. But the stake they are playing for must be a big one, and
+already they have done enough to make me sure that we should be prepared
+for anything. I shall be surprised if we don't get some communication
+from them to-day. The old Marquis counts on it, or he would not keep so
+still. At any cost, we must get Dan back."
+
+They talked for some time longer and were about to go in, when Nancy
+pointed to a horse and rider coming down the avenue of Maples. A
+glance sufficed to show that the rider was a woman. Nancy slipped
+inside to escape observation, while Tom waited on the gallery to
+receive the visitor.
+
+As the lady drew rein under the Red Oak, he ran down the steps, and
+helped her to dismount. Her grace, her beauty, her manner as of the
+great world, made him sure that he was in the presence of Madame de
+la Fontaine.
+
+"Good morning, sir," said the lady, with a charming smile, "if I mistake
+not, I have the pleasure of addressing Mr. Pembroke?"
+
+"Yes, madam,--at you service," replied Tom.
+
+"I am come on a strange errand, monsieur; as an ambassadress, so to say,
+of those whom I fear you take to be your enemies."
+
+"You are frank, madam. I believe that I am speaking with--?"
+
+"Madame de la Fontaine," the lady instantly supplied. "Events have so
+precipitated themselves, monsieur, that pretense and conventionality were
+an affectation. I am informed, you understand, of your brilliant rescue
+of Mademoiselle Eloise de Boisdhyver."
+
+"If you mean Nancy Frost by Mademoiselle Eloise de Boisdhyver, madam,
+your information is correct. I gathered that you had been told of
+this, when I saw Captain Bonhomme make his way to the House on the
+Dunes this morning."
+
+"Ah! What eyes, monsieur!" exclaimed the lady. "But I have grown
+accustomed to having my privacy examined over-curiously during the few
+days I have spent on your hospitable shores. _Mais pardon_--my purpose in
+coming to the Inn at the Red Oak this morning was but to request that my
+name be conveyed to Monsieur the Marquis de Boisdhyver."
+
+"You mean, madam, that you wish to see the Marquis?"
+
+"Yes, monsieur, if you will be so good as to allow me to do so."
+
+"I am sorry," Tom rejoined, "that I must disappoint you. Circumstances
+over which the Marquis has no control will deprive him of the pleasure of
+seeing you this morning."
+
+"Ah!" exclaimed Madame de la Fontaine, "I was right then. Monsieur le
+Marquis is, shall we say, in confinement?"
+
+"As you please, madam; as safe, for the time, as is my friend Dan Frost."
+
+"_Eh bien_, monsieur! It is that you have--do you not say?--turned the
+tables upon us?"
+
+"Precisely, madam," assented Tom.
+
+"And you will not permit me even a word--ever so little a word--with my
+poor friend?" murmured Madame de la Fontaine plaintively.
+
+"Again I am sorry to refuse you, madam; but--not even a little word."
+
+"So! _Mais oui_, I am not greatly surprised. I was assured last
+night...."
+
+"When you did not see the signals?" suggested Tom quickly.
+
+"When I did not see the signals," repeated the lady, with a glance of the
+briefest enquiry, "I was assured that something had befallen Monsieur le
+Marquis. _Mais vraiment_, monsieur, you do us much dishonour in assuming
+a wicked conspiracy on our parts. The Marquis is my friend; he is also
+the friend of the charming Mademoiselle. All that we wish, all that we
+would do is as much in her interest as in his own. But it is impossible
+that my old friend shall remain in confinement. On what condition,
+monsieur, will you release the Marquis de Boisdhyver?"
+
+"On the condition, naturally, that my friend Dan Frost is released from
+the _Southern Cross_."
+
+"Ah! Is it that you are quite sure that Monsieur Frost is confined on
+the ship?"
+
+"Quite sure, Madame de la Fontaine. I was on board _The Southern Cross_
+last night."
+
+"Yes, I know it; and I congratulate you upon your extraordinary success.
+Very well, then, I accept your condition. Monsieur Dan Frost returns;
+Monsieur le Marquis is released. And now you will perhaps have the
+kindness--"
+
+"No, madame; in this affair the Marquis and his friends have been the
+aggressors. I cannot consent that you should hold any communication with
+the Marquis till Dan returns free and unharmed to the Inn."
+
+"And what assurance then shall I have that the Marquis will be released?"
+
+"None, madame, but my word of honour."
+
+"_Pardon, monsieur_. I accept your terms. Monsieur Frost shall
+return. The instant he enters the Inn at the Red Oak, you promise
+that the Marquis de Boisdhyver be released and that he be given this
+note from me?"
+
+"Certainly, madam."
+
+The lady took a sealed note from the pocket of her habit and handed it to
+Tom. "There remains, monsieur," she murmured, "but to bid you good-day.
+If you will be so kind--"
+
+She ran lightly down the steps, and held up her foot for Tom to assist
+her into the saddle.
+
+"Your friend will return _tout de suite_, monsieur," she cried gayly, as
+she drew in the rein.
+
+"And we shall have the pleasure of seeing you again?" asked Tom.
+
+"Ah! who can tell?" She touched the horse lightly with her whip, inclined
+her head, and soon disappeared down the avenue of maples.
+
+Some time later Nancy and Tom watched her cantering across the beach.
+She waved her handkerchief as a signal to the schooner; a small boat put
+ashore, and she was rowed out to _The Southern Cross_.
+
+"Once Dan is back, and we get rid of the old Marquis," said Tom, "I shall
+breathe considerably easier."
+
+"I can't believe they will give the game up so easily," was Nancy's
+reply. "Seizing the Marquis, Tom, was a check, not a mate."
+
+Out on the schooner in the Cove, Madame de la Fontaine and Dan Frost were
+once more talking together.
+
+"Dear boy," said the lady. "I cannot do that which I promised. It is
+impossible that your sister shall make to you the request to give me the
+torn scrap of paper, for the reason that Mademoiselle Nancy has chosen to
+disappear. Have no fear, monsieur, for I have good reason to believe she
+has returned to the Inn at the Red Oak. Our schemes, _mon ami_, have
+failed. You are no longer a prisoner, you are free. And this is good-bye.
+I abandon our mission. I leave the House on the Dunes to-day; to-morrow I
+return to France."
+
+"But, madame, you bewilder me," exclaimed Dan. "Why should you go; why
+should we not all join forces, hunt for the treasure together, if there
+is a treasure; why this division of interests?"
+
+"_C'est impossible_!" she exclaimed impetuously. "Monsieur le Marquis
+will not consent. He is treated with intolerable rudeness by your friend
+Mr. Pembroke. He will not accept that which I propose. And I--_vraiment,
+I_ desire no longer to work against you. No, monsieur Dan, _tout est
+fini_, we must say good-bye."
+
+She held out her hands and Dan impetuously seized them. Then, suddenly,
+she was in his arms and his lips were seeking hers.
+
+"I cannot let you go," he cried hoarsely. "I cannot say good-bye."
+
+For a moment he held her, but soon, almost brusquely, she repulsed him.
+"_C'est folie, mon ami, folie_! We lose our heads, we lose our hearts."
+
+"But I love you," cried Dan. "You must believe it; will you believe it if
+I give you the paper?"
+
+"No, no!--What!--you wish to give to me the secret of the Oak Parlour?--"
+
+"Aye, to entrust to you my life, my soul, my honour."
+
+"Ah, but you must go," she murmured tensely.
+
+"Captain Bonhomme is returning. It is better that he knows of your
+release after you are gone. _C'est vrai_, my friend, that I risk not a
+little in your behalf. Go now, quickly ... No! No!" she protested, as she
+drew away from him. "I tell you, _C'est folie_,--madness and folly. You
+do not know me. Go now, while there is time!"
+
+"But you will see me again?" insisted Dan. "Promise me that; or, on my
+honour, I refuse to leave. Do with me what you will, but--"
+
+"Listen!" she whispered hurriedly. "I shall meet you to-night at ten
+o'clock, at the end of the avenue of maples near to your inn; you know
+the place? _Bien_! Bring me the paper there, to prove that you trust me.
+And I--_mais non_, I implore you--go quickly!"
+
+Dan turned at last and opened the door. Madame de la Fontaine called
+sharply to the waiting Jean, and he, motioning to Dan to follow him, led
+the way on deck. In a moment they were in a little boat heading for the
+shore. The afternoon sun was bright in the western sky. The _Southern
+Cross_ rode serenely at anchor, and from her deck, Madame de la Fontaine
+was waving him good-bye.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+THE MARQUIS LEAVES THE INN
+
+
+By the time Dan was put ashore on the beach of the Cove it was afternoon.
+During the short row from the schooner he had been unable to exchange
+remarks with the surly Jean, for that individual's only response to his
+repeated efforts, was a surly "_Je ne parle pas anglais_," which seemed
+to answer as a general formula to the conspirators. He gave up at last in
+disgust, and waited impatiently for the small boat to be beached,
+distrustful lest at the last moment some fresh trick be played upon him.
+Not that his ingenuous faith in the beautiful French lady failed him, but
+he was suspicious lest, having acted independently of the Marquis and
+Captain Bonhomme in releasing him, she should not have the power to make
+that release genuinely effective.
+
+But his apprehensions were groundless. The seaman rowed straight for the
+shore, beached the boat with a last sturdy pull at the oars, and leaping
+out into the curling surf, held the skiff steady.
+
+"Thank you very much," said Dan, shaking the spray from his coat.
+
+"Eh?" grunted Jean.
+
+"Oh!--beg pardon!--_merci_," he explained, exaggerating the pronunciation
+of the French word.
+
+"Huh!" was the gutteral reply, as the man jumped back into the skiff, and
+pushed off. Dan looked once more towards the distant schooner and the
+slight figure in the stern. Then he started at a rapid pace for the Inn.
+
+As he turned into the avenue of maples, he was surprised to see
+Jesse standing on the gallery, musket in hand, as though he were a
+sentinel on guard.
+
+"Bless my soul, Mister Dan! I thought the Frenchies had made way with
+you. You're a blessed sight to lay eyes on. But Mister Tom was right, he
+said you'd be coming back this afternoon."
+
+"Well, here I am, Jesse," Dan replied grasping his hand, "as large as
+life and twice as natural, I guess. I feel as if I'd been away for a year
+and a day. But tell me, what's the news? Where is Tom? Has Nancy come
+back? How is Mother? Have you been having trouble, that you are guarding
+the door like a soldier on duty?"
+
+"Well, now, Mister Dan, one at a time, _if_ you please. Can't say
+exactly as we've been havin' trouble; but we've sort of been lookin' for
+it. And Mister Tom--"
+
+"Where is Tom? I must see him at once.'
+
+"He ain't here, sir; he left about an hour ago, driving the old Miss and
+Miss Nancy to the Red Farm, sir; so as to be out of harm's way. He'll be
+back before night, sir."
+
+"Ah, good! Then Nance is back? When did she come?"
+
+"She come back last night, sir; leastways Mister Tom brought her back.
+Mister Tom, he got the idea that they'd cooped Miss Nance up on that
+there schooner laying in the Cove, and sure enough, he found her there
+and got her off somehows last night."
+
+"Good for Tom! How did he work it?"
+
+"I ain't heard no particulars, Mister Dan. We've been too busy watching
+things to talk much. We got Ezra Manners out from the Port to help do
+guard duty."
+
+"Guard?--what?"
+
+"Why, the Inn, sir. Mister Tom he's been sort of expectin' some kind of
+attack. That's the reason he took the women folks over to the Red Farm."
+
+"I see--and where's the old Marquis?"
+
+Jesse chuckled. "The old Marquis's where he hasn't been doin' any harm
+for the last twenty-four hours, sir. Mister Tom he locked him up last
+night in one of the south bedrooms. That reminds me, I was to let him out
+just as soon as you come back."
+
+"Why lock him up, and then let him out? Things have been moving at the
+Inn, Jess, since I've been gone!"
+
+"Moving--yes, sir. But them's my orders--first thing I was to do soon as
+you come back was to let the old Frenchy out and do as he pleased. Mister
+Tom was to arrange everything else with you, sir."
+
+"Seems as if Tom had a whole campaign planned out. All right--we'll obey
+orders, Jess. Let the Marquis out, and tell him he can find me in the bar
+if he wants to see me. What time will Tom be back?"
+
+"Before dark, sir, I'm sure. He's been gone over an hour."
+
+Dan ran up to his bedroom, made a quick toilet, took the torn scrap of
+paper from his strong-box, and put it in his wallet. Then he went down
+stairs into the bar. The Marquis, released from his confinement, was
+awaiting him.
+
+"Ah, Monsieur Frost!" the old gentleman exclaimed, coming forward with
+outstretched hands, "I rejoice at your return. Now this so horrible
+nightmare will end... Ah!" This last exclamation was uttered in a tone of
+surprise and indignation, for Dan faced him with folded arms,
+deliberately refusing the handclasp.
+
+"Yes, Marquis," he said, "I have returned; but I cannot say that I am
+particularly pleased to see you."
+
+"Monsieur, _te me comprends pas_; this abuse, this insult--it is
+impossible that I understand."
+
+"Pray, Monsieur de Boisdhyver," replied Dan, with dignity, "Let us have
+done with make-believe and sham. For two days I have been in prison on
+that confounded ship yonder, whose villainous crew are in your pay."
+
+"You in prison--the ship--the villainous crew!" repeated the Marquis.
+"What is it that you say?"
+
+"Come, Marquis, your protests are useless," Dan interrupted. "I know of
+the conspiracy in which you are engaged, of your deceit and trickery
+here, of your part in my poor sister's disappearance. You know that
+Madame de la Fontaine has told me much. Do you expect me to meet you as
+though nothing had happened?"
+
+"But, _mon cher, monsieur_," continued the Marquis, "if it is that you
+have been told anything by Madame de la Fontaine, my so good friend, the
+bright angel of an old age too-cruelly shattered by misfortune, you well
+know how innocent are my designs, how sincere my efforts for your
+foster-sister, for her who is my niece."
+
+"Marquis, I do not understand all that has taken place. I may say further
+that I do not care to discuss the situation with you until I have talked
+with my sister and Mr. Pembroke."
+
+"Ah! then Eloise--then Mademoiselle Nancy, is returned?" exclaimed the
+old gentleman.
+
+"I believe so. But I have not seen her. I must decline, Marquis, to
+continue this conversation. I must first learn what has taken place in my
+absence. When Tom returns--he is out just now--I am perfectly willing to
+talk matters over with you and him together."
+
+The Marquis's eyes flashed. "But, Monsieur," he protested, "you must
+understand that I cannot submit to meet with Monsieur Pembroke again. A
+Marquis de Boisdhyver does not twice put himself in the position to be
+insulted with impunity."
+
+"I should hardly imagine," Dan replied, "that it would be more
+difficult for you to meet Pembroke again than it has been difficult for
+me to meet you."
+
+"How--me?--_je ne comprends pas_. But I have been insulted, imprisoned, I
+have suffered much that is terrible."
+
+"I found myself in an identical situation," said Dan.
+
+"But, monsieur, _un moment_" protested the old gentleman, as Dan made as
+if to leave the room, "give me the time to explain to you this
+misunderstanding.--"
+
+"No, Marquis. I will not talk until I have seen Tom."
+
+The black eyes of Monsieur de Boisdhyver gleamed unpleasantly. "I have
+said to you, Monsieur Frost, that I refuse to meet Monsieur Tom Pembroke
+once more. It would be intolerable. _Impossible, absolutment_! I must
+insist that you will be kind enough to facilitate my departure at once."
+
+"Certainly, as you wish, Marquis."
+
+The old gentleman hesitated. For once indecision was shown by the
+agitation of his features and the shifting of his eyes, but he gave no
+other expression to the quandaries in his mind. After a moment's silence
+he drew himself up with exaggerated dignity. With one hand upon his
+breast and the other extended, in a fashion at once absurd and a little
+pathetic, he addressed Dan for the last time, as might an ambassador
+taking leave of a sovereign upon his declaration of war.
+
+"Monsieur, I renew my gratitude for the hospitality of the Inn at the Red
+Oak, so long enjoyed, so discourteously withdrawn. I require but the
+presentation of my account for the time, I have trespassed upon your good
+will, and I request the assistance of a servant to facilitate my
+departure. But I do not take my farewell without protesting, _avec tout
+mon coeur_, at the misunderstanding to which I am persistently subjected.
+The inevitable bitterness in my soul does not prevent me even now to
+forget the sweet hours of rest that I have enjoyed here. The
+unwillingness on your part, monsieur, to comprehend my position, does not
+interfere to stifle in my breast the consciousness but of honourable
+purpose. I make my compliments to mesdames."
+
+"Very good, marquis--and at what time shall I have a carriage
+ready for you?"
+
+The Marquis glanced nonchalantly at his watch, "In fifteen minutes,
+monsieur."
+
+"It will be ready, Marquis."
+
+"Your very obedient servant; Monsieur Frost."
+
+"Your obedient servant, Marquis de Boisdhyver."
+
+The old gentleman bowed again with elaborate courtesy and, turning
+sharply on his heel, left the room.
+
+Somewhat disturbed by the turn affairs had taken, Dan stood for a moment
+lost in thought. There was nothing for it, he supposed: Tom, who had
+been in command, had given orders, and they should be obeyed; besides
+there was no reason that he could see why the Marquis should be detained
+at the Inn if he chose to leave it. So he sat down at a table, made out
+the old gentleman's bill for the month, and then stepped to the door to
+call for Jesse.
+
+"Take this," he said when the man appeared in response to his summons,
+"to the old Marquis. It is the bill for his board. If he pays you, well
+and good; if not--in any case, treat him courteously, and do not
+interfere with his movements. He is leaving the Inn for good. I want you
+to have the buggy ready within half-an-hour and drive him where he wishes
+to go. I fancy he will want his stuff put on the schooner in the Cove."
+
+"All right, sir," replied Jesse. "Now that you and Miss Nance are back,
+sir, I guess the sooner we get rid of the Marquis the better."
+
+Jesse carried the bill to the Marquis, then came down and went to the
+barn to harness the horse. A little later he drove round to the
+courtyard, hitched the horse to a ring in the Red Oak, and ran upstairs
+to fetch the Marquis's boxes.
+
+Perhaps half-an-hour had passed when he returned to Dan in the Bar. "The
+old gentleman's gone, sir," he said.
+
+"Gone!--where?" cried Dan.
+
+"Don't know, sir," Jesse replied. "To the schooner, I guess. He left this
+money on his dressing-bureau."
+
+Dan took the gold which Jesse held out to him. "Well, well," he murmured,
+"quite on his dignity, eh? All right, Jess, take his stuff to the beach
+and hail the schooner. He will probably have given directions. I hope
+we've seen the last of him."
+
+
+
+
+PART IV
+
+THE ATTACK ON THE INN
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+THE AVENUE OF MAPLES
+
+
+The Marquis's belongings were sent after him to the schooner, where,
+however, it appeared that they had not been expected, for it was some
+time before Jesse could obtain an answer to his hail from the shore, and
+still longer before he could make the men on the ship understand what it
+was he wanted with them. Eventually Captain Bonhomme had rowed ashore,
+and the Marquis's bags, boxes, writing-desk, and fiddle were loaded into
+the small boat and taken off to _The Southern Cross_.
+
+It appeared from Jesse's report that the Captain had been sufficiently
+polite, and had attributed the misunderstanding of his men to their
+inability to speak English. They had not gotten their orders for the
+Marquis. He had asked no further questions about Monsieur de Boisdhyver
+or about his recent prisoners, but had feed Jesse liberally, and
+dismissed him, with his own and the Marquis's thanks.
+
+"Well," said Tom, who had returned an hour before and had been
+exchanging experiences with Dan, "that seems to be the end of him for
+the present. I don't know that I did right in promising your French lady
+that I should release him, but there seemed no other way to make sure of
+getting you back."
+
+"I am glad you promised," replied Dan. "It is a relief not to have him
+under our roof. For the last week I've felt as if the place were haunted
+by an evil spirit."
+
+"So it has been, and so it still will be, I am afraid," was Tom's reply.
+"If there is treasure here, you may be sure that gang won't sail away
+without making a desperate effort to get it. I move that we beat them out
+by hunting for it ourselves. Why not begin to-night?"
+
+"Not to-night," protested Dan. "I am tired to death. You can imagine that
+I didn't get much sleep cooped up on that confounded ship."
+
+"No more have I, old boy. But I believe in striking while the iron is
+hot. Every day's delay gives them a better chance for their plans, if
+they mean to attack the Inn."
+
+"I doubt if they'll do that. I don't think force is precisely their line.
+You know, I believe that the story Madame de la Fontaine told isn't
+altogether a fiction."
+
+"Pshaw!" exclaimed Tom. "I don't believe a word of it. Naturally they
+wouldn't use force, if they could help it. But their plans have all been
+upset, and a gang like that won't stop at anything."
+
+"But we live in a civilized community, my boy. This isn't the
+middle ages."
+
+"We live in a civilized community, perhaps; but if you can find a more
+isolated spot, a place more remote from help, in any other part of the
+civilized world, I'd be glad to see it. We might as well be in the middle
+of the Sahara desert. Find the treasure and get it out of harm's
+way--that's my idea."
+
+"All right, but to-morrow; I swear I'm not up to it to-night."
+
+"To-morrow! Well, then to-morrow. Though for the life of me, I don't see
+why you want to delay things. Jesse and Ezra can keep watch tonight."
+
+"But we must get some sleep, Tom."
+
+"The devil with sleep! However, you're the boss now. It's your inn, your
+treasure, your sister, that are involved. I'll take a back seat."
+
+"Come, come, Tom--don't let's quarrel. Give me to-night to--to get myself
+together, and tomorrow I'll pull the Inn down with you, if you wish."
+
+Perhaps Dan was right, he did need rest and sleep and a few hours would
+restore him. They had their supper, then, apportioned the night into
+watches, and Dan went upstairs for his first period of sleep.
+
+His brain was a-whirl. All through the afternoon, during his talk with
+the Marquis, and later during his talk with Tom, one idea had been
+dominating his thought, dictating his plan of action, colouring his
+judgment. The fascination which Madame de la Fontaine exerted over his
+senses was too strong for him even to contemplate resisting it. She was
+confessedly in league with a gang of adventurers upon a quest for
+treasure. She had lied to him at first about the Marquis, she had lied
+to him about Nancy, she had lied to him about his release; and when she
+had left him under the pretext of arranging his return to the Inn, she
+had in fact gone to Tom to bargain an exchange of him for the old
+Marquis. Her lies, her subterfuges, her flatteries, had been evidently
+designed but to get possession of the torn scrap of paper which was so
+necessary to their finding the hidden treasure. All this Dan told
+himself a hundred times, and then, quickly dispelling the witness of
+these cold hard facts, there would flash before him the vision of her
+wonderful eyes, of her strange appealing beauty, of her stirring
+personality; he would feel once more the touch of her cheek and her lips
+pressing his, intoxicating as wine; and delicious fires flamed through
+his veins, and set his heart to beating, and made havoc of his honour
+and his conscience. Whatever were the consequences, he would meet her
+again that night as he had promised. It was his first experience of
+passion and it was sweeping him off his feet.
+
+Alone in his room Dan sat down at the table. He drew from his pocket the
+torn paper, and as an act of justice to the friends he felt that he was
+about to betray, he labourously made a copy of the difficult French
+handwriting. This done, he locked the copy in his strong box and put the
+original back in his pocket. Then, like the criminal he thought himself
+to be, he crept cautiously down the stairs. The door into the bar was
+open, and he stood for a moment, shoes in hand, peering into the
+dimly-lit room. Tom sat by the hearth, reading, a pipe in his mouth and a
+cocked pistol on the table by his side. A pang went through Dan's breast,
+but he checked the impulse to speak, and stole softly across the hall and
+into his mother's parlour. Ever so cautiously he closed the door behind
+him, crossed the room, and raised the sash of one of the windows.
+
+It was dark, but starlight; the moon had not yet risen. In a moment he
+had slipped over the sill and stood upon the porch. Lowering the sash, he
+crept across the band of light that shone from the windows of the bar,
+and into the shadow of the Red Oak. There he buttoned his great coat
+tightly about him, put on his shoes, and started softly down the avenue
+of maples. Scarcely a sound disturbed the silence of the night, save the
+lazy creaking of the windmill as it turned now and then to the puff of a
+gentle breeze.
+
+At every few steps, he paused to listen, fearful lest his absence had
+been detected and he were followed by some one from the Inn. Then he
+would start on again, peering eagerly into the darkness ahead for any
+sign of her whom he sought. At last he reached the end of the avenue.
+His heart was beating wildly, in a very terror that she might not come.
+Nothing--no catastrophe, no danger, no disgrace,--could be so terrible
+to him as that the woman he loved so recklessly and madly should not
+come. She must not fail! He looked at his watch; it was already three
+minutes past ten. If in five--then minutes she did not come, he would go
+to seek her--to the House on the Dunes, aye, if must be to _The Southern
+Cross_ itself.
+
+Suddenly a dark figure slipped out of the gloom, and Claire de la
+Fontaine was in his arms. For a moment she let him clasp her, let his
+lips again meet hers; then quickly she disengaged herself. "Are we safe?"
+she asked in a whisper. "Is it that we can talk here."
+
+"We are perfectly safe," he answered. "Nothing can be heard from the Inn.
+No one is about."
+
+"You escaped without notice? Are you certain that no one follows you?"
+
+"Absolutely. I am sure. And you?"
+
+"I?--Oh, no, no--. There is no one to question me. I have been at the
+House on the Dunes all the evening. Marie, my maid,--she thinks that I
+am gone to the schooner. _Mon Dieu! cher ami_, what terrors I have
+suffered for you. It had not seemed possible that Claire de la Fontaine
+would ride and walk two so long miles in a desolate country to meet a
+lover--It must be that we are gone mad."
+
+"Madness then is the sweetest experience of life," said Dan, seizing her
+hand again and carrying it to his lips.
+
+"Ah _peut-etre, mon ami_. But now there are many affairs to discuss. Tell
+me--the Marquis, he was released, as your friend has promised me he
+should be?"
+
+"Of course, didn't you know it?"
+
+"I know nothing. Why then is it he has not left the Inn?"
+
+"But he did leave--in the middle of the afternoon, half an hour after I
+returned."
+
+"And where is it that he has gone?"
+
+"To the schooner, I suppose. He left alone, giving directions for his
+things to be sent after him."
+
+"Ah! to the schooner, you say? You are certain?"
+
+"Yes--that is, I think he went there. Jesse took his boxes and bags down
+to the shore, and Captain Bonhomme received them, and thanked him in the
+Marquis's name,''
+
+"_Mais non! Est-ce possible_?" For a moment she was silent, considering
+deeply. "_Bien_!" she exclaimed presently. "It is as you say, of course.
+And you, my friend?" She stopped suddenly, for they had been walking
+slowly forward, and withdrawing her hand from his arm, she held it out
+before him. "The paper?" she demanded.
+
+"Here it is," murmured Dan, fumbling in his pocket, and pulling out the
+scrap of paper. She took it eagerly from his hand and held it up before
+her eyes as though trying to see it in the dark.
+
+"This is it, really?" she asked.
+
+"I swear it," he answered. "It is the piece of writing that I found in
+the hidden cubby-hole of the old cabinet in the Oak Parlour. It is written
+in French, you know."
+
+"Yes, I know, I know," she assented absently. For a moment she was quite
+still, and then, with a strange exclamation, she put the paper to her
+lips. "_Quels souvenirs, d'autrefois_!" she murmured. "_Ah, mon Dieu,
+mon Dieu_!"
+
+"Dearest, what is it?" asked Dan.
+
+"Nothing, nothing," she replied, withdrawing a little from his touch. "I
+was unwell for the moment,--_ce ne fait rien_. No, no, you are not to
+kiss me, please." Again she unloosed his arm from about her neck, slipped
+the paper into her muff, and pressed a little forward. For a space they
+walked slowly, silently, toward the Inn.
+
+"But, dearest one," murmured Dan, "this proves to you my love, doesn't
+it? You no longer doubt me. For your sake, I give my honour; it may be,
+the safety of my friends. You must see how I love you with all my heart
+and soul. Won't you,--"
+
+Suddenly she stopped again quite still and faced him. "My poor boy," she
+said gently, "you really love me?"
+
+"Love you! My God, have I not proved it! What more would you have me do?"
+
+"_Mais oui_," she answered quickly. "You have proved it, but I have
+thought that it was not possible."
+
+"And you--you do care--oh, tell me--"
+
+"_Hélas, mon paurve ami_. I love as tenderly as it remains in me to love.
+Ah, dear, dear boy, so sincerely, that I cannot have you to sell your
+honour for the futile kisses of Claire de la Fontaine."
+
+"What do you mean? Have I--"
+
+"No, no, no! This--take the paper. You must not again give it me, I
+desire that you will not." She drew the paper from her muff with an
+impulsive movement and thrust it toward him. "Take it, I implore you."
+
+"But why--?"
+
+"Because that you shall not give your honour to a woman such as I am.
+_Mai vraiment_, I love you. That is why you must take back the paper."
+
+"But you must explain--"
+
+"_Mon Dieu_! is it that I have not explained? There is time for nothing
+more. I have fear, _mon ami_; a kiss, and it is necessary that I go. It
+is good-bye."
+
+"But you love me, you have said so. I cannot, I will not let you go."
+
+"Listen to me, my friend," she said, her voice rising for the moment
+above the whisper in which she had cautiously spoken heretofore. "From
+the first I have deceived you, betrayed you, played upon your affection
+but to betray you afresh. And now I find that I love you. I am not that
+which you call good, but it is impossible that I injure you. Go back to
+your friends."
+
+"Never! I love you. What matters now anything that you have said or done?
+And you love me. Ah dearest one, what can that mean but good?"
+
+"_Bien-aimé_, what will you that I say?" she interrupted speaking
+rapidly, "I am what you Americans call 'a bad woman',--the sort of woman
+that you know nothing of. I was the woman who sixteen years ago stayed at
+the Inn at the Red Oak with François de Boisdhyver, the woman your mother
+called nurse, who cared for his little daughter. And now I have told you
+all. Will you know from now that I am a thousand times unworthy? _Pour
+l'amour de Dieu_, give it to me to do this one act of honour and of
+generosity."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+THE ATTACK
+
+
+With these words she thrust the scrap of paper into his hands and turning
+swiftly, started forward as though to escape his further importunities by
+flight. But Dan was instantly by her side, trying to catch her hand in
+the darkness.
+
+Again she faced him passionately. "_C'est folie_," she cried hoarsely,
+"have I not told you that we are in great danger? Go, go back to the Inn.
+It is there only that you will be safe.--O, _mon Dieu!"_
+
+A figure had sprung suddenly from the blackness of the trees. Dan felt a
+sharp blow on his shoulder, and then he was grappling with a wiry
+antagonist, striving to keep at safe distance a hand that clutched an
+open knife. Locked in a close embrace, swaying from side to side of the
+road, they fought desperately. Dan striving to get at the pistol which he
+carried, his assailant trying to use his knife.
+
+It seemed as if Dan could no longer hold the man off when two small
+hands closed over the fist that held the gleaming knife and a clear voice
+rang out in French. Dan felt his antagonist's grip loosen and he wrenched
+himself free. Madame de la Fontaine had come to his rescue. "Quick,
+quick--to the Inn. I am safe. You have but one chance for your life," she
+cried. Already his assailant had put a boatswain's whistle to his lips
+and was sounding a shrill blast.
+
+As Dan hesitated, uncertain what to do, he heard a number of men come
+crashing through the underbrush of the neighbouring field. Again Madame
+de la Fontaine cried, "_Mon Dieu_! will you not run?" Then she turned and
+disappeared in the darkness. Simultaneously came the crack of a pistol
+shot, and a bullet whizzed by his ear. There was nothing for it but to
+run; and run he did, shouting at the top of his voice the while to Tom in
+the Inn. He probably owed his start to the fact that for the moment his
+attacker, who had been held at bay by Madame de la Fontaine, was
+uncertain whether to follow her or Dan. That moment's delay saved Dan's
+life, for though, with a curse, the man started after him now, he had a
+poor chance of catching him in the darkness. But on he came only a dozen
+yards or so behind, and after him the thundering steps and harsh cries
+of those who had responded to the call of the whistle.
+
+At last Dan was at the door of the Inn, beating wildly upon it, and
+calling, "Open, Tom; quick, for God's sake! It's Dan." As the door was
+flung back, he sprang in and slammed it shut. Already the attackers were
+in the courtyard, a volley of shots rang against the stout oak, followed
+almost at once, by the flinging against it of half-a-dozen men. But the
+great oaken beam had been slipped into place and held firmly. Dan was
+none the worse for his experience, save for a graze on the cheek where
+the knife had glanced, and a slit on his shoulder from a bullet.
+
+"They're here!" he cried. "No time for explanations, Tom. I went
+out--fool that I was!--was attacked. They're here in force."
+
+By this time Jesse had rushed into the bar, attracted by the firing, and
+soon Ezra Manners came running down from the floor above. After the first
+impact against the door those without had withdrawn, evidently taking up
+a position in the courtyard again, for almost at once there was a
+fusilade of shots against door and windows, which luckily the heavy oak
+was proof against.
+
+"They're welcome to keep that up all night," said Tom. "Only a waste of
+ammunition. How many are there?" He would liked to have asked Dan why he
+had gone out, but there was no time for discussion.
+
+"I don't know--half-a-dozen at least, I should guess," was Dan's reply.
+"Bonhomme is at their head, I'm sure. It was he who tackled me in the
+avenue. They may have the whole crew of the schooner here. That would
+mean a dozen or more."
+
+"Well," said Tom, "we're in for it now, I guess. We'll have to watch in
+different parts of the house, for we don't know where they will attack.
+Unless they are all fools, it won't be here."
+
+"You're right. I'll stay and look out for the south wing. You go to the
+north wing, Tom; Jesse to the kitchen, and Ezra to the end of the south
+passage. That'll cover the house as well as we can cover it. They'll try
+to force an entrance somewheres. Have you all got guns? Good. Leave the
+doors open so that we can hear each other call."
+
+Evidently the attacking party had concluded that they were wasting their
+lead and their time in shooting at doors and window-shutters, for as Tom
+had said, all was now quiet outside. Fifteen minutes, half-an-hour
+passed, and nothing occurred to alarm or to relieve the tension on the
+anxious watchers within. At length Dan stole upstairs to reconnoitre.
+
+It was fortunate that he chose the precise moment he did, for as his
+head emerged above the last stair, he saw that the great shutters at
+the end of the south corridor were open, and a man stood before the
+window, evidently on the top rung of a ladder, trying the sash. It was
+locked to be sure, but at the instant Dan saw him, he raised his fist
+and smashed it. He was about to leap through the opening, fringed
+though it was with jagged glass, when Dan aimed his pistol carefully,
+and fired. There was a cry, and the form at the window fell crashing to
+the ground below. Dan rushed to the casement, and could hear in the
+court beneath him the curses and exclamations of the surprised
+assailants. Quickly he thrust the end of the ladder from the wall, then
+seizing a fresh pistol from his belt, fired at random into the darkness
+below. Another cry of pain attested to the fact that his chance shot
+had taken effect. By this time Tom had rushed to his assistance, and
+together they barred the window again.
+
+Dan gave a brief account of the incident. "But, for heaven's sake, Tom,"
+he concluded, "get back to the north wing. We are in danger there every
+moment. I'll watch out here."
+
+As Tom returned to his post in the cold corridor of the north wing, he
+heard heavy crashes, as of a battering-ram, against the great door that
+opened into the gallery. A shrill whistle brought Ezra Manners to his
+assistance. "Watch here!" he commanded. "If the door crashes in, shoot,
+and shoot to kill; then run into the bar and barricade the door between.
+I've a plan."
+
+He himself ran into the bar, blew out the candles, and risking perhaps
+too much on the chance of success, cautiously opened the front door. He
+could scarcely make out the group at the farther end of the gallery, as
+he stepped out; but he could hear the resounding crashes against the door
+into the north hall, each one of which seemed to be the last that even
+that massive frame could hold out against. Leveling his pistol at the
+group; he took aim, and fired; snatched another from his pocket, and
+fired a second time. Again, by good luck, the defender's shots had told.
+There was a thud on the gallery floor, and the besiegers scurried to
+cover beyond the courtyard fence. Tom dashed safely back into the house,
+and slipped the great beam into place.
+
+Upstairs Dan's attention had been attracted by the commotion in front of
+the inn. He opened a window on to the roof of the gallery, climbed out,
+and crawled along on his belly till his head just abutted over the eaves.
+For a few moments, after the firing, he could hear the attackers moving
+about behind the fence across the courtyard. At length, a couple of them
+stole across the court and up on to the gallery beneath him. In a moment
+they returned carrying the dead or wounded comrade; then all of them
+seemed to go off together up the dark avenue of maples. He waited till
+they could be heard no more, then crept back into the house and ran down
+to tell Dan of their temporary withdrawal. For an hour or more the four
+defenders of the Inn kept themselves occupied parading the corridors and
+rooms, on the watch for a fresh attack. But nothing happened. They felt
+no security, however, and would feel none till daylight.
+
+In the silent watching of that night Dan had ample opportunity to reflect
+upon his extraordinary interview with Madame de la Fontaine. He loved
+her. Good heavens how he loved her, but--had she been sincere in her
+refusal at the last to keep the scrap of paper for the possession of
+which she had so desperately intrigued? Had she decoyed him to the
+rendezvous in the dark but to betray him to the bandits with whom she was
+in league? At first it would seem so. And yet the paper was in his
+possession; and, she it was who had rescued him from the assassin's
+knife. Where was she now? What had become of her? What was to be the end
+of this mad night's work? That she was the woman who had accompanied
+General Pointelle--or the Maréchal de Boisdhyver--somehow did not
+surprise him. And for the time the full import of what that implied did
+not dawn upon him. But what mattered anything now that he loved her?
+
+He determined at last to reconnoitre again from the roof of the gallery.
+It still lay in shadow, but it would not be long before the moon, now
+rising over the eastern hills beyond the Strathsey flooded it with light.
+In a moment, he had opened the window, was over the sill, and, creeping
+cautiously along the roof to the ledge, he worked his way toward the
+great oak at the farther end.
+
+All was still and deserted below as the Inn courtyard would have been in
+the middle of any winter's night. While he stood peering into the
+darkness, listening intently, the moon, just showing above the distant
+tree tops, cast the first rays of its light into the courtyard beneath
+him. At the instant the figure of a woman stole across the flagged
+pavement and crept fearfully to the Red Oak. With a strange thrill he
+recognized Claire de la Fontaine. Reaching the shelter of the great tree,
+she stooped, gathered a handful of gravel from the road bed, and then
+cast it boldly at the shutters of the bar, calling softly, "Dan, Dan."
+
+Instantly he replied. "Claire! Is that you? What is it? I am here, above
+you, on the roof."
+
+"Ah, _mon Dieu_!" she exclaimed, as she looked up startled, and
+discerned his form leaning over the eaves, "for the love of heaven, my
+friend, open to me. I am in danger and I must tell you that which is of
+great importance to you. _Mais vite, mon ami_. In ten minutes they will
+return again."
+
+It did not occur to Dan to doubt her. Careless of the risk, he rushed
+back to the window, climbed in, and in a few seconds had opened the door
+to the anxious woman without. She seemed physically exhausted as she
+stepped into the warm bar. Taking her in his arms, he carried her to a
+chair, and poured out a glass of wine, which she eagerly drank.
+
+"It matters not what I have been doing," she murmured in reply to his
+questions, "I have but little time to give you my warning. _Ecoute_.
+Bonhomme and his men are gone only to carry back their dead and wounded,
+and to bring cutlasses, and the two or three sailors who were left on the
+schooner. I have followed them--God knows how--and heard something of
+their plans. They will make an attack--now, in a moment--in two different
+places. But these attacks will be shams,--is not that the word?--they
+will mean nothing. It is the Oak Parlour that they desire to enter. At
+the window of that so horrible room Bonhomme will try to make an entrance
+without alarm while the others hold your attention at the front and back
+of the Inn. Is it that you understand? It is necessary that you are
+prepared for these sham attacks, but the great danger is Bonhomme. The
+window in the Oak Parlour is not strong. They have information--recent
+information--from the Marquis probably,--that it will not be difficult to
+break in. One of you must conceal himself in the dark and shoot Bonhomme
+when he enters; you must shoot and shoot to kill, then we will be safe.
+I have no fear of Monsieur le Marquis. The others--they are brutes--but
+they will flee. And they know nothing, they do this for money,--ah, _mon
+Dieu_, for money which I have furnished!"
+
+For a moment, torn between his love and his deep distrust of this woman,
+poor Dan stood uncertainly. Suddenly he knelt at her side and clasped his
+arms about her. "Claire, you are on our side? You swear it."
+
+"Ah, _mon Dieu_! is it that I deserve this?" she exclaimed bitterly.
+"Ah! I tell you truth," she cried. "You must believe me--Listen! Are
+they come already?"
+
+"No, no, there is nothing. But I trust you, I will go."
+
+Suddenly she sprang to her feet. "Let me go with you. It is terrible to
+me to enter again that room; but I desire to prove myself of honour.
+_Allous, allous_!"
+
+"Tom is there."
+
+"Ah! send him here to the bar. But do you come, _mon ami_. See, I go with
+you." She rose and forcing herself to the effort, led the way across the
+bar and into the corridor of the north wing, as if to show him that in
+sixteen years she had not forgotten.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+IN THE OAK PARLOUR
+
+
+"You know the way?" Dan exclaimed as he caught up with her, and held open
+the door that led into the old north wing.
+
+"But so well," she replied, catching her breath. "Would to God that
+I did not!"
+
+"Ah!" he murmured, "I forgot that you have been here before."
+
+They pressed on silently. At the turn of the corridor upon which the Oak
+Parlour gave, they discerned Tom Pembroke, a weird figure, in the dim
+light of the tallow dip upon the table, that cast fantastic shadows upon
+the whitewashed walls.
+
+As he recognized them, he sprang forward in astonishment. "Madame de la
+Fontaine! Dan! What does this mean?" he cried.
+
+"You know Madame?" Dan replied hastily and in evident confusion. "At
+great risk she has come to warn us--she is our friend, understand.--She
+has come to tell us how Bonhomme and his men will attack the Inn."
+
+Tom listened to his explanation with unconcealed dismay. "Good heavens,
+Dan!" he protested, "You trust this woman? You know she is in league with
+these ruffians. Do you want us to fall into a trap?"
+
+"No, no, Monsieur Pembroke," interrupted Madame de la Fontaine, "you must
+listen to me. I understand your fear. But at last you can trust me. I
+repent that which I have done. Ah, _mon Dieu_, with what bitterness! And
+now I desire to do all that is possible to save you. You must trust me."
+
+"I do not--I can not trust you," Tom cried sternly. "Don't go in there,
+Dan. Don't I beg of you, trust this woman's word. It is a trick."
+
+"Perhaps," said Dan grimly, "but go back. I take the responsibility. I
+do trust her, I shall trust her--to death. There is no time to lose,
+man. Go back!"
+
+"What deviltry has bewitched you?" cried Tom passionately. "Already once
+to-night you have risked our lives by your fool-hardiness,--for the sake
+of this woman, eh? By gad, man, I begin to see. But I tell you now, I
+refuse to be a victim to your madness."
+
+"_Mais non_, Monsieur Pembroke," Claire cried again. "By all that is good
+and holy, I swear to you, that that which I have said is true. You must
+go. They will attack the bar and the kitchen. If those places are not
+defended, there will be danger."
+
+"At any rate," said Dan, "I am going into the Oak Parlour. If you refuse
+to act with me, barricade the door between the bar and the north wing. If
+need be, I shall fight alone. Only now we lose time, precious time."
+
+Pembroke looked at him as if he had gone mad, then shrugging his
+shoulders he turned back into the bar, whistling for Jesse and Ezra as
+he did so.
+
+For a moment, glancing after Tom's retreating figure, shaken to his soul
+by conflicting emotions, Dan stood irresolute.
+
+"But come," said Madame de la Fontaine, touching his arm. Again like the
+weird genius of this strange night she led the way on down the shadowy
+hall, and paused only when her hand rested upon the knob of the door into
+the Oak Parlour. "It is here," she said simply.
+
+As Dan reached her side, she opened the door. The light of the candle
+down the hallway did not penetrate the gloom of the disused room. A musty
+smell as of cold stagnant air came strong to their nostrils, and Dan
+felt, as they crossed the threshold together, that he was entering a
+place where no life had been for a long long time, a place full of dead
+nameless horrors.
+
+The woman by his side was trembling violently. He put his arm about her
+to reassure her, and there shot through him a sensation of strange and
+terrible joy to be with her alone in this darkness and danger. For the
+moment he was exulting that for her sake he had risked his honour, that
+for her sake now he was risking life itself. He bent his head to hers.
+
+"No! no!--not here!" she whispered hoarsely, but yet clinging to him with
+shaking hands. "It is so cold, so dark. I have fear," she murmured.
+
+"It is like a tomb," he said.
+
+"The tomb of my hopes, of my youth," she breathed softly.
+
+"Shall I strike a light?"
+
+"No, no,--no light, I implore you. _Ecoute_! What is it that I hear?"
+
+"I hear nothing. It is the wind in the Red Oak outside."
+
+"But listen!"
+
+"It is an owl hooting."
+
+Suddenly she drew her hand from his, and he could hear her moving swiftly
+about. "All is as it used to be?" she asked.
+
+"Precisely," he answered; "nothing has been changed."
+
+"Here is the cabinet," she said, from across the room. "I can feel the
+lion's head. It is opposite to the window and the moonlight will stream
+in when the casement is opened, but if I crouch low I shall not be seen.
+_Bien_! And you, _mon ami_? Tell me, is the old _escritoire_ still to the
+left of the door?" Now she was back at his side once again.
+
+"The _escritoire_?" he repeated.
+
+"The little table where one writes. Ah! yes, it is here. See, behind
+this, _mon ami_, shall you hide yourself. The moonlight will not reach
+here--and it is so arranged that you will see plainly any one that
+appears at the window. When the casement is opened, you will shoot, will
+you not, and shoot to kill?"
+
+"Yes, I will shoot," said Dan, his voice trembling.
+
+"You promise me?" she cried in a tense whisper, as she grasped his arm
+and held it tight in her grip.
+
+"I tell you, yes."
+
+"You must not fail."
+
+"No. Shall I shoot at any one who opens?"
+
+"Any one?--it will be Bonhomme,--no other."
+
+Suddenly there came, from the front and the rear of the Inn, at the same
+instant it seemed, the sharp staccato of a fusilade of pistol shots, and
+the lumbering blows as of beams being thrust at distant doors.
+
+"They are come!" she whispered, "hide." Dan could hear the swish of her
+garments as she rapidly glided across the room to the old cabinet, then
+he turned and crouched low behind the writing desk that she had chosen
+for his place of concealment. He knelt there motionless, a cocked pistol
+clenched in his right hand. His breath seemed to have stopped, but his
+heart was pounding as though it must burst through his breast. How could
+he shoot down in cold blood a fellow man? The horror of it crowded out
+all other impressions, sensations fears. He could fight, risk his life,
+but to pull the trigger of that pistol when the casement should open
+seemed to him an impossibility. He would wait, grapple with him, fight
+as men should.
+
+Suddenly a ray of moonlight fell across the dark floor. Dan, looking up,
+seemed frozen by horror. The shutters had opened, the casement swung back
+noiselessly, and there in the opening, sharply outlined against the
+moonlight-flooded night, was the great black hulk of Captain Bonhomme.
+
+For a moment he stood there irresolute, listening intently. Dan was
+fascinated, motionless, held as in a vice by the horror of the thing.
+
+Suddenly Bonhomme moved his head to one side as if to listen more
+acutely. As he did so, the ray of moonlight fell upon the cabinet, fell
+upon Claire de la Fontaine, upon something that she held in an
+outstretched hand that gleamed.
+
+"_Nom de Dieu_!" There was the flash and crack of a pistol, a sharp cry,
+and the great figure fell back and sank out of sight.
+
+With that Dan sprang forward, reckless of danger, and ran to the window.
+He heard without the confused sounds as of persons scurrying to cover,
+saw their forms dash across the moonlit courtyard, into the shadows of
+the trees and outhouses. Beneath him on the floor of the gallery was
+something horrible and still.
+
+Almost instantly Claire de la Fontaine was by his side, and as
+regardless of danger as he, she was calling sharply, calling men by their
+names. Her hair had been loosened and fell over her shoulders in black
+waves, her dark eyes flashed with excitement and passion, and her face,
+strangely pale, in the silver moonlight, was set in stern harsh lines.
+Even then this vision of her tragic beauty thrilled the man at her side.
+
+But she was as unconscious of him as she was of her danger. With hand
+uplifted she called by name the desperados, who had taken shelter in the
+darkness and to those who now came running from front and rear where
+their attacks had been unsuccessful.
+
+Appalled, spell-bound by the vision, even as Dan was, they stopped, and
+stood listening mutely to the torrent of words that she poured
+forth,--vehement French of which Dan had no understanding.
+
+At last, ending the frightful tension of the scene, two of the men came
+forward, crept up to the lifeless body of Bonhomme, and grasping it by
+head and feet, carried it away, across the courtyard, into the darkness
+of the avenue of maples. One by one, still mysteriously silent, the
+others of the gang followed, till at length the last one had disappeared
+into the gloom. Weird silence fell once more upon the Inn.
+
+It was only then that Madame de la Fontaine turned to Dan. "They will
+come no more," she said in a strained unnatural voice. "We are saved,
+safe.... I have proved, is it not so?--my honour, my love."
+
+With the words she sank at his feet, just as Tom, candle in hand,
+appeared in the doorway.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+THE TREASURE
+
+
+Owing doubtless to the death of Bonhomme and to the orders given in no
+uncertain tones by Madame de la Fontaine, the bandits from the schooner
+in the cove did not make a further effort to attack the Inn that night.
+There was no rest, however, for Madame de la Fontaine, after her heroic
+exploit in the Oak Parlour, had swooned completely away. They carried her
+to the couch in Mrs. Frost's parlour, and, awkwardly enough, did what
+could be done for her by men. It was over an hour before they succeeded
+in restoring her to consciousness, and when they did so, she awoke to
+delirium and fever. Distracted by anxiety and by their helplessness, at
+the first streak of dawn, Dan started for town to get a doctor, and Ezra
+Manners volunteered to go to the Red Farm and bring back Mrs. Frost,
+Nancy, and the maids.
+
+About six o'clock in the morning the women folk returned to the Inn. But
+the briefest account of the attack was given them, though they were told
+in no uncertain terms of Madame de la Fontaine's heroic action in coming
+to warn them and of her courageous shot at the leader. Then Mrs. Frost
+and Nancy turned all their attention to the sick woman, caring for her as
+tenderly and devotedly as if she were their own. Half-an-hour later Dan
+returned from Monday Port with the family doctor, a grave silent old
+gentleman, in whose skill and discretion they trusted. After making an
+examination of his patient, he nodded his head encouragingly; gave a few
+directions to Mrs. Frost, and then left, promising to return later in the
+morning with medicines and supplies.
+
+At last, utterly worn out, the four men threw themselves on their beds
+and slept from sheer exhaustion. The sun was high in the sky when they
+came down stairs again and found Nancy waiting for them, and a smoking
+breakfast ready on the table. After greeting them, she pointed to the
+window, across the fields, almost bare of snow now and gleaming in the
+morning sunlight, to the bright waters of the cove. "See!" she cried,
+"the schooner has disappeared."
+
+They both looked. "By Jove, it has!" exclaimed Tom, rushing to the other
+side of the room, and peering out at the shipless sea. "Heigho! that's a
+relief. Pray God we've seen the last of her. The Marquis gone, the
+schooner gone,--we three together once more! Perhaps we shall begin to
+live again. Ah!" he added more softly, glancing with sudden sympathy at
+Dan's white drawn face, "I forgot the poor woman across the hall."
+
+Dan turned aside to hide his emotion, for though a load of anxiety had
+been lifted from his heart by the vanishing of _The Southern Cross_, he
+was sick with fear for the issue of the illness that had stricken down
+the woman he loved,--the woman who had proved her love for him by so
+terrible and so tragic a deed.
+
+As though aware that for the moment they were best left together alone,
+Nancy slipped away into the kitchen.
+
+"You love her, Dan?" asked Tom simply.
+
+"Yes, Tom, with all my heart and soul. I staked my honour, my life, on
+her sincerity. And how she has proved that we were right to trust her! It
+can't be--she mustn't die--I couldn't bear it!"
+
+"She'll be all right, old fellow, don't worry; trust to your mother and
+Nance. It is only the shock of the terrible things she went through last
+night. Come on, we must take something to eat. Here is Nancy back again."
+
+There was no doubt of the fact, _The Southern Cross_ had sailed away,
+vanished in the night as mysteriously as a week before she had appeared
+in the Strathsey and found moorings in the Cove. They did not count on
+the certainty of her not reappearing, however; and that night and for
+many nights thereafter the Inn was securely barricaded and a watch was
+kept, but neither then nor ever did _The Southern Cross_ spread her sails
+in those waters again. She and her crew disappeared from their lives as
+completely as from the seas that stretched around the coast of Deal.
+
+Tom at once was for making a search in the Oak Parlour for the hidden
+treasure, but for the time Dan had no heart for the undertaking. He urged
+delay at least until Madame de la Fontaine had recovered; and as for
+Nancy she would not hear of it.
+
+"I can't bear to think of it,--of the trouble, the crime, the suffering
+of which it has been the cause. When our poor lady recovers, she will
+tell us all we need to know. I dread the Oak Parlour. I would not go into
+that room for anything in the world. Nor, believe me, Tom, could Dan do
+so now. You have guessed, haven't you, that he loves Madame de la
+Fontaine?"
+
+"Of course, dearest; poor fellow! he betrays his love by every word and
+act. But good heaven, Nance, he couldn't marry her!"
+
+"No--I don't know. I suppose not. But Dan will do as he will. To oppose
+him now would only make him the more wretched."
+
+"Does your mother know?"
+
+"No, and it is best she should not. I don't think she has the faintest
+suspicion."
+
+"Well, I suppose we had better let things rest awhile;" Tom assented,
+"but I swear I would like to get at the Oak Parlour and tear the secret
+out of it."
+
+"We must wait a bit, Tom dear. Let's just be glad now of what we
+have and are."
+
+And with that he drew her toward him and pressed for a definite answer to
+the question which so deeply concerned their future.
+
+"When Madame has recovered, when we know all and the mystery is solved,"
+she replied; then she added inconsequently, "I wonder if we shall ever
+hear of the old Marquis again."
+
+"I wonder too," Tom exclaimed. "Though he has sailed away on _The
+Southern Cross_, I doubt if he will willingly leave the treasure
+behind him."
+
+"That dreadful treasure, Tom," cried Nancy. "I wish to goodness that the
+Marquis had it and might keep it always. We have each other."
+
+The evening of the second day after the terrible night of the attack, as
+Dan was entering the Inn from his work outside, he saw Madame de la
+Fontaine standing on the gallery under the Red Oak. It was the dusk of a
+mild pleasant day. She was clad still in her soft grey gown with furs
+about her waists and neck, and a grey scarf over her head. But there was
+something infinitely pathetic to him in the listlessness of her attitude,
+in the expression of a deep and melancholy that had come into her face.
+
+He stole swiftly to her side, and taking her hand in his pressed it to
+his lips, with a gesture that was as reverent as it was tender. For a
+moment something of the old brightness returned to her face as she bent
+her clear gaze upon his bowed head.
+
+"You love me, Dan?" she murmured.
+
+"You know I love you," he whispered passionately.
+
+"Yes, I believe that you do," she said simply. "I shall always be
+thankful that I have won a good man's love." But suddenly she withdrew
+her hand, as the door of the bar opened. "See, here is Mademoiselle
+Nancy. She is coming for me: she is to be with me to-night. There is
+much for me to do."
+
+His heart surged within him; for he knew that in her simple words there
+was the tragic note of farewell; but he could not speak, he could not
+plead from that sad and broken woman for a passion that he knew but too
+well she could never give. He knew that she would leave him on the
+morrow, that his protests would be vain;--nay,--he would not even utter
+them! With the gathering of the darkness about the old Inn, he felt that
+the light in his heart was being obscured forever.
+
+The evening passed, the night. Morning came, and Madame de la Fontaine,
+accompanied by Nancy, left the Inn at the Red Oak for Coventry. There
+remained to Dan of his brief and tragic passion but one letter, which Tom
+handed to him that morning, and which, with despairing heart, he read and
+re-read a hundred times.
+
+"_Mon cher ami_:
+
+"You would forgive that I do not know well how to express myself as I
+desire, if you could read my heart. I bade you good-bye to-night under
+the Red Oak, tree for me of such tragic and such beautiful memories. I
+could not say farewell otherwise, dear friend, nor could you. We have
+loved sincerely, have we not? We will remember that in days to come; you
+will remember it even in the happier days to come that I pray God to
+grant you. I know all that you would say, my friend, but it cannot be. I
+must vanish from your life, be gone as completely as though I had never
+entered it. I love you deeply, tenderly, but I could not be to you what I
+know that now you wish. All the past forbids. The very tragedy that
+proved to you that I was worthy of your trust forbids. It is my only
+justification that I saved your lives, dear friend; but oh how bitterly I
+ask pardon of God for what has been done! Then also, dearest friend, my
+heart is no longer capable to bear passion, but only to feel great
+tenderness. I could not say these things, and yet they must be written. I
+cannot go with them unsaid. Certain other things must be told you in
+justice to all.
+
+"The story I told you on the schooner that day was largely truth. The
+General Pointelle, who was at the Inn at the Red Oak in 1814, was in
+reality the Maréchal de Boisdhyver, the father of your foster-sister
+Nancy. She is truly Eloise de Boisdhyver. The Maréchal returned to France
+to support the Emperor, as he wrote to madame your good mother; and he
+fell, as I told you, on the field of Waterloo. Admitting the importance
+of his mission, admitting my ambiguous relation to him (indefensible as
+it was), to have left the child as he did was an act of kindness. In
+truth the treasure concealed in the Oak Parlour is considerable, and it
+was always my purpose to return, but the necessary directions for finding
+it were not entrusted to me, but to the Marquis Marie-Anne, whom I didn't
+meet until many years after Waterloo. Then I was induced by the
+Marquis,--your old Marquis--to provide the money for the miserable
+enterprise, of which we know the tragic result. From the first I was
+uncertain about the method we adopted; and then soon after our arrival
+here, from a hundred little indications, I became convinced that Bonhomme
+was prepared to betray us, once we secured the treasure. As for the
+Marquis, I suppose that he sailed away on the schooner. You need fear him
+no longer. It was he, I am convinced, that conveyed to them the
+information of the loosened casement in the Oak Parlour, and unwittingly
+arranged for his own undoing and our salvation. At all events he will
+have realized now that he has hopelessly lost the fight. As for the
+treasure, by right it belongs to Eloise, who should not disdain to use
+it. I enclose a transcription of the other half of the torn scrap of
+paper, which will supplement the directions in your possession.
+
+"And as for me, my friend, I shall seek a shelter in my own country apart
+from the world in which I have lived so to little purpose and for the
+most part so unhappily. Believe me, so it is best. My heart is too full
+for me to express all that I feel for you.
+
+"Dear, dear friend, do not render me the more unhappy to know that my
+brief friendship with you shall have harmed your life. Your place is in
+the world, to take part in the life of your own country, not, dear Dan,
+to waste youth and energy in the fruitless desolation of this beautiful
+Deal, not above all to grieve for a woman who was unworthy.
+
+"I commend you to God, and I shall never forget you.
+
+"CLAIRE DE LA FONTAINE."
+
+It was with a heavy heart that Dan consented later in the morning to
+Tom's proposal that they force at last the secret of the Oak Parlour. He
+got the torn scrap of paper which he had found,--such ages ago it seemed,
+though it was scarcely a week,--in the old cabinet, and gave it to Tom,
+with the copy of the other half which Madame de la Fontaine had enclosed
+in her letter of farewell. The copy in Madame de la Fontaine's
+handwriting did not dovetail exactly into the jagged edges of the
+original portion, so that it was some time before they could get it into
+position for reading. But at last it was pasted together on a large bit
+of cardboard, and Tom, with the aid of a dictionary, succeeded in making
+a translation, which Dan took down.
+
+"Learning of the attempt of my Emperor to regain his glorious throne, I
+leave these hospitable shores to offer my sword to his cause. In case I
+do not return, the person having instructions for the discovery of this
+paper, which I tear in two parts, will find herein the necessary
+directions for the finding of my hidden treasure. This treasure, bullion,
+jewels, and coins, is concealed in a secret chamber in this Inn at the
+Red Oak. This secret chamber will be entered from the Oak Parlour. The
+hidden door is released by a spring beneath the hand of the lady in the
+picture nearest the fireplace on the north side of the room. A panel
+slides back revealing the entrance. Instructions as to the deposition of
+the treasure will be found in the golden casket therewith.
+
+"FRANÇOIS DE BOISDHYVER."
+
+"Well?" said Tom, "the instructions are definite enough. Now we can put
+them to the test. Let's get to work at once. Wait a second till I get
+some wood, and well make a fire in the Oak Parlour." He filled his arms
+with logs from the bin under the settle in the bar, while Dan got the key
+for the north wing.
+
+Soon they were at the end of the old hall. It was with an effort that Dan
+brought himself to enter the room, for there flashed into his mind the
+vision of the last time he was there,--the cold silver moonlight, the
+dark burly form at the casement, the white drawn face of Claire de la
+Fontaine, and then the sharp flash and crack of the pistol.
+
+But with an impatient gesture, as if to thrust aside these tragic
+memories, he stepped across the threshold, and kneeling at the hearth,
+took the wood from Tom's arms and began to lay a fire. In the meantime
+his friend fumbled at the window casements, opened them, and let in the
+light of day and the pure air of out-of-doors. Soon the fire was
+crackling cheerily on the great andirons and casting its bright
+reflection on the dark oak panelling of the walls. Nothing had been
+disturbed--the old cabinet with the lions' heads stood opposite the
+window; the little _escritoire_, behind which he had crouched on the
+fatal night, was pushed back against the wall; the chairs, the tables,
+thick with dust, stood just as they had been standing for many years.
+
+"Do you realize, Tom," Dan said, as they stood side by side watching the
+blazing logs, "that it is sixteen years since General Pointelle stayed at
+the Inn and used this room? And the treasure, if there is any treasure,
+has been mouldering here all that time."
+
+"Let's get at it," said Tom. "I confess this place gives me the creeps.
+Have you got my translation of the directions?"
+
+"Yes, here it is." Dan spread out the bit of paper on one of the tables.
+"'The hidden door is released by a spring beneath the hand of the lady in
+the picture nearest the fireplace on the north side of the room.' Ah!
+that must be it--that old landscape let into the panel there." He walked
+nearer and examined it closely.
+
+It was a simple landscape, a garden in the foreground, forest and hills
+in the distance; and in the midst a lady in Eighteenth century costume
+caressing the head of a greyhound. It was beautifully mellow in tone, and
+might well have been a production of Gainsborough, though the Frosts had
+preserved no such tradition.
+
+Dan began to fumble, according to the directions, beneath the hand of
+the stately lady, pressing vigourously here and there with thumb and
+forefinger. "What's that?" he cried suddenly. A faint click, as of a
+spring in action, had sounded sharp in the stillness, but apparently with
+no other effect. "By Jove!" he exclaimed, "I believe there is something
+behind it. You heard the click? See there! the panel's opened a bit at
+the side." Surely enough, there was a long crack on the right--the length
+of the picture. "Here, let's push."
+
+Careless of the landscape, they put their hands upon the panel and
+pressed with all their force to the left. It yielded slowly, slipping
+back side-wise into the wall, and revealed a narrow opening, beyond which
+was a little circular stairway, leading apparently to some chamber above.
+
+"Here's the entrance to the secret chamber all right," Dan exclaimed.
+"Let's see where it goes to." He climbed in and started up the winding
+flight of stairs, Tom close behind him. About half way up the height
+of the Oak Parlour he came to a door. "Can't go any farther," he
+called to Tom.
+
+"What's the matter?"
+
+"There's a door here; it leads, evidently, into some little room between
+the Oak Parlour and the bedroom next. Who would ever have guessed it?"
+
+"Can't you open the door; is it locked?"
+
+Dan fumbled about till he found and turned the knob. "No," he answered.
+"I've opened it. But it's pitch dark inside. Get a candle."
+
+He waited anxiously while Tom went below again to get a candle, a
+strange feeling of dread creeping over him now that at last he was about
+to penetrate the secret which had been of such tragic purport in his
+life. In a moment Tom had returned, a candle in either hand, one of
+which he handed to Dan, and together they entered the secret chamber. It
+was a little room scarcely six feet square, without light, and so far as
+they could see without ventilation. As they stood looking about the
+candle flickered strangely casting weird shadows over the walls.
+Suddenly they saw at their feet a tiny golden casket, and then, in a
+corner of the room a row of small cloth bags, several of which had been
+ripped open, so that a stream of golden coin flowed out upon the floor.
+Nearby stood another little golden chest; and Tom, lifting the lid,
+started back astonished. For there sparkling and glowing in the candle
+light as though they were living moving things, lay a heap of precious
+gems--diamonds, rubies, opals, sapphires, amethysts, that might have
+been the ransom of a princess.
+
+"It's a treasure right enough!" cried Dan. "But what's this?" He turned
+to the opposite corner where there lay a heap of something covered with a
+great black cloth. They approached gingerly, and Dan stooped and picked
+up an edge of the covering. "It's a cloak," he exclaimed. Startled, he
+paused for a moment; then quickly pulled the cloak away, uncovering, to
+their horror, a lifeless body.
+
+"Tom!" Dan cried in a ghastly whisper. "A man has died here."
+
+Tom held the candle over the gruesome heap. "But who?" he asked in a
+hoarse whisper.
+
+For reply Dan pointed significantly to the cloak which he had dropped on
+the floor.
+
+"What!" cried Tom. "Good God! the old Marquis! But how? I don't
+understand--" he added, staring blankly.
+
+"He must have come here the afternoon he pretended to leave the Inn, must
+have learned the secret passage somehow. It was he who loosened the
+casement in the Oak Parlour that night, and got his message to Bonhomme.
+He was waiting here for him. Can't you see it all--the panel slipped
+back; he couldn't open it again; Bonhomme didn't come; he was caught like
+a rat in a trap."
+
+"My God, what a fate!"
+
+"We can't leave his body here. We must give it decent burial, you and I,
+Tom, for we can't let this be known."
+
+"And the treasure?"
+
+"Ah! there was treasure, wasn't there? Wait, let's see what is in the
+little casket." He picked up the golden casket that they had stepped over
+as they entered, and raised the lid. A single scrap of paper was inside
+on the little velvet cushion, inscribed in the same handwriting as the
+paper of directions, "_Pour Eloise de Boisdhyver_."
+
+"But come," Tom whispered, holding back the door, "I can't stand this any
+longer. We'll come back again, and do what must be done. Come, Dan."
+
+Dan gave a last look into the strange horrible little room, then he
+followed his friend. They closed the door behind them and crept slowly
+down the narrow winding stairs to the Oak Parlour, leaving the
+treasure in the secret chamber and the Marquis guarding it in the
+silence and darkness of death. What had been so basely striven for was
+sorrily won at last.
+
+THE END.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Inn at the Red Oak, by Latta Griswold
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+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Inn at the Red Oak, by Latta Griswold
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere 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
+
+
+Title: The Inn at the Red Oak
+
+Author: Latta Griswold
+
+Posting Date: December 8, 2011 [EBook #9856]
+Release Date: February, 2006
+First Posted: October 24, 2003
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE INN AT THE RED OAK ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Mary Meehan, David Garcia
+and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ THE INN AT THE RED OAK
+ </h1>
+ <center>
+ <b>BY LATTA GRISWOLD</b>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>1917
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="image-1"><!-- Image 1 --></a>
+ <center>
+ <img src="images/frontis.png" height="555" width="450" alt=
+ "'It's a treasure right enough!' cried Dan.">
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ CONTENTS
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ <a href="#PART1">PART I</a><br>
+ THE OLD MARQUIS
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH1">I THE MARQUIS ARRIVES AT THE INN</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH2">II THE LION'S EYE</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH3">III THE MARQUIS AT NIGHT</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH4">IV THE OAK PARLOUR</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH5">V THE WALK THROUGH THE WOODS</a>
+ </p>
+ <center>
+ <a href="#PART2">PART II</a><br>
+ THE TORN SCRAP OF PAPER
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH6">VI THE HALF OF AN OLD SCRAP OF PAPER</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH7">VII A DISAPPEARANCE</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH8">VIII GREEN LIGHTS</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH9">IX RECOLLECTIONS OF A FRENCH EXILE</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH10">X MIDNIGHT VIGILS</a>
+ </p>
+ <center>
+ <a href="#PART3">PART III</a><br>
+ THE SCHOONER IN THE COVE
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH11">XI THE SOUTHERN CROSS</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH12">XII TOM TURNS THE TABLES</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH13">XIII MADAME DE LA FONTAINE</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH14">XIV IN THE FOG</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH15">XV NANCY</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH16">XVI MADAME AT THE INN</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH17">XVII THE MARQUIS LEAVES THE INN</a>
+ </p>
+ <center>
+ <a href="#PART4">PART IV</a><br>
+ THE ATTACK ON THE INN
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH18">XVIII THE AVENUE OF MAPLES</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH19">XIX THE ATTACK</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH20">XX THE OAK PARLOUR</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH21">XXI THE TREASURE</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ The Inn at the Red Oak
+ </h1><a name="PART1"><!-- PART1 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ PART I
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ THE OLD MARQUIS
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH1"><!-- CH1 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ THE MARQUIS ARRIVES AT THE INN
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ By the end of the second decade of the last century Monday
+ Port had passed the height of prosperity as one of the
+ principal depots for the West Indian trade. The shipping was
+ rapidly being transferred to New York and Boston, and the old
+ families of the Port, having made their fortunes, in rum and
+ tobacco as often as not, were either moving away to follow
+ the trade or had acquiesced in the changed conditions and
+ were settling down to enjoy the fruit of their labours. The
+ harbour now was frequently deserted, except for an occasional
+ coastwise trader; the streets began to wear that melancholy
+ aspect of a town whose good days are more a memory than a
+ present reality; and the old stage roads to Coventry and
+ Perth Anhault were no longer the arteries of travel they once
+ had been.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To the east of Monday Port, across Deal Great Water, an
+ estuary of the sea that expanded almost to the dignity of a
+ lake, lay a pleasant rolling wooded country known in Caesarea
+ as Deal. It boasted no village, scarcely a hamlet. Dr.
+ Jeremiah Watson, a famous pedagogue and a graduate of
+ Kingsbridge, had started his modest establishment for "the
+ education of the sons of gentlemen" on Deal Hill; there were
+ half-a-dozen prospering farms, Squire Pembroke's Red Farm and
+ Judge Meath's curiously lonely but beautiful House on the
+ Dunes among them; a little Episcopalian chapel on the shores
+ of the Strathsey river, a group of houses at the cross roads
+ north of Level's Woods, and the Inn at the Red Oak,&#8212;and
+ that was all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In its day this inn had been a famous hostelry, much more
+ popular with travellers than the ill-kept provincial hotels
+ in Monday Port; but now for a long time it had scarcely
+ provided a livelihood for old Mrs. Frost, widow of the famous
+ Peter who for so many years had been its popular host. No one
+ knew when the house had been built; though there was an old
+ corner stone on which local antiquarians professed to
+ decipher the figures "1693," and that year was assigned by
+ tradition as the date of its foundation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a long crazy building, with a great sloping roof, a
+ wide porch running its entire length, and attached to its
+ sides and rear in all sorts of unexpected ways and places
+ were numerous out houses and offices. Behind its high brick
+ chimneys rose the thick growth of Lovel's Woods, crowning the
+ ridge that ran between Beaver Pond and the Strathsey river to
+ the sea. The house faced southwards, and from the cobbled
+ court before it meadow and woodland sloped to the beaches and
+ the long line of sand dunes that straggled out and lost
+ themselves in Strathsey Neck. To the east lay marshes and the
+ dunes and beyond them the Strathsey, two miles wide where its
+ waters met those of the Atlantic; west lay the great curve,
+ known as the Second Beach, the blue surface of Deal Bay, and
+ a line of rocky shore, three miles in length, terminated by
+ Rough Point, near which began the out-lying houses of Monday
+ Port.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old hostelry took its name from a giant oak which grew at
+ its doorstep just to one side of the maple-lined driveway
+ that led down to the Port Road, a hundred yards or so beyond.
+ This enormous tree spread its branches over the entire width
+ and half the length of the roof. Ordinarily, of course, its
+ foliage was as green as the leaves on the maples of the
+ avenue or on the neighbouring elms, and the name of the Inn
+ might have seemed to the summer or winter traveller an odd
+ misnomer; but in autumn when the frost came early and the
+ great mass of green flushed to a deep crimson it could not
+ have been known more appropriately than as the Inn at the Red
+ Oak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a solidly-built house, such as even in the early part
+ of the nineteenth century men were complaining they could no
+ longer obtain; built to weather centuries of biting
+ southeasters, and&#8212;the legend ran&#8212;to afford
+ protection in its early days against Indians. At the time of
+ the Revolution it had been barricaded, pierced with
+ portholes, and had served, like innumerable other houses from
+ Virginia to Massachusetts, as Washington's headquarters. When
+ Tom Pembroke knew it best, its old age and decay had well set
+ in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pembroke was the son of the neighbouring squire, whose house,
+ known as the Red Farm, lay In the little valley on the other
+ side of the Woods at the head of Beaver Pond. From the time
+ he had been able to thread his way across the woodland by its
+ devious paths&#8212;Tom had been at the Inn almost every day
+ to play with Dan Frost, the landlord's son. They had played
+ in the stables, then stocked with a score of horses, where
+ now there were only two or three; in the great haymows of the
+ old barn in the clearing back of the Inn; in the ramshackle
+ garret under that amazing roof; or, best of all, in the
+ abandoned bowling-alley, where they rolled dilapidated balls
+ at rickety ten-pins.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Tom and Dan were eighteen&#8212;they were born within a
+ day of each other one bitter February&#8212;old Peter died,
+ leaving the Inn to his wife. Mrs. Frost pretended to carry on
+ the business, but the actual task of doing so soon devolved
+ upon her son. And in this he was subjected to little
+ interference; for the poor lady, kindly inefficient soul that
+ she was, became almost helpless with rheumatism. But indeed
+ it was rather on the farm than to the Inn that more and more
+ they depended for their living. In the social hierarchy of
+ Caesarea the Pembrokes held themselves as vastly superior to
+ the Frosts; but thanks to the easy-going democratic customs
+ of the young republic, more was made of this by the women
+ than the men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two boys loved each other devotedly, though love is
+ doubtless the last word they would have chosen to express
+ their relation. Dan was tall, dark, muscular; he had a
+ well-shaped head on his square shoulders; strong well-cut
+ features; a face that the sun had deeply tanned and dark hair
+ that it had burnished with gold. Altogether he was a
+ prepossessing lad, though he looked several years older than
+ he was, and he was commonly treated by his neighbours with a
+ consideration that his years did not merit. Tom Pembroke was
+ fairer; more attractive, perhaps, on first acquaintance;
+ certainly more boyish in appearance and behaviour. He was
+ quicker in his movements and in his mental processes; more
+ aristocratic in his bearing. His blue eyes were more
+ intelligent than Dan's, but no less frank and kindly. Young
+ Frost admired his friend almost as much as he cared for him;
+ for Dan, deprived of schooling, had a reverence for learning,
+ of which Tom had got a smattering at Dr. Watson's
+ establishment for "the sons of gentlemen" on the nearby hill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One stormy night in early January, the eve of Dan Frost's
+ twenty-second birthday, the two young men had their supper
+ together at the Inn, and afterwards sat for half-an-hour in
+ the hot, stove-heated parlour until Mrs. Frost began to nod
+ over her knitting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Off with you, boys," she said at length; "you will be
+ wanting to smoke your dreadful pipes. Nancy will keep me
+ company."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They took instant advantage of this permission and went into
+ the deserted bar, where they made a roaring fire on the great
+ hearth, drew their chairs near, filled their long clay pipes
+ with Virginia tobacco, and fell to talking.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Think of it!" exclaimed young Frost, as he took a great
+ whiff at his pipe; "here we are&#8212;the middle of the
+ winter&#8212;and not a guest in the house. Why we used to
+ have a dozen travellers round the bar here, and the whole
+ house bustling. I've known my father to serve a hundred and
+ more with rum on a night like this. Now we do a fine business
+ if we serve as many in a winter. Times have changed since we
+ were boys."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Aye," Tom agreed, "and it isn't so long ago, either. It
+ seemed to me as if the whole county used to be here on a
+ Saturday night."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I'm thinking," resumed Dan musingly, "of throwing up the
+ business, what's the use of pretending to keep an inn? If it
+ wasn't for mother and for Nancy, I'd clear out, boy; go off
+ and hunt my fortune. As it is, with what I make on the farm
+ and lose on the house, I just pull through the year."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "By gad," exclaimed Tom, "I'd go with you, Dan. I'm tired to
+ my soul with reading law in father's office. Why, you and I
+ haven't been farther than Coventry to the county fair, or to
+ Perth Anhault to make a horse trade. I'd like to see the
+ world, go to London and Paris. I've wanted to go to France
+ ever since that queer Frenchman was
+ here&#8212;remember?&#8212;and told us those jolly tales
+ about the Revolution and the great Napoleon. We were hardly
+ more than seven or eight then, I guess."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I would like to go, hanged if I wouldn't," said Dan. "I'm
+ getting more and more discontented. But there's not much use
+ crying for the moon, and France might as well be the moon,
+ for all of me." He relapsed then into a brooding silence. It
+ was hard for an inn-keeper to be cheerful in midwinter with
+ an empty house. Tom too was silent, dreaming vividly, if
+ vaguely, of the France he longed to see.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hark!" exclaimed Dan presently. "How it blows! There must be
+ a big sea outside to-night."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He strode to the window, pushed back the curtains of faded
+ chintz, and stared out into the darkness. The wind was
+ howling in the trees and about the eaves of the old inn, the
+ harsh roar of the surf mingled with the noise of the storm,
+ and the sleet lashed the window-panes in fury.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You will not be thinking of going home tonight, Tom?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not I," Pembroke answered, for he was as much at home in
+ Dan's enormous chamber as he was in his own little room under
+ the roof at the Red Farm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he turned from the window, the door into the parlour
+ opened, and a young girl quietly slipped in and seated
+ herself in the chimney-corner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hello, Nance," Dan exclaimed, as she entered; "come close,
+ child; you need to be near the fire on a night like this."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mother is asleep," the girl answered briefly, and then,
+ resting her chin upon her hands, she fixed her great dark
+ eyes upon the glowing logs. She was Dan's foster-sister,
+ eighteen years of age, though she looked hardly more than
+ sixteen; a shy, slender, girl, lovely with a wild, unusual
+ charm. To Tom she had always been a silent elfin creature,
+ delightful as their playmate when a child, but now though
+ still so familiar, she seemed in an odd way, to grow more
+ remote. Apparently she liked to sit with them on these winter
+ evenings in the deserted bar, when Mrs. Frost had gone to
+ bed; and to listen to their conversation, though she took
+ little part in it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Dan resumed his seat, he looked at her with evident
+ concern, for she was shivering as she sat so quietly by the
+ fireside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Are you cold, Nance?" he asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A little," she replied. "I was afraid in the parlour with
+ Mother asleep, and the wind and the waves roaring so
+ horribly."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Afraid?" exclaimed Tom, with an incredulous laugh. "I never
+ knew you to be really afraid of anything in the world,
+ Nancy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She turned her dark eyes upon him for the moment, with a
+ sharp inquisitive glance which caused him to flush
+ unaccountably. An answering crimson showed in her cheeks, and
+ she turned back to the fire. The colour fled almost as
+ quickly as it had come, and left her pale, despite the glow
+ of firelight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I was afraid&#8212;to-night," she said, after a moment's
+ silence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly there came the sound of a tremendous knocking on the
+ door which opened from the bar into the outer porch, and all
+ three started in momentary alarm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan jumped to his feet. "Who's that?" he cried.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again came the vigorous knocking. He ran across the room, let
+ down the great oaken beam, and opened the door to the night
+ and storm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Come in, travellers." A gust of wind and sleet rushed
+ through the opening and stung their faces. With the gust
+ there seemed to blow in the figure of a little old man
+ wrapped in a great black coat, bouncing into their midst as
+ if he were an India rubber ball thrown by a gigantic hand.
+ Behind him strode in Manners, the liveryman of Monday Port.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Here's a guest for you, Mr. Frost. I confess I did my best
+ to keep him in town till morning, but nothing 'd do; he must
+ get to the Inn at the Red Oak to-night. We had a hellish time
+ getting here too, begging the lady's pardon; but here we
+ are."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Good-naturedly he had taken hold of his fare and, as he
+ spoke, was helping the stranger unwrap himself from the
+ enveloping cloak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He's welcome," said Dan. "Here, sir, let me help you." He
+ put out his hand to steady the curious old gentleman, who, at
+ last, gasping for breath and blinking the sleet out of his
+ eyes, had been unrolled by Manners from the dripping cloak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was a strange figure of a man, they thought, as Dan led
+ him to the fire to thaw himself out. He was scarcely more
+ than five and a half feet in height, with tiny hands and feet
+ almost out of proportion even to his diminutive size. He was
+ an old man, they would have said, though his movements were
+ quick and agile as if he were set up on springs. His face,
+ small, sharp-featured and weazened, was seamed with a
+ thousand wrinkles. His wig was awry, its powder, washed out
+ by the melting sleet, was dripping on his face in pasty
+ streaks; and from beneath it had fallen wisps of thin grey
+ hair, which plastered themselves against his temples and
+ forehead. This last feature was also out of proportion to the
+ rest of his physiognomy, for it was of extraordinary height,
+ and of a polished smoothness, in strange contrast to his
+ wrinkled cheeks. Beneath shone two flashing black eyes, with
+ the fire of youth in them, for all he seemed so old. The
+ lower part of his face was less distinctive. He had a small,
+ Suddenly there came the sound of a tremendous knocking on the
+ door which opened from the bar into the outer porch, and all
+ three started in momentary alarm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan jumped to his feet. "Who's that?" he cried.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again came the vigorous knocking. He ran across the room, let
+ down the great oaken beam, and opened the door to the night
+ and storm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Come in, travellers." A gust of wind and sleet rushed
+ through the opening and stung their faces. With the gust
+ there seemed to blow in the figure of a little old man
+ wrapped in a great black coat, bouncing into their midst as
+ if he were an India rubber ball thrown by a gigantic hand.
+ Behind him strode in Manners, the liveryman of Monday Port.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Here's a guest for you, Mr. Frost. I confess I did my best
+ to keep him in town till morning, but nothing'd do; he must
+ get to the Inn at the Red Oak to-night. We had a hellish time
+ getting here too, begging the lady's pardon; but here we
+ are."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Good-naturedly he had taken hold of his fare and, as he
+ spoke, was helping the stranger unwrap himself from the
+ enveloping cloak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He's welcome," said Dan. "Here, sir, let me sharply-pointed
+ nose; a weak mouth, half-hidden by drooping white moustaches;
+ and a small sharp chin, accentuated by a white beard nattily
+ trimmed to a point. He was dressed entirely in black; a
+ flowing coat of French cut, black small clothes, black
+ stockings and boots that reached to the calves of his little
+ legs. These boots were ornamented with great silver buckles,
+ and about his neck and wrists showed bedraggled bits of
+ yellowed lace."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He stood before the fire, speechless still; standing first on
+ one foot then on the other; rubbing his hands the while as he
+ held them to the grateful warmth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nancy had in the meanwhile drawn a glass of rum, and now
+ advancing held it toward him a little gingerly. He took it
+ eagerly and drained it at a gulp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Merci, ma petite ange; merci, messieurs</i>" he exclaimed
+ at last; and then added in distinct, though somewhat strongly
+ accented English, "I ask your pardon. I forget you may not
+ know my language. But now that this good liquor has put new
+ life in my poor old bones, I explain myself. I am arrived, I
+ infer, at the Inn at the Red Oak; and you, monsieur, though
+ so young, I take to be my host. I have your description, you
+ perceive, from the good postilion. You will do me the
+ kindness to provide me with supper and a bed?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Certainly, sir," said Dan. "It is late and we are
+ unprepared, but we will put you up somehow. You too, Manners,
+ had best let me bunk you till morning; you'll not be going
+ back to the Port tonight? Nancy a fresh bumper for Mr.
+ Manners."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thankee, sir; I managed to get out with the gentleman
+ yonder, and I guess I'll manage to get back. But it's a rare
+ night, masters. Just a minute, sir, and I'll be getting his
+ honour's bags.... Thank ye kindly, Miss Nancy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He drained the tumbler of raw spirit that Nancy held out.
+ Then he opened the door again and went out into the storm,
+ returning almost at once with the stranger's bags.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan turned to his sister. "Nancy dear, go stir up Susan and
+ Deborah. We must have a fire made in the south chamber and
+ some hot supper got ready. Tell Susan to rout out Jesse to
+ help her. Say nothing to Mother; no need to disturb her. And
+ now, sir," he continued, turning again to the stranger, "may
+ I ask your name?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old gentleman ceased his springing seesaw for a moment,
+ and fixed his keen black eyes on the questioner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Certainment, monsieur</i>&#8212;certainly, I should say,"
+ he replied in a high, but not unpleasant, voice. "I am the
+ Marquis de Boisdhyver, at your service. I am to travel in the
+ United States&#8212;oh! for a long time. I stay here, if you
+ are so good as to accommodate me, perhaps till you are weary
+ and wish me to go elsewhere. You have been greatly
+ recommended to me by my friend,&#8212;quiet, remote,
+ secluded, an <i>auberge</i>&#8212;what you call it?&#8212;an
+ inn, well-suited to my habits, my tastes, my desire for rest.
+ I am very <i>fatigu&eacute;</i>, monsieur."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes," said Dan, with a grim smile, "we are remote and quiet
+ and secluded. You are welcome, sir, to what we have. Tom, see
+ that Manners has another drink before he goes, will you? and
+ do the honours for our guest, while Nance and I get things
+ ready."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he disappeared into the kitchen, following Nancy, the
+ Marquis looking after him with a comical expression of
+ gratitude upon his face. Tom drew another glass of rum, which
+ Manners eagerly, if rashly, devoured. Then the liveryman
+ wrapped himself in his furs, bade them good-night, and
+ started out again into the storm for his drive back to Monday
+ Port.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this time the old gentleman stood warming his feet and
+ hands at the fire, watching his two companions with
+ quickly-shifting eyes, or glancing curiously over the great
+ bar which the light of the fire and the few candles but
+ faintly illuminated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having barred the door, Tom turned back to the hearth. "It is
+ a bad night, sir."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But yes," exclaimed the Marquis. "I think I perish. Oh! that
+ dreary tavern at your Monday Port. I think when I arrive
+ there I prefer to perish. But this, this is the old Inn at
+ the Red Oak, is it not? And it dates, yes,&#8212;from the
+ year 1693? The old inn, eh, by the great tree?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, certainly," Pembroke answered; "at least, that is the
+ date that some people claim is on the old cornerstone. You
+ have been here before then, sir?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I?" exclaimed Monsieur de Boisdhyver. "Oh, no! not I. I have
+ heard from my friend who was here some years ago."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, I see. And you have come far to-day?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "From Coventry, monsieur&#8212;Monsieur&#8212;?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Pembroke," Tom replied, with a little start.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah! yes, Monsieur Pembroke. A member of the household?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No&#8212;a friend."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I make a mistake," quickly interposed the traveller,
+ "Pardon. I am come from Coventry, Monsieur Pembroke, in an
+ everlasting an eternal stage, a monster of a carriage,
+ monsieur. It is only a few days since that I arrive from
+ France."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah, France!" exclaimed Tom, recalling that only a little
+ while before he and Dan had been dreaming of that magic
+ country. And here was a person who actually lived in France,
+ who had just come from there, who extraordinarily chose to
+ leave that delightful land for the Inn at the Red Oak in
+ mid-winter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "France," he repeated; "all my life, sir, I have been longing
+ to go there."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So?" said the Marquis, raising his white eyebrows with
+ interest. "You love <i>ma belle patrie</i>, eh? <i>Qui
+ Sait</i>?&#8212;you will perhaps some day go there. You have
+ interests, friends in my country?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, none," Tom answered. "I wish I had. You come from Paris,
+ sir?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Mais oui</i>."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For some time they chatted in such fashion, the Marquis
+ answering Tom's many questions with characteristic French
+ politeness, but turning ever and anon a pathetic glance
+ toward the door through which Dan and Nancy had disappeared.
+ It was with undisguised satisfaction that he greeted young
+ Frost when he returned to announce that supper was ready.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I famish!" the old gentleman exclaimed. "I have dined to-day
+ on a biscuit and a glass of water."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They found the kitchen table amply spread with
+ food,&#8212;cold meats, hot eggs and coffee, and a bottle of
+ port. Monsieur de Boisdhyver ate heartily and drank his wine
+ with relish, gracefully toasting Nancy as he did so. When his
+ meal was finished, he begged with many excuses to be shown to
+ his bedroom; and indeed his fatigue was evident. Dan saw him
+ to the great south chamber, carrying a pair of lighted
+ candles before. He made sure that all had been done that
+ sulky sleepy maids could be induced to do, and then left him
+ to make ready for the night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lights were extinguished in the parlour and the bar, the
+ fires were banked, and the two young men went up to Dan's own
+ room. There on either side of the warm hearth, had been drawn
+ two great four-posted beds, and it took the lads but a moment
+ to tumble into them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It's queer," said Dan, as he pulled the comfort snugly about
+ his shoulders, calling to Tom across the way; "it's
+ queer&#8212;the old chap evidently means to stay awhile. What
+ does a French marquis want in a deserted hole like this, I'd
+ like to know? But if he pays, why the longer he stays the
+ better."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I hope he does," said Tom sleepily. "He has a reason, I
+ fancy, for he asked questions enough while you were out
+ seeing to his supper. He seems to know the place almost as
+ well as if he had been here before, though he said he hadn't.
+ But, by gad, I wish you and I were snug in a little hotel on
+ the banks of the Seine to-night and not bothering our heads
+ about a doddering old marquis who hadn't sense enough to stay
+ there."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Wish we were," Dan replied. "Good-night," he called,
+ realizing that his friend was too sleepy to lie awake and
+ discuss any longer their unexpected guest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Good-night," murmured Tom, and promptly drifted away into
+ dreams of the wonderful land he had never seen. As for Dan he
+ lay awake a long time, wondering what could possibly have
+ brought the old Marquis to the deserted inn at such a time of
+ the year and on such a night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH2"><!-- CH2 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ THE LIONS EYE
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ Toward daylight the storm blew itself out, the wind swung
+ round to the northwest, and the morning dawned clear and
+ cold, with a sharp breeze blowing and a bright sun shining
+ upon a snow-clad, ice-crusted world and a sparkling sapphire
+ sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan had risen early and had set Jesse to clear a way across
+ the court and down the avenue to the road. The maids, astir
+ by dawn, were no longer sulky but bustled about at the
+ preparation of an unusually good breakfast in honour of the
+ new guest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Frost, who habitually lay till nine or ten o'clock
+ behind the crimson curtains of her great bed, had caught wind
+ of something out of the ordinary, demanded Nancy's early
+ assistance, and announced her intention of breakfasting with
+ the household.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was fretful during the complicated process of her
+ toilette and so hurt the feelings of her foster-daughter,
+ that when Dan came to take her into the breakfast room, Nancy
+ found an excuse for not accompanying them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Marquis was awaiting their appearance. He stood with his
+ back-to the fire, a spruce and carefully-dressed little
+ figure, passing remarks upon the weather with young Pembroke,
+ who leaned his graceful length against the mantelpiece.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The noble traveller was presented with due ceremony to Mrs.
+ Frost, who greeted him with old-world courtesy. She had had,
+ indeed, considerably more association with distinguished
+ personages than had most of the dames of the neighbouring
+ farms who considered themselves her social superiors. She
+ welcomed Monsieur de Boisdhyver graciously, enquiring with
+ interest of his journey and with solicitude as to his rest
+ during the night. She received with satisfaction his
+ rapturous compliments on the comforts that had been provided
+ him, on the beauty of the surrounding country upon which he
+ had looked from the windows of his chamber, and on her own
+ condescension in vouchsafing to breakfast with them. She was
+ delighted that he should find the Inn at the Red Oak so much
+ to his taste that he proposed to stay with them indefinitely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were soon seated at the breakfast-table and had
+ addressed themselves to the various good things that black
+ Deborah had provided. The native Johnny cakes, made of meal
+ ground by their own windmill, the Marquis professed to find
+ particularly tempting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Despite Mrs. Frost's questions, despite his own voluble
+ replies, Monsieur de Boisdhyver gave no hint, that there was
+ any deeper reason for his seeking exile at the Inn of the Red
+ Oak than that he desired rest and quiet and had been assured
+ that he would find them there. And who had so complimented
+ their simple abode of hospitality?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah, madame," he murmured, lifting his tiny hands, "so many!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But I fear, monsieur," replied his hostess, "that you, who
+ are accustomed to the luxuries of a splendid city like Paris,
+ to so many things of which we read, will find little to
+ interest and amuse you in our remote countryside."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As for interest, madame," the Marquis protested, "there are
+ the beauties of nature, your so delightful household, my few
+ books, my writing; and for amusement, I have my
+ violin;&#8212;I so love to play. You will not
+ mind?&#8212;perhaps, enjoy it?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Indeed yes," said Mrs. Frost. "Dan, too, is a fiddler after
+ a fashion; and as for Nancy, she has a passion for music, and
+ dreams away many an evening while my son plays his old
+ tunes."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah, yes," said the Marquis, "Mademoiselle Nancy, I have not
+ the pleasure to see her this morning?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No," replied Mrs. Frost, flushing a trifle at the
+ recollection of why Nancy was not present, "she is somewhat
+ indisposed&#8212;a mere trifle. You will see her later in the
+ day. But, monsieur, you should have come to us in the spring
+ or the summer, for then the country is truly beautiful; now,
+ with these snow-bound roads, when not even the stagecoach
+ passes, we are indeed lonely and remote."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is that," insisted the Marquis, "which so charms me. When
+ one is old and when one has lived a life too occupied, it is
+ this peace, this quiet, this remoteness one desires. To walk
+ a little, to sit by your so marvellously warm fires, to look
+ upon your beautiful country, <i>cest bou</i>!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He held her for a moment with his piercing little eyes, a
+ faint smile upon his lips, as though to say that it was
+ impossible he should be convinced that he had not found
+ precisely what he was seeking, and insisting, as it were,
+ that his hostess take his words as the compliment they were
+ designed to be.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before she had time to reply, he had turned to Dan. "What a
+ fine harbour you have, Monsieur Frost," he said, pointing
+ through the window toward the Cove, separated from the river
+ and the sea by the great curve of Strathsey Neck, its blue
+ waters sparkling now in the light of the morning sun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes," replied Dan, glancing out upon the well-known
+ shoreline, "it is a good harbour, though nothing, of course,
+ to compare with a Port. But it's seldom that we see a ship at
+ anchor here, now."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There is, however," inquired the Marquis with interest,
+ "anchorage for a vessel, a large vessel?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, indeed," Tom interrupted, "in the old days when my
+ father had his ships plying between Havana and the Port, he
+ would often have them anchor in the Cove for convenience in
+ lading them with corn from the farm."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And they were large ships?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Full-rigged, sir; many of 'em, and drawing eight feet at
+ least."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Eh bien</i>! And the old Inn, madame, it dates, your son
+ tells me, from 1693?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We think so, sir, though I have no positive knowledge of its
+ existence before 1750. My husband purchased the place in '94,
+ and it had then been a hostelry for some years, certainly
+ from the middle of the century. But we have made many
+ additions. Danny dear, perhaps it will interest the Marquis
+ if you should take him over the house. We are proud of our
+ old inn, sir."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And with reason, madame. If monsieur will, I shall be
+ charmed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will leave you then with my son. Give me your arm, Dan, to
+ the parlour. Unfortunately, Monsieur le Marquis, affliction
+ has crippled me and I spend the day in my chair in the blue
+ parlour. I shall be so pleased, if you will come and chat
+ with me. Tommy, you will be staying to dinner with us?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thank you, Mrs. Frost, but I must get to the Port for the
+ day. Mother and Father are leaving by the afternoon stage, if
+ it gets through. They are going to spend the winter in
+ Coventry. But I shall be back to-night as I have promised Dan
+ to spend that time with him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We shall be glad to have you, as you know."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon after Mrs. Frost had left the breakfast-room and Tom had
+ started forth with horse and sleigh, Dan returned. The
+ Marquis promptly reminded him of the suggestion that he
+ should be taken over the Inn. It seemed to Dan an
+ uninteresting way to entertain his guest and the morning was
+ a busy one. However, he promised to be ready at eleven
+ o'clock to show the Marquis all there was in the old house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Dan went about the offices and stables, performing himself
+ much of the work that in prosperous times fell to grooms and
+ hostlers, he found himself thinking about his new guest. Dan
+ knew enough of French history to be aware there were frequent
+ occasions in France when partisans of the various factions,
+ royalist, imperialist, or republican, found it best to
+ expatriate themselves. He knew that in times past many of the
+ most distinguished exiles had found asylum in America. But at
+ the present, he understood, King Louis Philippe, was reigning
+ quietly at the Tuileries and, moreover, the Marquis de
+ Boisdhyver, mysterious as he was, did not suggest the
+ political adventurer of whom Dan as a boy had heard his
+ parents tell such extraordinary tales. In the few years
+ immediately after the final fall of the great Bonaparte there
+ had been an influx of imperialistic supporters in America,
+ some of whom had even found their way to Monday Port and
+ Deal. One of these, Dan remembered, had stayed for some
+ months in '14 or '15 at the Inn at the Red Oak, and it was he
+ whom Tom had recalled the night before as having told them
+ stories of his adventurous exploits in the wars of the Little
+ Corporal. But it was too long after Napoleon's fall to
+ connect his present guest with the imperial exiles. He could
+ imagine no ulterior reason for the Marquis's coming and was
+ inclined to put it down as the caprice of an old restless
+ gentleman who had a genuine mania for solitude. Of solitude,
+ certainly, he was apt to get his fill at the Inn at the Red
+ Oak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At eleven o'clock he returned to keep his appointment. He
+ found the Marquis established at a small table in the bar by
+ an east window, from which was obtained a view of the Cove,
+ of the sand-dunes along the Neck, and of the open sea beyond.
+ A writing-desk was on the table, ink and quills had been
+ provided, a number of books and papers were strewn about, and
+ Monsieur de Boisdhyver was apparently busy with his
+ correspondence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Enchanted" he exclaimed, as he pulled out a great gold
+ watch. "Punctual. I find another virtue, monsieur, in a
+ character to which I have already had so much reason to pay
+ my compliments. I trust I do not trespass upon your more
+ important duties." As he spoke, he rapidly swept the papers
+ into the writing-desk, closed and locked it, and carefully
+ placed the tiny golden key into the pocket of his
+ gayly-embroidered waistcoat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not at all," Dan replied courteously, "I shall be glad to
+ show you about. But I fear you will find it cold and dismal,
+ for the greater part of the house is seldom used or even
+ entered."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I bring my cloak," said the Marquis. "Interest will give me
+ warmth. What I have already seen of the Inn at the Red Oak is
+ so charming, that I doubt not there is much more to delight
+ one. I imagine, monsieur, how gay must have been this place
+ once."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He took his great cloak from the peg near the fire where it
+ had been hung the night before to dry wrapped himself snugly
+ in it; and then, with a little bow, preceded Dan into the
+ cold and draughty corridor that opened from the bar into the
+ older part of the house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This hallway extended fifty or sixty feet to the north wall
+ of the main part of the inn whence a large window at the turn
+ of a flight of stairs gave light. On the right, extending the
+ same distance as the hall itself, was a great room known as
+ the Red Drawing-room, into which Dan first showed the
+ Marquis. This room had not been used since father's death
+ four or five years before, and for a long time previous to
+ that only on the rare occasions when a county gathering of
+ some sort was held at the inn. It had been furnished in good
+ taste and style in colonial days, but was now dilapidated and
+ musty. The heavy red damask curtains were drawn before the
+ windows, and the room was dark and cheerless. Dan admitted
+ the dazzling light of the sun; but the Marquis only shivered
+ and seemed anxious to pass quickly on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You see, sir," observed the young landlord, "it is dismal
+ enough."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Mais oui</i>&#8212;<i>mais oui</i>," exclaimed the
+ Marquis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the foot of the stairway the corridor turned at right
+ angles and ran north. On either side opened a number of
+ chambers in like conditions of disrepair, which had been used
+ as bedrooms in the palmy days of the hostelry. This corridor
+ ended at the bowling-alley, where as children Tom and Dan had
+ loved to play. Half-way to the entrance to the bowling-alley
+ a third hallway branched off to the right, leading to a
+ similar set of chambers. Into all these they entered, the
+ Marquis examining each with quick glances, dismissing them
+ with the briefest interest and the most obvious comment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan saved the <i>pi&eacute;ce-de-resistance</i> till last.
+ This was a little room entered from the second corridor just
+ at the turn&#8212;the only room indeed, as he truthfully
+ said, that merited a visit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This," he explained, "we call the Oak Parlour. It is the
+ only room on this floor worth showing you. My father brought
+ the wainscoting from an old English country-house in
+ Dorsetshire. My father's people were Torries, sir, and kept
+ up their connection with the old country."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a delightful room into which Dan now admitted the
+ light of day, drawing aside the heavy green curtains from the
+ eastern windows. It was wainscoted from floor to cornice in
+ old black English oak, curiously and elaborately carved, and
+ divided into long narrow panels. The ceiling, of similar
+ materials and alike elaborately decorated, was supported by
+ heavy transverse beams that seemed solid and strong enough to
+ support the roof of a cathedral. On one side two windows
+ opened upon the gallery and court and looked out upon the
+ Cove, on the other side stood a cabinet. It was the most
+ striking piece of furniture in the room, of enormous
+ dimensions and beautifully carved on the doors of the
+ cupboards below and on the top-pieces between the mirrors
+ were lion's heads of almost life-size. Opposite the heavy
+ door, by which they had entered, was a large fireplace,
+ containing a pair of elaborately ornamented brass and irons.
+ There was not otherwise a great deal of furniture,&#8212;two
+ or three tables, some chairs, a deep window-seat, a
+ writing-desk of French design; but all, except this last, in
+ keeping with the character of the room, and all brought
+ across the seas from the old Dorsetshire mansion, from which
+ Peter Frost had obtained the interior.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Charmant</i>!" exclaimed the Marquis. "You have a jewel,
+ <i>mon ami</i>; a bit of old England or of old France in the
+ heart of America; a room one finds not elsewhere in the
+ States. It is a <i>creation superbe</i>."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With enthusiastic interest he moved about, touching each
+ article of furniture, examining with care the two of three
+ old English landscapes that had been let into panels on the
+ west side of the room, pausing in ecstacies before the great
+ cabinet and standing before the fireplace as if he were
+ warming his hands at that generous hearth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah, Monsieur Frost, could I but write, read, dream here...!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I fear that would be impossible, sir," replied Dan. "It is
+ difficult to heat this portion of the house; and in fact, we
+ never use it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>H&eacute;las</i>!" exclaimed the Marquis, "those things
+ which allure us in this world are so often impossible.
+ Perhaps in the spring, in the summer, when there is no longer
+ the necessity of the fire, you will permit me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It may be, monsieur," Dan replied, "that long before the
+ summer comes you will have left us."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Mais non</i>!" cried M. de Boisdhyver. "Every hour that I
+ stay but proves to me how long you will have to endure my
+ company."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Somewhat ungraciously, it seemed, young Frost made no reply
+ to this pleasantry; for already he was impatient to be gone.
+ Although the room was intensely cold and uncomfortable, still
+ his guest lingered, standing before the massive cabinet,
+ exclaiming upon the exquisiteness of the workmanship, and
+ every now and then running his dainty fingers along the
+ carving of its front. As Dan stood waiting for the Marquis to
+ leave, he chanced to glance through the window to the court
+ without, and saw Jesse starting out in the sleigh. As he had
+ given him no such order he ran quickly to the window, rapped
+ vigourously and then, excusing himself to the Marquis,
+ hurried out to ask Jesse to explain his errand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Marquis de Boisdhyver stood for a moment, as Dan left
+ him, motionless in front of the cabinet. His face was bright
+ with surprise and delight, his eyes alert with interest and
+ cunning. After a moment's hesitation he stole cautiously to
+ the window, and seeing Frost was engaged in conversation with
+ Jesse, he sprang back with quick steps to the cabinet. He
+ hastily ran the tips of his fingers along the beveled edges
+ of the wide shelf from end to end several times, each time
+ the expression of alertness deepening into one of
+ disappointment. He stopped for a moment and listened. All was
+ quiet. Again with quick motions he felt beneath the edges.
+ Suddenly his eyes brightened and he breathed quickly; his
+ sensitive fingers had detected a slight unevenness in the
+ smooth woodwork. Again he paused and listened, and then
+ pressed heavily until he heard a slight click. He glanced up,
+ as directly in front of him the eye of one of the carved
+ wooden lion's heads on the front of the board winked and
+ slowly raised, revealing a small aperture. With a look of
+ satisfaction, the Marquis thrust his fingers into the tiny
+ opening and drew forth a bit of tightly folded yellow paper;
+ he glanced at it for an instant and thrust it quickly into
+ the pocket of his waistcoat. Then he lowered the lid of the
+ lion's eye. There was a slight click again; and he turned,
+ just as Dan reappeared in the doorway.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Excuse my leaving you so abruptly," said Frost, "but I saw
+ Jesse going off with the sleigh, and as I had given him no
+ orders, I wanted to know where he was going. But it was all
+ right. Are you ready, sir? I am afraid if we stay much longer
+ you will catch cold." This last remark was added as the
+ Marquis politely smothered a sneeze with his flimsy lace
+ handkerchief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>C'est bien</i>, monsieur. I fear I have taken a little
+ cold. Perhaps it would be just as well if we explore no
+ further to-day."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If you prefer, sir," answered Dan, holding the door open for
+ his guest to go out. Monsieur de Boisdhyver turned and
+ surveyed the Oak Parlour once more before he left it. "Ah!"
+ he exclaimed, "this so charming room&#8212;it is of a
+ perfection! Dorsetshire, you say? ... To me it would seem
+ French." They walked back rapidly along the dark cold
+ corridors to the bar. All the way the Marquis, wrapped
+ tightly in his great cloak, kept the thumb of his left hand
+ in his waistcoat pocket, pressing securely against the paper
+ he had taken from the old cabinet in the Oak Parlour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH3"><!-- CH3 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER III
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ THE MARQUIS AT NIGHT
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ The household of the Inn at the Red Oak soon became
+ accustomed to the presence of their new member; indeed, he
+ seemed to them during those bleak winter months a most
+ welcome addition. Except for an occasional traveller who
+ spent a night or a Sunday at the Inn, he was the only guest.
+ He was gregarious and talkative, and would frequently keep
+ them for an hour or so at table as he talked to them of his
+ life in France, and of his adventures in the exciting times
+ through which his country had passed during the last fifty
+ years. He was the cadet, he told them, of a noble family of
+ the Vend&eacute;e, the head of which, though long faithful to
+ the exiled Bourbons, had gone over to Napoleon upon the
+ establishment of the Empire. But as for
+ himself&#8212;Marie-Anne-Tim&eacute;lon-Armand de
+ Boisdhyver&#8212;he still clung to the Imperial cause, and
+ though now for many years his age and infirmities had forced
+ him to withdraw from any part in intrigues aiming at the
+ restoration of the Empire, his sympathies were still keen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he talked in this strain, of his thrilling memories of
+ the Terror and of the extraordinary days when Bonaparte was
+ Emperor, Dan and Tom would listen to him by the hour. But
+ Mrs. Frost preferred to hear the Marquis's reminiscences of
+ the <i>ancien r&eacute;gime</i> and of the old court life at
+ Versailles. He had been a page, he said, to the unfortunate
+ Marie Antoinette; he would cross himself piously at the
+ mention of the magic name, and digress rapturously upon her
+ beauty and grace, and bemoan, with tears, her unhappy fate.
+ She liked also to hear of the court of Napoleon and of the
+ life of the <i>faubourgs</i> in the Paris of the day. On
+ these occasions the young men were apt to slip away and leave
+ the Marquis alone with Mrs. Frost and Nancy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For Nancy Monsieur de Boisdhyver seemed to have a
+ fascination. She would listen absorbed to his voluble tales,
+ her bright eyes fixed on his fantastic countenance, her head
+ usually resting upon her hand, and her body bent forward in
+ an attitude of eager attention. She rarely spoke even to ask
+ a question; indeed, her only words would be an occasional
+ exclamation of interest, or the briefest reply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the day their noble guest would potter about the house
+ or, when the weather was fine, stroll down to the shore,
+ where he would walk up and down the strip of sandy beach in
+ the lee of the wind hour after hour. Now and then he wandered
+ out upon the dunes that stretched along the Neck; and once,
+ Dan afterwards learned, he paid a call upon old Mrs. Meath
+ who lived by herself in the lonely farmhouse on Strathsey
+ Neck, that was known as the House of the Dunes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After supper they were wont to gather in Mrs. Frost's parlour
+ or in the old bar before the great hearth on which a splendid
+ fire always blazed; and when the Marquis had had his special
+ cup of black coffee, he would get out his violin and play to
+ them the long evening through. He played well, with the skill
+ of a master of the art, and with feeling. He seemed at such
+ times to forget himself and his surroundings; his bright eyes
+ would grow soft, a dreamy look would steal into them, and a
+ happy little smile play about the corners of his thin pale
+ lips. Obligingly he gave Dan lessons, and often the young man
+ would accompany him, in the songs his mother had known and
+ loved in her youth, when old Peter had come wooing with
+ fiddle in hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But best of all were the evenings when the Marquis chose to
+ improvise. Plaintive, tender melodies for the most part;
+ prolonged trembling, faintly-expiring airs; and sometimes
+ harsh, strident notes that evoked weird echoes from the bare
+ wainscoted walls. Mrs. Frost would sit, tears of sadness and
+ of pleasure in her eyes, the kindly homely features of her
+ face moving with interest and delight. Nancy was usually by
+ the table, her sharp little chin propped up on the palms of
+ her hands, never taking her fascinated gaze from the
+ musician. Sometimes Tom would look at her and wonder of what
+ she could be thinking. For certainly her spirit seemed to be
+ far away wandering in a world of dreams and of strange
+ inexpressible emotions. For Tom the music stirred delicate
+ thoughts bright dreams of beauty and of love; the vivid
+ intangible dreams of awakening youth. He had not had much
+ experience with emotion; the story of his love affairs
+ contained no more dramatic moments than the stealing of
+ occasional kisses from the glowing cheeks of Maria Stonywell,
+ the beauty of the Tinterton road, as he had walked back to
+ the old farm with her on moonlight evenings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They would all be sorry when Monsieur pleaded weariness and
+ bade them good-night. Sometimes his music so moved the old
+ Frenchman that the tears would gather in his faded blue eyes
+ and steal down his powdered cheeks; and then, like as not, he
+ was apt to break off suddenly, drop violin and bow upon his
+ knees, and exclaim, "<i>Ah! la musique! mon Dieu, mon Dieu!
+ elle me rappelle ma jeunesse. Et maintenant&#8212;et
+ maintenant</i>!" And then, brushing away the tears he would
+ rise, make them a courtly bow, and hurry out of the room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan alone did not fall under his spell. He and Tom would
+ often talk of their strange guest after they were gone to bed
+ in the great chamber over the dining-room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't know what it is," Dan said one night, "but I am
+ sorry he ever came to the Inn; I wish he would go away."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How absurd, old boy!" protested Tom. "He has saved our lives
+ this frightful winter. I never knew your mother to be so
+ cheerful and contented; Nancy seems to adore him, and you
+ yourself are making the most of his fiddle lessons."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I know," Dan replied, "all that is true, but it is only half
+ the truth. Mother's cheerfulness is costing me a pretty
+ penny, for I can't keep her from ordering the most expensive
+ things,&#8212;wines, and the like,&#8212;that we can't
+ afford. Maybe Nance adores him, as you say,&#8212;she is such
+ a strange wild child; but I have never known her to be so
+ unlike herself. We used to have good times
+ together&#8212;Nance and I. But this winter I see nothing of
+ her at all." For the moment Dan forgot his complaint in the
+ tender thought of his foster-sister. "It probably is absurd,"
+ he added presently, "but I don't like it; I don't like him,
+ Tom! He plays the fiddle well, I admit but he is so queer and
+ shifty, nosing about, looking this way and that, never
+ meeting your eyes. It's just as though he were waiting,
+ biding his time, for&#8212;I don't know what."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nonsense, Dan; you're not an old woman."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It may be, Tom, but I feel so anyway. The place hasn't
+ seemed the same to me since that Frenchman came. I wish he
+ would go away; and apparently he means to stay on forever."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I think you would miss him, if he were to go," insisted
+ Pembroke, "for my part I'm glad he is here. To tell the
+ truth, Dan, he's been the life of the house."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He has fascinated you as he has fascinated Mother and
+ Nance," Dan replied. "But it stands to reason, boy, that he
+ can't be quite all right. What does he want poking about in a
+ deserted old hole like Deal?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What he has said a thousand times; just what he so
+ beautifully gets&#8212;quiet and seclusion."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Perhaps you are right and I am wrong; but all the same I
+ shall be glad to see the last of him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The night was one of bright moonlight at the end of February.
+ The bedroom windows were open to the cold clear air. Tom was
+ not sleepy, and he lay for a long time recalling the dreams
+ and emotions that had so stirred him earlier in the evening,
+ as he had listened to the Marquis's playing. He kept
+ whistling softly to himself such bars of the music as he
+ could remember. Dan's chamber faced west, and Tom's bed was
+ so placed that he could look out, without raising his head
+ from the pillow, over the court in the rear of the Inn and
+ into the misty depths of Lovel's Woods beyond the offices and
+ stables.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he lay half-consciously musing&#8212;it must have been
+ near midnight&#8212;his attention was suddenly riveted upon
+ the court below. It seemed to him that he heard footsteps. He
+ was instantly wide awake, and jumped from the bed to the
+ window, whence he peered from behind the curtain into the
+ courtyard. Close to the wall of the Inn, directly beneath the
+ window, a shadow flitted on the moonlight-flooded pavement,
+ and he could hear the crumbling of the snow. Cautiously he
+ thrust his head out of the window. Moving rapidly along near
+ to the house, was a little figure wrapped in a dark cloak,
+ which looked to Tom for all the world like the Marquis de
+ Boisdhyver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the moment he had the impulse to call to him by name, but
+ the conversation he had so recently had with Dan flashed into
+ his mind, and he decided to keep still and watch. The figure
+ moved rapidly along the west wall of the Inn almost the
+ entire length of the building, until it arrived at the
+ entrance of the bowling-alley which abutted from the old
+ northern wing. Reaching this it paused for a moment, glancing
+ about; then inserted a key, fumbled for a moment with the
+ latch, opened the door, and disappeared within.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom was perplexed. He could not be sure that it was the
+ Marquis; but whether it were or not, he knew that there was
+ no reason for any one entering the old portion of the Inn at
+ midnight. His first thought was to go down alone and
+ investigate; his second was to waken Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He lowered the window gently, drew the curtains across it,
+ and bending over his friend, shook him gently by the
+ shoulder. "Dan, Dan, I say; wake up!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What's the matter?" exclaimed Dan with a start of alarm, as
+ he sat up in bed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nothing, nothing; don't make a noise. I happened to be
+ awake, and hearing footsteps under the window, I got up and
+ looked out. I saw some one moving along close to the wall
+ until he got to the bowling alley. He opened the door and
+ disappeared."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The door's locked," exclaimed Dan. "Who was it?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He had a key, whoever he was then. To tell the truth, Dan,
+ it looked like the Marquis; though I couldn't swear to him. I
+ certainly saw some one."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You have not been asleep and dreaming, have you?" asked his
+ friend, rubbing his eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I should say not. I'm going down to investigate; thought
+ you'd like to come along."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So I shall," said Dan, jumping out of bed and beginning to
+ dress. "If you really have seen any one, I'll wager you are
+ right in thinking it's the old marquis. That is just the sort
+ of thing I have imagined him being up to. What he wants
+ though in the old part of the house is more than I can think.
+ He has pestered me to get back there ever since I showed him
+ over the place the day he arrived. Are you ready? Bring a
+ candle, and some matches. Ill just take my gun along on
+ general principles. I don't care how soon we get rid of the
+ Marquis de Boisdhyver, but I shouldn't exactly like to shoot
+ him out with a load of buckshot in his hide."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom stood waiting with his boots in hand. Dan went to his
+ bureau and took out his father's old pistol, that had done
+ duty in the West India trade years ago, when pirates were not
+ romantic memories but genuine menaces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sh!" whispered Dan as he opened the door. "Let's blow out
+ the candle. It's moonlight, and we will be safer without it.
+ Be careful as you go down stairs not to wake Mother and
+ Nancy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom blew out the candle and slipped the end into his pocket,
+ as he tiptoed after Dan down the stairs. At every step the
+ old boards seemed to creak as though in pain. As they paused
+ breathless half-way down on the landing, they heard no sound
+ save the loud ticking of the clock in the hall below and the
+ gentle whispering of the breeze without. The moon gave light
+ enough had they needed it, but each of them could have found
+ his way through every nook and corner of the Inn in darkness
+ as well as in broad day-light. They crept down the short
+ flight from the landing, paused and listened at the doors of
+ Mrs. Frost's and Nancy's chambers, and then slipped
+ noiselessly into the bar where the logs still glowed on the
+ hearth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Shall we," asked Tom in a low tone, "go down the corridor or
+ around outside?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Best outside," Dan whispered. "If we go down the corridor we
+ are like to frighten him if he is the Marquis, or get a
+ bullet in our gizzards if he is not. Should he be inside,
+ he'll have a light and we can find just where he is. I have a
+ notion that it's the Marquis and that he'll be in the Oak
+ Parlour. We'd better creep along the porch."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Very softly he unlocked the door, and stepped outside. Tom
+ was close behind him. They crept stealthily along next the
+ wall well within the shadow of the roof, pausing at every
+ window to peer through the cracks of the shutters. But all
+ were dark. As they turned the corner of the porch at the end
+ of the main portion of the inn from which the north wing
+ extended, Dan suddenly put his hand back and stopped Tom.
+ "Wait," he breathed, "there's a light in the Oak Parlour.
+ Stay here, while I peek in."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With gun in hand he crept up to the nearest window of the Oak
+ Parlour. The heavy shutters were closed, but between the
+ crack made by the warping of the wood, he could distinguish a
+ streak of golden light. He waited a moment; and, then at the
+ risk of alarming the intruder within, carefully tried the
+ shutter. To his great satisfaction it yielded and swung
+ slowly, almost noiselessly, back upon its hinges; the inside
+ curtains were drawn; but a slight gap had been left. Peering
+ in through this, Dan found he could get a view of a small
+ section of the interior,&#8212;the end of the great
+ Dorsetshire cabinet on the farther side of the room and a
+ part of the wall. Before the cabinet, bending over its shelf,
+ stood the familiar form of the Marquis de Boisdhyver,
+ apparently absorbed in a minute examination of the carving.
+ But Dan's attention was quickly diverted from the figure of
+ the old Frenchman, for by his side, also engaged in a similar
+ examination of the cabinet, stood Nancy. For a moment he
+ watched them with intent interest, but as he could not
+ discover what so absorbed them he slipped back to Tom, who
+ was waiting at the turn of the porch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It's the Marquis," he whispered in his friend's ear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What is he up to?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't know. Apparently he is examining the old cabinet.
+ But, Tom, Nancy is with him and as absorbed in the thing as
+ he is. Look!" he exclaimed suddenly. "They've blown out the
+ light."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he spoke, he pointed to the window, now dark. "Come," he
+ said, making an instant decision, "let's hide ourselves in
+ the hall and see if they come back."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But Nancy&#8212;?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No time for talk now. Come along."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They ran back along the porch, slipped into the bar, and
+ thence into the hall. Dan motioned to Tom to conceal himself
+ in a closet beneath the stairway, and he himself slipped
+ behind the clock. Hardly were they safely hidden thus, than
+ they heard a fumble at the latch of the door into the bar.
+ Then the door was pushed open, and the Marquis stepped
+ cautiously in the hall. He paused for a moment, listening
+ intently. Then he held open the door a little wider; and
+ another figure, quite enveloped by a long black coat, entered
+ after him. They silently crossed the hall to the door of
+ Nancy's chamber. This the Marquis opened; then bowed low, as
+ his companion passed within. They were so close to him that
+ Dan could have reached out his hand and touched them. As
+ Nancy entered her room, Dan distinctly heard Monsieur de
+ Boisdhyver whisper, "More success next time, mademoiselle!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was no reply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Marquis turned, stole softly up the stairs, and in a
+ moment Dan heard the click of the latch as he closed his
+ door. He slipped out from his hiding place, and whispered to
+ Tom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a few moments they were back again in their bedroom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Heavens! man, what do you make of it?" asked Tom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Make of it!" exclaimed Dan, "I don't know what to make of
+ it. It's incomprehensible. What the devil is that old rascal
+ after, and how has he bewitched Nance?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Perhaps," suggested Tom, more for Nancy's sake than because
+ he believed what he was saying, "it is simply that he is
+ curious, and knowing that you don't want him in the old part
+ of the Inn, he has persuaded Nancy to take him there at
+ night."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nonsense! that couldn't possibly account for such secrecy
+ and caution. No, Tom, he has some deviltry on foot, and we
+ must find out what it is."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That should be simple enough. Ask Nance."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah!" exclaimed his friend, "you don't know Nance as well as
+ I. You may be sure he has sworn her to secrecy, and Nance
+ would never betray a promise whether she had been wise in
+ making it or not."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then go to the old man himself and demand an explanation."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He'd lie ..."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Turn him out."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I could do that, of course. But I think I would rather find
+ out what he is up to. It has something to do with the old
+ cabinet in the Oak Parlour. I'll find out the mystery of that
+ if I have to hack the thing into a thousand pieces. What I
+ hate, is Nance's being mixed up in it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We can watch again."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes; we'll do that. In the meanwhile, I am going to
+ investigate that old ark myself. There's something about,
+ something concealed in it, that he wants to get. When I took
+ him in there the day after he came, he couldn't keep his eyes
+ off it. If you can get Nance out of the way tomorrow
+ afternoon, I'll send the Marquis off with Jesse for that
+ long-talked-of visit to Mondy Port; and I'll give Jesse
+ instructions not to get him back before dark. And while they
+ are away, I'll investigate the Oak Parlour myself. Can you
+ get Nance off?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I might ask her to go and look over the Red Farm with me.
+ She might like the walk through the woods. I could easily
+ manage to be away for three or four hours."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Good! You may think it odd, Tom, that I should seem to
+ distrust Nance. I don't distrust her, but there has always
+ been a mystery about her. Mother knows a good deal more than
+ she has even been willing to tell to me, or even to Nance, I
+ guess. I know nothing except that she is of French
+ extraction, and I have sometimes wondered since she has been
+ so often with the old Marquis this winter, if he didn't know
+ something about her. It flashed over me to-night as I saw
+ them in that deserted room. Whatever is a-foot, I am going to
+ get at the bottom of it. We will watch again to-morrow night.
+ I heard him whisper as he left Nance, 'More success next
+ time!' This sort of thing may have been going on for a
+ month."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They undressed again, and Dan put his gun away in his bureau.
+ "We may have use for that yet, Tommy," he said. "It would do
+ me good, after what I have seen to-night, to put a bit of
+ lead into the Marquis de Boisdhyver as a memento of his so
+ delightful sojourn at <i>L'Auberge au Chene Rouge</i>."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH4"><!-- CH4 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IV
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ THE OAK PARLOUR
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ The two young men felt self-conscious and ill-at-ease the
+ next morning at the breakfast table, but apparently their
+ embarrassment was neither shared nor observed. Mrs. Frost had
+ kept her room, but Nancy and the Marquis were in their
+ accustomed places; the old gentleman, chattering away in a
+ fashion that demanded few answers and no attention; Nancy,
+ speaking only to ask necessary questions as to their wants at
+ table and meeting the occasional glances of Dan and Tom
+ without suspicion. Tom could scarcely realize in that bright
+ morning light, that only seven or eight hours earlier he and
+ his friend had spied upon their companions prowling about in
+ the abandoned wing of the inn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Monsieur de Boisdhyver assented readily enough when Dan
+ proposed that Jesse should take him that day to Monday Port.
+ He was curious to see the old town, he said, having heard
+ much of it from his friend; much also from his celebrated
+ compatriot, the Marquis de Lafayette.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom took occasion during the discussion to ask Nancy if she
+ would walk across the woods with him after dinner, that he
+ might pay a visit to the Red Farm and see that all was going
+ well in the absence of his parents. He felt that the tones of
+ his voice were charged with unwonted significance; but Nancy
+ accepted the invitation with a simple expression of pleasure.
+ When Mrs. Frost was informed of the plans for the day, she
+ came near thwarting Dan's carefully laid schemes. She had
+ counted upon Jesse to do her bidding and had, she declared,
+ arranged that Nancy should help her put together the silken
+ patches of the quilt upon which she was perennially engaged.
+ Her foster-daughter's glance of displeasure at this was
+ tinder to the old lady's temper, and Dan entered most
+ opportunely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So!" she was exclaiming, "I am always the one to be
+ sacrificed when it is a question of some one's else
+ pleasure."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mother, Mother," Dan protested good-naturedly, as he bent
+ over to kiss her good-morning, "aren't you ever willing to
+ spend a day alone with me?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Danny dear," cried the old lady, as she began to smile
+ again, "you know I'm always willing. Of course, if Tom wants
+ Nancy to go, the quilt can wait; it has waited long enough,
+ in all conscience. There, my dear," she added, turning to the
+ girl, "order an early dinner, and since you are going to the
+ Red Farm, you might as well come back by the dunes and
+ enquire for old Mrs. Meath. We have neglected that poor woman
+ shamefully this winter."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, Mother,&#8212;if we have time."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Take the time, my dear," added Mrs. Frost sharply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, Mother."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Marquis started off with Jesse at eleven o'clock, as
+ eager for the excursion as a boy; and by half-past twelve
+ Nancy and Tom had set out across the woods for the Red Farm.
+ Dan was impatient for them to be gone. As soon as he saw them
+ disappear in the woods back of the Inn, he made excuses to
+ his mother, and hurried to the north wing. He found the door
+ of the bowling alley securely locked, which convinced him
+ that either the Marquis or Nancy had taken the key from the
+ closet of his chamber. Having satisfied himself, he went
+ directly to the Oak Parlour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was cold and dark there. He opened the shutters and drew
+ back the curtains, letting in the cheerful midday sun, which
+ revealed all the antique, sombre beauty of the room, of the
+ soft landscapes and the exquisite carving of the Dorsetshire
+ cabinet. But Dan was in no mood to appreciate the old-world
+ beauty of the Oak Parlour. In that cabinet he felt sure there
+ was something concealed which would reveal the mystery of the
+ Marquis's stay at the inn and possibly the nature of his
+ influence over Nancy. Whatever had been the object of the
+ Marquis's search, it had not been found: his parting words to
+ Nancy the night before showed that.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan took a long look at the cabinet first, estimating the
+ possibility of its containing secret drawers. Hidden
+ compartments in old cabinets, secret chambers in old houses,
+ subterranean passageways leading to dungeons in romantic
+ castles, had been the material of many a tale that Dan and
+ Tom had told each other as boys. For years their dearest
+ possession had been a forbidden copy of "<i>The Mysteries of
+ Udolpho</i>" which they read in the mow of the barn lying in
+ the dusty hay. However unusual, the situation was real; and
+ he felt himself confronted by as hard a problem as he had
+ ever tried to solve in fiction. He knew something about
+ carpentry, so that his first step, after examining the
+ drawers and cupboards and finding them empty, was to take
+ careful measurements of the entire cabinet, particularly of
+ the thicknesses of its sides, back, and partitions. It proved
+ a piece of furniture of absolutely simple and straightforward
+ construction. After long examination and careful soundings he
+ came to the conclusion that a secret drawer was an
+ impossibility.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly an idea occurred to him and he returned to the
+ sitting-room. "Mother," he said, "I have been looking over
+ the old cabinet in the Oak Parlour, thinking perhaps that I
+ would have it brought into the dining-room. I wonder, if by
+ chance, there are any secret drawers in it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Secret drawers? What an idea!" exclaimed Mrs. Frost.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You never knew of any did you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No.... Stop, let me think. Upon my word, I think there was
+ something of the sort, but it has been so long ago I have
+ almost forgotten."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Try to remember, do!" urged Dan, striving to repress his
+ excitement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was not a secret drawer, but there were little hidden
+ cubby-holes&#8212;three or four of them. I remember, now,
+ your father once showed me how they opened. They were little
+ places where the Roman Catholics used to hide the pages of
+ their mass-books and such like in the days of persecution in
+ England."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, yes," said Dan, "that makes it awfully interesting. Did
+ father ever find anything in them?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, I think not; but, dear me, it was over thirty years ago
+ we brought that old cabinet from England,&#8212;long before
+ you were born, Dan."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Can you remember how to open the secret places? I have been
+ looking it over, but I can't see where they can be, much less
+ how to get into them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There were four of them, I think; all in the carving on the
+ front, in the eyes of the lions it seems to me, and in the
+ lion's mouth, or in the leaves somewhere. One spring that
+ opened them I recollect, was under the ledge of the shelf,
+ another at the back of the cabinet and,&#8212;but no, I
+ really can't remember where the others were."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan was impatient to try his luck at finding them, and
+ hurried back to the Oak Parlour. He ran his fingers many
+ times under the ledge of the shelf before he heard the click
+ of a tiny spring, and, looking up, saw the lion's eyelid wink
+ and slowly open. With an exclamation of satisfaction, he
+ thrust his fingers into the tiny aperture, felt carefully
+ about, and was chagrined to find it empty. "More success next
+ time, <i>monsieur le marquis</i>!" he muttered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At length he found the spring that released the eyelid on the
+ carved lion on the other side of the panel. He glanced into
+ the little opening and, to his delight, saw the end of a bit
+ of paper tucked away there. He dug it out with the blade of
+ his pocket knife and unfolded it. It was yellow and brittle
+ with age, covered with writing in a fine clear hand. But he
+ was annoyed to discover, as he bent closely over to read it,
+ that it was written in French, still worse, part of the paper
+ was missing, for one side of it was ragged as if it had been
+ torn in two.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Remembering with relief, that Pembroke had acquired a
+ smattering of French at Dr. Watson's school for the sons of
+ gentlemen, he put the paper carefully away in his pocket to
+ wait for Tom's assistance in deciphering it. Then he set to
+ work to find the missing half.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He fumbled about at the back of the cabinet for a spring that
+ would release another secret cubby-hole, and was rewarded at
+ last by an unexpected click, and the seemingly solid jaws of
+ the lion fell apart about half-an-inch. But the little
+ aperture which they revealed was empty. Further experiment at
+ last discovered the fourth hiding place, but this also
+ contained nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It occurred to him then that the Marquis had already
+ discovered the other half of the paper, and like himself was
+ searching for a missing portion. As he stood thinking over
+ the problem, he suddenly noticed that the room was in deep
+ shadow, and realized that the sun had set over the ridge of
+ Lovel's Woods. The Marquis would soon be returning. Carefully
+ closing the four openings in the carving he pushed the old
+ cabinet back against the wall, closed the shutters and drew
+ the curtains. Then with a last glance to see that all was as
+ he found it, he went out and closed the door the precious bit
+ of paper in his inside pocket.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He went directly to Mrs. Frost's parlour. "Mother," he said,
+ "please don't tell anyone that I have been in the north wing
+ today. I have good reasons which I will explain to you before
+ long. Now, I shall be deeply offended if you give the
+ slightest hint."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Gracious! Dan, what is all this mystery about?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You will never know, mother, unless you trust me absolutely.
+ Mind! not a word to Tom, Nancy or the Marquis."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Very well, Danny. You know I am as safe with a secret as
+ though it had been breathed into the grave."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan did not quite share his mother's confidence in her own
+ discretion, but he knew he could count on her devotion to him
+ to keep her silent even where curiosity and the love of talk
+ would render her indiscreet. He also knew, and had often
+ deplored it, that fond as she was of Nancy she was not
+ inclined to take the girl into her confidence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having said all he dared to his mother, Dan went to his room
+ and carefully locked up the mysterious paper. He returned to
+ the first floor just as the Marquis and Jesse drove up in the
+ sleigh to the door of the inn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Monsieur de Boisdhyver was enthusiastic about all that he had
+ seen&#8212;the headquarters of General Washington, the house
+ in which the Marquis de Lafayette had slept, the old mill in
+ the parade, the fort at the Narrows, the shipping, the quaint
+ old streets.... "But, O Monsieur Frost," he exclaimed, "the
+ weariness that is now so delightful! How soundly shall I
+ sleep to-night!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan smiled grimly as he assured his guest of his sympathy for
+ a good night and a sound sleep; thinking to himself, however,
+ that if the Marquis walked, he would not walk unattended. He
+ had no intention of trusting too implicitly to that loudly
+ proclaimed fatigue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH5"><!-- CH5 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ THE WALK THROUGH THE WOODS
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ While Dan Frost was hunting for the secret places of the old
+ cabinet, Tom and Nancy were picking their way across the
+ snowcovered paths of Lovel's Woods to the Red Farm. These
+ woods were a striking feature in the landscape of the open
+ coast country around Deal. Rising somewhat precipitously
+ almost out of the sea, three ridges extended far back into
+ the country, with deep ravines between. They were thickly
+ wooded, for the most part with juniper and pine. In some
+ places the descent to the ravines was sheer and massed with
+ rocks heaped there by a primeval glacier; in other parts they
+ dipped more gently to the little valleys, which were threaded
+ with many a path worn smooth by the dwellers on the eastern
+ shore. Nearly two miles might be saved in a walk from the Inn
+ to Squire Pembroke's Farm by going across the Woods rather
+ than by the encircling road.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As they were used to the frozen country Tom and Nancy
+ preferred the shorter if more difficult route. They had often
+ found their way together through the tangled thickets of the
+ Woods or along the shores of the Strathsey River, in season
+ accompanied by dog and gun hunting fox and rabbit or
+ partridge and wild duck. In Tom's company Nancy seemed to
+ forget her shyness and would talk freely enough of her
+ interests and her doings. He had always been fond of her,
+ though until lately she had seemed to him hardly more than a
+ child. This winter, as so frequently he had watched her
+ sitting in the firelight listening to the old Marquis's
+ playing and dreaming perhaps as he also dreamed, he realized
+ that she was growing up. A new beauty had come into her face
+ and slender form, her great dark eyes seemed to hold deeper
+ interests, she was no longer in the world of childhood. The
+ mystery enveloping her origin, which for some reason Mrs.
+ Frost had never chosen to dispel, gave a certain piquancy to
+ the interest and affection Tom felt for her. In the
+ imaginative tales he had been fond of weaving for his own
+ amusement, Nancy would frequently figure, revealed at last as
+ the child of noble parents, as a princess doomed by some
+ strange fate to exile. He thought of these things as from
+ time to time he glanced back at her, holding aside some
+ branch that crossed the path or giving her his hand to help
+ her over a boulder in the way. The red scarf about her neck,
+ red cap on her dark hair, flashing in and out of the tangled
+ pathway against the background of the snow-clad woods, gave a
+ bright note of colour to the scene.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were obliged for the most part to walk in single file
+ until the last ridge descended over a mass of rocks to the
+ marshes along Beaver Pond. Then having given her his hand to
+ help her down, he kept hold of it as they went along the free
+ path to the open meadows. The feeling of Nancy's cool little
+ hand in his gave Tom an odd and conscious sense of pleasure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You have been uncommonly silent, Nance, even for you," he
+ said at last.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, I'm always silent, Tom," she replied. "It is because I
+ am stupid and have nothing to say."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nonsense, my dear, you always have a lot to say to me. But
+ you are forever reading, thinking ... what's it all about?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, I think, Tom, because I have little else to do; but my
+ thoughts aren't often worth the telling. In truth there is no
+ one, not even you, who particularly cares to hear them. Tom,"
+ she said, "I am restless and discontented. Sometimes I wish I
+ were far away from the Inn at the Red Oak and Deal, from all
+ that I know,&#8212;even from you and Dan."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pembroke suddenly realized that he could not laugh at these
+ fancies, as he had so often done, and dismiss as if they were
+ the vagaries of a child.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why are you restless and discontented, Nancy?" he asked
+ seriously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Aren't you ever?" she questioned for reply. "Don't you ever
+ get weary with the emptiness of it all, the everlasting
+ round, the dullness? Don't you ever want to get away from
+ Deal, and know people and see things and be somebody?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I do that, Nance. I mean to go as soon as I am a lawyer. I
+ won't poke about Deal long after that, nor Monday Port
+ either. I mean to set up in Coventry."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Coventry!" exclaimed the girl with an accent of disdain.
+ "That is just a provincial town like the Port, only a little
+ more important because it is the capital of the state."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Being the capital means a lot," protested Tom in defense of
+ his ambitions of which for the first time he felt ashamed.
+ "Men are sent to Congress from there. Nance, girl, ours is a
+ wonderful country; we are making a great nation."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Some people may be. None of us are, Tom. I wonder at you
+ more than I do at Dan, for you have had more advantages. As
+ for me, I am only a girl; there's nothing for girls but to
+ sit and sew, and prepare meals for men to eat, and wait until
+ some one comes and chooses to marry them. Then they go off
+ and do the same thing some place else."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But what have you to complain of, Nancy? you have the
+ kindest brother, a good mother, a comfortable home...."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The kindest brother, yes. But you know Mrs. Frost is not my
+ mother. She doesn't care for me and I can't care for her as
+ if she were. I have never loved any one but Dan."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You can't help loving Dan," said Tom, thinking of his good
+ friend. "But then, little girl, you love me too." And he
+ pressed the hand in his warmly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nancy quickly withdrew her hand. "I am not a little girl. I
+ have been grown up in lots of ways ever so long."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But you love me?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I like you. Oh, Tom, the life we all lead is so futile. If I
+ weren't a girl, I should go away."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They had reached the stile by now that led into the meadow
+ which sloped down from the clump of poplars a hundred rods or
+ so above, in the midst of which the Red Farmhouse stood.
+ Instead of helping his companion over the steps in the wall,
+ Tom stopped and stood with his back to them. "Let's stay here
+ a minute, Nance, and have it out."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Have what out?" she asked a trifle sharply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You haven't any queer wild plan in your head to go away,
+ have you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't know&#8212;sometimes I think I have. I dare say
+ there are things somewhere a girl could find to do."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But Mrs. Frost&#8212;?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, Mother would not miss me long&#8212;she'd have Dan."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But Dan would miss you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, Dan might. I couldn't go, if Dan really needed me here.
+ I think sometimes he doesn't. But, Tom, if you were in my
+ position, if you didn't know who your parents were, if all
+ your life you had been living on the charity of
+ others&#8212;good and kind as they are, wonderful even as Dan
+ has always been&#8212;you couldn't be happy. I'm not happy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But, Nance, what has come over you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No&#8212;nothing in particular; I have often felt this way."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But, dear, I couldn't let you go. I'd mind a lot, Nance."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She looked at him with a sudden smile of incredulity. "You,
+ Tommy?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You can't go&#8212;you musn't go," Tom repeated, as he drew
+ nearer to her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly he reached out and seized her hands. "Don't you
+ realize it?&#8212;I love you, Nance; I've always loved you!"
+ He drew her close to him. She did not resist nor did she
+ yield, but still with her eyes she questioned him. "Kiss me,
+ Nancy," he whispered. She let him press his lips to hers but
+ without responding to the pressure, as though she still were
+ wondering of the meaning of this sudden unforeseen passion.
+ But at last, caught up in its intensity, she gave him back
+ his kisses. He took her face then between his hands and
+ looked into it with a gaze that in itself was a caress. "Oh
+ my sweetheart!" he said softly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Slowly she disengaged herself. "Tom, Tom," she said, "this is
+ foolishness. We musn't do this."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why not?" demanded Pembroke. "I tell you I love you!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No&#8212;not that way, not that way. I didn't mean that.
+ Why, you foolish boy, haven't we kissed each other hundreds
+ of times before?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, Nancy, not like that&#8212;not like this," he added, as
+ again he put his arm around her and drew her face to his. And
+ again she yielded. "Say it&#8212;say it, Nance&#8212;you love
+ me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She drew back from him. "I think I must, Tom. I don't think I
+ could let you kiss me that way if I didn't. But now come ...
+ Tom ... dear Tom ... do come ... don't kiss me again."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But say it," he insisted, "say you love me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Please help me over the stile."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He gave her his hand and she sprang lightly to the top of the
+ steps. In a second he was by her side, both of them balancing
+ somewhat uncertainly on the top of the stone wall. "I won't
+ let you down till you say it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Please&#8212;".
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No&#8212;you love me?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes&#8212;there&#8212;I love you&#8212;now&#8212;".
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, kiss me again."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Tom&#8212;no." But the negative was weak and Pembroke took
+ it so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now," he said, as they began to cross the meadow, "we must
+ tell Mrs. Frost and Dan."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Tell them what?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, that we are in love with each other, and that you are
+ going to marry me. What else?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, no," exclaimed Nancy, "You must say nothing. I am not in
+ love. I don't mean to marry you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But why not? You are. You do."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Are&#8212;do&#8212;?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In love&#8212;you do mean to marry me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No&#8212;Tom, listen&#8212;you know your father and mother
+ would hate it. You have at least two years before you can
+ practice. We couldn't marry&#8212;we can't marry. Oh, there
+ are things I must do, before I can think of that."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not marry me? Good Lord, what does it mean when people are
+ in love with each other, what does it mean when a girl kisses
+ a fellow like that?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't know! what it means&#8212;madness, I guess. Do you
+ think I could marry as I am, not knowing who I am?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, what do I care who your parents were! We'll find out. I
+ swear we will. Good Lord, I love you, Nancy; I love you!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Please, please don't make me talk about it now."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But soon&#8212;?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, soon&#8212;only promise you'll say nothing to Dan or to
+ Mother till we have talked again. I must think; it is all so
+ queer and unexpected; I never dreamed that you cared for me
+ except as a little girl."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I didn't know I did. But come to think of it, Nance, it has
+ been you as much as Dan that has brought me to the Inn at the
+ Red Oak. Why it was you I wanted to walk and talk and play
+ with."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Please,&#8212;dear Tom&#8212;G&#8212;ive me time to think
+ what it all means. Now be careful, there's the farmer. You
+ have a lot to do, and we have been lingering too long. Mother
+ wants us to go back by the dunes and enquire for old Mrs.
+ Meath; so we must hurry."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sun had set before they started on the homeward journey
+ in one of the squire's sleighs. As they turned the bend at
+ the beach and started across the dune road close to the sea,
+ a great yellow moon rose over Strathsey Neck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom had been so preoccupied with his own emotions and the
+ unexpected and absorbing relation in which he found himself
+ with Nancy, that he had altogether forgotten why he had asked
+ her to go off with him that afternoon. As they skimmed along
+ over the snow-packed road across the sands, Tom spied another
+ sleigh on the Port road, the occupants of which he recognized
+ as Jesse and the Marquis. Suddenly the memory of the night
+ before flashed over him. He pointed with his whip in their
+ direction. "There's the old Marquis coming back from Monday
+ Port," he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nancy looked without comment, but Tom thought the colour
+ deepened in her cheeks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "See here, Nance," he exclaimed impulsively; "has the Marquis
+ anything to do with the mood you were in this afternoon? Has
+ he said anything to make you discontented?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was sure that now she paled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What makes you ask?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh&#8212;a number of things. I've seen you with him more or
+ less; felt he had some influence over you."&#8212;Tom was
+ blundering now and knew it.&#8212;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She looked at him coldly. "I have been with the Marquis very
+ little save when others have been about. He has no influence
+ over me. I don't care to discuss such queer ideas."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, all right ... I dare say I'm mistaken ... I only
+ thought..." He hesitated... "If you care for me, I don't mind
+ what you think of the Marquis."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Remember, Tom&#8212;you promised to say nothing until I gave
+ you leave. You're not fair..."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But you do love me?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nancy was silent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There is nothing between you and the old Frenchman&#8212;no
+ mystery?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was no reply. Nancy sat with compressed lips and drawn
+ brows, gazing fixedly at the distant House on the Dunes at
+ the end of their road. For a long while they drove on in
+ silence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the House on the Dunes they chatted for a while with old
+ Mrs. Meath, who lived there alone with a maid-of-all-work.
+ She was a source of much anxiety to Mrs. Frost, who sent
+ several times each week to learn if all was going well. But
+ Mrs. Meath was a Quaker and apparently never gave a thought
+ to loneliness or fear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They will never guess," she said to Nancy and Tom as they
+ sat in the tiled kitchen talking with her, "what I am going
+ to do."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not going to leave the House on the Dunes, Mrs. Meath?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Deary me! no; but I am going to take a boarder."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Really?&#8212;you are setting up to rival the Inn, eh?" said
+ Tom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No", Tommy, nothing of the sort. But I am offered good pay
+ for my front room, and as Jane Frost is always nagging me
+ about living here alone, I thought I'd take her."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And who pray is your new boarder?" asked Nancy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is the funny part of it," replied Mrs. Meath, "I know
+ nothing but her name&#8212;Mrs. Fountain. Everything has been
+ arranged by a lawyer man from Coventry, and she is coming in
+ a few days. Tell thy mother, Nancy dear, that she need worry
+ about me no longer."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will, Mrs. Meath. I think it is a splendid idea, and I
+ hope you will like the lady. Mother will be so glad that you
+ have some one with you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon they were on their way across the dunes and marshes to
+ Tinterton road and home. Dan was preoccupied, not with the
+ news that was so exciting to Mrs. Meath, but with the
+ recollection of his conversation with Nancy as they had
+ driven toward the house. Despite her implicit denial he knew
+ there was a secret between the Marquis de Boisdhyver and
+ herself. He could not imagine what it might be, and it was
+ evident that she did not mean to tell him at present. But his
+ anxieties on this or kindred subjects were not relieved by
+ his companion during the remainder of the drive. Moreover his
+ attempts to speak again of his newly discovered passion were
+ received coldly&#8212;so coldly indeed that he had no heart
+ for pleading for such proofs as she had given him earlier in
+ the afternoon that she shared his emotion. So despite the
+ splendid moon, the bright cold night, the merry jangle of the
+ sleigh bells, the drive back was not the unmixed joy Tom had
+ promised himself; and he felt his role of a declared and
+ practically-accepted lover anything but a satisfactory one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally they reached the Inn and entered the bar where they
+ found the Marquis sitting alone before a cheerful fire. All
+ of Tom's suspicious jealousies returned with fresh force, for
+ Nancy rapidly crossed the room, spoke a few words to the old
+ gentleman in an inaudible tone of voice, and passed quickly
+ on to her own apartments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="PART2"><!-- PART2 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ PART II
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ THE TORN SCRAP OF PAPER
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH6"><!-- CH6 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VI
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ THE HALF OF AN OLD PAPER
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ That evening Mrs. Frost made a particular request for music.
+ Poor Dan, impatient to be alone with Tom and show him the
+ torn scrap of paper that he had found that afternoon was
+ forced to bring out his fiddle and accompany the Marquis.
+ Tom, for first part, was more concerned with his own
+ relations with Nancy than with the mysterious possibilities
+ of the previous night. The poignant notes of the violin set
+ his pulses to beating in tune with the throbbing of the music
+ and transported him again into the realms of youthful dreams.
+ They were quaint plaintive songs of old France that the
+ Marquis chose to play that evening, folk tunes of the
+ Vend&eacute;e, love songs of olden time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From where he sat in the shadow Tom got a full view of Nancy
+ seated on the oaken setlle near the fire. Her brows were
+ drawn a little in deep thought, her lips for the most part
+ compressed, though ever and anon relaxing at some gentler
+ thought. Her hands were clasped, her head was bent a little,
+ but her body was held straight and tense. Her eyes, dark and
+ lustrous in the light of the flaming logs, always fixed upon
+ the musician, not once wandering in his direction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What was the influence, the fascination that strange old
+ Frenchman seemed to exert? It seemed to Tom impossible that
+ there could be a secret which she felt necessary to hide from
+ them, her lifelong friends. But apart from what he knew had
+ taken place the night before as he looked back over the past
+ month, he was conscious that there had been a change in
+ Nancy, a change that mystified him. It was the danger in this
+ change, he told himself, that had awakened in him the
+ knowledge of his love.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But then as he looked across at her so lovely, in the
+ firelight, he felt again the thrill as when first he had
+ taken her hand that afternoon. In that moment all the dreams,
+ the vague longings of his boyhood had found their reality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly, while he was thinking thus, the Marquis laid his
+ violin upon his knees. "Ah, <i>ma jeunnesse</i>!" he
+ exclaimed in a dramatic whisper, "<i>et
+ maintenant</i>&#8212;<i>et maintenant</i>!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a moment no one spoke or stirred. They looked at him
+ curiously as they always did when he brought his playing to
+ an end in such fashion. Then he rose. "<i>Bon soir, madame;
+ bon soir, messieurs; bon soir, mademoiselle</i>"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom saw his little faded blue eyes meet Nancy's with a look
+ of swift significance. Then he bowed with a flourish that
+ included them all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A thousand thanks, Monsieur le Marquis," murmured Mrs.
+ Frost, "how much pleasure you give us!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They all rose then, as the Marquis smiled his appreciation
+ and withdrew.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Give me your arm, Dan," the old lady said. "It must be past
+ my bedtime. Come, Nancy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, mother." The girl rose wearily, stopping a moment at
+ the mantelpiece to snuff the candles there. Tom seized his
+ opportunity, and was by her side. She started, as she
+ realized him near her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nance, Nance, I must have a word with you," he exclaimed in
+ a tense whisper, "don't go!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nance, come," called Mrs. Frost from the hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, Mother, I am coming ... I must go, Tom. Don't delay me.
+ You know how Mother is ..."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What difference will it make if you wait a moment? Good
+ Lord! Nance, I have been trying all evening to get a word
+ with you, and you have not so much as given me a glance.
+ Don't go&#8212;please don't go! Oh, Nancy dear,&#8212;I love
+ you so!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He seized her hands and kissed them passionately. "Nance,
+ Nance ... please ..." His arms were about her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Tom, you make it so hard ... Remember, you promised me ...
+ No word of love until I can think, until I have time to know
+ ... Please, Tom, let me go."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I can't let you go. Oh sweetheart dear."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Tom, we musn't&#8212;Dan, Mother! ..."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unheeding her protest, he put his arms around her. An instant
+ he felt her yield, then quickly thrusting him aside, she ran
+ from the room, leaving him standing alone there, trembling
+ with excitement, chagrin, happiness, alarm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a moment his friend returned and Tom pulled himself
+ together. "Come on," said Dan, "I have a lot to tell you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Did you find anything this afternoon?" exclaimed Pembroke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sh! for heaven's sake be careful. Don't talk here. Let's go
+ upstairs."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few minutes later they were closeted in Dan's chamber. The
+ curtains were tightly drawn and a heavy quilt was hung over
+ the door. Good Lord! thought Tom, could it be possible that
+ these precautions in part at least were taken against Nancy.
+ The world seemed to have turned upside down for him in the
+ last twenty-four hours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Aren't we going to keep watch to-night?" he asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, but later. They are just getting to bed&#8212;or
+ pretending to. Look here, this may throw light on the
+ mystery. I found this paper in a secret cubby-hole in the old
+ cabinet in the Oak Parlour. Draw a chair up to the table so
+ that you can see."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The cabinet," he continued, as he took the paper out of his
+ strong-box and began to unfold it, "was brought from some old
+ manor house in England. It has four little secret
+ cubby-holes, opened by hidden springs, that Mother says were
+ probably used by the Roman Catholics to hide pages of their
+ mass-books during the days of persecution. She remembered
+ fortunately a little about them. They were all empty but one,
+ and in that I found this torn scrap of paper."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He handed the yellowed bit of writing to Tom, who flattened
+ it out on the table before him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why it's written in French," Pembroke exclaimed, as he bent
+ over to examine it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, I know it is," said Dan. "I can't make head or tail of
+ it. Besides it seems to be only a part of a note or letter. I
+ could hardly wait to give you a chance at it. You can make
+ something of it, can't you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't know&#8212;I guess I can. It's hard to read the
+ handwriting. The thing's torn in two&#8212;haven't you the
+ rest of it?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, I tell you; that's all I could find; that's all, I am
+ sure, that can be in the cabinet now. My theory is that the
+ old marquis has somehow come across the other half and is
+ still looking for this. God only knows who hid it there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How the deuce could the Marquis know about it. Ah!
+ look&#8212;it's signed somebody, something <i>de
+ Boisdhyver</i>&#8212;'<i>an&ccedil;ois</i>&#8212;that's short
+ for Fran&ccedil;ois, I guess. Evidently 't wasn't the Marquis
+ himself. Wonder what it means?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For goodness' sake, try to read it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Wait. Get that old French dictionary out of the bookcase
+ downstairs, will you? I'll see if I can translate."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan crept softly out, leaving Tom bent over the paper. Again
+ he smoothed it out carefully on the table, bringing the two
+ candles nearer, and tried to puzzle out the faint fine
+ handwriting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I can make out some of it," he remarked to Dan, when his
+ friend returned with the dictionary. "Let me have that thing;
+ there are a few words I don't know at all, but I'll write out
+ as good a translation as I can."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While Tom was busy with the dictionary, Dan placed writing
+ materials to his hand, and sat down to wait as patiently as
+ he could. His curiosity was intensified by Pembroke's
+ occasional exclamations and the absorption with which he bent
+ over the task.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There!" Tom exclaimed after half-an-hour's labour, "that's
+ the best I can do with it. You see the original note was
+ evidently torn into two or three strips and we have only got
+ the righthand one, so we don't get a single complete
+ sentence&#8212;, but what we have is mighty suggestive.
+ Listen&#8212;This is what it says: Make great efforts ... gap
+ ... glorious, I am about to leave' ... gap ... 'to offer my'
+ ... gap ... 'that I should not return' ... gap ...
+ 'directions' ... gap ... 'this paper which I tear' ... gap
+ ... 'the explanation' ... something missing ... 'to discover'
+ ... that's the end of a sentence. The next one begins, 'This
+ treasure' ... than another gap ... 'jewels and money' ...
+ 'secret chamber' ... 'one can enter' ... something gone here
+ ... 'by the <i>salon de chene</i>'&#8212;that's the Oak
+ Parlour, I suppose ... something missing again ... 'by a
+ spring' ... 'hand of the lady in the picture' ... 'chimney on
+ the north side of the' ... 'side a panel which reveals' ...
+ 'one will find the directions' ... more missing ... 'of the
+ treasure in a golden chest' ... That's the end of it. And, as
+ I said before it is signed,&#8212;'an&ccedil;ois de
+ Boisdhyver.' There, you can read it. That's the best I can
+ make of it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan bent over his friend's translation. "Whoever wrote it was
+ about to leave here to offer something to somebody, and if he
+ did not return, apparently he is giving directions, in this
+ paper, which he tears in to two or three parts, how to
+ discover&#8212;a treasure?&#8212;jewels and money, I
+ guess,&#8212;that he is about to hide or has hidden in a
+ secret chamber, which is entered in some way from the Oak
+ Parlour&#8212;? ... pushes a spring,&#8212;Something to do
+ with the hand of the lady in the picture, near the chimney on
+ the north side of the room ... then a panel which reveals
+ ...where? ... the directions will be found, for getting the
+ treasure, in a golden chest in the secret chamber? How's that
+ for a version? I reckon the other half doesn't tell as much
+ ...'an&ccedil;ois de Boisdhyver!&#8212;That can't be the
+ Marquis, for none of his names end 'an&ccedil;ois; do they?
+ Let's see, what are they?&#8212;Marie, Anne, Tim&eacute;lon,
+ Armand ... Tom,"&#8212;and Dan faced his friend
+ excitedly,&#8212;"that old devil is after treasure! Who the
+ deuce is 'an&ccedil;ois de Boisdhyver, and how did he come to
+ leave money in the Oak Parlour? Hanged if I believe there's
+ any secret chamber! By gad, man, if I didn't hurt when I
+ pinch myself, I'd think I was asleep and dreaming. What do
+ you make of it?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Pretty much what you do. Somebody sometime,&#8212;a good
+ many years ago, concealed some valuables here in the Inn. It
+ must be some one who is connected with our marquis, for the
+ last names are the same. These are directions, or half the
+ directions, for finding it. The Marquis knows enough about it
+ to have been hunting for this paper. Who the devil is the
+ Marquis?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Lord knows. But how does Nance come in?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Blamed if I can see; wish I could! This accounts for the
+ Marquis's mysterious investigations, anyway. Probably he's no
+ right to the paper. Maybe he isn't a Boisdhyver at all. I'll
+ be damned if I can understand how he has got Nance to league
+ with him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And now what the deuce are we going to do about it?" asked
+ Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hunt for the treasure ourselves, eh?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, why not? but to do that we've got to get rid of the
+ Marquis. He'll be suspicious if we begin to poke about the
+ north wing. Hanged if I wouldn't like to have it all out with
+ him!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, but we'd better think and talk it over before we decide
+ to do anything. We can watch them. We'll watch to-night any
+ way, and plan something definite to-morrow."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I tell you one thing, Tom, I am going to make Mother tell me
+ all she knows about Nancy. Perhaps she is mixed up in some
+ way with all this. But it's time to keep watch now. We'll put
+ out the candles and I'll watch for the first two hours. If
+ you go to sleep, I'll wake you up to take the next turn. How
+ about it?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hang sleep!" Tom replied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "All right, but we must blow out the light. Lucky it's clear.
+ Let's whisper after this."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom threw himself on the bed, while Dan sat near the window
+ and kept his eyes fixed on the door of the bowling-alley.
+ They talked for some time in low tones, but eventually Tom
+ fell asleep. Dan waked him at twelve for his vigil, and he in
+ turn was wakened at two. During the third watch they both
+ succumbed to weariness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tow awoke with a start about four, and sprang to the window.
+ The moon was sinking low in the western sky, but its light
+ still flooded the deserted courtyard beneath. He heard the
+ patter of a horse's hoofs on the road beyond and the
+ crunching of the snow beneath the runners of a sleigh. Well,
+ he thought, as he rubbed his eyes, it was too near morning
+ for anything to happen, so he turned in and was soon asleep,
+ as though no difficult problems were puzzling his mind and
+ heart and no mysteries were being enacted around him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH7"><!-- CH7 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VII
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ A DISAPPEARANCE
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ When Dan came downstairs in the morning Mrs. Frost called him
+ to the door of her bedroom. "What on earth is the matter with
+ Nancy?" she exclaimed; "I have been waiting for her the past
+ hour. No one has been near me since Deborah came in to lay
+ the fire. Call the girl Danny; I want to get up."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "All right, mother. She has probably overslept; she had a
+ long walk yesterday."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But that is no excuse for sleeping till this time of day.
+ Tell her to hurry."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is only seven, mother."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, Danny, dear, but I mean to breakfast with you all this
+ morning if I ever succeed in getting dressed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan crossed the hall and knocked at Nancy's door. There was
+ no response. He knocked again, then opened the door and
+ looked within. Nancy was not there, and her bed had not been
+ slept in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He went back to his mother. "Nancy is not in her room," he
+ said. "She has probably gone out for a walk. I'll go and look
+ for her."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He went to the kitchens to enquire of the maids, but they had
+ not seen their young mistress since the night before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Spec she's taken dem dogs a walkin'," said black Deborah
+ unconcernedly. "Miss Nance she like de early morn' 'fore de
+ sun come up."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan went out to the stables. The setters came rushing out,
+ bounding and barking joyously about him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Have you seen Miss Nancy this morning, Jess?" he asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, Mister Dan, ain't seen her this mornin'. Be n't she in
+ the house?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She doesn't seem to be. Take a look down the road, and call
+ after her, will you? Down, Boy; down, Girl!" he cried to the
+ dogs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan began to be thoroughly alarmed. If Nancy had gone out,
+ the dogs would certainly have followed her. She must be
+ within!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He went back into the house, and searched room after room,
+ but no trace of her was to be found. He returned at last to
+ his mother's chamber.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I can't find Nancy," he said. "She must have gone off
+ somewhere."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Gone off! why, she must have left very early then. I have
+ been awake these two hours&#8212;since daylight&#8212;; I
+ would have heard every sound."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, she isn't about now, Mother. She will be back by
+ breakfast time, I don't doubt. Just stay abed this morning, I
+ will send her to you as soon as she comes."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I shall have to, I suppose. Really, Dan, it is extraordinary
+ how neglectful of me that child can sometimes be. She
+ knew&#8212;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mother, don't find fault with her. She is devoted to you,
+ and you know it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I daresay she is. Of course she is, and I am devoted to her.
+ Where would she be, I wonder, if it hadn't been for me? Good
+ heavens! Dan, can anything have happened to her?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, no&#8212;of course not,&#8212;nothing."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Search the house, boy; she may be lying some place in a
+ faint. She isn't strong&#8212;I have always been
+ worried&#8212;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Don't get excited, Mother. We will wait until breakfast
+ time. If she doesn't turn up then, you may be sure I shall
+ find her."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He looked at his watch. It was already nearly eight o'clock,
+ so he decided to say nothing to Pembroke until after
+ breakfast. He found the Marquis and Tom chatting before the
+ fire in the bar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Shall we have breakfast?" said Dan. "Mother will not be in
+ this morning."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah!" exclaimed the Marquis, as they took their seats at
+ table, "that is a disappointment. And shall we not wait for
+ Mademoiselle Nancy?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My sister has stepped out, monsieur; she may be late. Shall
+ I give you some coffee?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If you please&#8212;. We have another of these so beautiful
+ days, eh? This so glorious weather, these moonlight nights,
+ this snow&#8212;<i>C'est merveilleux</i>. Last night I sat
+ myself for a long time in my window. Ah <i>la
+ nuit</i>&#8212;the moon past its full, say you not?&#8212;the
+ sea superbly dark, superbly blue, the wonderful white
+ country! As I sat there, messieurs, a sight too beautiful
+ greeted my eyes. A ship, with three great sails, appeared out
+ on the sea and sailed as a bird up the river to our little
+ cove, <i>Voila, mes amis</i>"&#8212;he waved his hand toward
+ the eastern windows&#8212;"She is anchored at our feet."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two young men looked in the direction in which the
+ marquis pointed, and to their astonishment they saw, riding
+ securely at her moorings in the cove, a large sailing vessel.
+ She was a three-masted schooner of perhaps fifteen hundred
+ tons, a larger ship than they had seen at anchor in the
+ Strathsey for many a year.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "By all that's good!" exclaimed Tom, "that is exactly the
+ sort of ship my father used to have in the West Indie trade,
+ a dozen or fifteen years ago. What is she? I wonder; and why
+ is she anchored here instead of in the Port?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Marquis shrugged his shoulders. "That I can tell you not,
+ my friend; but I am happy that she is anchored there for the
+ hours of beauty she has already given to me. On this strange
+ coast of yours one so rarely sees a sail."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, they go too far to the south... But what is she?" asked
+ Dan. "We must find out." He went to the cupboard, and got out
+ his marine glass and took a long look at the stranger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What do you make her out?" asked Tom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There are men on deck, some swabbing out the roundhouse. One
+ of them is lolling at the wheel. She flies the British flag."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do you, perhaps, make out the name?" asked the Marquis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't know&#8212;yes," Dan replied, twisting the lens to
+ suit his eyes better and spelling out the letters,
+ "S,O,U,T,H,E,R,N,C,R&#8212;the <i>Southern Cross</i>. By
+ Jingo, Tom, we'll have to go down to the beach and have a
+ look at her."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom took the glasses; turning them over presently to the
+ Marquis. "She is a good fine boat, eh?" exclaimed M. de
+ Boisdhyver, as he applied his eye to the end of the glass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She certainly is," said Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They sat down at length and resumed their breakfast. The ship
+ had diverted Tom's attention for the moment from the fact
+ that Nancy had not appeared.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Where is Nance, Dan?" he asked at length, striving to
+ conceal his impatience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't know," Dan replied. "I think she has gone over to
+ see Mrs. Meath and stayed for breakfast."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Madame Meath&#8212;?" enquired the Marquis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At the House on the Dunes," Dan answered, a trifle sharply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A long walk for Mademoiselle on a cold morning," commented
+ Monsieur Boisdhyver, as he sipped his coffee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a few moments Dan rose. "Going to the Port to-day, Tom?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not till later, any way; I am going down to the beach to
+ have a look at that ship."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Wait a little, and I'll go with you," He turned to the door
+ and motioned Tom to follow him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Outside he took his friend's arm and drew him close. "Tom,
+ something's up; Nancy's not here."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nancy's not here;" exclaimed Pembroke. "What do you mean?
+ Where is she?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To tell the truth, I don't know where she is; her bed has
+ not been slept in. I thought at first she had gone for a walk
+ with the dogs as she does sometimes, but Boy and Girl are
+ both in the barn. It's half-past eight now, and she ought to
+ be back,"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Good Lord! man, have you searched the house?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I've been over it from garret to cellar."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And you can't find her?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not a sign of her."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Have you been through the north wing?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, all over it. I have been in every room in the house,
+ boy. Nance isn't there. You heard nothing in the night, did
+ you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nothing."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When did you go to sleep?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Perhaps about half-past three. Come to think of it, I awoke
+ at four with a start, for I heard a sleigh on the Port Road.
+ After that I went to bed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The sleigh hadn't been at the Inn?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It couldn't have been&#8212;I'd have heard of it if it had;
+ you see it woke me up just going along the road."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't suppose we need worry. But it is queer&#8212;none of
+ the servants have seen her since last night."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My God, what can have happened to her?" cried Tom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sh, boy! We have nothing to go on, but I wager that old
+ French devil knows more than he will tell."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then, we'll choke it out of him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, no, don't be a fool! She may be back any minute. I'll
+ get the sleigh and go over to the House on the Dunes. In the
+ meanwhile don't show that you are anxious! I'll be back
+ inside of an hour, and we can have a look at the ship. If
+ Nance isn't with Mrs. Meath, why I am sure I'll find her
+ here. Let's not worry till we have to."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom assented to this proposition somewhat unwillingly.
+ Despite his friend's reassuring words, he did not feel that
+ Nancy would be found at the House on the Dunes or that she
+ would immediately return. He remembered her telling him of
+ her desire to go away. He remembered how strangely she had
+ received the declaration of his love, and he feared almost as
+ much that she had fled from him, as that the Marquis, weird
+ and evil as he began to think him, had any hand in her
+ disappearance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After Dan's departure in the sleigh, Tom wandered about
+ restlessly. When half an hour passed and Frost did not
+ return, he went out to look down the road and see if he were
+ coming. The white open country was still and empty, and the
+ only sign of life was the great three-masted ship riding at
+ anchor in the cove, with seamen lolling about her deck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Tom stood under the Red Oak, the Marquis stepped out of
+ the front door. He was wrapped in his great coat, about to
+ take his morning walk up and down the gallery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why so pensive, Monsieur Pembroke? Is it that you are moved
+ by the beauty of the scene&#8212;, the land so white, the sea
+ so blue, and the <i>Southern Cross</i> shining as it were in
+ a northern sky!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom grunted a scarcely civil reply, and turning away to avoid
+ further conversation, strolled down the avenue of maples
+ toward the road.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Monsieur de Boisdhyver raised his eyebrows slightly, and
+ began his walk. By and by, still more impatient, Pembroke
+ walked back toward the house. If Dan did not return soon, he
+ determined he would go after him. As he came up to the
+ gallery again the Marquis paused and spoke to him. "And
+ Mademoiselle, she has not returned?" he asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No!" Pembroke replied sharply. "She has gone to the House on
+ the Dunes and her brother has driven over to fetch her."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah! pardon," exclaimed Monsieur de Boisdhyver; "I did not
+ know... But it is cold for me, Monsieur Pembroke; I seek the
+ fire."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom did not reply. The Marquis went inside, and presently Tom
+ could see him standing at the window, the marine glass in his
+ hands, sweeping the countryside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pembroke passed an anxious morning. Ten o'clock came;
+ half-past; eleven struck. Nancy had not appeared, or was
+ there a sign of Dan. Unable to be patient longer, he set out
+ on the Port Road to meet his friend.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH8"><!-- CH8 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VIII
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ GREEN LIGHTS
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ The smoke was curling from the chimneys of the House on the
+ Dunes as Dan drove up the long marsh road from the beach. He
+ had half convinced himself that Nancy would be there, and he
+ hoped that she herself would answer his knock. When at length
+ the door was opened it was not by Nancy nor by Mrs. Meath,
+ but by a stranger whom he had never seen before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes?" a pleasant voice questioned, but giving an accent to
+ the monosyllable that made Dan think instantly of France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He found himself facing a charming woman, her bright blue
+ eyes looking into his with a smile that instantly attracted
+ him. She was well-dressed, with a different air from the
+ women he knew. And she was undeniably pretty&#8212;of that
+ Dan was convinced, and the conviction overwhelmed him with
+ shyness. He stood awkward and ill-at-ease; for the moment
+ forgetting his errand. "I suppose," he stammered, "&#8212;I
+ beg your pardon&#8212;but I suppose you are Mrs. Heath's new
+ boarder,&#8212;Mrs. Fountain?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes," replied the strange lady with an amused smile, "that
+ is what I imagine that I am called. My name is Madame de La
+ Fontaine. And you&#8212;?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I?&#8212;Oh, yes&#8212;of course&#8212;I am Dan Frost from
+ the Inn over yonder. I came to see Mrs. Meath to ask if my
+ sister Nancy is here."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Alas!" replied Madame de La Fontaine, "poor Mrs. Meath she
+ this morning is quite unwell. She is in her room, so that I
+ am afraid you cannot see her. But, I may tell you, there is
+ no one else here, just myself and my servants."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You have not seen or heard anything then of my sister, Nancy
+ Frost?" repeated Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nancy Frost?&#8212;your sister?&#8212;No, monsieur. I am
+ arrived only last night and have seen no one."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I had hoped my sister would be here. I am sorry about Mrs.
+ Meath; perhaps I can be of some service. If you should need
+ me at any time, I can almost always be found at the Inn at
+ the Red Oak."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Inn at the Red Oak?" repeated Madame de La Fontaine,
+ "and is that near by?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is about a mile and a half by the road," Frost replied,
+ "but you can see it plainly from the doorstep here."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The foreign lady stepped out in the crisp February air. "Can
+ you point it out to me? I may need your assistance some
+ time."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You see the woods and the oak at the edge of them," said
+ Dan, pointing across the Dunes. "That great tree is the Red
+ Oak, the rambling old building beneath it is the Inn."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah! one can see quite plainly from one house to the other,
+ is it not so?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Quite," Dan replied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thank you, monsieur. I trust there will be no need for
+ assistance. But it makes one glad to know where are
+ neighbours, especially&#8212;" she added, "while poor Mrs.
+ Meath is ill."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As she spoke she turned to the door with the air of
+ dismissing him, but on second thoughts she faced him again.
+ "I wonder, Mr. Frost, will you do me a favour?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I shall be delighted," Dan exclaimed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My luggage arrived last night," said Madame de La Fontaine,
+ "upon the ship that is at anchor in the bay. They are to
+ bring my boxes ashore. But before that I desire to give
+ directions to the captain at the beach, and I cannot well do
+ so by my servant. Will you be kind enough to walk with me and
+ show me the way?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan forgot about Nancy in his eagerness to assure this
+ unusually attractive lady that he was at her disposal. She
+ disappeared within, and he heard her give some quick, sharp
+ directions in French to a maid. Then in a moment she
+ reappeared on the little porch, bonneted and wrapped for a
+ walk in the cold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As they set out across the Dunes, she kept up a rapid fire of
+ questions that might have seemed inquisitive to one more
+ accustomed to the world than Dan. He found himself in the
+ course of that quarter of an hour talking quite freely with
+ the charming stranger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, I did not make the journey from France in the
+ <i>Southern Cross</i>," she replied to one of his
+ interrogations, "that would have been uncomfortable, I fear.
+ But she brings over my boxes. She is arrived somewhat sooner
+ than I was promised."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do you expect to signal her from the beach?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But yes."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How will they know who you are?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, they have instructions. You must think all this
+ curious!" she commented with a smile. "You must think me an
+ odd person."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The possible oddness of Madame de La Fontaine made less
+ impression upon Dan than did her charm. He was conversing
+ easily with a very lovely woman, and all else was forgotten
+ in that agreeable sensation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As they emerged from the Dunes upon the little beach of the
+ Cove, Dan observed on the deck of the <i>Southern Cross</i> a
+ sailor watching them through a glass. Madame de La Fontaine
+ drew her handkerchief from beneath her cloak and waved it
+ toward the ship.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This is the signal," she explained, "that they were
+ instructed to look out for. If I am not mistaken Captain
+ Bonhomme will come to the shore for my directions. You speak
+ French, monsieur?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not at all," Dan replied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah!" sighed the lady, "you lose a great deal."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I might have learned some this winter," said Dan; "for we
+ have had a French gentleman as our guest at the Inn."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Indeed! And who, may I ask, is your French gentleman?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "His name is the Marquis de Boisdhyver. Do you, by any
+ chance, know him?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Marquis de Boisdhyver?" repeated Madame de La Fontaine.
+ "I know the name certainly; it is an old family with us,
+ monsieur. But I do not recall that I have ever had the
+ pleasure of meeting any one who bore it... But see! they are
+ lowering the boat."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were now at the edge of the surf. Madame de La Fontaine
+ again waved a hand in the direction of the clipper. Dan saw a
+ small boat alongside her, into which several sailors and an
+ officer, as it seemed, were clambering over the rail. They
+ pushed off, and began to row vigorously for the shore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The French lady stood watching them intently. Within a few
+ moments the little boat was beached, the officer sprang out,
+ advanced to Madame de La Fontaine, and saluted. She exchanged
+ sentences with him in French of which Dan understood nothing.
+ Then the seaman touched his cap, got into his small boat, and
+ gave orders to push off.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He understands no English," remarked Madame de La Fontaine.
+ "I gave directions about my boxes. We may return now,
+ monsieur; or doubtless I am able to find my way back alone."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh no," exclaimed Dan gallantly, "I will go with you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lady smiled graciously. As they walked back across the
+ Dunes, she kept up a lively conversation, no longer asking
+ him questions, nor, he observed, giving him the opportunity
+ to ask any.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the door of the House on the Dunes she dismissed him
+ finally. "I am but too grateful, Monsieur, for your kindness.
+ I hope that we shall meet again while I dwell in your
+ beautiful country. In the meantime, I trust you will find
+ your sister."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan flushed, how could he have forgotten Nancy! Taking the
+ hand that his new acquaintance offered, he hurried away. He
+ met Tom on the Port Road about half a mile from the Inn and
+ was truly worried to find that Nancy had not returned; he
+ explained briefly his own delay in his expedition with the
+ strange lady to the beach.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is certainly odd, though perhaps not so odd as stupid,
+ that they should have anchored in the Cove just to disembark
+ one woman's boxes. It would have been much simpler to go to
+ the Port, as every well-bred skipper does, and had the French
+ woman's stuff carted out. At any rate, we'll go down this
+ afternoon and have a look at her."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By the time they reached the Inn it was noon, and still there
+ was no word of Nancy. The dinner was a silent one, as the
+ Marquis tactfully did not disturb his companions'
+ preoccupation, and Mrs. Frost, who was unusually nervous, did
+ not appear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the meal the two young men started for the beach. At
+ Tom's suggestion they got a little dory from the boathouse
+ and rowed out to the clipper. The wind had shifted to the
+ southeast, but still there was not enough of a sea to give
+ them any trouble; and in a few minutes they were under the
+ bows of <i>The Southern Cross</i>. Dan hailed a seaman who
+ was leaning over the gunwale and watching them with idle
+ curiosity. If the man replied in French, it was in a variety
+ of that tongue that Tom's limited attainments did not
+ understand, and, annoyed by the incomprehensible replies, he
+ asked for "le captaine". At length,&#8212;possibly attracted
+ by the altercation at the bows,&#8212;the
+ authoritative-looking person who had come ashore in the
+ morning in response to Madame de La Fontaine's signal, now
+ appeared at the gunwale and glanced below at the two young
+ men in the dory. His expression betrayed no sign that he
+ recognized Frost. Indeed he vouchsafed no syllable of reply
+ to the questions Dan asked in English or to those that Tom
+ ventured to phrase in Dr. Watson's French.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was not, they thought, an attractive person; his
+ countenance was swarthy, his eyes were black his hair was
+ black, his heavy jaw was shadowed by an enormous black
+ mustachio. A kerchief of brilliant red tied about his throat
+ gave him the appearance of the matador in a Spanish bullfight
+ rather than the officer of an English merchantman. He glanced
+ at the dory occasionally, shook his head silently in response
+ to the requests to go aboard, and at length when that did not
+ serve to put an end to them, he shrugged his shoulders and
+ disappeared. The seaman continued to lean over the gunwale
+ and spat nonchalantly as though that were the measure of
+ their appreciation of this unasked-for visit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I move we skip up the rope," said Tom, "and explain
+ ourselves at close quarters."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thanks, no," replied Dan. "Either of those two amiable
+ gentlemen looks capable and willing of pitching us overboard.
+ The water is too cold for bathing."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Very well," said Tom, "I will yield to your sober judgment
+ for the moment; but I propose to see the inside of that ship
+ sooner or later unless she weighs anchor in the hour and
+ sails away. But we ought to be getting to town to make
+ enquiries about Nancy. For Heavens' sake, Dan, where do you
+ suppose she can be?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They rowed back to the beach, stowed the dory in the
+ boathouse, and set out in the sleigh for Monday Port.
+ Diligent enquiry there, in likely and unlikely places, proved
+ fruitless. It was nightfall when they returned to the Inn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were greeted by the Marquis in the bar. "Mademoiselle
+ Nancy, she has not been found?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No," said Dan. "I take it from your question that she has
+ not come home yet either."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She is not come, no. Perhaps she stays at the House on the
+ Dunes?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I do not know," Dan answered tartly. "I expect her every
+ moment, but it is idle to conceal from you, Monsieur, that we
+ are much concerned as to her absence."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Marquis grew sympathetic,&#8212;optimistically
+ sympathetic. Tom clutched at his re-assuring words, but Dan
+ was even more irritated by the silence that Monsieur de
+ Boisdhyver had maintained throughout the day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Directly after supper Dan went into his mother's parlour,
+ leaving the others to their own devices. The Marquis settled
+ himself near the fire and was soon absorbed in reading an old
+ folio; Tom wandered restlessly about, now up and down the
+ long bar, now in the corridors, now on the gallery and in the
+ court without.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The night, after the bright day, had set in raw and cold; a
+ damp breeze blew from the southwest, and gave promise both of
+ wind and rain. From his position under the Red Oak, Tom could
+ see the red and green lights of <i>The Southern Cross</i> at
+ her moorings in the Cove below, and across the Neck the
+ lighted windows of the House on the Dunes. Over all else the
+ night had cast its black damp mantle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he stood watching, deeply anxious for the welfare of the
+ girl he loved, he noticed a new light appear in one of the
+ upper windows of the House on the Dunes&#8212;not yellow as
+ is the light of candles, but green like the light on the port
+ side of the clipper in the Cove. Had he not seen the lights
+ from the other windows he could have thought it was another
+ ship on the ocean side of the Neck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He looked for a long time at the tiny spark in the distance,
+ wondering what whim had induced Mrs. Meath to shade her
+ candles with so deep a green. As he strolled back toward the
+ Inn, he glanced through the windows of the bar where the
+ Marquis still read by the fireside. Suddenly the old
+ gentleman, as Tom curiously watched him, laid his book down
+ on the table and rose from his chair. He looked about the
+ room and then advanced to the window. Tom instinctively
+ slipped behind the trunk of the great oak. Monsieur de
+ Boisdhyver stood for several moments peering into the
+ darkness. Then he turned away and crossed the room to the
+ door into the front hall. It flashed through Tom's mind that
+ possibly the Marquis had started on another of his mysterious
+ tours. He ran down again into the court far enough from the
+ house to command a view of the entire facade, and watched
+ curiously, particularly the north wing. All was dark, save
+ for the lights below.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly he saw the flicker of a candle in one of the
+ windows, not of the north wing, but of the south. A moment's
+ glance, and he made sure that it was the room occupied as a
+ sleeping apartment by Monsieur de Boisdhyver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Marquis was standing by the window, with his face pressed
+ close to the pane, peering out into the night. He still held
+ the candle in his hand. To Dan's surprise, he placed it
+ carefully on the broad window-sill, and drew down the dark
+ shade to within a foot of the sill, blotting out all save a
+ narrow band of light. Then the Marquis disappeared for
+ several moments into the interior of the room. Dan was about
+ to turn back into the house, when again Monsieur de
+ Boisdhyver came to the window. He did not raise the shade,
+ but inserted between the windowpane and the candle a strip of
+ dark green paper. It was translucent and had the effect of
+ sending a beam of green light southward, across the meadows
+ and the dunes, to meet&#8212;Tom suddenly realized&#8212;the
+ rays of the green light from the House on the Dunes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Was it a signal being exchanged, and between whom? The
+ coincidence of green lights from the Inn and the House on the
+ Dunes, at the same moment, was too marked to be without
+ significance. To what end was the Marquis de Boisdhyver
+ exchanging mysterious signals with some one in that lonely
+ farmhouse, and what did they mean?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom repressed his agitation and remained for some time
+ watching the two green lights that glowed toward one another
+ over the dark landscape.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly the light in the House on the Dunes was
+ extinguished; then, momentarily it shone again, but quickly
+ went out and left the great sweep of dunes in darkness. Two
+ minutes later the same thing took place in the window of the
+ south chamber of the Inn. The light flashed and was gone,
+ flashed again and shone no more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom went in, by a rear entrance, to the bar. The Marquis was
+ seated by a table, absorbed in reading. He started as Tom
+ entered. "Still no word of Mademoiselle?" he piped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Still no word, monsieur," Pembroke answered laconically. He
+ also seated himself in the candle light and took up the last
+ issue of the <i>Port News</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do you know what has become of Dan?" Pembroke asked
+ presently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Monsieur Frost he has been closeted with madame his mother
+ for the past half-hour. You have no further plans for seeking
+ Mademoiselle? For myself, I grow alarmed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I know nothing but what you know, monsieur. Nancy has not
+ returned. There has been no word of her. We shall have to
+ wait." With tremendous effort to conceal his agitation and
+ annoyance, Tom resumed his reading.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Monsieur de Boisdhyver glanced at him for a moment with a
+ little air of interrogation, then shrugged his shoulders
+ slightly and turned again to his French paper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH9"><!-- CH9 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IX
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ MRS. FROST'S RECOLLECTIONS OF A FRENCH EXILE
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ After the long day of fruitless search and enquiry for the
+ vanished Nancy, supper being over and Tom having gone
+ outside, Dan joined his mother in the blue parlour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Frost was weary with waiting and anxiety, but as Dan
+ threw himself on a couch near her chair, she watched him
+ patiently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There is no clue, Dan?" she ventured at last.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No clue, mother, not the slightest. Nancy seems to have
+ vanished as completely as if she had dissolved into air. As
+ you know, the house has been thoroughly searched; the
+ servants carefully questioned; and enquiries have been made
+ at every conceivable place in Monday Port. I have been to the
+ House on the Dunes, and to the farmhouses on every road round
+ about. No one has seen or heard of her. She has taken French
+ leave, but for what reason I can't imagine."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nancy has not been happy for some time, Dan," said Mrs.
+ Frost.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, I have fancied that she was not. But why? Do you suppose
+ she has left us deliberately? or&#8212;". He paused uncertain
+ whether or not to give voice to his suspicions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Or what?" asked his mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Or she has been forced away against her will."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Against her will!" the old lady exclaimed. "Who could have
+ forced her? and for what reason? Do you think she may have
+ been kidnapped?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Either kidnapped or decoyed away."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But who could have designs upon Nancy? It is more reasonable
+ to suppose that she left of her own accord. I confess that
+ would not altogether surprise me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't know, mother, but I have my fears and suspicions.
+ There may be some one who has a deep interest in Nancy, who
+ for reasons of his own, which I don't yet understand, may
+ wish to control her movements. I wish you would tell me all
+ you know of Nancy's origin. You have never told me;&#8212;you
+ have never told her, I fancy,&#8212;who she really is and how
+ you came to adopt her as your own child. I have never been
+ curious to know, in fact I have not wanted to know, for she
+ has always been to me precisely what a sister of my own blood
+ would be. But now, it may help me to understand certain
+ strange things that have happened in the last few days."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a moment Mrs. Frost was silent. "No, I have never spoken
+ to you or to Nancy of her early history, Dan; simply because,
+ to all intent she has been our own. I have always wished that
+ she should feel absolutely one with us; and I think she
+ always has, until this winter. But of late I have noticed her
+ discontent, her growing restlessness, and I have sometimes
+ wondered if she could be brooding over the mystery of her
+ early years. But she has never asked me a direct question;
+ and I have kept silent."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I think now, mother," Dan replied, "it is your duty to tell
+ me all you know."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have no reason, my dear, to keep anything from you. I
+ should have told you years ago, if you had asked me. There is
+ not much to tell. You may remember when you were a boy about
+ six or seven years old, a French exile came to the Inn, a
+ military gentleman, who had left France in consequence of the
+ fall of the great Napoleon."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, I remember him distinctly," said Dan. "He used to tell
+ stories to Tom and me of his adventures in the wars. Tom was
+ speaking of him only the other day."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well," continued Mrs. Frost, "this gentleman called himself
+ General Pointelle. I learned afterwards it was not his real
+ name. Who he actually was, I have not the slightest idea. He
+ brought with him a little girl two years old, a sweet little
+ black-eyed girl, to whom I, having lost your only sister at
+ about that age, took a great fancy. The General also had two
+ servants with him, a valet, and a maid. The maid, a pretty
+ young thing, took care of the child. They arrived in
+ mid-summer, on a merchantman that plied between Marseilles
+ and Monday Port. I do not know why General Pointelle came to
+ this part of the country, or why he chose to stay at the Inn;
+ at any rate he came, and he engaged for an indefinite period
+ the best suite of apartments in the old north wing. He had
+ the Oak Parlour&#8212;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Oak Parlour!" exclaimed Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes," replied Mrs. Frost, "that was part of the suite
+ reserved usually for our most distinguished guests. The
+ general used that for a sitting-room and the adjoining
+ chamber as a bed-room. The maid and child occupied connecting
+ rooms across the hall. The valet, I believe, was in some
+ other part of the house. General Pointelle proved himself a
+ fascinating guest, and his little daughter Eloise was a
+ favourite with all the household. The maid, pretty as she
+ certainly was and apparently above her station, I somehow
+ never trusted. I have always believed that the relations
+ between the general and herself were not what they should
+ have been. But Frenchmen look at such things differently, I
+ am told; and it was not to our interests to be over-curious.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They had been with us about two months when one fine morning
+ we awoke to find that General Pointelle, his valet, and the
+ charming Marie had disappeared, and little Eloise was crying
+ alone in her big room. You have probably guessed the child
+ was Nancy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes," Dan agreed, "but do you mean that the father actually
+ abandoned her?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Practically. He left a note for me and a little bag of gold
+ amounting to two thousand dollars to be used for the child.
+ If you will hand me that old secretary there, I will show you
+ the letter."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan placed the old-fashioned writing-desk on the table beside
+ her, and waited anxiously while she fumbled in her pocket for
+ the key. She unlocked the desk, and after searching a few
+ moments amongst innumerable papers, drew out an old letter.
+ This she unfolded carefully and handed to Dan. It was written
+ in English, in a fine running hand. He read it attentively.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>The Inn at the Red Oak, Deal</i>:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "14 October, '814.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Madame:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Political circumstances over which I have no control,
+ patriotic considerations which I cannot withstand, demand my
+ immediate return to France. In the conditions into which I am
+ about to be plunged the care of my dear little daughter
+ becomes an impossibility. Inhuman as it must seem to you,
+ lacking in all sense of Christian duty as it must appear to
+ you, I entrust, without the formality of consulting you, my
+ beautiful little Eloise to your humane and tender care. With
+ this letter I deposit with you the sum of two thousand
+ dollars in gold, which will go a little way at least to
+ compensate you for the burden I thus unceremoniously, but of
+ necessity, thrust upon you. I appeal to and confide in the
+ goodness of your heart, of which already I have such abundant
+ testimony, that will take pity upon the misfortune of a
+ helpless infant and an equally helpless parent. May you be a
+ mother to the motherless, and may the Heavenly Father bless
+ you for what you shall do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I embark, madame, upon a dangerous and uncertain mission.
+ Should that mission prove successful and restore the fortunes
+ of my house, I will return and claim my daughter. Should fate
+ overwhelm me with disaster, I must beg that you will continue
+ to regard her and love her as your own. The issue will have
+ been decided within five years. Permit me to add but one
+ thing more,&#8212;in the event that I fall in the cause I
+ have embraced, I have made arrangements whereby
+ communications shall be established with you, madame, that
+ will redound to your own good fortune and that of the little
+ Eloise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "All effort to thwart my plans or to establish my identity in
+ the meantime, will, I must warn you, be fruitless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Adieu, madame: accept the assurance of my gratitude for all
+ that you have already done to sweeten exile and of my earnest
+ prayer for the blessing of God upon your great good heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I remain, madame, for the present, but always, under
+ whatever name,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your grateful and sincere servant,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "GASTON POINTELLE,"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Dan, with gathering brows, concluded the reading of this
+ extraordinary letter, Mrs. Frost resumed her story.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We always imagined that the general and his companions had
+ sailed in a French vessel that lay at that time in the
+ Passage and left that morning at dawn. There was nothing to
+ do but adopt little Eloise Pointelle for my own. I changed
+ her name, at your father's suggestion, to Nancy Frost;
+ knowing that Pointelle was not the general's real name. For
+ five years we looked to see our guest return; and afterwards
+ for years, we hoped to receive some communication that would
+ prove, as he promised, of advantage to Nancy and ourselves.
+ But from the night General Pointelle left our house to this
+ day, I have not heard one word to show that he still existed
+ or, indeed, that he ever had existed. We brought Nancy up as
+ our own daughter, though, never concealing from her the fact
+ that she was not of our blood. Indeed, Dan, I have loved her
+ dearly."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Certainly, you have always treated her with the greatest
+ kindness. But this is quite extraordinary, Mother. I think it
+ will throw light on Nancy's present disappearance."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do you think the father is alive, Dan? that he has
+ communicated with her?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not that, mother; I am really in the dark. But I believe
+ that the Marquis de Boisdhyver has some connection with your
+ General Pointelle, and that his stay with us this winter has
+ something to do with Nancy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In response to Mrs. Frost's questions, he told of the
+ meetings of Nancy and the marquis, but decided to say nothing
+ about the paper that he had found in the Oak Parlour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I want you to be careful, Mother, to give no hint to the
+ Marquis that we suspect him in any way. Tom and I are trying
+ to solve the mystery, and secrecy is of the greatest
+ importance. It is a more complicated business than we
+ imagined. I must go now and find Tom. May I keep this
+ letter?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, but keep it under lock and key. I have guarded it for
+ sixteen years; and it is the only evidence I possess of
+ Nancy's origin."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan returned to the bar, where he found the Marquis and Tom
+ still reading their papers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah!" exclaimed Monsieur de Boisdhyver, "I trust, Monsieur
+ Frost, you bring us the good news at last of the return of
+ Mademoiselle."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Unfortunately, I do not, monsieur," Dan replied. "Our
+ efforts to find out what has become of her have been entirely
+ unsuccessful. I am very anxious, as you may imagine."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And to what mishap do you attribute Mademoiselle's so
+ unceremonious departure?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I do not attribute it to any mishap," replied Dan. "I think
+ that my sister has gone off on a visit to some friends, and
+ that her messages to us have been miscarried. I feel certain
+ that to-morrow we will be completely reassured."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah! I hope so with all my heart," exclaimed the Marquis
+ fervently. "It is a matter of deep distress to
+ me&#8212;monsieur. But if&#8212;to-morrow passes and still
+ you do not hear&#8212;?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "God knows, sir. We must do everything to find her."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We shall find her," cried Tom, as he sprang to his feet,
+ unable longer to repress his anxiety or his irritation. "And
+ if we do not find her safe and well, woe to the man who has
+ harmed her."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Bravo!" cried the Marquis. "Permit me to adopt those words
+ to express my own sentiments. I applaud this determination,
+ monsieur, <i>de tout mon coeur</i>."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom glared at the little old man with an expression of
+ illconcealed rage. He was about to blurt out some angry
+ reply, when a warning gesture from Dan checked him. Without
+ speaking, he flung himself out of the room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Poor Tom!" said Dan quickly, to cover Pembroke's attitude
+ toward the Marquis, "this takes him especially hard. He is in
+ love with Nancy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Eh bien</i>! I sympathize with his good taste. It is that
+ that accounts for his vigour of his expressions, so much more
+ <i>emphatique</i> than our good host."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "More emphatic, perhaps," said Dan, "though I do not feel
+ less strongly."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Marquis made a little bow, as he rose to retire. "If,
+ chance, monsieur could require my assistance&#8212;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thank you," said Dan quickly. "In that case, sir, I shall be
+ only too happy to call upon you." He rose also, and
+ courteously held the candle till the Marquis had reached the
+ top of the stairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom waited his friend impatiently in their common chamber.
+ And when at last, having closed the house for the night, Dan
+ joined him, he told at once of the signals which he supposed
+ had been exchanged between the Marquis at the Inn and someone
+ at the House on the Dunes. In return Dan repeated what he had
+ learned about Nancy from Mrs. Frost.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There is no doubt in my mind," said Dan, "that the Marquis
+ knows all about Nancy's disappearance and where she is, and
+ further I believe that Nancy's disappearance is part of a
+ plot with the Marquis here, Madame de la Fontaine at the
+ House on the Dunes, and that schooner riding at anchor in the
+ Cove. I have a plan, Tom."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Go ahead for heaven's sake. If we don't do something, I'll
+ go in and choke the truth out of that old reprobate. He
+ applauds my sentiments, eh! Good God! If he knew them!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, yes," said Dan. "But the time for choking has not come.
+ You nearly gave yourself away to-night, you will ruin our
+ plans, and involve Nancy in some harm. She is probably in
+ that old villain's power. Now listen to me. The first thing
+ to do is to discover Nancy's whereabouts. The second is to
+ get at the bottom of the Marquis's plot and the secret of the
+ torn scrap of paper. We will find the clew to both, I think,
+ if we can discover the meaning of the signals between the
+ Marquis and the lady in the House on the Dunes."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Right!" cried Tom. "But how?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "One of us must stay at the Inn and watch the Marquis
+ to-night, and the other investigate the House on the Dunes. I
+ have already been there and made the acquaintance of the
+ lady, so I had better do that, and you stay here. Do you
+ agree?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, of course; though I envy you the chance to be out and
+ doing."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You will be doing something here. I want you to hide
+ yourself in the hallway near the Marquis's door and watch all
+ night&#8212;till dawn anyway. He cannot get out of his room
+ without coming into the hall, and we must know what he does
+ to-night. If the Marquis can spend a sleepless night, we can
+ afford to do so. I don't know what I can do at the House on
+ the Dunes but I shall take the pistol, and you can keep my
+ gun. To-morrow I will get more arms, for I shouldn't be
+ surprised if we needed them. Is everything clear?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Perfectly," said Tom. "I'll watch as soon as you are off."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Good-night, old boy, good luck."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Good-night," and Dan slipped out of the room and down the
+ dark stairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH10"><!-- CH10 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER X
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ MIDNIGHT VIGILS
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ As soon as Dan had gone Tom blew out his light and slipped
+ into the hallway.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This portion of the Inn was simple in design. A long corridor
+ ran through the middle of the house to meet a similar passage
+ at the southern end extending at right angles to the main
+ hall. The South Chamber, occupied by the Marquis de
+ Boisdhyver, opened into the southwest passage, but the door
+ was well beyond the juncture of the two corridors. It was
+ Pembroke's intention to conceal himself in the bedroom next
+ the Marquis's chamber, from the door of which he could look
+ down the entire length of the main hall, and by stepping
+ outside get a view of the branch hallway into which the door
+ of this room and that of the Marquis actually opened. A
+ further advantage was that the windows of this room, like
+ those of the South Chamber, looked out upon the Dunes and the
+ Cove.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Tom stepped from his chamber, the house seemed utterly
+ deserted; save for the roaring of the wind without and an
+ occasional creak or crack in the time-worn boards, there were
+ no sounds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The night was not a dark one, although the wind was rising
+ and rain was threatening; for a full moon lurked behind the
+ thick veil of cloud and something of its weird weak light
+ relieved the darkness even of the great corridor of the Inn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom stole softly down the hallway and gained the room next
+ the Marquis's. He took his position in a great chair, which
+ he drew near the open door, and laid his gun on the floor
+ near at hand. No one could enter the hall without his seeing
+ him. Every few moments he would tiptoe to the doorway, thrust
+ his head into the corridor, and listen intently for any sound
+ in the South Chamber.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a lonely and unpleasant vigil. The night was wild, the
+ storm was rising, the old Inn was moaning as though in
+ distress; and, despite his natural courage, fantastic terrors
+ and dangers thrust themselves upon his excited imagination.
+ He would much have preferred, he felt, to be out in the open
+ as Dan was, even facing real dangers and greater
+ difficulties. Deeper than by these imaginary fears of the
+ night, he was racked with anxiety to know what had become of
+ the girl he loved. Had she been decoyed away by the evil
+ genius of the place; was she in danger? Had she disappeared
+ of her own free will; and didn't she really love him?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was not in the least sleepy; but after a while the vigil
+ began to tell upon his nerves. He found it almost impossible
+ to sit still and wait, perhaps in vain. He made innumerable
+ trips across the room to the windows to look out into the
+ bleak night. The landscape was blotted out. Not a light
+ showed from the House on the Dunes; only the two lamps on the
+ schooner at anchor in the Cove gleamed across the night.
+ Eleven o'clock, twelve o'clock struck solemnly from the old
+ clock on the stairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once as he was looking out of the window, it seemed to him
+ that the green light on the <i>Southern Cross</i> was moving.
+ But it was impossible that she should weigh anchor in the
+ teeth of the rising storm. He was mistaken. Nay, he was sure.
+ But it was rising, slowly, steadily, as though drawn by an
+ invisible hand, to about the height of the masthead. There at
+ last it stopped, and swung to the wind, to and fro, to and
+ fro; high above its red companion, high above the deck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And then, suddenly, as if to answer this mysterious
+ manoeuvre, the green light, that earlier in the evening had
+ glowed from a north window of the House on the Dunes, now
+ flashed from an east window of the old farmhouse; flashed,
+ then gleamed steadily. The light on the <i>Southern Cross</i>
+ was lowered slowly, then raised again. The light in the House
+ on the Dunes vanished; soon flashed again and then vanished
+ once more. Slowly the light in the schooner descended to its
+ normal position. A moment later the green light appeared on
+ the north side of the House on the Dunes, where it had been
+ earlier, and shone there steadily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Was it a signal to the Marquis de Boisdhyver? Tom tiptoed to
+ the partition between his room and the South Chamber, and put
+ his ear to the wall to listen. Not a sound reached him. He
+ turned to the door to go into the corridor, and stood
+ suddenly motionless. For there, advancing ever so cautiously
+ down the hall, carrying a lighted candle in his hand, was the
+ old Marquis. He was clad in night dress and cap, with a
+ gayly-coloured dressing-gown worn over the white shirt.
+ Slowly, silently, pausing every instant to listen; he stole
+ on, gun in hand, and Tom followed him as cautiously and as
+ quietly. Instead of turning to the right at the partition
+ that divides the north and south wings of the Inn and going
+ down stairs, the Marquis turned to the left, into the short
+ hall that led directly to the great chamber occupied by Tom
+ and Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By the time Pembroke in pursuit had reached the turn and
+ dared to peep around the corner of the wall, the Marquis was
+ at the door of Dan's room. He stood there, ear bent close to
+ the panel, intently listening.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom waited breathless. Not satisfied, Monsieur de Boisdhyver
+ turned about and went into an adjoining chamber, the door of
+ which stood open. Pembroke was about to advance, when the
+ Marquis emerged again into the corridor, having left his
+ lighted candle in the empty room. This manoeuvre, whatever
+ advantage it had for the Marquis, was fortunate for Pembroke,
+ for it left the end of the little hall, where he stood
+ watching, in deep shadow. He could now step boldly from
+ behind the concealing wall without fear of immediate
+ detection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again the Marquis stood and listened at the door of Dan's
+ room, then cautiously turned the knob. The door yielded and
+ opened an inch or so. Monsieur de Boisdhyver put his ear to
+ the crack. Dissatisfied with the absolute silence that must
+ have met him, he pushed open the door a little further and
+ thrust his head inside. In a moment he disappeared within.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom realized that the Marquis would soon discover the fact
+ that the room was empty. He looked about quickly for a place
+ of concealment that would command a view of all the halls.
+ Fortunately the partition that divided the long corridor
+ between the north and south wings was hung with heavy
+ curtains. Deciding instantly, Pembroke slipped behind them,
+ and ruthlessly slit an opening in the thick green stuff,
+ through which he could peek out. He was just in time, as the
+ Marquis came out of their bedroom and softly closed the door.
+ He stood irresolute; then, with even greater caution,
+ re-entered the room in which he had left his candle. To Tom's
+ chagrin, the candle was suddenly extinguished and the Inn
+ left in darkness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For some moments, there was absolute silence. Then Tom could
+ hear faintly,&#8212;or feel rather than hear&#8212;the
+ Marquis cautiously finding his way back. Luckily, the old
+ Frenchman was groping his way next the other wall. Pembroke
+ slipped from behind the curtains and stole softly in pursuit.
+ As he reached the south end of the corridor, he heard the
+ latch of the Marquis's door click softly. Alarmed by
+ discovering that they were not in bed, thought Tom, he had
+ abandoned whatever purpose he had in mind for his midnight
+ prowl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After waiting a little and hearing no more, Tom went again to
+ the window. The rain had begun now and the wind was blowing a
+ gale. Suddenly Pembroke discerned a light shining from the
+ window next the very one from which he was peering into the
+ darkness,&#8212;the steady glow of a deep red light.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Another signal!" he murmured; then waited to see if it would
+ be answered by the House on the Dunes. Perhaps fifteen
+ minutes passed, and then, suddenly, there gleamed through the
+ rain and dark, a tiny bit of red flame, just where the House
+ on the Dunes must be. A little later the red lamp on the
+ <i>Southern Cross</i> performed a fantastic ascension to what
+ Pembroke took to be the masthead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The red light in the neighbouring window was extinguished.
+ Almost instantly the red spark on the Dunes disappeared, and
+ in a few moments the schooner's lamp began its descent.
+ Simultaneously they glowed again and the ship's light danced
+ upward; then the two red lights on shore vanished and the
+ lamp on the <i>Southern Cross</i> sank to its proper place
+ and stayed there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of one thing Tom was sure: The Marquis, the lady at the House
+ on the Dunes, and the skipper of the schooner in the Cove,
+ were in collusion. Of another thing he felt almost equally
+ certain: the red light was a signal of danger, and the
+ message of danger flashed across the night was the fact that
+ he and Dan were not safe asleep in bed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a long time he watched, keen with excitement; listened
+ patiently; started at every sound. But nothing more unusual
+ did he hear that night than the roar of the wind, the dash of
+ the brawling southeaster against the panes, and the groans of
+ the old house, shaken by the storm. Toward morning he crept
+ back to bed and fell instantly into a deep and dreamless
+ sleep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While Tom was thus watching and sleeping a somewhat different
+ experience had fallen to the lot of Dan Frost. He had no
+ definite plan in making a midnight visit to the vicinity of
+ the House on the Dunes, but he hoped to discover some clue to
+ the surrounding mysteries. From time to time during the day
+ he had taken his field glasses to one of the upper rooms of
+ the Inn, and scanned the countryside but nothing unusual
+ seemed astir in the white world without. The <i>Southern
+ Cross</i> had lain on the surface of the little cove all day,
+ swaying with wind and tide, no sign of activity upon her
+ decks. It was after ten when he started forth. The night was
+ not quite dark, for the full moon was shining somewhere
+ behind the thick veil of clouds. Earlier in the evening Dan
+ had intended to go boldly to the House itself and demand an
+ interview with old Mrs. Meath; but he reflected that he would
+ probably be met with the excuse that Mrs. Meath was ill, and
+ he did not know how he could force himself in, particularly
+ past the barrier of Madame de la Fontaine's charming manner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was an unpleasant walk with the wind in his face, and it
+ was nearly eleven before he turned into the long dune road,
+ which branched from the Port Road near the Rocking Stone and
+ led directly to the old farmhouse on Strathsey Neck. To his
+ chagrin it appeared that all lights had been extinguished as
+ if the inmates of the house had gone to bed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old farmhouse loomed before him, dark and forbidding. On
+ either side there were outhouses, and in the rear quite near
+ the house a barn. There was not a tree on the place; indeed,
+ there was little vegetation upon the entire Neck, save the
+ grass of the middle meadows which in summer furnished scant
+ nourishment for the cattle and a flock of sheep. Now all was
+ bleak and covered with snow, and a freshening gale swept out
+ of the great maw of the Atlantic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Keeping close to the fence, Frost began to make a complete
+ circuit of the farmhouse. As he turned a corner of the south
+ end, or rear of the house, he was relieved to see a light
+ burning in the kitchen. He stole cautiously to a position
+ within the shadow of the barn from which he could get a
+ glimpse of the interior. In the kitchen standing before a
+ deal table, he saw a young woman&#8212;not Jane, Mrs. Heath's
+ maid-of-all-work, but a stranger,&#8212;with her hands deep
+ in a bowl of dough. Her back was toward him, but he guessed
+ that she was Madame de la Fontaine's maid, whom he had seen
+ in the morning. The door into the dining-room beyond stood
+ open, and by craning his neck, Dan could see that the room
+ was lighter, but he could not discover whether or not it were
+ occupied. The shutters of the dining-room were so closely
+ barred and the curtains so tightly drawn that not a ray of
+ light penetrated to the outside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The girl in the kitchen proceeded busily about her work. She
+ was evidently engaged, despite the lateness of the hour, in
+ mixing bread.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once while he waited patiently, to what end he hardly knew,
+ Madame de la Fontaine entered the kitchen. She was clad in
+ black and held in her hands what Dan took to be a ship's
+ lamp. She stood for a moment in the doorway and spoke to the
+ servant maid. The girl stopped her work, and taking a strip
+ of paper, ignited it at a candle and lighted the lamp, which
+ Madame de la Fontaine held up for her. It glowed instantly
+ with a deep green flame, such as Tom had described as shining
+ from a window of the House on the Dunes in the early evening.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as her lamp was lighted Madame de la Fontaine left
+ the room. Supposing that she was about to give a signal,
+ Dan's heart leaped at the prospect of some result to his
+ eavesdropping, and he stole carefully around to the front of
+ the house. Presently from an upper window in the east side of
+ the house, not the north as he had expected, he saw the green
+ light sending forth its message across the Dunes&#8212;to
+ whom? Probably the signal could be seen from the Inn, but it
+ more likely was intended for the schooner in the Cove. Sure
+ enough, as he watched, Dan saw the phenomenon of the
+ ascending lamp on the <i>Southern Cross</i>, which at that
+ identical moment Tom Pembroke was watching from his post of
+ vantage in one of the south windows of the Inn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A little later the signal was removed from the east window of
+ the farmhouse and placed in a north window. Dan looked to see
+ the answering gleam from the Inn at the Red Oak. But none
+ came. Crouched in a corner of the fence, he waited perhaps
+ for half-an-hour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly a signal gleamed from the Inn, but this time it was
+ not green as he expected, but red. In a few moments a form
+ appeared in the window of the farmhouse, and a white hand,
+ which he supposed was that of Madame de la Fontaine, took
+ hold of the lamp and reversed it, so that now it showed red.
+ The light in the Inn vanished, reappeared, vanished again.
+ The same thing happened to the light in the House on the
+ Dunes. And looking eastward, Dan saw the ship's red lamp
+ perform its fantastic ascent and descent. Soon all was left
+ in darkness. Frost slipped back to his post near the barn and
+ looked again into the kitchen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madame de la Fontaine was standing in the doorway as before.
+ The maid, turning away from the table, came at that moment to
+ the window, and raised the sash, as though she were
+ overheated. Presently, leaving the window open, she turned to
+ her mistress, and Dan could hear the sharp staccato of her
+ voice as she said something in what seemed to him her
+ barbarous French.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Impelled by curiosity, he crept closer to the house. He was
+ within six feet of the window, standing on the tip of his
+ toes. Suddenly he felt himself pinioned from behind; his arms
+ were gripped as in a vise, a hand grasped his throat and
+ began to choke him, and a sharp knee was planted with
+ terrific force in the small of his back. He made a gurgling
+ sound as he went backward, but there was no opportunity for
+ struggling. He recovered from the shock to find himself
+ stretched at full length in the wet snow. Some one was
+ sitting upon him, struggling to thrust a gag into his mouth;
+ some one else was binding his hands and feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He could just distinguish, in the sickly moonlight and the
+ dim rays of the candle from the kitchen, the faces of his
+ assailants. One was the murderous looking Frenchman, the
+ skipper of the <i>Southern Cross</i>, the other he took to be
+ a common seaman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Attracted by the scuffle, the French maid had thrust her head
+ out of the window and was addressing the combatants in
+ vigorous French. Neither then nor later did Madame de la
+ Fontaine appear. When Frost was safely bound and gagged,
+ Captain Bonhomme arose, said a few words to his companion,
+ and disappeared into the farmhouse. Dan's guard searched him
+ rapidly, confiscated his revolver and knife, and then resumed
+ his seat upon his legs. Inside the kitchen Dan could hear the
+ sounds of an animated French dialogue, in which he imagined
+ from time to time that he detected the silvery tones of
+ Madame de la Fontaine's voice. Perhaps fifteen minutes
+ elapsed. Captain Bonhomme came out of the house, strode to
+ the spot where Dan was lying, and addressed him in excellent
+ English.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Monsieur; for purposes which it is superfluous to explain,
+ it is decided to extend to you for a while the hospitality of
+ my good ship the <i>Southern Cross</i>&#8212;a hospitality, I
+ may say, that your unceremonious eavesdropping has thrust
+ upon you. I will release your feet; and then, monsieur, you
+ follow my good Jean across the sands. If you are quiet, no
+ harm shall come to you. If you resist, <i>cher monsieur</i>,
+ it will be of painful duty that I entrust the contents of
+ this revolver into&#8212;<i>mais non! Vous comprenez,
+ n'est-ce pas?&#8212;Bien</i>!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He gave a sharp order to the seaman. The handkerchief about
+ Dan's ankles was untied, and he was roughly assisted to his
+ feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The snow is wet, eh! Yes, for the good wind is moist. Now,
+ <i>Allons</i>!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jean led the way, and Dan, deciding that he had no choice in
+ the matter, followed obediently. The captain brought up the
+ rear. As they went out through the gate, Dan turned for a
+ moment and looked back at the house. He could see the French
+ maid still at the kitchen window. At the same moment Captain
+ Bonhomme glanced back and ceremoniously raised his hat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Bonsoir, mam'zelle</i>."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Bonsoir, monsieur</i>," was the sharp reply, and the
+ window was lowered with a bang.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They went on in silence across the Dunes to the beach. There,
+ drawn up above high water line, they found a skiff. The
+ captain and Jean shoved off, sprang in, and the little boat
+ plunged into the combing waves. They reached the <i>Southern
+ Cross</i> without misadventure. The captain blew a call upon
+ a boatswain's whistle. A rope was lowered and Jean made the
+ skiff fast to the ladder at the schooner's side. The captain
+ took out his revolver and held it in his hand, while Jean
+ unloosed the cords that bound Dan's wrists.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now up, <i>mon ami</i>."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a moment Dan thought of risking a scuffle in the unsteady
+ skiff, but discretion proved the better part of valour, and
+ he climbed obediently on to the deck. The seaman stood close
+ by till the captain and Jean had clambered up after him. A
+ few words in French to his men, then Captain Bonhomme,
+ beckoning to Dan to follow, led the way down the companion.
+ He opened the door of a little cabin amidships and bade Frost
+ enter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You will find everything required for your comfort,
+ monsieur," he said, "and I trust you will make yourself at
+ home, as you say; and enjoy a good night and a sound sleep.
+ We can discuss our affairs in the morning."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And with the words, he closed the door, turned the key in the
+ lock, and left Dan to his reflections.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="PART3"><!-- PART3 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ PART III
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ THE SCHOONER IN THE COVE
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH11"><!-- CH11 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XI
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ THE SOUTHERN CROSS
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ Dan spent a miserable night. He had soon satisfied himself
+ that escape was impossible. A child could not have squeezed
+ through the port hole, and the stoutness of the
+ door&#8212;barred, he fancied, as well as locked on the
+ outside,&#8212;seemed to indicate that this particular cabin
+ had been constructed for the purpose of keeping an enemy out
+ of mischief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Young Frost's reflections, as at length he stretched himself
+ upon the bunk, were anything but agreeable. The reconnoitre
+ at the House on the Dunes had established nothing but what
+ they already practically knew&#8212;that the Marquis, the
+ lady, and the captain of the schooner were working together.
+ If they were responsible for Nancy's disappearance, as Dan
+ was convinced, he had not succeeded in getting a scrap of
+ evidence against them. And to cap the climax, he had stupidly
+ allowed himself to be captured. The method of his capture
+ seemed to him quite as ignominious as the fact.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was not particularly alarmed for his own safety. He did
+ not doubt that eventually he would escape, though at the
+ moment he could not imagine how; or, failing in that, he
+ supposed he would be released,&#8212;honorably discharged, as
+ it were,&#8212;when it was too late for him to interfere with
+ the designs of the conspirators. And this was the bitterest
+ reflection of all: that a carefully-planned conspiracy was on
+ foot, and no sooner had he and Tom realized it than through
+ sheer stupidity he must not only make it clear to the Marquis
+ and his colleagues that they were being watched, but must let
+ himself fall into their power. Poor Tom! thought Dan ruefully
+ as he tossed upon the little bunk, there must fall upon him
+ now the brunt of whatever was to be done for Nancy's rescue,
+ for the thwarting of whatever nefarious designs this gang of
+ French desperados were concocting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Escape! A dozen times and more he sprang from his bed to
+ press his face against the thick glass of the little port and
+ to rage futilely that he could not elongate his six feet of
+ anatomy, and slip through. In vain he would throw his weight
+ against the door, without so much as shaking it. And then he
+ would sink back upon the bunk and determine to conserve his
+ strength by snatching a bit of sleep. And he would
+ wait&#8212;since he must wait&#8212;till morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The gale had lashed itself into a fury; the rain was pouring
+ in torrents; and the ship rolled distressingly in the rising
+ sea. It was near dawn before Dan succeeded in getting to
+ sleep at all, but from then on for several hours he slept
+ heavily. When he awoke the storm, like many storms that come
+ out of the south, had exhausted itself. The rain had ceased,
+ the wind had fallen, and it was evident from the motion of
+ the ship, that the sea was going down. Dan sprang to the port
+ hole and peered out, and was thankful to realize that the
+ peep hole of his prison gave upon the shore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though it had stopped raining, the clouds were still grey and
+ lowering, and the morning light was weak and pale. The Dunes,
+ beyond the disturbed waters of the little cove, looked dirty
+ and bedraggled. The snow had been washed off the hillocks,
+ the little streams that here and there emptied into the Cove
+ had swollen to the size of respectable brooks, and the high
+ water of the night had strewn the beach with brown tangled
+ seaweed. There was no sign of human life in evidence. Dan
+ could just see the upper story of the House on the Dunes, but
+ no other habitation save the deserted fisherman's huts that
+ straggled along the beach.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His watch showed half-past seven when the evil-visaged Jean
+ unbarred the door, opened it about a foot, and thrust in upon
+ the floor a tray of food. Dan sprang forward and succeeded in
+ getting his foot into the opening, so that Jean could not
+ close the door. He was prepared to fight for his liberty.
+ Despite Jean's superior strength, Dan had the advantage in
+ that his own body acted as a lever, and for a moment it
+ seemed that he was to be successful; but the Frenchman, with
+ a violent execration, suddenly let go his hold on the knob,
+ the door swung in, and Dan fell back on all fours upon the
+ floor. By the time he had recovered himself for another dash,
+ he was confronted by Jean, a disagreeable leer upon his
+ unpleasant countenance and a cocked pistol in his hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan stood in his tracks. "I want to see Captain Bonhomme!" he
+ demanded, making up in the tone of his voice for the vigor
+ his movements suddenly lacked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Je ne parle pas englais</i>," was the irritating reply,
+ as Jean, menacing the prisoner with the pistol, reached for
+ the door and closed it with a snap. Dan had the chagrin of
+ hearing the key turn in the lock and the heavy bar fall into
+ place across the panels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He sat down ruefully, but after a moment or so took up the
+ tray and placed it on the bunk before him. He made a bad
+ breakfast off thick gruel, black bread and villainous coffee,
+ and then kicked his heels impatiently for an hour or more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eventually Jean reappeared, this time pistol in hand, and
+ behind him, to Dan's relief, Captain Bonhomme. The captain
+ entered the little cabin, leaving the door open behind him
+ while Jean stood in the passage on duty as guard. The swarthy
+ unattractive face of Captain Bonhomme wore this morning an
+ expression of sarcastic levity that was more irritating to
+ Frost than its ferocious anger had been the night before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Bon jour, monsieur</i>," said the captain in a tone of
+ obnoxious pleasantry. "I trust the night has gone well with
+ you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You will oblige me," snapped Dan for reply, "by omitting
+ your hypocritical courtesy. I demand to know what you mean by
+ this proceeding,&#8212;capturing me like a common thief and
+ imprisoning me on this confounded ship?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Captain Bonhomme's countenance quickly lost its factitious
+ cheerfulness. "Monsieur," he replied sharply, "I did not come
+ to you to bandy words. If you will reflect on the occupation
+ you were indulging last night at the moment we surprised you,
+ you will comprehend that it was certainly to be inferred
+ that, if you were not a thief, you were an eavesdropper;
+ which, to my way of thinking, is as bad. If you address me
+ again in that insulting tone, I shall leave you till such a
+ time as you may be willing to listen at least with common
+ courtesy to what I have to say. You are, young gentleman, a
+ prisoner on my ship and very much in my power. You have
+ grossly offended a distinguished countrywoman who is under my
+ protection in your barbarous country. Madame de la Fontaine,
+ however, has been good enough to interest herself in your
+ behalf and to beg that I shall not unceremoniously pitch you
+ overboard to feed the fishes as you so richly deserve."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan bit his lips, but for the moment kept silent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am come this morning," continued Captain Bonhomme, "not
+ for the pleasure of entering upon a discussion, but to inform
+ you that a little later in the morning, when this infernal
+ wind of yours has blown itself out, Madame de la Fontaine
+ proposes to come aboard. For reasons of her own, she does you
+ the honor to desire a conversation with you. I have to ask
+ that you will meet my distinguished patroness as the
+ gentleman you doubtless profess to be, and that you will give
+ me your word not to attempt to escape while Madame is on
+ board the ship."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I shall not give my word," protested Dan, "under any
+ circumstances to a pirate such as I take you to be."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Eh bien, monsieur</i>; in that case, you will appear
+ before Madame in irons. From your window, so admirably small,
+ you will see at what hour Madame comes aboard. If in the
+ meantime you have decided to give us your word of honour,
+ well and good; if you continue to display your freedom of
+ choice by the exercise of your stupidity, also, well and
+ good. And now, <i>an revoir</i>." Captain Bonhomme smiled
+ grimly, bowed again with insulting politeness, and left Dan
+ alone in the cabin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An hour, two hours passed. The wind had abated, the sun was
+ struggling to dissipate the murky bank of cloud that hung
+ from zenith to the eastern horizon. From his coign of vantage
+ at the little port hole Dan saw Madame de la Fontaine pick
+ her way across the Dunes and come upon the little beach. A
+ small boat had put off from the schooner and was being rowed
+ to shore by two seamen. The French lady gathered her skirts
+ about her ankles, and stepped lightly into the skiff, as the
+ men held it at the edge of the surf. The little boat was then
+ pushed off and rowed briskly toward the <i>Southern
+ Cross</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Half-an-hour passed before the door of Dan's cabin was opened
+ again, and Captain Bonhomme, attended by the faithful Jean,
+ reappeared. In the skipper's hand was a pair of irons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Monsieur," said the captain, holding up the irons, "Madame
+ de la Fontaine does you the honour of desiring an interview
+ in the saloon. May I venture to enquire your pleasure?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ignominy of appearing before his charming acquaintance of
+ the day before manacled like a criminal, was too much for
+ Dan's vanity. "I give you my word of honour," he said
+ gruffly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah, monsieur," murmured the captain, "permit me to applaud
+ your good taste. But let us be exact: until you are returned
+ to this cabin and are again under lock and key, that is to
+ say until Madame is safely upon shore again,&#8212;you give
+ me your word of honour as a gentleman to make no attempt to
+ escape?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, yes," said Dan, striving to conceal his irritation.
+ "But spare me, I beg, your explanations. As you know, I am
+ practically helpless. We understand each other. I trust that
+ Madame de la Fontaine will give me an explanation of the
+ outrage that you have refused."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Sans doute, sane doute</i>!" exclaimed the captain. He
+ waved his hand toward the door. "<i>Apr&eacute;s vous,
+ monsieur</i>. Our worthy Jean will lead the way."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Without more ado they left the little cabin that had served
+ as Dan's prison and traversed a narrow passageway aft to the
+ door of a little saloon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the saloon, seated in a deep arm chair by the side of the
+ table, was Madame de la Fontaine. She was clad in some soft
+ green gown, with furs about her neck and wrists, and a little
+ bonnet, adorned by the gay plumage of a tropical bird, worn
+ close upon her head. At first glance she was as bewitchingly
+ beautiful, as entirely charming, as she had seemed to Dan the
+ day before. He blushed to the roots of his hair and for the
+ moment quite forgot the extraordinary predicament in which he
+ was placed. Madame de la Fontaine rose, a bright smile
+ beaming from her soft blue eyes, and waited for Dan to
+ approach.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Good morning, Mr. Frost. This is charming of you. And now,
+ Captain Bonhomme, if you will be so kind,&#8212;" she turned
+ with her delightful smile to the skipper. "<i>Eh bien</i>,
+ Jean!" This last remark was uttered in a sharp tone of
+ command, very different from the silvery accents in which she
+ had spoken to Frost and the captain. Dan wondered at it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The disagreeable impression was but momentary, for the lady
+ turned again to Dan, engaged him with her frank and pleasant
+ glance, and young Frost forgot everything in the presence of
+ the most charming woman he had ever met.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Captain Bonhomme and his watchdog had disappeared, closing
+ the saloon door behind them. Dan and Madame de la Fontaine
+ were alone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Will you not seat yourself, monsieur?" she said. "We shall
+ then talk so much more at our ease."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thank you," Dan murmured vaguely, and advancing a step or
+ two nearer, seated himself in the first chair within reach.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah, not there, Mr. Frost," the lady protested with a little
+ laugh of amusement. "It will never be that we are able to
+ talk at so great a distance." She indicated a more
+ comfortable chair at much closer quarters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan obediently changed his seat, and waited for Madame de la
+ Fontaine to begin the conversation. But she continued for a
+ moment silently to regard him with a naive air of interest
+ and of unconcealed admiration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "May I ask," said Dan at length, disturbed by this scrutiny,
+ and rising to a courtesy that was in reality beyond him, "for
+ what reason you have done me the honour to wish to speak with
+ me?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Vraiment</i>," replied Madame de la Fontaine; "after the
+ events of last night there is need that we should have some
+ conversation. You are very young and I have reason to be
+ grateful to you for courtesy and kindness, so I have yielded
+ to impulse, against my judgment, to interfere with Captain
+ Bonhomme who has great anger with you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You are very kind, madame," Dan replied with dignity. "I am
+ to infer then that my liberty or my further unwarranted
+ imprisonment on this ship is to be determined by you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Mais non, Monsieur</i>. It is true only that I have a
+ little influence with Captain Bonhomme. Last night you were
+ watching me, so it interests me to know why."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I was watching Mrs. Heath's house," Dan answered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah! but I and my maid were alone in the room into which you
+ so unceremoniously looked, monsieur!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, madame, but why should you infer that my motive in
+ looking into that room was interest in your affairs?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I do not altogether assume that, Mr. Frost," the lady
+ protested. "I infer simply&#8212;but, pardon! you were to
+ say&#8212;?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Merely to ask you, madame, what Captain Bonhomme proposes to
+ do with me, should you not be so good as to use your
+ influence in my behalf?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For reply the lady shrugged her shoulders a trifle. "I have
+ fear, monsieur," she said after a moment, "that Captain
+ Bonhomme will take you for a sail, perhaps a long sail, on
+ the <i>Southern Cross</i>."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then," said Dan, "since there is no doubt in my mind of your
+ influence with the captain, I beg that you will have him
+ release me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is that that I desire, monsieur; and yet&#8212;?" Madame
+ de la Fontaine paused and glanced at her companion with a
+ charming little air of interrogation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And yet?" repeated Dan, flushing a little as he looked into
+ the lovely blue eyes that met his so frankly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I confess, monsieur, I must first discover if you are really
+ deserving of my efforts. I care to know very much why you
+ watched me last night at the House on the Dunes. For what
+ reason do you watch me at midnight? a stranger, a woman? Why
+ is it that my affairs give you interest? I would know."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her voice, her countenance expressed now only her sense of
+ injury, an injury which, as it were, she was striving not to
+ regard also as an insult. Under the persistent searching of
+ her soft glance, Dan felt himself very small indeed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Answer me, if you please," she said. This time Dan detected
+ just a trace of the sharpness with which she had dismissed
+ the obsequious Jean. It gave him courage and a sense of
+ protection from the fascination he knew that this strange
+ woman was successfully exerting over him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he replied, his glance encountered hers with frankness.
+ "Madame de la Fontaine, I told you yesterday morning, my
+ sister, Nancy Frost, has disappeared. We searched for her all
+ day in vain. Not a trace of her has been found. But certain
+ strange events have led me to suspect that certain persons
+ have had something to do with her disappearance and must know
+ her whereabouts. I will be frank Madame. One of the persons
+ whom I so suspect is yourself."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I!&#8212;<i>mon Dieu</i>! and why is it that you believe
+ this, Monsieur?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I suspect you, madame, because I suspect the Marquis de
+ Boisdhyver."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah! the French gentleman who is staying with you at the Inn
+ at the Red Oak, is it not so?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But&#8212;why me?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Because, madame, I discovered that you and the Marquis de
+ Boisdhyver have been in secret communication with each
+ other."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>C'est impossible. Te me comprende pas, monsieur</i>. Will
+ you tell me why it is that you can think that this Marquis de
+ Bois&#8212;what is the name?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "De Boisdhyver."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Merci</i>. Why is it that you can think that the Marquis
+ de Boisdhyver and I have been in secret communication?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Lights, green and red lights, have been used as signals; by
+ the Marquis at the Inn; by you, madame, from the House on the
+ Dunes; and by some one,&#8212;Captain Bonhomme, I
+ suppose,&#8212;from this ship."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Lights, you have seen lights?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Several times last night, Madame. My suspicions were
+ aroused. I was determined to find my sister. I resolved to
+ learn the meaning of those mysterious signals. My method was
+ stupid: I blundered, and as you have several times so gently
+ hinted, I am in your power."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a moment Madame de la Fontaine was silent, then she
+ looked quickly up; a half-vexed, half-amused expression
+ curling her pretty lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Look at me, monsieur," she said. "Do you know what you tell
+ me? That I am an adventuress?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan flushed suddenly as he met her steadfast gaze. "I have
+ stated only a suspicion, madame, to account for my own stupid
+ blundering. But if you think that my suspicions are
+ extraordinary, don't you think that our present situation and
+ conversation are also extraordinary, and that they might
+ rather confirm my suspicions?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madame de la Fontaine dropped her eyes with a perceptible
+ frown of displeasure; but again she looked up, smiling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>C'est drole</i>, monsieur, but I find you very
+ attractive? You are at once so naive and so clever?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan, finding nothing to reply to this unexpected remark, bit
+ his lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Will you not trust me?" she asked him suddenly, and putting
+ out her hand she touched his own with the tips of her
+ fingers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Poor Frost tingled at this unaccustomed contact.
+ "I&#8212;I&#8212;" he stammered awkwardly. "I have certainly
+ no desire to distrust you, madame."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And yet it is that you do distrust me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But what would you have me do?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah!" Her hand spontaneously closed upon his with a clasp
+ that delighted and yet disconcerted him. "I hope that we
+ shall make each other to understand."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What would you have me do?" Dan repeated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Monsieur, let me make to you a confession. I understand your
+ suspicions; I understand your desire to find if they are
+ true. You have reason; Monsieur le Marquis de Boisdhyver and
+ I have exchanged the mysterious signals that you have
+ witnessed. Why should I deny that which already you know?
+ Monsieur de Boisdhyver and I are occupied with affairs of
+ great importance, and it is necessary that all is kept
+ secret. But I believe, that it is that I can trust you,
+ monsieur."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And Nancy&#8212;?" exclaimed Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Pas si vite, pas si vite</i>!" said the lady, laughing
+ gayly, Dan's hand still in her friendly pressure. "All in
+ good time, <i>mon ami</i>. It is necessary before I confide
+ in you our little secret that I consult Monsieur le Marquis."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan's face betrayed his disappointment. "But you do know
+ about Nancy," he insisted; "you will assure me&#8212;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Of nothing, dear boy,"&#8212;and she withdrew her hand. "But
+ it had been so much better for us all if only Monsieur le
+ Marquis had at the first confided in you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madame de la Fontaine had risen now and was holding out her
+ hand to say good-bye.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is necessary that I return to the shore. I will see
+ Monsieur le Marquis this afternoon, and immediately
+ afterward&#8212;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But, madame, surely," Dan exclaimed, "I am to accompany
+ you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah! monsieur," she replied with a charming little smile,
+ "for the present you must rest content to be <i>mon
+ captif</i>. We must quite clearly understand each other
+ before&#8212;well. But you are too impetuous, Monsieur Dan.
+ For the moment I leave you here."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But Madame de la Fontaine," cried Dan, "I cannot
+ consent&#8212;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No! no!" she said, as with a gay laugh, she placed a cool
+ little hand across his mouth to prevent his finishing his
+ sentence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What absurd impulse fired his blood at this sudden
+ familiarity, Dan did not know; but, quite spontaneously, as
+ though all his life he had been in the habit of paying such
+ gallantries to charming ladies, he kissed the soft fingers
+ upon his lips. Madame de la Fontaine quickly withdrew them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah, <i>mon ami</i>;" she said, "I expected not to find here
+ <i>une telle galanterie</i>."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have offended you," murmured Dan, blushing furiously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah, <i>pas du tout</i>!" said Madame de la Fontaine. "You
+ are a dear boy, monsieur Dan, and I&#8212;well, I find you
+ charming."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As she said this, to Dan's complete confusion, Madame de la
+ Fontaine lightly brushed his cheeks with her lips, and
+ passing him rapidly, went out of the door of the saloon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH12"><!-- CH12 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XII
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ TOM TURNS THE TABLES
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ Owing to his long watch during the greater part of the night,
+ Pembroke slept heavily until late the next morning. Indeed,
+ he did not waken until Jesse, alarmed that neither Dan nor he
+ had appeared, knocked on their door. He sprang up quickly
+ then, and began to dress hastily. Dan's bed had not been
+ slept in, and Tom wondered how the night had gone with him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a few moments he was down stairs and in the
+ breakfast-room. He found the Marquis de Boisdhyver already at
+ table, pouring out his coffee, which Deborah had just placed
+ before him. Mrs. Frost had not appeared.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom murmured an apology for being late, and delayed the black
+ woman, who was on the point of leaving the room, by a
+ question.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Where is Mr. Dan?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sure an, Mass' Tom, I ain't seen him dis mornin' yet. Ain't
+ he done over-slept hisself like you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No; but I dare say he is about the place somewheres. All
+ right, Deb; bring my breakfast quickly, please."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You will pardon me," said Monsieur de Boisdhyver, "for
+ having begun without you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, certainly," said Tom; "Don't know what was the matter,
+ but I slept unusually soundly last night; that is, after I
+ got to sleep, for the storm kept me awake for hours."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Et moi aussi</i>," said the Marquis. "What wind! I am but
+ thankful it has exhausted itself at last. And Monsieur Frost,
+ he has also over-slept, you say?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No. He got up early without disturbing me. I guess he will
+ be in any minute now."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Marquis stirred his coffee and slowly sipped it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom made a hasty breakfast, and then went outside to
+ reconnoitre. He discovered no trace of his friend. There was
+ but one inference in his uneasy mind: Dan had met with some
+ misadventure at the House on the Dunes. At last, after
+ wandering about aimlessly for some time, he decided to tell
+ Jesse of his uneasiness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If Mr. Dan is not back by dinner time, I shall go over to
+ the House on the Dunes and try to find out what has become of
+ him. Heaven knows what has become of Miss Nancy. I don't like
+ that schooner, Jess, and its ugly crew, lying there in the
+ Cove. It's all a darn queer business."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They're certainly a rough-looking lot, Mr. Tom, as I saw
+ when I was on the beach yesterday. And she don't appear to
+ have any particular business anchoring there. I hope they've
+ nothing to do with Miss Nancy's and Mr. Dan's being away."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't know, Jess, what to think. But listen here I want
+ you to go into the Port this morning and engage Ezra Manners
+ to come out here and stay with us for a week or so. Don't
+ tell him too much, but I guess Ezra won't balk at the notion
+ of a scrap. Bring him out with you, and offer to pay him
+ enough to make sure of his coming. And I want you to go to
+ Breeze's on the Parade and get some guns and powder, enough
+ to arm every blessed soul of us in the Inn. Charge the stuff
+ to me. And be careful how you bring it back, for I don't want
+ any one here to know about it, particularly the old
+ Frenchman. Understand? You ought to get back by dinner-time,
+ if you start at once. I'll stay here till you return."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I'll start right off, sir. Guess I'll have to drive, for the
+ rain'll have washed the snow off the roads. I'll be back by
+ halfpast twelve, Mr. Tom."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "All right," said Pembroke. "Be sure not to let any one know
+ what you are doing."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sure I won't, sir. I've been pretty much worried myself
+ about Miss Nancy. Didn't seem a bit like Miss Nance to go off
+ without sayin' a word to anybody.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, hurry along now, Jesse."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, sir."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom's next task was to try to explain to Mrs. Frost without
+ alarming her. She happily jumped to the idea that Dan had
+ gotten trace of Nancy, had gone to fetch her, and would
+ return with her before nightfall. So Tom left her quite
+ cheerfully knitting in her room for the day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From time to time during the morning Tom wandered into the
+ bar always to find Monsieur de Boisdhyver absorbed in his
+ writing before the fire. The morning passed&#8212;a long
+ restless morning for Pembroke&#8212;and nothing had happened.
+ Dan had not returned. He tried to think out a plan of action.
+ He went into the north wing of the Inn and barricaded the
+ door leading from the bowling alley into the hallway. He made
+ sure that all other doors and windows were fastened, and he
+ put the key of the door that opened from the bar into the old
+ wing into his pocket. Then he looked at the doors and windows
+ in the south wing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About noon, as he was standing at an upper window anxiously
+ scanning the landscape for any sign of his friend, Tom saw
+ the Marquis, wrapped in his great black cloak, emerge from
+ the gallery, go down the steps by the Red Oak, and walk
+ rapidly down the avenue of maples. He went along the Port
+ Road, to the point where a little road branched off and led
+ to the beach of the Cove; here he turned and walked in the
+ direction of the beach. With the field glass Tom could follow
+ him quite easily as he picked his way through the slush.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Beyond, on the waters of the Cove, the <i>Southern Cross</i>
+ rode at anchor. A small boat had put off from the schooner,
+ two seamen at the oars, and a woman seated in the stern. The
+ boat reached the shore, the lady was lifted out upon the
+ sands, the men jumped in again, pushed off and rowed briskly
+ back to the schooner. Tom could not distinguish the lady's
+ features, but from the style of her dress, cut in so
+ different a fashion than that the ladies of Caesarea were
+ wont to display, and from the character of her easy graceful
+ walk, he judged that that was the Madame de la Fontaine, of
+ whom Dan had told him the day before. The lady, whoever she
+ might be, advanced along the beach and turned into the road
+ down which the Marquis de Boisdhyver was going to meet her.
+ Tom could see her extend her hand, and the old gentleman,
+ bending ceremoniously, lift it to his lips. Then leaning
+ against a stone wall beside a meadow of bedraggled snow, they
+ engaged in animated conversation. The lady talked, the
+ Marquis talked. They shrugged their shoulders, they nodded
+ their heads, they pointed this way and then that. Poor Tom
+ felt he must know what was being said. At last, their
+ conference ended, they parted as ceremoniously as they had
+ met, the lady starting across the Dunes and the Marquis
+ retracing his steps toward the Inn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the meantime, fortunately before the Marquis reached the
+ Port Road, Jesse had returned, accompanied by the able-bodied
+ Ezra Manners, and laden with the supply of arms and
+ ammunition that Pembroke had ordered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Within half-an-hour Tom and Monsieur de Boisdhyver were
+ seated together in the dining-room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah, and where is Monsieur Dan?" asked the Marquis, with an
+ affectation of cheerfulness. "Is he not returned?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not yet, monsieur," Tom replied grimly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But you have heard from him?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, yes," was Tom's answer; "I have heard from him of
+ course."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And from Mademoiselle Nancy, I trust, also?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, from Nancy also."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah, I am so relieved, Monsieur Pembroke. I was most anxious
+ for their safety. One knows not what may happen. We shall
+ have a charming little reunion at supper, <i>n'est-ce
+ pas</i>?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Delightful," said Tom, but in a tone of voice that did not
+ encourage the Marquis to ask further questions or to continue
+ his comments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After dinner, Tom slipped the field glass beneath his jacket,
+ and ran upstairs to take another view of the countryside. To
+ his great satisfaction he saw a dark spot moving across the
+ snowy dunes and recognized the lady of the morning.
+ Apparently she was on her way to the Cove again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He took a loaded pistol, ran down stairs, gave Jesse strict
+ orders to keep his eye on the Marquis, saddled his horse, and
+ galloped off madly for Mrs. Meath's house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he reached the gate of the farmhouse, Tom hitched his
+ horse to the fence, went rapidly up the little walk, and
+ knocked boldly and loudly on the front door. Repeated and
+ prolonged knocking brought no response. He tried the door and
+ found it fastened. He walked about the house. Every window on
+ the ground floor was tightly closed and barred. There was no
+ sign of life. He knocked at the door of the kitchen, but with
+ no result. He tried it, and found it also locked. Determined
+ not to be thwarted in his effort to see Mrs. Meath, he kicked
+ vigourously against the door with his great hob-nailed boots.
+ Unsuccessful in this, he detached a rail from the top of the
+ fence and used it against the door as a battering-ram. At the
+ first crash of timbers, the sash of a window in the second
+ story, directly above the kitchen, was thrown open, and a
+ dark-eyed, dark-haired, excessively angry-looking, young
+ woman thrust her head out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Qui va la</i>?" she exclaimed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well," said Tom, smiling a little in spite of himself, for
+ the young woman was in a state of great indignation. "I want
+ to see Mrs. Meath. I may say, I am determined to see Mrs.
+ Meath."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Peste! Je ne parle pas anglais</i>!" snapped the damsel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Very well then, mademoiselle, I'll try you in French," said
+ Tom. And in very bad French indeed, scarcely even the French
+ of Dr. Watson's school for the sons of gentlemen, Pembroke
+ repeated his remarks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Je ne comprend pas</i>," said the young woman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom essayed his explanation again, but whether the youthful
+ female in the window could or would not understand, she kept
+ repeating in the midst of his every sentence "<i>Je ne parle
+ pas anglais</i>," till Tom lost his temper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Bien</i>, my fine girl," he exclaimed at last; "I am
+ going to enter this house. If you won't open the door, I will
+ batter it down. Understand? <i>Comprenez-vous</i>?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Je ne parle pas anglais</i>."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As you will." He raised the fence-rail again and made as if
+ to ram the door. "<i>Ouvrez la porte</i>! Do you understand
+ that?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Bete</i>!" cried the girl, withdrawing her head and
+ slamming down the window.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom waited a moment to see if his threats had been effective,
+ and was relieved by hearing the bar within removed and the
+ key turned in the lock. The door was opened, and the young
+ woman stood on the sill and volleyed forth a series of French
+ execrations that made Tom wince, though he did not understand
+ a word she was saying. Despite her protests, he brushed her
+ aside and stalked into the house. He went rapidly from room
+ to room, upstairs and down, from garret to cellar, the girl
+ following him with her chorus of abusive reproach. She might
+ have held her peace, thought Tom, for within half-an-hour he
+ was convinced that there was not a person in the House on the
+ Dunes save himself and his excited companion. All he
+ discovered for his pains was that old Mrs. Meath was also
+ among the missing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Ou est Madame Meath</i>?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Madame Meath! Que voulez vous? Je ne connais pas Madame
+ Meath</i>...." And infinitely more of which Tom could gather
+ neither head nor tail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Satisfied at last that there was nothing to be gained by
+ further search or parley with the woman, he thanked her
+ civilly enough and went out. He unhitched his horse, vaulted
+ into the saddle, and dashed back, as fast as his beast could
+ be urged to carry him, to the Inn. He was certain now that
+ the schooner held the secret of his vanished friends, and it
+ occurred to him to play their own game and turn the tables on
+ Monsieur the Marquis de Boisdhyver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arrived at the Inn, Tom turned his horse, white with lather,
+ over to Jesse; made sure that the Marquis was in the bar; and
+ then, with the help of Manners, rapidly made a few
+ preparations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was about five o'clock when, his arrangements completed,
+ he returned to the bar, where Monsieur de Boisdhyver was
+ quietly taking his tea. Tom bowed to the old gentleman,
+ seated himself in a great chair about five feet away, and
+ somewhat ostentatiously took from his pocket a pistol, laid
+ it on the arm of his chair, and let his fingers lightly play
+ upon the handle. The old marquis watched Pembroke's movements
+ out of the corner of his eye, still somewhat deliberately
+ sipping his tea. Manners, meanwhile, had entered, and stood
+ respectfully in the doorway, oddly enough also with a pistol
+ in his hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly Monsieur de Boisdhyver placed his teacup on the
+ table, and leaning back in his chair, surveyed Tom with an
+ air of indignant astonishment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Monsieur Pembroke," he said, "to what am I to attribute
+ these so unusual attentions? Is it that you are mad?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You may attribute these unusual attentions, marquis, to the
+ fact that from now on, you are not a guest of the Inn at the
+ Red Oak, but a prisoner."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah!" exclaimed the Marquis with a start, as he made a
+ spasmodic motion toward the pocket of his coat. But if his
+ intention had been to draw a weapon, Tom was too quick for
+ him. The Marquis found himself staring into the barrel of a
+ pistol and heard the unpleasant click of the trigger as it
+ was cocked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old gentleman paled, whether with fright or indignation,
+ Tom was not concerned to know. "You will please keep
+ perfectly still, marquis."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Monsieur Pembroke," exclaimed the old gentleman,
+ "<i>C'est</i> abominable, outrageous, <i>Mon Dieu</i>, what
+ insult!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Manners," said Tom, "kindly search that gentleman and put
+ his firearms out of his reach."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Monsieur, <i>c'est extraordinaire</i>. I protest."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Quick, Ezra," replied Tom, "or one of us is likely to know
+ how it feels to have a bullet in his skin. Up with your
+ hands, marquis."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Monsieur de Boisdhyver obeyed perforce, while Manners quickly
+ searched him, removed a small pistol from his coat pocket and
+ a stiletto from his waistcoat, and handed them to Tom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I thought as much," said Pembroke, slipping them into his
+ pocket. "Now, sir, you will oblige me by dropping that
+ attitude of surprised indignation."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Monsieur," said the Marquis, "What is it that you do? Why is
+ it that you so insult me?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Monsieur, I will explain. You are my prisoner. I intend to
+ lock you up safely and securely until my friend and his
+ sister return, unharmed, to the Inn. When they are safe at
+ home, when Madame de la Fontaine has taken her departure from
+ the House on the Dunes, and when the <i>Southern Cross</i>
+ has sailed out of the Strathsey, we shall release you and see
+ you also safely out of this country. Is that clear?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Mais, monsieur</i>&#8212;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am quite convinced that you know where Nancy is and what
+ has happened to Dan. As my friends are probably in your power
+ or in the power of your friends, so, dear marquis, you are in
+ mine. If you wish to regain your own liberty, you will have
+ to see that they have theirs. Now kindly follow Manners; it
+ will give him pleasure to show you to your apartment. There
+ you may burn either red or green lights, and I am sure the
+ snowbirds and rabbits of Lovel's Woods will enjoy them. After
+ you, monsieur."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sir, I refuse."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My dear marquis, do not make me add force to discourtesy.
+ After you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Marquis bowed ironically, shrugged his shoulders, and
+ followed Manners up the stairs. He was ushered into a chamber
+ on the west side of the Inn, whose windows, had they not been
+ heavily barred, would have given him a view but of the thick
+ tangles of the Woods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I trust you will be able to make yourself comfortable here,"
+ said Tom. "Your meals will be served at the accustomed hours.
+ I shall return myself in a short time, and perhaps by then
+ you will have reconciled yourself to the insult I have
+ offered you and be prepared to talk with me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With that Tom bowed as ironically as the Marquis had done,
+ went out and closed the door, and securely locked and barred
+ it outside. Monsieur de Boisdhyver was left to his
+ reflections.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH13"><!-- CH13 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIII
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ MADAME DE LA FONTAINE
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ For several hours after his return to the little cabin Dan
+ had ample leisure in which to think over his extraordinary
+ interview. There could be no doubt that the conspirators, for
+ such he had come to call them to himself, were determined and
+ desperate enough to go to any lengths in accomplishing their
+ designs. Whether his suspicions and activity in seeking Nancy
+ had precipitated their plans, his unexpected capture seemed
+ to embarrass his captors as much as it did himself. At least,
+ he gathered this from Madame de la Fontaine's conversation.
+ Whatever might be the motive of the lady's proposed
+ confidence, poor Frost could see nothing for it but to await
+ their disclosure and then seize whatever advantage they might
+ open to him. Notwithstanding the fact that Dan had cautioned
+ himself against trusting the flattery of his charming
+ visitor, notwithstanding that he told himself to be
+ forewarned, even by his own suspicions, was to be forearmed,
+ he was in reality unconscious of the degree to which he had
+ proved susceptible to the lady's blandishments, if indeed she
+ had employed blandishments and had not merely given him the
+ evidence of a good heart upon which his youth and
+ naivet&eacute; had made a genuine impression.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan's experiences with girls up to this time had been
+ limited. His emotional nature had never, as yet, been deeply
+ stirred. But no one could be insensible to Madame de la
+ Fontaine's beauty and charm, and her delightfully natural
+ familiarity; and, finally, her fleeting kiss had seemed to
+ Dan but evidence of a warm impulsive heart. To be sure, with
+ all the good will in the world, he could not acquit her of
+ being concerned in a mysterious plot&#8212;indeed, had she
+ not admitted so much?&#8212;though, also, he must in justice
+ remember that he knew very little of the nature of the plot
+ in question.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he paced restlessly back and forth the length of his
+ prison, he tried to think clearly of the accumulating
+ mystery. Was there a hidden treasure and how did the Marquis
+ know about it? What part had the <i>Southern Cross</i> to
+ play with its diabolical looking captain, and what could have
+ become of Nancy? Then why had Madame de la Fontaine&#8212;but
+ again his cheek would burn and remembrance of the bewitching
+ Frenchwoman blotted out all else.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At half-past twelve Captain Bonhomme appeared again. This
+ time he invited Dan to partake of luncheon with him on the
+ condition once more of a parole. And Dan accepted. He and the
+ Captain made their luncheon together, attended by the
+ faithful Jean; and, though no mention was made to their
+ anomalous position, the meal was not altogether a comfortable
+ one. Captain Bonhomme asked a great many questions about the
+ country, to which Frost was inclined to give but the briefest
+ replies; nor, on his part, did he show more disposition to be
+ communicative in response to Dan's questions about France.
+ Jean regarded the situation with obviously surly disapproval.
+ When the meal was finished, Frost was conducted back to his
+ little cabin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About two o'clock he saw the small boat put off for shore,
+ and glancing in that direction, he was relieved to see Madame
+ de la Fontaine already waiting upon the beach. Within
+ half-an-hour he was again in her presence in the Captain's
+ saloon, where their conversation had taken place in the
+ morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lady received him graciously. "Ah! monsieur Dan, I fear
+ you have had a weary day of it; but it was impossible for me
+ to return sooner."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is very kind of you to return at all," replied Dan,
+ gallantly enough.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now, Monsieur, you are anxious, I know, that I keep my
+ promise of the morning."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Most anxious," said Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Without doubt. Come here, my friend, sit near me and listen
+ attentively to a long story."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You have consulted with the Marquis?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Mais oui</i>. It was difficult, but I have brought him to
+ my way of thinking. I am certain that it was an error in the
+ first place not taking you into our confidence. <i>Eh
+ bien</i>! Tell me, do you know how your foster-sister came to
+ be in the charge of your mother at the Inn at the Red Oak?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, I know what my mother has told me. The child was
+ abandoned to her rather than left in her charge."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Mais non</i>" said Madame de la Fontaine; "General
+ Pointelle was impelled to act as he did by the strongest
+ motives,&#8212;nothing less than the tremendous task,
+ undertaken for his country, to liberate the Emperor Napoleon
+ from Elba. General Pointelle was a soldier,&#8212;more, he
+ was a mar&eacute;chal of the Empire; the greatest
+ responsibilities devolved upon him. It was impossible for him
+ to be burdened with a child."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But why, madame, did he not take my mother into his
+ confidence?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Secrecy was imperative, monsieur. Even to this day, you do
+ not know who General Pointelle actually was. His was a name
+ well-known in France, glorious in the annals of the Empire; a
+ name, too, familiar to you in a somewhat different
+ connection. 'General Pointelle' was the <i>nom-de-guerre</i>,
+ as it were, of Fran&ccedil;ois, Marquis de Boisdhyver,
+ mar&eacute;chal de France."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Fran&ccedil;ois! you say, <i>Fran&ccedil;ois</i>!" exclaimed
+ Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Mais oui</i>, monsieur; but that should hardly astonish
+ you so much as the fact that he was a Boisdhyver. Why are you
+ surprised?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Simply, madame," exclaimed Dan hastily, "by the fact that it
+ is the same name as that of our Marquis."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not quite," corrected the lady; "our Marquis&#8212;as you
+ say&#8212;is Marie-Anne-Tim&eacute;lon-Armand de Boisdhyver,
+ the General's younger brother."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah! and therefore Nancy's uncle?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, the uncle of Nancy Frost, or of Eloise de Boisdhyver."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I see," said Dan. "I begin to see."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Eh bien</i>, monsieur. General Pointelle&#8212;the
+ mar&eacute;chal de Boisdhyver,&#8212;left the Inn at the Red
+ Oak upon a mission for the Emperor, then at Elba.
+ <i>H&eacute;las</i>! that mission ended with disaster after
+ the Hundred Days; for, as you know, the Emperor was sent in
+ exile to St. Helena; and, as you may not know, the
+ Mar&eacute;chal de Boisdhyver was killed on the plains of
+ Waterloo. <i>Allons</i>; when he left Deal, he concealed in a
+ hidden chamber, which one enters, I believe, from a room you
+ call the Oak Parlour, a large treasure, of jewels and gold.
+ This treasure, saved from the <i>debacle</i> in France, he
+ had brought with him to America, and he hid it in the Inn,
+ for the future of his little daughter Eloise. You remember
+ that your mother was to hear something of advantage to her
+ and the child, did not the General return. It was the secret
+ of the treasure and the directions to find it. Well,
+ Monsieur, at Waterloo, you must know, the Mar&eacute;chal and
+ his brother, the present Marquis, fought side by side.
+ Fran&ccedil;ois de Boisdhyver fell, nobly fighting for the
+ glory of France; Marie-Anne had the good fortune to preserve
+ his life, but was taken prisoner by the English. Before the
+ Mar&eacute;chal received his death wound, the two brothers
+ spoke with each other for the last time. In that moment,
+ monsieur, the Marquis Fran&ccedil;ois revealed to the Marquis
+ Marie-Anne that he had abandoned his daughter in America and
+ that he had concealed in your old inn a treasure sufficient
+ to provide for her future. He charged his brother to go to
+ America, if he survived the battle; claim the little Eloise;
+ rescue the treasure, and return with her to France and
+ restore the fallen fortunes of the House of Boisdhyver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It took the Marquis Marie-Anne a long time to carry out his
+ brother's dying injunctions," said Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah! but yes. You do not realize that the Marquis Marie-Anne,
+ after the fall of Napoleon, spent many years in a military
+ prison in England, for I have already told you that he fell
+ into the hands of the enemy on the field of Waterloo. When at
+ last he was released, he was aged, broken, and in poverty.
+ His brother, in those dreadful moments on the battlefield,
+ had been able to give him but the briefest description of the
+ Inn at the Red Oak and the hidden treasure. He did not tell
+ him where the treasure was, but only how he might obtain the
+ paper of instructions which the Mar&eacute;chal had concealed
+ in a curiously-carved old cabinet in the Oak Parlour. The
+ Mar&eacute;chal, monsieur, loved the mysterious, and chose
+ the device of tearing into two parts this paper of directions
+ and concealing them in different hiding-places of the
+ cabinet. Those directions, after many years, grew vague in
+ the younger brother's memory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Eh bien</i>, the Marquis was at last able to make the
+ journey to this country. You must remember he had nothing
+ wherewith to prove his story, if he gave you his confidence
+ at once; and so, he decided, to investigate quietly alone.
+ But he won the confidence of Mademoiselle Nancy,&#8212;that
+ is, of his niece, Eloise de Boisdhyver,&#8212;and revealed to
+ her the secret of her identity and the mysterious story of
+ the treasure. You follow me in all this, Monsieur Dan?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Perfectly, madame," Frost replied. "But as yet you have told
+ me nothing of your own connection with this strange history."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Pardon, dear boy," rejoined Madame de la Fontaine; "I was
+ about to do so, but there is so much to tell. My own
+ connection with the affair is quite simple. I am an old
+ friend, one of the oldest, of Monsieur le Marquis de
+ Boisdhyver, and, when I was a very young girl, I knew the
+ Mar&eacute;chal himself. It has been my happiness to be able
+ to prove my friendship for a noble and a fallen family. One
+ day last summer, Monsieur de Boisdhyver told me his brother's
+ dying words, and it was I, Monsieur Dan, who was able to give
+ the money for this strange expedition. The poor Marquis had
+ lost quite all his fortune."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I understand," said Frost. "But, yet, madame, I do not see
+ the necessity for the secrecy, the mystery, for these strange
+ signals at night, for these midnight investigations, for this
+ schooner and its rough crew, for Nancy's disappearance, for
+ my own imprisonment here."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Please, please," murmured Madame de la Fontaine, as she held
+ up her hands in smiling protest. "You go too fast for me.
+ <i>Un moment, mon ami, un moment</i>. It was sixteen years
+ ago that the Mar&eacute;chal de Boisdhyver was a guest at the
+ Inn at the Red Oak. You forget that the Marquis de Boisdhyver
+ had no proof of his right to the treasure, save his own
+ story, save his account of his brother's instructions on the
+ field of Waterloo. By telling all he might have awakened
+ deeper suspicions than by secrecy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That, I must say," Dan interrupted, "would hardly be
+ possible."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So!" exclaimed Madame de la Fontaine, with an accent of
+ displeasure. "<i>Ecoutez</i>! Monsieur le Marquis was to come
+ a month in advance, as he did come; take up his quarters at
+ the Inn; reconnoitre the ground; and win, if possible, the
+ confidence and aid of mademoiselle. He fortunately succeeded
+ in this last, for he found it otherwise impossible to enter
+ into the old wing of the Inn and examine the Oak Parlour.
+ With the assistance of Eloise, this was accomplished at last,
+ and the paper of directions was found; at least, found in
+ part.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then I, having impressed the services of Captain Bonhomme
+ and his ship the <i>Southern Cross</i>, set sail and arrived
+ at the House on the Dunes only a few days ago, as you already
+ know. The signals that you saw flashing at night were to
+ indicate that all was well."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The green light, I suppose," commented Dan, "was to indicate
+ that; and the red&#8212;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Was the signal of danger. Because the Marquis discovered
+ last night that you were not in the house; he flashed the
+ warning that made Captain Bonhomme go to the House on the
+ Dunes. Quite recently the manners of your friend,
+ Mr.&#8212;eh&#8212;?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Pembroke?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, Mr. Pembroke&#8212;led the Marquis to believe that he
+ was being watched.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I understand," said Dan, "but nothing you have told me so
+ far, madame, accounts for Nancy's disappearance, and I am as
+ anxious as ever to know where she is."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mademoiselle is perfectly safe, Monsieur Dan; I assure you.
+ She left the Inn because she had fear of betraying our plans,
+ particularly as she loved your friend, Mr. Pembroke."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is still strange to me, madame, that Nancy should
+ distrust her oldest and best friends. But now you will let me
+ see her?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Of course I shall soon, very soon, my dear boy. I have told
+ you all, and now you will aid me to find the treasure that is
+ your foster-sister's heritage, will you not?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why certainly I want Nancy to have what is hers," replied
+ Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Bravo, my friend. We are to count you one of us, I am sure."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Just a moment," said Dan, resisting the temptation to touch
+ the little hand that had been placed impulsively upon his
+ arm. "May I ask one more question?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A thousand, my dear, if you desire."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why then, since until last night everything has gone as you
+ planned it, why has not the treasure already been
+ discovered?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Because, <i>mon ami</i>; the Marquis has only been able to
+ visit the Oak Parlour at night. And also it was decided to
+ wait until I arrived."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "With the schooner?" suggested Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "With the schooner, if you will. And you may remember that it
+ was only the day before yesterday that I reached your so
+ hospitable countryside."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah! I understand; so then all that you desire of me, madame,
+ is that I shall permit the Marquis or anyone else whom you
+ may select for the purpose, to make such investigation of the
+ Oak Parlour as is desired."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, my friend; and also there is yet another thing that we
+ desire."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But suppose, madame, that I cannot agree to that?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah! <i>cher ami</i>, but you will. I confess&#8212;you must
+ remember that the Marquis de Boisdhyver has been a
+ soldier&#8212;that my friends have not agreed with me
+ entirely. It has seemed to them simpler that we should keep
+ you a prisoner on this ship, as we could so easily do, until
+ our mission is accomplished. But,&#8212;I like you too much
+ to agree to that."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan flushed a trifle, but he was not yet quite sure enough to
+ fall in entirely with his charming gaoler's suggestions.
+ "Madame de la Fontaine," he said after a moment's reflection,
+ "I am greatly obliged to you for explaining the situation to
+ me so fully. I shall be only too happy to help you,
+ particularly in anything that is for the benefit of Nancy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I was sure of it. Now, my friend, there is a service that
+ you can immediately render."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And that is?" asked Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To entrust to me the other half of the paper of directions
+ written by Fran&ccedil;ois de Boisdhyver, which you found in
+ a secret cubby-hole in the old cabinet."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What makes you think that I was successful in finding that,
+ when the Marquis failed?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Because, at first having forgotten his precise directions
+ after so many years, the Marquis could not find the fourth
+ and last hiding-place in the cabinet, in which he knew the
+ Mar&eacute;chal had placed the other half of the torn scrap
+ of paper. Another time he did find the cubby-hole, and it was
+ empty. So knowing he was watched by you and Mr. Pembroke, he
+ decided that you must have found it. Is it not so, that you
+ have it?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is certainly not in my possession at this moment," said
+ Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, but you have it?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And if I have?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is necessary for our success."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then, my first service, is to put you into complete
+ possession of the secret?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If you will so express it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Very well, madame, I will do so; but, on one condition."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And what is that, my friend?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That I be allowed to see Nancy, and that she herself shall
+ ask me to do as you desire."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a moment Madame de la Fontaine was silent. "<i>Eh
+ bien</i>," she said at last, "you do not trust me?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But, dear madame, think of my situation, it is hard for me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah! I know it, believe me. <i>C'est difficile</i>. But I
+ hoped you would trust me as I have you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Indeed, madame," exclaimed Dan, "I must try to think of
+ everything, the mystery, this extraordinary mission upon
+ which you are engaged, the fact that I am quite literally
+ your prisoner. When I think about you, I know only you are
+ beautiful, that you are lovely, and that I am happy near
+ you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She looked at him for a moment with a glance of anxious
+ interrogation, as if to ask were it safe for her to believe
+ these protestations. "You say, my friend," she asked at
+ length, "that you care a little for me, for just me? <i>C'est
+ impossible</i>. If Claire de la Fontaine could believe that,
+ understand me, monsieur, it would be very sweet and very
+ precious to her."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I do care," cried Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah!" she exclaimed. "You have touched my heart. I am not a
+ young girl, <i>mon ami</i>, but I confess that you have made
+ me to know again the dreams of youth."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Only let me prove that I care," cried Dan, considering but
+ little now to what he committed himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Let me prove," cried she, "that I too believe in you. I must
+ first see the Marquis, and then, tonight, if it can be
+ arranged, you shall receive from Eloise de Boisdhyver's own
+ lips the request I have made of you. But if, for any reason,
+ this cannot be arranged for to-night, you must be patient
+ till morning; you must trust me to the extent of remaining on
+ this ship. I cannot act entirely on my own judgment, but I
+ assure you that in the end my judgment will prevail. And now,
+ <i>au revoir</i>."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She placed her hand in his, and responded to the impulsive
+ pressure with which he clasped it. Their eyes met; in Dan's
+ the frankest expression of her conquest of his emotions; in
+ her's a glance at once tender and sad, above all a glance
+ that seemed to search his spirit for assurance that he was in
+ earnest. Suddenly fired by her alluring beauty, Dan drew her
+ to him and bent his head to hers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah! my friend," she murmured, "you are taking an unfair
+ advantage of the fact that this morning I too rashly yielded
+ to an impulse."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I cannot help it," Dan stammered. "You bewitch me." He bent
+ lower to kiss her cheek, when he suddenly thrilled to the
+ realization that his lips had met hers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A moment later Madame de la Fontaine was gone and Captain
+ Bonhomme had reappeared in the doorway.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH14"><!-- CH14 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIV
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ IN THE FOG
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ Tom Pembroke was as good as his word. He returned to the
+ little room, in which he had confined the Marquis, within an
+ hour after he had left him. It was then nearly supper-time
+ and dusk was fast settling upon the gloomy countryside. An
+ unwonted calm had fallen upon land and sea after the sharp
+ blow of the previous night, but the sky was still gray and
+ there was promise of more rain, if not of wind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To Tom's indignation and alarm, though scarcely to his
+ surprise, there had been no sign or word from Dan or Nancy.
+ Shortly after he had left the Marquis, he saw, by aid of the
+ field-glass, Madame de la Fontaine, attended by two seamen,
+ leave the schooner and return to the House on the Dunes. He
+ smiled a little as he thought of the account the lively young
+ maid-servant would give of his recent visit. But withal, he
+ felt very much as if he were playing a game of blind man's
+ buff and that he was "it." He was impatient for his interview
+ with the Marquis, though he was but little hopeful that an
+ hour's confinement would have been sufficient to bring the
+ old gentleman to terms. Nor was he to be surprised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He found Monsieur de Boisdhyver huddled in a great arm chair
+ near the fire that that been kindled on the hearth of his
+ prison. The Marquis glanced up, as Tom entered, but dropped
+ his eyes at once and offered him no greeting. Tom placed his
+ candle on the table and, drawing up a chair, seated himself
+ between the Marquis and the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, sir," he said at last, "as I promised you, I have
+ returned within an hour. Have you anything to say to me?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Have I anything to say to you!" exclaimed the Marquis. "For
+ why, monsieur? If I venture to express my astonishment and
+ indignation at the way I am treated, you subject me to a
+ barbarity that could be matched no where else in the
+ civilized world than in this extraordinary country. My life
+ is menaced with firearms. My protests are sneered at. I have
+ left but one inference&#8212;you have gone mad."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, marquis," said Pembroke, "I am not mad. I am simply
+ determined that the mysteries by which we have been
+ surrounded and of which you are the center, shall cease. You
+ have a free choice: put me in the way of getting my friend
+ and his sister back to the Inn, or resign yourself to a
+ prolonged confinement in this room."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But monsieur I have nothing to communicate to you concerning
+ the disappearance of your friends."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Pardon me, marquis," returned Pembroke; "you have much to
+ communicate to me. Perhaps you are not aware that I know the
+ motive of your coming to the Inn at the Red Oak; that I know
+ the reason for your prolonged stay here; that I know of the
+ influence that you have acquired over Nancy Frost; and that I
+ have been a witness of your midnight prowlings about the Inn.
+ Nor am I in ignorance of your connection with the
+ rascally-looking captain of the schooner at anchor in the
+ Cove and with the mysterious woman, who has taken possession
+ of the House on the Dunes. I am convinced that you know what
+ has become of Dan as well as what has happened to Nancy. And,
+ believe me, I am determined to find out."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Bien</i>!" exclaimed Monsieur de Boisdhyver, "permit me
+ to wish you good luck in your undertaking. I repeat, Monsieur
+ Pembroke, I have no information to give to you. I do not know
+ to what extent I have been watched, but I may say with truth
+ that my actions do not in the least concern you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They concern my friends," said Tom. "Dan, as you know, is
+ more to me than a brother; and as for his sister Nancy, I
+ hope and expect to make her my wife."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In that case," rejoined the Marquis with ill-concealed
+ irony, "I may be permitted to offer to you my
+ congratulations. But even so, monsieur, there is nothing that
+ I can do to facilitate your matrimonial plans."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You refuse then to come to terms?" asked Pembroke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Marquis raised his hands with a gesture of despair. "What
+ shall I say, monsieur? If you insisted upon my flying from
+ here to yonder beach, I might have all the desire in the
+ world to oblige you, but the fact would remain that I was
+ without the means of doing so. Since you are so little
+ disposed to accept my protestations, I will no longer make
+ them, but simply decline your proposal. And, pardon me, but
+ so long as I am submitted to the indignity of this
+ confinement, it would be a courtesy that I should appreciate
+ if you would spare me your company."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Very good," said Tom. "Your meals will be served regularly;
+ and you may ask the servant for anything necessary. I shall
+ not visit you again until you request me to do so."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Merci</i>," said the Marquis drily. He rose from his seat
+ as Dan turned toward the door, and bowed ironically.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pembroke went downstairs to have his supper with Mrs. Frost.
+ He said what he could to pacify her, not altogether with
+ success, for as darkness fell the old lady became
+ increasingly apprehensive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I know you are anxious, Mrs. Frost," said Tom, "but you must
+ not worry. Try to believe that all will come out right. I am
+ going out after supper, but I shall leave Jesse and Ezra on
+ guard, and you may be sure everything will be safe."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was some time before Mrs. Frost would consent to his
+ leaving the Inn. If she had yielded to her inclinations, she
+ would have spent the evening in hysterics with Tom at hand to
+ administer comfort. Pembroke, however, deputed that office to
+ black Deborah, and immediately after supper set about his
+ business.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He gave the necessary instructions to Jesse, Ezra and the
+ maids, saw that everything was closely locked and barred,
+ supplied himself with arms and ammunition, and slipped out
+ into the night. Having saddled Fleetwing, he swung himself on
+ the young hunter's back, and trotted down the avenue to the
+ Port Road. The night was intensely dark and still. The moon
+ had not yet risen, and a thick fog rolled in from the sea,
+ shrouding the countryside with its impenetrable veil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the Beach Road Pembroke dismounted, tied his horse to a
+ fence rail, and proceeded thence on foot toward the Cove.
+ Stumbling along through the heavy sand, he made his way to
+ the boathouse at the northern end of the little beach. There
+ he ventured to light his lantern, unlocked the door and
+ stepped within. On either side of the entrance were the two
+ sailboats that he and Dan used in summer and to the rear was
+ the old-fashioned whaleboat with which they did their deep
+ fishing. Over it, in a rudely constructed rack, was the
+ Indian birch-bark canoe which Dan had purchased in the
+ mountains a few years before. As the sea had fallen to a dead
+ calm, he decided to use this canoe, which he could paddle
+ quite noiselessly, and pulling down the little craft from its
+ winter resting-place, he carried it to the water's edge. The
+ sea, so angry the night before, now scarcely murmured; only a
+ low lazy swell, at regularly recurring intervals, slapped the
+ shore and hissed upon the sands. Tom pushed the nose of the
+ canoe into the water, leaped lightly over the rail, and with
+ his paddle thrust it off the beach. He was launched without
+ mishap.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not the faintest gleam of light showed the position of the
+ <i>Southern Cross</i>, but estimating as well as he could the
+ general direction, he paddled out through the enshrouding
+ fog. For ten minutes or so, he pushed on into the strange,
+ misty night. Then suddenly he found himself alongside an old
+ fisherman's yawl that had been rotting all winter at her
+ moorings, and he knew from her position that he could not be
+ far from the <i>Southern Cross</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few more strokes to leeward, and a spot of dull light broke
+ through the darkness. He headed directly for it. To his
+ relief it grew brighter; when suddenly, too late to stop the
+ progress of his canoe, he shot under it, and the bow of his
+ craft bumped with a dull thud against the timber side of the
+ schooner. Its dark outlines were just perceptible above him;
+ and at one or two points there gleamed rays of light in the
+ fog, green and red from the night lamps on the masthead, and
+ dull yellow from the port holes in the rear. A second after
+ the contact the canoe receded, then the wash of the sea drew
+ her toward the stern. Another moment and Pembroke felt his
+ prow scrape gently against the rudder, which prevented
+ further drifting. Apparently, since he heard nothing from the
+ deck above, he had reached his goal without attracting
+ attention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He kept perfectly still, however, for some little time, until
+ satisfied that there was no one at the wheel above, he pushed
+ the canoe softly back to the rope ladder, that a day or so
+ before he had seen hanging over the side. It was the work of
+ a moment to make his little boat fast to the lower rung. Then
+ slipping over the rail, he climbed stealthily up till his
+ head protruded above the gunwhale. The immediate deck seemed
+ deserted; but he was sure that some one was keeping the
+ watch, and probably near the point where he was, that is to
+ say, where access to the deck was easiest. But the fog and
+ the darkness afforded him protection, as he climbed over the
+ gunwhale and, without making a sound, moved toward the stern,
+ crossed the after-deck and found the wheel. As he had
+ surmised, it was deserted. The watch evidently was forward.
+ Beneath him, sending its ineffectual rays obliquely into the
+ fog, shone the light from the little cabin below.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Determined to get a look through the port, he climbed over
+ the gunwhale again, fastened a stern-sheet about his waist
+ and to a staple, and at the risk, if he slipped or if the
+ rope gave way, of plunging head foremost into the icy waters
+ of the Cove, he let himself down until his head was on a
+ level of the port.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Through the blurred glass he peered into a tiny cabin. There
+ with back toward him, just a few feet away stood Nancy Frost.
+ He steadied himself with an effort, and looking again saw
+ that she was alone. A moment's hesitation, and he tapped
+ resolutely on the pane with his finger tips. At first Nancy
+ did not hear, but presently, aroused by the slight tapping,
+ she glanced with a frightened expression toward the door, and
+ stood anxiously listening. Tom continued to knock on the
+ window, not daring to make it louder for fear of being heard
+ above. The alarm deepened on Nancy's face, and in sheer pity
+ Tom was tempted to desist; but at that instant her attention
+ was riveted upon the spot whence the tapping came. At last,
+ still with the expression of alarm on her face, she came
+ slowly toward the port. She hesitated, then pressed her face
+ against the pane over which Tom had spread his fingers. At
+ whatever risk, of frightening her or of danger to himself, as
+ she drew back, he pressed his own face against the outside of
+ the little window glass. She stared at him as if she were
+ looking at a ghost.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He moved his lips to form the word "Open." At length, in
+ obedience to this direction, Nancy cautiously unloosened the
+ window of the port and drew it back.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Good heavens, Tom!" she whispered. "Is it you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, yes," Pembroke whispered back. "But for God's sake,
+ speak softly. I'm in a devilishly unpleasant position, and
+ can hang here but a minute. Tell me quickly&#8212;are you
+ here of your own free will or are you a prisoner?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How can you ask?" she exclaimed. "For the love of heaven,
+ help me to escape."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That's what I'm here for," was Toms reply. "Now, quick; are
+ you only locked in or barred as well? I've brought some keys
+ along."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Only locked, I think."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Where does that door lead?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Into a little passage off the companion-way. Give me your
+ keys. They have but one man on watch. The captain is on shore
+ to-night, apt to return at any moment. And you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have a canoe tied to the ladder on the shore side. If the
+ captain returns, I'm caught. Try those keys." He slipped into
+ her the bunch of keys that he had brought along. "I was sure
+ you were here, and against your will."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Dan, too, is locked up on board."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I thought as much; but you first. Hurry."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nancy sprang to the door, trying one key after another in
+ feverish haste. At last, to Tom's infinite relief, he saw the
+ key turn in the lock, and the door open.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On deck," she whispered; "at the ladder. I'm not likely to
+ be caught." Then she waved her hand and disappeared into the
+ passage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom pulled himself up, unloosed the rope, and stole along the
+ rail toward the ladder. For a few moments, which seemed like
+ a thousand years, he stood in anguished suspense waiting for
+ Nancy. Then suddenly she came out of the mist and was at his
+ side. They stood for a moment like disembodied spirits,
+ creatures of the night and the fog. The next instant a hand
+ shot out and grasped the girl's shoulder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Peste! mam'zelle</i>," a rough voice hissed, "<i>ou
+ allez-vous</i>?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the man spoke Tom swung at him with the butt of his
+ revolver, and without a murmur the figure fell to the deck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Quick now," Pembroke whispered, "down the ladder."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Instantly Nancy was over the rail and Tom was climbing down
+ after her. As he knelt in the bow and fumbled with the
+ painter, the plash of oars sounded a dozen yards away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Ho! Croix du Midi</i>!" came a hail through the fog.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Curse it!" muttered Tom; "the painter's caught." He drew out
+ his knife, slashed the rope that bound them to the schooner,
+ got to his place amidships, and pushed the canoe free. The
+ lights of a small boat were just emerging from the dark a
+ dozen feet away. But the canoe slid by unobserved, in the
+ fog. They heard the nose of the small boat bump against the
+ schooner; then an oath, and a man's voice calling the watch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They've found my painter," whispered Tom, "and in a second
+ they'll find the sailor on their deck."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lights of the <i>Southern Cross</i> grew dim; vanished;
+ the sound of angry voices became muffled. They were half-way
+ to shore when they heard the noise of oars again. Evidently
+ some one had started in pursuit. For a moment Tom rested,
+ listening intently; but the sound was still some distance
+ away. Probably, he thought, they were heading directly for
+ the shore, whereas he, at a considerable angle, was making
+ for the boathouse at the north end of the beach. In ten
+ minutes he had beached the canoe within a rod of the point
+ from where he embarked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I can't hear them," whispered Tom, after a moment's
+ listening. "They've made for shore down the beach. They can't
+ find us in the dark. I've got Fleetwing tied to a fence in
+ the meadow yonder. Come."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was the work of a moment to stow the canoe, lock the
+ boathouse, run across the sands, and mount Nancy in front of
+ him on the back of his trusty hunter. A second later
+ Fleetwing's hoofs were striking fire on the stones that the
+ high tides had washed into the beach road. In the distance
+ there was a cry, the sharp ring of a pistol shot; but they
+ were safe on their way, racing wildly for the Inn. The
+ escape, the adventure had thrilled Nancy. Tom's arms were
+ around her, and her hands on his that grasped the bridle. At
+ last they were in the avenue, and Tom pulled in under the
+ great branches of the Red Oak. He slipped from the back of
+ the horse and held out his arms to Nance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We are safe, girl," he whispered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You are sure? Oh, thank God, thank God! Quick, let us in!
+ Can they be following?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, no. They won't follow. It's all right.
+ Easy,&#8212;before we go in&#8212;please,
+ dear&#8212;once&#8212;kiss me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, Tom, Tom," she whispered, as she lifted her face to his.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have you at last, sweetheart," he murmured. "You love me?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah!" she cried, "with my whole heart and soul."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH15"><!-- CH15 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XV
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ NANCY
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ It was after eleven before Nancy rejoined Tom in the bar. She
+ seemed more like herself as she slipped in and took her
+ accustomed seat beside the blazing logs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, I am all right, thank you," she insisted, declining the
+ glass of wine that Pembroke poured out for her. "I wonder,
+ Tom, if you killed that poor wretch on the deck?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Don't know," Tom answered. "I hope so. But what the deuce,
+ Nance, has been happening? I can wait till to-morrow to hear,
+ if you are too tired to tell me; but I do want awfully to
+ know."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am not tired," Nancy replied, "and I shan't sleep a wink
+ anyway. If I close my eyes I'll feel that hand on my shoulder
+ and hear the thud of that man's fall on the deck. I can't
+ bear to think that this miserable business will bring
+ bloodshed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But tell me, Nance, who is the Marquis&#8212;what
+ happened&#8212;how did they get you away?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah! the Marquis," exclaimed Nancy with a shudder. "I am glad
+ you have him locked up. I can't bear to think of him, but
+ I'll tell you what I know. You remember, Tom, he tried to be
+ friends with me from the first; and he seemed to fascinate me
+ in some unaccountable way. Then he questioned me about my
+ identity, and began to drop hints that he knew more than he
+ cared to let appear to the others, and my curiosity was
+ excited. I have always known of course that there was some
+ mystery about my being left to Mrs. Frost's care. She has
+ been kind, good, all that she should be; but she wasn't my
+ mother. Well, the Marquis stirred all the old wonder that I
+ had as a child, and before long quite won my confidence. He
+ told me after a time that I was the daughter of his elder
+ brother, the Marquis Fran&ccedil;ois de Boisdhyver, who in
+ 1814 stayed here at the Inn at the Red Oak under the name of
+ General Pointelle. I was not altogether surprised, for I have
+ always believed that I was French by birth, and his assertion
+ that I was his niece seemed to account for his interest in
+ me. My father, if this Marquis de Boisdhyver was my father,
+ was one of the Emperor Napoleon's marshals and was a party to
+ the plot to rescue the Emperor from Elba. He was obliged to
+ return to France, and since it was impossible for him to take
+ me with him&#8212;I was a little girl of two at the
+ time&#8212;he left me with Mrs. Frost. Thinking of my future,
+ he hid a large treasure in some secret chamber off the Oak
+ Parlour."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I know," Tom interrupted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What? You mean there is a treasure?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I think there is; but go on. I will tell you afterwards."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then he set sail for France, took part in the great events
+ of the Hundred Days, and fell at Waterloo. It was on the
+ field of Waterloo that he met his younger brother&#8212;our
+ Marquis&#8212;and told him about the child left in America
+ and about the treasure hidden in the Inn at the Red Oak."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well," Nancy continued, having answered a volley of
+ questions from Tom, "the Marquis&#8212;I mean our old
+ Marquis&#8212;was held for many years in a military prison in
+ England. Upon his release he was poor and unable to come to
+ America to seek his little niece and the fortune that he
+ believed to be hidden in the Inn. Tom, at first I didn't
+ believe this strange story about a treasure; but gradually I
+ became convinced; for the Marquis believed in it thoroughly,
+ and for proof of it he showed me a torn scrap of paper that
+ he found in the cabinet in the Oak Parlour the day after he
+ arrived at the Inn. It seems the old marshal had torn the
+ paper in two and hidden the parts in different cubby-holes of
+ that old Dorsetshire cabinet. He couldn't find an opportunity
+ to hunt for the other half, so at last he persuaded me to
+ help him in the search. Of course, he swore me to secrecy,
+ and I was foolish enough to give him my promise. I got the
+ key to the bowling alley from the ring in Dan's closet, and
+ two or three times went with him at night after you all were
+ asleep."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I know you did," said Tom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How could you know it&#8212;has the Marquis&#8212;?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, Dan and I saw you. I woke one night, happened to look
+ out of the window and saw the Marquis going into the bowling
+ alley. It was moonlight, you know. I woke Dan, we slipped
+ down stairs, saw a light in the Oak Parlour, peeped through
+ the shutters and saw you and the old Marquis at the cabinet."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When was this?" asked Nancy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The night&#8212;before our walk in the woods."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And you did not tell me! What could you think I was doing?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I didn't know. How could I know? It was that which first
+ made me suspicious of the Marquis. We made up our minds to
+ watch. But that day in the woods&#8212;well, I forgot
+ everything in the world but just that I was in love with
+ you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah!" exclaimed Nancy, flushing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But tell me," asked Tom, "What did you find in the cabinet?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We found nothing. I began to think that the Marquis had
+ deceived me. I didn't know what to believe. I didn't know
+ what to do. I threatened each day to tell Dan. And then came
+ our walk. When we came in that night&#8212;do you
+ recall?&#8212;we found the Marquis sitting in the bar before
+ the fire, and I went over and spoke to him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, I remember," Tom answered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I had made up my mind that I must take you all,&#8212;mother
+ and you and Dan,&#8212;into my confidence. I told him so. He
+ begged me to wait until the next day and promised that he
+ would tell you then himself. I was beginning to think he
+ might be a little crazy, that there was no hidden treasure."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I'm sure there is," said Tom. "There was another half of
+ that torn scrap of paper, hidden in one of the cubby-holes of
+ the old cabinet. Dan found it. It's the directions, sure
+ enough, for finding the treasure."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah! but what has it all to do with me?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't know; something I fancy, or the Marquis would not
+ have told you as much as he did. But here is the other half.
+ You can tell whether it is part of the paper he showed you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He drew from his pocket the yellowed bit of paper and spread
+ it on the table before them. Nance bent over and examined it
+ closely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I believe it is the other half. See, it is signed
+ ...'an&ccedil;ois de Boisdhyver'. I remember perfectly that
+ the signature of the other was missing, except for the
+ letters 'F-r-' It is, it must be, Fran&ccedil;ois de
+ Boisdhyver, who, the Marquis says, was my father. Then look!
+ here are the words '<i>tr&eacute;sor', 'bijoux et
+ monaie</i>'. I remember in the other there were phrases that
+ seemed to go with these&#8212;'<i>tr&eacute;sor cach&eacute;'
+ 'lingots d'or</i>'. Ah! do you suppose there really is a
+ fortune hidden away in the Inn all these years?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, I think so," said Tom. "And I feel certain you have
+ some claim to it, or they wouldn't have made such an effort
+ to involve you in their plot. But, please, Nance, tell me the
+ rest. You got to the night of your disappearance."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was a horror&#8212;that night!" exclaimed Nancy. "It must
+ have been about twelve that the Marquis came and tapped at my
+ door. For some reason I was restless and had not gone to bed.
+ I slipped out into the hall with him and we came in here to
+ talk. He begged me to make one more expedition with him to
+ the Oak Parlour. But I refused&#8212;I insisted that I must
+ tell Dan. Suddenly, Tom, without the slightest warning, I
+ felt my arms pinioned from behind, and before I could scream,
+ the Marquis himself had thrust a handkerchief in my mouth,
+ and I was gagged and bound. Everything was done so quickly,
+ so noiselessly, that not a soul in the house could have
+ heard. They carried me out of the Inn and into the avenue of
+ maples. From there on I was forced to walk. We went to the
+ beach. I was put into a small boat and rowed out to the
+ schooner, and there they locked me up in the little cabin in
+ which you found me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What time did you say it was?" asked Tom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "About twelve&#8212;after midnight, perhaps; I don't know for
+ sure. The Marquis went to the beach with us and pretended to
+ assure me that I was in no danger; that I would be released
+ in good time, and that he would see me again. As a matter of
+ fact for three days I have seen no one but Captain Bonhomme.
+ He brought my meals, and was inclined to talk about anything
+ that come into his head. Last night he told me that Dan was
+ also a prisoner on the <i>Southern Cross</i>, if that would
+ be of any consolation to me. Then he said he had to go ashore
+ and locked me up. Several times I was taken on deck for
+ exercise, but the captain kept close by my side."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And you haven't seen or heard from the Marquis again?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No! nor do I want to see him. But, Tom, what is the meaning
+ of it all? How are we going to rescue Dan? What are we going
+ to do? We can't keep the Marquis a prisoner indefinitely."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom gave her his own version of the last few days. He told
+ her of what he and Dan had suspected, of Dan's proposal to
+ visit the House on the Dunes and his disappearance, of his
+ own investigations there, and his determination to play the
+ same game with the Marquis as hostage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But what to do next, I confess I don't know," he continued.
+ "At present it seems to be stale mate. For to-night, any way,
+ we are safe, I think, for I shall take turns in keeping guard
+ with Jesse and Ezra. I have the idea that to-morrow, when
+ they realize something has happened to the Marquis we shall
+ hear from Madame de la Fontaine or from the schooner. In the
+ morning I am going to take you and Mrs. Frost to the Red Farm
+ for safety. I intend to fight this thing out with that gang,
+ whatever happens. If there is treasure, according to their
+ own story, it belongs to you. If I don't get a proposal from
+ them, I shall make the offer, through Madame de la Fontaine,
+ of exchanging the Marquis for Dan.... But I must go now,
+ Nance, and relieve one of the men. We must all get some sleep
+ to-night, and it's already after twelve. Go to bed,
+ sweetheart, and try to get some rest. One of us will be
+ within call all night, watching right there in the hall; so
+ don't be afraid."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was my wretched curiosity that got us into all this
+ trouble."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not a bit of it! The trouble was all arranged by the
+ Marquis; he was simply waiting for the schooner. Now that I
+ have you back again, my heart is fairly light. We shall get
+ Dan to-morrow, I am sure."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH16"><!-- CH16 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVI
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ MADAME AT THE INN
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ In the morning the fog lifted, a bright sun shone from a
+ cloudless sky, the marshes sparkled with pools of melted snow
+ and the long-promised thaw seemed definitely to have set in.
+ Soon after breakfast Tom sent Jesse to the Red Farm with
+ directions for the people there to make preparations for Mrs.
+ Frost and Nancy, whom he proposed to drive over himself in
+ the course of the afternoon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About the middle of the morning as Tom and Nancy stood on the
+ gallery discussing the situation, Tom drew her attention to a
+ small boat putting off from <i>The Southern Cross</i>. They
+ examined it through the glass, and Nancy recognized the
+ figure of Captain Bonhomme sitting amongst the stern-sheets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You may depend upon it," said Tom, "he is going to the House
+ on the Dunes to report your disappearance to Madame de la
+ Fontaine. The most curious thing about this whole business to
+ me is the mixing-up in it of such a woman as Dan described
+ Madame de la Fontaine to be."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is strange," Nancy agreed, "but from the bits of talk
+ I've overheard, I should say that she was the prime mover in
+ it all."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In a way I am rather glad of that," said Tom, "for with a
+ woman at the head of things there is less chance of their
+ resorting to force to gain their ends. But the stake they are
+ playing for must be a big one, and already they have done
+ enough to make me sure that we should be prepared for
+ anything. I shall be surprised if we don't get some
+ communication from them to-day. The old Marquis counts on it,
+ or he would not keep so still. At any cost, we must get Dan
+ back."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They talked for some time longer and were about to go in,
+ when Nancy pointed to a horse and rider coming down the
+ avenue of Maples. A glance sufficed to show that the rider
+ was a woman. Nancy slipped inside to escape observation,
+ while Tom waited on the gallery to receive the visitor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the lady drew rein under the Red Oak, he ran down the
+ steps, and helped her to dismount. Her grace, her beauty, her
+ manner as of the great world, made him sure that he was in
+ the presence of Madame de la Fontaine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Good morning, sir," said the lady, with a charming smile,
+ "if I mistake not, I have the pleasure of addressing Mr.
+ Pembroke?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, madam,&#8212;at you service," replied Tom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am come on a strange errand, monsieur; as an ambassadress,
+ so to say, of those whom I fear you take to be your enemies."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You are frank, madam. I believe that I am speaking
+ with&#8212;?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Madame de la Fontaine," the lady instantly supplied. "Events
+ have so precipitated themselves, monsieur, that pretense and
+ conventionality were an affectation. I am informed, you
+ understand, of your brilliant rescue of Mademoiselle Eloise
+ de Boisdhyver."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If you mean Nancy Frost by Mademoiselle Eloise de
+ Boisdhyver, madam, your information is correct. I gathered
+ that you had been told of this, when I saw Captain Bonhomme
+ make his way to the House on the Dunes this morning."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah! What eyes, monsieur!" exclaimed the lady. "But I have
+ grown accustomed to having my privacy examined over-curiously
+ during the few days I have spent on your hospitable shores.
+ <i>Mais pardon</i>&#8212;my purpose in coming to the Inn at
+ the Red Oak this morning was but to request that my name be
+ conveyed to Monsieur the Marquis de Boisdhyver."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You mean, madam, that you wish to see the Marquis?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, monsieur, if you will be so good as to allow me to do
+ so."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am sorry," Tom rejoined, "that I must disappoint you.
+ Circumstances over which the Marquis has no control will
+ deprive him of the pleasure of seeing you this morning."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah!" exclaimed Madame de la Fontaine, "I was right then.
+ Monsieur le Marquis is, shall we say, in confinement?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As you please, madam; as safe, for the time, as is my friend
+ Dan Frost."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Eh bien</i>, monsieur! It is that you have&#8212;do you
+ not say?&#8212;turned the tables upon us?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Precisely, madam," assented Tom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And you will not permit me even a word&#8212;ever so little
+ a word&#8212;with my poor friend?" murmured Madame de la
+ Fontaine plaintively.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Again I am sorry to refuse you, madam; but&#8212;not even a
+ little word."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So! <i>Mais oui</i>, I am not greatly surprised. I was
+ assured last night...."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When you did not see the signals?" suggested Tom quickly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When I did not see the signals," repeated the lady, with a
+ glance of the briefest enquiry, "I was assured that something
+ had befallen Monsieur le Marquis. <i>Mais vraiment</i>,
+ monsieur, you do us much dishonour in assuming a wicked
+ conspiracy on our parts. The Marquis is my friend; he is also
+ the friend of the charming Mademoiselle. All that we wish,
+ all that we would do is as much in her interest as in his
+ own. But it is impossible that my old friend shall remain in
+ confinement. On what condition, monsieur, will you release
+ the Marquis de Boisdhyver?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On the condition, naturally, that my friend Dan Frost is
+ released from the <i>Southern Cross</i>."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah! Is it that you are quite sure that Monsieur Frost is
+ confined on the ship?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Quite sure, Madame de la Fontaine. I was on board <i>The
+ Southern Cross</i> last night."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, I know it; and I congratulate you upon your
+ extraordinary success. Very well, then, I accept your
+ condition. Monsieur Dan Frost returns; Monsieur le Marquis is
+ released. And now you will perhaps have the kindness&#8212;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, madame; in this affair the Marquis and his friends have
+ been the aggressors. I cannot consent that you should hold
+ any communication with the Marquis till Dan returns free and
+ unharmed to the Inn."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And what assurance then shall I have that the Marquis will
+ be released?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "None, madame, but my word of honour."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Pardon, monsieur</i>. I accept your terms. Monsieur Frost
+ shall return. The instant he enters the Inn at the Red Oak,
+ you promise that the Marquis de Boisdhyver be released and
+ that he be given this note from me?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Certainly, madam."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lady took a sealed note from the pocket of her habit and
+ handed it to Tom. "There remains, monsieur," she murmured,
+ "but to bid you good-day. If you will be so kind&#8212;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She ran lightly down the steps, and held up her foot for Tom
+ to assist her into the saddle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your friend will return <i>tout de suite</i>, monsieur," she
+ cried gayly, as she drew in the rein.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And we shall have the pleasure of seeing you again?" asked
+ Tom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah! who can tell?" She touched the horse lightly with her
+ whip, inclined her head, and soon disappeared down the avenue
+ of maples.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some time later Nancy and Tom watched her cantering across
+ the beach. She waved her handkerchief as a signal to the
+ schooner; a small boat put ashore, and she was rowed out to
+ <i>The Southern Cross</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Once Dan is back, and we get rid of the old Marquis," said
+ Tom, "I shall breathe considerably easier."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I can't believe they will give the game up so easily," was
+ Nancy's reply. "Seizing the Marquis, Tom, was a check, not a
+ mate."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Out on the schooner in the Cove, Madame de la Fontaine and
+ Dan Frost were once more talking together.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Dear boy," said the lady. "I cannot do that which I
+ promised. It is impossible that your sister shall make to you
+ the request to give me the torn scrap of paper, for the
+ reason that Mademoiselle Nancy has chosen to disappear. Have
+ no fear, monsieur, for I have good reason to believe she has
+ returned to the Inn at the Red Oak. Our schemes, <i>mon
+ ami</i>, have failed. You are no longer a prisoner, you are
+ free. And this is good-bye. I abandon our mission. I leave
+ the House on the Dunes to-day; to-morrow I return to France."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But, madame, you bewilder me," exclaimed Dan. "Why should
+ you go; why should we not all join forces, hunt for the
+ treasure together, if there is a treasure; why this division
+ of interests?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>C'est impossible</i>!" she exclaimed impetuously.
+ "Monsieur le Marquis will not consent. He is treated with
+ intolerable rudeness by your friend Mr. Pembroke. He will not
+ accept that which I propose. And I&#8212;<i>vraiment, I</i>
+ desire no longer to work against you. No, monsieur Dan,
+ <i>tout est fini</i>, we must say good-bye."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She held out her hands and Dan impetuously seized them. Then,
+ suddenly, she was in his arms and his lips were seeking hers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I cannot let you go," he cried hoarsely. "I cannot say
+ good-bye."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a moment he held her, but soon, almost brusquely, she
+ repulsed him. "<i>C'est folie, mon ami, folie</i>! We lose
+ our heads, we lose our hearts."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But I love you," cried Dan. "You must believe it; will you
+ believe it if I give you the paper?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, no!&#8212;What!&#8212;you wish to give to me the secret
+ of the Oak Parlour?&#8212;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Aye, to entrust to you my life, my soul, my honour."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah, but you must go," she murmured tensely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Captain Bonhomme is returning. It is better that he knows of
+ your release after you are gone. <i>C'est vrai</i>, my
+ friend, that I risk not a little in your behalf. Go now,
+ quickly ... No! No!" she protested, as she drew away from
+ him. "I tell you, <i>C'est folie</i>,&#8212;madness and
+ folly. You do not know me. Go now, while there is time!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But you will see me again?" insisted Dan. "Promise me that;
+ or, on my honour, I refuse to leave. Do with me what you
+ will, but&#8212;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Listen!" she whispered hurriedly. "I shall meet you to-night
+ at ten o'clock, at the end of the avenue of maples near to
+ your inn; you know the place? <i>Bien</i>! Bring me the paper
+ there, to prove that you trust me. And I&#8212;<i>mais
+ non</i>, I implore you&#8212;go quickly!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan turned at last and opened the door. Madame de la Fontaine
+ called sharply to the waiting Jean, and he, motioning to Dan
+ to follow him, led the way on deck. In a moment they were in
+ a little boat heading for the shore. The afternoon sun was
+ bright in the western sky. The <i>Southern Cross</i> rode
+ serenely at anchor, and from her deck, Madame de la Fontaine
+ was waving him good-bye.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH17"><!-- CH17 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVII
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ THE MARQUIS LEAVES THE INN
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ By the time Dan was put ashore on the beach of the Cove it
+ was afternoon. During the short row from the schooner he had
+ been unable to exchange remarks with the surly Jean, for that
+ individual's only response to his repeated efforts, was a
+ surly "<i>Je ne parle pas anglais</i>," which seemed to
+ answer as a general formula to the conspirators. He gave up
+ at last in disgust, and waited impatiently for the small boat
+ to be beached, distrustful lest at the last moment some fresh
+ trick be played upon him. Not that his ingenuous faith in the
+ beautiful French lady failed him, but he was suspicious lest,
+ having acted independently of the Marquis and Captain
+ Bonhomme in releasing him, she should not have the power to
+ make that release genuinely effective.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But his apprehensions were groundless. The seaman rowed
+ straight for the shore, beached the boat with a last sturdy
+ pull at the oars, and leaping out into the curling surf, held
+ the skiff steady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thank you very much," said Dan, shaking the spray from his
+ coat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Eh?" grunted Jean.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh!&#8212;beg pardon!&#8212;<i>merci</i>," he explained,
+ exaggerating the pronunciation of the French word.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Huh!" was the gutteral reply, as the man jumped back into
+ the skiff, and pushed off. Dan looked once more towards the
+ distant schooner and the slight figure in the stern. Then he
+ started at a rapid pace for the Inn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he turned into the avenue of maples, he was surprised to
+ see Jesse standing on the gallery, musket in hand, as though
+ he were a sentinel on guard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Bless my soul, Mister Dan! I thought the Frenchies had made
+ way with you. You're a blessed sight to lay eyes on. But
+ Mister Tom was right, he said you'd be coming back this
+ afternoon."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, here I am, Jesse," Dan replied grasping his hand, "as
+ large as life and twice as natural, I guess. I feel as if I'd
+ been away for a year and a day. But tell me, what's the news?
+ Where is Tom? Has Nancy come back? How is Mother? Have you
+ been having trouble, that you are guarding the door like a
+ soldier on duty?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, now, Mister Dan, one at a time, <i>if</i> you please.
+ Can't say exactly as we've been havin' trouble; but we've
+ sort of been lookin' for it. And Mister Tom&#8212;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Where is Tom? I must see him at once.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He ain't here, sir; he left about an hour ago, driving the
+ old Miss and Miss Nancy to the Red Farm, sir; so as to be out
+ of harm's way. He'll be back before night, sir."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah, good! Then Nance is back? When did she come?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She come back last night, sir; leastways Mister Tom brought
+ her back. Mister Tom, he got the idea that they'd cooped Miss
+ Nance up on that there schooner laying in the Cove, and sure
+ enough, he found her there and got her off somehows last
+ night."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Good for Tom! How did he work it?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I ain't heard no particulars, Mister Dan. We've been too
+ busy watching things to talk much. We got Ezra Manners out
+ from the Port to help do guard duty."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Guard?&#8212;what?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, the Inn, sir. Mister Tom he's been sort of expectin'
+ some kind of attack. That's the reason he took the women
+ folks over to the Red Farm."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I see&#8212;and where's the old Marquis?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jesse chuckled. "The old Marquis's where he hasn't been doin'
+ any harm for the last twenty-four hours, sir. Mister Tom he
+ locked him up last night in one of the south bedrooms. That
+ reminds me, I was to let him out just as soon as you come
+ back."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why lock him up, and then let him out? Things have been
+ moving at the Inn, Jess, since I've been gone!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Moving&#8212;yes, sir. But them's my orders&#8212;first
+ thing I was to do soon as you come back was to let the old
+ Frenchy out and do as he pleased. Mister Tom was to arrange
+ everything else with you, sir."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Seems as if Tom had a whole campaign planned out. All
+ right&#8212;we'll obey orders, Jess. Let the Marquis out, and
+ tell him he can find me in the bar if he wants to see me.
+ What time will Tom be back?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Before dark, sir, I'm sure. He's been gone over an hour."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan ran up to his bedroom, made a quick toilet, took the torn
+ scrap of paper from his strong-box, and put it in his wallet.
+ Then he went down stairs into the bar. The Marquis, released
+ from his confinement, was awaiting him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah, Monsieur Frost!" the old gentleman exclaimed, coming
+ forward with outstretched hands, "I rejoice at your return.
+ Now this so horrible nightmare will end... Ah!" This last
+ exclamation was uttered in a tone of surprise and
+ indignation, for Dan faced him with folded arms, deliberately
+ refusing the handclasp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, Marquis," he said, "I have returned; but I cannot say
+ that I am particularly pleased to see you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Monsieur, <i>te me comprends pas</i>; this abuse, this
+ insult&#8212;it is impossible that I understand."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Pray, Monsieur de Boisdhyver," replied Dan, with dignity,
+ "Let us have done with make-believe and sham. For two days I
+ have been in prison on that confounded ship yonder, whose
+ villainous crew are in your pay."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You in prison&#8212;the ship&#8212;the villainous crew!"
+ repeated the Marquis. "What is it that you say?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Come, Marquis, your protests are useless," Dan interrupted.
+ "I know of the conspiracy in which you are engaged, of your
+ deceit and trickery here, of your part in my poor sister's
+ disappearance. You know that Madame de la Fontaine has told
+ me much. Do you expect me to meet you as though nothing had
+ happened?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But, <i>mon cher, monsieur</i>," continued the Marquis, "if
+ it is that you have been told anything by Madame de la
+ Fontaine, my so good friend, the bright angel of an old age
+ too-cruelly shattered by misfortune, you well know how
+ innocent are my designs, how sincere my efforts for your
+ foster-sister, for her who is my niece."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Marquis, I do not understand all that has taken place. I may
+ say further that I do not care to discuss the situation with
+ you until I have talked with my sister and Mr. Pembroke."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah! then Eloise&#8212;then Mademoiselle Nancy, is returned?"
+ exclaimed the old gentleman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I believe so. But I have not seen her. I must decline,
+ Marquis, to continue this conversation. I must first learn
+ what has taken place in my absence. When Tom returns&#8212;he
+ is out just now&#8212;I am perfectly willing to talk matters
+ over with you and him together."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Marquis's eyes flashed. "But, Monsieur," he protested,
+ "you must understand that I cannot submit to meet with
+ Monsieur Pembroke again. A Marquis de Boisdhyver does not
+ twice put himself in the position to be insulted with
+ impunity."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I should hardly imagine," Dan replied, "that it would be
+ more difficult for you to meet Pembroke again than it has
+ been difficult for me to meet you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How&#8212;me?&#8212;<i>je ne comprends pas</i>. But I have
+ been insulted, imprisoned, I have suffered much that is
+ terrible."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I found myself in an identical situation," said Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But, monsieur, <i>un moment</i>" protested the old
+ gentleman, as Dan made as if to leave the room, "give me the
+ time to explain to you this misunderstanding.&#8212;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, Marquis. I will not talk until I have seen Tom."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The black eyes of Monsieur de Boisdhyver gleamed
+ unpleasantly. "I have said to you, Monsieur Frost, that I
+ refuse to meet Monsieur Tom Pembroke once more. It would be
+ intolerable. <i>Impossible, absolutment</i>! I must insist
+ that you will be kind enough to facilitate my departure at
+ once."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Certainly, as you wish, Marquis."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old gentleman hesitated. For once indecision was shown by
+ the agitation of his features and the shifting of his eyes,
+ but he gave no other expression to the quandaries in his
+ mind. After a moment's silence he drew himself up with
+ exaggerated dignity. With one hand upon his breast and the
+ other extended, in a fashion at once absurd and a little
+ pathetic, he addressed Dan for the last time, as might an
+ ambassador taking leave of a sovereign upon his declaration
+ of war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Monsieur, I renew my gratitude for the hospitality of the
+ Inn at the Red Oak, so long enjoyed, so discourteously
+ withdrawn. I require but the presentation of my account for
+ the time, I have trespassed upon your good will, and I
+ request the assistance of a servant to facilitate my
+ departure. But I do not take my farewell without protesting,
+ <i>avec tout mon coeur</i>, at the misunderstanding to which
+ I am persistently subjected. The inevitable bitterness in my
+ soul does not prevent me even now to forget the sweet hours
+ of rest that I have enjoyed here. The unwillingness on your
+ part, monsieur, to comprehend my position, does not interfere
+ to stifle in my breast the consciousness but of honourable
+ purpose. I make my compliments to mesdames."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Very good, marquis&#8212;and at what time shall I have a
+ carriage ready for you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Marquis glanced nonchalantly at his watch, "In fifteen
+ minutes, monsieur."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It will be ready, Marquis."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your very obedient servant; Monsieur Frost."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your obedient servant, Marquis de Boisdhyver."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old gentleman bowed again with elaborate courtesy and,
+ turning sharply on his heel, left the room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Somewhat disturbed by the turn affairs had taken, Dan stood
+ for a moment lost in thought. There was nothing for it, he
+ supposed: Tom, who had been in command, had given orders, and
+ they should be obeyed; besides there was no reason that he
+ could see why the Marquis should be detained at the Inn if he
+ chose to leave it. So he sat down at a table, made out the
+ old gentleman's bill for the month, and then stepped to the
+ door to call for Jesse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Take this," he said when the man appeared in response to his
+ summons, "to the old Marquis. It is the bill for his board.
+ If he pays you, well and good; if not&#8212;in any case,
+ treat him courteously, and do not interfere with his
+ movements. He is leaving the Inn for good. I want you to have
+ the buggy ready within half-an-hour and drive him where he
+ wishes to go. I fancy he will want his stuff put on the
+ schooner in the Cove."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "All right, sir," replied Jesse. "Now that you and Miss Nance
+ are back, sir, I guess the sooner we get rid of the Marquis
+ the better."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jesse carried the bill to the Marquis, then came down and
+ went to the barn to harness the horse. A little later he
+ drove round to the courtyard, hitched the horse to a ring in
+ the Red Oak, and ran upstairs to fetch the Marquis's boxes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps half-an-hour had passed when he returned to Dan in
+ the Bar. "The old gentleman's gone, sir," he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Gone!&#8212;where?" cried Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Don't know, sir," Jesse replied. "To the schooner, I guess.
+ He left this money on his dressing-bureau."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan took the gold which Jesse held out to him. "Well, well,"
+ he murmured, "quite on his dignity, eh? All right, Jess, take
+ his stuff to the beach and hail the schooner. He will
+ probably have given directions. I hope we've seen the last of
+ him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="PART4"><!-- PART4 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ PART IV
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ THE ATTACK ON THE INN
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH18"><!-- CH18 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVIII
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ THE AVENUE OF MAPLES
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ The Marquis's belongings were sent after him to the schooner,
+ where, however, it appeared that they had not been expected,
+ for it was some time before Jesse could obtain an answer to
+ his hail from the shore, and still longer before he could
+ make the men on the ship understand what it was he wanted
+ with them. Eventually Captain Bonhomme had rowed ashore, and
+ the Marquis's bags, boxes, writing-desk, and fiddle were
+ loaded into the small boat and taken off to <i>The Southern
+ Cross</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It appeared from Jesse's report that the Captain had been
+ sufficiently polite, and had attributed the misunderstanding
+ of his men to their inability to speak English. They had not
+ gotten their orders for the Marquis. He had asked no further
+ questions about Monsieur de Boisdhyver or about his recent
+ prisoners, but had feed Jesse liberally, and dismissed him,
+ with his own and the Marquis's thanks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well," said Tom, who had returned an hour before and had
+ been exchanging experiences with Dan, "that seems to be the
+ end of him for the present. I don't know that I did right in
+ promising your French lady that I should release him, but
+ there seemed no other way to make sure of getting you back."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am glad you promised," replied Dan. "It is a relief not to
+ have him under our roof. For the last week I've felt as if
+ the place were haunted by an evil spirit."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So it has been, and so it still will be, I am afraid," was
+ Tom's reply. "If there is treasure here, you may be sure that
+ gang won't sail away without making a desperate effort to get
+ it. I move that we beat them out by hunting for it ourselves.
+ Why not begin to-night?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not to-night," protested Dan. "I am tired to death. You can
+ imagine that I didn't get much sleep cooped up on that
+ confounded ship."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No more have I, old boy. But I believe in striking while the
+ iron is hot. Every day's delay gives them a better chance for
+ their plans, if they mean to attack the Inn."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I doubt if they'll do that. I don't think force is precisely
+ their line. You know, I believe that the story Madame de la
+ Fontaine told isn't altogether a fiction."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Pshaw!" exclaimed Tom. "I don't believe a word of it.
+ Naturally they wouldn't use force, if they could help it. But
+ their plans have all been upset, and a gang like that won't
+ stop at anything."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But we live in a civilized community, my boy. This isn't the
+ middle ages."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We live in a civilized community, perhaps; but if you can
+ find a more isolated spot, a place more remote from help, in
+ any other part of the civilized world, I'd be glad to see it.
+ We might as well be in the middle of the Sahara desert. Find
+ the treasure and get it out of harm's way&#8212;that's my
+ idea."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "All right, but to-morrow; I swear I'm not up to it
+ to-night."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To-morrow! Well, then to-morrow. Though for the life of me,
+ I don't see why you want to delay things. Jesse and Ezra can
+ keep watch tonight."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But we must get some sleep, Tom."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The devil with sleep! However, you're the boss now. It's
+ your inn, your treasure, your sister, that are involved. I'll
+ take a back seat."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Come, come, Tom&#8212;don't let's quarrel. Give me to-night
+ to&#8212;to get myself together, and tomorrow I'll pull the
+ Inn down with you, if you wish."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps Dan was right, he did need rest and sleep and a few
+ hours would restore him. They had their supper, then,
+ apportioned the night into watches, and Dan went upstairs for
+ his first period of sleep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His brain was a-whirl. All through the afternoon, during his
+ talk with the Marquis, and later during his talk with Tom,
+ one idea had been dominating his thought, dictating his plan
+ of action, colouring his judgment. The fascination which
+ Madame de la Fontaine exerted over his senses was too strong
+ for him even to contemplate resisting it. She was confessedly
+ in league with a gang of adventurers upon a quest for
+ treasure. She had lied to him at first about the Marquis, she
+ had lied to him about Nancy, she had lied to him about his
+ release; and when she had left him under the pretext of
+ arranging his return to the Inn, she had in fact gone to Tom
+ to bargain an exchange of him for the old Marquis. Her lies,
+ her subterfuges, her flatteries, had been evidently designed
+ but to get possession of the torn scrap of paper which was so
+ necessary to their finding the hidden treasure. All this Dan
+ told himself a hundred times, and then, quickly dispelling
+ the witness of these cold hard facts, there would flash
+ before him the vision of her wonderful eyes, of her strange
+ appealing beauty, of her stirring personality; he would feel
+ once more the touch of her cheek and her lips pressing his,
+ intoxicating as wine; and delicious fires flamed through his
+ veins, and set his heart to beating, and made havoc of his
+ honour and his conscience. Whatever were the consequences, he
+ would meet her again that night as he had promised. It was
+ his first experience of passion and it was sweeping him off
+ his feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alone in his room Dan sat down at the table. He drew from his
+ pocket the torn paper, and as an act of justice to the
+ friends he felt that he was about to betray, he labourously
+ made a copy of the difficult French handwriting. This done,
+ he locked the copy in his strong box and put the original
+ back in his pocket. Then, like the criminal he thought
+ himself to be, he crept cautiously down the stairs. The door
+ into the bar was open, and he stood for a moment, shoes in
+ hand, peering into the dimly-lit room. Tom sat by the hearth,
+ reading, a pipe in his mouth and a cocked pistol on the table
+ by his side. A pang went through Dan's breast, but he checked
+ the impulse to speak, and stole softly across the hall and
+ into his mother's parlour. Ever so cautiously he closed the
+ door behind him, crossed the room, and raised the sash of one
+ of the windows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was dark, but starlight; the moon had not yet risen. In a
+ moment he had slipped over the sill and stood upon the porch.
+ Lowering the sash, he crept across the band of light that
+ shone from the windows of the bar, and into the shadow of the
+ Red Oak. There he buttoned his great coat tightly about him,
+ put on his shoes, and started softly down the avenue of
+ maples. Scarcely a sound disturbed the silence of the night,
+ save the lazy creaking of the windmill as it turned now and
+ then to the puff of a gentle breeze.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At every few steps, he paused to listen, fearful lest his
+ absence had been detected and he were followed by some one
+ from the Inn. Then he would start on again, peering eagerly
+ into the darkness ahead for any sign of her whom he sought.
+ At last he reached the end of the avenue. His heart was
+ beating wildly, in a very terror that she might not come.
+ Nothing&#8212;no catastrophe, no danger, no
+ disgrace,&#8212;could be so terrible to him as that the woman
+ he loved so recklessly and madly should not come. She must
+ not fail! He looked at his watch; it was already three
+ minutes past ten. If in five&#8212;then minutes she did not
+ come, he would go to seek her&#8212;to the House on the
+ Dunes, aye, if must be to <i>The Southern Cross</i> itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly a dark figure slipped out of the gloom, and Claire
+ de la Fontaine was in his arms. For a moment she let him
+ clasp her, let his lips again meet hers; then quickly she
+ disengaged herself. "Are we safe?" she asked in a whisper.
+ "Is it that we can talk here."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We are perfectly safe," he answered. "Nothing can be heard
+ from the Inn. No one is about."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You escaped without notice? Are you certain that no one
+ follows you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Absolutely. I am sure. And you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I?&#8212;Oh, no, no&#8212;. There is no one to question me.
+ I have been at the House on the Dunes all the evening. Marie,
+ my maid,&#8212;she thinks that I am gone to the schooner.
+ <i>Mon Dieu! cher ami</i>, what terrors I have suffered for
+ you. It had not seemed possible that Claire de la Fontaine
+ would ride and walk two so long miles in a desolate country
+ to meet a lover&#8212;It must be that we are gone mad."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Madness then is the sweetest experience of life," said Dan,
+ seizing her hand again and carrying it to his lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah <i>peut-etre, mon ami</i>. But now there are many affairs
+ to discuss. Tell me&#8212;the Marquis, he was released, as
+ your friend has promised me he should be?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Of course, didn't you know it?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I know nothing. Why then is it he has not left the Inn?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But he did leave&#8212;in the middle of the afternoon, half
+ an hour after I returned."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And where is it that he has gone?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To the schooner, I suppose. He left alone, giving directions
+ for his things to be sent after him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah! to the schooner, you say? You are certain?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes&#8212;that is, I think he went there. Jesse took his
+ boxes and bags down to the shore, and Captain Bonhomme
+ received them, and thanked him in the Marquis's name,''
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Mais non! Est-ce possible</i>?" For a moment she was
+ silent, considering deeply. "<i>Bien</i>!" she exclaimed
+ presently. "It is as you say, of course. And you, my friend?"
+ She stopped suddenly, for they had been walking slowly
+ forward, and withdrawing her hand from his arm, she held it
+ out before him. "The paper?" she demanded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Here it is," murmured Dan, fumbling in his pocket, and
+ pulling out the scrap of paper. She took it eagerly from his
+ hand and held it up before her eyes as though trying to see
+ it in the dark.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This is it, really?" she asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I swear it," he answered. "It is the piece of writing that I
+ found in the hidden cubby-hole of the old cabinet in the Oak
+ Parlour. It is written in French, you know."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, I know, I know," she assented absently. For a moment
+ she was quite still, and then, with a strange exclamation,
+ she put the paper to her lips. "<i>Quels souvenirs,
+ d'autrefois</i>!" she murmured. "<i>Ah, mon Dieu, mon
+ Dieu</i>!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Dearest, what is it?" asked Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nothing, nothing," she replied, withdrawing a little from
+ his touch. "I was unwell for the moment,&#8212;<i>ce ne fait
+ rien</i>. No, no, you are not to kiss me, please." Again she
+ unloosed his arm from about her neck, slipped the paper into
+ her muff, and pressed a little forward. For a space they
+ walked slowly, silently, toward the Inn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But, dearest one," murmured Dan, "this proves to you my
+ love, doesn't it? You no longer doubt me. For your sake, I
+ give my honour; it may be, the safety of my friends. You must
+ see how I love you with all my heart and soul. Won't
+ you,&#8212;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly she stopped again quite still and faced him. "My
+ poor boy," she said gently, "you really love me?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Love you! My God, have I not proved it! What more would you
+ have me do?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Mais oui</i>," she answered quickly. "You have proved it,
+ but I have thought that it was not possible."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And you&#8212;you do care&#8212;oh, tell me&#8212;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>H&eacute;las, mon paurve ami</i>. I love as tenderly as
+ it remains in me to love. Ah, dear, dear boy, so sincerely,
+ that I cannot have you to sell your honour for the futile
+ kisses of Claire de la Fontaine."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What do you mean? Have I&#8212;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, no, no! This&#8212;take the paper. You must not again
+ give it me, I desire that you will not." She drew the paper
+ from her muff with an impulsive movement and thrust it toward
+ him. "Take it, I implore you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But why&#8212;?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Because that you shall not give your honour to a woman such
+ as I am. <i>Mai vraiment</i>, I love you. That is why you
+ must take back the paper."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But you must explain&#8212;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Mon Dieu</i>! is it that I have not explained? There is
+ time for nothing more. I have fear, <i>mon ami</i>; a kiss,
+ and it is necessary that I go. It is good-bye."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But you love me, you have said so. I cannot, I will not let
+ you go."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Listen to me, my friend," she said, her voice rising for the
+ moment above the whisper in which she had cautiously spoken
+ heretofore. "From the first I have deceived you, betrayed
+ you, played upon your affection but to betray you afresh. And
+ now I find that I love you. I am not that which you call
+ good, but it is impossible that I injure you. Go back to your
+ friends."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Never! I love you. What matters now anything that you have
+ said or done? And you love me. Ah dearest one, what can that
+ mean but good?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Bien-aim&eacute;</i>, what will you that I say?" she
+ interrupted speaking rapidly, "I am what you Americans call
+ 'a bad woman',&#8212;the sort of woman that you know nothing
+ of. I was the woman who sixteen years ago stayed at the Inn
+ at the Red Oak with Fran&ccedil;ois de Boisdhyver, the woman
+ your mother called nurse, who cared for his little daughter.
+ And now I have told you all. Will you know from now that I am
+ a thousand times unworthy? <i>Pour l'amour de Dieu</i>, give
+ it to me to do this one act of honour and of generosity."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH19"><!-- CH19 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIX
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ THE ATTACK
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ With these words she thrust the scrap of paper into his hands
+ and turning swiftly, started forward as though to escape his
+ further importunities by flight. But Dan was instantly by her
+ side, trying to catch her hand in the darkness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again she faced him passionately. "<i>C'est folie</i>," she
+ cried hoarsely, "have I not told you that we are in great
+ danger? Go, go back to the Inn. It is there only that you
+ will be safe.&#8212;O, <i>mon Dieu!"</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A figure had sprung suddenly from the blackness of the trees.
+ Dan felt a sharp blow on his shoulder, and then he was
+ grappling with a wiry antagonist, striving to keep at safe
+ distance a hand that clutched an open knife. Locked in a
+ close embrace, swaying from side to side of the road, they
+ fought desperately. Dan striving to get at the pistol which
+ he carried, his assailant trying to use his knife.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seemed as if Dan could no longer hold the man off when two
+ small hands closed over the fist that held the gleaming knife
+ and a clear voice rang out in French. Dan felt his
+ antagonist's grip loosen and he wrenched himself free. Madame
+ de la Fontaine had come to his rescue. "Quick, quick&#8212;to
+ the Inn. I am safe. You have but one chance for your life,"
+ she cried. Already his assailant had put a boatswain's
+ whistle to his lips and was sounding a shrill blast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Dan hesitated, uncertain what to do, he heard a number of
+ men come crashing through the underbrush of the neighbouring
+ field. Again Madame de la Fontaine cried, "<i>Mon Dieu</i>!
+ will you not run?" Then she turned and disappeared in the
+ darkness. Simultaneously came the crack of a pistol shot, and
+ a bullet whizzed by his ear. There was nothing for it but to
+ run; and run he did, shouting at the top of his voice the
+ while to Tom in the Inn. He probably owed his start to the
+ fact that for the moment his attacker, who had been held at
+ bay by Madame de la Fontaine, was uncertain whether to follow
+ her or Dan. That moment's delay saved Dan's life, for though,
+ with a curse, the man started after him now, he had a poor
+ chance of catching him in the darkness. But on he came only a
+ dozen yards or so behind, and after him the thundering steps
+ and harsh cries of those who had responded to the call of the
+ whistle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last Dan was at the door of the Inn, beating wildly upon
+ it, and calling, "Open, Tom; quick, for God's sake! It's
+ Dan." As the door was flung back, he sprang in and slammed it
+ shut. Already the attackers were in the courtyard, a volley
+ of shots rang against the stout oak, followed almost at once,
+ by the flinging against it of half-a-dozen men. But the great
+ oaken beam had been slipped into place and held firmly. Dan
+ was none the worse for his experience, save for a graze on
+ the cheek where the knife had glanced, and a slit on his
+ shoulder from a bullet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They're here!" he cried. "No time for explanations, Tom. I
+ went out&#8212;fool that I was!&#8212;was attacked. They're
+ here in force."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By this time Jesse had rushed into the bar, attracted by the
+ firing, and soon Ezra Manners came running down from the
+ floor above. After the first impact against the door those
+ without had withdrawn, evidently taking up a position in the
+ courtyard again, for almost at once there was a fusilade of
+ shots against door and windows, which luckily the heavy oak
+ was proof against.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They're welcome to keep that up all night," said Tom. "Only
+ a waste of ammunition. How many are there?" He would liked to
+ have asked Dan why he had gone out, but there was no time for
+ discussion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't know&#8212;half-a-dozen at least, I should guess,"
+ was Dan's reply. "Bonhomme is at their head, I'm sure. It was
+ he who tackled me in the avenue. They may have the whole crew
+ of the schooner here. That would mean a dozen or more."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well," said Tom, "we're in for it now, I guess. We'll have
+ to watch in different parts of the house, for we don't know
+ where they will attack. Unless they are all fools, it won't
+ be here."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You're right. I'll stay and look out for the south wing. You
+ go to the north wing, Tom; Jesse to the kitchen, and Ezra to
+ the end of the south passage. That'll cover the house as well
+ as we can cover it. They'll try to force an entrance
+ somewheres. Have you all got guns? Good. Leave the doors open
+ so that we can hear each other call."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Evidently the attacking party had concluded that they were
+ wasting their lead and their time in shooting at doors and
+ window-shutters, for as Tom had said, all was now quiet
+ outside. Fifteen minutes, half-an-hour passed, and nothing
+ occurred to alarm or to relieve the tension on the anxious
+ watchers within. At length Dan stole upstairs to reconnoitre.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was fortunate that he chose the precise moment he did, for
+ as his head emerged above the last stair, he saw that the
+ great shutters at the end of the south corridor were open,
+ and a man stood before the window, evidently on the top rung
+ of a ladder, trying the sash. It was locked to be sure, but
+ at the instant Dan saw him, he raised his fist and smashed
+ it. He was about to leap through the opening, fringed though
+ it was with jagged glass, when Dan aimed his pistol
+ carefully, and fired. There was a cry, and the form at the
+ window fell crashing to the ground below. Dan rushed to the
+ casement, and could hear in the court beneath him the curses
+ and exclamations of the surprised assailants. Quickly he
+ thrust the end of the ladder from the wall, then seizing a
+ fresh pistol from his belt, fired at random into the darkness
+ below. Another cry of pain attested to the fact that his
+ chance shot had taken effect. By this time Tom had rushed to
+ his assistance, and together they barred the window again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan gave a brief account of the incident. "But, for heaven's
+ sake, Tom," he concluded, "get back to the north wing. We are
+ in danger there every moment. I'll watch out here."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Tom returned to his post in the cold corridor of the north
+ wing, he heard heavy crashes, as of a battering-ram, against
+ the great door that opened into the gallery. A shrill whistle
+ brought Ezra Manners to his assistance. "Watch here!" he
+ commanded. "If the door crashes in, shoot, and shoot to kill;
+ then run into the bar and barricade the door between. I've a
+ plan."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He himself ran into the bar, blew out the candles, and
+ risking perhaps too much on the chance of success, cautiously
+ opened the front door. He could scarcely make out the group
+ at the farther end of the gallery, as he stepped out; but he
+ could hear the resounding crashes against the door into the
+ north hall, each one of which seemed to be the last that even
+ that massive frame could hold out against. Leveling his
+ pistol at the group; he took aim, and fired; snatched another
+ from his pocket, and fired a second time. Again, by good
+ luck, the defender's shots had told. There was a thud on the
+ gallery floor, and the besiegers scurried to cover beyond the
+ courtyard fence. Tom dashed safely back into the house, and
+ slipped the great beam into place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upstairs Dan's attention had been attracted by the commotion
+ in front of the inn. He opened a window on to the roof of the
+ gallery, climbed out, and crawled along on his belly till his
+ head just abutted over the eaves. For a few moments, after
+ the firing, he could hear the attackers moving about behind
+ the fence across the courtyard. At length, a couple of them
+ stole across the court and up on to the gallery beneath him.
+ In a moment they returned carrying the dead or wounded
+ comrade; then all of them seemed to go off together up the
+ dark avenue of maples. He waited till they could be heard no
+ more, then crept back into the house and ran down to tell Dan
+ of their temporary withdrawal. For an hour or more the four
+ defenders of the Inn kept themselves occupied parading the
+ corridors and rooms, on the watch for a fresh attack. But
+ nothing happened. They felt no security, however, and would
+ feel none till daylight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the silent watching of that night Dan had ample
+ opportunity to reflect upon his extraordinary interview with
+ Madame de la Fontaine. He loved her. Good heavens how he
+ loved her, but&#8212;had she been sincere in her refusal at
+ the last to keep the scrap of paper for the possession of
+ which she had so desperately intrigued? Had she decoyed him
+ to the rendezvous in the dark but to betray him to the
+ bandits with whom she was in league? At first it would seem
+ so. And yet the paper was in his possession; and, she it was
+ who had rescued him from the assassin's knife. Where was she
+ now? What had become of her? What was to be the end of this
+ mad night's work? That she was the woman who had accompanied
+ General Pointelle&#8212;or the Mar&eacute;chal de
+ Boisdhyver&#8212;somehow did not surprise him. And for the
+ time the full import of what that implied did not dawn upon
+ him. But what mattered anything now that he loved her?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He determined at last to reconnoitre again from the roof of
+ the gallery. It still lay in shadow, but it would not be long
+ before the moon, now rising over the eastern hills beyond the
+ Strathsey flooded it with light. In a moment, he had opened
+ the window, was over the sill, and, creeping cautiously along
+ the roof to the ledge, he worked his way toward the great oak
+ at the farther end.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All was still and deserted below as the Inn courtyard would
+ have been in the middle of any winter's night. While he stood
+ peering into the darkness, listening intently, the moon, just
+ showing above the distant tree tops, cast the first rays of
+ its light into the courtyard beneath him. At the instant the
+ figure of a woman stole across the flagged pavement and crept
+ fearfully to the Red Oak. With a strange thrill he recognized
+ Claire de la Fontaine. Reaching the shelter of the great
+ tree, she stooped, gathered a handful of gravel from the road
+ bed, and then cast it boldly at the shutters of the bar,
+ calling softly, "Dan, Dan."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Instantly he replied. "Claire! Is that you? What is it? I am
+ here, above you, on the roof."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah, <i>mon Dieu</i>!" she exclaimed, as she looked up
+ startled, and discerned his form leaning over the eaves, "for
+ the love of heaven, my friend, open to me. I am in danger and
+ I must tell you that which is of great importance to you.
+ <i>Mais vite, mon ami</i>. In ten minutes they will return
+ again."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It did not occur to Dan to doubt her. Careless of the risk,
+ he rushed back to the window, climbed in, and in a few
+ seconds had opened the door to the anxious woman without. She
+ seemed physically exhausted as she stepped into the warm bar.
+ Taking her in his arms, he carried her to a chair, and poured
+ out a glass of wine, which she eagerly drank.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It matters not what I have been doing," she murmured in
+ reply to his questions, "I have but little time to give you
+ my warning. <i>Ecoute</i>. Bonhomme and his men are gone only
+ to carry back their dead and wounded, and to bring cutlasses,
+ and the two or three sailors who were left on the schooner. I
+ have followed them&#8212;God knows how&#8212;and heard
+ something of their plans. They will make an attack&#8212;now,
+ in a moment&#8212;in two different places. But these attacks
+ will be shams,&#8212;is not that the word?&#8212;they will
+ mean nothing. It is the Oak Parlour that they desire to
+ enter. At the window of that so horrible room Bonhomme will
+ try to make an entrance without alarm while the others hold
+ your attention at the front and back of the Inn. Is it that
+ you understand? It is necessary that you are prepared for
+ these sham attacks, but the great danger is Bonhomme. The
+ window in the Oak Parlour is not strong. They have
+ information&#8212;recent information&#8212;from the Marquis
+ probably,&#8212;that it will not be difficult to break in.
+ One of you must conceal himself in the dark and shoot
+ Bonhomme when he enters; you must shoot and shoot to kill,
+ then we will be safe. I have no fear of Monsieur le Marquis.
+ The others&#8212;they are brutes&#8212;but they will flee.
+ And they know nothing, they do this for money,&#8212;ah,
+ <i>mon Dieu</i>, for money which I have furnished!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a moment, torn between his love and his deep distrust of
+ this woman, poor Dan stood uncertainly. Suddenly he knelt at
+ her side and clasped his arms about her. "Claire, you are on
+ our side? You swear it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah, <i>mon Dieu</i>! is it that I deserve this?" she
+ exclaimed bitterly. "Ah! I tell you truth," she cried. "You
+ must believe me&#8212;Listen! Are they come already?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, no, there is nothing. But I trust you, I will go."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly she sprang to her feet. "Let me go with you. It is
+ terrible to me to enter again that room; but I desire to
+ prove myself of honour. <i>Allous, allous</i>!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Tom is there."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah! send him here to the bar. But do you come, <i>mon
+ ami</i>. See, I go with you." She rose and forcing herself to
+ the effort, led the way across the bar and into the corridor
+ of the north wing, as if to show him that in sixteen years
+ she had not forgotten.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH20"><!-- CH20 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XX
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ IN THE OAK PARLOUR
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ "You know the way?" Dan exclaimed as he caught up with her,
+ and held open the door that led into the old north wing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But so well," she replied, catching her breath. "Would to
+ God that I did not!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah!" he murmured, "I forgot that you have been here before."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They pressed on silently. At the turn of the corridor upon
+ which the Oak Parlour gave, they discerned Tom Pembroke, a
+ weird figure, in the dim light of the tallow dip upon the
+ table, that cast fantastic shadows upon the whitewashed
+ walls.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he recognized them, he sprang forward in astonishment.
+ "Madame de la Fontaine! Dan! What does this mean?" he cried.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You know Madame?" Dan replied hastily and in evident
+ confusion. "At great risk she has come to warn us&#8212;she
+ is our friend, understand.&#8212;She has come to tell us how
+ Bonhomme and his men will attack the Inn."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom listened to his explanation with unconcealed dismay.
+ "Good heavens, Dan!" he protested, "You trust this woman? You
+ know she is in league with these ruffians. Do you want us to
+ fall into a trap?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, no, Monsieur Pembroke," interrupted Madame de la
+ Fontaine, "you must listen to me. I understand your fear. But
+ at last you can trust me. I repent that which I have done.
+ Ah, <i>mon Dieu</i>, with what bitterness! And now I desire
+ to do all that is possible to save you. You must trust me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I do not&#8212;I can not trust you," Tom cried sternly.
+ "Don't go in there, Dan. Don't I beg of you, trust this
+ woman's word. It is a trick."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Perhaps," said Dan grimly, "but go back. I take the
+ responsibility. I do trust her, I shall trust her&#8212;to
+ death. There is no time to lose, man. Go back!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What deviltry has bewitched you?" cried Tom passionately.
+ "Already once to-night you have risked our lives by your
+ fool-hardiness,&#8212;for the sake of this woman, eh? By gad,
+ man, I begin to see. But I tell you now, I refuse to be a
+ victim to your madness."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Mais non</i>, Monsieur Pembroke," Claire cried again. "By
+ all that is good and holy, I swear to you, that that which I
+ have said is true. You must go. They will attack the bar and
+ the kitchen. If those places are not defended, there will be
+ danger."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At any rate," said Dan, "I am going into the Oak Parlour. If
+ you refuse to act with me, barricade the door between the bar
+ and the north wing. If need be, I shall fight alone. Only now
+ we lose time, precious time."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pembroke looked at him as if he had gone mad, then shrugging
+ his shoulders he turned back into the bar, whistling for
+ Jesse and Ezra as he did so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a moment, glancing after Tom's retreating figure, shaken
+ to his soul by conflicting emotions, Dan stood irresolute.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But come," said Madame de la Fontaine, touching his arm.
+ Again like the weird genius of this strange night she led the
+ way on down the shadowy hall, and paused only when her hand
+ rested upon the knob of the door into the Oak Parlour. "It is
+ here," she said simply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Dan reached her side, she opened the door. The light of
+ the candle down the hallway did not penetrate the gloom of
+ the disused room. A musty smell as of cold stagnant air came
+ strong to their nostrils, and Dan felt, as they crossed the
+ threshold together, that he was entering a place where no
+ life had been for a long long time, a place full of dead
+ nameless horrors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The woman by his side was trembling violently. He put his arm
+ about her to reassure her, and there shot through him a
+ sensation of strange and terrible joy to be with her alone in
+ this darkness and danger. For the moment he was exulting that
+ for her sake he had risked his honour, that for her sake now
+ he was risking life itself. He bent his head to hers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No! no!&#8212;not here!" she whispered hoarsely, but yet
+ clinging to him with shaking hands. "It is so cold, so dark.
+ I have fear," she murmured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is like a tomb," he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The tomb of my hopes, of my youth," she breathed softly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Shall I strike a light?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, no,&#8212;no light, I implore you. <i>Ecoute</i>! What
+ is it that I hear?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I hear nothing. It is the wind in the Red Oak outside."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But listen!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is an owl hooting."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly she drew her hand from his, and he could hear her
+ moving swiftly about. "All is as it used to be?" she asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Precisely," he answered; "nothing has been changed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Here is the cabinet," she said, from across the room. "I can
+ feel the lion's head. It is opposite to the window and the
+ moonlight will stream in when the casement is opened, but if
+ I crouch low I shall not be seen. <i>Bien</i>! And you,
+ <i>mon ami</i>? Tell me, is the old <i>escritoire</i> still
+ to the left of the door?" Now she was back at his side once
+ again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The <i>escritoire</i>?" he repeated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The little table where one writes. Ah! yes, it is here. See,
+ behind this, <i>mon ami</i>, shall you hide yourself. The
+ moonlight will not reach here&#8212;and it is so arranged
+ that you will see plainly any one that appears at the window.
+ When the casement is opened, you will shoot, will you not,
+ and shoot to kill?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, I will shoot," said Dan, his voice trembling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You promise me?" she cried in a tense whisper, as she
+ grasped his arm and held it tight in her grip.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I tell you, yes."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You must not fail."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No. Shall I shoot at any one who opens?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Any one?&#8212;it will be Bonhomme,&#8212;no other."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly there came, from the front and the rear of the Inn,
+ at the same instant it seemed, the sharp staccato of a
+ fusilade of pistol shots, and the lumbering blows as of beams
+ being thrust at distant doors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They are come!" she whispered, "hide." Dan could hear the
+ swish of her garments as she rapidly glided across the room
+ to the old cabinet, then he turned and crouched low behind
+ the writing desk that she had chosen for his place of
+ concealment. He knelt there motionless, a cocked pistol
+ clenched in his right hand. His breath seemed to have
+ stopped, but his heart was pounding as though it must burst
+ through his breast. How could he shoot down in cold blood a
+ fellow man? The horror of it crowded out all other
+ impressions, sensations fears. He could fight, risk his life,
+ but to pull the trigger of that pistol when the casement
+ should open seemed to him an impossibility. He would wait,
+ grapple with him, fight as men should.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly a ray of moonlight fell across the dark floor. Dan,
+ looking up, seemed frozen by horror. The shutters had opened,
+ the casement swung back noiselessly, and there in the
+ opening, sharply outlined against the moonlight-flooded
+ night, was the great black hulk of Captain Bonhomme.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a moment he stood there irresolute, listening intently.
+ Dan was fascinated, motionless, held as in a vice by the
+ horror of the thing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly Bonhomme moved his head to one side as if to listen
+ more acutely. As he did so, the ray of moonlight fell upon
+ the cabinet, fell upon Claire de la Fontaine, upon something
+ that she held in an outstretched hand that gleamed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Nom de Dieu</i>!" There was the flash and crack of a
+ pistol, a sharp cry, and the great figure fell back and sank
+ out of sight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With that Dan sprang forward, reckless of danger, and ran to
+ the window. He heard without the confused sounds as of
+ persons scurrying to cover, saw their forms dash across the
+ moonlit courtyard, into the shadows of the trees and
+ outhouses. Beneath him on the floor of the gallery was
+ something horrible and still.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Almost instantly Claire de la Fontaine was by his side, and
+ as regardless of danger as he, she was calling sharply,
+ calling men by their names. Her hair had been loosened and
+ fell over her shoulders in black waves, her dark eyes flashed
+ with excitement and passion, and her face, strangely pale, in
+ the silver moonlight, was set in stern harsh lines. Even then
+ this vision of her tragic beauty thrilled the man at her
+ side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But she was as unconscious of him as she was of her danger.
+ With hand uplifted she called by name the desperados, who had
+ taken shelter in the darkness and to those who now came
+ running from front and rear where their attacks had been
+ unsuccessful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Appalled, spell-bound by the vision, even as Dan was, they
+ stopped, and stood listening mutely to the torrent of words
+ that she poured forth,&#8212;vehement French of which Dan had
+ no understanding.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last, ending the frightful tension of the scene, two of
+ the men came forward, crept up to the lifeless body of
+ Bonhomme, and grasping it by head and feet, carried it away,
+ across the courtyard, into the darkness of the avenue of
+ maples. One by one, still mysteriously silent, the others of
+ the gang followed, till at length the last one had
+ disappeared into the gloom. Weird silence fell once more upon
+ the Inn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was only then that Madame de la Fontaine turned to Dan.
+ "They will come no more," she said in a strained unnatural
+ voice. "We are saved, safe.... I have proved, is it not
+ so?&#8212;my honour, my love."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the words she sank at his feet, just as Tom, candle in
+ hand, appeared in the doorway.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH21"><!-- CH21 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXI
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ THE TREASURE
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ Owing doubtless to the death of Bonhomme and to the orders
+ given in no uncertain tones by Madame de la Fontaine, the
+ bandits from the schooner in the cove did not make a further
+ effort to attack the Inn that night. There was no rest,
+ however, for Madame de la Fontaine, after her heroic exploit
+ in the Oak Parlour, had swooned completely away. They carried
+ her to the couch in Mrs. Frost's parlour, and, awkwardly
+ enough, did what could be done for her by men. It was over an
+ hour before they succeeded in restoring her to consciousness,
+ and when they did so, she awoke to delirium and fever.
+ Distracted by anxiety and by their helplessness, at the first
+ streak of dawn, Dan started for town to get a doctor, and
+ Ezra Manners volunteered to go to the Red Farm and bring back
+ Mrs. Frost, Nancy, and the maids.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About six o'clock in the morning the women folk returned to
+ the Inn. But the briefest account of the attack was given
+ them, though they were told in no uncertain terms of Madame
+ de la Fontaine's heroic action in coming to warn them and of
+ her courageous shot at the leader. Then Mrs. Frost and Nancy
+ turned all their attention to the sick woman, caring for her
+ as tenderly and devotedly as if she were their own.
+ Half-an-hour later Dan returned from Monday Port with the
+ family doctor, a grave silent old gentleman, in whose skill
+ and discretion they trusted. After making an examination of
+ his patient, he nodded his head encouragingly; gave a few
+ directions to Mrs. Frost, and then left, promising to return
+ later in the morning with medicines and supplies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last, utterly worn out, the four men threw themselves on
+ their beds and slept from sheer exhaustion. The sun was high
+ in the sky when they came down stairs again and found Nancy
+ waiting for them, and a smoking breakfast ready on the table.
+ After greeting them, she pointed to the window, across the
+ fields, almost bare of snow now and gleaming in the morning
+ sunlight, to the bright waters of the cove. "See!" she cried,
+ "the schooner has disappeared."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They both looked. "By Jove, it has!" exclaimed Tom, rushing
+ to the other side of the room, and peering out at the
+ shipless sea. "Heigho! that's a relief. Pray God we've seen
+ the last of her. The Marquis gone, the schooner
+ gone,&#8212;we three together once more! Perhaps we shall
+ begin to live again. Ah!" he added more softly, glancing with
+ sudden sympathy at Dan's white drawn face, "I forgot the poor
+ woman across the hall."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan turned aside to hide his emotion, for though a load of
+ anxiety had been lifted from his heart by the vanishing of
+ <i>The Southern Cross</i>, he was sick with fear for the
+ issue of the illness that had stricken down the woman he
+ loved,&#8212;the woman who had proved her love for him by so
+ terrible and so tragic a deed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As though aware that for the moment they were best left
+ together alone, Nancy slipped away into the kitchen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You love her, Dan?" asked Tom simply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, Tom, with all my heart and soul. I staked my honour, my
+ life, on her sincerity. And how she has proved that we were
+ right to trust her! It can't be&#8212;she mustn't die&#8212;I
+ couldn't bear it!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She'll be all right, old fellow, don't worry; trust to your
+ mother and Nance. It is only the shock of the terrible things
+ she went through last night. Come on, we must take something
+ to eat. Here is Nancy back again."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was no doubt of the fact, <i>The Southern Cross</i> had
+ sailed away, vanished in the night as mysteriously as a week
+ before she had appeared in the Strathsey and found moorings
+ in the Cove. They did not count on the certainty of her not
+ reappearing, however; and that night and for many nights
+ thereafter the Inn was securely barricaded and a watch was
+ kept, but neither then nor ever did <i>The Southern Cross</i>
+ spread her sails in those waters again. She and her crew
+ disappeared from their lives as completely as from the seas
+ that stretched around the coast of Deal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom at once was for making a search in the Oak Parlour for
+ the hidden treasure, but for the time Dan had no heart for
+ the undertaking. He urged delay at least until Madame de la
+ Fontaine had recovered; and as for Nancy she would not hear
+ of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I can't bear to think of it,&#8212;of the trouble, the
+ crime, the suffering of which it has been the cause. When our
+ poor lady recovers, she will tell us all we need to know. I
+ dread the Oak Parlour. I would not go into that room for
+ anything in the world. Nor, believe me, Tom, could Dan do so
+ now. You have guessed, haven't you, that he loves Madame de
+ la Fontaine?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Of course, dearest; poor fellow! he betrays his love by
+ every word and act. But good heaven, Nance, he couldn't marry
+ her!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No&#8212;I don't know. I suppose not. But Dan will do as he
+ will. To oppose him now would only make him the more
+ wretched."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Does your mother know?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, and it is best she should not. I don't think she has the
+ faintest suspicion."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, I suppose we had better let things rest awhile;" Tom
+ assented, "but I swear I would like to get at the Oak Parlour
+ and tear the secret out of it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We must wait a bit, Tom dear. Let's just be glad now of what
+ we have and are."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And with that he drew her toward him and pressed for a
+ definite answer to the question which so deeply concerned
+ their future.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When Madame has recovered, when we know all and the mystery
+ is solved," she replied; then she added inconsequently, "I
+ wonder if we shall ever hear of the old Marquis again."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I wonder too," Tom exclaimed. "Though he has sailed away on
+ <i>The Southern Cross</i>, I doubt if he will willingly leave
+ the treasure behind him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That dreadful treasure, Tom," cried Nancy. "I wish to
+ goodness that the Marquis had it and might keep it always. We
+ have each other."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The evening of the second day after the terrible night of the
+ attack, as Dan was entering the Inn from his work outside, he
+ saw Madame de la Fontaine standing on the gallery under the
+ Red Oak. It was the dusk of a mild pleasant day. She was clad
+ still in her soft grey gown with furs about her waists and
+ neck, and a grey scarf over her head. But there was something
+ infinitely pathetic to him in the listlessness of her
+ attitude, in the expression of a deep and melancholy that had
+ come into her face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He stole swiftly to her side, and taking her hand in his
+ pressed it to his lips, with a gesture that was as reverent
+ as it was tender. For a moment something of the old
+ brightness returned to her face as she bent her clear gaze
+ upon his bowed head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You love me, Dan?" she murmured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You know I love you," he whispered passionately.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, I believe that you do," she said simply. "I shall
+ always be thankful that I have won a good man's love." But
+ suddenly she withdrew her hand, as the door of the bar
+ opened. "See, here is Mademoiselle Nancy. She is coming for
+ me: she is to be with me to-night. There is much for me to
+ do."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His heart surged within him; for he knew that in her simple
+ words there was the tragic note of farewell; but he could not
+ speak, he could not plead from that sad and broken woman for
+ a passion that he knew but too well she could never give. He
+ knew that she would leave him on the morrow, that his
+ protests would be vain;&#8212;nay,&#8212;he would not even
+ utter them! With the gathering of the darkness about the old
+ Inn, he felt that the light in his heart was being obscured
+ forever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The evening passed, the night. Morning came, and Madame de la
+ Fontaine, accompanied by Nancy, left the Inn at the Red Oak
+ for Coventry. There remained to Dan of his brief and tragic
+ passion but one letter, which Tom handed to him that morning,
+ and which, with despairing heart, he read and re-read a
+ hundred times.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Mon cher ami</i>:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You would forgive that I do not know well how to express
+ myself as I desire, if you could read my heart. I bade you
+ good-bye to-night under the Red Oak, tree for me of such
+ tragic and such beautiful memories. I could not say farewell
+ otherwise, dear friend, nor could you. We have loved
+ sincerely, have we not? We will remember that in days to
+ come; you will remember it even in the happier days to come
+ that I pray God to grant you. I know all that you would say,
+ my friend, but it cannot be. I must vanish from your life, be
+ gone as completely as though I had never entered it. I love
+ you deeply, tenderly, but I could not be to you what I know
+ that now you wish. All the past forbids. The very tragedy
+ that proved to you that I was worthy of your trust forbids.
+ It is my only justification that I saved your lives, dear
+ friend; but oh how bitterly I ask pardon of God for what has
+ been done! Then also, dearest friend, my heart is no longer
+ capable to bear passion, but only to feel great tenderness. I
+ could not say these things, and yet they must be written. I
+ cannot go with them unsaid. Certain other things must be told
+ you in justice to all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The story I told you on the schooner that day was largely
+ truth. The General Pointelle, who was at the Inn at the Red
+ Oak in 1814, was in reality the Mar&eacute;chal de
+ Boisdhyver, the father of your foster-sister Nancy. She is
+ truly Eloise de Boisdhyver. The Mar&eacute;chal returned to
+ France to support the Emperor, as he wrote to madame your
+ good mother; and he fell, as I told you, on the field of
+ Waterloo. Admitting the importance of his mission, admitting
+ my ambiguous relation to him (indefensible as it was), to
+ have left the child as he did was an act of kindness. In
+ truth the treasure concealed in the Oak Parlour is
+ considerable, and it was always my purpose to return, but the
+ necessary directions for finding it were not entrusted to me,
+ but to the Marquis Marie-Anne, whom I didn't meet until many
+ years after Waterloo. Then I was induced by the
+ Marquis,&#8212;your old Marquis&#8212;to provide the money
+ for the miserable enterprise, of which we know the tragic
+ result. From the first I was uncertain about the method we
+ adopted; and then soon after our arrival here, from a hundred
+ little indications, I became convinced that Bonhomme was
+ prepared to betray us, once we secured the treasure. As for
+ the Marquis, I suppose that he sailed away on the schooner.
+ You need fear him no longer. It was he, I am convinced, that
+ conveyed to them the information of the loosened casement in
+ the Oak Parlour, and unwittingly arranged for his own undoing
+ and our salvation. At all events he will have realized now
+ that he has hopelessly lost the fight. As for the treasure,
+ by right it belongs to Eloise, who should not disdain to use
+ it. I enclose a transcription of the other half of the torn
+ scrap of paper, which will supplement the directions in your
+ possession.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And as for me, my friend, I shall seek a shelter in my own
+ country apart from the world in which I have lived so to
+ little purpose and for the most part so unhappily. Believe
+ me, so it is best. My heart is too full for me to express all
+ that I feel for you.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Dear, dear friend, do not render me the more unhappy to know
+ that my brief friendship with you shall have harmed your
+ life. Your place is in the world, to take part in the life of
+ your own country, not, dear Dan, to waste youth and energy in
+ the fruitless desolation of this beautiful Deal, not above
+ all to grieve for a woman who was unworthy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I commend you to God, and I shall never forget you.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "CLAIRE DE LA FONTAINE."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was with a heavy heart that Dan consented later in the
+ morning to Tom's proposal that they force at last the secret
+ of the Oak Parlour. He got the torn scrap of paper which he
+ had found,&#8212;such ages ago it seemed, though it was
+ scarcely a week,&#8212;in the old cabinet, and gave it to
+ Tom, with the copy of the other half which Madame de la
+ Fontaine had enclosed in her letter of farewell. The copy in
+ Madame de la Fontaine's handwriting did not dovetail exactly
+ into the jagged edges of the original portion, so that it was
+ some time before they could get it into position for reading.
+ But at last it was pasted together on a large bit of
+ cardboard, and Tom, with the aid of a dictionary, succeeded
+ in making a translation, which Dan took down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Learning of the attempt of my Emperor to regain his glorious
+ throne, I leave these hospitable shores to offer my sword to
+ his cause. In case I do not return, the person having
+ instructions for the discovery of this paper, which I tear in
+ two parts, will find herein the necessary directions for the
+ finding of my hidden treasure. This treasure, bullion,
+ jewels, and coins, is concealed in a secret chamber in this
+ Inn at the Red Oak. This secret chamber will be entered from
+ the Oak Parlour. The hidden door is released by a spring
+ beneath the hand of the lady in the picture nearest the
+ fireplace on the north side of the room. A panel slides back
+ revealing the entrance. Instructions as to the deposition of
+ the treasure will be found in the golden casket therewith.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "FRAN&Ccedil;OIS DE BOISDHYVER."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well?" said Tom, "the instructions are definite enough. Now
+ we can put them to the test. Let's get to work at once. Wait
+ a second till I get some wood, and well make a fire in the
+ Oak Parlour." He filled his arms with logs from the bin under
+ the settle in the bar, while Dan got the key for the north
+ wing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon they were at the end of the old hall. It was with an
+ effort that Dan brought himself to enter the room, for there
+ flashed into his mind the vision of the last time he was
+ there,&#8212;the cold silver moonlight, the dark burly form
+ at the casement, the white drawn face of Claire de la
+ Fontaine, and then the sharp flash and crack of the pistol.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But with an impatient gesture, as if to thrust aside these
+ tragic memories, he stepped across the threshold, and
+ kneeling at the hearth, took the wood from Tom's arms and
+ began to lay a fire. In the meantime his friend fumbled at
+ the window casements, opened them, and let in the light of
+ day and the pure air of out-of-doors. Soon the fire was
+ crackling cheerily on the great andirons and casting its
+ bright reflection on the dark oak panelling of the walls.
+ Nothing had been disturbed&#8212;the old cabinet with the
+ lions' heads stood opposite the window; the little
+ <i>escritoire</i>, behind which he had crouched on the fatal
+ night, was pushed back against the wall; the chairs, the
+ tables, thick with dust, stood just as they had been standing
+ for many years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do you realize, Tom," Dan said, as they stood side by side
+ watching the blazing logs, "that it is sixteen years since
+ General Pointelle stayed at the Inn and used this room? And
+ the treasure, if there is any treasure, has been mouldering
+ here all that time."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Let's get at it," said Tom. "I confess this place gives me
+ the creeps. Have you got my translation of the directions?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, here it is." Dan spread out the bit of paper on one of
+ the tables. "'The hidden door is released by a spring beneath
+ the hand of the lady in the picture nearest the fireplace on
+ the north side of the room.' Ah! that must be it&#8212;that
+ old landscape let into the panel there." He walked nearer and
+ examined it closely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a simple landscape, a garden in the foreground, forest
+ and hills in the distance; and in the midst a lady in
+ Eighteenth century costume caressing the head of a greyhound.
+ It was beautifully mellow in tone, and might well have been a
+ production of Gainsborough, though the Frosts had preserved
+ no such tradition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan began to fumble, according to the directions, beneath the
+ hand of the stately lady, pressing vigourously here and there
+ with thumb and forefinger. "What's that?" he cried suddenly.
+ A faint click, as of a spring in action, had sounded sharp in
+ the stillness, but apparently with no other effect. "By
+ Jove!" he exclaimed, "I believe there is something behind it.
+ You heard the click? See there! the panel's opened a bit at
+ the side." Surely enough, there was a long crack on the
+ right&#8212;the length of the picture. "Here, let's push."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Careless of the landscape, they put their hands upon the
+ panel and pressed with all their force to the left. It
+ yielded slowly, slipping back side-wise into the wall, and
+ revealed a narrow opening, beyond which was a little circular
+ stairway, leading apparently to some chamber above.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Here's the entrance to the secret chamber all right," Dan
+ exclaimed. "Let's see where it goes to." He climbed in and
+ started up the winding flight of stairs, Tom close behind
+ him. About half way up the height of the Oak Parlour he came
+ to a door. "Can't go any farther," he called to Tom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What's the matter?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There's a door here; it leads, evidently, into some little
+ room between the Oak Parlour and the bedroom next. Who would
+ ever have guessed it?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Can't you open the door; is it locked?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan fumbled about till he found and turned the knob. "No," he
+ answered. "I've opened it. But it's pitch dark inside. Get a
+ candle."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He waited anxiously while Tom went below again to get a
+ candle, a strange feeling of dread creeping over him now that
+ at last he was about to penetrate the secret which had been
+ of such tragic purport in his life. In a moment Tom had
+ returned, a candle in either hand, one of which he handed to
+ Dan, and together they entered the secret chamber. It was a
+ little room scarcely six feet square, without light, and so
+ far as they could see without ventilation. As they stood
+ looking about the candle flickered strangely casting weird
+ shadows over the walls. Suddenly they saw at their feet a
+ tiny golden casket, and then, in a corner of the room a row
+ of small cloth bags, several of which had been ripped open,
+ so that a stream of golden coin flowed out upon the floor.
+ Nearby stood another little golden chest; and Tom, lifting
+ the lid, started back astonished. For there sparkling and
+ glowing in the candle light as though they were living moving
+ things, lay a heap of precious gems&#8212;diamonds, rubies,
+ opals, sapphires, amethysts, that might have been the ransom
+ of a princess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It's a treasure right enough!" cried Dan. "But what's this?"
+ He turned to the opposite corner where there lay a heap of
+ something covered with a great black cloth. They approached
+ gingerly, and Dan stooped and picked up an edge of the
+ covering. "It's a cloak," he exclaimed. Startled, he paused
+ for a moment; then quickly pulled the cloak away, uncovering,
+ to their horror, a lifeless body.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Tom!" Dan cried in a ghastly whisper. "A man has died here."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom held the candle over the gruesome heap. "But who?" he
+ asked in a hoarse whisper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For reply Dan pointed significantly to the cloak which he had
+ dropped on the floor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What!" cried Tom. "Good God! the old Marquis! But how? I
+ don't understand&#8212;" he added, staring blankly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He must have come here the afternoon he pretended to leave
+ the Inn, must have learned the secret passage somehow. It was
+ he who loosened the casement in the Oak Parlour that night,
+ and got his message to Bonhomme. He was waiting here for him.
+ Can't you see it all&#8212;the panel slipped back; he
+ couldn't open it again; Bonhomme didn't come; he was caught
+ like a rat in a trap."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My God, what a fate!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We can't leave his body here. We must give it decent burial,
+ you and I, Tom, for we can't let this be known."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And the treasure?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah! there was treasure, wasn't there? Wait, let's see what
+ is in the little casket." He picked up the golden casket that
+ they had stepped over as they entered, and raised the lid. A
+ single scrap of paper was inside on the little velvet
+ cushion, inscribed in the same handwriting as the paper of
+ directions, "<i>Pour Eloise de Boisdhyver</i>."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But come," Tom whispered, holding back the door, "I can't
+ stand this any longer. We'll come back again, and do what
+ must be done. Come, Dan."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan gave a last look into the strange horrible little room,
+ then he followed his friend. They closed the door behind them
+ and crept slowly down the narrow winding stairs to the Oak
+ Parlour, leaving the treasure in the secret chamber and the
+ Marquis guarding it in the silence and darkness of death.
+ What had been so basely striven for was sorrily won at last.
+ </p>
+ <center>
+ THE END.
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Inn at the Red Oak, by Latta Griswold
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Inn at the Red Oak, by Latta Griswold
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere 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
+
+
+Title: The Inn at the Red Oak
+
+Author: Latta Griswold
+
+Posting Date: December 8, 2011 [EBook #9856]
+Release Date: February, 2006
+First Posted: October 24, 2003
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE INN AT THE RED OAK ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Mary Meehan, David Garcia
+and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE INN AT THE RED OAK
+
+BY LATTA GRISWOLD
+
+1917
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: "It's a treasure right enough!" cried Dan.]
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+PART I
+THE OLD MARQUIS
+
+I THE MARQUIS ARRIVES AT THE INN
+
+II THE LION'S EYE
+
+III THE MARQUIS AT NIGHT
+
+IV THE OAK PARLOUR
+
+V THE WALK THROUGH THE WOODS
+
+
+PART II
+THE TORN SCRAP OF PAPER
+
+VI THE HALF OF AN OLD SCRAP OF PAPER
+
+VII A DISAPPEARANCE
+
+VIII GREEN LIGHTS
+
+IX RECOLLECTIONS OF A FRENCH EXILE
+
+X MIDNIGHT VIGILS
+
+
+PART III
+THE SCHOONER IN THE COVE
+
+XI THE SOUTHERN CROSS
+
+XII TOM TURNS THE TABLES
+
+XIII MADAME DE LA FONTAINE
+
+XIV IN THE FOG
+
+XV NANCY
+
+XVI MADAME AT THE INN
+
+XVII THE MARQUIS LEAVES THE INN
+
+
+PART IV
+THE ATTACK ON THE INN
+
+XVIII THE AVENUE OF MAPLES
+
+XIX THE ATTACK
+
+XX THE OAK PARLOUR
+
+XXI THE TREASURE
+
+
+
+
+The Inn at the Red Oak
+
+
+
+
+PART I
+
+THE OLD MARQUIS
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+THE MARQUIS ARRIVES AT THE INN
+
+
+By the end of the second decade of the last century Monday Port had
+passed the height of prosperity as one of the principal depots for the
+West Indian trade. The shipping was rapidly being transferred to New York
+and Boston, and the old families of the Port, having made their fortunes,
+in rum and tobacco as often as not, were either moving away to follow the
+trade or had acquiesced in the changed conditions and were settling down
+to enjoy the fruit of their labours. The harbour now was frequently
+deserted, except for an occasional coastwise trader; the streets began to
+wear that melancholy aspect of a town whose good days are more a memory
+than a present reality; and the old stage roads to Coventry and Perth
+Anhault were no longer the arteries of travel they once had been.
+
+To the east of Monday Port, across Deal Great Water, an estuary of the
+sea that expanded almost to the dignity of a lake, lay a pleasant rolling
+wooded country known in Caesarea as Deal. It boasted no village, scarcely
+a hamlet. Dr. Jeremiah Watson, a famous pedagogue and a graduate of
+Kingsbridge, had started his modest establishment for "the education of
+the sons of gentlemen" on Deal Hill; there were half-a-dozen prospering
+farms, Squire Pembroke's Red Farm and Judge Meath's curiously lonely but
+beautiful House on the Dunes among them; a little Episcopalian chapel on
+the shores of the Strathsey river, a group of houses at the cross roads
+north of Level's Woods, and the Inn at the Red Oak,--and that was all.
+
+In its day this inn had been a famous hostelry, much more popular with
+travellers than the ill-kept provincial hotels in Monday Port; but now
+for a long time it had scarcely provided a livelihood for old Mrs. Frost,
+widow of the famous Peter who for so many years had been its popular
+host. No one knew when the house had been built; though there was an old
+corner stone on which local antiquarians professed to decipher the
+figures "1693," and that year was assigned by tradition as the date of
+its foundation.
+
+It was a long crazy building, with a great sloping roof, a wide porch
+running its entire length, and attached to its sides and rear in all
+sorts of unexpected ways and places were numerous out houses and offices.
+Behind its high brick chimneys rose the thick growth of Lovel's Woods,
+crowning the ridge that ran between Beaver Pond and the Strathsey river
+to the sea. The house faced southwards, and from the cobbled court before
+it meadow and woodland sloped to the beaches and the long line of sand
+dunes that straggled out and lost themselves in Strathsey Neck. To the
+east lay marshes and the dunes and beyond them the Strathsey, two miles
+wide where its waters met those of the Atlantic; west lay the great
+curve, known as the Second Beach, the blue surface of Deal Bay, and a
+line of rocky shore, three miles in length, terminated by Rough Point,
+near which began the out-lying houses of Monday Port.
+
+The old hostelry took its name from a giant oak which grew at its
+doorstep just to one side of the maple-lined driveway that led down to
+the Port Road, a hundred yards or so beyond. This enormous tree spread
+its branches over the entire width and half the length of the roof.
+Ordinarily, of course, its foliage was as green as the leaves on the
+maples of the avenue or on the neighbouring elms, and the name of the Inn
+might have seemed to the summer or winter traveller an odd misnomer; but
+in autumn when the frost came early and the great mass of green flushed
+to a deep crimson it could not have been known more appropriately than as
+the Inn at the Red Oak.
+
+It was a solidly-built house, such as even in the early part of the
+nineteenth century men were complaining they could no longer obtain;
+built to weather centuries of biting southeasters, and--the legend
+ran--to afford protection in its early days against Indians. At the time
+of the Revolution it had been barricaded, pierced with portholes, and had
+served, like innumerable other houses from Virginia to Massachusetts, as
+Washington's headquarters. When Tom Pembroke knew it best, its old age
+and decay had well set in.
+
+Pembroke was the son of the neighbouring squire, whose house, known as
+the Red Farm, lay In the little valley on the other side of the Woods at
+the head of Beaver Pond. From the time he had been able to thread his way
+across the woodland by its devious paths--Tom had been at the Inn almost
+every day to play with Dan Frost, the landlord's son. They had played in
+the stables, then stocked with a score of horses, where now there were
+only two or three; in the great haymows of the old barn in the clearing
+back of the Inn; in the ramshackle garret under that amazing roof; or,
+best of all, in the abandoned bowling-alley, where they rolled
+dilapidated balls at rickety ten-pins.
+
+When Tom and Dan were eighteen--they were born within a day of each
+other one bitter February--old Peter died, leaving the Inn to his wife.
+Mrs. Frost pretended to carry on the business, but the actual task of
+doing so soon devolved upon her son. And in this he was subjected to
+little interference; for the poor lady, kindly inefficient soul that she
+was, became almost helpless with rheumatism. But indeed it was rather on
+the farm than to the Inn that more and more they depended for their
+living. In the social hierarchy of Caesarea the Pembrokes held
+themselves as vastly superior to the Frosts; but thanks to the
+easy-going democratic customs of the young republic, more was made of
+this by the women than the men.
+
+The two boys loved each other devotedly, though love is doubtless the
+last word they would have chosen to express their relation. Dan was tall,
+dark, muscular; he had a well-shaped head on his square shoulders; strong
+well-cut features; a face that the sun had deeply tanned and dark hair
+that it had burnished with gold. Altogether he was a prepossessing lad,
+though he looked several years older than he was, and he was commonly
+treated by his neighbours with a consideration that his years did not
+merit. Tom Pembroke was fairer; more attractive, perhaps, on first
+acquaintance; certainly more boyish in appearance and behaviour. He was
+quicker in his movements and in his mental processes; more aristocratic
+in his bearing. His blue eyes were more intelligent than Dan's, but no
+less frank and kindly. Young Frost admired his friend almost as much as
+he cared for him; for Dan, deprived of schooling, had a reverence for
+learning, of which Tom had got a smattering at Dr. Watson's establishment
+for "the sons of gentlemen" on the nearby hill.
+
+One stormy night in early January, the eve of Dan Frost's twenty-second
+birthday, the two young men had their supper together at the Inn, and
+afterwards sat for half-an-hour in the hot, stove-heated parlour until
+Mrs. Frost began to nod over her knitting.
+
+"Off with you, boys," she said at length; "you will be wanting to smoke
+your dreadful pipes. Nancy will keep me company."
+
+They took instant advantage of this permission and went into the deserted
+bar, where they made a roaring fire on the great hearth, drew their
+chairs near, filled their long clay pipes with Virginia tobacco, and fell
+to talking.
+
+"Think of it!" exclaimed young Frost, as he took a great whiff at his
+pipe; "here we are--the middle of the winter--and not a guest in the
+house. Why we used to have a dozen travellers round the bar here, and the
+whole house bustling. I've known my father to serve a hundred and more
+with rum on a night like this. Now we do a fine business if we serve as
+many in a winter. Times have changed since we were boys."
+
+"Aye," Tom agreed, "and it isn't so long ago, either. It seemed to me as
+if the whole county used to be here on a Saturday night."
+
+"I'm thinking," resumed Dan musingly, "of throwing up the business,
+what's the use of pretending to keep an inn? If it wasn't for mother
+and for Nancy, I'd clear out, boy; go off and hunt my fortune. As it is,
+with what I make on the farm and lose on the house, I just pull through
+the year."
+
+"By gad," exclaimed Tom, "I'd go with you, Dan. I'm tired to my soul with
+reading law in father's office. Why, you and I haven't been farther than
+Coventry to the county fair, or to Perth Anhault to make a horse trade.
+I'd like to see the world, go to London and Paris. I've wanted to go to
+France ever since that queer Frenchman was here--remember?--and told us
+those jolly tales about the Revolution and the great Napoleon. We were
+hardly more than seven or eight then, I guess."
+
+"I would like to go, hanged if I wouldn't," said Dan. "I'm getting more
+and more discontented. But there's not much use crying for the moon, and
+France might as well be the moon, for all of me." He relapsed then into a
+brooding silence. It was hard for an inn-keeper to be cheerful in
+midwinter with an empty house. Tom too was silent, dreaming vividly, if
+vaguely, of the France he longed to see.
+
+"Hark!" exclaimed Dan presently. "How it blows! There must be a big sea
+outside to-night."
+
+He strode to the window, pushed back the curtains of faded chintz, and
+stared out into the darkness. The wind was howling in the trees and about
+the eaves of the old inn, the harsh roar of the surf mingled with the
+noise of the storm, and the sleet lashed the window-panes in fury.
+
+"You will not be thinking of going home tonight, Tom?"
+
+"Not I," Pembroke answered, for he was as much at home in Dan's enormous
+chamber as he was in his own little room under the roof at the Red Farm.
+
+As he turned from the window, the door into the parlour opened, and a
+young girl quietly slipped in and seated herself in the chimney-corner.
+
+"Hello, Nance," Dan exclaimed, as she entered; "come close, child; you
+need to be near the fire on a night like this."
+
+"Mother is asleep," the girl answered briefly, and then, resting her
+chin upon her hands, she fixed her great dark eyes upon the glowing
+logs. She was Dan's foster-sister, eighteen years of age, though she
+looked hardly more than sixteen; a shy, slender, girl, lovely with a
+wild, unusual charm. To Tom she had always been a silent elfin
+creature, delightful as their playmate when a child, but now though
+still so familiar, she seemed in an odd way, to grow more remote.
+Apparently she liked to sit with them on these winter evenings in the
+deserted bar, when Mrs. Frost had gone to bed; and to listen to their
+conversation, though she took little part in it.
+
+As Dan resumed his seat, he looked at her with evident concern, for she
+was shivering as she sat so quietly by the fireside.
+
+"Are you cold, Nance?" he asked.
+
+"A little," she replied. "I was afraid in the parlour with Mother asleep,
+and the wind and the waves roaring so horribly."
+
+"Afraid?" exclaimed Tom, with an incredulous laugh. "I never knew you to
+be really afraid of anything in the world, Nancy."
+
+She turned her dark eyes upon him for the moment, with a sharp
+inquisitive glance which caused him to flush unaccountably. An answering
+crimson showed in her cheeks, and she turned back to the fire. The colour
+fled almost as quickly as it had come, and left her pale, despite the
+glow of firelight.
+
+"I was afraid--to-night," she said, after a moment's silence.
+
+Suddenly there came the sound of a tremendous knocking on the door which
+opened from the bar into the outer porch, and all three started in
+momentary alarm.
+
+Dan jumped to his feet. "Who's that?" he cried.
+
+Again came the vigorous knocking. He ran across the room, let down the
+great oaken beam, and opened the door to the night and storm.
+
+"Come in, travellers." A gust of wind and sleet rushed through the
+opening and stung their faces. With the gust there seemed to blow in the
+figure of a little old man wrapped in a great black coat, bouncing into
+their midst as if he were an India rubber ball thrown by a gigantic hand.
+Behind him strode in Manners, the liveryman of Monday Port.
+
+"Here's a guest for you, Mr. Frost. I confess I did my best to keep him
+in town till morning, but nothing 'd do; he must get to the Inn at the
+Red Oak to-night. We had a hellish time getting here too, begging the
+lady's pardon; but here we are."
+
+Good-naturedly he had taken hold of his fare and, as he spoke, was
+helping the stranger unwrap himself from the enveloping cloak.
+
+"He's welcome," said Dan. "Here, sir, let me help you." He put out his
+hand to steady the curious old gentleman, who, at last, gasping for
+breath and blinking the sleet out of his eyes, had been unrolled by
+Manners from the dripping cloak.
+
+He was a strange figure of a man, they thought, as Dan led him to the
+fire to thaw himself out. He was scarcely more than five and a half feet
+in height, with tiny hands and feet almost out of proportion even to his
+diminutive size. He was an old man, they would have said, though his
+movements were quick and agile as if he were set up on springs. His face,
+small, sharp-featured and weazened, was seamed with a thousand wrinkles.
+His wig was awry, its powder, washed out by the melting sleet, was
+dripping on his face in pasty streaks; and from beneath it had fallen
+wisps of thin grey hair, which plastered themselves against his temples
+and forehead. This last feature was also out of proportion to the rest of
+his physiognomy, for it was of extraordinary height, and of a polished
+smoothness, in strange contrast to his wrinkled cheeks. Beneath shone two
+flashing black eyes, with the fire of youth in them, for all he seemed so
+old. The lower part of his face was less distinctive. He had a small,
+Suddenly there came the sound of a tremendous knocking on the door which
+opened from the bar into the outer porch, and all three started in
+momentary alarm.
+
+Dan jumped to his feet. "Who's that?" he cried.
+
+Again came the vigorous knocking. He ran across the room, let down the
+great oaken beam, and opened the door to the night and storm.
+
+"Come in, travellers." A gust of wind and sleet rushed through the
+opening and stung their faces. With the gust there seemed to blow in the
+figure of a little old man wrapped in a great black coat, bouncing into
+their midst as if he were an India rubber ball thrown by a gigantic hand.
+Behind him strode in Manners, the liveryman of Monday Port.
+
+"Here's a guest for you, Mr. Frost. I confess I did my best to keep him
+in town till morning, but nothing'd do; he must get to the Inn at the Red
+Oak to-night. We had a hellish time getting here too, begging the lady's
+pardon; but here we are."
+
+Good-naturedly he had taken hold of his fare and, as he spoke, was
+helping the stranger unwrap himself from the enveloping cloak.
+
+"He's welcome," said Dan. "Here, sir, let me sharply-pointed nose; a
+weak mouth, half-hidden by drooping white moustaches; and a small sharp
+chin, accentuated by a white beard nattily trimmed to a point. He was
+dressed entirely in black; a flowing coat of French cut, black small
+clothes, black stockings and boots that reached to the calves of his
+little legs. These boots were ornamented with great silver buckles, and
+about his neck and wrists showed bedraggled bits of yellowed lace."
+
+He stood before the fire, speechless still; standing first on one foot
+then on the other; rubbing his hands the while as he held them to the
+grateful warmth.
+
+Nancy had in the meanwhile drawn a glass of rum, and now advancing
+held it toward him a little gingerly. He took it eagerly and drained
+it at a gulp.
+
+"_Merci, ma petite ange; merci, messieurs_" he exclaimed at last; and
+then added in distinct, though somewhat strongly accented English, "I ask
+your pardon. I forget you may not know my language. But now that this
+good liquor has put new life in my poor old bones, I explain myself. I am
+arrived, I infer, at the Inn at the Red Oak; and you, monsieur, though so
+young, I take to be my host. I have your description, you perceive, from
+the good postilion. You will do me the kindness to provide me with supper
+and a bed?"
+
+"Certainly, sir," said Dan. "It is late and we are unprepared, but we
+will put you up somehow. You too, Manners, had best let me bunk you till
+morning; you'll not be going back to the Port tonight? Nancy a fresh
+bumper for Mr. Manners."
+
+"Thankee, sir; I managed to get out with the gentleman yonder, and I
+guess I'll manage to get back. But it's a rare night, masters. Just a
+minute, sir, and I'll be getting his honour's bags.... Thank ye kindly,
+Miss Nancy."
+
+He drained the tumbler of raw spirit that Nancy held out. Then he opened
+the door again and went out into the storm, returning almost at once with
+the stranger's bags.
+
+Dan turned to his sister. "Nancy dear, go stir up Susan and Deborah. We
+must have a fire made in the south chamber and some hot supper got ready.
+Tell Susan to rout out Jesse to help her. Say nothing to Mother; no need
+to disturb her. And now, sir," he continued, turning again to the
+stranger, "may I ask your name?"
+
+The old gentleman ceased his springing seesaw for a moment, and fixed
+his keen black eyes on the questioner.
+
+"_Certainment, monsieur_--certainly, I should say," he replied in a high,
+but not unpleasant, voice. "I am the Marquis de Boisdhyver, at your
+service. I am to travel in the United States--oh! for a long time. I stay
+here, if you are so good as to accommodate me, perhaps till you are weary
+and wish me to go elsewhere. You have been greatly recommended to me by
+my friend,--quiet, remote, secluded, an _auberge_--what you call it?--an
+inn, well-suited to my habits, my tastes, my desire for rest. I am very
+_fatigue_, monsieur."
+
+"Yes," said Dan, with a grim smile, "we are remote and quiet and
+secluded. You are welcome, sir, to what we have. Tom, see that Manners
+has another drink before he goes, will you? and do the honours for our
+guest, while Nance and I get things ready."
+
+As he disappeared into the kitchen, following Nancy, the Marquis looking
+after him with a comical expression of gratitude upon his face. Tom drew
+another glass of rum, which Manners eagerly, if rashly, devoured. Then
+the liveryman wrapped himself in his furs, bade them good-night, and
+started out again into the storm for his drive back to Monday Port.
+
+All this time the old gentleman stood warming his feet and hands at the
+fire, watching his two companions with quickly-shifting eyes, or glancing
+curiously over the great bar which the light of the fire and the few
+candles but faintly illuminated.
+
+Having barred the door, Tom turned back to the hearth. "It is a bad
+night, sir."
+
+"But yes," exclaimed the Marquis. "I think I perish. Oh! that dreary
+tavern at your Monday Port. I think when I arrive there I prefer to
+perish. But this, this is the old Inn at the Red Oak, is it not? And it
+dates, yes,--from the year 1693? The old inn, eh, by the great tree?"
+
+"Yes, certainly," Pembroke answered; "at least, that is the date that
+some people claim is on the old cornerstone. You have been here before
+then, sir?"
+
+"I?" exclaimed Monsieur de Boisdhyver. "Oh, no! not I. I have heard from
+my friend who was here some years ago."
+
+"Oh, I see. And you have come far to-day?"
+
+"From Coventry, monsieur--Monsieur--?"
+
+"Pembroke," Tom replied, with a little start.
+
+"Ah! yes, Monsieur Pembroke. A member of the household?"
+
+"No--a friend."
+
+"I make a mistake," quickly interposed the traveller, "Pardon. I am come
+from Coventry, Monsieur Pembroke, in an everlasting an eternal stage, a
+monster of a carriage, monsieur. It is only a few days since that I
+arrive from France."
+
+"Ah, France!" exclaimed Tom, recalling that only a little while before he
+and Dan had been dreaming of that magic country. And here was a person
+who actually lived in France, who had just come from there, who
+extraordinarily chose to leave that delightful land for the Inn at the
+Red Oak in mid-winter.
+
+"France," he repeated; "all my life, sir, I have been longing to
+go there."
+
+"So?" said the Marquis, raising his white eyebrows with interest. "You
+love _ma belle patrie_, eh? _Qui Sait_?--you will perhaps some day go
+there. You have interests, friends in my country?"
+
+"No, none," Tom answered. "I wish I had. You come from Paris, sir?"
+
+"_Mais oui_."
+
+For some time they chatted in such fashion, the Marquis answering Tom's
+many questions with characteristic French politeness, but turning ever
+and anon a pathetic glance toward the door through which Dan and Nancy
+had disappeared. It was with undisguised satisfaction that he greeted
+young Frost when he returned to announce that supper was ready.
+
+"I famish!" the old gentleman exclaimed. "I have dined to-day on a
+biscuit and a glass of water."
+
+They found the kitchen table amply spread with food,--cold meats, hot
+eggs and coffee, and a bottle of port. Monsieur de Boisdhyver ate
+heartily and drank his wine with relish, gracefully toasting Nancy as he
+did so. When his meal was finished, he begged with many excuses to be
+shown to his bedroom; and indeed his fatigue was evident. Dan saw him to
+the great south chamber, carrying a pair of lighted candles before. He
+made sure that all had been done that sulky sleepy maids could be induced
+to do, and then left him to make ready for the night.
+
+Lights were extinguished in the parlour and the bar, the fires were
+banked, and the two young men went up to Dan's own room. There on either
+side of the warm hearth, had been drawn two great four-posted beds, and
+it took the lads but a moment to tumble into them.
+
+"It's queer," said Dan, as he pulled the comfort snugly about his
+shoulders, calling to Tom across the way; "it's queer--the old chap
+evidently means to stay awhile. What does a French marquis want in a
+deserted hole like this, I'd like to know? But if he pays, why the longer
+he stays the better."
+
+"I hope he does," said Tom sleepily. "He has a reason, I fancy, for he
+asked questions enough while you were out seeing to his supper. He seems
+to know the place almost as well as if he had been here before, though he
+said he hadn't. But, by gad, I wish you and I were snug in a little hotel
+on the banks of the Seine to-night and not bothering our heads about a
+doddering old marquis who hadn't sense enough to stay there."
+
+"Wish we were," Dan replied. "Good-night," he called, realizing that his
+friend was too sleepy to lie awake and discuss any longer their
+unexpected guest.
+
+"Good-night," murmured Tom, and promptly drifted away into dreams of the
+wonderful land he had never seen. As for Dan he lay awake a long time,
+wondering what could possibly have brought the old Marquis to the
+deserted inn at such a time of the year and on such a night.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+THE LIONS EYE
+
+
+Toward daylight the storm blew itself out, the wind swung round to the
+northwest, and the morning dawned clear and cold, with a sharp breeze
+blowing and a bright sun shining upon a snow-clad, ice-crusted world and
+a sparkling sapphire sea.
+
+Dan had risen early and had set Jesse to clear a way across the court and
+down the avenue to the road. The maids, astir by dawn, were no longer
+sulky but bustled about at the preparation of an unusually good breakfast
+in honour of the new guest.
+
+Mrs. Frost, who habitually lay till nine or ten o'clock behind the
+crimson curtains of her great bed, had caught wind of something out of
+the ordinary, demanded Nancy's early assistance, and announced her
+intention of breakfasting with the household.
+
+She was fretful during the complicated process of her toilette and so
+hurt the feelings of her foster-daughter, that when Dan came to take her
+into the breakfast room, Nancy found an excuse for not accompanying them.
+
+The Marquis was awaiting their appearance. He stood with his back-to the
+fire, a spruce and carefully-dressed little figure, passing remarks upon
+the weather with young Pembroke, who leaned his graceful length against
+the mantelpiece.
+
+The noble traveller was presented with due ceremony to Mrs. Frost, who
+greeted him with old-world courtesy. She had had, indeed, considerably
+more association with distinguished personages than had most of the dames
+of the neighbouring farms who considered themselves her social superiors.
+She welcomed Monsieur de Boisdhyver graciously, enquiring with interest
+of his journey and with solicitude as to his rest during the night. She
+received with satisfaction his rapturous compliments on the comforts that
+had been provided him, on the beauty of the surrounding country upon
+which he had looked from the windows of his chamber, and on her own
+condescension in vouchsafing to breakfast with them. She was delighted
+that he should find the Inn at the Red Oak so much to his taste that he
+proposed to stay with them indefinitely.
+
+They were soon seated at the breakfast-table and had addressed
+themselves to the various good things that black Deborah had provided.
+The native Johnny cakes, made of meal ground by their own windmill, the
+Marquis professed to find particularly tempting.
+
+Despite Mrs. Frost's questions, despite his own voluble replies, Monsieur
+de Boisdhyver gave no hint, that there was any deeper reason for his
+seeking exile at the Inn of the Red Oak than that he desired rest and
+quiet and had been assured that he would find them there. And who had so
+complimented their simple abode of hospitality?
+
+"Ah, madame," he murmured, lifting his tiny hands, "so many!"
+
+"But I fear, monsieur," replied his hostess, "that you, who are
+accustomed to the luxuries of a splendid city like Paris, to so many
+things of which we read, will find little to interest and amuse you in
+our remote countryside."
+
+"As for interest, madame," the Marquis protested, "there are the beauties
+of nature, your so delightful household, my few books, my writing; and
+for amusement, I have my violin;--I so love to play. You will not
+mind?--perhaps, enjoy it?"
+
+"Indeed yes," said Mrs. Frost. "Dan, too, is a fiddler after a fashion;
+and as for Nancy, she has a passion for music, and dreams away many an
+evening while my son plays his old tunes."
+
+"Ah, yes," said the Marquis, "Mademoiselle Nancy, I have not the pleasure
+to see her this morning?"
+
+"No," replied Mrs. Frost, flushing a trifle at the recollection of why
+Nancy was not present, "she is somewhat indisposed--a mere trifle. You
+will see her later in the day. But, monsieur, you should have come to us
+in the spring or the summer, for then the country is truly beautiful;
+now, with these snow-bound roads, when not even the stagecoach passes, we
+are indeed lonely and remote."
+
+"It is that," insisted the Marquis, "which so charms me. When one is
+old and when one has lived a life too occupied, it is this peace,
+this quiet, this remoteness one desires. To walk a little, to sit by
+your so marvellously warm fires, to look upon your beautiful country,
+_cest bou_!"
+
+He held her for a moment with his piercing little eyes, a faint smile
+upon his lips, as though to say that it was impossible he should be
+convinced that he had not found precisely what he was seeking, and
+insisting, as it were, that his hostess take his words as the compliment
+they were designed to be.
+
+Before she had time to reply, he had turned to Dan. "What a fine harbour
+you have, Monsieur Frost," he said, pointing through the window toward
+the Cove, separated from the river and the sea by the great curve of
+Strathsey Neck, its blue waters sparkling now in the light of the
+morning sun.
+
+"Yes," replied Dan, glancing out upon the well-known shoreline, "it is a
+good harbour, though nothing, of course, to compare with a Port. But it's
+seldom that we see a ship at anchor here, now."
+
+"There is, however," inquired the Marquis with interest, "anchorage for a
+vessel, a large vessel?"
+
+"Yes, indeed," Tom interrupted, "in the old days when my father had his
+ships plying between Havana and the Port, he would often have them anchor
+in the Cove for convenience in lading them with corn from the farm."
+
+"And they were large ships?"
+
+"Full-rigged, sir; many of 'em, and drawing eight feet at least."
+
+"_Eh bien_! And the old Inn, madame, it dates, your son tells me,
+from 1693?"
+
+"We think so, sir, though I have no positive knowledge of its existence
+before 1750. My husband purchased the place in '94, and it had then been
+a hostelry for some years, certainly from the middle of the century. But
+we have made many additions. Danny dear, perhaps it will interest the
+Marquis if you should take him over the house. We are proud of our old
+inn, sir."
+
+"And with reason, madame. If monsieur will, I shall be charmed."
+
+"I will leave you then with my son. Give me your arm, Dan, to the
+parlour. Unfortunately, Monsieur le Marquis, affliction has crippled me
+and I spend the day in my chair in the blue parlour. I shall be so
+pleased, if you will come and chat with me. Tommy, you will be staying to
+dinner with us?"
+
+"Thank you, Mrs. Frost, but I must get to the Port for the day. Mother
+and Father are leaving by the afternoon stage, if it gets through. They
+are going to spend the winter in Coventry. But I shall be back to-night
+as I have promised Dan to spend that time with him."
+
+"We shall be glad to have you, as you know."
+
+Soon after Mrs. Frost had left the breakfast-room and Tom had started
+forth with horse and sleigh, Dan returned. The Marquis promptly reminded
+him of the suggestion that he should be taken over the Inn. It seemed to
+Dan an uninteresting way to entertain his guest and the morning was a
+busy one. However, he promised to be ready at eleven o'clock to show the
+Marquis all there was in the old house.
+
+As Dan went about the offices and stables, performing himself much of the
+work that in prosperous times fell to grooms and hostlers, he found
+himself thinking about his new guest. Dan knew enough of French history
+to be aware there were frequent occasions in France when partisans of the
+various factions, royalist, imperialist, or republican, found it best to
+expatriate themselves. He knew that in times past many of the most
+distinguished exiles had found asylum in America. But at the present, he
+understood, King Louis Philippe, was reigning quietly at the Tuileries
+and, moreover, the Marquis de Boisdhyver, mysterious as he was, did not
+suggest the political adventurer of whom Dan as a boy had heard his
+parents tell such extraordinary tales. In the few years immediately after
+the final fall of the great Bonaparte there had been an influx of
+imperialistic supporters in America, some of whom had even found their
+way to Monday Port and Deal. One of these, Dan remembered, had stayed
+for some months in '14 or '15 at the Inn at the Red Oak, and it was he
+whom Tom had recalled the night before as having told them stories of his
+adventurous exploits in the wars of the Little Corporal. But it was too
+long after Napoleon's fall to connect his present guest with the imperial
+exiles. He could imagine no ulterior reason for the Marquis's coming and
+was inclined to put it down as the caprice of an old restless gentleman
+who had a genuine mania for solitude. Of solitude, certainly, he was apt
+to get his fill at the Inn at the Red Oak.
+
+At eleven o'clock he returned to keep his appointment. He found the
+Marquis established at a small table in the bar by an east window, from
+which was obtained a view of the Cove, of the sand-dunes along the Neck,
+and of the open sea beyond. A writing-desk was on the table, ink and
+quills had been provided, a number of books and papers were strewn about,
+and Monsieur de Boisdhyver was apparently busy with his correspondence.
+
+"Enchanted" he exclaimed, as he pulled out a great gold watch. "Punctual.
+I find another virtue, monsieur, in a character to which I have already
+had so much reason to pay my compliments. I trust I do not trespass upon
+your more important duties." As he spoke, he rapidly swept the papers
+into the writing-desk, closed and locked it, and carefully placed the
+tiny golden key into the pocket of his gayly-embroidered waistcoat.
+
+"Not at all," Dan replied courteously, "I shall be glad to show you
+about. But I fear you will find it cold and dismal, for the greater part
+of the house is seldom used or even entered."
+
+"I bring my cloak," said the Marquis. "Interest will give me warmth. What
+I have already seen of the Inn at the Red Oak is so charming, that I
+doubt not there is much more to delight one. I imagine, monsieur, how gay
+must have been this place once."
+
+He took his great cloak from the peg near the fire where it had been hung
+the night before to dry wrapped himself snugly in it; and then, with a
+little bow, preceded Dan into the cold and draughty corridor that opened
+from the bar into the older part of the house.
+
+This hallway extended fifty or sixty feet to the north wall of the main
+part of the inn whence a large window at the turn of a flight of stairs
+gave light. On the right, extending the same distance as the hall
+itself, was a great room known as the Red Drawing-room, into which Dan
+first showed the Marquis. This room had not been used since father's
+death four or five years before, and for a long time previous to that
+only on the rare occasions when a county gathering of some sort was held
+at the inn. It had been furnished in good taste and style in colonial
+days, but was now dilapidated and musty. The heavy red damask curtains
+were drawn before the windows, and the room was dark and cheerless. Dan
+admitted the dazzling light of the sun; but the Marquis only shivered and
+seemed anxious to pass quickly on.
+
+"You see, sir," observed the young landlord, "it is dismal enough."
+
+"_Mais oui_--_mais oui_," exclaimed the Marquis.
+
+At the foot of the stairway the corridor turned at right angles and ran
+north. On either side opened a number of chambers in like conditions of
+disrepair, which had been used as bedrooms in the palmy days of the
+hostelry. This corridor ended at the bowling-alley, where as children Tom
+and Dan had loved to play. Half-way to the entrance to the bowling-alley
+a third hallway branched off to the right, leading to a similar set of
+chambers. Into all these they entered, the Marquis examining each with
+quick glances, dismissing them with the briefest interest and the most
+obvious comment.
+
+Dan saved the _piece-de-resistance_ till last. This was a little room
+entered from the second corridor just at the turn--the only room indeed,
+as he truthfully said, that merited a visit.
+
+"This," he explained, "we call the Oak Parlour. It is the only room on
+this floor worth showing you. My father brought the wainscoting from an
+old English country-house in Dorsetshire. My father's people were
+Torries, sir, and kept up their connection with the old country."
+
+It was a delightful room into which Dan now admitted the light of day,
+drawing aside the heavy green curtains from the eastern windows. It was
+wainscoted from floor to cornice in old black English oak, curiously and
+elaborately carved, and divided into long narrow panels. The ceiling, of
+similar materials and alike elaborately decorated, was supported by heavy
+transverse beams that seemed solid and strong enough to support the roof
+of a cathedral. On one side two windows opened upon the gallery and court
+and looked out upon the Cove, on the other side stood a cabinet. It was
+the most striking piece of furniture in the room, of enormous dimensions
+and beautifully carved on the doors of the cupboards below and on the
+top-pieces between the mirrors were lion's heads of almost life-size.
+Opposite the heavy door, by which they had entered, was a large
+fireplace, containing a pair of elaborately ornamented brass and irons.
+There was not otherwise a great deal of furniture,--two or three tables,
+some chairs, a deep window-seat, a writing-desk of French design; but
+all, except this last, in keeping with the character of the room, and all
+brought across the seas from the old Dorsetshire mansion, from which
+Peter Frost had obtained the interior.
+
+"_Charmant_!" exclaimed the Marquis. "You have a jewel, _mon ami_; a bit
+of old England or of old France in the heart of America; a room one finds
+not elsewhere in the States. It is a _creation superbe_."
+
+With enthusiastic interest he moved about, touching each article of
+furniture, examining with care the two of three old English landscapes
+that had been let into panels on the west side of the room, pausing in
+ecstacies before the great cabinet and standing before the fireplace as
+if he were warming his hands at that generous hearth.
+
+"Ah, Monsieur Frost, could I but write, read, dream here...!"
+
+"I fear that would be impossible, sir," replied Dan. "It is difficult to
+heat this portion of the house; and in fact, we never use it."
+
+"_Helas_!" exclaimed the Marquis, "those things which allure us in this
+world are so often impossible. Perhaps in the spring, in the summer, when
+there is no longer the necessity of the fire, you will permit me."
+
+"It may be, monsieur," Dan replied, "that long before the summer comes
+you will have left us."
+
+"_Mais non_!" cried M. de Boisdhyver. "Every hour that I stay but proves
+to me how long you will have to endure my company."
+
+Somewhat ungraciously, it seemed, young Frost made no reply to this
+pleasantry; for already he was impatient to be gone. Although the room
+was intensely cold and uncomfortable, still his guest lingered, standing
+before the massive cabinet, exclaiming upon the exquisiteness of the
+workmanship, and every now and then running his dainty fingers along the
+carving of its front. As Dan stood waiting for the Marquis to leave, he
+chanced to glance through the window to the court without, and saw Jesse
+starting out in the sleigh. As he had given him no such order he ran
+quickly to the window, rapped vigourously and then, excusing himself to
+the Marquis, hurried out to ask Jesse to explain his errand.
+
+The Marquis de Boisdhyver stood for a moment, as Dan left him, motionless
+in front of the cabinet. His face was bright with surprise and delight,
+his eyes alert with interest and cunning. After a moment's hesitation he
+stole cautiously to the window, and seeing Frost was engaged in
+conversation with Jesse, he sprang back with quick steps to the cabinet.
+He hastily ran the tips of his fingers along the beveled edges of the
+wide shelf from end to end several times, each time the expression of
+alertness deepening into one of disappointment. He stopped for a moment
+and listened. All was quiet. Again with quick motions he felt beneath the
+edges. Suddenly his eyes brightened and he breathed quickly; his
+sensitive fingers had detected a slight unevenness in the smooth
+woodwork. Again he paused and listened, and then pressed heavily until he
+heard a slight click. He glanced up, as directly in front of him the eye
+of one of the carved wooden lion's heads on the front of the board winked
+and slowly raised, revealing a small aperture. With a look of
+satisfaction, the Marquis thrust his fingers into the tiny opening and
+drew forth a bit of tightly folded yellow paper; he glanced at it for an
+instant and thrust it quickly into the pocket of his waistcoat. Then he
+lowered the lid of the lion's eye. There was a slight click again; and he
+turned, just as Dan reappeared in the doorway.
+
+"Excuse my leaving you so abruptly," said Frost, "but I saw Jesse going
+off with the sleigh, and as I had given him no orders, I wanted to know
+where he was going. But it was all right. Are you ready, sir? I am afraid
+if we stay much longer you will catch cold." This last remark was added
+as the Marquis politely smothered a sneeze with his flimsy lace
+handkerchief.
+
+"_C'est bien_, monsieur. I fear I have taken a little cold. Perhaps it
+would be just as well if we explore no further to-day."
+
+"If you prefer, sir," answered Dan, holding the door open for his guest
+to go out. Monsieur de Boisdhyver turned and surveyed the Oak Parlour
+once more before he left it. "Ah!" he exclaimed, "this so charming
+room--it is of a perfection! Dorsetshire, you say? ... To me it would
+seem French." They walked back rapidly along the dark cold corridors to
+the bar. All the way the Marquis, wrapped tightly in his great cloak,
+kept the thumb of his left hand in his waistcoat pocket, pressing
+securely against the paper he had taken from the old cabinet in the Oak
+Parlour.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+THE MARQUIS AT NIGHT
+
+
+The household of the Inn at the Red Oak soon became accustomed to the
+presence of their new member; indeed, he seemed to them during those
+bleak winter months a most welcome addition. Except for an occasional
+traveller who spent a night or a Sunday at the Inn, he was the only
+guest. He was gregarious and talkative, and would frequently keep them
+for an hour or so at table as he talked to them of his life in France,
+and of his adventures in the exciting times through which his country had
+passed during the last fifty years. He was the cadet, he told them, of a
+noble family of the Vendee, the head of which, though long faithful to
+the exiled Bourbons, had gone over to Napoleon upon the establishment of
+the Empire. But as for himself--Marie-Anne-Timelon-Armand de
+Boisdhyver--he still clung to the Imperial cause, and though now for many
+years his age and infirmities had forced him to withdraw from any part in
+intrigues aiming at the restoration of the Empire, his sympathies were
+still keen.
+
+When he talked in this strain, of his thrilling memories of the Terror
+and of the extraordinary days when Bonaparte was Emperor, Dan and Tom
+would listen to him by the hour. But Mrs. Frost preferred to hear the
+Marquis's reminiscences of the _ancien regime_ and of the old court life
+at Versailles. He had been a page, he said, to the unfortunate Marie
+Antoinette; he would cross himself piously at the mention of the magic
+name, and digress rapturously upon her beauty and grace, and bemoan, with
+tears, her unhappy fate. She liked also to hear of the court of Napoleon
+and of the life of the _faubourgs_ in the Paris of the day. On these
+occasions the young men were apt to slip away and leave the Marquis alone
+with Mrs. Frost and Nancy.
+
+For Nancy Monsieur de Boisdhyver seemed to have a fascination. She would
+listen absorbed to his voluble tales, her bright eyes fixed on his
+fantastic countenance, her head usually resting upon her hand, and her
+body bent forward in an attitude of eager attention. She rarely spoke
+even to ask a question; indeed, her only words would be an occasional
+exclamation of interest, or the briefest reply.
+
+During the day their noble guest would potter about the house or, when
+the weather was fine, stroll down to the shore, where he would walk up
+and down the strip of sandy beach in the lee of the wind hour after hour.
+Now and then he wandered out upon the dunes that stretched along the
+Neck; and once, Dan afterwards learned, he paid a call upon old Mrs.
+Meath who lived by herself in the lonely farmhouse on Strathsey Neck,
+that was known as the House of the Dunes.
+
+After supper they were wont to gather in Mrs. Frost's parlour or in the
+old bar before the great hearth on which a splendid fire always blazed;
+and when the Marquis had had his special cup of black coffee, he would
+get out his violin and play to them the long evening through. He played
+well, with the skill of a master of the art, and with feeling. He seemed
+at such times to forget himself and his surroundings; his bright eyes
+would grow soft, a dreamy look would steal into them, and a happy little
+smile play about the corners of his thin pale lips. Obligingly he gave
+Dan lessons, and often the young man would accompany him, in the songs
+his mother had known and loved in her youth, when old Peter had come
+wooing with fiddle in hand.
+
+But best of all were the evenings when the Marquis chose to improvise.
+Plaintive, tender melodies for the most part; prolonged trembling,
+faintly-expiring airs; and sometimes harsh, strident notes that evoked
+weird echoes from the bare wainscoted walls. Mrs. Frost would sit, tears
+of sadness and of pleasure in her eyes, the kindly homely features of her
+face moving with interest and delight. Nancy was usually by the table,
+her sharp little chin propped up on the palms of her hands, never taking
+her fascinated gaze from the musician. Sometimes Tom would look at her
+and wonder of what she could be thinking. For certainly her spirit seemed
+to be far away wandering in a world of dreams and of strange
+inexpressible emotions. For Tom the music stirred delicate thoughts
+bright dreams of beauty and of love; the vivid intangible dreams of
+awakening youth. He had not had much experience with emotion; the story
+of his love affairs contained no more dramatic moments than the stealing
+of occasional kisses from the glowing cheeks of Maria Stonywell, the
+beauty of the Tinterton road, as he had walked back to the old farm with
+her on moonlight evenings.
+
+They would all be sorry when Monsieur pleaded weariness and bade them
+good-night. Sometimes his music so moved the old Frenchman that the tears
+would gather in his faded blue eyes and steal down his powdered cheeks;
+and then, like as not, he was apt to break off suddenly, drop violin and
+bow upon his knees, and exclaim, "_Ah! la musique! mon Dieu, mon Dieu!
+elle me rappelle ma jeunesse. Et maintenant--et maintenant_!" And then,
+brushing away the tears he would rise, make them a courtly bow, and hurry
+out of the room.
+
+Dan alone did not fall under his spell. He and Tom would often talk of
+their strange guest after they were gone to bed in the great chamber over
+the dining-room.
+
+"I don't know what it is," Dan said one night, "but I am sorry he ever
+came to the Inn; I wish he would go away."
+
+"How absurd, old boy!" protested Tom. "He has saved our lives this
+frightful winter. I never knew your mother to be so cheerful and
+contented; Nancy seems to adore him, and you yourself are making the most
+of his fiddle lessons."
+
+"I know," Dan replied, "all that is true, but it is only half the truth.
+Mother's cheerfulness is costing me a pretty penny, for I can't keep her
+from ordering the most expensive things,--wines, and the like,--that we
+can't afford. Maybe Nance adores him, as you say,--she is such a strange
+wild child; but I have never known her to be so unlike herself. We used
+to have good times together--Nance and I. But this winter I see nothing
+of her at all." For the moment Dan forgot his complaint in the tender
+thought of his foster-sister. "It probably is absurd," he added
+presently, "but I don't like it; I don't like him, Tom! He plays the
+fiddle well, I admit but he is so queer and shifty, nosing about, looking
+this way and that, never meeting your eyes. It's just as though he were
+waiting, biding his time, for--I don't know what."
+
+"Nonsense, Dan; you're not an old woman."
+
+"It may be, Tom, but I feel so anyway. The place hasn't seemed the same
+to me since that Frenchman came. I wish he would go away; and apparently
+he means to stay on forever."
+
+"I think you would miss him, if he were to go," insisted Pembroke, "for
+my part I'm glad he is here. To tell the truth, Dan, he's been the life
+of the house."
+
+"He has fascinated you as he has fascinated Mother and Nance," Dan
+replied. "But it stands to reason, boy, that he can't be quite all
+right. What does he want poking about in a deserted old hole like Deal?"
+
+"What he has said a thousand times; just what he so beautifully
+gets--quiet and seclusion."
+
+"Perhaps you are right and I am wrong; but all the same I shall be glad
+to see the last of him."
+
+The night was one of bright moonlight at the end of February. The bedroom
+windows were open to the cold clear air. Tom was not sleepy, and he lay
+for a long time recalling the dreams and emotions that had so stirred him
+earlier in the evening, as he had listened to the Marquis's playing. He
+kept whistling softly to himself such bars of the music as he could
+remember. Dan's chamber faced west, and Tom's bed was so placed that he
+could look out, without raising his head from the pillow, over the court
+in the rear of the Inn and into the misty depths of Lovel's Woods beyond
+the offices and stables.
+
+As he lay half-consciously musing--it must have been near midnight--his
+attention was suddenly riveted upon the court below. It seemed to him
+that he heard footsteps. He was instantly wide awake, and jumped from the
+bed to the window, whence he peered from behind the curtain into the
+courtyard. Close to the wall of the Inn, directly beneath the window, a
+shadow flitted on the moonlight-flooded pavement, and he could hear the
+crumbling of the snow. Cautiously he thrust his head out of the window.
+Moving rapidly along near to the house, was a little figure wrapped in a
+dark cloak, which looked to Tom for all the world like the Marquis de
+Boisdhyver.
+
+For the moment he had the impulse to call to him by name, but the
+conversation he had so recently had with Dan flashed into his mind, and
+he decided to keep still and watch. The figure moved rapidly along the
+west wall of the Inn almost the entire length of the building, until it
+arrived at the entrance of the bowling-alley which abutted from the old
+northern wing. Reaching this it paused for a moment, glancing about; then
+inserted a key, fumbled for a moment with the latch, opened the door, and
+disappeared within.
+
+Tom was perplexed. He could not be sure that it was the Marquis; but
+whether it were or not, he knew that there was no reason for any one
+entering the old portion of the Inn at midnight. His first thought was to
+go down alone and investigate; his second was to waken Dan.
+
+He lowered the window gently, drew the curtains across it, and
+bending over his friend, shook him gently by the shoulder. "Dan, Dan,
+I say; wake up!"
+
+"What's the matter?" exclaimed Dan with a start of alarm, as he sat
+up in bed.
+
+"Nothing, nothing; don't make a noise. I happened to be awake, and
+hearing footsteps under the window, I got up and looked out. I saw some
+one moving along close to the wall until he got to the bowling alley. He
+opened the door and disappeared."
+
+"The door's locked," exclaimed Dan. "Who was it?"
+
+"He had a key, whoever he was then. To tell the truth, Dan, it looked
+like the Marquis; though I couldn't swear to him. I certainly saw
+some one."
+
+"You have not been asleep and dreaming, have you?" asked his friend,
+rubbing his eyes.
+
+"I should say not. I'm going down to investigate; thought you'd like to
+come along."
+
+"So I shall," said Dan, jumping out of bed and beginning to dress. "If
+you really have seen any one, I'll wager you are right in thinking it's
+the old marquis. That is just the sort of thing I have imagined him
+being up to. What he wants though in the old part of the house is more
+than I can think. He has pestered me to get back there ever since I
+showed him over the place the day he arrived. Are you ready? Bring a
+candle, and some matches. Ill just take my gun along on general
+principles. I don't care how soon we get rid of the Marquis de
+Boisdhyver, but I shouldn't exactly like to shoot him out with a load of
+buckshot in his hide."
+
+Tom stood waiting with his boots in hand. Dan went to his bureau and took
+out his father's old pistol, that had done duty in the West India trade
+years ago, when pirates were not romantic memories but genuine menaces.
+
+"Sh!" whispered Dan as he opened the door. "Let's blow out the candle.
+It's moonlight, and we will be safer without it. Be careful as you go
+down stairs not to wake Mother and Nancy."
+
+Tom blew out the candle and slipped the end into his pocket, as he
+tiptoed after Dan down the stairs. At every step the old boards seemed to
+creak as though in pain. As they paused breathless half-way down on the
+landing, they heard no sound save the loud ticking of the clock in the
+hall below and the gentle whispering of the breeze without. The moon
+gave light enough had they needed it, but each of them could have found
+his way through every nook and corner of the Inn in darkness as well as
+in broad day-light. They crept down the short flight from the landing,
+paused and listened at the doors of Mrs. Frost's and Nancy's chambers,
+and then slipped noiselessly into the bar where the logs still glowed on
+the hearth.
+
+"Shall we," asked Tom in a low tone, "go down the corridor or
+around outside?"
+
+"Best outside," Dan whispered. "If we go down the corridor we are like to
+frighten him if he is the Marquis, or get a bullet in our gizzards if he
+is not. Should he be inside, he'll have a light and we can find just
+where he is. I have a notion that it's the Marquis and that he'll be in
+the Oak Parlour. We'd better creep along the porch."
+
+Very softly he unlocked the door, and stepped outside. Tom was close
+behind him. They crept stealthily along next the wall well within the
+shadow of the roof, pausing at every window to peer through the
+cracks of the shutters. But all were dark. As they turned the corner
+of the porch at the end of the main portion of the inn from which
+the north wing extended, Dan suddenly put his hand back and stopped
+Tom. "Wait," he breathed, "there's a light in the Oak Parlour. Stay
+here, while I peek in."
+
+With gun in hand he crept up to the nearest window of the Oak Parlour.
+The heavy shutters were closed, but between the crack made by the warping
+of the wood, he could distinguish a streak of golden light. He waited a
+moment; and, then at the risk of alarming the intruder within, carefully
+tried the shutter. To his great satisfaction it yielded and swung slowly,
+almost noiselessly, back upon its hinges; the inside curtains were drawn;
+but a slight gap had been left. Peering in through this, Dan found he
+could get a view of a small section of the interior,--the end of the
+great Dorsetshire cabinet on the farther side of the room and a part of
+the wall. Before the cabinet, bending over its shelf, stood the familiar
+form of the Marquis de Boisdhyver, apparently absorbed in a minute
+examination of the carving. But Dan's attention was quickly diverted from
+the figure of the old Frenchman, for by his side, also engaged in a
+similar examination of the cabinet, stood Nancy. For a moment he watched
+them with intent interest, but as he could not discover what so absorbed
+them he slipped back to Tom, who was waiting at the turn of the porch.
+
+"It's the Marquis," he whispered in his friend's ear.
+
+"What is he up to?"
+
+"I don't know. Apparently he is examining the old cabinet. But, Tom,
+Nancy is with him and as absorbed in the thing as he is. Look!" he
+exclaimed suddenly. "They've blown out the light."
+
+As he spoke, he pointed to the window, now dark. "Come," he said, making
+an instant decision, "let's hide ourselves in the hall and see if they
+come back."
+
+"But Nancy--?"
+
+"No time for talk now. Come along."
+
+They ran back along the porch, slipped into the bar, and thence into the
+hall. Dan motioned to Tom to conceal himself in a closet beneath the
+stairway, and he himself slipped behind the clock. Hardly were they
+safely hidden thus, than they heard a fumble at the latch of the door
+into the bar. Then the door was pushed open, and the Marquis stepped
+cautiously in the hall. He paused for a moment, listening intently. Then
+he held open the door a little wider; and another figure, quite enveloped
+by a long black coat, entered after him. They silently crossed the hall
+to the door of Nancy's chamber. This the Marquis opened; then bowed low,
+as his companion passed within. They were so close to him that Dan could
+have reached out his hand and touched them. As Nancy entered her room,
+Dan distinctly heard Monsieur de Boisdhyver whisper, "More success next
+time, mademoiselle!"
+
+There was no reply.
+
+The Marquis turned, stole softly up the stairs, and in a moment Dan heard
+the click of the latch as he closed his door. He slipped out from his
+hiding place, and whispered to Tom.
+
+In a few moments they were back again in their bedroom.
+
+"Heavens! man, what do you make of it?" asked Tom.
+
+"Make of it!" exclaimed Dan, "I don't know what to make of it. It's
+incomprehensible. What the devil is that old rascal after, and how has he
+bewitched Nance?"
+
+"Perhaps," suggested Tom, more for Nancy's sake than because he believed
+what he was saying, "it is simply that he is curious, and knowing that
+you don't want him in the old part of the Inn, he has persuaded Nancy to
+take him there at night."
+
+"Nonsense! that couldn't possibly account for such secrecy and caution.
+No, Tom, he has some deviltry on foot, and we must find out what it is."
+
+"That should be simple enough. Ask Nance."
+
+"Ah!" exclaimed his friend, "you don't know Nance as well as I. You may
+be sure he has sworn her to secrecy, and Nance would never betray a
+promise whether she had been wise in making it or not."
+
+"Then go to the old man himself and demand an explanation."
+
+"He'd lie ..."
+
+"Turn him out."
+
+"I could do that, of course. But I think I would rather find out what he
+is up to. It has something to do with the old cabinet in the Oak Parlour.
+I'll find out the mystery of that if I have to hack the thing into a
+thousand pieces. What I hate, is Nance's being mixed up in it."
+
+"We can watch again."
+
+"Yes; we'll do that. In the meanwhile, I am going to investigate that old
+ark myself. There's something about, something concealed in it, that he
+wants to get. When I took him in there the day after he came, he
+couldn't keep his eyes off it. If you can get Nance out of the way
+tomorrow afternoon, I'll send the Marquis off with Jesse for that
+long-talked-of visit to Mondy Port; and I'll give Jesse instructions not
+to get him back before dark. And while they are away, I'll investigate
+the Oak Parlour myself. Can you get Nance off?"
+
+"I might ask her to go and look over the Red Farm with me. She might like
+the walk through the woods. I could easily manage to be away for three or
+four hours."
+
+"Good! You may think it odd, Tom, that I should seem to distrust Nance. I
+don't distrust her, but there has always been a mystery about her. Mother
+knows a good deal more than she has even been willing to tell to me, or
+even to Nance, I guess. I know nothing except that she is of French
+extraction, and I have sometimes wondered since she has been so often
+with the old Marquis this winter, if he didn't know something about her.
+It flashed over me to-night as I saw them in that deserted room. Whatever
+is a-foot, I am going to get at the bottom of it. We will watch again
+to-morrow night. I heard him whisper as he left Nance, 'More success next
+time!' This sort of thing may have been going on for a month."
+
+They undressed again, and Dan put his gun away in his bureau. "We may
+have use for that yet, Tommy," he said. "It would do me good, after what
+I have seen to-night, to put a bit of lead into the Marquis de Boisdhyver
+as a memento of his so delightful sojourn at _L'Auberge au Chene Rouge_."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+THE OAK PARLOUR
+
+
+The two young men felt self-conscious and ill-at-ease the next morning at
+the breakfast table, but apparently their embarrassment was neither
+shared nor observed. Mrs. Frost had kept her room, but Nancy and the
+Marquis were in their accustomed places; the old gentleman, chattering
+away in a fashion that demanded few answers and no attention; Nancy,
+speaking only to ask necessary questions as to their wants at table and
+meeting the occasional glances of Dan and Tom without suspicion. Tom
+could scarcely realize in that bright morning light, that only seven or
+eight hours earlier he and his friend had spied upon their companions
+prowling about in the abandoned wing of the inn.
+
+Monsieur de Boisdhyver assented readily enough when Dan proposed that
+Jesse should take him that day to Monday Port. He was curious to see the
+old town, he said, having heard much of it from his friend; much also
+from his celebrated compatriot, the Marquis de Lafayette.
+
+Tom took occasion during the discussion to ask Nancy if she would walk
+across the woods with him after dinner, that he might pay a visit to the
+Red Farm and see that all was going well in the absence of his parents.
+He felt that the tones of his voice were charged with unwonted
+significance; but Nancy accepted the invitation with a simple expression
+of pleasure. When Mrs. Frost was informed of the plans for the day, she
+came near thwarting Dan's carefully laid schemes. She had counted upon
+Jesse to do her bidding and had, she declared, arranged that Nancy should
+help her put together the silken patches of the quilt upon which she was
+perennially engaged. Her foster-daughter's glance of displeasure at this
+was tinder to the old lady's temper, and Dan entered most opportunely.
+
+"So!" she was exclaiming, "I am always the one to be sacrificed when it
+is a question of some one's else pleasure."
+
+"Mother, Mother," Dan protested good-naturedly, as he bent over to kiss
+her good-morning, "aren't you ever willing to spend a day alone with me?"
+
+"Danny dear," cried the old lady, as she began to smile again, "you know
+I'm always willing. Of course, if Tom wants Nancy to go, the quilt can
+wait; it has waited long enough, in all conscience. There, my dear," she
+added, turning to the girl, "order an early dinner, and since you are
+going to the Red Farm, you might as well come back by the dunes and
+enquire for old Mrs. Meath. We have neglected that poor woman shamefully
+this winter."
+
+"Yes, Mother,--if we have time."
+
+"Take the time, my dear," added Mrs. Frost sharply.
+
+"Yes, Mother."
+
+The Marquis started off with Jesse at eleven o'clock, as eager for the
+excursion as a boy; and by half-past twelve Nancy and Tom had set out
+across the woods for the Red Farm. Dan was impatient for them to be gone.
+As soon as he saw them disappear in the woods back of the Inn, he made
+excuses to his mother, and hurried to the north wing. He found the door
+of the bowling alley securely locked, which convinced him that either the
+Marquis or Nancy had taken the key from the closet of his chamber. Having
+satisfied himself, he went directly to the Oak Parlour.
+
+It was cold and dark there. He opened the shutters and drew back the
+curtains, letting in the cheerful midday sun, which revealed all the
+antique, sombre beauty of the room, of the soft landscapes and the
+exquisite carving of the Dorsetshire cabinet. But Dan was in no mood to
+appreciate the old-world beauty of the Oak Parlour. In that cabinet he
+felt sure there was something concealed which would reveal the mystery of
+the Marquis's stay at the inn and possibly the nature of his influence
+over Nancy. Whatever had been the object of the Marquis's search, it had
+not been found: his parting words to Nancy the night before showed that.
+
+Dan took a long look at the cabinet first, estimating the possibility of
+its containing secret drawers. Hidden compartments in old cabinets,
+secret chambers in old houses, subterranean passageways leading to
+dungeons in romantic castles, had been the material of many a tale that
+Dan and Tom had told each other as boys. For years their dearest
+possession had been a forbidden copy of "_The Mysteries of Udolpho_"
+which they read in the mow of the barn lying in the dusty hay. However
+unusual, the situation was real; and he felt himself confronted by as
+hard a problem as he had ever tried to solve in fiction. He knew
+something about carpentry, so that his first step, after examining the
+drawers and cupboards and finding them empty, was to take careful
+measurements of the entire cabinet, particularly of the thicknesses of
+its sides, back, and partitions. It proved a piece of furniture of
+absolutely simple and straightforward construction. After long
+examination and careful soundings he came to the conclusion that a secret
+drawer was an impossibility.
+
+Suddenly an idea occurred to him and he returned to the sitting-room.
+"Mother," he said, "I have been looking over the old cabinet in the Oak
+Parlour, thinking perhaps that I would have it brought into the
+dining-room. I wonder, if by chance, there are any secret drawers in it.
+
+"Secret drawers? What an idea!" exclaimed Mrs. Frost.
+
+"You never knew of any did you?"
+
+"No.... Stop, let me think. Upon my word, I think there was something of
+the sort, but it has been so long ago I have almost forgotten."
+
+"Try to remember, do!" urged Dan, striving to repress his excitement.
+
+"It was not a secret drawer, but there were little hidden
+cubby-holes--three or four of them. I remember, now, your father once
+showed me how they opened. They were little places where the Roman
+Catholics used to hide the pages of their mass-books and such like in the
+days of persecution in England."
+
+"Yes, yes," said Dan, "that makes it awfully interesting. Did father
+ever find anything in them?"
+
+"No, I think not; but, dear me, it was over thirty years ago we brought
+that old cabinet from England,--long before you were born, Dan."
+
+"Can you remember how to open the secret places? I have been looking it
+over, but I can't see where they can be, much less how to get into them."
+
+"There were four of them, I think; all in the carving on the front, in
+the eyes of the lions it seems to me, and in the lion's mouth, or in the
+leaves somewhere. One spring that opened them I recollect, was under the
+ledge of the shelf, another at the back of the cabinet and,--but no, I
+really can't remember where the others were."
+
+Dan was impatient to try his luck at finding them, and hurried back to
+the Oak Parlour. He ran his fingers many times under the ledge of the
+shelf before he heard the click of a tiny spring, and, looking up, saw
+the lion's eyelid wink and slowly open. With an exclamation of
+satisfaction, he thrust his fingers into the tiny aperture, felt
+carefully about, and was chagrined to find it empty. "More success next
+time, _monsieur le marquis_!" he muttered.
+
+At length he found the spring that released the eyelid on the carved lion
+on the other side of the panel. He glanced into the little opening and,
+to his delight, saw the end of a bit of paper tucked away there. He dug
+it out with the blade of his pocket knife and unfolded it. It was yellow
+and brittle with age, covered with writing in a fine clear hand. But he
+was annoyed to discover, as he bent closely over to read it, that it was
+written in French, still worse, part of the paper was missing, for one
+side of it was ragged as if it had been torn in two.
+
+Remembering with relief, that Pembroke had acquired a smattering of
+French at Dr. Watson's school for the sons of gentlemen, he put the paper
+carefully away in his pocket to wait for Tom's assistance in deciphering
+it. Then he set to work to find the missing half.
+
+He fumbled about at the back of the cabinet for a spring that would
+release another secret cubby-hole, and was rewarded at last by an
+unexpected click, and the seemingly solid jaws of the lion fell apart
+about half-an-inch. But the little aperture which they revealed was
+empty. Further experiment at last discovered the fourth hiding place, but
+this also contained nothing.
+
+It occurred to him then that the Marquis had already discovered the other
+half of the paper, and like himself was searching for a missing portion.
+As he stood thinking over the problem, he suddenly noticed that the room
+was in deep shadow, and realized that the sun had set over the ridge of
+Lovel's Woods. The Marquis would soon be returning. Carefully closing the
+four openings in the carving he pushed the old cabinet back against the
+wall, closed the shutters and drew the curtains. Then with a last glance
+to see that all was as he found it, he went out and closed the door the
+precious bit of paper in his inside pocket.
+
+He went directly to Mrs. Frost's parlour. "Mother," he said, "please
+don't tell anyone that I have been in the north wing today. I have good
+reasons which I will explain to you before long. Now, I shall be deeply
+offended if you give the slightest hint."
+
+"Gracious! Dan, what is all this mystery about?"
+
+"You will never know, mother, unless you trust me absolutely. Mind! not
+a word to Tom, Nancy or the Marquis."
+
+"Very well, Danny. You know I am as safe with a secret as though it had
+been breathed into the grave."
+
+Dan did not quite share his mother's confidence in her own discretion,
+but he knew he could count on her devotion to him to keep her silent even
+where curiosity and the love of talk would render her indiscreet. He also
+knew, and had often deplored it, that fond as she was of Nancy she was
+not inclined to take the girl into her confidence.
+
+Having said all he dared to his mother, Dan went to his room and
+carefully locked up the mysterious paper. He returned to the first
+floor just as the Marquis and Jesse drove up in the sleigh to the door
+of the inn.
+
+Monsieur de Boisdhyver was enthusiastic about all that he had seen--the
+headquarters of General Washington, the house in which the Marquis de
+Lafayette had slept, the old mill in the parade, the fort at the Narrows,
+the shipping, the quaint old streets.... "But, O Monsieur Frost," he
+exclaimed, "the weariness that is now so delightful! How soundly shall I
+sleep to-night!"
+
+Dan smiled grimly as he assured his guest of his sympathy for a good
+night and a sound sleep; thinking to himself, however, that if the
+Marquis walked, he would not walk unattended. He had no intention of
+trusting too implicitly to that loudly proclaimed fatigue.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+THE WALK THROUGH THE WOODS
+
+
+While Dan Frost was hunting for the secret places of the old cabinet, Tom
+and Nancy were picking their way across the snowcovered paths of Lovel's
+Woods to the Red Farm. These woods were a striking feature in the
+landscape of the open coast country around Deal. Rising somewhat
+precipitously almost out of the sea, three ridges extended far back into
+the country, with deep ravines between. They were thickly wooded, for the
+most part with juniper and pine. In some places the descent to the
+ravines was sheer and massed with rocks heaped there by a primeval
+glacier; in other parts they dipped more gently to the little valleys,
+which were threaded with many a path worn smooth by the dwellers on the
+eastern shore. Nearly two miles might be saved in a walk from the Inn to
+Squire Pembroke's Farm by going across the Woods rather than by the
+encircling road.
+
+As they were used to the frozen country Tom and Nancy preferred the
+shorter if more difficult route. They had often found their way together
+through the tangled thickets of the Woods or along the shores of the
+Strathsey River, in season accompanied by dog and gun hunting fox and
+rabbit or partridge and wild duck. In Tom's company Nancy seemed to
+forget her shyness and would talk freely enough of her interests and her
+doings. He had always been fond of her, though until lately she had
+seemed to him hardly more than a child. This winter, as so frequently he
+had watched her sitting in the firelight listening to the old Marquis's
+playing and dreaming perhaps as he also dreamed, he realized that she was
+growing up. A new beauty had come into her face and slender form, her
+great dark eyes seemed to hold deeper interests, she was no longer in the
+world of childhood. The mystery enveloping her origin, which for some
+reason Mrs. Frost had never chosen to dispel, gave a certain piquancy to
+the interest and affection Tom felt for her. In the imaginative tales he
+had been fond of weaving for his own amusement, Nancy would frequently
+figure, revealed at last as the child of noble parents, as a princess
+doomed by some strange fate to exile. He thought of these things as from
+time to time he glanced back at her, holding aside some branch that
+crossed the path or giving her his hand to help her over a boulder in the
+way. The red scarf about her neck, red cap on her dark hair, flashing in
+and out of the tangled pathway against the background of the snow-clad
+woods, gave a bright note of colour to the scene.
+
+They were obliged for the most part to walk in single file until the last
+ridge descended over a mass of rocks to the marshes along Beaver Pond.
+Then having given her his hand to help her down, he kept hold of it as
+they went along the free path to the open meadows. The feeling of Nancy's
+cool little hand in his gave Tom an odd and conscious sense of pleasure.
+
+"You have been uncommonly silent, Nance, even for you," he said at last.
+
+"Oh, I'm always silent, Tom," she replied. "It is because I am stupid and
+have nothing to say."
+
+"Nonsense, my dear, you always have a lot to say to me. But you are
+forever reading, thinking ... what's it all about?"
+
+"Oh, I think, Tom, because I have little else to do; but my thoughts
+aren't often worth the telling. In truth there is no one, not even you,
+who particularly cares to hear them. Tom," she said, "I am restless and
+discontented. Sometimes I wish I were far away from the Inn at the Red
+Oak and Deal, from all that I know,--even from you and Dan."
+
+Pembroke suddenly realized that he could not laugh at these
+fancies, as he had so often done, and dismiss as if they were the
+vagaries of a child.
+
+"Why are you restless and discontented, Nancy?" he asked seriously.
+
+"Aren't you ever?" she questioned for reply. "Don't you ever get weary
+with the emptiness of it all, the everlasting round, the dullness? Don't
+you ever want to get away from Deal, and know people and see things and
+be somebody?"
+
+"I do that, Nance. I mean to go as soon as I am a lawyer. I won't poke
+about Deal long after that, nor Monday Port either. I mean to set up in
+Coventry."
+
+"Coventry!" exclaimed the girl with an accent of disdain. "That is just a
+provincial town like the Port, only a little more important because it is
+the capital of the state."
+
+"Being the capital means a lot," protested Tom in defense of his
+ambitions of which for the first time he felt ashamed. "Men are sent to
+Congress from there. Nance, girl, ours is a wonderful country; we are
+making a great nation."
+
+"Some people may be. None of us are, Tom. I wonder at you more than I do
+at Dan, for you have had more advantages. As for me, I am only a girl;
+there's nothing for girls but to sit and sew, and prepare meals for men
+to eat, and wait until some one comes and chooses to marry them. Then
+they go off and do the same thing some place else."
+
+"But what have you to complain of, Nancy? you have the kindest brother, a
+good mother, a comfortable home...."
+
+"The kindest brother, yes. But you know Mrs. Frost is not my mother. She
+doesn't care for me and I can't care for her as if she were. I have never
+loved any one but Dan."
+
+"You can't help loving Dan," said Tom, thinking of his good friend.
+"But then, little girl, you love me too." And he pressed the hand in
+his warmly.
+
+Nancy quickly withdrew her hand. "I am not a little girl. I have been
+grown up in lots of ways ever so long."
+
+"But you love me?"
+
+"I like you. Oh, Tom, the life we all lead is so futile. If I weren't a
+girl, I should go away."
+
+They had reached the stile by now that led into the meadow which sloped
+down from the clump of poplars a hundred rods or so above, in the midst
+of which the Red Farmhouse stood. Instead of helping his companion over
+the steps in the wall, Tom stopped and stood with his back to them.
+"Let's stay here a minute, Nance, and have it out."
+
+"Have what out?" she asked a trifle sharply.
+
+"You haven't any queer wild plan in your head to go away, have you?"
+
+"I don't know--sometimes I think I have. I dare say there are things
+somewhere a girl could find to do."
+
+"But Mrs. Frost--?"
+
+"Oh, Mother would not miss me long--she'd have Dan."
+
+"But Dan would miss you."
+
+"Yes, Dan might. I couldn't go, if Dan really needed me here. I think
+sometimes he doesn't. But, Tom, if you were in my position, if you didn't
+know who your parents were, if all your life you had been living on the
+charity of others--good and kind as they are, wonderful even as Dan has
+always been--you couldn't be happy. I'm not happy."
+
+"But, Nance, what has come over you?"
+
+"No--nothing in particular; I have often felt this way."
+
+"But, dear, I couldn't let you go. I'd mind a lot, Nance."
+
+She looked at him with a sudden smile of incredulity. "You, Tommy?"
+
+"You can't go--you musn't go," Tom repeated, as he drew nearer to her.
+
+Suddenly he reached out and seized her hands. "Don't you realize it?--I
+love you, Nance; I've always loved you!" He drew her close to him. She
+did not resist nor did she yield, but still with her eyes she questioned
+him. "Kiss me, Nancy," he whispered. She let him press his lips to hers
+but without responding to the pressure, as though she still were
+wondering of the meaning of this sudden unforeseen passion. But at last,
+caught up in its intensity, she gave him back his kisses. He took her
+face then between his hands and looked into it with a gaze that in itself
+was a caress. "Oh my sweetheart!" he said softly.
+
+Slowly she disengaged herself. "Tom, Tom," she said, "this is
+foolishness. We musn't do this."
+
+"Why not?" demanded Pembroke. "I tell you I love you!"
+
+"No--not that way, not that way. I didn't mean that. Why, you foolish
+boy, haven't we kissed each other hundreds of times before?"
+
+"No, Nancy, not like that--not like this," he added, as again he put his
+arm around her and drew her face to his. And again she yielded. "Say
+it--say it, Nance--you love me."
+
+She drew back from him. "I think I must, Tom. I don't think I could let
+you kiss me that way if I didn't. But now come ... Tom ... dear Tom ...
+do come ... don't kiss me again."
+
+"But say it," he insisted, "say you love me."
+
+"Please help me over the stile."
+
+He gave her his hand and she sprang lightly to the top of the steps. In a
+second he was by her side, both of them balancing somewhat uncertainly on
+the top of the stone wall. "I won't let you down till you say it."
+
+"Please--".
+
+"No--you love me?"
+
+"Yes--there--I love you--now--".
+
+"No, kiss me again."
+
+"Tom--no." But the negative was weak and Pembroke took it so.
+
+"Now," he said, as they began to cross the meadow, "we must tell Mrs.
+Frost and Dan."
+
+"Tell them what?"
+
+"Why, that we are in love with each other, and that you are going to
+marry me. What else?"
+
+"No, no," exclaimed Nancy, "You must say nothing. I am not in love. I
+don't mean to marry you."
+
+"But why not? You are. You do."
+
+"Are--do--?"
+
+"In love--you do mean to marry me."
+
+"No--Tom, listen--you know your father and mother would hate it. You have
+at least two years before you can practice. We couldn't marry--we can't
+marry. Oh, there are things I must do, before I can think of that."
+
+"Not marry me? Good Lord, what does it mean when people are in love with
+each other, what does it mean when a girl kisses a fellow like that?"
+
+"I don't know! what it means--madness, I guess. Do you think I could
+marry as I am, not knowing who I am?"
+
+"Oh, what do I care who your parents were! We'll find out. I swear we
+will. Good Lord, I love you, Nancy; I love you!"
+
+"Please, please don't make me talk about it now."
+
+"But soon--?"
+
+"Yes, soon--only promise you'll say nothing to Dan or to Mother till we
+have talked again. I must think; it is all so queer and unexpected; I
+never dreamed that you cared for me except as a little girl."
+
+"I didn't know I did. But come to think of it, Nance, it has been you as
+much as Dan that has brought me to the Inn at the Red Oak. Why it was you
+I wanted to walk and talk and play with."
+
+"Please,--dear Tom--G--ive me time to think what it all means. Now be
+careful, there's the farmer. You have a lot to do, and we have been
+lingering too long. Mother wants us to go back by the dunes and enquire
+for old Mrs. Meath; so we must hurry."
+
+The sun had set before they started on the homeward journey in one of
+the squire's sleighs. As they turned the bend at the beach and started
+across the dune road close to the sea, a great yellow moon rose over
+Strathsey Neck.
+
+Tom had been so preoccupied with his own emotions and the unexpected and
+absorbing relation in which he found himself with Nancy, that he had
+altogether forgotten why he had asked her to go off with him that
+afternoon. As they skimmed along over the snow-packed road across the
+sands, Tom spied another sleigh on the Port road, the occupants of which
+he recognized as Jesse and the Marquis. Suddenly the memory of the night
+before flashed over him. He pointed with his whip in their direction.
+"There's the old Marquis coming back from Monday Port," he said.
+
+Nancy looked without comment, but Tom thought the colour deepened in
+her cheeks.
+
+"See here, Nance," he exclaimed impulsively; "has the Marquis anything to
+do with the mood you were in this afternoon? Has he said anything to make
+you discontented?"
+
+He was sure that now she paled.
+
+"What makes you ask?"
+
+"Oh--a number of things. I've seen you with him more or less; felt he had
+some influence over you."--Tom was blundering now and knew it.--
+
+She looked at him coldly. "I have been with the Marquis very little save
+when others have been about. He has no influence over me. I don't care to
+discuss such queer ideas."
+
+"Oh, all right ... I dare say I'm mistaken ... I only thought..."
+He hesitated... "If you care for me, I don't mind what you think of
+the Marquis."
+
+"Remember, Tom--you promised to say nothing until I gave you leave.
+You're not fair..."
+
+"But you do love me?"
+
+Nancy was silent.
+
+"There is nothing between you and the old Frenchman--no mystery?"
+
+There was no reply. Nancy sat with compressed lips and drawn brows,
+gazing fixedly at the distant House on the Dunes at the end of their
+road. For a long while they drove on in silence.
+
+At the House on the Dunes they chatted for a while with old Mrs. Meath,
+who lived there alone with a maid-of-all-work. She was a source of much
+anxiety to Mrs. Frost, who sent several times each week to learn if all
+was going well. But Mrs. Meath was a Quaker and apparently never gave a
+thought to loneliness or fear.
+
+"They will never guess," she said to Nancy and Tom as they sat in the
+tiled kitchen talking with her, "what I am going to do."
+
+"Not going to leave the House on the Dunes, Mrs. Meath?"
+
+"Deary me! no; but I am going to take a boarder."
+
+"Really?--you are setting up to rival the Inn, eh?" said Tom.
+
+"No", Tommy, nothing of the sort. But I am offered good pay for my front
+room, and as Jane Frost is always nagging me about living here alone, I
+thought I'd take her."
+
+"And who pray is your new boarder?" asked Nancy.
+
+"That is the funny part of it," replied Mrs. Meath, "I know nothing but
+her name--Mrs. Fountain. Everything has been arranged by a lawyer man
+from Coventry, and she is coming in a few days. Tell thy mother, Nancy
+dear, that she need worry about me no longer."
+
+"I will, Mrs. Meath. I think it is a splendid idea, and I hope you will
+like the lady. Mother will be so glad that you have some one with you."
+
+Soon they were on their way across the dunes and marshes to Tinterton
+road and home. Dan was preoccupied, not with the news that was so
+exciting to Mrs. Meath, but with the recollection of his conversation
+with Nancy as they had driven toward the house. Despite her implicit
+denial he knew there was a secret between the Marquis de Boisdhyver and
+herself. He could not imagine what it might be, and it was evident
+that she did not mean to tell him at present. But his anxieties on this
+or kindred subjects were not relieved by his companion during the
+remainder of the drive. Moreover his attempts to speak again of his
+newly discovered passion were received coldly--so coldly indeed that he
+had no heart for pleading for such proofs as she had given him earlier
+in the afternoon that she shared his emotion. So despite the splendid
+moon, the bright cold night, the merry jangle of the sleigh bells, the
+drive back was not the unmixed joy Tom had promised himself; and he
+felt his role of a declared and practically-accepted lover anything but
+a satisfactory one.
+
+Finally they reached the Inn and entered the bar where they found the
+Marquis sitting alone before a cheerful fire. All of Tom's suspicious
+jealousies returned with fresh force, for Nancy rapidly crossed the room,
+spoke a few words to the old gentleman in an inaudible tone of voice, and
+passed quickly on to her own apartments.
+
+
+
+
+PART II
+
+THE TORN SCRAP OF PAPER
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+THE HALF OF AN OLD PAPER
+
+
+That evening Mrs. Frost made a particular request for music. Poor Dan,
+impatient to be alone with Tom and show him the torn scrap of paper that
+he had found that afternoon was forced to bring out his fiddle and
+accompany the Marquis. Tom, for first part, was more concerned with his
+own relations with Nancy than with the mysterious possibilities of the
+previous night. The poignant notes of the violin set his pulses to
+beating in tune with the throbbing of the music and transported him again
+into the realms of youthful dreams. They were quaint plaintive songs of
+old France that the Marquis chose to play that evening, folk tunes of the
+Vendee, love songs of olden time.
+
+From where he sat in the shadow Tom got a full view of Nancy seated on
+the oaken setlle near the fire. Her brows were drawn a little in deep
+thought, her lips for the most part compressed, though ever and anon
+relaxing at some gentler thought. Her hands were clasped, her head was
+bent a little, but her body was held straight and tense. Her eyes, dark
+and lustrous in the light of the flaming logs, always fixed upon the
+musician, not once wandering in his direction.
+
+What was the influence, the fascination that strange old Frenchman seemed
+to exert? It seemed to Tom impossible that there could be a secret which
+she felt necessary to hide from them, her lifelong friends. But apart
+from what he knew had taken place the night before as he looked back over
+the past month, he was conscious that there had been a change in Nancy, a
+change that mystified him. It was the danger in this change, he told
+himself, that had awakened in him the knowledge of his love.
+
+But then as he looked across at her so lovely, in the firelight, he felt
+again the thrill as when first he had taken her hand that afternoon. In
+that moment all the dreams, the vague longings of his boyhood had found
+their reality.
+
+Suddenly, while he was thinking thus, the Marquis laid his violin upon
+his knees. "Ah, _ma jeunnesse_!" he exclaimed in a dramatic whisper, "_et
+maintenant_--_et maintenant_!"
+
+For a moment no one spoke or stirred. They looked at him curiously as
+they always did when he brought his playing to an end in such fashion.
+Then he rose. "_Bon soir, madame; bon soir, messieurs; bon soir,
+mademoiselle_"
+
+Tom saw his little faded blue eyes meet Nancy's with a look of swift
+significance. Then he bowed with a flourish that included them all.
+
+"A thousand thanks, Monsieur le Marquis," murmured Mrs. Frost, "how much
+pleasure you give us!"
+
+They all rose then, as the Marquis smiled his appreciation and withdrew.
+
+"Give me your arm, Dan," the old lady said. "It must be past my bedtime.
+Come, Nancy."
+
+"Yes, mother." The girl rose wearily, stopping a moment at the
+mantelpiece to snuff the candles there. Tom seized his opportunity, and
+was by her side. She started, as she realized him near her.
+
+"Nance, Nance, I must have a word with you," he exclaimed in a tense
+whisper, "don't go!"
+
+"Nance, come," called Mrs. Frost from the hall.
+
+"Yes, Mother, I am coming ... I must go, Tom. Don't delay me. You know
+how Mother is ..."
+
+"What difference will it make if you wait a moment? Good Lord! Nance, I
+have been trying all evening to get a word with you, and you have not so
+much as given me a glance. Don't go--please don't go! Oh, Nancy dear,--I
+love you so!"
+
+He seized her hands and kissed them passionately. "Nance, Nance ...
+please ..." His arms were about her.
+
+"Tom, you make it so hard ... Remember, you promised me ... No word
+of love until I can think, until I have time to know ... Please, Tom,
+let me go."
+
+"I can't let you go. Oh sweetheart dear."
+
+"Tom, we musn't--Dan, Mother! ..."
+
+Unheeding her protest, he put his arms around her. An instant he felt
+her yield, then quickly thrusting him aside, she ran from the room,
+leaving him standing alone there, trembling with excitement, chagrin,
+happiness, alarm.
+
+In a moment his friend returned and Tom pulled himself together. "Come
+on," said Dan, "I have a lot to tell you."
+
+"Did you find anything this afternoon?" exclaimed Pembroke.
+
+"Sh! for heaven's sake be careful. Don't talk here. Let's go upstairs."
+
+A few minutes later they were closeted in Dan's chamber. The curtains
+were tightly drawn and a heavy quilt was hung over the door. Good Lord!
+thought Tom, could it be possible that these precautions in part at least
+were taken against Nancy. The world seemed to have turned upside down for
+him in the last twenty-four hours.
+
+"Aren't we going to keep watch to-night?" he asked.
+
+"Yes, but later. They are just getting to bed--or pretending to. Look
+here, this may throw light on the mystery. I found this paper in a secret
+cubby-hole in the old cabinet in the Oak Parlour. Draw a chair up to the
+table so that you can see."
+
+"The cabinet," he continued, as he took the paper out of his strong-box
+and began to unfold it, "was brought from some old manor house in
+England. It has four little secret cubby-holes, opened by hidden springs,
+that Mother says were probably used by the Roman Catholics to hide pages
+of their mass-books during the days of persecution. She remembered
+fortunately a little about them. They were all empty but one, and in that
+I found this torn scrap of paper."
+
+He handed the yellowed bit of writing to Tom, who flattened it out on the
+table before him.
+
+"Why it's written in French," Pembroke exclaimed, as he bent over to
+examine it.
+
+"Yes, I know it is," said Dan. "I can't make head or tail of it. Besides
+it seems to be only a part of a note or letter. I could hardly wait to
+give you a chance at it. You can make something of it, can't you?"
+
+"I don't know--I guess I can. It's hard to read the handwriting. The
+thing's torn in two--haven't you the rest of it?"
+
+"No, I tell you; that's all I could find; that's all, I am sure, that can
+be in the cabinet now. My theory is that the old marquis has somehow come
+across the other half and is still looking for this. God only knows who
+hid it there.
+
+"How the deuce could the Marquis know about it. Ah! look--it's signed
+somebody, something _de Boisdhyver_--'_ancois_--that's short for
+Francois, I guess. Evidently 't wasn't the Marquis himself. Wonder what
+it means?"
+
+For goodness' sake, try to read it."
+
+"Wait. Get that old French dictionary out of the bookcase downstairs,
+will you? I'll see if I can translate."
+
+Dan crept softly out, leaving Tom bent over the paper. Again he smoothed
+it out carefully on the table, bringing the two candles nearer, and tried
+to puzzle out the faint fine handwriting.
+
+"I can make out some of it," he remarked to Dan, when his friend returned
+with the dictionary. "Let me have that thing; there are a few words I
+don't know at all, but I'll write out as good a translation as I can."
+
+While Tom was busy with the dictionary, Dan placed writing materials to
+his hand, and sat down to wait as patiently as he could. His curiosity
+was intensified by Pembroke's occasional exclamations and the absorption
+with which he bent over the task.
+
+"There!" Tom exclaimed after half-an-hour's labour, "that's the
+best I can do with it. You see the original note was evidently torn
+into two or three strips and we have only got the righthand one, so we
+don't get a single complete sentence--, but what we have is mighty
+suggestive. Listen--This is what it says: Make great efforts ... gap ...
+glorious, I am about to leave' ... gap ... 'to offer my' ... gap ...
+'that I should not return' ... gap ... 'directions' ... gap ... 'this
+paper which I tear' ... gap ... 'the explanation' ... something
+missing ... 'to discover' ... that's the end of a sentence. The next one
+begins, 'This treasure' ... than another gap ... 'jewels and money' ...
+'secret chamber' ... 'one can enter' ... something gone here ... 'by the
+_salon de chene_'--that's the Oak Parlour, I suppose ... something
+missing again ... 'by a spring' ... 'hand of the lady in the picture' ...
+'chimney on the north side of the' ... 'side a panel which reveals' ...
+'one will find the directions' ... more missing ... 'of the treasure in a
+golden chest' ... That's the end of it. And, as I said before it is
+signed,--'ancois de Boisdhyver.' There, you can read it. That's the best
+I can make of it."
+
+Dan bent over his friend's translation. "Whoever wrote it was
+about to leave here to offer something to somebody, and if he did
+not return, apparently he is giving directions, in this paper, which
+he tears in to two or three parts, how to discover--a treasure?--jewels
+and money, I guess,--that he is about to hide or has hidden in a secret
+chamber, which is entered in some way from the Oak Parlour--? ... pushes
+a spring,--Something to do with the hand of the lady in the picture,
+near the chimney on the north side of the room ... then a panel which
+reveals ...where? ... the directions will be found, for getting the
+treasure, in a golden chest in the secret chamber? How's that for a
+version? I reckon the other half doesn't tell as much ...'ancois de
+Boisdhyver!--That can't be the Marquis, for none of his names end
+'ancois; do they? Let's see, what are they?--Marie, Anne, Timelon,
+Armand ... Tom,"--and Dan faced his friend excitedly,--"that old devil is
+after treasure! Who the deuce is 'ancois de Boisdhyver, and how did he
+come to leave money in the Oak Parlour? Hanged if I believe there's any
+secret chamber! By gad, man, if I didn't hurt when I pinch myself, I'd
+think I was asleep and dreaming. What do you make of it?"
+
+"Pretty much what you do. Somebody sometime,--a good many years ago,
+concealed some valuables here in the Inn. It must be some one who is
+connected with our marquis, for the last names are the same. These are
+directions, or half the directions, for finding it. The Marquis knows
+enough about it to have been hunting for this paper. Who the devil is
+the Marquis?"
+
+"The Lord knows. But how does Nance come in?"
+
+"Blamed if I can see; wish I could! This accounts for the Marquis's
+mysterious investigations, anyway. Probably he's no right to the paper.
+Maybe he isn't a Boisdhyver at all. I'll be damned if I can understand
+how he has got Nance to league with him."
+
+"And now what the deuce are we going to do about it?" asked Dan.
+
+"Hunt for the treasure ourselves, eh?"
+
+"Well, why not? but to do that we've got to get rid of the Marquis. He'll
+be suspicious if we begin to poke about the north wing. Hanged if I
+wouldn't like to have it all out with him!"
+
+"Yes, but we'd better think and talk it over before we decide to do
+anything. We can watch them. We'll watch to-night any way, and plan
+something definite to-morrow."
+
+"I tell you one thing, Tom, I am going to make Mother tell me all she
+knows about Nancy. Perhaps she is mixed up in some way with all this. But
+it's time to keep watch now. We'll put out the candles and I'll watch for
+the first two hours. If you go to sleep, I'll wake you up to take the
+next turn. How about it?"
+
+"Hang sleep!" Tom replied.
+
+"All right, but we must blow out the light. Lucky it's clear. Let's
+whisper after this."
+
+Tom threw himself on the bed, while Dan sat near the window and kept his
+eyes fixed on the door of the bowling-alley. They talked for some time in
+low tones, but eventually Tom fell asleep. Dan waked him at twelve for
+his vigil, and he in turn was wakened at two. During the third watch they
+both succumbed to weariness.
+
+Tow awoke with a start about four, and sprang to the window. The moon was
+sinking low in the western sky, but its light still flooded the deserted
+courtyard beneath. He heard the patter of a horse's hoofs on the road
+beyond and the crunching of the snow beneath the runners of a sleigh.
+Well, he thought, as he rubbed his eyes, it was too near morning for
+anything to happen, so he turned in and was soon asleep, as though no
+difficult problems were puzzling his mind and heart and no mysteries were
+being enacted around him.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+A DISAPPEARANCE
+
+
+When Dan came downstairs in the morning Mrs. Frost called him to the door
+of her bedroom. "What on earth is the matter with Nancy?" she exclaimed;
+"I have been waiting for her the past hour. No one has been near me since
+Deborah came in to lay the fire. Call the girl Danny; I want to get up."
+
+"All right, mother. She has probably overslept; she had a long walk
+yesterday."
+
+"But that is no excuse for sleeping till this time of day. Tell her
+to hurry."
+
+"It is only seven, mother."
+
+"Yes, Danny, dear, but I mean to breakfast with you all this morning if I
+ever succeed in getting dressed."
+
+Dan crossed the hall and knocked at Nancy's door. There was no response.
+He knocked again, then opened the door and looked within. Nancy was not
+there, and her bed had not been slept in.
+
+He went back to his mother. "Nancy is not in her room," he said. "She
+has probably gone out for a walk. I'll go and look for her."
+
+He went to the kitchens to enquire of the maids, but they had not seen
+their young mistress since the night before.
+
+"Spec she's taken dem dogs a walkin'," said black Deborah unconcernedly.
+"Miss Nance she like de early morn' 'fore de sun come up."
+
+Dan went out to the stables. The setters came rushing out, bounding and
+barking joyously about him.
+
+"Have you seen Miss Nancy this morning, Jess?" he asked.
+
+"No, Mister Dan, ain't seen her this mornin'. Be n't she in the house?"
+
+"She doesn't seem to be. Take a look down the road, and call after her,
+will you? Down, Boy; down, Girl!" he cried to the dogs.
+
+Dan began to be thoroughly alarmed. If Nancy had gone out, the dogs would
+certainly have followed her. She must be within!
+
+He went back into the house, and searched room after room, but no trace
+of her was to be found. He returned at last to his mother's chamber.
+
+"I can't find Nancy," he said. "She must have gone off somewhere."
+
+"Gone off! why, she must have left very early then. I have been awake
+these two hours--since daylight--; I would have heard every sound."
+
+"Well, she isn't about now, Mother. She will be back by breakfast time, I
+don't doubt. Just stay abed this morning, I will send her to you as soon
+as she comes."
+
+"I shall have to, I suppose. Really, Dan, it is extraordinary how
+neglectful of me that child can sometimes be. She knew--"
+
+"Mother, don't find fault with her. She is devoted to you, and you know
+it."
+
+"I daresay she is. Of course she is, and I am devoted to her. Where would
+she be, I wonder, if it hadn't been for me? Good heavens! Dan, can
+anything have happened to her?"
+
+"No, no--of course not,--nothing."
+
+"Search the house, boy; she may be lying some place in a faint. She isn't
+strong--I have always been worried--"
+
+"Don't get excited, Mother. We will wait until breakfast time. If she
+doesn't turn up then, you may be sure I shall find her."
+
+He looked at his watch. It was already nearly eight o'clock, so he
+decided to say nothing to Pembroke until after breakfast. He found the
+Marquis and Tom chatting before the fire in the bar.
+
+"Shall we have breakfast?" said Dan. "Mother will not be in this
+morning."
+
+"Ah!" exclaimed the Marquis, as they took their seats at table, "that is
+a disappointment. And shall we not wait for Mademoiselle Nancy?"
+
+"My sister has stepped out, monsieur; she may be late. Shall I give you
+some coffee?"
+
+"If you please--. We have another of these so beautiful days, eh? This so
+glorious weather, these moonlight nights, this snow--_C'est merveilleux_.
+Last night I sat myself for a long time in my window. Ah _la nuit_--the
+moon past its full, say you not?--the sea superbly dark, superbly blue,
+the wonderful white country! As I sat there, messieurs, a sight too
+beautiful greeted my eyes. A ship, with three great sails, appeared out
+on the sea and sailed as a bird up the river to our little cove, _Voila,
+mes amis_"--he waved his hand toward the eastern windows--"She is
+anchored at our feet."
+
+The two young men looked in the direction in which the marquis pointed,
+and to their astonishment they saw, riding securely at her moorings in
+the cove, a large sailing vessel. She was a three-masted schooner of
+perhaps fifteen hundred tons, a larger ship than they had seen at anchor
+in the Strathsey for many a year.
+
+"By all that's good!" exclaimed Tom, "that is exactly the sort of ship my
+father used to have in the West Indie trade, a dozen or fifteen years
+ago. What is she? I wonder; and why is she anchored here instead of in
+the Port?"
+
+The Marquis shrugged his shoulders. "That I can tell you not, my friend;
+but I am happy that she is anchored there for the hours of beauty she
+has already given to me. On this strange coast of yours one so rarely
+sees a sail."
+
+"No, they go too far to the south... But what is she?" asked Dan. "We
+must find out." He went to the cupboard, and got out his marine glass and
+took a long look at the stranger.
+
+"What do you make her out?" asked Tom.
+
+"There are men on deck, some swabbing out the roundhouse. One of them is
+lolling at the wheel. She flies the British flag."
+
+"Do you, perhaps, make out the name?" asked the Marquis.
+
+"I don't know--yes," Dan replied, twisting the lens to suit his eyes
+better and spelling out the letters, "S,O,U,T,H,E,R,N,C,R--the
+_Southern Cross_. By Jingo, Tom, we'll have to go down to the beach and
+have a look at her."
+
+Tom took the glasses; turning them over presently to the Marquis. "She is
+a good fine boat, eh?" exclaimed M. de Boisdhyver, as he applied his eye
+to the end of the glass.
+
+"She certainly is," said Dan.
+
+They sat down at length and resumed their breakfast. The ship had
+diverted Tom's attention for the moment from the fact that Nancy had
+not appeared.
+
+"Where is Nance, Dan?" he asked at length, striving to conceal his
+impatience.
+
+"I don't know," Dan replied. "I think she has gone over to see Mrs. Meath
+and stayed for breakfast."
+
+"Madame Meath--?" enquired the Marquis.
+
+"At the House on the Dunes," Dan answered, a trifle sharply.
+
+"A long walk for Mademoiselle on a cold morning," commented Monsieur
+Boisdhyver, as he sipped his coffee.
+
+In a few moments Dan rose. "Going to the Port to-day, Tom?"
+
+"Not till later, any way; I am going down to the beach to have a look at
+that ship."
+
+"Wait a little, and I'll go with you," He turned to the door and motioned
+Tom to follow him.
+
+Outside he took his friend's arm and drew him close. "Tom, something's
+up; Nancy's not here."
+
+"Nancy's not here;" exclaimed Pembroke. "What do you mean? Where is she?"
+
+"To tell the truth, I don't know where she is; her bed has not been slept
+in. I thought at first she had gone for a walk with the dogs as she does
+sometimes, but Boy and Girl are both in the barn. It's half-past eight
+now, and she ought to be back,"
+
+"Good Lord! man, have you searched the house?"
+
+"I've been over it from garret to cellar."
+
+"And you can't find her?"
+
+"Not a sign of her."
+
+"Have you been through the north wing?"
+
+"Yes, all over it. I have been in every room in the house, boy. Nance
+isn't there. You heard nothing in the night, did you?"
+
+"Nothing."
+
+"When did you go to sleep?"
+
+"Perhaps about half-past three. Come to think of it, I awoke at four
+with a start, for I heard a sleigh on the Port Road. After that I
+went to bed."
+
+"The sleigh hadn't been at the Inn?"
+
+"It couldn't have been--I'd have heard of it if it had; you see it woke
+me up just going along the road."
+
+"I don't suppose we need worry. But it is queer--none of the servants
+have seen her since last night."
+
+"My God, what can have happened to her?" cried Tom.
+
+"Sh, boy! We have nothing to go on, but I wager that old French devil
+knows more than he will tell."
+
+"Then, we'll choke it out of him."
+
+"No, no, don't be a fool! She may be back any minute. I'll get the sleigh
+and go over to the House on the Dunes. In the meanwhile don't show that
+you are anxious! I'll be back inside of an hour, and we can have a look
+at the ship. If Nance isn't with Mrs. Meath, why I am sure I'll find her
+here. Let's not worry till we have to."
+
+Tom assented to this proposition somewhat unwillingly. Despite his
+friend's reassuring words, he did not feel that Nancy would be found at
+the House on the Dunes or that she would immediately return. He
+remembered her telling him of her desire to go away. He remembered how
+strangely she had received the declaration of his love, and he feared
+almost as much that she had fled from him, as that the Marquis, weird and
+evil as he began to think him, had any hand in her disappearance.
+
+After Dan's departure in the sleigh, Tom wandered about restlessly. When
+half an hour passed and Frost did not return, he went out to look down
+the road and see if he were coming. The white open country was still and
+empty, and the only sign of life was the great three-masted ship riding
+at anchor in the cove, with seamen lolling about her deck.
+
+As Tom stood under the Red Oak, the Marquis stepped out of the front
+door. He was wrapped in his great coat, about to take his morning walk up
+and down the gallery.
+
+"Why so pensive, Monsieur Pembroke? Is it that you are moved by the
+beauty of the scene--, the land so white, the sea so blue, and the
+_Southern Cross_ shining as it were in a northern sky!"
+
+Tom grunted a scarcely civil reply, and turning away to avoid further
+conversation, strolled down the avenue of maples toward the road.
+
+Monsieur de Boisdhyver raised his eyebrows slightly, and began his walk.
+By and by, still more impatient, Pembroke walked back toward the house.
+If Dan did not return soon, he determined he would go after him. As he
+came up to the gallery again the Marquis paused and spoke to him. "And
+Mademoiselle, she has not returned?" he asked.
+
+"No!" Pembroke replied sharply. "She has gone to the House on the Dunes
+and her brother has driven over to fetch her."
+
+"Ah! pardon," exclaimed Monsieur de Boisdhyver; "I did not know... But it
+is cold for me, Monsieur Pembroke; I seek the fire."
+
+Tom did not reply. The Marquis went inside, and presently Tom could see
+him standing at the window, the marine glass in his hands, sweeping the
+countryside.
+
+Pembroke passed an anxious morning. Ten o'clock came; half-past; eleven
+struck. Nancy had not appeared, or was there a sign of Dan. Unable to be
+patient longer, he set out on the Port Road to meet his friend.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+GREEN LIGHTS
+
+
+The smoke was curling from the chimneys of the House on the Dunes as Dan
+drove up the long marsh road from the beach. He had half convinced
+himself that Nancy would be there, and he hoped that she herself would
+answer his knock. When at length the door was opened it was not by Nancy
+nor by Mrs. Meath, but by a stranger whom he had never seen before.
+
+"Yes?" a pleasant voice questioned, but giving an accent to the
+monosyllable that made Dan think instantly of France.
+
+He found himself facing a charming woman, her bright blue eyes looking
+into his with a smile that instantly attracted him. She was well-dressed,
+with a different air from the women he knew. And she was undeniably
+pretty--of that Dan was convinced, and the conviction overwhelmed him
+with shyness. He stood awkward and ill-at-ease; for the moment forgetting
+his errand. "I suppose," he stammered, "--I beg your pardon--but I
+suppose you are Mrs. Heath's new boarder,--Mrs. Fountain?"
+
+"Yes," replied the strange lady with an amused smile, "that is what I
+imagine that I am called. My name is Madame de La Fontaine. And you--?"
+
+"I?--Oh, yes--of course--I am Dan Frost from the Inn over yonder. I came
+to see Mrs. Meath to ask if my sister Nancy is here."
+
+"Alas!" replied Madame de La Fontaine, "poor Mrs. Meath she this morning
+is quite unwell. She is in her room, so that I am afraid you cannot see
+her. But, I may tell you, there is no one else here, just myself and my
+servants."
+
+"You have not seen or heard anything then of my sister, Nancy Frost?"
+repeated Dan.
+
+"Nancy Frost?--your sister?--No, monsieur. I am arrived only last night
+and have seen no one."
+
+"I had hoped my sister would be here. I am sorry about Mrs. Meath;
+perhaps I can be of some service. If you should need me at any time, I
+can almost always be found at the Inn at the Red Oak."
+
+"The Inn at the Red Oak?" repeated Madame de La Fontaine, "and is
+that near by?"
+
+"It is about a mile and a half by the road," Frost replied, "but you can
+see it plainly from the doorstep here."
+
+The foreign lady stepped out in the crisp February air. "Can you point it
+out to me? I may need your assistance some time."
+
+"You see the woods and the oak at the edge of them," said Dan, pointing
+across the Dunes. "That great tree is the Red Oak, the rambling old
+building beneath it is the Inn."
+
+"Ah! one can see quite plainly from one house to the other, is it not
+so?"
+
+"Quite," Dan replied.
+
+"Thank you, monsieur. I trust there will be no need for assistance. But
+it makes one glad to know where are neighbours, especially--" she added,
+"while poor Mrs. Meath is ill."
+
+As she spoke she turned to the door with the air of dismissing him, but
+on second thoughts she faced him again. "I wonder, Mr. Frost, will you do
+me a favour?"
+
+"I shall be delighted," Dan exclaimed.
+
+"My luggage arrived last night," said Madame de La Fontaine, "upon the
+ship that is at anchor in the bay. They are to bring my boxes ashore. But
+before that I desire to give directions to the captain at the beach, and
+I cannot well do so by my servant. Will you be kind enough to walk with
+me and show me the way?"
+
+Dan forgot about Nancy in his eagerness to assure this unusually
+attractive lady that he was at her disposal. She disappeared within, and
+he heard her give some quick, sharp directions in French to a maid. Then
+in a moment she reappeared on the little porch, bonneted and wrapped for
+a walk in the cold.
+
+As they set out across the Dunes, she kept up a rapid fire of questions
+that might have seemed inquisitive to one more accustomed to the world
+than Dan. He found himself in the course of that quarter of an hour
+talking quite freely with the charming stranger.
+
+"No, I did not make the journey from France in the _Southern Cross_," she
+replied to one of his interrogations, "that would have been
+uncomfortable, I fear. But she brings over my boxes. She is arrived
+somewhat sooner than I was promised."
+
+"Do you expect to signal her from the beach?"
+
+"But yes."
+
+"How will they know who you are?"
+
+"Oh, they have instructions. You must think all this curious!" she
+commented with a smile. "You must think me an odd person."
+
+The possible oddness of Madame de La Fontaine made less impression upon
+Dan than did her charm. He was conversing easily with a very lovely
+woman, and all else was forgotten in that agreeable sensation.
+
+As they emerged from the Dunes upon the little beach of the Cove, Dan
+observed on the deck of the _Southern Cross_ a sailor watching them
+through a glass. Madame de La Fontaine drew her handkerchief from beneath
+her cloak and waved it toward the ship.
+
+"This is the signal," she explained, "that they were instructed to look
+out for. If I am not mistaken Captain Bonhomme will come to the shore for
+my directions. You speak French, monsieur?"
+
+"Not at all," Dan replied.
+
+"Ah!" sighed the lady, "you lose a great deal."
+
+"I might have learned some this winter," said Dan; "for we have had a
+French gentleman as our guest at the Inn."
+
+"Indeed! And who, may I ask, is your French gentleman?"
+
+"His name is the Marquis de Boisdhyver. Do you, by any chance, know him?"
+
+"The Marquis de Boisdhyver?" repeated Madame de La Fontaine. "I know the
+name certainly; it is an old family with us, monsieur. But I do not
+recall that I have ever had the pleasure of meeting any one who bore
+it... But see! they are lowering the boat."
+
+They were now at the edge of the surf. Madame de La Fontaine again waved
+a hand in the direction of the clipper. Dan saw a small boat alongside
+her, into which several sailors and an officer, as it seemed, were
+clambering over the rail. They pushed off, and began to row vigorously
+for the shore.
+
+The French lady stood watching them intently. Within a few moments the
+little boat was beached, the officer sprang out, advanced to Madame de La
+Fontaine, and saluted. She exchanged sentences with him in French of
+which Dan understood nothing. Then the seaman touched his cap, got into
+his small boat, and gave orders to push off.
+
+"He understands no English," remarked Madame de La Fontaine. "I gave
+directions about my boxes. We may return now, monsieur; or doubtless I am
+able to find my way back alone."
+
+"Oh no," exclaimed Dan gallantly, "I will go with you."
+
+The lady smiled graciously. As they walked back across the Dunes, she
+kept up a lively conversation, no longer asking him questions, nor, he
+observed, giving him the opportunity to ask any.
+
+At the door of the House on the Dunes she dismissed him finally. "I am
+but too grateful, Monsieur, for your kindness. I hope that we shall meet
+again while I dwell in your beautiful country. In the meantime, I trust
+you will find your sister."
+
+Dan flushed, how could he have forgotten Nancy! Taking the hand that his
+new acquaintance offered, he hurried away. He met Tom on the Port Road
+about half a mile from the Inn and was truly worried to find that Nancy
+had not returned; he explained briefly his own delay in his expedition
+with the strange lady to the beach.
+
+"It is certainly odd, though perhaps not so odd as stupid, that they
+should have anchored in the Cove just to disembark one woman's boxes. It
+would have been much simpler to go to the Port, as every well-bred
+skipper does, and had the French woman's stuff carted out. At any rate,
+we'll go down this afternoon and have a look at her."
+
+By the time they reached the Inn it was noon, and still there was no word
+of Nancy. The dinner was a silent one, as the Marquis tactfully did not
+disturb his companions' preoccupation, and Mrs. Frost, who was unusually
+nervous, did not appear.
+
+After the meal the two young men started for the beach. At Tom's
+suggestion they got a little dory from the boathouse and rowed out to the
+clipper. The wind had shifted to the southeast, but still there was not
+enough of a sea to give them any trouble; and in a few minutes they were
+under the bows of _The Southern Cross_. Dan hailed a seaman who was
+leaning over the gunwale and watching them with idle curiosity. If the
+man replied in French, it was in a variety of that tongue that Tom's
+limited attainments did not understand, and, annoyed by the
+incomprehensible replies, he asked for "le captaine". At
+length,--possibly attracted by the altercation at the bows,--the
+authoritative-looking person who had come ashore in the morning in
+response to Madame de La Fontaine's signal, now appeared at the gunwale
+and glanced below at the two young men in the dory. His expression
+betrayed no sign that he recognized Frost. Indeed he vouchsafed no
+syllable of reply to the questions Dan asked in English or to those that
+Tom ventured to phrase in Dr. Watson's French.
+
+He was not, they thought, an attractive person; his countenance was
+swarthy, his eyes were black his hair was black, his heavy jaw was
+shadowed by an enormous black mustachio. A kerchief of brilliant red tied
+about his throat gave him the appearance of the matador in a Spanish
+bullfight rather than the officer of an English merchantman. He glanced
+at the dory occasionally, shook his head silently in response to the
+requests to go aboard, and at length when that did not serve to put an
+end to them, he shrugged his shoulders and disappeared. The seaman
+continued to lean over the gunwale and spat nonchalantly as though that
+were the measure of their appreciation of this unasked-for visit.
+
+"I move we skip up the rope," said Tom, "and explain ourselves at close
+quarters."
+
+"Thanks, no," replied Dan. "Either of those two amiable gentlemen
+looks capable and willing of pitching us overboard. The water is too
+cold for bathing."
+
+"Very well," said Tom, "I will yield to your sober judgment for the
+moment; but I propose to see the inside of that ship sooner or later
+unless she weighs anchor in the hour and sails away. But we ought to be
+getting to town to make enquiries about Nancy. For Heavens' sake, Dan,
+where do you suppose she can be?"
+
+They rowed back to the beach, stowed the dory in the boathouse, and set
+out in the sleigh for Monday Port. Diligent enquiry there, in likely and
+unlikely places, proved fruitless. It was nightfall when they returned
+to the Inn.
+
+They were greeted by the Marquis in the bar. "Mademoiselle Nancy, she has
+not been found?"
+
+"No," said Dan. "I take it from your question that she has not come home
+yet either."
+
+"She is not come, no. Perhaps she stays at the House on the Dunes?"
+
+"I do not know," Dan answered tartly. "I expect her every moment, but it
+is idle to conceal from you, Monsieur, that we are much concerned as to
+her absence."
+
+The Marquis grew sympathetic,--optimistically sympathetic. Tom clutched
+at his re-assuring words, but Dan was even more irritated by the silence
+that Monsieur de Boisdhyver had maintained throughout the day.
+
+Directly after supper Dan went into his mother's parlour, leaving the
+others to their own devices. The Marquis settled himself near the fire
+and was soon absorbed in reading an old folio; Tom wandered restlessly
+about, now up and down the long bar, now in the corridors, now on the
+gallery and in the court without.
+
+The night, after the bright day, had set in raw and cold; a damp breeze
+blew from the southwest, and gave promise both of wind and rain. From his
+position under the Red Oak, Tom could see the red and green lights of
+_The Southern Cross_ at her moorings in the Cove below, and across the
+Neck the lighted windows of the House on the Dunes. Over all else the
+night had cast its black damp mantle.
+
+As he stood watching, deeply anxious for the welfare of the girl he
+loved, he noticed a new light appear in one of the upper windows of the
+House on the Dunes--not yellow as is the light of candles, but green like
+the light on the port side of the clipper in the Cove. Had he not seen
+the lights from the other windows he could have thought it was another
+ship on the ocean side of the Neck.
+
+He looked for a long time at the tiny spark in the distance, wondering
+what whim had induced Mrs. Meath to shade her candles with so deep a
+green. As he strolled back toward the Inn, he glanced through the windows
+of the bar where the Marquis still read by the fireside. Suddenly the
+old gentleman, as Tom curiously watched him, laid his book down on the
+table and rose from his chair. He looked about the room and then advanced
+to the window. Tom instinctively slipped behind the trunk of the great
+oak. Monsieur de Boisdhyver stood for several moments peering into the
+darkness. Then he turned away and crossed the room to the door into the
+front hall. It flashed through Tom's mind that possibly the Marquis had
+started on another of his mysterious tours. He ran down again into the
+court far enough from the house to command a view of the entire facade,
+and watched curiously, particularly the north wing. All was dark, save
+for the lights below.
+
+Suddenly he saw the flicker of a candle in one of the windows, not of the
+north wing, but of the south. A moment's glance, and he made sure that it
+was the room occupied as a sleeping apartment by Monsieur de Boisdhyver.
+
+The Marquis was standing by the window, with his face pressed close to
+the pane, peering out into the night. He still held the candle in his
+hand. To Dan's surprise, he placed it carefully on the broad window-sill,
+and drew down the dark shade to within a foot of the sill, blotting out
+all save a narrow band of light. Then the Marquis disappeared for several
+moments into the interior of the room. Dan was about to turn back into
+the house, when again Monsieur de Boisdhyver came to the window. He did
+not raise the shade, but inserted between the windowpane and the candle a
+strip of dark green paper. It was translucent and had the effect of
+sending a beam of green light southward, across the meadows and the
+dunes, to meet--Tom suddenly realized--the rays of the green light from
+the House on the Dunes.
+
+Was it a signal being exchanged, and between whom? The coincidence of
+green lights from the Inn and the House on the Dunes, at the same moment,
+was too marked to be without significance. To what end was the Marquis de
+Boisdhyver exchanging mysterious signals with some one in that lonely
+farmhouse, and what did they mean?
+
+Tom repressed his agitation and remained for some time watching the two
+green lights that glowed toward one another over the dark landscape.
+
+Suddenly the light in the House on the Dunes was extinguished; then,
+momentarily it shone again, but quickly went out and left the great sweep
+of dunes in darkness. Two minutes later the same thing took place in the
+window of the south chamber of the Inn. The light flashed and was gone,
+flashed again and shone no more.
+
+Tom went in, by a rear entrance, to the bar. The Marquis was seated by a
+table, absorbed in reading. He started as Tom entered. "Still no word of
+Mademoiselle?" he piped.
+
+"Still no word, monsieur," Pembroke answered laconically. He also
+seated himself in the candle light and took up the last issue of the
+_Port News_.
+
+"Do you know what has become of Dan?" Pembroke asked presently.
+
+"Monsieur Frost he has been closeted with madame his mother for the past
+half-hour. You have no further plans for seeking Mademoiselle? For
+myself, I grow alarmed."
+
+"I know nothing but what you know, monsieur. Nancy has not returned.
+There has been no word of her. We shall have to wait." With tremendous
+effort to conceal his agitation and annoyance, Tom resumed his reading.
+
+Monsieur de Boisdhyver glanced at him for a moment with a little air of
+interrogation, then shrugged his shoulders slightly and turned again to
+his French paper.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+MRS. FROST'S RECOLLECTIONS OF A FRENCH EXILE
+
+
+After the long day of fruitless search and enquiry for the vanished
+Nancy, supper being over and Tom having gone outside, Dan joined his
+mother in the blue parlour.
+
+Mrs. Frost was weary with waiting and anxiety, but as Dan threw himself
+on a couch near her chair, she watched him patiently.
+
+"There is no clue, Dan?" she ventured at last.
+
+"No clue, mother, not the slightest. Nancy seems to have vanished as
+completely as if she had dissolved into air. As you know, the house has
+been thoroughly searched; the servants carefully questioned; and
+enquiries have been made at every conceivable place in Monday Port. I
+have been to the House on the Dunes, and to the farmhouses on every road
+round about. No one has seen or heard of her. She has taken French leave,
+but for what reason I can't imagine."
+
+"Nancy has not been happy for some time, Dan," said Mrs. Frost.
+
+"No, I have fancied that she was not. But why? Do you suppose she has
+left us deliberately? or--". He paused uncertain whether or not to give
+voice to his suspicions.
+
+"Or what?" asked his mother.
+
+"Or she has been forced away against her will."
+
+"Against her will!" the old lady exclaimed. "Who could have forced her?
+and for what reason? Do you think she may have been kidnapped?"
+
+"Either kidnapped or decoyed away."
+
+"But who could have designs upon Nancy? It is more reasonable to suppose
+that she left of her own accord. I confess that would not altogether
+surprise me."
+
+"I don't know, mother, but I have my fears and suspicions. There may be
+some one who has a deep interest in Nancy, who for reasons of his own,
+which I don't yet understand, may wish to control her movements. I wish
+you would tell me all you know of Nancy's origin. You have never told
+me;--you have never told her, I fancy,--who she really is and how you
+came to adopt her as your own child. I have never been curious to know,
+in fact I have not wanted to know, for she has always been to me
+precisely what a sister of my own blood would be. But now, it may help
+me to understand certain strange things that have happened in the last
+few days."
+
+For a moment Mrs. Frost was silent. "No, I have never spoken to you or
+to Nancy of her early history, Dan; simply because, to all intent she
+has been our own. I have always wished that she should feel absolutely
+one with us; and I think she always has, until this winter. But of late
+I have noticed her discontent, her growing restlessness, and I have
+sometimes wondered if she could be brooding over the mystery of her
+early years. But she has never asked me a direct question; and I have
+kept silent."
+
+"I think now, mother," Dan replied, "it is your duty to tell me all
+you know."
+
+"I have no reason, my dear, to keep anything from you. I should have told
+you years ago, if you had asked me. There is not much to tell. You may
+remember when you were a boy about six or seven years old, a French exile
+came to the Inn, a military gentleman, who had left France in consequence
+of the fall of the great Napoleon."
+
+"Yes, I remember him distinctly," said Dan. "He used to tell stories to
+Tom and me of his adventures in the wars. Tom was speaking of him only
+the other day."
+
+"Well," continued Mrs. Frost, "this gentleman called himself General
+Pointelle. I learned afterwards it was not his real name. Who he actually
+was, I have not the slightest idea. He brought with him a little girl two
+years old, a sweet little black-eyed girl, to whom I, having lost your
+only sister at about that age, took a great fancy. The General also had
+two servants with him, a valet, and a maid. The maid, a pretty young
+thing, took care of the child. They arrived in mid-summer, on a
+merchantman that plied between Marseilles and Monday Port. I do not know
+why General Pointelle came to this part of the country, or why he chose
+to stay at the Inn; at any rate he came, and he engaged for an indefinite
+period the best suite of apartments in the old north wing. He had the Oak
+Parlour--"
+
+"The Oak Parlour!" exclaimed Dan.
+
+"Yes," replied Mrs. Frost, "that was part of the suite reserved usually
+for our most distinguished guests. The general used that for a
+sitting-room and the adjoining chamber as a bed-room. The maid and child
+occupied connecting rooms across the hall. The valet, I believe, was in
+some other part of the house. General Pointelle proved himself a
+fascinating guest, and his little daughter Eloise was a favourite with
+all the household. The maid, pretty as she certainly was and apparently
+above her station, I somehow never trusted. I have always believed that
+the relations between the general and herself were not what they should
+have been. But Frenchmen look at such things differently, I am told; and
+it was not to our interests to be over-curious.
+
+"They had been with us about two months when one fine morning we awoke to
+find that General Pointelle, his valet, and the charming Marie had
+disappeared, and little Eloise was crying alone in her big room. You have
+probably guessed the child was Nancy."
+
+"Yes," Dan agreed, "but do you mean that the father actually
+abandoned her?"
+
+"Practically. He left a note for me and a little bag of gold amounting to
+two thousand dollars to be used for the child. If you will hand me that
+old secretary there, I will show you the letter."
+
+Dan placed the old-fashioned writing-desk on the table beside her, and
+waited anxiously while she fumbled in her pocket for the key. She
+unlocked the desk, and after searching a few moments amongst innumerable
+papers, drew out an old letter. This she unfolded carefully and handed
+to Dan. It was written in English, in a fine running hand. He read it
+attentively.
+
+"_The Inn at the Red Oak, Deal_:
+
+"14 October, '814.
+
+"Madame:
+
+"Political circumstances over which I have no control, patriotic
+considerations which I cannot withstand, demand my immediate return to
+France. In the conditions into which I am about to be plunged the care of
+my dear little daughter becomes an impossibility. Inhuman as it must seem
+to you, lacking in all sense of Christian duty as it must appear to you,
+I entrust, without the formality of consulting you, my beautiful little
+Eloise to your humane and tender care. With this letter I deposit with
+you the sum of two thousand dollars in gold, which will go a little way
+at least to compensate you for the burden I thus unceremoniously, but of
+necessity, thrust upon you. I appeal to and confide in the goodness of
+your heart, of which already I have such abundant testimony, that will
+take pity upon the misfortune of a helpless infant and an equally
+helpless parent. May you be a mother to the motherless, and may the
+Heavenly Father bless you for what you shall do.
+
+"I embark, madame, upon a dangerous and uncertain mission. Should that
+mission prove successful and restore the fortunes of my house, I will
+return and claim my daughter. Should fate overwhelm me with disaster, I
+must beg that you will continue to regard her and love her as your own.
+The issue will have been decided within five years. Permit me to add but
+one thing more,--in the event that I fall in the cause I have embraced, I
+have made arrangements whereby communications shall be established with
+you, madame, that will redound to your own good fortune and that of the
+little Eloise.
+
+"All effort to thwart my plans or to establish my identity in the
+meantime, will, I must warn you, be fruitless.
+
+"Adieu, madame: accept the assurance of my gratitude for all that you
+have already done to sweeten exile and of my earnest prayer for the
+blessing of God upon your great good heart.
+
+"I remain, madame, for the present, but always, under whatever name,
+
+"Your grateful and sincere servant,
+
+"GASTON POINTELLE,"
+
+As Dan, with gathering brows, concluded the reading of this
+extraordinary letter, Mrs. Frost resumed her story.
+
+"We always imagined that the general and his companions had sailed in a
+French vessel that lay at that time in the Passage and left that morning
+at dawn. There was nothing to do but adopt little Eloise Pointelle for my
+own. I changed her name, at your father's suggestion, to Nancy Frost;
+knowing that Pointelle was not the general's real name. For five years we
+looked to see our guest return; and afterwards for years, we hoped to
+receive some communication that would prove, as he promised, of advantage
+to Nancy and ourselves. But from the night General Pointelle left our
+house to this day, I have not heard one word to show that he still
+existed or, indeed, that he ever had existed. We brought Nancy up as our
+own daughter, though, never concealing from her the fact that she was not
+of our blood. Indeed, Dan, I have loved her dearly."
+
+"Certainly, you have always treated her with the greatest kindness. But
+this is quite extraordinary, Mother. I think it will throw light on
+Nancy's present disappearance."
+
+"Do you think the father is alive, Dan? that he has communicated
+with her?"
+
+"Not that, mother; I am really in the dark. But I believe that the
+Marquis de Boisdhyver has some connection with your General Pointelle,
+and that his stay with us this winter has something to do with Nancy."
+
+In response to Mrs. Frost's questions, he told of the meetings of Nancy
+and the marquis, but decided to say nothing about the paper that he had
+found in the Oak Parlour.
+
+"I want you to be careful, Mother, to give no hint to the Marquis that we
+suspect him in any way. Tom and I are trying to solve the mystery, and
+secrecy is of the greatest importance. It is a more complicated business
+than we imagined. I must go now and find Tom. May I keep this letter?"
+
+"Yes, but keep it under lock and key. I have guarded it for sixteen
+years; and it is the only evidence I possess of Nancy's origin."
+
+Dan returned to the bar, where he found the Marquis and Tom still reading
+their papers.
+
+"Ah!" exclaimed Monsieur de Boisdhyver, "I trust, Monsieur Frost, you
+bring us the good news at last of the return of Mademoiselle."
+
+"Unfortunately, I do not, monsieur," Dan replied. "Our efforts to find
+out what has become of her have been entirely unsuccessful. I am very
+anxious, as you may imagine."
+
+"And to what mishap do you attribute Mademoiselle's so unceremonious
+departure?"
+
+"I do not attribute it to any mishap," replied Dan. "I think that my
+sister has gone off on a visit to some friends, and that her messages to
+us have been miscarried. I feel certain that to-morrow we will be
+completely reassured."
+
+"Ah! I hope so with all my heart," exclaimed the Marquis fervently. "It
+is a matter of deep distress to me--monsieur. But if--to-morrow passes
+and still you do not hear--?"
+
+"God knows, sir. We must do everything to find her."
+
+"We shall find her," cried Tom, as he sprang to his feet, unable longer
+to repress his anxiety or his irritation. "And if we do not find her safe
+and well, woe to the man who has harmed her."
+
+"Bravo!" cried the Marquis. "Permit me to adopt those words to express
+my own sentiments. I applaud this determination, monsieur, _de tout
+mon coeur_."
+
+Tom glared at the little old man with an expression of illconcealed rage.
+He was about to blurt out some angry reply, when a warning gesture from
+Dan checked him. Without speaking, he flung himself out of the room.
+
+"Poor Tom!" said Dan quickly, to cover Pembroke's attitude toward the
+Marquis, "this takes him especially hard. He is in love with Nancy."
+
+"_Eh bien_! I sympathize with his good taste. It is that that accounts
+for his vigour of his expressions, so much more _emphatique_ than our
+good host."
+
+"More emphatic, perhaps," said Dan, "though I do not feel less strongly."
+
+The Marquis made a little bow, as he rose to retire. "If, chance,
+monsieur could require my assistance--"
+
+"Thank you," said Dan quickly. "In that case, sir, I shall be only too
+happy to call upon you." He rose also, and courteously held the candle
+till the Marquis had reached the top of the stairs.
+
+Tom waited his friend impatiently in their common chamber. And when at
+last, having closed the house for the night, Dan joined him, he told at
+once of the signals which he supposed had been exchanged between the
+Marquis at the Inn and someone at the House on the Dunes. In return Dan
+repeated what he had learned about Nancy from Mrs. Frost.
+
+"There is no doubt in my mind," said Dan, "that the Marquis knows all
+about Nancy's disappearance and where she is, and further I believe that
+Nancy's disappearance is part of a plot with the Marquis here, Madame de
+la Fontaine at the House on the Dunes, and that schooner riding at anchor
+in the Cove. I have a plan, Tom."
+
+"Go ahead for heaven's sake. If we don't do something, I'll go in and
+choke the truth out of that old reprobate. He applauds my sentiments, eh!
+Good God! If he knew them!"
+
+"Yes, yes," said Dan. "But the time for choking has not come. You nearly
+gave yourself away to-night, you will ruin our plans, and involve Nancy
+in some harm. She is probably in that old villain's power. Now listen to
+me. The first thing to do is to discover Nancy's whereabouts. The second
+is to get at the bottom of the Marquis's plot and the secret of the torn
+scrap of paper. We will find the clew to both, I think, if we can
+discover the meaning of the signals between the Marquis and the lady in
+the House on the Dunes."
+
+"Right!" cried Tom. "But how?"
+
+"One of us must stay at the Inn and watch the Marquis to-night, and the
+other investigate the House on the Dunes. I have already been there and
+made the acquaintance of the lady, so I had better do that, and you stay
+here. Do you agree?"
+
+"Yes, of course; though I envy you the chance to be out and doing."
+
+"You will be doing something here. I want you to hide yourself in the
+hallway near the Marquis's door and watch all night--till dawn anyway.
+He cannot get out of his room without coming into the hall, and we must
+know what he does to-night. If the Marquis can spend a sleepless night,
+we can afford to do so. I don't know what I can do at the House on the
+Dunes but I shall take the pistol, and you can keep my gun. To-morrow I
+will get more arms, for I shouldn't be surprised if we needed them. Is
+everything clear?"
+
+"Perfectly," said Tom. "I'll watch as soon as you are off."
+
+"Good-night, old boy, good luck."
+
+"Good-night," and Dan slipped out of the room and down the dark stairs.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+MIDNIGHT VIGILS
+
+
+As soon as Dan had gone Tom blew out his light and slipped into
+the hallway.
+
+This portion of the Inn was simple in design. A long corridor ran through
+the middle of the house to meet a similar passage at the southern end
+extending at right angles to the main hall. The South Chamber, occupied
+by the Marquis de Boisdhyver, opened into the southwest passage, but the
+door was well beyond the juncture of the two corridors. It was Pembroke's
+intention to conceal himself in the bedroom next the Marquis's chamber,
+from the door of which he could look down the entire length of the main
+hall, and by stepping outside get a view of the branch hallway into which
+the door of this room and that of the Marquis actually opened. A further
+advantage was that the windows of this room, like those of the South
+Chamber, looked out upon the Dunes and the Cove.
+
+As Tom stepped from his chamber, the house seemed utterly deserted; save
+for the roaring of the wind without and an occasional creak or crack in
+the time-worn boards, there were no sounds.
+
+The night was not a dark one, although the wind was rising and rain was
+threatening; for a full moon lurked behind the thick veil of cloud and
+something of its weird weak light relieved the darkness even of the great
+corridor of the Inn.
+
+Tom stole softly down the hallway and gained the room next the Marquis's.
+He took his position in a great chair, which he drew near the open door,
+and laid his gun on the floor near at hand. No one could enter the hall
+without his seeing him. Every few moments he would tiptoe to the doorway,
+thrust his head into the corridor, and listen intently for any sound in
+the South Chamber.
+
+It was a lonely and unpleasant vigil. The night was wild, the storm was
+rising, the old Inn was moaning as though in distress; and, despite his
+natural courage, fantastic terrors and dangers thrust themselves upon his
+excited imagination. He would much have preferred, he felt, to be out in
+the open as Dan was, even facing real dangers and greater difficulties.
+Deeper than by these imaginary fears of the night, he was racked with
+anxiety to know what had become of the girl he loved. Had she been
+decoyed away by the evil genius of the place; was she in danger? Had she
+disappeared of her own free will; and didn't she really love him?
+
+He was not in the least sleepy; but after a while the vigil began to tell
+upon his nerves. He found it almost impossible to sit still and wait,
+perhaps in vain. He made innumerable trips across the room to the windows
+to look out into the bleak night. The landscape was blotted out. Not a
+light showed from the House on the Dunes; only the two lamps on the
+schooner at anchor in the Cove gleamed across the night. Eleven o'clock,
+twelve o'clock struck solemnly from the old clock on the stairs.
+
+Once as he was looking out of the window, it seemed to him that the green
+light on the _Southern Cross_ was moving. But it was impossible that she
+should weigh anchor in the teeth of the rising storm. He was mistaken.
+Nay, he was sure. But it was rising, slowly, steadily, as though drawn by
+an invisible hand, to about the height of the masthead. There at last it
+stopped, and swung to the wind, to and fro, to and fro; high above its
+red companion, high above the deck.
+
+And then, suddenly, as if to answer this mysterious manoeuvre, the green
+light, that earlier in the evening had glowed from a north window of the
+House on the Dunes, now flashed from an east window of the old farmhouse;
+flashed, then gleamed steadily. The light on the _Southern Cross_ was
+lowered slowly, then raised again. The light in the House on the Dunes
+vanished; soon flashed again and then vanished once more. Slowly the
+light in the schooner descended to its normal position. A moment later
+the green light appeared on the north side of the House on the Dunes,
+where it had been earlier, and shone there steadily.
+
+Was it a signal to the Marquis de Boisdhyver? Tom tiptoed to the
+partition between his room and the South Chamber, and put his ear to the
+wall to listen. Not a sound reached him. He turned to the door to go into
+the corridor, and stood suddenly motionless. For there, advancing ever so
+cautiously down the hall, carrying a lighted candle in his hand, was the
+old Marquis. He was clad in night dress and cap, with a gayly-coloured
+dressing-gown worn over the white shirt. Slowly, silently, pausing every
+instant to listen; he stole on, gun in hand, and Tom followed him as
+cautiously and as quietly. Instead of turning to the right at the
+partition that divides the north and south wings of the Inn and going
+down stairs, the Marquis turned to the left, into the short hall that led
+directly to the great chamber occupied by Tom and Dan.
+
+By the time Pembroke in pursuit had reached the turn and dared to peep
+around the corner of the wall, the Marquis was at the door of Dan's room.
+He stood there, ear bent close to the panel, intently listening.
+
+Tom waited breathless. Not satisfied, Monsieur de Boisdhyver turned about
+and went into an adjoining chamber, the door of which stood open.
+Pembroke was about to advance, when the Marquis emerged again into the
+corridor, having left his lighted candle in the empty room. This
+manoeuvre, whatever advantage it had for the Marquis, was fortunate for
+Pembroke, for it left the end of the little hall, where he stood
+watching, in deep shadow. He could now step boldly from behind the
+concealing wall without fear of immediate detection.
+
+Again the Marquis stood and listened at the door of Dan's room, then
+cautiously turned the knob. The door yielded and opened an inch or so.
+Monsieur de Boisdhyver put his ear to the crack. Dissatisfied with the
+absolute silence that must have met him, he pushed open the door a little
+further and thrust his head inside. In a moment he disappeared within.
+
+Tom realized that the Marquis would soon discover the fact that the
+room was empty. He looked about quickly for a place of concealment that
+would command a view of all the halls. Fortunately the partition that
+divided the long corridor between the north and south wings was hung
+with heavy curtains. Deciding instantly, Pembroke slipped behind them,
+and ruthlessly slit an opening in the thick green stuff, through which
+he could peek out. He was just in time, as the Marquis came out of
+their bedroom and softly closed the door. He stood irresolute; then,
+with even greater caution, re-entered the room in which he had left his
+candle. To Tom's chagrin, the candle was suddenly extinguished and the
+Inn left in darkness.
+
+For some moments, there was absolute silence. Then Tom could hear
+faintly,--or feel rather than hear--the Marquis cautiously finding his
+way back. Luckily, the old Frenchman was groping his way next the other
+wall. Pembroke slipped from behind the curtains and stole softly in
+pursuit. As he reached the south end of the corridor, he heard the latch
+of the Marquis's door click softly. Alarmed by discovering that they were
+not in bed, thought Tom, he had abandoned whatever purpose he had in mind
+for his midnight prowl.
+
+After waiting a little and hearing no more, Tom went again to the window.
+The rain had begun now and the wind was blowing a gale. Suddenly Pembroke
+discerned a light shining from the window next the very one from which he
+was peering into the darkness,--the steady glow of a deep red light.
+
+"Another signal!" he murmured; then waited to see if it would be answered
+by the House on the Dunes. Perhaps fifteen minutes passed, and then,
+suddenly, there gleamed through the rain and dark, a tiny bit of red
+flame, just where the House on the Dunes must be. A little later the red
+lamp on the _Southern Cross_ performed a fantastic ascension to what
+Pembroke took to be the masthead.
+
+The red light in the neighbouring window was extinguished. Almost
+instantly the red spark on the Dunes disappeared, and in a few moments
+the schooner's lamp began its descent. Simultaneously they glowed again
+and the ship's light danced upward; then the two red lights on shore
+vanished and the lamp on the _Southern Cross_ sank to its proper place
+and stayed there.
+
+Of one thing Tom was sure: The Marquis, the lady at the House on the
+Dunes, and the skipper of the schooner in the Cove, were in collusion. Of
+another thing he felt almost equally certain: the red light was a signal
+of danger, and the message of danger flashed across the night was the
+fact that he and Dan were not safe asleep in bed.
+
+For a long time he watched, keen with excitement; listened patiently;
+started at every sound. But nothing more unusual did he hear that night
+than the roar of the wind, the dash of the brawling southeaster against
+the panes, and the groans of the old house, shaken by the storm. Toward
+morning he crept back to bed and fell instantly into a deep and
+dreamless sleep.
+
+While Tom was thus watching and sleeping a somewhat different experience
+had fallen to the lot of Dan Frost. He had no definite plan in making a
+midnight visit to the vicinity of the House on the Dunes, but he hoped to
+discover some clue to the surrounding mysteries. From time to time during
+the day he had taken his field glasses to one of the upper rooms of the
+Inn, and scanned the countryside but nothing unusual seemed astir in the
+white world without. The _Southern Cross_ had lain on the surface of the
+little cove all day, swaying with wind and tide, no sign of activity upon
+her decks. It was after ten when he started forth. The night was not
+quite dark, for the full moon was shining somewhere behind the thick veil
+of clouds. Earlier in the evening Dan had intended to go boldly to the
+House itself and demand an interview with old Mrs. Meath; but he
+reflected that he would probably be met with the excuse that Mrs. Meath
+was ill, and he did not know how he could force himself in, particularly
+past the barrier of Madame de la Fontaine's charming manner.
+
+It was an unpleasant walk with the wind in his face, and it was nearly
+eleven before he turned into the long dune road, which branched from the
+Port Road near the Rocking Stone and led directly to the old farmhouse on
+Strathsey Neck. To his chagrin it appeared that all lights had been
+extinguished as if the inmates of the house had gone to bed.
+
+The old farmhouse loomed before him, dark and forbidding. On either side
+there were outhouses, and in the rear quite near the house a barn. There
+was not a tree on the place; indeed, there was little vegetation upon the
+entire Neck, save the grass of the middle meadows which in summer
+furnished scant nourishment for the cattle and a flock of sheep. Now all
+was bleak and covered with snow, and a freshening gale swept out of the
+great maw of the Atlantic.
+
+Keeping close to the fence, Frost began to make a complete circuit of
+the farmhouse. As he turned a corner of the south end, or rear of the
+house, he was relieved to see a light burning in the kitchen. He stole
+cautiously to a position within the shadow of the barn from which he
+could get a glimpse of the interior. In the kitchen standing before a
+deal table, he saw a young woman--not Jane, Mrs. Heath's
+maid-of-all-work, but a stranger,--with her hands deep in a bowl of
+dough. Her back was toward him, but he guessed that she was Madame de la
+Fontaine's maid, whom he had seen in the morning. The door into the
+dining-room beyond stood open, and by craning his neck, Dan could see
+that the room was lighter, but he could not discover whether or not it
+were occupied. The shutters of the dining-room were so closely barred
+and the curtains so tightly drawn that not a ray of light penetrated to
+the outside.
+
+The girl in the kitchen proceeded busily about her work. She was
+evidently engaged, despite the lateness of the hour, in mixing bread.
+
+Once while he waited patiently, to what end he hardly knew, Madame de la
+Fontaine entered the kitchen. She was clad in black and held in her hands
+what Dan took to be a ship's lamp. She stood for a moment in the doorway
+and spoke to the servant maid. The girl stopped her work, and taking a
+strip of paper, ignited it at a candle and lighted the lamp, which Madame
+de la Fontaine held up for her. It glowed instantly with a deep green
+flame, such as Tom had described as shining from a window of the House on
+the Dunes in the early evening.
+
+As soon as her lamp was lighted Madame de la Fontaine left the room.
+Supposing that she was about to give a signal, Dan's heart leaped at the
+prospect of some result to his eavesdropping, and he stole carefully
+around to the front of the house. Presently from an upper window in the
+east side of the house, not the north as he had expected, he saw the
+green light sending forth its message across the Dunes--to whom? Probably
+the signal could be seen from the Inn, but it more likely was intended
+for the schooner in the Cove. Sure enough, as he watched, Dan saw the
+phenomenon of the ascending lamp on the _Southern Cross_, which at that
+identical moment Tom Pembroke was watching from his post of vantage in
+one of the south windows of the Inn.
+
+A little later the signal was removed from the east window of the
+farmhouse and placed in a north window. Dan looked to see the answering
+gleam from the Inn at the Red Oak. But none came. Crouched in a corner of
+the fence, he waited perhaps for half-an-hour.
+
+Suddenly a signal gleamed from the Inn, but this time it was not green as
+he expected, but red. In a few moments a form appeared in the window of
+the farmhouse, and a white hand, which he supposed was that of Madame de
+la Fontaine, took hold of the lamp and reversed it, so that now it showed
+red. The light in the Inn vanished, reappeared, vanished again. The same
+thing happened to the light in the House on the Dunes. And looking
+eastward, Dan saw the ship's red lamp perform its fantastic ascent and
+descent. Soon all was left in darkness. Frost slipped back to his post
+near the barn and looked again into the kitchen.
+
+Madame de la Fontaine was standing in the doorway as before. The maid,
+turning away from the table, came at that moment to the window, and
+raised the sash, as though she were overheated. Presently, leaving the
+window open, she turned to her mistress, and Dan could hear the sharp
+staccato of her voice as she said something in what seemed to him her
+barbarous French.
+
+Impelled by curiosity, he crept closer to the house. He was within six
+feet of the window, standing on the tip of his toes. Suddenly he felt
+himself pinioned from behind; his arms were gripped as in a vise, a hand
+grasped his throat and began to choke him, and a sharp knee was planted
+with terrific force in the small of his back. He made a gurgling sound as
+he went backward, but there was no opportunity for struggling. He
+recovered from the shock to find himself stretched at full length in the
+wet snow. Some one was sitting upon him, struggling to thrust a gag into
+his mouth; some one else was binding his hands and feet.
+
+He could just distinguish, in the sickly moonlight and the dim rays of
+the candle from the kitchen, the faces of his assailants. One was the
+murderous looking Frenchman, the skipper of the _Southern Cross_, the
+other he took to be a common seaman.
+
+Attracted by the scuffle, the French maid had thrust her head out of the
+window and was addressing the combatants in vigorous French. Neither then
+nor later did Madame de la Fontaine appear. When Frost was safely bound
+and gagged, Captain Bonhomme arose, said a few words to his companion,
+and disappeared into the farmhouse. Dan's guard searched him rapidly,
+confiscated his revolver and knife, and then resumed his seat upon his
+legs. Inside the kitchen Dan could hear the sounds of an animated French
+dialogue, in which he imagined from time to time that he detected the
+silvery tones of Madame de la Fontaine's voice. Perhaps fifteen minutes
+elapsed. Captain Bonhomme came out of the house, strode to the spot where
+Dan was lying, and addressed him in excellent English.
+
+"Monsieur; for purposes which it is superfluous to explain, it is decided
+to extend to you for a while the hospitality of my good ship the
+_Southern Cross_--a hospitality, I may say, that your unceremonious
+eavesdropping has thrust upon you. I will release your feet; and then,
+monsieur, you follow my good Jean across the sands. If you are quiet, no
+harm shall come to you. If you resist, _cher monsieur_, it will be of
+painful duty that I entrust the contents of this revolver into--_mais
+non! Vous comprenez, n'est-ce pas?--Bien_!"
+
+He gave a sharp order to the seaman. The handkerchief about Dan's ankles
+was untied, and he was roughly assisted to his feet.
+
+"The snow is wet, eh! Yes, for the good wind is moist. Now, _Allons_!"
+
+Jean led the way, and Dan, deciding that he had no choice in the matter,
+followed obediently. The captain brought up the rear. As they went out
+through the gate, Dan turned for a moment and looked back at the house.
+He could see the French maid still at the kitchen window. At the same
+moment Captain Bonhomme glanced back and ceremoniously raised his hat.
+
+"_Bonsoir, mam'zelle_."
+
+"_Bonsoir, monsieur_," was the sharp reply, and the window was lowered
+with a bang.
+
+They went on in silence across the Dunes to the beach. There, drawn up
+above high water line, they found a skiff. The captain and Jean shoved
+off, sprang in, and the little boat plunged into the combing waves. They
+reached the _Southern Cross_ without misadventure. The captain blew a
+call upon a boatswain's whistle. A rope was lowered and Jean made the
+skiff fast to the ladder at the schooner's side. The captain took out
+his revolver and held it in his hand, while Jean unloosed the cords that
+bound Dan's wrists.
+
+"Now up, _mon ami_."
+
+For a moment Dan thought of risking a scuffle in the unsteady skiff, but
+discretion proved the better part of valour, and he climbed obediently on
+to the deck. The seaman stood close by till the captain and Jean had
+clambered up after him. A few words in French to his men, then Captain
+Bonhomme, beckoning to Dan to follow, led the way down the companion. He
+opened the door of a little cabin amidships and bade Frost enter.
+
+"You will find everything required for your comfort, monsieur," he said,
+"and I trust you will make yourself at home, as you say; and enjoy a good
+night and a sound sleep. We can discuss our affairs in the morning."
+
+And with the words, he closed the door, turned the key in the lock, and
+left Dan to his reflections.
+
+
+
+
+PART III
+
+THE SCHOONER IN THE COVE
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+THE SOUTHERN CROSS
+
+
+Dan spent a miserable night. He had soon satisfied himself that escape
+was impossible. A child could not have squeezed through the port hole,
+and the stoutness of the door--barred, he fancied, as well as locked on
+the outside,--seemed to indicate that this particular cabin had been
+constructed for the purpose of keeping an enemy out of mischief.
+
+Young Frost's reflections, as at length he stretched himself upon the
+bunk, were anything but agreeable. The reconnoitre at the House on the
+Dunes had established nothing but what they already practically
+knew--that the Marquis, the lady, and the captain of the schooner were
+working together. If they were responsible for Nancy's disappearance, as
+Dan was convinced, he had not succeeded in getting a scrap of evidence
+against them. And to cap the climax, he had stupidly allowed himself to
+be captured. The method of his capture seemed to him quite as ignominious
+as the fact.
+
+He was not particularly alarmed for his own safety. He did not doubt that
+eventually he would escape, though at the moment he could not imagine
+how; or, failing in that, he supposed he would be released,--honorably
+discharged, as it were,--when it was too late for him to interfere with
+the designs of the conspirators. And this was the bitterest reflection of
+all: that a carefully-planned conspiracy was on foot, and no sooner had
+he and Tom realized it than through sheer stupidity he must not only make
+it clear to the Marquis and his colleagues that they were being watched,
+but must let himself fall into their power. Poor Tom! thought Dan
+ruefully as he tossed upon the little bunk, there must fall upon him now
+the brunt of whatever was to be done for Nancy's rescue, for the
+thwarting of whatever nefarious designs this gang of French desperados
+were concocting.
+
+Escape! A dozen times and more he sprang from his bed to press his face
+against the thick glass of the little port and to rage futilely that he
+could not elongate his six feet of anatomy, and slip through. In vain he
+would throw his weight against the door, without so much as shaking it.
+And then he would sink back upon the bunk and determine to conserve his
+strength by snatching a bit of sleep. And he would wait--since he must
+wait--till morning.
+
+The gale had lashed itself into a fury; the rain was pouring in
+torrents; and the ship rolled distressingly in the rising sea. It was
+near dawn before Dan succeeded in getting to sleep at all, but from then
+on for several hours he slept heavily. When he awoke the storm, like
+many storms that come out of the south, had exhausted itself. The rain
+had ceased, the wind had fallen, and it was evident from the motion of
+the ship, that the sea was going down. Dan sprang to the port hole and
+peered out, and was thankful to realize that the peep hole of his prison
+gave upon the shore.
+
+Though it had stopped raining, the clouds were still grey and lowering,
+and the morning light was weak and pale. The Dunes, beyond the disturbed
+waters of the little cove, looked dirty and bedraggled. The snow had been
+washed off the hillocks, the little streams that here and there emptied
+into the Cove had swollen to the size of respectable brooks, and the high
+water of the night had strewn the beach with brown tangled seaweed. There
+was no sign of human life in evidence. Dan could just see the upper story
+of the House on the Dunes, but no other habitation save the deserted
+fisherman's huts that straggled along the beach.
+
+His watch showed half-past seven when the evil-visaged Jean unbarred the
+door, opened it about a foot, and thrust in upon the floor a tray of
+food. Dan sprang forward and succeeded in getting his foot into the
+opening, so that Jean could not close the door. He was prepared to fight
+for his liberty. Despite Jean's superior strength, Dan had the advantage
+in that his own body acted as a lever, and for a moment it seemed that he
+was to be successful; but the Frenchman, with a violent execration,
+suddenly let go his hold on the knob, the door swung in, and Dan fell
+back on all fours upon the floor. By the time he had recovered himself
+for another dash, he was confronted by Jean, a disagreeable leer upon his
+unpleasant countenance and a cocked pistol in his hand.
+
+Dan stood in his tracks. "I want to see Captain Bonhomme!" he demanded,
+making up in the tone of his voice for the vigor his movements
+suddenly lacked.
+
+"_Je ne parle pas englais_," was the irritating reply, as Jean, menacing
+the prisoner with the pistol, reached for the door and closed it with a
+snap. Dan had the chagrin of hearing the key turn in the lock and the
+heavy bar fall into place across the panels.
+
+He sat down ruefully, but after a moment or so took up the tray and
+placed it on the bunk before him. He made a bad breakfast off thick
+gruel, black bread and villainous coffee, and then kicked his heels
+impatiently for an hour or more.
+
+Eventually Jean reappeared, this time pistol in hand, and behind him, to
+Dan's relief, Captain Bonhomme. The captain entered the little cabin,
+leaving the door open behind him while Jean stood in the passage on duty
+as guard. The swarthy unattractive face of Captain Bonhomme wore this
+morning an expression of sarcastic levity that was more irritating to
+Frost than its ferocious anger had been the night before.
+
+"_Bon jour, monsieur_," said the captain in a tone of obnoxious
+pleasantry. "I trust the night has gone well with you."
+
+"You will oblige me," snapped Dan for reply, "by omitting your
+hypocritical courtesy. I demand to know what you mean by this
+proceeding,--capturing me like a common thief and imprisoning me on this
+confounded ship?"
+
+Captain Bonhomme's countenance quickly lost its factitious cheerfulness.
+"Monsieur," he replied sharply, "I did not come to you to bandy words. If
+you will reflect on the occupation you were indulging last night at the
+moment we surprised you, you will comprehend that it was certainly to be
+inferred that, if you were not a thief, you were an eavesdropper; which,
+to my way of thinking, is as bad. If you address me again in that
+insulting tone, I shall leave you till such a time as you may be willing
+to listen at least with common courtesy to what I have to say. You are,
+young gentleman, a prisoner on my ship and very much in my power. You
+have grossly offended a distinguished countrywoman who is under my
+protection in your barbarous country. Madame de la Fontaine, however, has
+been good enough to interest herself in your behalf and to beg that I
+shall not unceremoniously pitch you overboard to feed the fishes as you
+so richly deserve."
+
+Dan bit his lips, but for the moment kept silent.
+
+"I am come this morning," continued Captain Bonhomme, "not for the
+pleasure of entering upon a discussion, but to inform you that a little
+later in the morning, when this infernal wind of yours has blown itself
+out, Madame de la Fontaine proposes to come aboard. For reasons of her
+own, she does you the honor to desire a conversation with you. I have to
+ask that you will meet my distinguished patroness as the gentleman you
+doubtless profess to be, and that you will give me your word not to
+attempt to escape while Madame is on board the ship."
+
+"I shall not give my word," protested Dan, "under any circumstances to a
+pirate such as I take you to be."
+
+"_Eh bien, monsieur_; in that case, you will appear before Madame in
+irons. From your window, so admirably small, you will see at what hour
+Madame comes aboard. If in the meantime you have decided to give us your
+word of honour, well and good; if you continue to display your freedom of
+choice by the exercise of your stupidity, also, well and good. And now,
+_an revoir_." Captain Bonhomme smiled grimly, bowed again with insulting
+politeness, and left Dan alone in the cabin.
+
+An hour, two hours passed. The wind had abated, the sun was struggling to
+dissipate the murky bank of cloud that hung from zenith to the eastern
+horizon. From his coign of vantage at the little port hole Dan saw Madame
+de la Fontaine pick her way across the Dunes and come upon the little
+beach. A small boat had put off from the schooner and was being rowed to
+shore by two seamen. The French lady gathered her skirts about her
+ankles, and stepped lightly into the skiff, as the men held it at the
+edge of the surf. The little boat was then pushed off and rowed briskly
+toward the _Southern Cross_.
+
+Half-an-hour passed before the door of Dan's cabin was opened again, and
+Captain Bonhomme, attended by the faithful Jean, reappeared. In the
+skipper's hand was a pair of irons.
+
+"Monsieur," said the captain, holding up the irons, "Madame de la
+Fontaine does you the honour of desiring an interview in the saloon. May
+I venture to enquire your pleasure?"
+
+The ignominy of appearing before his charming acquaintance of the day
+before manacled like a criminal, was too much for Dan's vanity. "I give
+you my word of honour," he said gruffly.
+
+"Ah, monsieur," murmured the captain, "permit me to applaud your good
+taste. But let us be exact: until you are returned to this cabin and are
+again under lock and key, that is to say until Madame is safely upon
+shore again,--you give me your word of honour as a gentleman to make no
+attempt to escape?"
+
+"Yes, yes," said Dan, striving to conceal his irritation. "But spare me,
+I beg, your explanations. As you know, I am practically helpless. We
+understand each other. I trust that Madame de la Fontaine will give me an
+explanation of the outrage that you have refused."
+
+"_Sans doute, sane doute_!" exclaimed the captain. He waved his
+hand toward the door. "_Apres vous, monsieur_. Our worthy Jean will
+lead the way."
+
+Without more ado they left the little cabin that had served as
+Dan's prison and traversed a narrow passageway aft to the door of a
+little saloon.
+
+In the saloon, seated in a deep arm chair by the side of the table, was
+Madame de la Fontaine. She was clad in some soft green gown, with furs
+about her neck and wrists, and a little bonnet, adorned by the gay
+plumage of a tropical bird, worn close upon her head. At first glance she
+was as bewitchingly beautiful, as entirely charming, as she had seemed to
+Dan the day before. He blushed to the roots of his hair and for the
+moment quite forgot the extraordinary predicament in which he was placed.
+Madame de la Fontaine rose, a bright smile beaming from her soft blue
+eyes, and waited for Dan to approach.
+
+"Good morning, Mr. Frost. This is charming of you. And now, Captain
+Bonhomme, if you will be so kind,--" she turned with her delightful smile
+to the skipper. "_Eh bien_, Jean!" This last remark was uttered in a
+sharp tone of command, very different from the silvery accents in which
+she had spoken to Frost and the captain. Dan wondered at it.
+
+The disagreeable impression was but momentary, for the lady turned
+again to Dan, engaged him with her frank and pleasant glance, and young
+Frost forgot everything in the presence of the most charming woman he
+had ever met.
+
+Captain Bonhomme and his watchdog had disappeared, closing the saloon
+door behind them. Dan and Madame de la Fontaine were alone.
+
+"Will you not seat yourself, monsieur?" she said. "We shall then talk so
+much more at our ease."
+
+"Thank you," Dan murmured vaguely, and advancing a step or two nearer,
+seated himself in the first chair within reach.
+
+"Ah, not there, Mr. Frost," the lady protested with a little laugh
+of amusement. "It will never be that we are able to talk at so
+great a distance." She indicated a more comfortable chair at much
+closer quarters.
+
+Dan obediently changed his seat, and waited for Madame de la Fontaine to
+begin the conversation. But she continued for a moment silently to regard
+him with a naive air of interest and of unconcealed admiration.
+
+"May I ask," said Dan at length, disturbed by this scrutiny, and rising
+to a courtesy that was in reality beyond him, "for what reason you have
+done me the honour to wish to speak with me?"
+
+"_Vraiment_," replied Madame de la Fontaine; "after the events of last
+night there is need that we should have some conversation. You are very
+young and I have reason to be grateful to you for courtesy and kindness,
+so I have yielded to impulse, against my judgment, to interfere with
+Captain Bonhomme who has great anger with you."
+
+"You are very kind, madame," Dan replied with dignity. "I am to infer
+then that my liberty or my further unwarranted imprisonment on this ship
+is to be determined by you?"
+
+"_Mais non, Monsieur_. It is true only that I have a little influence
+with Captain Bonhomme. Last night you were watching me, so it interests
+me to know why."
+
+"I was watching Mrs. Heath's house," Dan answered.
+
+"Ah! but I and my maid were alone in the room into which you so
+unceremoniously looked, monsieur!"
+
+"Yes, madame, but why should you infer that my motive in looking into
+that room was interest in your affairs?"
+
+"I do not altogether assume that, Mr. Frost," the lady protested. "I
+infer simply--but, pardon! you were to say--?"
+
+"Merely to ask you, madame, what Captain Bonhomme proposes to do with me,
+should you not be so good as to use your influence in my behalf?"
+
+For reply the lady shrugged her shoulders a trifle. "I have fear,
+monsieur," she said after a moment, "that Captain Bonhomme will take you
+for a sail, perhaps a long sail, on the _Southern Cross_."
+
+"Then," said Dan, "since there is no doubt in my mind of your influence
+with the captain, I beg that you will have him release me."
+
+"It is that that I desire, monsieur; and yet--?" Madame de la Fontaine
+paused and glanced at her companion with a charming little air of
+interrogation.
+
+"And yet?" repeated Dan, flushing a little as he looked into the lovely
+blue eyes that met his so frankly.
+
+"I confess, monsieur, I must first discover if you are really deserving
+of my efforts. I care to know very much why you watched me last night
+at the House on the Dunes. For what reason do you watch me at midnight?
+a stranger, a woman? Why is it that my affairs give you interest? I
+would know."
+
+Her voice, her countenance expressed now only her sense of injury, an
+injury which, as it were, she was striving not to regard also as an
+insult. Under the persistent searching of her soft glance, Dan felt
+himself very small indeed.
+
+"Answer me, if you please," she said. This time Dan detected just a trace
+of the sharpness with which she had dismissed the obsequious Jean. It
+gave him courage and a sense of protection from the fascination he knew
+that this strange woman was successfully exerting over him.
+
+As he replied, his glance encountered hers with frankness. "Madame de la
+Fontaine, I told you yesterday morning, my sister, Nancy Frost, has
+disappeared. We searched for her all day in vain. Not a trace of her has
+been found. But certain strange events have led me to suspect that
+certain persons have had something to do with her disappearance and must
+know her whereabouts. I will be frank Madame. One of the persons whom I
+so suspect is yourself."
+
+"I!--_mon Dieu_! and why is it that you believe this, Monsieur?"
+
+"I suspect you, madame, because I suspect the Marquis de Boisdhyver."
+
+"Ah! the French gentleman who is staying with you at the Inn at the Red
+Oak, is it not so?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"But--why me?"
+
+"Because, madame, I discovered that you and the Marquis de Boisdhyver
+have been in secret communication with each other."
+
+"_C'est impossible. Te me comprende pas, monsieur_. Will you tell me why
+it is that you can think that this Marquis de Bois--what is the name?"
+
+"De Boisdhyver."
+
+"_Merci_. Why is it that you can think that the Marquis de Boisdhyver and
+I have been in secret communication?"
+
+"Lights, green and red lights, have been used as signals; by the Marquis
+at the Inn; by you, madame, from the House on the Dunes; and by some
+one,--Captain Bonhomme, I suppose,--from this ship."
+
+"Lights, you have seen lights?"
+
+"Several times last night, Madame. My suspicions were aroused. I was
+determined to find my sister. I resolved to learn the meaning of those
+mysterious signals. My method was stupid: I blundered, and as you have
+several times so gently hinted, I am in your power."
+
+For a moment Madame de la Fontaine was silent, then she looked quickly
+up; a half-vexed, half-amused expression curling her pretty lips.
+
+"Look at me, monsieur," she said. "Do you know what you tell me? That I
+am an adventuress?"
+
+Dan flushed suddenly as he met her steadfast gaze. "I have stated only a
+suspicion, madame, to account for my own stupid blundering. But if you
+think that my suspicions are extraordinary, don't you think that our
+present situation and conversation are also extraordinary, and that they
+might rather confirm my suspicions?"
+
+Madame de la Fontaine dropped her eyes with a perceptible frown of
+displeasure; but again she looked up, smiling.
+
+"_C'est drole_, monsieur, but I find you very attractive? You are at once
+so naive and so clever?"
+
+Dan, finding nothing to reply to this unexpected remark, bit his lips.
+
+"Will you not trust me?" she asked him suddenly, and putting out her hand
+she touched his own with the tips of her fingers.
+
+Poor Frost tingled at this unaccustomed contact. "I--I--" he stammered
+awkwardly. "I have certainly no desire to distrust you, madame."
+
+"And yet it is that you do distrust me."
+
+"But what would you have me do?"
+
+"Ah!" Her hand spontaneously closed upon his with a clasp that delighted
+and yet disconcerted him. "I hope that we shall make each other to
+understand."
+
+"What would you have me do?" Dan repeated.
+
+"Monsieur, let me make to you a confession. I understand your
+suspicions; I understand your desire to find if they are true. You have
+reason; Monsieur le Marquis de Boisdhyver and I have exchanged the
+mysterious signals that you have witnessed. Why should I deny that which
+already you know? Monsieur de Boisdhyver and I are occupied with affairs
+of great importance, and it is necessary that all is kept secret. But I
+believe, that it is that I can trust you, monsieur."
+
+"And Nancy--?" exclaimed Dan.
+
+"_Pas si vite, pas si vite_!" said the lady, laughing gayly, Dan's hand
+still in her friendly pressure. "All in good time, _mon ami_. It is
+necessary before I confide in you our little secret that I consult
+Monsieur le Marquis."
+
+Dan's face betrayed his disappointment. "But you do know about Nancy," he
+insisted; "you will assure me--"
+
+"Of nothing, dear boy,"--and she withdrew her hand. "But it had been so
+much better for us all if only Monsieur le Marquis had at the first
+confided in you."
+
+Madame de la Fontaine had risen now and was holding out her hand to
+say good-bye.
+
+"It is necessary that I return to the shore. I will see Monsieur le
+Marquis this afternoon, and immediately afterward--"
+
+"But, madame, surely," Dan exclaimed, "I am to accompany you?"
+
+"Ah! monsieur," she replied with a charming little smile, "for the
+present you must rest content to be _mon captif_. We must quite clearly
+understand each other before--well. But you are too impetuous, Monsieur
+Dan. For the moment I leave you here."
+
+"But Madame de la Fontaine," cried Dan, "I cannot consent--"
+
+"No! no!" she said, as with a gay laugh, she placed a cool little hand
+across his mouth to prevent his finishing his sentence.
+
+What absurd impulse fired his blood at this sudden familiarity, Dan did
+not know; but, quite spontaneously, as though all his life he had been in
+the habit of paying such gallantries to charming ladies, he kissed the
+soft fingers upon his lips. Madame de la Fontaine quickly withdrew them.
+
+"Ah, _mon ami_;" she said, "I expected not to find here _une telle
+galanterie_."
+
+"I have offended you," murmured Dan, blushing furiously.
+
+"Ah, _pas du tout_!" said Madame de la Fontaine. "You are a dear boy,
+monsieur Dan, and I--well, I find you charming."
+
+As she said this, to Dan's complete confusion, Madame de la Fontaine
+lightly brushed his cheeks with her lips, and passing him rapidly, went
+out of the door of the saloon.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+TOM TURNS THE TABLES
+
+
+Owing to his long watch during the greater part of the night, Pembroke
+slept heavily until late the next morning. Indeed, he did not waken until
+Jesse, alarmed that neither Dan nor he had appeared, knocked on their
+door. He sprang up quickly then, and began to dress hastily. Dan's bed
+had not been slept in, and Tom wondered how the night had gone with him.
+
+In a few moments he was down stairs and in the breakfast-room. He found
+the Marquis de Boisdhyver already at table, pouring out his coffee, which
+Deborah had just placed before him. Mrs. Frost had not appeared.
+
+Tom murmured an apology for being late, and delayed the black woman, who
+was on the point of leaving the room, by a question.
+
+"Where is Mr. Dan?"
+
+"Sure an, Mass' Tom, I ain't seen him dis mornin' yet. Ain't he done
+over-slept hisself like you?"
+
+"No; but I dare say he is about the place somewheres. All right, Deb;
+bring my breakfast quickly, please."
+
+"You will pardon me," said Monsieur de Boisdhyver, "for having begun
+without you?"
+
+"Oh, certainly," said Tom; "Don't know what was the matter, but I slept
+unusually soundly last night; that is, after I got to sleep, for the
+storm kept me awake for hours."
+
+"_Et moi aussi_," said the Marquis. "What wind! I am but thankful it
+has exhausted itself at last. And Monsieur Frost, he has also
+over-slept, you say?"
+
+"No. He got up early without disturbing me. I guess he will be in any
+minute now."
+
+The Marquis stirred his coffee and slowly sipped it.
+
+Tom made a hasty breakfast, and then went outside to reconnoitre. He
+discovered no trace of his friend. There was but one inference in his
+uneasy mind: Dan had met with some misadventure at the House on the
+Dunes. At last, after wandering about aimlessly for some time, he decided
+to tell Jesse of his uneasiness.
+
+"If Mr. Dan is not back by dinner time, I shall go over to the House on
+the Dunes and try to find out what has become of him. Heaven knows what
+has become of Miss Nancy. I don't like that schooner, Jess, and its ugly
+crew, lying there in the Cove. It's all a darn queer business."
+
+"They're certainly a rough-looking lot, Mr. Tom, as I saw when I was on
+the beach yesterday. And she don't appear to have any particular business
+anchoring there. I hope they've nothing to do with Miss Nancy's and Mr.
+Dan's being away."
+
+"I don't know, Jess, what to think. But listen here I want you to go into
+the Port this morning and engage Ezra Manners to come out here and stay
+with us for a week or so. Don't tell him too much, but I guess Ezra won't
+balk at the notion of a scrap. Bring him out with you, and offer to pay
+him enough to make sure of his coming. And I want you to go to Breeze's
+on the Parade and get some guns and powder, enough to arm every blessed
+soul of us in the Inn. Charge the stuff to me. And be careful how you
+bring it back, for I don't want any one here to know about it,
+particularly the old Frenchman. Understand? You ought to get back by
+dinner-time, if you start at once. I'll stay here till you return."
+
+"I'll start right off, sir. Guess I'll have to drive, for the
+rain'll have washed the snow off the roads. I'll be back by halfpast
+twelve, Mr. Tom."
+
+"All right," said Pembroke. "Be sure not to let any one know what you
+are doing."
+
+"Sure I won't, sir. I've been pretty much worried myself about Miss
+Nancy. Didn't seem a bit like Miss Nance to go off without sayin' a word
+to anybody.
+
+"Well, hurry along now, Jesse."
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+Tom's next task was to try to explain to Mrs. Frost without alarming her.
+She happily jumped to the idea that Dan had gotten trace of Nancy, had
+gone to fetch her, and would return with her before nightfall. So Tom
+left her quite cheerfully knitting in her room for the day.
+
+From time to time during the morning Tom wandered into the bar always to
+find Monsieur de Boisdhyver absorbed in his writing before the fire. The
+morning passed--a long restless morning for Pembroke--and nothing had
+happened. Dan had not returned. He tried to think out a plan of action.
+He went into the north wing of the Inn and barricaded the door leading
+from the bowling alley into the hallway. He made sure that all other
+doors and windows were fastened, and he put the key of the door that
+opened from the bar into the old wing into his pocket. Then he looked at
+the doors and windows in the south wing.
+
+About noon, as he was standing at an upper window anxiously scanning the
+landscape for any sign of his friend, Tom saw the Marquis, wrapped in his
+great black cloak, emerge from the gallery, go down the steps by the Red
+Oak, and walk rapidly down the avenue of maples. He went along the Port
+Road, to the point where a little road branched off and led to the beach
+of the Cove; here he turned and walked in the direction of the beach.
+With the field glass Tom could follow him quite easily as he picked his
+way through the slush.
+
+Beyond, on the waters of the Cove, the _Southern Cross_ rode at anchor. A
+small boat had put off from the schooner, two seamen at the oars, and a
+woman seated in the stern. The boat reached the shore, the lady was
+lifted out upon the sands, the men jumped in again, pushed off and rowed
+briskly back to the schooner. Tom could not distinguish the lady's
+features, but from the style of her dress, cut in so different a fashion
+than that the ladies of Caesarea were wont to display, and from the
+character of her easy graceful walk, he judged that that was the Madame
+de la Fontaine, of whom Dan had told him the day before. The lady,
+whoever she might be, advanced along the beach and turned into the road
+down which the Marquis de Boisdhyver was going to meet her. Tom could see
+her extend her hand, and the old gentleman, bending ceremoniously, lift
+it to his lips. Then leaning against a stone wall beside a meadow of
+bedraggled snow, they engaged in animated conversation. The lady talked,
+the Marquis talked. They shrugged their shoulders, they nodded their
+heads, they pointed this way and then that. Poor Tom felt he must know
+what was being said. At last, their conference ended, they parted as
+ceremoniously as they had met, the lady starting across the Dunes and the
+Marquis retracing his steps toward the Inn.
+
+In the meantime, fortunately before the Marquis reached the Port Road,
+Jesse had returned, accompanied by the able-bodied Ezra Manners, and
+laden with the supply of arms and ammunition that Pembroke had ordered.
+
+Within half-an-hour Tom and Monsieur de Boisdhyver were seated together
+in the dining-room.
+
+"Ah, and where is Monsieur Dan?" asked the Marquis, with an affectation
+of cheerfulness. "Is he not returned?"
+
+"Not yet, monsieur," Tom replied grimly.
+
+"But you have heard from him?"
+
+"Oh, yes," was Tom's answer; "I have heard from him of course."
+
+"And from Mademoiselle Nancy, I trust, also?"
+
+"Yes, from Nancy also."
+
+"Ah, I am so relieved, Monsieur Pembroke. I was most anxious for their
+safety. One knows not what may happen. We shall have a charming little
+reunion at supper, _n'est-ce pas_?"
+
+"Delightful," said Tom, but in a tone of voice that did not encourage the
+Marquis to ask further questions or to continue his comments.
+
+After dinner, Tom slipped the field glass beneath his jacket, and ran
+upstairs to take another view of the countryside. To his great
+satisfaction he saw a dark spot moving across the snowy dunes and
+recognized the lady of the morning. Apparently she was on her way to the
+Cove again.
+
+He took a loaded pistol, ran down stairs, gave Jesse strict orders to
+keep his eye on the Marquis, saddled his horse, and galloped off madly
+for Mrs. Meath's house.
+
+When he reached the gate of the farmhouse, Tom hitched his horse to the
+fence, went rapidly up the little walk, and knocked boldly and loudly on
+the front door. Repeated and prolonged knocking brought no response. He
+tried the door and found it fastened. He walked about the house. Every
+window on the ground floor was tightly closed and barred. There was no
+sign of life. He knocked at the door of the kitchen, but with no result.
+He tried it, and found it also locked. Determined not to be thwarted in
+his effort to see Mrs. Meath, he kicked vigourously against the door with
+his great hob-nailed boots. Unsuccessful in this, he detached a rail from
+the top of the fence and used it against the door as a battering-ram. At
+the first crash of timbers, the sash of a window in the second story,
+directly above the kitchen, was thrown open, and a dark-eyed,
+dark-haired, excessively angry-looking, young woman thrust her head out.
+
+"_Qui va la_?" she exclaimed.
+
+"Well," said Tom, smiling a little in spite of himself, for the young
+woman was in a state of great indignation. "I want to see Mrs. Meath. I
+may say, I am determined to see Mrs. Meath."
+
+"_Peste! Je ne parle pas anglais_!" snapped the damsel.
+
+"Very well then, mademoiselle, I'll try you in French," said Tom. And in
+very bad French indeed, scarcely even the French of Dr. Watson's school
+for the sons of gentlemen, Pembroke repeated his remarks.
+
+"_Je ne comprend pas_," said the young woman.
+
+Tom essayed his explanation again, but whether the youthful female in the
+window could or would not understand, she kept repeating in the midst of
+his every sentence "_Je ne parle pas anglais_," till Tom lost his temper.
+
+"_Bien_, my fine girl," he exclaimed at last; "I am going to enter this
+house. If you won't open the door, I will batter it down. Understand?
+_Comprenez-vous_?"
+
+"_Je ne parle pas anglais_."
+
+"As you will." He raised the fence-rail again and made as if to ram the
+door. "_Ouvrez la porte_! Do you understand that?"
+
+"_Bete_!" cried the girl, withdrawing her head and slamming down
+the window.
+
+Tom waited a moment to see if his threats had been effective, and was
+relieved by hearing the bar within removed and the key turned in the
+lock. The door was opened, and the young woman stood on the sill and
+volleyed forth a series of French execrations that made Tom wince,
+though he did not understand a word she was saying. Despite her protests,
+he brushed her aside and stalked into the house. He went rapidly from
+room to room, upstairs and down, from garret to cellar, the girl
+following him with her chorus of abusive reproach. She might have held
+her peace, thought Tom, for within half-an-hour he was convinced that
+there was not a person in the House on the Dunes save himself and his
+excited companion. All he discovered for his pains was that old Mrs.
+Meath was also among the missing.
+
+"_Ou est Madame Meath_?"
+
+"_Madame Meath! Que voulez vous? Je ne connais pas Madame Meath_...." And
+infinitely more of which Tom could gather neither head nor tail.
+
+Satisfied at last that there was nothing to be gained by further search
+or parley with the woman, he thanked her civilly enough and went out. He
+unhitched his horse, vaulted into the saddle, and dashed back, as fast as
+his beast could be urged to carry him, to the Inn. He was certain now
+that the schooner held the secret of his vanished friends, and it
+occurred to him to play their own game and turn the tables on Monsieur
+the Marquis de Boisdhyver.
+
+Arrived at the Inn, Tom turned his horse, white with lather, over to
+Jesse; made sure that the Marquis was in the bar; and then, with the help
+of Manners, rapidly made a few preparations.
+
+It was about five o'clock when, his arrangements completed, he returned
+to the bar, where Monsieur de Boisdhyver was quietly taking his tea. Tom
+bowed to the old gentleman, seated himself in a great chair about five
+feet away, and somewhat ostentatiously took from his pocket a pistol,
+laid it on the arm of his chair, and let his fingers lightly play upon
+the handle. The old marquis watched Pembroke's movements out of the
+corner of his eye, still somewhat deliberately sipping his tea. Manners,
+meanwhile, had entered, and stood respectfully in the doorway, oddly
+enough also with a pistol in his hand.
+
+Suddenly Monsieur de Boisdhyver placed his teacup on the table, and
+leaning back in his chair, surveyed Tom with an air of indignant
+astonishment.
+
+"Monsieur Pembroke," he said, "to what am I to attribute these so unusual
+attentions? Is it that you are mad?"
+
+"You may attribute these unusual attentions, marquis, to the fact that
+from now on, you are not a guest of the Inn at the Red Oak, but a
+prisoner."
+
+"Ah!" exclaimed the Marquis with a start, as he made a spasmodic motion
+toward the pocket of his coat. But if his intention had been to draw a
+weapon, Tom was too quick for him. The Marquis found himself staring into
+the barrel of a pistol and heard the unpleasant click of the trigger as
+it was cocked.
+
+The old gentleman paled, whether with fright or indignation, Tom was not
+concerned to know. "You will please keep perfectly still, marquis."
+
+"Monsieur Pembroke," exclaimed the old gentleman, "_C'est_ abominable,
+outrageous, _Mon Dieu_, what insult!"
+
+"Manners," said Tom, "kindly search that gentleman and put his firearms
+out of his reach."
+
+"Monsieur, _c'est extraordinaire_. I protest."
+
+"Quick, Ezra," replied Tom, "or one of us is likely to know how it feels
+to have a bullet in his skin. Up with your hands, marquis."
+
+Monsieur de Boisdhyver obeyed perforce, while Manners quickly searched
+him, removed a small pistol from his coat pocket and a stiletto from his
+waistcoat, and handed them to Tom.
+
+"I thought as much," said Pembroke, slipping them into his pocket. "Now,
+sir, you will oblige me by dropping that attitude of surprised
+indignation."
+
+"Monsieur," said the Marquis, "What is it that you do? Why is it that you
+so insult me?"
+
+"Monsieur, I will explain. You are my prisoner. I intend to lock you up
+safely and securely until my friend and his sister return, unharmed, to
+the Inn. When they are safe at home, when Madame de la Fontaine has taken
+her departure from the House on the Dunes, and when the _Southern Cross_
+has sailed out of the Strathsey, we shall release you and see you also
+safely out of this country. Is that clear?"
+
+"_Mais, monsieur_--"
+
+"I am quite convinced that you know where Nancy is and what has happened
+to Dan. As my friends are probably in your power or in the power of your
+friends, so, dear marquis, you are in mine. If you wish to regain your
+own liberty, you will have to see that they have theirs. Now kindly
+follow Manners; it will give him pleasure to show you to your apartment.
+There you may burn either red or green lights, and I am sure the
+snowbirds and rabbits of Lovel's Woods will enjoy them. After you,
+monsieur."
+
+"Sir, I refuse."
+
+"My dear marquis, do not make me add force to discourtesy. After you."
+
+The Marquis bowed ironically, shrugged his shoulders, and followed
+Manners up the stairs. He was ushered into a chamber on the west side of
+the Inn, whose windows, had they not been heavily barred, would have
+given him a view but of the thick tangles of the Woods.
+
+"I trust you will be able to make yourself comfortable here," said Tom.
+"Your meals will be served at the accustomed hours. I shall return myself
+in a short time, and perhaps by then you will have reconciled yourself to
+the insult I have offered you and be prepared to talk with me."
+
+With that Tom bowed as ironically as the Marquis had done, went out and
+closed the door, and securely locked and barred it outside. Monsieur de
+Boisdhyver was left to his reflections.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+MADAME DE LA FONTAINE
+
+
+For several hours after his return to the little cabin Dan had ample
+leisure in which to think over his extraordinary interview. There could
+be no doubt that the conspirators, for such he had come to call them to
+himself, were determined and desperate enough to go to any lengths in
+accomplishing their designs. Whether his suspicions and activity in
+seeking Nancy had precipitated their plans, his unexpected capture seemed
+to embarrass his captors as much as it did himself. At least, he gathered
+this from Madame de la Fontaine's conversation. Whatever might be the
+motive of the lady's proposed confidence, poor Frost could see nothing
+for it but to await their disclosure and then seize whatever advantage
+they might open to him. Notwithstanding the fact that Dan had cautioned
+himself against trusting the flattery of his charming visitor,
+notwithstanding that he told himself to be forewarned, even by his own
+suspicions, was to be forearmed, he was in reality unconscious of the
+degree to which he had proved susceptible to the lady's blandishments, if
+indeed she had employed blandishments and had not merely given him the
+evidence of a good heart upon which his youth and naivete had made a
+genuine impression.
+
+Dan's experiences with girls up to this time had been limited. His
+emotional nature had never, as yet, been deeply stirred. But no one could
+be insensible to Madame de la Fontaine's beauty and charm, and her
+delightfully natural familiarity; and, finally, her fleeting kiss had
+seemed to Dan but evidence of a warm impulsive heart. To be sure, with
+all the good will in the world, he could not acquit her of being
+concerned in a mysterious plot--indeed, had she not admitted so
+much?--though, also, he must in justice remember that he knew very little
+of the nature of the plot in question.
+
+As he paced restlessly back and forth the length of his prison, he tried
+to think clearly of the accumulating mystery. Was there a hidden treasure
+and how did the Marquis know about it? What part had the _Southern Cross_
+to play with its diabolical looking captain, and what could have become
+of Nancy? Then why had Madame de la Fontaine--but again his cheek would
+burn and remembrance of the bewitching Frenchwoman blotted out all else.
+
+At half-past twelve Captain Bonhomme appeared again. This time he invited
+Dan to partake of luncheon with him on the condition once more of a
+parole. And Dan accepted. He and the Captain made their luncheon
+together, attended by the faithful Jean; and, though no mention was made
+to their anomalous position, the meal was not altogether a comfortable
+one. Captain Bonhomme asked a great many questions about the country, to
+which Frost was inclined to give but the briefest replies; nor, on his
+part, did he show more disposition to be communicative in response to
+Dan's questions about France. Jean regarded the situation with obviously
+surly disapproval. When the meal was finished, Frost was conducted back
+to his little cabin.
+
+About two o'clock he saw the small boat put off for shore, and glancing
+in that direction, he was relieved to see Madame de la Fontaine already
+waiting upon the beach. Within half-an-hour he was again in her
+presence in the Captain's saloon, where their conversation had taken
+place in the morning.
+
+The lady received him graciously. "Ah! monsieur Dan, I fear you have had
+a weary day of it; but it was impossible for me to return sooner."
+
+"It is very kind of you to return at all," replied Dan, gallantly enough.
+
+"Now, Monsieur, you are anxious, I know, that I keep my promise of
+the morning."
+
+"Most anxious," said Dan.
+
+"Without doubt. Come here, my friend, sit near me and listen attentively
+to a long story."
+
+"You have consulted with the Marquis?"
+
+"_Mais oui_. It was difficult, but I have brought him to my way of
+thinking. I am certain that it was an error in the first place not
+taking you into our confidence. _Eh bien_! Tell me, do you know how
+your foster-sister came to be in the charge of your mother at the Inn
+at the Red Oak?"
+
+"Yes, I know what my mother has told me. The child was abandoned to her
+rather than left in her charge."
+
+"_Mais non_" said Madame de la Fontaine; "General Pointelle was impelled
+to act as he did by the strongest motives,--nothing less than the
+tremendous task, undertaken for his country, to liberate the Emperor
+Napoleon from Elba. General Pointelle was a soldier,--more, he was a
+marechal of the Empire; the greatest responsibilities devolved upon him.
+It was impossible for him to be burdened with a child."
+
+"But why, madame, did he not take my mother into his confidence?"
+
+"Secrecy was imperative, monsieur. Even to this day, you do not know who
+General Pointelle actually was. His was a name well-known in France,
+glorious in the annals of the Empire; a name, too, familiar to you in a
+somewhat different connection. 'General Pointelle' was the
+_nom-de-guerre_, as it were, of Francois, Marquis de Boisdhyver, marechal
+de France."
+
+"Francois! you say, _Francois_!" exclaimed Dan.
+
+"_Mais oui_, monsieur; but that should hardly astonish you so much as the
+fact that he was a Boisdhyver. Why are you surprised?"
+
+"Simply, madame," exclaimed Dan hastily, "by the fact that it is the same
+name as that of our Marquis."
+
+"Not quite," corrected the lady; "our Marquis--as you say--is
+Marie-Anne-Timelon-Armand de Boisdhyver, the General's younger brother."
+
+"Ah! and therefore Nancy's uncle?"
+
+"Yes, the uncle of Nancy Frost, or of Eloise de Boisdhyver."
+
+"I see," said Dan. "I begin to see."
+
+"_Eh bien_, monsieur. General Pointelle--the marechal de
+Boisdhyver,--left the Inn at the Red Oak upon a mission for the Emperor,
+then at Elba. _Helas_! that mission ended with disaster after the Hundred
+Days; for, as you know, the Emperor was sent in exile to St. Helena; and,
+as you may not know, the Marechal de Boisdhyver was killed on the plains
+of Waterloo. _Allons_; when he left Deal, he concealed in a hidden
+chamber, which one enters, I believe, from a room you call the Oak
+Parlour, a large treasure, of jewels and gold. This treasure, saved from
+the _debacle_ in France, he had brought with him to America, and he hid
+it in the Inn, for the future of his little daughter Eloise. You remember
+that your mother was to hear something of advantage to her and the child,
+did not the General return. It was the secret of the treasure and the
+directions to find it. Well, Monsieur, at Waterloo, you must know, the
+Marechal and his brother, the present Marquis, fought side by side.
+Francois de Boisdhyver fell, nobly fighting for the glory of France;
+Marie-Anne had the good fortune to preserve his life, but was taken
+prisoner by the English. Before the Marechal received his death wound,
+the two brothers spoke with each other for the last time. In that
+moment, monsieur, the Marquis Francois revealed to the Marquis Marie-Anne
+that he had abandoned his daughter in America and that he had concealed
+in your old inn a treasure sufficient to provide for her future. He
+charged his brother to go to America, if he survived the battle; claim
+the little Eloise; rescue the treasure, and return with her to France and
+restore the fallen fortunes of the House of Boisdhyver.
+
+"It took the Marquis Marie-Anne a long time to carry out his brother's
+dying injunctions," said Dan.
+
+"Ah! but yes. You do not realize that the Marquis Marie-Anne, after the
+fall of Napoleon, spent many years in a military prison in England, for I
+have already told you that he fell into the hands of the enemy on the
+field of Waterloo. When at last he was released, he was aged, broken, and
+in poverty. His brother, in those dreadful moments on the battlefield,
+had been able to give him but the briefest description of the Inn at the
+Red Oak and the hidden treasure. He did not tell him where the treasure
+was, but only how he might obtain the paper of instructions which the
+Marechal had concealed in a curiously-carved old cabinet in the Oak
+Parlour. The Marechal, monsieur, loved the mysterious, and chose the
+device of tearing into two parts this paper of directions and concealing
+them in different hiding-places of the cabinet. Those directions, after
+many years, grew vague in the younger brother's memory.
+
+"_Eh bien_, the Marquis was at last able to make the journey to this
+country. You must remember he had nothing wherewith to prove his story,
+if he gave you his confidence at once; and so, he decided, to investigate
+quietly alone. But he won the confidence of Mademoiselle Nancy,--that is,
+of his niece, Eloise de Boisdhyver,--and revealed to her the secret of
+her identity and the mysterious story of the treasure. You follow me in
+all this, Monsieur Dan?"
+
+"Perfectly, madame," Frost replied. "But as yet you have told me nothing
+of your own connection with this strange history."
+
+"Pardon, dear boy," rejoined Madame de la Fontaine; "I was about to do
+so, but there is so much to tell. My own connection with the affair is
+quite simple. I am an old friend, one of the oldest, of Monsieur le
+Marquis de Boisdhyver, and, when I was a very young girl, I knew the
+Marechal himself. It has been my happiness to be able to prove my
+friendship for a noble and a fallen family. One day last summer, Monsieur
+de Boisdhyver told me his brother's dying words, and it was I, Monsieur
+Dan, who was able to give the money for this strange expedition. The poor
+Marquis had lost quite all his fortune."
+
+"I understand," said Frost. "But, yet, madame, I do not see the necessity
+for the secrecy, the mystery, for these strange signals at night, for
+these midnight investigations, for this schooner and its rough crew, for
+Nancy's disappearance, for my own imprisonment here."
+
+"Please, please," murmured Madame de la Fontaine, as she held up her
+hands in smiling protest. "You go too fast for me. _Un moment, mon ami,
+un moment_. It was sixteen years ago that the Marechal de Boisdhyver was
+a guest at the Inn at the Red Oak. You forget that the Marquis de
+Boisdhyver had no proof of his right to the treasure, save his own story,
+save his account of his brother's instructions on the field of Waterloo.
+By telling all he might have awakened deeper suspicions than by secrecy."
+
+"That, I must say," Dan interrupted, "would hardly be possible."
+
+"So!" exclaimed Madame de la Fontaine, with an accent of displeasure.
+"_Ecoutez_! Monsieur le Marquis was to come a month in advance, as he did
+come; take up his quarters at the Inn; reconnoitre the ground; and win,
+if possible, the confidence and aid of mademoiselle. He fortunately
+succeeded in this last, for he found it otherwise impossible to enter
+into the old wing of the Inn and examine the Oak Parlour. With the
+assistance of Eloise, this was accomplished at last, and the paper of
+directions was found; at least, found in part.
+
+"Then I, having impressed the services of Captain Bonhomme and his ship
+the _Southern Cross_, set sail and arrived at the House on the Dunes only
+a few days ago, as you already know. The signals that you saw flashing at
+night were to indicate that all was well."
+
+"The green light, I suppose," commented Dan, "was to indicate that; and
+the red--"
+
+"Was the signal of danger. Because the Marquis discovered last night that
+you were not in the house; he flashed the warning that made Captain
+Bonhomme go to the House on the Dunes. Quite recently the manners of your
+friend, Mr.--eh--?"
+
+"Pembroke?"
+
+"Yes, Mr. Pembroke--led the Marquis to believe that he was being
+watched.
+
+"I understand," said Dan, "but nothing you have told me so far, madame,
+accounts for Nancy's disappearance, and I am as anxious as ever to know
+where she is."
+
+"Mademoiselle is perfectly safe, Monsieur Dan; I assure you. She left the
+Inn because she had fear of betraying our plans, particularly as she
+loved your friend, Mr. Pembroke."
+
+"It is still strange to me, madame, that Nancy should distrust her oldest
+and best friends. But now you will let me see her?"
+
+"Of course I shall soon, very soon, my dear boy. I have told you all, and
+now you will aid me to find the treasure that is your foster-sister's
+heritage, will you not?"
+
+"Why certainly I want Nancy to have what is hers," replied Dan.
+
+"Bravo, my friend. We are to count you one of us, I am sure."
+
+"Just a moment," said Dan, resisting the temptation to touch the little
+hand that had been placed impulsively upon his arm. "May I ask one more
+question?"
+
+"A thousand, my dear, if you desire."
+
+"Why then, since until last night everything has gone as you planned it,
+why has not the treasure already been discovered?"
+
+"Because, _mon ami_; the Marquis has only been able to visit the Oak
+Parlour at night. And also it was decided to wait until I arrived."
+
+"With the schooner?" suggested Dan.
+
+"With the schooner, if you will. And you may remember that it was only
+the day before yesterday that I reached your so hospitable countryside."
+
+"Ah! I understand; so then all that you desire of me, madame, is that I
+shall permit the Marquis or anyone else whom you may select for the
+purpose, to make such investigation of the Oak Parlour as is desired."
+
+"Yes, my friend; and also there is yet another thing that we desire."
+
+"But suppose, madame, that I cannot agree to that?"
+
+"Ah! _cher ami_, but you will. I confess--you must remember that the
+Marquis de Boisdhyver has been a soldier--that my friends have not agreed
+with me entirely. It has seemed to them simpler that we should keep you a
+prisoner on this ship, as we could so easily do, until our mission is
+accomplished. But,--I like you too much to agree to that."
+
+Dan flushed a trifle, but he was not yet quite sure enough to fall in
+entirely with his charming gaoler's suggestions. "Madame de la Fontaine,"
+he said after a moment's reflection, "I am greatly obliged to you for
+explaining the situation to me so fully. I shall be only too happy to
+help you, particularly in anything that is for the benefit of Nancy."
+
+"I was sure of it. Now, my friend, there is a service that you can
+immediately render."
+
+"And that is?" asked Dan.
+
+"To entrust to me the other half of the paper of directions written by
+Francois de Boisdhyver, which you found in a secret cubby-hole in the
+old cabinet."
+
+"What makes you think that I was successful in finding that, when the
+Marquis failed?"
+
+"Because, at first having forgotten his precise directions after so many
+years, the Marquis could not find the fourth and last hiding-place in the
+cabinet, in which he knew the Marechal had placed the other half of the
+torn scrap of paper. Another time he did find the cubby-hole, and it was
+empty. So knowing he was watched by you and Mr. Pembroke, he decided
+that you must have found it. Is it not so, that you have it?"
+
+"It is certainly not in my possession at this moment," said Dan.
+
+"No, but you have it?"
+
+"And if I have?"
+
+"It is necessary for our success."
+
+"Then, my first service, is to put you into complete possession of
+the secret?"
+
+"If you will so express it."
+
+"Very well, madame, I will do so; but, on one condition."
+
+"And what is that, my friend?"
+
+"That I be allowed to see Nancy, and that she herself shall ask me to do
+as you desire."
+
+For a moment Madame de la Fontaine was silent. "_Eh bien_," she said at
+last, "you do not trust me?"
+
+"But, dear madame, think of my situation, it is hard for me."
+
+"Ah! I know it, believe me. _C'est difficile_. But I hoped you would
+trust me as I have you."
+
+"Indeed, madame," exclaimed Dan, "I must try to think of everything,
+the mystery, this extraordinary mission upon which you are engaged, the
+fact that I am quite literally your prisoner. When I think about you,
+I know only you are beautiful, that you are lovely, and that I am happy
+near you."
+
+She looked at him for a moment with a glance of anxious interrogation,
+as if to ask were it safe for her to believe these protestations. "You
+say, my friend," she asked at length, "that you care a little for me,
+for just me? _C'est impossible_. If Claire de la Fontaine could
+believe that, understand me, monsieur, it would be very sweet and very
+precious to her."
+
+"I do care," cried Dan.
+
+"Ah!" she exclaimed. "You have touched my heart. I am not a young girl,
+_mon ami_, but I confess that you have made me to know again the dreams
+of youth."
+
+"Only let me prove that I care," cried Dan, considering but little now to
+what he committed himself.
+
+"Let me prove," cried she, "that I too believe in you. I must first see
+the Marquis, and then, tonight, if it can be arranged, you shall receive
+from Eloise de Boisdhyver's own lips the request I have made of you. But
+if, for any reason, this cannot be arranged for to-night, you must be
+patient till morning; you must trust me to the extent of remaining on
+this ship. I cannot act entirely on my own judgment, but I assure you
+that in the end my judgment will prevail. And now, _au revoir_."
+
+She placed her hand in his, and responded to the impulsive pressure with
+which he clasped it. Their eyes met; in Dan's the frankest expression of
+her conquest of his emotions; in her's a glance at once tender and sad,
+above all a glance that seemed to search his spirit for assurance that he
+was in earnest. Suddenly fired by her alluring beauty, Dan drew her to
+him and bent his head to hers.
+
+"Ah! my friend," she murmured, "you are taking an unfair advantage of the
+fact that this morning I too rashly yielded to an impulse."
+
+"I cannot help it," Dan stammered. "You bewitch me." He bent lower to
+kiss her cheek, when he suddenly thrilled to the realization that his
+lips had met hers.
+
+A moment later Madame de la Fontaine was gone and Captain Bonhomme had
+reappeared in the doorway.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+IN THE FOG
+
+
+Tom Pembroke was as good as his word. He returned to the little room, in
+which he had confined the Marquis, within an hour after he had left him.
+It was then nearly supper-time and dusk was fast settling upon the gloomy
+countryside. An unwonted calm had fallen upon land and sea after the
+sharp blow of the previous night, but the sky was still gray and there
+was promise of more rain, if not of wind.
+
+To Tom's indignation and alarm, though scarcely to his surprise, there
+had been no sign or word from Dan or Nancy. Shortly after he had left the
+Marquis, he saw, by aid of the field-glass, Madame de la Fontaine,
+attended by two seamen, leave the schooner and return to the House on the
+Dunes. He smiled a little as he thought of the account the lively young
+maid-servant would give of his recent visit. But withal, he felt very
+much as if he were playing a game of blind man's buff and that he was
+"it." He was impatient for his interview with the Marquis, though he was
+but little hopeful that an hour's confinement would have been sufficient
+to bring the old gentleman to terms. Nor was he to be surprised.
+
+He found Monsieur de Boisdhyver huddled in a great arm chair near the
+fire that that been kindled on the hearth of his prison. The Marquis
+glanced up, as Tom entered, but dropped his eyes at once and offered him
+no greeting. Tom placed his candle on the table and, drawing up a chair,
+seated himself between the Marquis and the door.
+
+"Well, sir," he said at last, "as I promised you, I have returned within
+an hour. Have you anything to say to me?"
+
+"Have I anything to say to you!" exclaimed the Marquis. "For why,
+monsieur? If I venture to express my astonishment and indignation at the
+way I am treated, you subject me to a barbarity that could be matched no
+where else in the civilized world than in this extraordinary country. My
+life is menaced with firearms. My protests are sneered at. I have left
+but one inference--you have gone mad."
+
+"No, marquis," said Pembroke, "I am not mad. I am simply determined that
+the mysteries by which we have been surrounded and of which you are the
+center, shall cease. You have a free choice: put me in the way of getting
+my friend and his sister back to the Inn, or resign yourself to a
+prolonged confinement in this room."
+
+"But monsieur I have nothing to communicate to you concerning the
+disappearance of your friends."
+
+"Pardon me, marquis," returned Pembroke; "you have much to communicate to
+me. Perhaps you are not aware that I know the motive of your coming to
+the Inn at the Red Oak; that I know the reason for your prolonged stay
+here; that I know of the influence that you have acquired over Nancy
+Frost; and that I have been a witness of your midnight prowlings about
+the Inn. Nor am I in ignorance of your connection with the
+rascally-looking captain of the schooner at anchor in the Cove and with
+the mysterious woman, who has taken possession of the House on the Dunes.
+I am convinced that you know what has become of Dan as well as what has
+happened to Nancy. And, believe me, I am determined to find out."
+
+"_Bien_!" exclaimed Monsieur de Boisdhyver, "permit me to wish you good
+luck in your undertaking. I repeat, Monsieur Pembroke, I have no
+information to give to you. I do not know to what extent I have been
+watched, but I may say with truth that my actions do not in the least
+concern you."
+
+"They concern my friends," said Tom. "Dan, as you know, is more to me
+than a brother; and as for his sister Nancy, I hope and expect to make
+her my wife."
+
+"In that case," rejoined the Marquis with ill-concealed irony, "I may be
+permitted to offer to you my congratulations. But even so, monsieur,
+there is nothing that I can do to facilitate your matrimonial plans."
+
+"You refuse then to come to terms?" asked Pembroke.
+
+The Marquis raised his hands with a gesture of despair. "What shall I
+say, monsieur? If you insisted upon my flying from here to yonder beach,
+I might have all the desire in the world to oblige you, but the fact
+would remain that I was without the means of doing so. Since you are so
+little disposed to accept my protestations, I will no longer make them,
+but simply decline your proposal. And, pardon me, but so long as I am
+submitted to the indignity of this confinement, it would be a courtesy
+that I should appreciate if you would spare me your company."
+
+"Very good," said Tom. "Your meals will be served regularly; and you may
+ask the servant for anything necessary. I shall not visit you again until
+you request me to do so."
+
+"_Merci_," said the Marquis drily. He rose from his seat as Dan turned
+toward the door, and bowed ironically.
+
+Pembroke went downstairs to have his supper with Mrs. Frost. He said what
+he could to pacify her, not altogether with success, for as darkness fell
+the old lady became increasingly apprehensive.
+
+"I know you are anxious, Mrs. Frost," said Tom, "but you must not worry.
+Try to believe that all will come out right. I am going out after supper,
+but I shall leave Jesse and Ezra on guard, and you may be sure everything
+will be safe."
+
+It was some time before Mrs. Frost would consent to his leaving the Inn.
+If she had yielded to her inclinations, she would have spent the evening
+in hysterics with Tom at hand to administer comfort. Pembroke, however,
+deputed that office to black Deborah, and immediately after supper set
+about his business.
+
+He gave the necessary instructions to Jesse, Ezra and the maids, saw that
+everything was closely locked and barred, supplied himself with arms and
+ammunition, and slipped out into the night. Having saddled Fleetwing, he
+swung himself on the young hunter's back, and trotted down the avenue to
+the Port Road. The night was intensely dark and still. The moon had not
+yet risen, and a thick fog rolled in from the sea, shrouding the
+countryside with its impenetrable veil.
+
+At the Beach Road Pembroke dismounted, tied his horse to a fence rail,
+and proceeded thence on foot toward the Cove. Stumbling along through the
+heavy sand, he made his way to the boathouse at the northern end of the
+little beach. There he ventured to light his lantern, unlocked the door
+and stepped within. On either side of the entrance were the two sailboats
+that he and Dan used in summer and to the rear was the old-fashioned
+whaleboat with which they did their deep fishing. Over it, in a rudely
+constructed rack, was the Indian birch-bark canoe which Dan had purchased
+in the mountains a few years before. As the sea had fallen to a dead
+calm, he decided to use this canoe, which he could paddle quite
+noiselessly, and pulling down the little craft from its winter
+resting-place, he carried it to the water's edge. The sea, so angry the
+night before, now scarcely murmured; only a low lazy swell, at regularly
+recurring intervals, slapped the shore and hissed upon the sands. Tom
+pushed the nose of the canoe into the water, leaped lightly over the
+rail, and with his paddle thrust it off the beach. He was launched
+without mishap.
+
+Not the faintest gleam of light showed the position of the _Southern
+Cross_, but estimating as well as he could the general direction, he
+paddled out through the enshrouding fog. For ten minutes or so, he pushed
+on into the strange, misty night. Then suddenly he found himself
+alongside an old fisherman's yawl that had been rotting all winter at her
+moorings, and he knew from her position that he could not be far from the
+_Southern Cross_.
+
+A few more strokes to leeward, and a spot of dull light broke through the
+darkness. He headed directly for it. To his relief it grew brighter; when
+suddenly, too late to stop the progress of his canoe, he shot under it,
+and the bow of his craft bumped with a dull thud against the timber side
+of the schooner. Its dark outlines were just perceptible above him; and
+at one or two points there gleamed rays of light in the fog, green and
+red from the night lamps on the masthead, and dull yellow from the port
+holes in the rear. A second after the contact the canoe receded, then the
+wash of the sea drew her toward the stern. Another moment and Pembroke
+felt his prow scrape gently against the rudder, which prevented further
+drifting. Apparently, since he heard nothing from the deck above, he had
+reached his goal without attracting attention.
+
+He kept perfectly still, however, for some little time, until satisfied
+that there was no one at the wheel above, he pushed the canoe softly back
+to the rope ladder, that a day or so before he had seen hanging over the
+side. It was the work of a moment to make his little boat fast to the
+lower rung. Then slipping over the rail, he climbed stealthily up till
+his head protruded above the gunwhale. The immediate deck seemed
+deserted; but he was sure that some one was keeping the watch, and
+probably near the point where he was, that is to say, where access to the
+deck was easiest. But the fog and the darkness afforded him protection,
+as he climbed over the gunwhale and, without making a sound, moved toward
+the stern, crossed the after-deck and found the wheel. As he had
+surmised, it was deserted. The watch evidently was forward. Beneath him,
+sending its ineffectual rays obliquely into the fog, shone the light from
+the little cabin below.
+
+Determined to get a look through the port, he climbed over the gunwhale
+again, fastened a stern-sheet about his waist and to a staple, and at the
+risk, if he slipped or if the rope gave way, of plunging head foremost
+into the icy waters of the Cove, he let himself down until his head was
+on a level of the port.
+
+Through the blurred glass he peered into a tiny cabin. There with back
+toward him, just a few feet away stood Nancy Frost. He steadied himself
+with an effort, and looking again saw that she was alone. A moment's
+hesitation, and he tapped resolutely on the pane with his finger tips. At
+first Nancy did not hear, but presently, aroused by the slight tapping,
+she glanced with a frightened expression toward the door, and stood
+anxiously listening. Tom continued to knock on the window, not daring to
+make it louder for fear of being heard above. The alarm deepened on
+Nancy's face, and in sheer pity Tom was tempted to desist; but at that
+instant her attention was riveted upon the spot whence the tapping came.
+At last, still with the expression of alarm on her face, she came slowly
+toward the port. She hesitated, then pressed her face against the pane
+over which Tom had spread his fingers. At whatever risk, of frightening
+her or of danger to himself, as she drew back, he pressed his own face
+against the outside of the little window glass. She stared at him as if
+she were looking at a ghost.
+
+He moved his lips to form the word "Open." At length, in obedience to
+this direction, Nancy cautiously unloosened the window of the port and
+drew it back.
+
+"Good heavens, Tom!" she whispered. "Is it you?"
+
+"Yes, yes," Pembroke whispered back. "But for God's sake, speak softly.
+I'm in a devilishly unpleasant position, and can hang here but a minute.
+Tell me quickly--are you here of your own free will or are you a
+prisoner?"
+
+"How can you ask?" she exclaimed. "For the love of heaven, help me
+to escape."
+
+"That's what I'm here for," was Toms reply. "Now, quick; are you only
+locked in or barred as well? I've brought some keys along."
+
+"Only locked, I think."
+
+"Where does that door lead?"
+
+"Into a little passage off the companion-way. Give me your keys. They
+have but one man on watch. The captain is on shore to-night, apt to
+return at any moment. And you?"
+
+"I have a canoe tied to the ladder on the shore side. If the captain
+returns, I'm caught. Try those keys." He slipped into her the bunch of
+keys that he had brought along. "I was sure you were here, and against
+your will."
+
+"Dan, too, is locked up on board."
+
+"I thought as much; but you first. Hurry."
+
+Nancy sprang to the door, trying one key after another in feverish haste.
+At last, to Tom's infinite relief, he saw the key turn in the lock, and
+the door open.
+
+"On deck," she whispered; "at the ladder. I'm not likely to be caught."
+Then she waved her hand and disappeared into the passage.
+
+Tom pulled himself up, unloosed the rope, and stole along the rail toward
+the ladder. For a few moments, which seemed like a thousand years, he
+stood in anguished suspense waiting for Nancy. Then suddenly she came out
+of the mist and was at his side. They stood for a moment like disembodied
+spirits, creatures of the night and the fog. The next instant a hand shot
+out and grasped the girl's shoulder.
+
+"_Peste! mam'zelle_," a rough voice hissed, "_ou allez-vous_?"
+
+As the man spoke Tom swung at him with the butt of his revolver, and
+without a murmur the figure fell to the deck.
+
+"Quick now," Pembroke whispered, "down the ladder."
+
+Instantly Nancy was over the rail and Tom was climbing down after her. As
+he knelt in the bow and fumbled with the painter, the plash of oars
+sounded a dozen yards away.
+
+"_Ho! Croix du Midi_!" came a hail through the fog.
+
+"Curse it!" muttered Tom; "the painter's caught." He drew out his knife,
+slashed the rope that bound them to the schooner, got to his place
+amidships, and pushed the canoe free. The lights of a small boat were
+just emerging from the dark a dozen feet away. But the canoe slid by
+unobserved, in the fog. They heard the nose of the small boat bump
+against the schooner; then an oath, and a man's voice calling the watch.
+
+"They've found my painter," whispered Tom, "and in a second they'll find
+the sailor on their deck."
+
+The lights of the _Southern Cross_ grew dim; vanished; the sound of angry
+voices became muffled. They were half-way to shore when they heard the
+noise of oars again. Evidently some one had started in pursuit. For a
+moment Tom rested, listening intently; but the sound was still some
+distance away. Probably, he thought, they were heading directly for the
+shore, whereas he, at a considerable angle, was making for the boathouse
+at the north end of the beach. In ten minutes he had beached the canoe
+within a rod of the point from where he embarked.
+
+"I can't hear them," whispered Tom, after a moment's listening. "They've
+made for shore down the beach. They can't find us in the dark. I've got
+Fleetwing tied to a fence in the meadow yonder. Come."
+
+It was the work of a moment to stow the canoe, lock the boathouse, run
+across the sands, and mount Nancy in front of him on the back of his
+trusty hunter. A second later Fleetwing's hoofs were striking fire on the
+stones that the high tides had washed into the beach road. In the
+distance there was a cry, the sharp ring of a pistol shot; but they were
+safe on their way, racing wildly for the Inn. The escape, the adventure
+had thrilled Nancy. Tom's arms were around her, and her hands on his that
+grasped the bridle. At last they were in the avenue, and Tom pulled in
+under the great branches of the Red Oak. He slipped from the back of the
+horse and held out his arms to Nance.
+
+"We are safe, girl," he whispered.
+
+"You are sure? Oh, thank God, thank God! Quick, let us in! Can they be
+following?"
+
+"No, no. They won't follow. It's all right. Easy,--before we go
+in--please, dear--once--kiss me."
+
+"Oh, Tom, Tom," she whispered, as she lifted her face to his.
+
+"I have you at last, sweetheart," he murmured. "You love me?"
+
+"Ah!" she cried, "with my whole heart and soul."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+NANCY
+
+
+It was after eleven before Nancy rejoined Tom in the bar. She seemed more
+like herself as she slipped in and took her accustomed seat beside the
+blazing logs.
+
+"Oh, I am all right, thank you," she insisted, declining the glass of
+wine that Pembroke poured out for her. "I wonder, Tom, if you killed that
+poor wretch on the deck?"
+
+"Don't know," Tom answered. "I hope so. But what the deuce, Nance, has
+been happening? I can wait till to-morrow to hear, if you are too tired
+to tell me; but I do want awfully to know."
+
+"I am not tired," Nancy replied, "and I shan't sleep a wink anyway. If I
+close my eyes I'll feel that hand on my shoulder and hear the thud of
+that man's fall on the deck. I can't bear to think that this miserable
+business will bring bloodshed."
+
+"But tell me, Nance, who is the Marquis--what happened--how did they get
+you away?"
+
+"Ah! the Marquis," exclaimed Nancy with a shudder. "I am glad you have
+him locked up. I can't bear to think of him, but I'll tell you what I
+know. You remember, Tom, he tried to be friends with me from the first;
+and he seemed to fascinate me in some unaccountable way. Then he
+questioned me about my identity, and began to drop hints that he knew
+more than he cared to let appear to the others, and my curiosity was
+excited. I have always known of course that there was some mystery about
+my being left to Mrs. Frost's care. She has been kind, good, all that she
+should be; but she wasn't my mother. Well, the Marquis stirred all the
+old wonder that I had as a child, and before long quite won my
+confidence. He told me after a time that I was the daughter of his elder
+brother, the Marquis Francois de Boisdhyver, who in 1814 stayed here at
+the Inn at the Red Oak under the name of General Pointelle. I was not
+altogether surprised, for I have always believed that I was French by
+birth, and his assertion that I was his niece seemed to account for his
+interest in me. My father, if this Marquis de Boisdhyver was my father,
+was one of the Emperor Napoleon's marshals and was a party to the plot to
+rescue the Emperor from Elba. He was obliged to return to France, and
+since it was impossible for him to take me with him--I was a little girl
+of two at the time--he left me with Mrs. Frost. Thinking of my future, he
+hid a large treasure in some secret chamber off the Oak Parlour."
+
+"I know," Tom interrupted.
+
+"What? You mean there is a treasure?"
+
+"I think there is; but go on. I will tell you afterwards."
+
+"Then he set sail for France, took part in the great events of the
+Hundred Days, and fell at Waterloo. It was on the field of Waterloo that
+he met his younger brother--our Marquis--and told him about the child
+left in America and about the treasure hidden in the Inn at the Red Oak."
+
+"Well," Nancy continued, having answered a volley of questions from Tom,
+"the Marquis--I mean our old Marquis--was held for many years in a
+military prison in England. Upon his release he was poor and unable to
+come to America to seek his little niece and the fortune that he believed
+to be hidden in the Inn. Tom, at first I didn't believe this strange
+story about a treasure; but gradually I became convinced; for the Marquis
+believed in it thoroughly, and for proof of it he showed me a torn scrap
+of paper that he found in the cabinet in the Oak Parlour the day after
+he arrived at the Inn. It seems the old marshal had torn the paper in two
+and hidden the parts in different cubby-holes of that old Dorsetshire
+cabinet. He couldn't find an opportunity to hunt for the other half, so
+at last he persuaded me to help him in the search. Of course, he swore me
+to secrecy, and I was foolish enough to give him my promise. I got the
+key to the bowling alley from the ring in Dan's closet, and two or three
+times went with him at night after you all were asleep."
+
+"I know you did," said Tom.
+
+"How could you know it--has the Marquis--?"
+
+"No, Dan and I saw you. I woke one night, happened to look out of the
+window and saw the Marquis going into the bowling alley. It was
+moonlight, you know. I woke Dan, we slipped down stairs, saw a light in
+the Oak Parlour, peeped through the shutters and saw you and the old
+Marquis at the cabinet."
+
+"When was this?" asked Nancy.
+
+"The night--before our walk in the woods."
+
+"And you did not tell me! What could you think I was doing?"
+
+"I didn't know. How could I know? It was that which first made me
+suspicious of the Marquis. We made up our minds to watch. But that day in
+the woods--well, I forgot everything in the world but just that I was in
+love with you."
+
+"Ah!" exclaimed Nancy, flushing.
+
+"But tell me," asked Tom, "What did you find in the cabinet?"
+
+"We found nothing. I began to think that the Marquis had deceived me. I
+didn't know what to believe. I didn't know what to do. I threatened each
+day to tell Dan. And then came our walk. When we came in that night--do
+you recall?--we found the Marquis sitting in the bar before the fire, and
+I went over and spoke to him."
+
+"Yes, I remember," Tom answered.
+
+"I had made up my mind that I must take you all,--mother and you and
+Dan,--into my confidence. I told him so. He begged me to wait until the
+next day and promised that he would tell you then himself. I was
+beginning to think he might be a little crazy, that there was no hidden
+treasure."
+
+"I'm sure there is," said Tom. "There was another half of that torn scrap
+of paper, hidden in one of the cubby-holes of the old cabinet. Dan found
+it. It's the directions, sure enough, for finding the treasure."
+
+"Ah! but what has it all to do with me?"
+
+"I don't know; something I fancy, or the Marquis would not have told you
+as much as he did. But here is the other half. You can tell whether it is
+part of the paper he showed you."
+
+He drew from his pocket the yellowed bit of paper and spread it on the
+table before them. Nance bent over and examined it closely.
+
+"I believe it is the other half. See, it is signed ...'ancois de
+Boisdhyver'. I remember perfectly that the signature of the other was
+missing, except for the letters 'F-r-' It is, it must be, Francois de
+Boisdhyver, who, the Marquis says, was my father. Then look! here are the
+words '_tresor', 'bijoux et monaie_'. I remember in the other there were
+phrases that seemed to go with these--'_tresor cache' 'lingots d'or_'.
+Ah! do you suppose there really is a fortune hidden away in the Inn all
+these years?"
+
+"Yes, I think so," said Tom. "And I feel certain you have some claim to
+it, or they wouldn't have made such an effort to involve you in their
+plot. But, please, Nance, tell me the rest. You got to the night of your
+disappearance."
+
+"It was a horror--that night!" exclaimed Nancy. "It must have been about
+twelve that the Marquis came and tapped at my door. For some reason I was
+restless and had not gone to bed. I slipped out into the hall with him
+and we came in here to talk. He begged me to make one more expedition
+with him to the Oak Parlour. But I refused--I insisted that I must tell
+Dan. Suddenly, Tom, without the slightest warning, I felt my arms
+pinioned from behind, and before I could scream, the Marquis himself had
+thrust a handkerchief in my mouth, and I was gagged and bound. Everything
+was done so quickly, so noiselessly, that not a soul in the house could
+have heard. They carried me out of the Inn and into the avenue of maples.
+From there on I was forced to walk. We went to the beach. I was put into
+a small boat and rowed out to the schooner, and there they locked me up
+in the little cabin in which you found me."
+
+"What time did you say it was?" asked Tom.
+
+"About twelve--after midnight, perhaps; I don't know for sure. The
+Marquis went to the beach with us and pretended to assure me that I was
+in no danger; that I would be released in good time, and that he would
+see me again. As a matter of fact for three days I have seen no one but
+Captain Bonhomme. He brought my meals, and was inclined to talk about
+anything that come into his head. Last night he told me that Dan was also
+a prisoner on the _Southern Cross_, if that would be of any consolation
+to me. Then he said he had to go ashore and locked me up. Several times I
+was taken on deck for exercise, but the captain kept close by my side."
+
+"And you haven't seen or heard from the Marquis again?"
+
+"No! nor do I want to see him. But, Tom, what is the meaning of it all?
+How are we going to rescue Dan? What are we going to do? We can't keep
+the Marquis a prisoner indefinitely."
+
+Tom gave her his own version of the last few days. He told her of what he
+and Dan had suspected, of Dan's proposal to visit the House on the Dunes
+and his disappearance, of his own investigations there, and his
+determination to play the same game with the Marquis as hostage.
+
+"But what to do next, I confess I don't know," he continued. "At present
+it seems to be stale mate. For to-night, any way, we are safe, I think,
+for I shall take turns in keeping guard with Jesse and Ezra. I have the
+idea that to-morrow, when they realize something has happened to the
+Marquis we shall hear from Madame de la Fontaine or from the schooner. In
+the morning I am going to take you and Mrs. Frost to the Red Farm for
+safety. I intend to fight this thing out with that gang, whatever
+happens. If there is treasure, according to their own story, it belongs
+to you. If I don't get a proposal from them, I shall make the offer,
+through Madame de la Fontaine, of exchanging the Marquis for Dan.... But
+I must go now, Nance, and relieve one of the men. We must all get some
+sleep to-night, and it's already after twelve. Go to bed, sweetheart, and
+try to get some rest. One of us will be within call all night, watching
+right there in the hall; so don't be afraid."
+
+"It was my wretched curiosity that got us into all this trouble."
+
+"Not a bit of it! The trouble was all arranged by the Marquis; he was
+simply waiting for the schooner. Now that I have you back again, my heart
+is fairly light. We shall get Dan to-morrow, I am sure."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+MADAME AT THE INN
+
+
+In the morning the fog lifted, a bright sun shone from a cloudless sky,
+the marshes sparkled with pools of melted snow and the long-promised thaw
+seemed definitely to have set in. Soon after breakfast Tom sent Jesse to
+the Red Farm with directions for the people there to make preparations
+for Mrs. Frost and Nancy, whom he proposed to drive over himself in the
+course of the afternoon.
+
+About the middle of the morning as Tom and Nancy stood on the gallery
+discussing the situation, Tom drew her attention to a small boat putting
+off from _The Southern Cross_. They examined it through the glass, and
+Nancy recognized the figure of Captain Bonhomme sitting amongst the
+stern-sheets.
+
+"You may depend upon it," said Tom, "he is going to the House on the
+Dunes to report your disappearance to Madame de la Fontaine. The most
+curious thing about this whole business to me is the mixing-up in it of
+such a woman as Dan described Madame de la Fontaine to be."
+
+"It is strange," Nancy agreed, "but from the bits of talk I've overheard,
+I should say that she was the prime mover in it all."
+
+"In a way I am rather glad of that," said Tom, "for with a woman at the
+head of things there is less chance of their resorting to force to gain
+their ends. But the stake they are playing for must be a big one, and
+already they have done enough to make me sure that we should be prepared
+for anything. I shall be surprised if we don't get some communication
+from them to-day. The old Marquis counts on it, or he would not keep so
+still. At any cost, we must get Dan back."
+
+They talked for some time longer and were about to go in, when Nancy
+pointed to a horse and rider coming down the avenue of Maples. A
+glance sufficed to show that the rider was a woman. Nancy slipped
+inside to escape observation, while Tom waited on the gallery to
+receive the visitor.
+
+As the lady drew rein under the Red Oak, he ran down the steps, and
+helped her to dismount. Her grace, her beauty, her manner as of the
+great world, made him sure that he was in the presence of Madame de
+la Fontaine.
+
+"Good morning, sir," said the lady, with a charming smile, "if I mistake
+not, I have the pleasure of addressing Mr. Pembroke?"
+
+"Yes, madam,--at you service," replied Tom.
+
+"I am come on a strange errand, monsieur; as an ambassadress, so to say,
+of those whom I fear you take to be your enemies."
+
+"You are frank, madam. I believe that I am speaking with--?"
+
+"Madame de la Fontaine," the lady instantly supplied. "Events have so
+precipitated themselves, monsieur, that pretense and conventionality were
+an affectation. I am informed, you understand, of your brilliant rescue
+of Mademoiselle Eloise de Boisdhyver."
+
+"If you mean Nancy Frost by Mademoiselle Eloise de Boisdhyver, madam,
+your information is correct. I gathered that you had been told of
+this, when I saw Captain Bonhomme make his way to the House on the
+Dunes this morning."
+
+"Ah! What eyes, monsieur!" exclaimed the lady. "But I have grown
+accustomed to having my privacy examined over-curiously during the few
+days I have spent on your hospitable shores. _Mais pardon_--my purpose in
+coming to the Inn at the Red Oak this morning was but to request that my
+name be conveyed to Monsieur the Marquis de Boisdhyver."
+
+"You mean, madam, that you wish to see the Marquis?"
+
+"Yes, monsieur, if you will be so good as to allow me to do so."
+
+"I am sorry," Tom rejoined, "that I must disappoint you. Circumstances
+over which the Marquis has no control will deprive him of the pleasure of
+seeing you this morning."
+
+"Ah!" exclaimed Madame de la Fontaine, "I was right then. Monsieur le
+Marquis is, shall we say, in confinement?"
+
+"As you please, madam; as safe, for the time, as is my friend Dan Frost."
+
+"_Eh bien_, monsieur! It is that you have--do you not say?--turned the
+tables upon us?"
+
+"Precisely, madam," assented Tom.
+
+"And you will not permit me even a word--ever so little a word--with my
+poor friend?" murmured Madame de la Fontaine plaintively.
+
+"Again I am sorry to refuse you, madam; but--not even a little word."
+
+"So! _Mais oui_, I am not greatly surprised. I was assured last
+night...."
+
+"When you did not see the signals?" suggested Tom quickly.
+
+"When I did not see the signals," repeated the lady, with a glance of the
+briefest enquiry, "I was assured that something had befallen Monsieur le
+Marquis. _Mais vraiment_, monsieur, you do us much dishonour in assuming
+a wicked conspiracy on our parts. The Marquis is my friend; he is also
+the friend of the charming Mademoiselle. All that we wish, all that we
+would do is as much in her interest as in his own. But it is impossible
+that my old friend shall remain in confinement. On what condition,
+monsieur, will you release the Marquis de Boisdhyver?"
+
+"On the condition, naturally, that my friend Dan Frost is released from
+the _Southern Cross_."
+
+"Ah! Is it that you are quite sure that Monsieur Frost is confined on
+the ship?"
+
+"Quite sure, Madame de la Fontaine. I was on board _The Southern Cross_
+last night."
+
+"Yes, I know it; and I congratulate you upon your extraordinary success.
+Very well, then, I accept your condition. Monsieur Dan Frost returns;
+Monsieur le Marquis is released. And now you will perhaps have the
+kindness--"
+
+"No, madame; in this affair the Marquis and his friends have been the
+aggressors. I cannot consent that you should hold any communication with
+the Marquis till Dan returns free and unharmed to the Inn."
+
+"And what assurance then shall I have that the Marquis will be released?"
+
+"None, madame, but my word of honour."
+
+"_Pardon, monsieur_. I accept your terms. Monsieur Frost shall
+return. The instant he enters the Inn at the Red Oak, you promise
+that the Marquis de Boisdhyver be released and that he be given this
+note from me?"
+
+"Certainly, madam."
+
+The lady took a sealed note from the pocket of her habit and handed it to
+Tom. "There remains, monsieur," she murmured, "but to bid you good-day.
+If you will be so kind--"
+
+She ran lightly down the steps, and held up her foot for Tom to assist
+her into the saddle.
+
+"Your friend will return _tout de suite_, monsieur," she cried gayly, as
+she drew in the rein.
+
+"And we shall have the pleasure of seeing you again?" asked Tom.
+
+"Ah! who can tell?" She touched the horse lightly with her whip, inclined
+her head, and soon disappeared down the avenue of maples.
+
+Some time later Nancy and Tom watched her cantering across the beach.
+She waved her handkerchief as a signal to the schooner; a small boat put
+ashore, and she was rowed out to _The Southern Cross_.
+
+"Once Dan is back, and we get rid of the old Marquis," said Tom, "I shall
+breathe considerably easier."
+
+"I can't believe they will give the game up so easily," was Nancy's
+reply. "Seizing the Marquis, Tom, was a check, not a mate."
+
+Out on the schooner in the Cove, Madame de la Fontaine and Dan Frost were
+once more talking together.
+
+"Dear boy," said the lady. "I cannot do that which I promised. It is
+impossible that your sister shall make to you the request to give me the
+torn scrap of paper, for the reason that Mademoiselle Nancy has chosen to
+disappear. Have no fear, monsieur, for I have good reason to believe she
+has returned to the Inn at the Red Oak. Our schemes, _mon ami_, have
+failed. You are no longer a prisoner, you are free. And this is good-bye.
+I abandon our mission. I leave the House on the Dunes to-day; to-morrow I
+return to France."
+
+"But, madame, you bewilder me," exclaimed Dan. "Why should you go; why
+should we not all join forces, hunt for the treasure together, if there
+is a treasure; why this division of interests?"
+
+"_C'est impossible_!" she exclaimed impetuously. "Monsieur le Marquis
+will not consent. He is treated with intolerable rudeness by your friend
+Mr. Pembroke. He will not accept that which I propose. And I--_vraiment,
+I_ desire no longer to work against you. No, monsieur Dan, _tout est
+fini_, we must say good-bye."
+
+She held out her hands and Dan impetuously seized them. Then, suddenly,
+she was in his arms and his lips were seeking hers.
+
+"I cannot let you go," he cried hoarsely. "I cannot say good-bye."
+
+For a moment he held her, but soon, almost brusquely, she repulsed him.
+"_C'est folie, mon ami, folie_! We lose our heads, we lose our hearts."
+
+"But I love you," cried Dan. "You must believe it; will you believe it if
+I give you the paper?"
+
+"No, no!--What!--you wish to give to me the secret of the Oak Parlour?--"
+
+"Aye, to entrust to you my life, my soul, my honour."
+
+"Ah, but you must go," she murmured tensely.
+
+"Captain Bonhomme is returning. It is better that he knows of your
+release after you are gone. _C'est vrai_, my friend, that I risk not a
+little in your behalf. Go now, quickly ... No! No!" she protested, as she
+drew away from him. "I tell you, _C'est folie_,--madness and folly. You
+do not know me. Go now, while there is time!"
+
+"But you will see me again?" insisted Dan. "Promise me that; or, on my
+honour, I refuse to leave. Do with me what you will, but--"
+
+"Listen!" she whispered hurriedly. "I shall meet you to-night at ten
+o'clock, at the end of the avenue of maples near to your inn; you know
+the place? _Bien_! Bring me the paper there, to prove that you trust me.
+And I--_mais non_, I implore you--go quickly!"
+
+Dan turned at last and opened the door. Madame de la Fontaine called
+sharply to the waiting Jean, and he, motioning to Dan to follow him, led
+the way on deck. In a moment they were in a little boat heading for the
+shore. The afternoon sun was bright in the western sky. The _Southern
+Cross_ rode serenely at anchor, and from her deck, Madame de la Fontaine
+was waving him good-bye.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+THE MARQUIS LEAVES THE INN
+
+
+By the time Dan was put ashore on the beach of the Cove it was afternoon.
+During the short row from the schooner he had been unable to exchange
+remarks with the surly Jean, for that individual's only response to his
+repeated efforts, was a surly "_Je ne parle pas anglais_," which seemed
+to answer as a general formula to the conspirators. He gave up at last in
+disgust, and waited impatiently for the small boat to be beached,
+distrustful lest at the last moment some fresh trick be played upon him.
+Not that his ingenuous faith in the beautiful French lady failed him, but
+he was suspicious lest, having acted independently of the Marquis and
+Captain Bonhomme in releasing him, she should not have the power to make
+that release genuinely effective.
+
+But his apprehensions were groundless. The seaman rowed straight for the
+shore, beached the boat with a last sturdy pull at the oars, and leaping
+out into the curling surf, held the skiff steady.
+
+"Thank you very much," said Dan, shaking the spray from his coat.
+
+"Eh?" grunted Jean.
+
+"Oh!--beg pardon!--_merci_," he explained, exaggerating the pronunciation
+of the French word.
+
+"Huh!" was the gutteral reply, as the man jumped back into the skiff, and
+pushed off. Dan looked once more towards the distant schooner and the
+slight figure in the stern. Then he started at a rapid pace for the Inn.
+
+As he turned into the avenue of maples, he was surprised to see
+Jesse standing on the gallery, musket in hand, as though he were a
+sentinel on guard.
+
+"Bless my soul, Mister Dan! I thought the Frenchies had made way with
+you. You're a blessed sight to lay eyes on. But Mister Tom was right, he
+said you'd be coming back this afternoon."
+
+"Well, here I am, Jesse," Dan replied grasping his hand, "as large as
+life and twice as natural, I guess. I feel as if I'd been away for a year
+and a day. But tell me, what's the news? Where is Tom? Has Nancy come
+back? How is Mother? Have you been having trouble, that you are guarding
+the door like a soldier on duty?"
+
+"Well, now, Mister Dan, one at a time, _if_ you please. Can't say
+exactly as we've been havin' trouble; but we've sort of been lookin' for
+it. And Mister Tom--"
+
+"Where is Tom? I must see him at once.'
+
+"He ain't here, sir; he left about an hour ago, driving the old Miss and
+Miss Nancy to the Red Farm, sir; so as to be out of harm's way. He'll be
+back before night, sir."
+
+"Ah, good! Then Nance is back? When did she come?"
+
+"She come back last night, sir; leastways Mister Tom brought her back.
+Mister Tom, he got the idea that they'd cooped Miss Nance up on that
+there schooner laying in the Cove, and sure enough, he found her there
+and got her off somehows last night."
+
+"Good for Tom! How did he work it?"
+
+"I ain't heard no particulars, Mister Dan. We've been too busy watching
+things to talk much. We got Ezra Manners out from the Port to help do
+guard duty."
+
+"Guard?--what?"
+
+"Why, the Inn, sir. Mister Tom he's been sort of expectin' some kind of
+attack. That's the reason he took the women folks over to the Red Farm."
+
+"I see--and where's the old Marquis?"
+
+Jesse chuckled. "The old Marquis's where he hasn't been doin' any harm
+for the last twenty-four hours, sir. Mister Tom he locked him up last
+night in one of the south bedrooms. That reminds me, I was to let him out
+just as soon as you come back."
+
+"Why lock him up, and then let him out? Things have been moving at the
+Inn, Jess, since I've been gone!"
+
+"Moving--yes, sir. But them's my orders--first thing I was to do soon as
+you come back was to let the old Frenchy out and do as he pleased. Mister
+Tom was to arrange everything else with you, sir."
+
+"Seems as if Tom had a whole campaign planned out. All right--we'll obey
+orders, Jess. Let the Marquis out, and tell him he can find me in the bar
+if he wants to see me. What time will Tom be back?"
+
+"Before dark, sir, I'm sure. He's been gone over an hour."
+
+Dan ran up to his bedroom, made a quick toilet, took the torn scrap of
+paper from his strong-box, and put it in his wallet. Then he went down
+stairs into the bar. The Marquis, released from his confinement, was
+awaiting him.
+
+"Ah, Monsieur Frost!" the old gentleman exclaimed, coming forward with
+outstretched hands, "I rejoice at your return. Now this so horrible
+nightmare will end... Ah!" This last exclamation was uttered in a tone of
+surprise and indignation, for Dan faced him with folded arms,
+deliberately refusing the handclasp.
+
+"Yes, Marquis," he said, "I have returned; but I cannot say that I am
+particularly pleased to see you."
+
+"Monsieur, _te me comprends pas_; this abuse, this insult--it is
+impossible that I understand."
+
+"Pray, Monsieur de Boisdhyver," replied Dan, with dignity, "Let us have
+done with make-believe and sham. For two days I have been in prison on
+that confounded ship yonder, whose villainous crew are in your pay."
+
+"You in prison--the ship--the villainous crew!" repeated the Marquis.
+"What is it that you say?"
+
+"Come, Marquis, your protests are useless," Dan interrupted. "I know of
+the conspiracy in which you are engaged, of your deceit and trickery
+here, of your part in my poor sister's disappearance. You know that
+Madame de la Fontaine has told me much. Do you expect me to meet you as
+though nothing had happened?"
+
+"But, _mon cher, monsieur_," continued the Marquis, "if it is that you
+have been told anything by Madame de la Fontaine, my so good friend, the
+bright angel of an old age too-cruelly shattered by misfortune, you well
+know how innocent are my designs, how sincere my efforts for your
+foster-sister, for her who is my niece."
+
+"Marquis, I do not understand all that has taken place. I may say further
+that I do not care to discuss the situation with you until I have talked
+with my sister and Mr. Pembroke."
+
+"Ah! then Eloise--then Mademoiselle Nancy, is returned?" exclaimed the
+old gentleman.
+
+"I believe so. But I have not seen her. I must decline, Marquis, to
+continue this conversation. I must first learn what has taken place in my
+absence. When Tom returns--he is out just now--I am perfectly willing to
+talk matters over with you and him together."
+
+The Marquis's eyes flashed. "But, Monsieur," he protested, "you must
+understand that I cannot submit to meet with Monsieur Pembroke again. A
+Marquis de Boisdhyver does not twice put himself in the position to be
+insulted with impunity."
+
+"I should hardly imagine," Dan replied, "that it would be more
+difficult for you to meet Pembroke again than it has been difficult for
+me to meet you."
+
+"How--me?--_je ne comprends pas_. But I have been insulted, imprisoned, I
+have suffered much that is terrible."
+
+"I found myself in an identical situation," said Dan.
+
+"But, monsieur, _un moment_" protested the old gentleman, as Dan made as
+if to leave the room, "give me the time to explain to you this
+misunderstanding.--"
+
+"No, Marquis. I will not talk until I have seen Tom."
+
+The black eyes of Monsieur de Boisdhyver gleamed unpleasantly. "I have
+said to you, Monsieur Frost, that I refuse to meet Monsieur Tom Pembroke
+once more. It would be intolerable. _Impossible, absolutment_! I must
+insist that you will be kind enough to facilitate my departure at once."
+
+"Certainly, as you wish, Marquis."
+
+The old gentleman hesitated. For once indecision was shown by the
+agitation of his features and the shifting of his eyes, but he gave no
+other expression to the quandaries in his mind. After a moment's silence
+he drew himself up with exaggerated dignity. With one hand upon his
+breast and the other extended, in a fashion at once absurd and a little
+pathetic, he addressed Dan for the last time, as might an ambassador
+taking leave of a sovereign upon his declaration of war.
+
+"Monsieur, I renew my gratitude for the hospitality of the Inn at the Red
+Oak, so long enjoyed, so discourteously withdrawn. I require but the
+presentation of my account for the time, I have trespassed upon your good
+will, and I request the assistance of a servant to facilitate my
+departure. But I do not take my farewell without protesting, _avec tout
+mon coeur_, at the misunderstanding to which I am persistently subjected.
+The inevitable bitterness in my soul does not prevent me even now to
+forget the sweet hours of rest that I have enjoyed here. The
+unwillingness on your part, monsieur, to comprehend my position, does not
+interfere to stifle in my breast the consciousness but of honourable
+purpose. I make my compliments to mesdames."
+
+"Very good, marquis--and at what time shall I have a carriage
+ready for you?"
+
+The Marquis glanced nonchalantly at his watch, "In fifteen minutes,
+monsieur."
+
+"It will be ready, Marquis."
+
+"Your very obedient servant; Monsieur Frost."
+
+"Your obedient servant, Marquis de Boisdhyver."
+
+The old gentleman bowed again with elaborate courtesy and, turning
+sharply on his heel, left the room.
+
+Somewhat disturbed by the turn affairs had taken, Dan stood for a moment
+lost in thought. There was nothing for it, he supposed: Tom, who had
+been in command, had given orders, and they should be obeyed; besides
+there was no reason that he could see why the Marquis should be detained
+at the Inn if he chose to leave it. So he sat down at a table, made out
+the old gentleman's bill for the month, and then stepped to the door to
+call for Jesse.
+
+"Take this," he said when the man appeared in response to his summons,
+"to the old Marquis. It is the bill for his board. If he pays you, well
+and good; if not--in any case, treat him courteously, and do not
+interfere with his movements. He is leaving the Inn for good. I want you
+to have the buggy ready within half-an-hour and drive him where he wishes
+to go. I fancy he will want his stuff put on the schooner in the Cove."
+
+"All right, sir," replied Jesse. "Now that you and Miss Nance are back,
+sir, I guess the sooner we get rid of the Marquis the better."
+
+Jesse carried the bill to the Marquis, then came down and went to the
+barn to harness the horse. A little later he drove round to the
+courtyard, hitched the horse to a ring in the Red Oak, and ran upstairs
+to fetch the Marquis's boxes.
+
+Perhaps half-an-hour had passed when he returned to Dan in the Bar. "The
+old gentleman's gone, sir," he said.
+
+"Gone!--where?" cried Dan.
+
+"Don't know, sir," Jesse replied. "To the schooner, I guess. He left this
+money on his dressing-bureau."
+
+Dan took the gold which Jesse held out to him. "Well, well," he murmured,
+"quite on his dignity, eh? All right, Jess, take his stuff to the beach
+and hail the schooner. He will probably have given directions. I hope
+we've seen the last of him."
+
+
+
+
+PART IV
+
+THE ATTACK ON THE INN
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+THE AVENUE OF MAPLES
+
+
+The Marquis's belongings were sent after him to the schooner, where,
+however, it appeared that they had not been expected, for it was some
+time before Jesse could obtain an answer to his hail from the shore, and
+still longer before he could make the men on the ship understand what it
+was he wanted with them. Eventually Captain Bonhomme had rowed ashore,
+and the Marquis's bags, boxes, writing-desk, and fiddle were loaded into
+the small boat and taken off to _The Southern Cross_.
+
+It appeared from Jesse's report that the Captain had been sufficiently
+polite, and had attributed the misunderstanding of his men to their
+inability to speak English. They had not gotten their orders for the
+Marquis. He had asked no further questions about Monsieur de Boisdhyver
+or about his recent prisoners, but had feed Jesse liberally, and
+dismissed him, with his own and the Marquis's thanks.
+
+"Well," said Tom, who had returned an hour before and had been
+exchanging experiences with Dan, "that seems to be the end of him for
+the present. I don't know that I did right in promising your French lady
+that I should release him, but there seemed no other way to make sure of
+getting you back."
+
+"I am glad you promised," replied Dan. "It is a relief not to have him
+under our roof. For the last week I've felt as if the place were haunted
+by an evil spirit."
+
+"So it has been, and so it still will be, I am afraid," was Tom's reply.
+"If there is treasure here, you may be sure that gang won't sail away
+without making a desperate effort to get it. I move that we beat them out
+by hunting for it ourselves. Why not begin to-night?"
+
+"Not to-night," protested Dan. "I am tired to death. You can imagine that
+I didn't get much sleep cooped up on that confounded ship."
+
+"No more have I, old boy. But I believe in striking while the iron is
+hot. Every day's delay gives them a better chance for their plans, if
+they mean to attack the Inn."
+
+"I doubt if they'll do that. I don't think force is precisely their line.
+You know, I believe that the story Madame de la Fontaine told isn't
+altogether a fiction."
+
+"Pshaw!" exclaimed Tom. "I don't believe a word of it. Naturally they
+wouldn't use force, if they could help it. But their plans have all been
+upset, and a gang like that won't stop at anything."
+
+"But we live in a civilized community, my boy. This isn't the
+middle ages."
+
+"We live in a civilized community, perhaps; but if you can find a more
+isolated spot, a place more remote from help, in any other part of the
+civilized world, I'd be glad to see it. We might as well be in the middle
+of the Sahara desert. Find the treasure and get it out of harm's
+way--that's my idea."
+
+"All right, but to-morrow; I swear I'm not up to it to-night."
+
+"To-morrow! Well, then to-morrow. Though for the life of me, I don't see
+why you want to delay things. Jesse and Ezra can keep watch tonight."
+
+"But we must get some sleep, Tom."
+
+"The devil with sleep! However, you're the boss now. It's your inn, your
+treasure, your sister, that are involved. I'll take a back seat."
+
+"Come, come, Tom--don't let's quarrel. Give me to-night to--to get myself
+together, and tomorrow I'll pull the Inn down with you, if you wish."
+
+Perhaps Dan was right, he did need rest and sleep and a few hours would
+restore him. They had their supper, then, apportioned the night into
+watches, and Dan went upstairs for his first period of sleep.
+
+His brain was a-whirl. All through the afternoon, during his talk with
+the Marquis, and later during his talk with Tom, one idea had been
+dominating his thought, dictating his plan of action, colouring his
+judgment. The fascination which Madame de la Fontaine exerted over his
+senses was too strong for him even to contemplate resisting it. She was
+confessedly in league with a gang of adventurers upon a quest for
+treasure. She had lied to him at first about the Marquis, she had lied
+to him about Nancy, she had lied to him about his release; and when she
+had left him under the pretext of arranging his return to the Inn, she
+had in fact gone to Tom to bargain an exchange of him for the old
+Marquis. Her lies, her subterfuges, her flatteries, had been evidently
+designed but to get possession of the torn scrap of paper which was so
+necessary to their finding the hidden treasure. All this Dan told
+himself a hundred times, and then, quickly dispelling the witness of
+these cold hard facts, there would flash before him the vision of her
+wonderful eyes, of her strange appealing beauty, of her stirring
+personality; he would feel once more the touch of her cheek and her lips
+pressing his, intoxicating as wine; and delicious fires flamed through
+his veins, and set his heart to beating, and made havoc of his honour
+and his conscience. Whatever were the consequences, he would meet her
+again that night as he had promised. It was his first experience of
+passion and it was sweeping him off his feet.
+
+Alone in his room Dan sat down at the table. He drew from his pocket the
+torn paper, and as an act of justice to the friends he felt that he was
+about to betray, he labourously made a copy of the difficult French
+handwriting. This done, he locked the copy in his strong box and put the
+original back in his pocket. Then, like the criminal he thought himself
+to be, he crept cautiously down the stairs. The door into the bar was
+open, and he stood for a moment, shoes in hand, peering into the
+dimly-lit room. Tom sat by the hearth, reading, a pipe in his mouth and a
+cocked pistol on the table by his side. A pang went through Dan's breast,
+but he checked the impulse to speak, and stole softly across the hall and
+into his mother's parlour. Ever so cautiously he closed the door behind
+him, crossed the room, and raised the sash of one of the windows.
+
+It was dark, but starlight; the moon had not yet risen. In a moment he
+had slipped over the sill and stood upon the porch. Lowering the sash, he
+crept across the band of light that shone from the windows of the bar,
+and into the shadow of the Red Oak. There he buttoned his great coat
+tightly about him, put on his shoes, and started softly down the avenue
+of maples. Scarcely a sound disturbed the silence of the night, save the
+lazy creaking of the windmill as it turned now and then to the puff of a
+gentle breeze.
+
+At every few steps, he paused to listen, fearful lest his absence had
+been detected and he were followed by some one from the Inn. Then he
+would start on again, peering eagerly into the darkness ahead for any
+sign of her whom he sought. At last he reached the end of the avenue.
+His heart was beating wildly, in a very terror that she might not come.
+Nothing--no catastrophe, no danger, no disgrace,--could be so terrible
+to him as that the woman he loved so recklessly and madly should not
+come. She must not fail! He looked at his watch; it was already three
+minutes past ten. If in five--then minutes she did not come, he would go
+to seek her--to the House on the Dunes, aye, if must be to _The Southern
+Cross_ itself.
+
+Suddenly a dark figure slipped out of the gloom, and Claire de la
+Fontaine was in his arms. For a moment she let him clasp her, let his
+lips again meet hers; then quickly she disengaged herself. "Are we safe?"
+she asked in a whisper. "Is it that we can talk here."
+
+"We are perfectly safe," he answered. "Nothing can be heard from the Inn.
+No one is about."
+
+"You escaped without notice? Are you certain that no one follows you?"
+
+"Absolutely. I am sure. And you?"
+
+"I?--Oh, no, no--. There is no one to question me. I have been at the
+House on the Dunes all the evening. Marie, my maid,--she thinks that I
+am gone to the schooner. _Mon Dieu! cher ami_, what terrors I have
+suffered for you. It had not seemed possible that Claire de la Fontaine
+would ride and walk two so long miles in a desolate country to meet a
+lover--It must be that we are gone mad."
+
+"Madness then is the sweetest experience of life," said Dan, seizing her
+hand again and carrying it to his lips.
+
+"Ah _peut-etre, mon ami_. But now there are many affairs to discuss. Tell
+me--the Marquis, he was released, as your friend has promised me he
+should be?"
+
+"Of course, didn't you know it?"
+
+"I know nothing. Why then is it he has not left the Inn?"
+
+"But he did leave--in the middle of the afternoon, half an hour after I
+returned."
+
+"And where is it that he has gone?"
+
+"To the schooner, I suppose. He left alone, giving directions for his
+things to be sent after him."
+
+"Ah! to the schooner, you say? You are certain?"
+
+"Yes--that is, I think he went there. Jesse took his boxes and bags down
+to the shore, and Captain Bonhomme received them, and thanked him in the
+Marquis's name,''
+
+"_Mais non! Est-ce possible_?" For a moment she was silent, considering
+deeply. "_Bien_!" she exclaimed presently. "It is as you say, of course.
+And you, my friend?" She stopped suddenly, for they had been walking
+slowly forward, and withdrawing her hand from his arm, she held it out
+before him. "The paper?" she demanded.
+
+"Here it is," murmured Dan, fumbling in his pocket, and pulling out the
+scrap of paper. She took it eagerly from his hand and held it up before
+her eyes as though trying to see it in the dark.
+
+"This is it, really?" she asked.
+
+"I swear it," he answered. "It is the piece of writing that I found in
+the hidden cubby-hole of the old cabinet in the Oak Parlour. It is written
+in French, you know."
+
+"Yes, I know, I know," she assented absently. For a moment she was quite
+still, and then, with a strange exclamation, she put the paper to her
+lips. "_Quels souvenirs, d'autrefois_!" she murmured. "_Ah, mon Dieu,
+mon Dieu_!"
+
+"Dearest, what is it?" asked Dan.
+
+"Nothing, nothing," she replied, withdrawing a little from his touch. "I
+was unwell for the moment,--_ce ne fait rien_. No, no, you are not to
+kiss me, please." Again she unloosed his arm from about her neck, slipped
+the paper into her muff, and pressed a little forward. For a space they
+walked slowly, silently, toward the Inn.
+
+"But, dearest one," murmured Dan, "this proves to you my love, doesn't
+it? You no longer doubt me. For your sake, I give my honour; it may be,
+the safety of my friends. You must see how I love you with all my heart
+and soul. Won't you,--"
+
+Suddenly she stopped again quite still and faced him. "My poor boy," she
+said gently, "you really love me?"
+
+"Love you! My God, have I not proved it! What more would you have me do?"
+
+"_Mais oui_," she answered quickly. "You have proved it, but I have
+thought that it was not possible."
+
+"And you--you do care--oh, tell me--"
+
+"_Helas, mon paurve ami_. I love as tenderly as it remains in me to love.
+Ah, dear, dear boy, so sincerely, that I cannot have you to sell your
+honour for the futile kisses of Claire de la Fontaine."
+
+"What do you mean? Have I--"
+
+"No, no, no! This--take the paper. You must not again give it me, I
+desire that you will not." She drew the paper from her muff with an
+impulsive movement and thrust it toward him. "Take it, I implore you."
+
+"But why--?"
+
+"Because that you shall not give your honour to a woman such as I am.
+_Mai vraiment_, I love you. That is why you must take back the paper."
+
+"But you must explain--"
+
+"_Mon Dieu_! is it that I have not explained? There is time for nothing
+more. I have fear, _mon ami_; a kiss, and it is necessary that I go. It
+is good-bye."
+
+"But you love me, you have said so. I cannot, I will not let you go."
+
+"Listen to me, my friend," she said, her voice rising for the moment
+above the whisper in which she had cautiously spoken heretofore. "From
+the first I have deceived you, betrayed you, played upon your affection
+but to betray you afresh. And now I find that I love you. I am not that
+which you call good, but it is impossible that I injure you. Go back to
+your friends."
+
+"Never! I love you. What matters now anything that you have said or done?
+And you love me. Ah dearest one, what can that mean but good?"
+
+"_Bien-aime_, what will you that I say?" she interrupted speaking
+rapidly, "I am what you Americans call 'a bad woman',--the sort of woman
+that you know nothing of. I was the woman who sixteen years ago stayed at
+the Inn at the Red Oak with Francois de Boisdhyver, the woman your mother
+called nurse, who cared for his little daughter. And now I have told you
+all. Will you know from now that I am a thousand times unworthy? _Pour
+l'amour de Dieu_, give it to me to do this one act of honour and of
+generosity."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+THE ATTACK
+
+
+With these words she thrust the scrap of paper into his hands and turning
+swiftly, started forward as though to escape his further importunities by
+flight. But Dan was instantly by her side, trying to catch her hand in
+the darkness.
+
+Again she faced him passionately. "_C'est folie_," she cried hoarsely,
+"have I not told you that we are in great danger? Go, go back to the Inn.
+It is there only that you will be safe.--O, _mon Dieu!"_
+
+A figure had sprung suddenly from the blackness of the trees. Dan felt a
+sharp blow on his shoulder, and then he was grappling with a wiry
+antagonist, striving to keep at safe distance a hand that clutched an
+open knife. Locked in a close embrace, swaying from side to side of the
+road, they fought desperately. Dan striving to get at the pistol which he
+carried, his assailant trying to use his knife.
+
+It seemed as if Dan could no longer hold the man off when two small
+hands closed over the fist that held the gleaming knife and a clear voice
+rang out in French. Dan felt his antagonist's grip loosen and he wrenched
+himself free. Madame de la Fontaine had come to his rescue. "Quick,
+quick--to the Inn. I am safe. You have but one chance for your life," she
+cried. Already his assailant had put a boatswain's whistle to his lips
+and was sounding a shrill blast.
+
+As Dan hesitated, uncertain what to do, he heard a number of men come
+crashing through the underbrush of the neighbouring field. Again Madame
+de la Fontaine cried, "_Mon Dieu_! will you not run?" Then she turned and
+disappeared in the darkness. Simultaneously came the crack of a pistol
+shot, and a bullet whizzed by his ear. There was nothing for it but to
+run; and run he did, shouting at the top of his voice the while to Tom in
+the Inn. He probably owed his start to the fact that for the moment his
+attacker, who had been held at bay by Madame de la Fontaine, was
+uncertain whether to follow her or Dan. That moment's delay saved Dan's
+life, for though, with a curse, the man started after him now, he had a
+poor chance of catching him in the darkness. But on he came only a dozen
+yards or so behind, and after him the thundering steps and harsh cries
+of those who had responded to the call of the whistle.
+
+At last Dan was at the door of the Inn, beating wildly upon it, and
+calling, "Open, Tom; quick, for God's sake! It's Dan." As the door was
+flung back, he sprang in and slammed it shut. Already the attackers were
+in the courtyard, a volley of shots rang against the stout oak, followed
+almost at once, by the flinging against it of half-a-dozen men. But the
+great oaken beam had been slipped into place and held firmly. Dan was
+none the worse for his experience, save for a graze on the cheek where
+the knife had glanced, and a slit on his shoulder from a bullet.
+
+"They're here!" he cried. "No time for explanations, Tom. I went
+out--fool that I was!--was attacked. They're here in force."
+
+By this time Jesse had rushed into the bar, attracted by the firing, and
+soon Ezra Manners came running down from the floor above. After the first
+impact against the door those without had withdrawn, evidently taking up
+a position in the courtyard again, for almost at once there was a
+fusilade of shots against door and windows, which luckily the heavy oak
+was proof against.
+
+"They're welcome to keep that up all night," said Tom. "Only a waste of
+ammunition. How many are there?" He would liked to have asked Dan why he
+had gone out, but there was no time for discussion.
+
+"I don't know--half-a-dozen at least, I should guess," was Dan's reply.
+"Bonhomme is at their head, I'm sure. It was he who tackled me in the
+avenue. They may have the whole crew of the schooner here. That would
+mean a dozen or more."
+
+"Well," said Tom, "we're in for it now, I guess. We'll have to watch in
+different parts of the house, for we don't know where they will attack.
+Unless they are all fools, it won't be here."
+
+"You're right. I'll stay and look out for the south wing. You go to the
+north wing, Tom; Jesse to the kitchen, and Ezra to the end of the south
+passage. That'll cover the house as well as we can cover it. They'll try
+to force an entrance somewheres. Have you all got guns? Good. Leave the
+doors open so that we can hear each other call."
+
+Evidently the attacking party had concluded that they were wasting their
+lead and their time in shooting at doors and window-shutters, for as Tom
+had said, all was now quiet outside. Fifteen minutes, half-an-hour
+passed, and nothing occurred to alarm or to relieve the tension on the
+anxious watchers within. At length Dan stole upstairs to reconnoitre.
+
+It was fortunate that he chose the precise moment he did, for as his
+head emerged above the last stair, he saw that the great shutters at
+the end of the south corridor were open, and a man stood before the
+window, evidently on the top rung of a ladder, trying the sash. It was
+locked to be sure, but at the instant Dan saw him, he raised his fist
+and smashed it. He was about to leap through the opening, fringed
+though it was with jagged glass, when Dan aimed his pistol carefully,
+and fired. There was a cry, and the form at the window fell crashing to
+the ground below. Dan rushed to the casement, and could hear in the
+court beneath him the curses and exclamations of the surprised
+assailants. Quickly he thrust the end of the ladder from the wall, then
+seizing a fresh pistol from his belt, fired at random into the darkness
+below. Another cry of pain attested to the fact that his chance shot
+had taken effect. By this time Tom had rushed to his assistance, and
+together they barred the window again.
+
+Dan gave a brief account of the incident. "But, for heaven's sake, Tom,"
+he concluded, "get back to the north wing. We are in danger there every
+moment. I'll watch out here."
+
+As Tom returned to his post in the cold corridor of the north wing, he
+heard heavy crashes, as of a battering-ram, against the great door that
+opened into the gallery. A shrill whistle brought Ezra Manners to his
+assistance. "Watch here!" he commanded. "If the door crashes in, shoot,
+and shoot to kill; then run into the bar and barricade the door between.
+I've a plan."
+
+He himself ran into the bar, blew out the candles, and risking perhaps
+too much on the chance of success, cautiously opened the front door. He
+could scarcely make out the group at the farther end of the gallery, as
+he stepped out; but he could hear the resounding crashes against the door
+into the north hall, each one of which seemed to be the last that even
+that massive frame could hold out against. Leveling his pistol at the
+group; he took aim, and fired; snatched another from his pocket, and
+fired a second time. Again, by good luck, the defender's shots had told.
+There was a thud on the gallery floor, and the besiegers scurried to
+cover beyond the courtyard fence. Tom dashed safely back into the house,
+and slipped the great beam into place.
+
+Upstairs Dan's attention had been attracted by the commotion in front of
+the inn. He opened a window on to the roof of the gallery, climbed out,
+and crawled along on his belly till his head just abutted over the eaves.
+For a few moments, after the firing, he could hear the attackers moving
+about behind the fence across the courtyard. At length, a couple of them
+stole across the court and up on to the gallery beneath him. In a moment
+they returned carrying the dead or wounded comrade; then all of them
+seemed to go off together up the dark avenue of maples. He waited till
+they could be heard no more, then crept back into the house and ran down
+to tell Dan of their temporary withdrawal. For an hour or more the four
+defenders of the Inn kept themselves occupied parading the corridors and
+rooms, on the watch for a fresh attack. But nothing happened. They felt
+no security, however, and would feel none till daylight.
+
+In the silent watching of that night Dan had ample opportunity to reflect
+upon his extraordinary interview with Madame de la Fontaine. He loved
+her. Good heavens how he loved her, but--had she been sincere in her
+refusal at the last to keep the scrap of paper for the possession of
+which she had so desperately intrigued? Had she decoyed him to the
+rendezvous in the dark but to betray him to the bandits with whom she was
+in league? At first it would seem so. And yet the paper was in his
+possession; and, she it was who had rescued him from the assassin's
+knife. Where was she now? What had become of her? What was to be the end
+of this mad night's work? That she was the woman who had accompanied
+General Pointelle--or the Marechal de Boisdhyver--somehow did not
+surprise him. And for the time the full import of what that implied did
+not dawn upon him. But what mattered anything now that he loved her?
+
+He determined at last to reconnoitre again from the roof of the gallery.
+It still lay in shadow, but it would not be long before the moon, now
+rising over the eastern hills beyond the Strathsey flooded it with light.
+In a moment, he had opened the window, was over the sill, and, creeping
+cautiously along the roof to the ledge, he worked his way toward the
+great oak at the farther end.
+
+All was still and deserted below as the Inn courtyard would have been in
+the middle of any winter's night. While he stood peering into the
+darkness, listening intently, the moon, just showing above the distant
+tree tops, cast the first rays of its light into the courtyard beneath
+him. At the instant the figure of a woman stole across the flagged
+pavement and crept fearfully to the Red Oak. With a strange thrill he
+recognized Claire de la Fontaine. Reaching the shelter of the great tree,
+she stooped, gathered a handful of gravel from the road bed, and then
+cast it boldly at the shutters of the bar, calling softly, "Dan, Dan."
+
+Instantly he replied. "Claire! Is that you? What is it? I am here, above
+you, on the roof."
+
+"Ah, _mon Dieu_!" she exclaimed, as she looked up startled, and
+discerned his form leaning over the eaves, "for the love of heaven, my
+friend, open to me. I am in danger and I must tell you that which is of
+great importance to you. _Mais vite, mon ami_. In ten minutes they will
+return again."
+
+It did not occur to Dan to doubt her. Careless of the risk, he rushed
+back to the window, climbed in, and in a few seconds had opened the door
+to the anxious woman without. She seemed physically exhausted as she
+stepped into the warm bar. Taking her in his arms, he carried her to a
+chair, and poured out a glass of wine, which she eagerly drank.
+
+"It matters not what I have been doing," she murmured in reply to his
+questions, "I have but little time to give you my warning. _Ecoute_.
+Bonhomme and his men are gone only to carry back their dead and wounded,
+and to bring cutlasses, and the two or three sailors who were left on the
+schooner. I have followed them--God knows how--and heard something of
+their plans. They will make an attack--now, in a moment--in two different
+places. But these attacks will be shams,--is not that the word?--they
+will mean nothing. It is the Oak Parlour that they desire to enter. At
+the window of that so horrible room Bonhomme will try to make an entrance
+without alarm while the others hold your attention at the front and back
+of the Inn. Is it that you understand? It is necessary that you are
+prepared for these sham attacks, but the great danger is Bonhomme. The
+window in the Oak Parlour is not strong. They have information--recent
+information--from the Marquis probably,--that it will not be difficult to
+break in. One of you must conceal himself in the dark and shoot Bonhomme
+when he enters; you must shoot and shoot to kill, then we will be safe.
+I have no fear of Monsieur le Marquis. The others--they are brutes--but
+they will flee. And they know nothing, they do this for money,--ah, _mon
+Dieu_, for money which I have furnished!"
+
+For a moment, torn between his love and his deep distrust of this woman,
+poor Dan stood uncertainly. Suddenly he knelt at her side and clasped his
+arms about her. "Claire, you are on our side? You swear it."
+
+"Ah, _mon Dieu_! is it that I deserve this?" she exclaimed bitterly.
+"Ah! I tell you truth," she cried. "You must believe me--Listen! Are
+they come already?"
+
+"No, no, there is nothing. But I trust you, I will go."
+
+Suddenly she sprang to her feet. "Let me go with you. It is terrible to
+me to enter again that room; but I desire to prove myself of honour.
+_Allous, allous_!"
+
+"Tom is there."
+
+"Ah! send him here to the bar. But do you come, _mon ami_. See, I go with
+you." She rose and forcing herself to the effort, led the way across the
+bar and into the corridor of the north wing, as if to show him that in
+sixteen years she had not forgotten.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+IN THE OAK PARLOUR
+
+
+"You know the way?" Dan exclaimed as he caught up with her, and held open
+the door that led into the old north wing.
+
+"But so well," she replied, catching her breath. "Would to God that
+I did not!"
+
+"Ah!" he murmured, "I forgot that you have been here before."
+
+They pressed on silently. At the turn of the corridor upon which the Oak
+Parlour gave, they discerned Tom Pembroke, a weird figure, in the dim
+light of the tallow dip upon the table, that cast fantastic shadows upon
+the whitewashed walls.
+
+As he recognized them, he sprang forward in astonishment. "Madame de la
+Fontaine! Dan! What does this mean?" he cried.
+
+"You know Madame?" Dan replied hastily and in evident confusion. "At
+great risk she has come to warn us--she is our friend, understand.--She
+has come to tell us how Bonhomme and his men will attack the Inn."
+
+Tom listened to his explanation with unconcealed dismay. "Good heavens,
+Dan!" he protested, "You trust this woman? You know she is in league with
+these ruffians. Do you want us to fall into a trap?"
+
+"No, no, Monsieur Pembroke," interrupted Madame de la Fontaine, "you must
+listen to me. I understand your fear. But at last you can trust me. I
+repent that which I have done. Ah, _mon Dieu_, with what bitterness! And
+now I desire to do all that is possible to save you. You must trust me."
+
+"I do not--I can not trust you," Tom cried sternly. "Don't go in there,
+Dan. Don't I beg of you, trust this woman's word. It is a trick."
+
+"Perhaps," said Dan grimly, "but go back. I take the responsibility. I
+do trust her, I shall trust her--to death. There is no time to lose,
+man. Go back!"
+
+"What deviltry has bewitched you?" cried Tom passionately. "Already once
+to-night you have risked our lives by your fool-hardiness,--for the sake
+of this woman, eh? By gad, man, I begin to see. But I tell you now, I
+refuse to be a victim to your madness."
+
+"_Mais non_, Monsieur Pembroke," Claire cried again. "By all that is good
+and holy, I swear to you, that that which I have said is true. You must
+go. They will attack the bar and the kitchen. If those places are not
+defended, there will be danger."
+
+"At any rate," said Dan, "I am going into the Oak Parlour. If you refuse
+to act with me, barricade the door between the bar and the north wing. If
+need be, I shall fight alone. Only now we lose time, precious time."
+
+Pembroke looked at him as if he had gone mad, then shrugging his
+shoulders he turned back into the bar, whistling for Jesse and Ezra as
+he did so.
+
+For a moment, glancing after Tom's retreating figure, shaken to his soul
+by conflicting emotions, Dan stood irresolute.
+
+"But come," said Madame de la Fontaine, touching his arm. Again like the
+weird genius of this strange night she led the way on down the shadowy
+hall, and paused only when her hand rested upon the knob of the door into
+the Oak Parlour. "It is here," she said simply.
+
+As Dan reached her side, she opened the door. The light of the candle
+down the hallway did not penetrate the gloom of the disused room. A musty
+smell as of cold stagnant air came strong to their nostrils, and Dan
+felt, as they crossed the threshold together, that he was entering a
+place where no life had been for a long long time, a place full of dead
+nameless horrors.
+
+The woman by his side was trembling violently. He put his arm about her
+to reassure her, and there shot through him a sensation of strange and
+terrible joy to be with her alone in this darkness and danger. For the
+moment he was exulting that for her sake he had risked his honour, that
+for her sake now he was risking life itself. He bent his head to hers.
+
+"No! no!--not here!" she whispered hoarsely, but yet clinging to him with
+shaking hands. "It is so cold, so dark. I have fear," she murmured.
+
+"It is like a tomb," he said.
+
+"The tomb of my hopes, of my youth," she breathed softly.
+
+"Shall I strike a light?"
+
+"No, no,--no light, I implore you. _Ecoute_! What is it that I hear?"
+
+"I hear nothing. It is the wind in the Red Oak outside."
+
+"But listen!"
+
+"It is an owl hooting."
+
+Suddenly she drew her hand from his, and he could hear her moving swiftly
+about. "All is as it used to be?" she asked.
+
+"Precisely," he answered; "nothing has been changed."
+
+"Here is the cabinet," she said, from across the room. "I can feel the
+lion's head. It is opposite to the window and the moonlight will stream
+in when the casement is opened, but if I crouch low I shall not be seen.
+_Bien_! And you, _mon ami_? Tell me, is the old _escritoire_ still to the
+left of the door?" Now she was back at his side once again.
+
+"The _escritoire_?" he repeated.
+
+"The little table where one writes. Ah! yes, it is here. See, behind
+this, _mon ami_, shall you hide yourself. The moonlight will not reach
+here--and it is so arranged that you will see plainly any one that
+appears at the window. When the casement is opened, you will shoot, will
+you not, and shoot to kill?"
+
+"Yes, I will shoot," said Dan, his voice trembling.
+
+"You promise me?" she cried in a tense whisper, as she grasped his arm
+and held it tight in her grip.
+
+"I tell you, yes."
+
+"You must not fail."
+
+"No. Shall I shoot at any one who opens?"
+
+"Any one?--it will be Bonhomme,--no other."
+
+Suddenly there came, from the front and the rear of the Inn, at the same
+instant it seemed, the sharp staccato of a fusilade of pistol shots, and
+the lumbering blows as of beams being thrust at distant doors.
+
+"They are come!" she whispered, "hide." Dan could hear the swish of her
+garments as she rapidly glided across the room to the old cabinet, then
+he turned and crouched low behind the writing desk that she had chosen
+for his place of concealment. He knelt there motionless, a cocked pistol
+clenched in his right hand. His breath seemed to have stopped, but his
+heart was pounding as though it must burst through his breast. How could
+he shoot down in cold blood a fellow man? The horror of it crowded out
+all other impressions, sensations fears. He could fight, risk his life,
+but to pull the trigger of that pistol when the casement should open
+seemed to him an impossibility. He would wait, grapple with him, fight
+as men should.
+
+Suddenly a ray of moonlight fell across the dark floor. Dan, looking up,
+seemed frozen by horror. The shutters had opened, the casement swung back
+noiselessly, and there in the opening, sharply outlined against the
+moonlight-flooded night, was the great black hulk of Captain Bonhomme.
+
+For a moment he stood there irresolute, listening intently. Dan was
+fascinated, motionless, held as in a vice by the horror of the thing.
+
+Suddenly Bonhomme moved his head to one side as if to listen more
+acutely. As he did so, the ray of moonlight fell upon the cabinet, fell
+upon Claire de la Fontaine, upon something that she held in an
+outstretched hand that gleamed.
+
+"_Nom de Dieu_!" There was the flash and crack of a pistol, a sharp cry,
+and the great figure fell back and sank out of sight.
+
+With that Dan sprang forward, reckless of danger, and ran to the window.
+He heard without the confused sounds as of persons scurrying to cover,
+saw their forms dash across the moonlit courtyard, into the shadows of
+the trees and outhouses. Beneath him on the floor of the gallery was
+something horrible and still.
+
+Almost instantly Claire de la Fontaine was by his side, and as
+regardless of danger as he, she was calling sharply, calling men by their
+names. Her hair had been loosened and fell over her shoulders in black
+waves, her dark eyes flashed with excitement and passion, and her face,
+strangely pale, in the silver moonlight, was set in stern harsh lines.
+Even then this vision of her tragic beauty thrilled the man at her side.
+
+But she was as unconscious of him as she was of her danger. With hand
+uplifted she called by name the desperados, who had taken shelter in the
+darkness and to those who now came running from front and rear where
+their attacks had been unsuccessful.
+
+Appalled, spell-bound by the vision, even as Dan was, they stopped, and
+stood listening mutely to the torrent of words that she poured
+forth,--vehement French of which Dan had no understanding.
+
+At last, ending the frightful tension of the scene, two of the men came
+forward, crept up to the lifeless body of Bonhomme, and grasping it by
+head and feet, carried it away, across the courtyard, into the darkness
+of the avenue of maples. One by one, still mysteriously silent, the
+others of the gang followed, till at length the last one had disappeared
+into the gloom. Weird silence fell once more upon the Inn.
+
+It was only then that Madame de la Fontaine turned to Dan. "They will
+come no more," she said in a strained unnatural voice. "We are saved,
+safe.... I have proved, is it not so?--my honour, my love."
+
+With the words she sank at his feet, just as Tom, candle in hand,
+appeared in the doorway.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+THE TREASURE
+
+
+Owing doubtless to the death of Bonhomme and to the orders given in no
+uncertain tones by Madame de la Fontaine, the bandits from the schooner
+in the cove did not make a further effort to attack the Inn that night.
+There was no rest, however, for Madame de la Fontaine, after her heroic
+exploit in the Oak Parlour, had swooned completely away. They carried her
+to the couch in Mrs. Frost's parlour, and, awkwardly enough, did what
+could be done for her by men. It was over an hour before they succeeded
+in restoring her to consciousness, and when they did so, she awoke to
+delirium and fever. Distracted by anxiety and by their helplessness, at
+the first streak of dawn, Dan started for town to get a doctor, and Ezra
+Manners volunteered to go to the Red Farm and bring back Mrs. Frost,
+Nancy, and the maids.
+
+About six o'clock in the morning the women folk returned to the Inn. But
+the briefest account of the attack was given them, though they were told
+in no uncertain terms of Madame de la Fontaine's heroic action in coming
+to warn them and of her courageous shot at the leader. Then Mrs. Frost
+and Nancy turned all their attention to the sick woman, caring for her as
+tenderly and devotedly as if she were their own. Half-an-hour later Dan
+returned from Monday Port with the family doctor, a grave silent old
+gentleman, in whose skill and discretion they trusted. After making an
+examination of his patient, he nodded his head encouragingly; gave a few
+directions to Mrs. Frost, and then left, promising to return later in the
+morning with medicines and supplies.
+
+At last, utterly worn out, the four men threw themselves on their beds
+and slept from sheer exhaustion. The sun was high in the sky when they
+came down stairs again and found Nancy waiting for them, and a smoking
+breakfast ready on the table. After greeting them, she pointed to the
+window, across the fields, almost bare of snow now and gleaming in the
+morning sunlight, to the bright waters of the cove. "See!" she cried,
+"the schooner has disappeared."
+
+They both looked. "By Jove, it has!" exclaimed Tom, rushing to the other
+side of the room, and peering out at the shipless sea. "Heigho! that's a
+relief. Pray God we've seen the last of her. The Marquis gone, the
+schooner gone,--we three together once more! Perhaps we shall begin to
+live again. Ah!" he added more softly, glancing with sudden sympathy at
+Dan's white drawn face, "I forgot the poor woman across the hall."
+
+Dan turned aside to hide his emotion, for though a load of anxiety had
+been lifted from his heart by the vanishing of _The Southern Cross_, he
+was sick with fear for the issue of the illness that had stricken down
+the woman he loved,--the woman who had proved her love for him by so
+terrible and so tragic a deed.
+
+As though aware that for the moment they were best left together alone,
+Nancy slipped away into the kitchen.
+
+"You love her, Dan?" asked Tom simply.
+
+"Yes, Tom, with all my heart and soul. I staked my honour, my life, on
+her sincerity. And how she has proved that we were right to trust her! It
+can't be--she mustn't die--I couldn't bear it!"
+
+"She'll be all right, old fellow, don't worry; trust to your mother and
+Nance. It is only the shock of the terrible things she went through last
+night. Come on, we must take something to eat. Here is Nancy back again."
+
+There was no doubt of the fact, _The Southern Cross_ had sailed away,
+vanished in the night as mysteriously as a week before she had appeared
+in the Strathsey and found moorings in the Cove. They did not count on
+the certainty of her not reappearing, however; and that night and for
+many nights thereafter the Inn was securely barricaded and a watch was
+kept, but neither then nor ever did _The Southern Cross_ spread her sails
+in those waters again. She and her crew disappeared from their lives as
+completely as from the seas that stretched around the coast of Deal.
+
+Tom at once was for making a search in the Oak Parlour for the hidden
+treasure, but for the time Dan had no heart for the undertaking. He urged
+delay at least until Madame de la Fontaine had recovered; and as for
+Nancy she would not hear of it.
+
+"I can't bear to think of it,--of the trouble, the crime, the suffering
+of which it has been the cause. When our poor lady recovers, she will
+tell us all we need to know. I dread the Oak Parlour. I would not go into
+that room for anything in the world. Nor, believe me, Tom, could Dan do
+so now. You have guessed, haven't you, that he loves Madame de la
+Fontaine?"
+
+"Of course, dearest; poor fellow! he betrays his love by every word and
+act. But good heaven, Nance, he couldn't marry her!"
+
+"No--I don't know. I suppose not. But Dan will do as he will. To oppose
+him now would only make him the more wretched."
+
+"Does your mother know?"
+
+"No, and it is best she should not. I don't think she has the faintest
+suspicion."
+
+"Well, I suppose we had better let things rest awhile;" Tom assented,
+"but I swear I would like to get at the Oak Parlour and tear the secret
+out of it."
+
+"We must wait a bit, Tom dear. Let's just be glad now of what we
+have and are."
+
+And with that he drew her toward him and pressed for a definite answer to
+the question which so deeply concerned their future.
+
+"When Madame has recovered, when we know all and the mystery is solved,"
+she replied; then she added inconsequently, "I wonder if we shall ever
+hear of the old Marquis again."
+
+"I wonder too," Tom exclaimed. "Though he has sailed away on _The
+Southern Cross_, I doubt if he will willingly leave the treasure
+behind him."
+
+"That dreadful treasure, Tom," cried Nancy. "I wish to goodness that the
+Marquis had it and might keep it always. We have each other."
+
+The evening of the second day after the terrible night of the attack, as
+Dan was entering the Inn from his work outside, he saw Madame de la
+Fontaine standing on the gallery under the Red Oak. It was the dusk of a
+mild pleasant day. She was clad still in her soft grey gown with furs
+about her waists and neck, and a grey scarf over her head. But there was
+something infinitely pathetic to him in the listlessness of her attitude,
+in the expression of a deep and melancholy that had come into her face.
+
+He stole swiftly to her side, and taking her hand in his pressed it to
+his lips, with a gesture that was as reverent as it was tender. For a
+moment something of the old brightness returned to her face as she bent
+her clear gaze upon his bowed head.
+
+"You love me, Dan?" she murmured.
+
+"You know I love you," he whispered passionately.
+
+"Yes, I believe that you do," she said simply. "I shall always be
+thankful that I have won a good man's love." But suddenly she withdrew
+her hand, as the door of the bar opened. "See, here is Mademoiselle
+Nancy. She is coming for me: she is to be with me to-night. There is
+much for me to do."
+
+His heart surged within him; for he knew that in her simple words there
+was the tragic note of farewell; but he could not speak, he could not
+plead from that sad and broken woman for a passion that he knew but too
+well she could never give. He knew that she would leave him on the
+morrow, that his protests would be vain;--nay,--he would not even utter
+them! With the gathering of the darkness about the old Inn, he felt that
+the light in his heart was being obscured forever.
+
+The evening passed, the night. Morning came, and Madame de la Fontaine,
+accompanied by Nancy, left the Inn at the Red Oak for Coventry. There
+remained to Dan of his brief and tragic passion but one letter, which Tom
+handed to him that morning, and which, with despairing heart, he read and
+re-read a hundred times.
+
+"_Mon cher ami_:
+
+"You would forgive that I do not know well how to express myself as I
+desire, if you could read my heart. I bade you good-bye to-night under
+the Red Oak, tree for me of such tragic and such beautiful memories. I
+could not say farewell otherwise, dear friend, nor could you. We have
+loved sincerely, have we not? We will remember that in days to come; you
+will remember it even in the happier days to come that I pray God to
+grant you. I know all that you would say, my friend, but it cannot be. I
+must vanish from your life, be gone as completely as though I had never
+entered it. I love you deeply, tenderly, but I could not be to you what I
+know that now you wish. All the past forbids. The very tragedy that
+proved to you that I was worthy of your trust forbids. It is my only
+justification that I saved your lives, dear friend; but oh how bitterly I
+ask pardon of God for what has been done! Then also, dearest friend, my
+heart is no longer capable to bear passion, but only to feel great
+tenderness. I could not say these things, and yet they must be written. I
+cannot go with them unsaid. Certain other things must be told you in
+justice to all.
+
+"The story I told you on the schooner that day was largely truth. The
+General Pointelle, who was at the Inn at the Red Oak in 1814, was in
+reality the Marechal de Boisdhyver, the father of your foster-sister
+Nancy. She is truly Eloise de Boisdhyver. The Marechal returned to France
+to support the Emperor, as he wrote to madame your good mother; and he
+fell, as I told you, on the field of Waterloo. Admitting the importance
+of his mission, admitting my ambiguous relation to him (indefensible as
+it was), to have left the child as he did was an act of kindness. In
+truth the treasure concealed in the Oak Parlour is considerable, and it
+was always my purpose to return, but the necessary directions for finding
+it were not entrusted to me, but to the Marquis Marie-Anne, whom I didn't
+meet until many years after Waterloo. Then I was induced by the
+Marquis,--your old Marquis--to provide the money for the miserable
+enterprise, of which we know the tragic result. From the first I was
+uncertain about the method we adopted; and then soon after our arrival
+here, from a hundred little indications, I became convinced that Bonhomme
+was prepared to betray us, once we secured the treasure. As for the
+Marquis, I suppose that he sailed away on the schooner. You need fear him
+no longer. It was he, I am convinced, that conveyed to them the
+information of the loosened casement in the Oak Parlour, and unwittingly
+arranged for his own undoing and our salvation. At all events he will
+have realized now that he has hopelessly lost the fight. As for the
+treasure, by right it belongs to Eloise, who should not disdain to use
+it. I enclose a transcription of the other half of the torn scrap of
+paper, which will supplement the directions in your possession.
+
+"And as for me, my friend, I shall seek a shelter in my own country apart
+from the world in which I have lived so to little purpose and for the
+most part so unhappily. Believe me, so it is best. My heart is too full
+for me to express all that I feel for you.
+
+"Dear, dear friend, do not render me the more unhappy to know that my
+brief friendship with you shall have harmed your life. Your place is in
+the world, to take part in the life of your own country, not, dear Dan,
+to waste youth and energy in the fruitless desolation of this beautiful
+Deal, not above all to grieve for a woman who was unworthy.
+
+"I commend you to God, and I shall never forget you.
+
+"CLAIRE DE LA FONTAINE."
+
+It was with a heavy heart that Dan consented later in the morning to
+Tom's proposal that they force at last the secret of the Oak Parlour. He
+got the torn scrap of paper which he had found,--such ages ago it seemed,
+though it was scarcely a week,--in the old cabinet, and gave it to Tom,
+with the copy of the other half which Madame de la Fontaine had enclosed
+in her letter of farewell. The copy in Madame de la Fontaine's
+handwriting did not dovetail exactly into the jagged edges of the
+original portion, so that it was some time before they could get it into
+position for reading. But at last it was pasted together on a large bit
+of cardboard, and Tom, with the aid of a dictionary, succeeded in making
+a translation, which Dan took down.
+
+"Learning of the attempt of my Emperor to regain his glorious throne, I
+leave these hospitable shores to offer my sword to his cause. In case I
+do not return, the person having instructions for the discovery of this
+paper, which I tear in two parts, will find herein the necessary
+directions for the finding of my hidden treasure. This treasure, bullion,
+jewels, and coins, is concealed in a secret chamber in this Inn at the
+Red Oak. This secret chamber will be entered from the Oak Parlour. The
+hidden door is released by a spring beneath the hand of the lady in the
+picture nearest the fireplace on the north side of the room. A panel
+slides back revealing the entrance. Instructions as to the deposition of
+the treasure will be found in the golden casket therewith.
+
+"FRANCOIS DE BOISDHYVER."
+
+"Well?" said Tom, "the instructions are definite enough. Now we can put
+them to the test. Let's get to work at once. Wait a second till I get
+some wood, and well make a fire in the Oak Parlour." He filled his arms
+with logs from the bin under the settle in the bar, while Dan got the key
+for the north wing.
+
+Soon they were at the end of the old hall. It was with an effort that Dan
+brought himself to enter the room, for there flashed into his mind the
+vision of the last time he was there,--the cold silver moonlight, the
+dark burly form at the casement, the white drawn face of Claire de la
+Fontaine, and then the sharp flash and crack of the pistol.
+
+But with an impatient gesture, as if to thrust aside these tragic
+memories, he stepped across the threshold, and kneeling at the hearth,
+took the wood from Tom's arms and began to lay a fire. In the meantime
+his friend fumbled at the window casements, opened them, and let in the
+light of day and the pure air of out-of-doors. Soon the fire was
+crackling cheerily on the great andirons and casting its bright
+reflection on the dark oak panelling of the walls. Nothing had been
+disturbed--the old cabinet with the lions' heads stood opposite the
+window; the little _escritoire_, behind which he had crouched on the
+fatal night, was pushed back against the wall; the chairs, the tables,
+thick with dust, stood just as they had been standing for many years.
+
+"Do you realize, Tom," Dan said, as they stood side by side watching the
+blazing logs, "that it is sixteen years since General Pointelle stayed at
+the Inn and used this room? And the treasure, if there is any treasure,
+has been mouldering here all that time."
+
+"Let's get at it," said Tom. "I confess this place gives me the creeps.
+Have you got my translation of the directions?"
+
+"Yes, here it is." Dan spread out the bit of paper on one of the tables.
+"'The hidden door is released by a spring beneath the hand of the lady in
+the picture nearest the fireplace on the north side of the room.' Ah!
+that must be it--that old landscape let into the panel there." He walked
+nearer and examined it closely.
+
+It was a simple landscape, a garden in the foreground, forest and hills
+in the distance; and in the midst a lady in Eighteenth century costume
+caressing the head of a greyhound. It was beautifully mellow in tone, and
+might well have been a production of Gainsborough, though the Frosts had
+preserved no such tradition.
+
+Dan began to fumble, according to the directions, beneath the hand of
+the stately lady, pressing vigourously here and there with thumb and
+forefinger. "What's that?" he cried suddenly. A faint click, as of a
+spring in action, had sounded sharp in the stillness, but apparently with
+no other effect. "By Jove!" he exclaimed, "I believe there is something
+behind it. You heard the click? See there! the panel's opened a bit at
+the side." Surely enough, there was a long crack on the right--the length
+of the picture. "Here, let's push."
+
+Careless of the landscape, they put their hands upon the panel and
+pressed with all their force to the left. It yielded slowly, slipping
+back side-wise into the wall, and revealed a narrow opening, beyond which
+was a little circular stairway, leading apparently to some chamber above.
+
+"Here's the entrance to the secret chamber all right," Dan exclaimed.
+"Let's see where it goes to." He climbed in and started up the winding
+flight of stairs, Tom close behind him. About half way up the height
+of the Oak Parlour he came to a door. "Can't go any farther," he
+called to Tom.
+
+"What's the matter?"
+
+"There's a door here; it leads, evidently, into some little room between
+the Oak Parlour and the bedroom next. Who would ever have guessed it?"
+
+"Can't you open the door; is it locked?"
+
+Dan fumbled about till he found and turned the knob. "No," he answered.
+"I've opened it. But it's pitch dark inside. Get a candle."
+
+He waited anxiously while Tom went below again to get a candle, a
+strange feeling of dread creeping over him now that at last he was about
+to penetrate the secret which had been of such tragic purport in his
+life. In a moment Tom had returned, a candle in either hand, one of
+which he handed to Dan, and together they entered the secret chamber. It
+was a little room scarcely six feet square, without light, and so far as
+they could see without ventilation. As they stood looking about the
+candle flickered strangely casting weird shadows over the walls.
+Suddenly they saw at their feet a tiny golden casket, and then, in a
+corner of the room a row of small cloth bags, several of which had been
+ripped open, so that a stream of golden coin flowed out upon the floor.
+Nearby stood another little golden chest; and Tom, lifting the lid,
+started back astonished. For there sparkling and glowing in the candle
+light as though they were living moving things, lay a heap of precious
+gems--diamonds, rubies, opals, sapphires, amethysts, that might have
+been the ransom of a princess.
+
+"It's a treasure right enough!" cried Dan. "But what's this?" He turned
+to the opposite corner where there lay a heap of something covered with a
+great black cloth. They approached gingerly, and Dan stooped and picked
+up an edge of the covering. "It's a cloak," he exclaimed. Startled, he
+paused for a moment; then quickly pulled the cloak away, uncovering, to
+their horror, a lifeless body.
+
+"Tom!" Dan cried in a ghastly whisper. "A man has died here."
+
+Tom held the candle over the gruesome heap. "But who?" he asked in a
+hoarse whisper.
+
+For reply Dan pointed significantly to the cloak which he had dropped on
+the floor.
+
+"What!" cried Tom. "Good God! the old Marquis! But how? I don't
+understand--" he added, staring blankly.
+
+"He must have come here the afternoon he pretended to leave the Inn, must
+have learned the secret passage somehow. It was he who loosened the
+casement in the Oak Parlour that night, and got his message to Bonhomme.
+He was waiting here for him. Can't you see it all--the panel slipped
+back; he couldn't open it again; Bonhomme didn't come; he was caught like
+a rat in a trap."
+
+"My God, what a fate!"
+
+"We can't leave his body here. We must give it decent burial, you and I,
+Tom, for we can't let this be known."
+
+"And the treasure?"
+
+"Ah! there was treasure, wasn't there? Wait, let's see what is in the
+little casket." He picked up the golden casket that they had stepped over
+as they entered, and raised the lid. A single scrap of paper was inside
+on the little velvet cushion, inscribed in the same handwriting as the
+paper of directions, "_Pour Eloise de Boisdhyver_."
+
+"But come," Tom whispered, holding back the door, "I can't stand this any
+longer. We'll come back again, and do what must be done. Come, Dan."
+
+Dan gave a last look into the strange horrible little room, then he
+followed his friend. They closed the door behind them and crept slowly
+down the narrow winding stairs to the Oak Parlour, leaving the
+treasure in the secret chamber and the Marquis guarding it in the
+silence and darkness of death. What had been so basely striven for was
+sorrily won at last.
+
+THE END.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Inn at the Red Oak, by Latta Griswold
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Inn at the Red Oak, by Latta Griswold
+
+Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the
+copyright laws for your country before downloading or redistributing
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+*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!*****
+
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+Title: The Inn at the Red Oak
+
+Author: Latta Griswold
+
+Release Date: February, 2006 [EBook #9856]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on October 24, 2003]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE INN AT THE RED OAK ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Mary Meehan, David Garcia
+and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+THE INN AT THE RED OAK
+
+BY LATTA GRISWOLD
+
+1917
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: "It's a treasure right enough!" cried Dan.]
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+PART I
+THE OLD MARQUIS
+
+I THE MARQUIS ARRIVES AT THE INN
+
+II THE LION'S EYE
+
+III THE MARQUIS AT NIGHT
+
+IV THE OAK PARLOUR
+
+V THE WALK THROUGH THE WOODS
+
+
+PART II
+THE TORN SCRAP OF PAPER
+
+VI THE HALF OF AN OLD SCRAP OF PAPER
+
+VII A DISAPPEARANCE
+
+VIII GREEN LIGHTS
+
+IX RECOLLECTIONS OF A FRENCH EXILE
+
+X MIDNIGHT VIGILS
+
+
+PART III
+THE SCHOONER IN THE COVE
+
+XI THE SOUTHERN CROSS
+
+XII TOM TURNS THE TABLES
+
+XIII MADAME DE LA FONTAINE
+
+XIV IN THE FOG
+
+XV NANCY
+
+XVI MADAME AT THE INN
+
+XVII THE MARQUIS LEAVES THE INN
+
+
+PART IV
+THE ATTACK ON THE INN
+
+XVIII THE AVENUE OF MAPLES
+
+XIX THE ATTACK
+
+XX THE OAK PARLOUR
+
+XXI THE TREASURE
+
+
+
+
+The Inn at the Red Oak
+
+
+
+
+PART I
+
+THE OLD MARQUIS
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+THE MARQUIS ARRIVES AT THE INN
+
+
+By the end of the second decade of the last century Monday Port had
+passed the height of prosperity as one of the principal depots for the
+West Indian trade. The shipping was rapidly being transferred to New York
+and Boston, and the old families of the Port, having made their fortunes,
+in rum and tobacco as often as not, were either moving away to follow the
+trade or had acquiesced in the changed conditions and were settling down
+to enjoy the fruit of their labours. The harbour now was frequently
+deserted, except for an occasional coastwise trader; the streets began to
+wear that melancholy aspect of a town whose good days are more a memory
+than a present reality; and the old stage roads to Coventry and Perth
+Anhault were no longer the arteries of travel they once had been.
+
+To the east of Monday Port, across Deal Great Water, an estuary of the
+sea that expanded almost to the dignity of a lake, lay a pleasant rolling
+wooded country known in Caesarea as Deal. It boasted no village, scarcely
+a hamlet. Dr. Jeremiah Watson, a famous pedagogue and a graduate of
+Kingsbridge, had started his modest establishment for "the education of
+the sons of gentlemen" on Deal Hill; there were half-a-dozen prospering
+farms, Squire Pembroke's Red Farm and Judge Meath's curiously lonely but
+beautiful House on the Dunes among them; a little Episcopalian chapel on
+the shores of the Strathsey river, a group of houses at the cross roads
+north of Level's Woods, and the Inn at the Red Oak,--and that was all.
+
+In its day this inn had been a famous hostelry, much more popular with
+travellers than the ill-kept provincial hotels in Monday Port; but now
+for a long time it had scarcely provided a livelihood for old Mrs. Frost,
+widow of the famous Peter who for so many years had been its popular
+host. No one knew when the house had been built; though there was an old
+corner stone on which local antiquarians professed to decipher the
+figures "1693," and that year was assigned by tradition as the date of
+its foundation.
+
+It was a long crazy building, with a great sloping roof, a wide porch
+running its entire length, and attached to its sides and rear in all
+sorts of unexpected ways and places were numerous out houses and offices.
+Behind its high brick chimneys rose the thick growth of Lovel's Woods,
+crowning the ridge that ran between Beaver Pond and the Strathsey river
+to the sea. The house faced southwards, and from the cobbled court before
+it meadow and woodland sloped to the beaches and the long line of sand
+dunes that straggled out and lost themselves in Strathsey Neck. To the
+east lay marshes and the dunes and beyond them the Strathsey, two miles
+wide where its waters met those of the Atlantic; west lay the great
+curve, known as the Second Beach, the blue surface of Deal Bay, and a
+line of rocky shore, three miles in length, terminated by Rough Point,
+near which began the out-lying houses of Monday Port.
+
+The old hostelry took its name from a giant oak which grew at its
+doorstep just to one side of the maple-lined driveway that led down to
+the Port Road, a hundred yards or so beyond. This enormous tree spread
+its branches over the entire width and half the length of the roof.
+Ordinarily, of course, its foliage was as green as the leaves on the
+maples of the avenue or on the neighbouring elms, and the name of the Inn
+might have seemed to the summer or winter traveller an odd misnomer; but
+in autumn when the frost came early and the great mass of green flushed
+to a deep crimson it could not have been known more appropriately than as
+the Inn at the Red Oak.
+
+It was a solidly-built house, such as even in the early part of the
+nineteenth century men were complaining they could no longer obtain;
+built to weather centuries of biting southeasters, and--the legend
+ran--to afford protection in its early days against Indians. At the time
+of the Revolution it had been barricaded, pierced with portholes, and had
+served, like innumerable other houses from Virginia to Massachusetts, as
+Washington's headquarters. When Tom Pembroke knew it best, its old age
+and decay had well set in.
+
+Pembroke was the son of the neighbouring squire, whose house, known as
+the Red Farm, lay In the little valley on the other side of the Woods at
+the head of Beaver Pond. From the time he had been able to thread his way
+across the woodland by its devious paths--Tom had been at the Inn almost
+every day to play with Dan Frost, the landlord's son. They had played in
+the stables, then stocked with a score of horses, where now there were
+only two or three; in the great haymows of the old barn in the clearing
+back of the Inn; in the ramshackle garret under that amazing roof; or,
+best of all, in the abandoned bowling-alley, where they rolled
+dilapidated balls at rickety ten-pins.
+
+When Tom and Dan were eighteen--they were born within a day of each
+other one bitter February--old Peter died, leaving the Inn to his wife.
+Mrs. Frost pretended to carry on the business, but the actual task of
+doing so soon devolved upon her son. And in this he was subjected to
+little interference; for the poor lady, kindly inefficient soul that she
+was, became almost helpless with rheumatism. But indeed it was rather on
+the farm than to the Inn that more and more they depended for their
+living. In the social hierarchy of Caesarea the Pembrokes held
+themselves as vastly superior to the Frosts; but thanks to the
+easy-going democratic customs of the young republic, more was made of
+this by the women than the men.
+
+The two boys loved each other devotedly, though love is doubtless the
+last word they would have chosen to express their relation. Dan was tall,
+dark, muscular; he had a well-shaped head on his square shoulders; strong
+well-cut features; a face that the sun had deeply tanned and dark hair
+that it had burnished with gold. Altogether he was a prepossessing lad,
+though he looked several years older than he was, and he was commonly
+treated by his neighbours with a consideration that his years did not
+merit. Tom Pembroke was fairer; more attractive, perhaps, on first
+acquaintance; certainly more boyish in appearance and behaviour. He was
+quicker in his movements and in his mental processes; more aristocratic
+in his bearing. His blue eyes were more intelligent than Dan's, but no
+less frank and kindly. Young Frost admired his friend almost as much as
+he cared for him; for Dan, deprived of schooling, had a reverence for
+learning, of which Tom had got a smattering at Dr. Watson's establishment
+for "the sons of gentlemen" on the nearby hill.
+
+One stormy night in early January, the eve of Dan Frost's twenty-second
+birthday, the two young men had their supper together at the Inn, and
+afterwards sat for half-an-hour in the hot, stove-heated parlour until
+Mrs. Frost began to nod over her knitting.
+
+"Off with you, boys," she said at length; "you will be wanting to smoke
+your dreadful pipes. Nancy will keep me company."
+
+They took instant advantage of this permission and went into the deserted
+bar, where they made a roaring fire on the great hearth, drew their
+chairs near, filled their long clay pipes with Virginia tobacco, and fell
+to talking.
+
+"Think of it!" exclaimed young Frost, as he took a great whiff at his
+pipe; "here we are--the middle of the winter--and not a guest in the
+house. Why we used to have a dozen travellers round the bar here, and the
+whole house bustling. I've known my father to serve a hundred and more
+with rum on a night like this. Now we do a fine business if we serve as
+many in a winter. Times have changed since we were boys."
+
+"Aye," Tom agreed, "and it isn't so long ago, either. It seemed to me as
+if the whole county used to be here on a Saturday night."
+
+"I'm thinking," resumed Dan musingly, "of throwing up the business,
+what's the use of pretending to keep an inn? If it wasn't for mother
+and for Nancy, I'd clear out, boy; go off and hunt my fortune. As it is,
+with what I make on the farm and lose on the house, I just pull through
+the year."
+
+"By gad," exclaimed Tom, "I'd go with you, Dan. I'm tired to my soul with
+reading law in father's office. Why, you and I haven't been farther than
+Coventry to the county fair, or to Perth Anhault to make a horse trade.
+I'd like to see the world, go to London and Paris. I've wanted to go to
+France ever since that queer Frenchman was here--remember?--and told us
+those jolly tales about the Revolution and the great Napoleon. We were
+hardly more than seven or eight then, I guess."
+
+"I would like to go, hanged if I wouldn't," said Dan. "I'm getting more
+and more discontented. But there's not much use crying for the moon, and
+France might as well be the moon, for all of me." He relapsed then into a
+brooding silence. It was hard for an inn-keeper to be cheerful in
+midwinter with an empty house. Tom too was silent, dreaming vividly, if
+vaguely, of the France he longed to see.
+
+"Hark!" exclaimed Dan presently. "How it blows! There must be a big sea
+outside to-night."
+
+He strode to the window, pushed back the curtains of faded chintz, and
+stared out into the darkness. The wind was howling in the trees and about
+the eaves of the old inn, the harsh roar of the surf mingled with the
+noise of the storm, and the sleet lashed the window-panes in fury.
+
+"You will not be thinking of going home tonight, Tom?"
+
+"Not I," Pembroke answered, for he was as much at home in Dan's enormous
+chamber as he was in his own little room under the roof at the Red Farm.
+
+As he turned from the window, the door into the parlour opened, and a
+young girl quietly slipped in and seated herself in the chimney-corner.
+
+"Hello, Nance," Dan exclaimed, as she entered; "come close, child; you
+need to be near the fire on a night like this."
+
+"Mother is asleep," the girl answered briefly, and then, resting her
+chin upon her hands, she fixed her great dark eyes upon the glowing
+logs. She was Dan's foster-sister, eighteen years of age, though she
+looked hardly more than sixteen; a shy, slender, girl, lovely with a
+wild, unusual charm. To Tom she had always been a silent elfin
+creature, delightful as their playmate when a child, but now though
+still so familiar, she seemed in an odd way, to grow more remote.
+Apparently she liked to sit with them on these winter evenings in the
+deserted bar, when Mrs. Frost had gone to bed; and to listen to their
+conversation, though she took little part in it.
+
+As Dan resumed his seat, he looked at her with evident concern, for she
+was shivering as she sat so quietly by the fireside.
+
+"Are you cold, Nance?" he asked.
+
+"A little," she replied. "I was afraid in the parlour with Mother asleep,
+and the wind and the waves roaring so horribly."
+
+"Afraid?" exclaimed Tom, with an incredulous laugh. "I never knew you to
+be really afraid of anything in the world, Nancy."
+
+She turned her dark eyes upon him for the moment, with a sharp
+inquisitive glance which caused him to flush unaccountably. An answering
+crimson showed in her cheeks, and she turned back to the fire. The colour
+fled almost as quickly as it had come, and left her pale, despite the
+glow of firelight.
+
+"I was afraid--to-night," she said, after a moment's silence.
+
+Suddenly there came the sound of a tremendous knocking on the door which
+opened from the bar into the outer porch, and all three started in
+momentary alarm.
+
+Dan jumped to his feet. "Who's that?" he cried.
+
+Again came the vigorous knocking. He ran across the room, let down the
+great oaken beam, and opened the door to the night and storm.
+
+"Come in, travellers." A gust of wind and sleet rushed through the
+opening and stung their faces. With the gust there seemed to blow in the
+figure of a little old man wrapped in a great black coat, bouncing into
+their midst as if he were an India rubber ball thrown by a gigantic hand.
+Behind him strode in Manners, the liveryman of Monday Port.
+
+"Here's a guest for you, Mr. Frost. I confess I did my best to keep him
+in town till morning, but nothing 'd do; he must get to the Inn at the
+Red Oak to-night. We had a hellish time getting here too, begging the
+lady's pardon; but here we are."
+
+Good-naturedly he had taken hold of his fare and, as he spoke, was
+helping the stranger unwrap himself from the enveloping cloak.
+
+"He's welcome," said Dan. "Here, sir, let me help you." He put out his
+hand to steady the curious old gentleman, who, at last, gasping for
+breath and blinking the sleet out of his eyes, had been unrolled by
+Manners from the dripping cloak.
+
+He was a strange figure of a man, they thought, as Dan led him to the
+fire to thaw himself out. He was scarcely more than five and a half feet
+in height, with tiny hands and feet almost out of proportion even to his
+diminutive size. He was an old man, they would have said, though his
+movements were quick and agile as if he were set up on springs. His face,
+small, sharp-featured and weazened, was seamed with a thousand wrinkles.
+His wig was awry, its powder, washed out by the melting sleet, was
+dripping on his face in pasty streaks; and from beneath it had fallen
+wisps of thin grey hair, which plastered themselves against his temples
+and forehead. This last feature was also out of proportion to the rest of
+his physiognomy, for it was of extraordinary height, and of a polished
+smoothness, in strange contrast to his wrinkled cheeks. Beneath shone two
+flashing black eyes, with the fire of youth in them, for all he seemed so
+old. The lower part of his face was less distinctive. He had a small,
+Suddenly there came the sound of a tremendous knocking on the door which
+opened from the bar into the outer porch, and all three started in
+momentary alarm.
+
+Dan jumped to his feet. "Who's that?" he cried.
+
+Again came the vigorous knocking. He ran across the room, let down the
+great oaken beam, and opened the door to the night and storm.
+
+"Come in, travellers." A gust of wind and sleet rushed through the
+opening and stung their faces. With the gust there seemed to blow in the
+figure of a little old man wrapped in a great black coat, bouncing into
+their midst as if he were an India rubber ball thrown by a gigantic hand.
+Behind him strode in Manners, the liveryman of Monday Port.
+
+"Here's a guest for you, Mr. Frost. I confess I did my best to keep him
+in town till morning, but nothing'd do; he must get to the Inn at the Red
+Oak to-night. We had a hellish time getting here too, begging the lady's
+pardon; but here we are."
+
+Good-naturedly he had taken hold of his fare and, as he spoke, was
+helping the stranger unwrap himself from the enveloping cloak.
+
+"He's welcome," said Dan. "Here, sir, let me sharply-pointed nose; a
+weak mouth, half-hidden by drooping white moustaches; and a small sharp
+chin, accentuated by a white beard nattily trimmed to a point. He was
+dressed entirely in black; a flowing coat of French cut, black small
+clothes, black stockings and boots that reached to the calves of his
+little legs. These boots were ornamented with great silver buckles, and
+about his neck and wrists showed bedraggled bits of yellowed lace."
+
+He stood before the fire, speechless still; standing first on one foot
+then on the other; rubbing his hands the while as he held them to the
+grateful warmth.
+
+Nancy had in the meanwhile drawn a glass of rum, and now advancing
+held it toward him a little gingerly. He took it eagerly and drained
+it at a gulp.
+
+"_Merci, ma petite ange; merci, messieurs_" he exclaimed at last; and
+then added in distinct, though somewhat strongly accented English, "I ask
+your pardon. I forget you may not know my language. But now that this
+good liquor has put new life in my poor old bones, I explain myself. I am
+arrived, I infer, at the Inn at the Red Oak; and you, monsieur, though so
+young, I take to be my host. I have your description, you perceive, from
+the good postilion. You will do me the kindness to provide me with supper
+and a bed?"
+
+"Certainly, sir," said Dan. "It is late and we are unprepared, but we
+will put you up somehow. You too, Manners, had best let me bunk you till
+morning; you'll not be going back to the Port tonight? Nancy a fresh
+bumper for Mr. Manners."
+
+"Thankee, sir; I managed to get out with the gentleman yonder, and I
+guess I'll manage to get back. But it's a rare night, masters. Just a
+minute, sir, and I'll be getting his honour's bags.... Thank ye kindly,
+Miss Nancy."
+
+He drained the tumbler of raw spirit that Nancy held out. Then he opened
+the door again and went out into the storm, returning almost at once with
+the stranger's bags.
+
+Dan turned to his sister. "Nancy dear, go stir up Susan and Deborah. We
+must have a fire made in the south chamber and some hot supper got ready.
+Tell Susan to rout out Jesse to help her. Say nothing to Mother; no need
+to disturb her. And now, sir," he continued, turning again to the
+stranger, "may I ask your name?"
+
+The old gentleman ceased his springing seesaw for a moment, and fixed
+his keen black eyes on the questioner.
+
+"_Certainment, monsieur_--certainly, I should say," he replied in a high,
+but not unpleasant, voice. "I am the Marquis de Boisdhyver, at your
+service. I am to travel in the United States--oh! for a long time. I stay
+here, if you are so good as to accommodate me, perhaps till you are weary
+and wish me to go elsewhere. You have been greatly recommended to me by
+my friend,--quiet, remote, secluded, an _auberge_--what you call it?--an
+inn, well-suited to my habits, my tastes, my desire for rest. I am very
+_fatigue_, monsieur."
+
+"Yes," said Dan, with a grim smile, "we are remote and quiet and
+secluded. You are welcome, sir, to what we have. Tom, see that Manners
+has another drink before he goes, will you? and do the honours for our
+guest, while Nance and I get things ready."
+
+As he disappeared into the kitchen, following Nancy, the Marquis looking
+after him with a comical expression of gratitude upon his face. Tom drew
+another glass of rum, which Manners eagerly, if rashly, devoured. Then
+the liveryman wrapped himself in his furs, bade them good-night, and
+started out again into the storm for his drive back to Monday Port.
+
+All this time the old gentleman stood warming his feet and hands at the
+fire, watching his two companions with quickly-shifting eyes, or glancing
+curiously over the great bar which the light of the fire and the few
+candles but faintly illuminated.
+
+Having barred the door, Tom turned back to the hearth. "It is a bad
+night, sir."
+
+"But yes," exclaimed the Marquis. "I think I perish. Oh! that dreary
+tavern at your Monday Port. I think when I arrive there I prefer to
+perish. But this, this is the old Inn at the Red Oak, is it not? And it
+dates, yes,--from the year 1693? The old inn, eh, by the great tree?"
+
+"Yes, certainly," Pembroke answered; "at least, that is the date that
+some people claim is on the old cornerstone. You have been here before
+then, sir?"
+
+"I?" exclaimed Monsieur de Boisdhyver. "Oh, no! not I. I have heard from
+my friend who was here some years ago."
+
+"Oh, I see. And you have come far to-day?"
+
+"From Coventry, monsieur--Monsieur--?"
+
+"Pembroke," Tom replied, with a little start.
+
+"Ah! yes, Monsieur Pembroke. A member of the household?"
+
+"No--a friend."
+
+"I make a mistake," quickly interposed the traveller, "Pardon. I am come
+from Coventry, Monsieur Pembroke, in an everlasting an eternal stage, a
+monster of a carriage, monsieur. It is only a few days since that I
+arrive from France."
+
+"Ah, France!" exclaimed Tom, recalling that only a little while before he
+and Dan had been dreaming of that magic country. And here was a person
+who actually lived in France, who had just come from there, who
+extraordinarily chose to leave that delightful land for the Inn at the
+Red Oak in mid-winter.
+
+"France," he repeated; "all my life, sir, I have been longing to
+go there."
+
+"So?" said the Marquis, raising his white eyebrows with interest. "You
+love _ma belle patrie_, eh? _Qui Sait_?--you will perhaps some day go
+there. You have interests, friends in my country?"
+
+"No, none," Tom answered. "I wish I had. You come from Paris, sir?"
+
+"_Mais oui_."
+
+For some time they chatted in such fashion, the Marquis answering Tom's
+many questions with characteristic French politeness, but turning ever
+and anon a pathetic glance toward the door through which Dan and Nancy
+had disappeared. It was with undisguised satisfaction that he greeted
+young Frost when he returned to announce that supper was ready.
+
+"I famish!" the old gentleman exclaimed. "I have dined to-day on a
+biscuit and a glass of water."
+
+They found the kitchen table amply spread with food,--cold meats, hot
+eggs and coffee, and a bottle of port. Monsieur de Boisdhyver ate
+heartily and drank his wine with relish, gracefully toasting Nancy as he
+did so. When his meal was finished, he begged with many excuses to be
+shown to his bedroom; and indeed his fatigue was evident. Dan saw him to
+the great south chamber, carrying a pair of lighted candles before. He
+made sure that all had been done that sulky sleepy maids could be induced
+to do, and then left him to make ready for the night.
+
+Lights were extinguished in the parlour and the bar, the fires were
+banked, and the two young men went up to Dan's own room. There on either
+side of the warm hearth, had been drawn two great four-posted beds, and
+it took the lads but a moment to tumble into them.
+
+"It's queer," said Dan, as he pulled the comfort snugly about his
+shoulders, calling to Tom across the way; "it's queer--the old chap
+evidently means to stay awhile. What does a French marquis want in a
+deserted hole like this, I'd like to know? But if he pays, why the longer
+he stays the better."
+
+"I hope he does," said Tom sleepily. "He has a reason, I fancy, for he
+asked questions enough while you were out seeing to his supper. He seems
+to know the place almost as well as if he had been here before, though he
+said he hadn't. But, by gad, I wish you and I were snug in a little hotel
+on the banks of the Seine to-night and not bothering our heads about a
+doddering old marquis who hadn't sense enough to stay there."
+
+"Wish we were," Dan replied. "Good-night," he called, realizing that his
+friend was too sleepy to lie awake and discuss any longer their
+unexpected guest.
+
+"Good-night," murmured Tom, and promptly drifted away into dreams of the
+wonderful land he had never seen. As for Dan he lay awake a long time,
+wondering what could possibly have brought the old Marquis to the
+deserted inn at such a time of the year and on such a night.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+THE LIONS EYE
+
+
+Toward daylight the storm blew itself out, the wind swung round to the
+northwest, and the morning dawned clear and cold, with a sharp breeze
+blowing and a bright sun shining upon a snow-clad, ice-crusted world and
+a sparkling sapphire sea.
+
+Dan had risen early and had set Jesse to clear a way across the court and
+down the avenue to the road. The maids, astir by dawn, were no longer
+sulky but bustled about at the preparation of an unusually good breakfast
+in honour of the new guest.
+
+Mrs. Frost, who habitually lay till nine or ten o'clock behind the
+crimson curtains of her great bed, had caught wind of something out of
+the ordinary, demanded Nancy's early assistance, and announced her
+intention of breakfasting with the household.
+
+She was fretful during the complicated process of her toilette and so
+hurt the feelings of her foster-daughter, that when Dan came to take her
+into the breakfast room, Nancy found an excuse for not accompanying them.
+
+The Marquis was awaiting their appearance. He stood with his back-to the
+fire, a spruce and carefully-dressed little figure, passing remarks upon
+the weather with young Pembroke, who leaned his graceful length against
+the mantelpiece.
+
+The noble traveller was presented with due ceremony to Mrs. Frost, who
+greeted him with old-world courtesy. She had had, indeed, considerably
+more association with distinguished personages than had most of the dames
+of the neighbouring farms who considered themselves her social superiors.
+She welcomed Monsieur de Boisdhyver graciously, enquiring with interest
+of his journey and with solicitude as to his rest during the night. She
+received with satisfaction his rapturous compliments on the comforts that
+had been provided him, on the beauty of the surrounding country upon
+which he had looked from the windows of his chamber, and on her own
+condescension in vouchsafing to breakfast with them. She was delighted
+that he should find the Inn at the Red Oak so much to his taste that he
+proposed to stay with them indefinitely.
+
+They were soon seated at the breakfast-table and had addressed
+themselves to the various good things that black Deborah had provided.
+The native Johnny cakes, made of meal ground by their own windmill, the
+Marquis professed to find particularly tempting.
+
+Despite Mrs. Frost's questions, despite his own voluble replies, Monsieur
+de Boisdhyver gave no hint, that there was any deeper reason for his
+seeking exile at the Inn of the Red Oak than that he desired rest and
+quiet and had been assured that he would find them there. And who had so
+complimented their simple abode of hospitality?
+
+"Ah, madame," he murmured, lifting his tiny hands, "so many!"
+
+"But I fear, monsieur," replied his hostess, "that you, who are
+accustomed to the luxuries of a splendid city like Paris, to so many
+things of which we read, will find little to interest and amuse you in
+our remote countryside."
+
+"As for interest, madame," the Marquis protested, "there are the beauties
+of nature, your so delightful household, my few books, my writing; and
+for amusement, I have my violin;--I so love to play. You will not
+mind?--perhaps, enjoy it?"
+
+"Indeed yes," said Mrs. Frost. "Dan, too, is a fiddler after a fashion;
+and as for Nancy, she has a passion for music, and dreams away many an
+evening while my son plays his old tunes."
+
+"Ah, yes," said the Marquis, "Mademoiselle Nancy, I have not the pleasure
+to see her this morning?"
+
+"No," replied Mrs. Frost, flushing a trifle at the recollection of why
+Nancy was not present, "she is somewhat indisposed--a mere trifle. You
+will see her later in the day. But, monsieur, you should have come to us
+in the spring or the summer, for then the country is truly beautiful;
+now, with these snow-bound roads, when not even the stagecoach passes, we
+are indeed lonely and remote."
+
+"It is that," insisted the Marquis, "which so charms me. When one is
+old and when one has lived a life too occupied, it is this peace,
+this quiet, this remoteness one desires. To walk a little, to sit by
+your so marvellously warm fires, to look upon your beautiful country,
+_cest bou_!"
+
+He held her for a moment with his piercing little eyes, a faint smile
+upon his lips, as though to say that it was impossible he should be
+convinced that he had not found precisely what he was seeking, and
+insisting, as it were, that his hostess take his words as the compliment
+they were designed to be.
+
+Before she had time to reply, he had turned to Dan. "What a fine harbour
+you have, Monsieur Frost," he said, pointing through the window toward
+the Cove, separated from the river and the sea by the great curve of
+Strathsey Neck, its blue waters sparkling now in the light of the
+morning sun.
+
+"Yes," replied Dan, glancing out upon the well-known shoreline, "it is a
+good harbour, though nothing, of course, to compare with a Port. But it's
+seldom that we see a ship at anchor here, now."
+
+"There is, however," inquired the Marquis with interest, "anchorage for a
+vessel, a large vessel?"
+
+"Yes, indeed," Tom interrupted, "in the old days when my father had his
+ships plying between Havana and the Port, he would often have them anchor
+in the Cove for convenience in lading them with corn from the farm."
+
+"And they were large ships?"
+
+"Full-rigged, sir; many of 'em, and drawing eight feet at least."
+
+"_Eh bien_! And the old Inn, madame, it dates, your son tells me,
+from 1693?"
+
+"We think so, sir, though I have no positive knowledge of its existence
+before 1750. My husband purchased the place in '94, and it had then been
+a hostelry for some years, certainly from the middle of the century. But
+we have made many additions. Danny dear, perhaps it will interest the
+Marquis if you should take him over the house. We are proud of our old
+inn, sir."
+
+"And with reason, madame. If monsieur will, I shall be charmed."
+
+"I will leave you then with my son. Give me your arm, Dan, to the
+parlour. Unfortunately, Monsieur le Marquis, affliction has crippled me
+and I spend the day in my chair in the blue parlour. I shall be so
+pleased, if you will come and chat with me. Tommy, you will be staying to
+dinner with us?"
+
+"Thank you, Mrs. Frost, but I must get to the Port for the day. Mother
+and Father are leaving by the afternoon stage, if it gets through. They
+are going to spend the winter in Coventry. But I shall be back to-night
+as I have promised Dan to spend that time with him."
+
+"We shall be glad to have you, as you know."
+
+Soon after Mrs. Frost had left the breakfast-room and Tom had started
+forth with horse and sleigh, Dan returned. The Marquis promptly reminded
+him of the suggestion that he should be taken over the Inn. It seemed to
+Dan an uninteresting way to entertain his guest and the morning was a
+busy one. However, he promised to be ready at eleven o'clock to show the
+Marquis all there was in the old house.
+
+As Dan went about the offices and stables, performing himself much of the
+work that in prosperous times fell to grooms and hostlers, he found
+himself thinking about his new guest. Dan knew enough of French history
+to be aware there were frequent occasions in France when partisans of the
+various factions, royalist, imperialist, or republican, found it best to
+expatriate themselves. He knew that in times past many of the most
+distinguished exiles had found asylum in America. But at the present, he
+understood, King Louis Philippe, was reigning quietly at the Tuileries
+and, moreover, the Marquis de Boisdhyver, mysterious as he was, did not
+suggest the political adventurer of whom Dan as a boy had heard his
+parents tell such extraordinary tales. In the few years immediately after
+the final fall of the great Bonaparte there had been an influx of
+imperialistic supporters in America, some of whom had even found their
+way to Monday Port and Deal. One of these, Dan remembered, had stayed
+for some months in '14 or '15 at the Inn at the Red Oak, and it was he
+whom Tom had recalled the night before as having told them stories of his
+adventurous exploits in the wars of the Little Corporal. But it was too
+long after Napoleon's fall to connect his present guest with the imperial
+exiles. He could imagine no ulterior reason for the Marquis's coming and
+was inclined to put it down as the caprice of an old restless gentleman
+who had a genuine mania for solitude. Of solitude, certainly, he was apt
+to get his fill at the Inn at the Red Oak.
+
+At eleven o'clock he returned to keep his appointment. He found the
+Marquis established at a small table in the bar by an east window, from
+which was obtained a view of the Cove, of the sand-dunes along the Neck,
+and of the open sea beyond. A writing-desk was on the table, ink and
+quills had been provided, a number of books and papers were strewn about,
+and Monsieur de Boisdhyver was apparently busy with his correspondence.
+
+"Enchanted" he exclaimed, as he pulled out a great gold watch. "Punctual.
+I find another virtue, monsieur, in a character to which I have already
+had so much reason to pay my compliments. I trust I do not trespass upon
+your more important duties." As he spoke, he rapidly swept the papers
+into the writing-desk, closed and locked it, and carefully placed the
+tiny golden key into the pocket of his gayly-embroidered waistcoat.
+
+"Not at all," Dan replied courteously, "I shall be glad to show you
+about. But I fear you will find it cold and dismal, for the greater part
+of the house is seldom used or even entered."
+
+"I bring my cloak," said the Marquis. "Interest will give me warmth. What
+I have already seen of the Inn at the Red Oak is so charming, that I
+doubt not there is much more to delight one. I imagine, monsieur, how gay
+must have been this place once."
+
+He took his great cloak from the peg near the fire where it had been hung
+the night before to dry wrapped himself snugly in it; and then, with a
+little bow, preceded Dan into the cold and draughty corridor that opened
+from the bar into the older part of the house.
+
+This hallway extended fifty or sixty feet to the north wall of the main
+part of the inn whence a large window at the turn of a flight of stairs
+gave light. On the right, extending the same distance as the hall
+itself, was a great room known as the Red Drawing-room, into which Dan
+first showed the Marquis. This room had not been used since father's
+death four or five years before, and for a long time previous to that
+only on the rare occasions when a county gathering of some sort was held
+at the inn. It had been furnished in good taste and style in colonial
+days, but was now dilapidated and musty. The heavy red damask curtains
+were drawn before the windows, and the room was dark and cheerless. Dan
+admitted the dazzling light of the sun; but the Marquis only shivered and
+seemed anxious to pass quickly on.
+
+"You see, sir," observed the young landlord, "it is dismal enough."
+
+"_Mais oui_--_mais oui_," exclaimed the Marquis.
+
+At the foot of the stairway the corridor turned at right angles and ran
+north. On either side opened a number of chambers in like conditions of
+disrepair, which had been used as bedrooms in the palmy days of the
+hostelry. This corridor ended at the bowling-alley, where as children Tom
+and Dan had loved to play. Half-way to the entrance to the bowling-alley
+a third hallway branched off to the right, leading to a similar set of
+chambers. Into all these they entered, the Marquis examining each with
+quick glances, dismissing them with the briefest interest and the most
+obvious comment.
+
+Dan saved the _piece-de-resistance_ till last. This was a little room
+entered from the second corridor just at the turn--the only room indeed,
+as he truthfully said, that merited a visit.
+
+"This," he explained, "we call the Oak Parlour. It is the only room on
+this floor worth showing you. My father brought the wainscoting from an
+old English country-house in Dorsetshire. My father's people were
+Torries, sir, and kept up their connection with the old country."
+
+It was a delightful room into which Dan now admitted the light of day,
+drawing aside the heavy green curtains from the eastern windows. It was
+wainscoted from floor to cornice in old black English oak, curiously and
+elaborately carved, and divided into long narrow panels. The ceiling, of
+similar materials and alike elaborately decorated, was supported by heavy
+transverse beams that seemed solid and strong enough to support the roof
+of a cathedral. On one side two windows opened upon the gallery and court
+and looked out upon the Cove, on the other side stood a cabinet. It was
+the most striking piece of furniture in the room, of enormous dimensions
+and beautifully carved on the doors of the cupboards below and on the
+top-pieces between the mirrors were lion's heads of almost life-size.
+Opposite the heavy door, by which they had entered, was a large
+fireplace, containing a pair of elaborately ornamented brass and irons.
+There was not otherwise a great deal of furniture,--two or three tables,
+some chairs, a deep window-seat, a writing-desk of French design; but
+all, except this last, in keeping with the character of the room, and all
+brought across the seas from the old Dorsetshire mansion, from which
+Peter Frost had obtained the interior.
+
+"_Charmant_!" exclaimed the Marquis. "You have a jewel, _mon ami_; a bit
+of old England or of old France in the heart of America; a room one finds
+not elsewhere in the States. It is a _creation superbe_."
+
+With enthusiastic interest he moved about, touching each article of
+furniture, examining with care the two of three old English landscapes
+that had been let into panels on the west side of the room, pausing in
+ecstacies before the great cabinet and standing before the fireplace as
+if he were warming his hands at that generous hearth.
+
+"Ah, Monsieur Frost, could I but write, read, dream here...!"
+
+"I fear that would be impossible, sir," replied Dan. "It is difficult to
+heat this portion of the house; and in fact, we never use it."
+
+"_Helas_!" exclaimed the Marquis, "those things which allure us in this
+world are so often impossible. Perhaps in the spring, in the summer, when
+there is no longer the necessity of the fire, you will permit me."
+
+"It may be, monsieur," Dan replied, "that long before the summer comes
+you will have left us."
+
+"_Mais non_!" cried M. de Boisdhyver. "Every hour that I stay but proves
+to me how long you will have to endure my company."
+
+Somewhat ungraciously, it seemed, young Frost made no reply to this
+pleasantry; for already he was impatient to be gone. Although the room
+was intensely cold and uncomfortable, still his guest lingered, standing
+before the massive cabinet, exclaiming upon the exquisiteness of the
+workmanship, and every now and then running his dainty fingers along the
+carving of its front. As Dan stood waiting for the Marquis to leave, he
+chanced to glance through the window to the court without, and saw Jesse
+starting out in the sleigh. As he had given him no such order he ran
+quickly to the window, rapped vigourously and then, excusing himself to
+the Marquis, hurried out to ask Jesse to explain his errand.
+
+The Marquis de Boisdhyver stood for a moment, as Dan left him, motionless
+in front of the cabinet. His face was bright with surprise and delight,
+his eyes alert with interest and cunning. After a moment's hesitation he
+stole cautiously to the window, and seeing Frost was engaged in
+conversation with Jesse, he sprang back with quick steps to the cabinet.
+He hastily ran the tips of his fingers along the beveled edges of the
+wide shelf from end to end several times, each time the expression of
+alertness deepening into one of disappointment. He stopped for a moment
+and listened. All was quiet. Again with quick motions he felt beneath the
+edges. Suddenly his eyes brightened and he breathed quickly; his
+sensitive fingers had detected a slight unevenness in the smooth
+woodwork. Again he paused and listened, and then pressed heavily until he
+heard a slight click. He glanced up, as directly in front of him the eye
+of one of the carved wooden lion's heads on the front of the board winked
+and slowly raised, revealing a small aperture. With a look of
+satisfaction, the Marquis thrust his fingers into the tiny opening and
+drew forth a bit of tightly folded yellow paper; he glanced at it for an
+instant and thrust it quickly into the pocket of his waistcoat. Then he
+lowered the lid of the lion's eye. There was a slight click again; and he
+turned, just as Dan reappeared in the doorway.
+
+"Excuse my leaving you so abruptly," said Frost, "but I saw Jesse going
+off with the sleigh, and as I had given him no orders, I wanted to know
+where he was going. But it was all right. Are you ready, sir? I am afraid
+if we stay much longer you will catch cold." This last remark was added
+as the Marquis politely smothered a sneeze with his flimsy lace
+handkerchief.
+
+"_C'est bien_, monsieur. I fear I have taken a little cold. Perhaps it
+would be just as well if we explore no further to-day."
+
+"If you prefer, sir," answered Dan, holding the door open for his guest
+to go out. Monsieur de Boisdhyver turned and surveyed the Oak Parlour
+once more before he left it. "Ah!" he exclaimed, "this so charming
+room--it is of a perfection! Dorsetshire, you say? ... To me it would
+seem French." They walked back rapidly along the dark cold corridors to
+the bar. All the way the Marquis, wrapped tightly in his great cloak,
+kept the thumb of his left hand in his waistcoat pocket, pressing
+securely against the paper he had taken from the old cabinet in the Oak
+Parlour.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+THE MARQUIS AT NIGHT
+
+
+The household of the Inn at the Red Oak soon became accustomed to the
+presence of their new member; indeed, he seemed to them during those
+bleak winter months a most welcome addition. Except for an occasional
+traveller who spent a night or a Sunday at the Inn, he was the only
+guest. He was gregarious and talkative, and would frequently keep them
+for an hour or so at table as he talked to them of his life in France,
+and of his adventures in the exciting times through which his country had
+passed during the last fifty years. He was the cadet, he told them, of a
+noble family of the Vendee, the head of which, though long faithful to
+the exiled Bourbons, had gone over to Napoleon upon the establishment of
+the Empire. But as for himself--Marie-Anne-Timelon-Armand de
+Boisdhyver--he still clung to the Imperial cause, and though now for many
+years his age and infirmities had forced him to withdraw from any part in
+intrigues aiming at the restoration of the Empire, his sympathies were
+still keen.
+
+When he talked in this strain, of his thrilling memories of the Terror
+and of the extraordinary days when Bonaparte was Emperor, Dan and Tom
+would listen to him by the hour. But Mrs. Frost preferred to hear the
+Marquis's reminiscences of the _ancien regime_ and of the old court life
+at Versailles. He had been a page, he said, to the unfortunate Marie
+Antoinette; he would cross himself piously at the mention of the magic
+name, and digress rapturously upon her beauty and grace, and bemoan, with
+tears, her unhappy fate. She liked also to hear of the court of Napoleon
+and of the life of the _faubourgs_ in the Paris of the day. On these
+occasions the young men were apt to slip away and leave the Marquis alone
+with Mrs. Frost and Nancy.
+
+For Nancy Monsieur de Boisdhyver seemed to have a fascination. She would
+listen absorbed to his voluble tales, her bright eyes fixed on his
+fantastic countenance, her head usually resting upon her hand, and her
+body bent forward in an attitude of eager attention. She rarely spoke
+even to ask a question; indeed, her only words would be an occasional
+exclamation of interest, or the briefest reply.
+
+During the day their noble guest would potter about the house or, when
+the weather was fine, stroll down to the shore, where he would walk up
+and down the strip of sandy beach in the lee of the wind hour after hour.
+Now and then he wandered out upon the dunes that stretched along the
+Neck; and once, Dan afterwards learned, he paid a call upon old Mrs.
+Meath who lived by herself in the lonely farmhouse on Strathsey Neck,
+that was known as the House of the Dunes.
+
+After supper they were wont to gather in Mrs. Frost's parlour or in the
+old bar before the great hearth on which a splendid fire always blazed;
+and when the Marquis had had his special cup of black coffee, he would
+get out his violin and play to them the long evening through. He played
+well, with the skill of a master of the art, and with feeling. He seemed
+at such times to forget himself and his surroundings; his bright eyes
+would grow soft, a dreamy look would steal into them, and a happy little
+smile play about the corners of his thin pale lips. Obligingly he gave
+Dan lessons, and often the young man would accompany him, in the songs
+his mother had known and loved in her youth, when old Peter had come
+wooing with fiddle in hand.
+
+But best of all were the evenings when the Marquis chose to improvise.
+Plaintive, tender melodies for the most part; prolonged trembling,
+faintly-expiring airs; and sometimes harsh, strident notes that evoked
+weird echoes from the bare wainscoted walls. Mrs. Frost would sit, tears
+of sadness and of pleasure in her eyes, the kindly homely features of her
+face moving with interest and delight. Nancy was usually by the table,
+her sharp little chin propped up on the palms of her hands, never taking
+her fascinated gaze from the musician. Sometimes Tom would look at her
+and wonder of what she could be thinking. For certainly her spirit seemed
+to be far away wandering in a world of dreams and of strange
+inexpressible emotions. For Tom the music stirred delicate thoughts
+bright dreams of beauty and of love; the vivid intangible dreams of
+awakening youth. He had not had much experience with emotion; the story
+of his love affairs contained no more dramatic moments than the stealing
+of occasional kisses from the glowing cheeks of Maria Stonywell, the
+beauty of the Tinterton road, as he had walked back to the old farm with
+her on moonlight evenings.
+
+They would all be sorry when Monsieur pleaded weariness and bade them
+good-night. Sometimes his music so moved the old Frenchman that the tears
+would gather in his faded blue eyes and steal down his powdered cheeks;
+and then, like as not, he was apt to break off suddenly, drop violin and
+bow upon his knees, and exclaim, "_Ah! la musique! mon Dieu, mon Dieu!
+elle me rappelle ma jeunesse. Et maintenant--et maintenant_!" And then,
+brushing away the tears he would rise, make them a courtly bow, and hurry
+out of the room.
+
+Dan alone did not fall under his spell. He and Tom would often talk of
+their strange guest after they were gone to bed in the great chamber over
+the dining-room.
+
+"I don't know what it is," Dan said one night, "but I am sorry he ever
+came to the Inn; I wish he would go away."
+
+"How absurd, old boy!" protested Tom. "He has saved our lives this
+frightful winter. I never knew your mother to be so cheerful and
+contented; Nancy seems to adore him, and you yourself are making the most
+of his fiddle lessons."
+
+"I know," Dan replied, "all that is true, but it is only half the truth.
+Mother's cheerfulness is costing me a pretty penny, for I can't keep her
+from ordering the most expensive things,--wines, and the like,--that we
+can't afford. Maybe Nance adores him, as you say,--she is such a strange
+wild child; but I have never known her to be so unlike herself. We used
+to have good times together--Nance and I. But this winter I see nothing
+of her at all." For the moment Dan forgot his complaint in the tender
+thought of his foster-sister. "It probably is absurd," he added
+presently, "but I don't like it; I don't like him, Tom! He plays the
+fiddle well, I admit but he is so queer and shifty, nosing about, looking
+this way and that, never meeting your eyes. It's just as though he were
+waiting, biding his time, for--I don't know what."
+
+"Nonsense, Dan; you're not an old woman."
+
+"It may be, Tom, but I feel so anyway. The place hasn't seemed the same
+to me since that Frenchman came. I wish he would go away; and apparently
+he means to stay on forever."
+
+"I think you would miss him, if he were to go," insisted Pembroke, "for
+my part I'm glad he is here. To tell the truth, Dan, he's been the life
+of the house."
+
+"He has fascinated you as he has fascinated Mother and Nance," Dan
+replied. "But it stands to reason, boy, that he can't be quite all
+right. What does he want poking about in a deserted old hole like Deal?"
+
+"What he has said a thousand times; just what he so beautifully
+gets--quiet and seclusion."
+
+"Perhaps you are right and I am wrong; but all the same I shall be glad
+to see the last of him."
+
+The night was one of bright moonlight at the end of February. The bedroom
+windows were open to the cold clear air. Tom was not sleepy, and he lay
+for a long time recalling the dreams and emotions that had so stirred him
+earlier in the evening, as he had listened to the Marquis's playing. He
+kept whistling softly to himself such bars of the music as he could
+remember. Dan's chamber faced west, and Tom's bed was so placed that he
+could look out, without raising his head from the pillow, over the court
+in the rear of the Inn and into the misty depths of Lovel's Woods beyond
+the offices and stables.
+
+As he lay half-consciously musing--it must have been near midnight--his
+attention was suddenly riveted upon the court below. It seemed to him
+that he heard footsteps. He was instantly wide awake, and jumped from the
+bed to the window, whence he peered from behind the curtain into the
+courtyard. Close to the wall of the Inn, directly beneath the window, a
+shadow flitted on the moonlight-flooded pavement, and he could hear the
+crumbling of the snow. Cautiously he thrust his head out of the window.
+Moving rapidly along near to the house, was a little figure wrapped in a
+dark cloak, which looked to Tom for all the world like the Marquis de
+Boisdhyver.
+
+For the moment he had the impulse to call to him by name, but the
+conversation he had so recently had with Dan flashed into his mind, and
+he decided to keep still and watch. The figure moved rapidly along the
+west wall of the Inn almost the entire length of the building, until it
+arrived at the entrance of the bowling-alley which abutted from the old
+northern wing. Reaching this it paused for a moment, glancing about; then
+inserted a key, fumbled for a moment with the latch, opened the door, and
+disappeared within.
+
+Tom was perplexed. He could not be sure that it was the Marquis; but
+whether it were or not, he knew that there was no reason for any one
+entering the old portion of the Inn at midnight. His first thought was to
+go down alone and investigate; his second was to waken Dan.
+
+He lowered the window gently, drew the curtains across it, and
+bending over his friend, shook him gently by the shoulder. "Dan, Dan,
+I say; wake up!"
+
+"What's the matter?" exclaimed Dan with a start of alarm, as he sat
+up in bed.
+
+"Nothing, nothing; don't make a noise. I happened to be awake, and
+hearing footsteps under the window, I got up and looked out. I saw some
+one moving along close to the wall until he got to the bowling alley. He
+opened the door and disappeared."
+
+"The door's locked," exclaimed Dan. "Who was it?"
+
+"He had a key, whoever he was then. To tell the truth, Dan, it looked
+like the Marquis; though I couldn't swear to him. I certainly saw
+some one."
+
+"You have not been asleep and dreaming, have you?" asked his friend,
+rubbing his eyes.
+
+"I should say not. I'm going down to investigate; thought you'd like to
+come along."
+
+"So I shall," said Dan, jumping out of bed and beginning to dress. "If
+you really have seen any one, I'll wager you are right in thinking it's
+the old marquis. That is just the sort of thing I have imagined him
+being up to. What he wants though in the old part of the house is more
+than I can think. He has pestered me to get back there ever since I
+showed him over the place the day he arrived. Are you ready? Bring a
+candle, and some matches. Ill just take my gun along on general
+principles. I don't care how soon we get rid of the Marquis de
+Boisdhyver, but I shouldn't exactly like to shoot him out with a load of
+buckshot in his hide."
+
+Tom stood waiting with his boots in hand. Dan went to his bureau and took
+out his father's old pistol, that had done duty in the West India trade
+years ago, when pirates were not romantic memories but genuine menaces.
+
+"Sh!" whispered Dan as he opened the door. "Let's blow out the candle.
+It's moonlight, and we will be safer without it. Be careful as you go
+down stairs not to wake Mother and Nancy."
+
+Tom blew out the candle and slipped the end into his pocket, as he
+tiptoed after Dan down the stairs. At every step the old boards seemed to
+creak as though in pain. As they paused breathless half-way down on the
+landing, they heard no sound save the loud ticking of the clock in the
+hall below and the gentle whispering of the breeze without. The moon
+gave light enough had they needed it, but each of them could have found
+his way through every nook and corner of the Inn in darkness as well as
+in broad day-light. They crept down the short flight from the landing,
+paused and listened at the doors of Mrs. Frost's and Nancy's chambers,
+and then slipped noiselessly into the bar where the logs still glowed on
+the hearth.
+
+"Shall we," asked Tom in a low tone, "go down the corridor or
+around outside?"
+
+"Best outside," Dan whispered. "If we go down the corridor we are like to
+frighten him if he is the Marquis, or get a bullet in our gizzards if he
+is not. Should he be inside, he'll have a light and we can find just
+where he is. I have a notion that it's the Marquis and that he'll be in
+the Oak Parlour. We'd better creep along the porch."
+
+Very softly he unlocked the door, and stepped outside. Tom was close
+behind him. They crept stealthily along next the wall well within the
+shadow of the roof, pausing at every window to peer through the
+cracks of the shutters. But all were dark. As they turned the corner
+of the porch at the end of the main portion of the inn from which
+the north wing extended, Dan suddenly put his hand back and stopped
+Tom. "Wait," he breathed, "there's a light in the Oak Parlour. Stay
+here, while I peek in."
+
+With gun in hand he crept up to the nearest window of the Oak Parlour.
+The heavy shutters were closed, but between the crack made by the warping
+of the wood, he could distinguish a streak of golden light. He waited a
+moment; and, then at the risk of alarming the intruder within, carefully
+tried the shutter. To his great satisfaction it yielded and swung slowly,
+almost noiselessly, back upon its hinges; the inside curtains were drawn;
+but a slight gap had been left. Peering in through this, Dan found he
+could get a view of a small section of the interior,--the end of the
+great Dorsetshire cabinet on the farther side of the room and a part of
+the wall. Before the cabinet, bending over its shelf, stood the familiar
+form of the Marquis de Boisdhyver, apparently absorbed in a minute
+examination of the carving. But Dan's attention was quickly diverted from
+the figure of the old Frenchman, for by his side, also engaged in a
+similar examination of the cabinet, stood Nancy. For a moment he watched
+them with intent interest, but as he could not discover what so absorbed
+them he slipped back to Tom, who was waiting at the turn of the porch.
+
+"It's the Marquis," he whispered in his friend's ear.
+
+"What is he up to?"
+
+"I don't know. Apparently he is examining the old cabinet. But, Tom,
+Nancy is with him and as absorbed in the thing as he is. Look!" he
+exclaimed suddenly. "They've blown out the light."
+
+As he spoke, he pointed to the window, now dark. "Come," he said, making
+an instant decision, "let's hide ourselves in the hall and see if they
+come back."
+
+"But Nancy--?"
+
+"No time for talk now. Come along."
+
+They ran back along the porch, slipped into the bar, and thence into the
+hall. Dan motioned to Tom to conceal himself in a closet beneath the
+stairway, and he himself slipped behind the clock. Hardly were they
+safely hidden thus, than they heard a fumble at the latch of the door
+into the bar. Then the door was pushed open, and the Marquis stepped
+cautiously in the hall. He paused for a moment, listening intently. Then
+he held open the door a little wider; and another figure, quite enveloped
+by a long black coat, entered after him. They silently crossed the hall
+to the door of Nancy's chamber. This the Marquis opened; then bowed low,
+as his companion passed within. They were so close to him that Dan could
+have reached out his hand and touched them. As Nancy entered her room,
+Dan distinctly heard Monsieur de Boisdhyver whisper, "More success next
+time, mademoiselle!"
+
+There was no reply.
+
+The Marquis turned, stole softly up the stairs, and in a moment Dan heard
+the click of the latch as he closed his door. He slipped out from his
+hiding place, and whispered to Tom.
+
+In a few moments they were back again in their bedroom.
+
+"Heavens! man, what do you make of it?" asked Tom.
+
+"Make of it!" exclaimed Dan, "I don't know what to make of it. It's
+incomprehensible. What the devil is that old rascal after, and how has he
+bewitched Nance?"
+
+"Perhaps," suggested Tom, more for Nancy's sake than because he believed
+what he was saying, "it is simply that he is curious, and knowing that
+you don't want him in the old part of the Inn, he has persuaded Nancy to
+take him there at night."
+
+"Nonsense! that couldn't possibly account for such secrecy and caution.
+No, Tom, he has some deviltry on foot, and we must find out what it is."
+
+"That should be simple enough. Ask Nance."
+
+"Ah!" exclaimed his friend, "you don't know Nance as well as I. You may
+be sure he has sworn her to secrecy, and Nance would never betray a
+promise whether she had been wise in making it or not."
+
+"Then go to the old man himself and demand an explanation."
+
+"He'd lie ..."
+
+"Turn him out."
+
+"I could do that, of course. But I think I would rather find out what he
+is up to. It has something to do with the old cabinet in the Oak Parlour.
+I'll find out the mystery of that if I have to hack the thing into a
+thousand pieces. What I hate, is Nance's being mixed up in it."
+
+"We can watch again."
+
+"Yes; we'll do that. In the meanwhile, I am going to investigate that old
+ark myself. There's something about, something concealed in it, that he
+wants to get. When I took him in there the day after he came, he
+couldn't keep his eyes off it. If you can get Nance out of the way
+tomorrow afternoon, I'll send the Marquis off with Jesse for that
+long-talked-of visit to Mondy Port; and I'll give Jesse instructions not
+to get him back before dark. And while they are away, I'll investigate
+the Oak Parlour myself. Can you get Nance off?"
+
+"I might ask her to go and look over the Red Farm with me. She might like
+the walk through the woods. I could easily manage to be away for three or
+four hours."
+
+"Good! You may think it odd, Tom, that I should seem to distrust Nance. I
+don't distrust her, but there has always been a mystery about her. Mother
+knows a good deal more than she has even been willing to tell to me, or
+even to Nance, I guess. I know nothing except that she is of French
+extraction, and I have sometimes wondered since she has been so often
+with the old Marquis this winter, if he didn't know something about her.
+It flashed over me to-night as I saw them in that deserted room. Whatever
+is a-foot, I am going to get at the bottom of it. We will watch again
+to-morrow night. I heard him whisper as he left Nance, 'More success next
+time!' This sort of thing may have been going on for a month."
+
+They undressed again, and Dan put his gun away in his bureau. "We may
+have use for that yet, Tommy," he said. "It would do me good, after what
+I have seen to-night, to put a bit of lead into the Marquis de Boisdhyver
+as a memento of his so delightful sojourn at _L'Auberge au Chene Rouge_."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+THE OAK PARLOUR
+
+
+The two young men felt self-conscious and ill-at-ease the next morning at
+the breakfast table, but apparently their embarrassment was neither
+shared nor observed. Mrs. Frost had kept her room, but Nancy and the
+Marquis were in their accustomed places; the old gentleman, chattering
+away in a fashion that demanded few answers and no attention; Nancy,
+speaking only to ask necessary questions as to their wants at table and
+meeting the occasional glances of Dan and Tom without suspicion. Tom
+could scarcely realize in that bright morning light, that only seven or
+eight hours earlier he and his friend had spied upon their companions
+prowling about in the abandoned wing of the inn.
+
+Monsieur de Boisdhyver assented readily enough when Dan proposed that
+Jesse should take him that day to Monday Port. He was curious to see the
+old town, he said, having heard much of it from his friend; much also
+from his celebrated compatriot, the Marquis de Lafayette.
+
+Tom took occasion during the discussion to ask Nancy if she would walk
+across the woods with him after dinner, that he might pay a visit to the
+Red Farm and see that all was going well in the absence of his parents.
+He felt that the tones of his voice were charged with unwonted
+significance; but Nancy accepted the invitation with a simple expression
+of pleasure. When Mrs. Frost was informed of the plans for the day, she
+came near thwarting Dan's carefully laid schemes. She had counted upon
+Jesse to do her bidding and had, she declared, arranged that Nancy should
+help her put together the silken patches of the quilt upon which she was
+perennially engaged. Her foster-daughter's glance of displeasure at this
+was tinder to the old lady's temper, and Dan entered most opportunely.
+
+"So!" she was exclaiming, "I am always the one to be sacrificed when it
+is a question of some one's else pleasure."
+
+"Mother, Mother," Dan protested good-naturedly, as he bent over to kiss
+her good-morning, "aren't you ever willing to spend a day alone with me?"
+
+"Danny dear," cried the old lady, as she began to smile again, "you know
+I'm always willing. Of course, if Tom wants Nancy to go, the quilt can
+wait; it has waited long enough, in all conscience. There, my dear," she
+added, turning to the girl, "order an early dinner, and since you are
+going to the Red Farm, you might as well come back by the dunes and
+enquire for old Mrs. Meath. We have neglected that poor woman shamefully
+this winter."
+
+"Yes, Mother,--if we have time."
+
+"Take the time, my dear," added Mrs. Frost sharply.
+
+"Yes, Mother."
+
+The Marquis started off with Jesse at eleven o'clock, as eager for the
+excursion as a boy; and by half-past twelve Nancy and Tom had set out
+across the woods for the Red Farm. Dan was impatient for them to be gone.
+As soon as he saw them disappear in the woods back of the Inn, he made
+excuses to his mother, and hurried to the north wing. He found the door
+of the bowling alley securely locked, which convinced him that either the
+Marquis or Nancy had taken the key from the closet of his chamber. Having
+satisfied himself, he went directly to the Oak Parlour.
+
+It was cold and dark there. He opened the shutters and drew back the
+curtains, letting in the cheerful midday sun, which revealed all the
+antique, sombre beauty of the room, of the soft landscapes and the
+exquisite carving of the Dorsetshire cabinet. But Dan was in no mood to
+appreciate the old-world beauty of the Oak Parlour. In that cabinet he
+felt sure there was something concealed which would reveal the mystery of
+the Marquis's stay at the inn and possibly the nature of his influence
+over Nancy. Whatever had been the object of the Marquis's search, it had
+not been found: his parting words to Nancy the night before showed that.
+
+Dan took a long look at the cabinet first, estimating the possibility of
+its containing secret drawers. Hidden compartments in old cabinets,
+secret chambers in old houses, subterranean passageways leading to
+dungeons in romantic castles, had been the material of many a tale that
+Dan and Tom had told each other as boys. For years their dearest
+possession had been a forbidden copy of "_The Mysteries of Udolpho_"
+which they read in the mow of the barn lying in the dusty hay. However
+unusual, the situation was real; and he felt himself confronted by as
+hard a problem as he had ever tried to solve in fiction. He knew
+something about carpentry, so that his first step, after examining the
+drawers and cupboards and finding them empty, was to take careful
+measurements of the entire cabinet, particularly of the thicknesses of
+its sides, back, and partitions. It proved a piece of furniture of
+absolutely simple and straightforward construction. After long
+examination and careful soundings he came to the conclusion that a secret
+drawer was an impossibility.
+
+Suddenly an idea occurred to him and he returned to the sitting-room.
+"Mother," he said, "I have been looking over the old cabinet in the Oak
+Parlour, thinking perhaps that I would have it brought into the
+dining-room. I wonder, if by chance, there are any secret drawers in it.
+
+"Secret drawers? What an idea!" exclaimed Mrs. Frost.
+
+"You never knew of any did you?"
+
+"No.... Stop, let me think. Upon my word, I think there was something of
+the sort, but it has been so long ago I have almost forgotten."
+
+"Try to remember, do!" urged Dan, striving to repress his excitement.
+
+"It was not a secret drawer, but there were little hidden
+cubby-holes--three or four of them. I remember, now, your father once
+showed me how they opened. They were little places where the Roman
+Catholics used to hide the pages of their mass-books and such like in the
+days of persecution in England."
+
+"Yes, yes," said Dan, "that makes it awfully interesting. Did father
+ever find anything in them?"
+
+"No, I think not; but, dear me, it was over thirty years ago we brought
+that old cabinet from England,--long before you were born, Dan."
+
+"Can you remember how to open the secret places? I have been looking it
+over, but I can't see where they can be, much less how to get into them."
+
+"There were four of them, I think; all in the carving on the front, in
+the eyes of the lions it seems to me, and in the lion's mouth, or in the
+leaves somewhere. One spring that opened them I recollect, was under the
+ledge of the shelf, another at the back of the cabinet and,--but no, I
+really can't remember where the others were."
+
+Dan was impatient to try his luck at finding them, and hurried back to
+the Oak Parlour. He ran his fingers many times under the ledge of the
+shelf before he heard the click of a tiny spring, and, looking up, saw
+the lion's eyelid wink and slowly open. With an exclamation of
+satisfaction, he thrust his fingers into the tiny aperture, felt
+carefully about, and was chagrined to find it empty. "More success next
+time, _monsieur le marquis_!" he muttered.
+
+At length he found the spring that released the eyelid on the carved lion
+on the other side of the panel. He glanced into the little opening and,
+to his delight, saw the end of a bit of paper tucked away there. He dug
+it out with the blade of his pocket knife and unfolded it. It was yellow
+and brittle with age, covered with writing in a fine clear hand. But he
+was annoyed to discover, as he bent closely over to read it, that it was
+written in French, still worse, part of the paper was missing, for one
+side of it was ragged as if it had been torn in two.
+
+Remembering with relief, that Pembroke had acquired a smattering of
+French at Dr. Watson's school for the sons of gentlemen, he put the paper
+carefully away in his pocket to wait for Tom's assistance in deciphering
+it. Then he set to work to find the missing half.
+
+He fumbled about at the back of the cabinet for a spring that would
+release another secret cubby-hole, and was rewarded at last by an
+unexpected click, and the seemingly solid jaws of the lion fell apart
+about half-an-inch. But the little aperture which they revealed was
+empty. Further experiment at last discovered the fourth hiding place, but
+this also contained nothing.
+
+It occurred to him then that the Marquis had already discovered the other
+half of the paper, and like himself was searching for a missing portion.
+As he stood thinking over the problem, he suddenly noticed that the room
+was in deep shadow, and realized that the sun had set over the ridge of
+Lovel's Woods. The Marquis would soon be returning. Carefully closing the
+four openings in the carving he pushed the old cabinet back against the
+wall, closed the shutters and drew the curtains. Then with a last glance
+to see that all was as he found it, he went out and closed the door the
+precious bit of paper in his inside pocket.
+
+He went directly to Mrs. Frost's parlour. "Mother," he said, "please
+don't tell anyone that I have been in the north wing today. I have good
+reasons which I will explain to you before long. Now, I shall be deeply
+offended if you give the slightest hint."
+
+"Gracious! Dan, what is all this mystery about?"
+
+"You will never know, mother, unless you trust me absolutely. Mind! not
+a word to Tom, Nancy or the Marquis."
+
+"Very well, Danny. You know I am as safe with a secret as though it had
+been breathed into the grave."
+
+Dan did not quite share his mother's confidence in her own discretion,
+but he knew he could count on her devotion to him to keep her silent even
+where curiosity and the love of talk would render her indiscreet. He also
+knew, and had often deplored it, that fond as she was of Nancy she was
+not inclined to take the girl into her confidence.
+
+Having said all he dared to his mother, Dan went to his room and
+carefully locked up the mysterious paper. He returned to the first
+floor just as the Marquis and Jesse drove up in the sleigh to the door
+of the inn.
+
+Monsieur de Boisdhyver was enthusiastic about all that he had seen--the
+headquarters of General Washington, the house in which the Marquis de
+Lafayette had slept, the old mill in the parade, the fort at the Narrows,
+the shipping, the quaint old streets.... "But, O Monsieur Frost," he
+exclaimed, "the weariness that is now so delightful! How soundly shall I
+sleep to-night!"
+
+Dan smiled grimly as he assured his guest of his sympathy for a good
+night and a sound sleep; thinking to himself, however, that if the
+Marquis walked, he would not walk unattended. He had no intention of
+trusting too implicitly to that loudly proclaimed fatigue.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+THE WALK THROUGH THE WOODS
+
+
+While Dan Frost was hunting for the secret places of the old cabinet, Tom
+and Nancy were picking their way across the snowcovered paths of Lovel's
+Woods to the Red Farm. These woods were a striking feature in the
+landscape of the open coast country around Deal. Rising somewhat
+precipitously almost out of the sea, three ridges extended far back into
+the country, with deep ravines between. They were thickly wooded, for the
+most part with juniper and pine. In some places the descent to the
+ravines was sheer and massed with rocks heaped there by a primeval
+glacier; in other parts they dipped more gently to the little valleys,
+which were threaded with many a path worn smooth by the dwellers on the
+eastern shore. Nearly two miles might be saved in a walk from the Inn to
+Squire Pembroke's Farm by going across the Woods rather than by the
+encircling road.
+
+As they were used to the frozen country Tom and Nancy preferred the
+shorter if more difficult route. They had often found their way together
+through the tangled thickets of the Woods or along the shores of the
+Strathsey River, in season accompanied by dog and gun hunting fox and
+rabbit or partridge and wild duck. In Tom's company Nancy seemed to
+forget her shyness and would talk freely enough of her interests and her
+doings. He had always been fond of her, though until lately she had
+seemed to him hardly more than a child. This winter, as so frequently he
+had watched her sitting in the firelight listening to the old Marquis's
+playing and dreaming perhaps as he also dreamed, he realized that she was
+growing up. A new beauty had come into her face and slender form, her
+great dark eyes seemed to hold deeper interests, she was no longer in the
+world of childhood. The mystery enveloping her origin, which for some
+reason Mrs. Frost had never chosen to dispel, gave a certain piquancy to
+the interest and affection Tom felt for her. In the imaginative tales he
+had been fond of weaving for his own amusement, Nancy would frequently
+figure, revealed at last as the child of noble parents, as a princess
+doomed by some strange fate to exile. He thought of these things as from
+time to time he glanced back at her, holding aside some branch that
+crossed the path or giving her his hand to help her over a boulder in the
+way. The red scarf about her neck, red cap on her dark hair, flashing in
+and out of the tangled pathway against the background of the snow-clad
+woods, gave a bright note of colour to the scene.
+
+They were obliged for the most part to walk in single file until the last
+ridge descended over a mass of rocks to the marshes along Beaver Pond.
+Then having given her his hand to help her down, he kept hold of it as
+they went along the free path to the open meadows. The feeling of Nancy's
+cool little hand in his gave Tom an odd and conscious sense of pleasure.
+
+"You have been uncommonly silent, Nance, even for you," he said at last.
+
+"Oh, I'm always silent, Tom," she replied. "It is because I am stupid and
+have nothing to say."
+
+"Nonsense, my dear, you always have a lot to say to me. But you are
+forever reading, thinking ... what's it all about?"
+
+"Oh, I think, Tom, because I have little else to do; but my thoughts
+aren't often worth the telling. In truth there is no one, not even you,
+who particularly cares to hear them. Tom," she said, "I am restless and
+discontented. Sometimes I wish I were far away from the Inn at the Red
+Oak and Deal, from all that I know,--even from you and Dan."
+
+Pembroke suddenly realized that he could not laugh at these
+fancies, as he had so often done, and dismiss as if they were the
+vagaries of a child.
+
+"Why are you restless and discontented, Nancy?" he asked seriously.
+
+"Aren't you ever?" she questioned for reply. "Don't you ever get weary
+with the emptiness of it all, the everlasting round, the dullness? Don't
+you ever want to get away from Deal, and know people and see things and
+be somebody?"
+
+"I do that, Nance. I mean to go as soon as I am a lawyer. I won't poke
+about Deal long after that, nor Monday Port either. I mean to set up in
+Coventry."
+
+"Coventry!" exclaimed the girl with an accent of disdain. "That is just a
+provincial town like the Port, only a little more important because it is
+the capital of the state."
+
+"Being the capital means a lot," protested Tom in defense of his
+ambitions of which for the first time he felt ashamed. "Men are sent to
+Congress from there. Nance, girl, ours is a wonderful country; we are
+making a great nation."
+
+"Some people may be. None of us are, Tom. I wonder at you more than I do
+at Dan, for you have had more advantages. As for me, I am only a girl;
+there's nothing for girls but to sit and sew, and prepare meals for men
+to eat, and wait until some one comes and chooses to marry them. Then
+they go off and do the same thing some place else."
+
+"But what have you to complain of, Nancy? you have the kindest brother, a
+good mother, a comfortable home...."
+
+"The kindest brother, yes. But you know Mrs. Frost is not my mother. She
+doesn't care for me and I can't care for her as if she were. I have never
+loved any one but Dan."
+
+"You can't help loving Dan," said Tom, thinking of his good friend.
+"But then, little girl, you love me too." And he pressed the hand in
+his warmly.
+
+Nancy quickly withdrew her hand. "I am not a little girl. I have been
+grown up in lots of ways ever so long."
+
+"But you love me?"
+
+"I like you. Oh, Tom, the life we all lead is so futile. If I weren't a
+girl, I should go away."
+
+They had reached the stile by now that led into the meadow which sloped
+down from the clump of poplars a hundred rods or so above, in the midst
+of which the Red Farmhouse stood. Instead of helping his companion over
+the steps in the wall, Tom stopped and stood with his back to them.
+"Let's stay here a minute, Nance, and have it out."
+
+"Have what out?" she asked a trifle sharply.
+
+"You haven't any queer wild plan in your head to go away, have you?"
+
+"I don't know--sometimes I think I have. I dare say there are things
+somewhere a girl could find to do."
+
+"But Mrs. Frost--?"
+
+"Oh, Mother would not miss me long--she'd have Dan."
+
+"But Dan would miss you."
+
+"Yes, Dan might. I couldn't go, if Dan really needed me here. I think
+sometimes he doesn't. But, Tom, if you were in my position, if you didn't
+know who your parents were, if all your life you had been living on the
+charity of others--good and kind as they are, wonderful even as Dan has
+always been--you couldn't be happy. I'm not happy."
+
+"But, Nance, what has come over you?"
+
+"No--nothing in particular; I have often felt this way."
+
+"But, dear, I couldn't let you go. I'd mind a lot, Nance."
+
+She looked at him with a sudden smile of incredulity. "You, Tommy?"
+
+"You can't go--you musn't go," Tom repeated, as he drew nearer to her.
+
+Suddenly he reached out and seized her hands. "Don't you realize it?--I
+love you, Nance; I've always loved you!" He drew her close to him. She
+did not resist nor did she yield, but still with her eyes she questioned
+him. "Kiss me, Nancy," he whispered. She let him press his lips to hers
+but without responding to the pressure, as though she still were
+wondering of the meaning of this sudden unforeseen passion. But at last,
+caught up in its intensity, she gave him back his kisses. He took her
+face then between his hands and looked into it with a gaze that in itself
+was a caress. "Oh my sweetheart!" he said softly.
+
+Slowly she disengaged herself. "Tom, Tom," she said, "this is
+foolishness. We musn't do this."
+
+"Why not?" demanded Pembroke. "I tell you I love you!"
+
+"No--not that way, not that way. I didn't mean that. Why, you foolish
+boy, haven't we kissed each other hundreds of times before?"
+
+"No, Nancy, not like that--not like this," he added, as again he put his
+arm around her and drew her face to his. And again she yielded. "Say
+it--say it, Nance--you love me."
+
+She drew back from him. "I think I must, Tom. I don't think I could let
+you kiss me that way if I didn't. But now come ... Tom ... dear Tom ...
+do come ... don't kiss me again."
+
+"But say it," he insisted, "say you love me."
+
+"Please help me over the stile."
+
+He gave her his hand and she sprang lightly to the top of the steps. In a
+second he was by her side, both of them balancing somewhat uncertainly on
+the top of the stone wall. "I won't let you down till you say it."
+
+"Please--".
+
+"No--you love me?"
+
+"Yes--there--I love you--now--".
+
+"No, kiss me again."
+
+"Tom--no." But the negative was weak and Pembroke took it so.
+
+"Now," he said, as they began to cross the meadow, "we must tell Mrs.
+Frost and Dan."
+
+"Tell them what?"
+
+"Why, that we are in love with each other, and that you are going to
+marry me. What else?"
+
+"No, no," exclaimed Nancy, "You must say nothing. I am not in love. I
+don't mean to marry you."
+
+"But why not? You are. You do."
+
+"Are--do--?"
+
+"In love--you do mean to marry me."
+
+"No--Tom, listen--you know your father and mother would hate it. You have
+at least two years before you can practice. We couldn't marry--we can't
+marry. Oh, there are things I must do, before I can think of that."
+
+"Not marry me? Good Lord, what does it mean when people are in love with
+each other, what does it mean when a girl kisses a fellow like that?"
+
+"I don't know! what it means--madness, I guess. Do you think I could
+marry as I am, not knowing who I am?"
+
+"Oh, what do I care who your parents were! We'll find out. I swear we
+will. Good Lord, I love you, Nancy; I love you!"
+
+"Please, please don't make me talk about it now."
+
+"But soon--?"
+
+"Yes, soon--only promise you'll say nothing to Dan or to Mother till we
+have talked again. I must think; it is all so queer and unexpected; I
+never dreamed that you cared for me except as a little girl."
+
+"I didn't know I did. But come to think of it, Nance, it has been you as
+much as Dan that has brought me to the Inn at the Red Oak. Why it was you
+I wanted to walk and talk and play with."
+
+"Please,--dear Tom--G--ive me time to think what it all means. Now be
+careful, there's the farmer. You have a lot to do, and we have been
+lingering too long. Mother wants us to go back by the dunes and enquire
+for old Mrs. Meath; so we must hurry."
+
+The sun had set before they started on the homeward journey in one of
+the squire's sleighs. As they turned the bend at the beach and started
+across the dune road close to the sea, a great yellow moon rose over
+Strathsey Neck.
+
+Tom had been so preoccupied with his own emotions and the unexpected and
+absorbing relation in which he found himself with Nancy, that he had
+altogether forgotten why he had asked her to go off with him that
+afternoon. As they skimmed along over the snow-packed road across the
+sands, Tom spied another sleigh on the Port road, the occupants of which
+he recognized as Jesse and the Marquis. Suddenly the memory of the night
+before flashed over him. He pointed with his whip in their direction.
+"There's the old Marquis coming back from Monday Port," he said.
+
+Nancy looked without comment, but Tom thought the colour deepened in
+her cheeks.
+
+"See here, Nance," he exclaimed impulsively; "has the Marquis anything to
+do with the mood you were in this afternoon? Has he said anything to make
+you discontented?"
+
+He was sure that now she paled.
+
+"What makes you ask?"
+
+"Oh--a number of things. I've seen you with him more or less; felt he had
+some influence over you."--Tom was blundering now and knew it.--
+
+She looked at him coldly. "I have been with the Marquis very little save
+when others have been about. He has no influence over me. I don't care to
+discuss such queer ideas."
+
+"Oh, all right ... I dare say I'm mistaken ... I only thought..."
+He hesitated... "If you care for me, I don't mind what you think of
+the Marquis."
+
+"Remember, Tom--you promised to say nothing until I gave you leave.
+You're not fair..."
+
+"But you do love me?"
+
+Nancy was silent.
+
+"There is nothing between you and the old Frenchman--no mystery?"
+
+There was no reply. Nancy sat with compressed lips and drawn brows,
+gazing fixedly at the distant House on the Dunes at the end of their
+road. For a long while they drove on in silence.
+
+At the House on the Dunes they chatted for a while with old Mrs. Meath,
+who lived there alone with a maid-of-all-work. She was a source of much
+anxiety to Mrs. Frost, who sent several times each week to learn if all
+was going well. But Mrs. Meath was a Quaker and apparently never gave a
+thought to loneliness or fear.
+
+"They will never guess," she said to Nancy and Tom as they sat in the
+tiled kitchen talking with her, "what I am going to do."
+
+"Not going to leave the House on the Dunes, Mrs. Meath?"
+
+"Deary me! no; but I am going to take a boarder."
+
+"Really?--you are setting up to rival the Inn, eh?" said Tom.
+
+"No", Tommy, nothing of the sort. But I am offered good pay for my front
+room, and as Jane Frost is always nagging me about living here alone, I
+thought I'd take her."
+
+"And who pray is your new boarder?" asked Nancy.
+
+"That is the funny part of it," replied Mrs. Meath, "I know nothing but
+her name--Mrs. Fountain. Everything has been arranged by a lawyer man
+from Coventry, and she is coming in a few days. Tell thy mother, Nancy
+dear, that she need worry about me no longer."
+
+"I will, Mrs. Meath. I think it is a splendid idea, and I hope you will
+like the lady. Mother will be so glad that you have some one with you."
+
+Soon they were on their way across the dunes and marshes to Tinterton
+road and home. Dan was preoccupied, not with the news that was so
+exciting to Mrs. Meath, but with the recollection of his conversation
+with Nancy as they had driven toward the house. Despite her implicit
+denial he knew there was a secret between the Marquis de Boisdhyver and
+herself. He could not imagine what it might be, and it was evident
+that she did not mean to tell him at present. But his anxieties on this
+or kindred subjects were not relieved by his companion during the
+remainder of the drive. Moreover his attempts to speak again of his
+newly discovered passion were received coldly--so coldly indeed that he
+had no heart for pleading for such proofs as she had given him earlier
+in the afternoon that she shared his emotion. So despite the splendid
+moon, the bright cold night, the merry jangle of the sleigh bells, the
+drive back was not the unmixed joy Tom had promised himself; and he
+felt his role of a declared and practically-accepted lover anything but
+a satisfactory one.
+
+Finally they reached the Inn and entered the bar where they found the
+Marquis sitting alone before a cheerful fire. All of Tom's suspicious
+jealousies returned with fresh force, for Nancy rapidly crossed the room,
+spoke a few words to the old gentleman in an inaudible tone of voice, and
+passed quickly on to her own apartments.
+
+
+
+
+PART II
+
+THE TORN SCRAP OF PAPER
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+THE HALF OF AN OLD PAPER
+
+
+That evening Mrs. Frost made a particular request for music. Poor Dan,
+impatient to be alone with Tom and show him the torn scrap of paper that
+he had found that afternoon was forced to bring out his fiddle and
+accompany the Marquis. Tom, for first part, was more concerned with his
+own relations with Nancy than with the mysterious possibilities of the
+previous night. The poignant notes of the violin set his pulses to
+beating in tune with the throbbing of the music and transported him again
+into the realms of youthful dreams. They were quaint plaintive songs of
+old France that the Marquis chose to play that evening, folk tunes of the
+Vendee, love songs of olden time.
+
+From where he sat in the shadow Tom got a full view of Nancy seated on
+the oaken setlle near the fire. Her brows were drawn a little in deep
+thought, her lips for the most part compressed, though ever and anon
+relaxing at some gentler thought. Her hands were clasped, her head was
+bent a little, but her body was held straight and tense. Her eyes, dark
+and lustrous in the light of the flaming logs, always fixed upon the
+musician, not once wandering in his direction.
+
+What was the influence, the fascination that strange old Frenchman seemed
+to exert? It seemed to Tom impossible that there could be a secret which
+she felt necessary to hide from them, her lifelong friends. But apart
+from what he knew had taken place the night before as he looked back over
+the past month, he was conscious that there had been a change in Nancy, a
+change that mystified him. It was the danger in this change, he told
+himself, that had awakened in him the knowledge of his love.
+
+But then as he looked across at her so lovely, in the firelight, he felt
+again the thrill as when first he had taken her hand that afternoon. In
+that moment all the dreams, the vague longings of his boyhood had found
+their reality.
+
+Suddenly, while he was thinking thus, the Marquis laid his violin upon
+his knees. "Ah, _ma jeunnesse_!" he exclaimed in a dramatic whisper, "_et
+maintenant_--_et maintenant_!"
+
+For a moment no one spoke or stirred. They looked at him curiously as
+they always did when he brought his playing to an end in such fashion.
+Then he rose. "_Bon soir, madame; bon soir, messieurs; bon soir,
+mademoiselle_"
+
+Tom saw his little faded blue eyes meet Nancy's with a look of swift
+significance. Then he bowed with a flourish that included them all.
+
+"A thousand thanks, Monsieur le Marquis," murmured Mrs. Frost, "how much
+pleasure you give us!"
+
+They all rose then, as the Marquis smiled his appreciation and withdrew.
+
+"Give me your arm, Dan," the old lady said. "It must be past my bedtime.
+Come, Nancy."
+
+"Yes, mother." The girl rose wearily, stopping a moment at the
+mantelpiece to snuff the candles there. Tom seized his opportunity, and
+was by her side. She started, as she realized him near her.
+
+"Nance, Nance, I must have a word with you," he exclaimed in a tense
+whisper, "don't go!"
+
+"Nance, come," called Mrs. Frost from the hall.
+
+"Yes, Mother, I am coming ... I must go, Tom. Don't delay me. You know
+how Mother is ..."
+
+"What difference will it make if you wait a moment? Good Lord! Nance, I
+have been trying all evening to get a word with you, and you have not so
+much as given me a glance. Don't go--please don't go! Oh, Nancy dear,--I
+love you so!"
+
+He seized her hands and kissed them passionately. "Nance, Nance ...
+please ..." His arms were about her.
+
+"Tom, you make it so hard ... Remember, you promised me ... No word
+of love until I can think, until I have time to know ... Please, Tom,
+let me go."
+
+"I can't let you go. Oh sweetheart dear."
+
+"Tom, we musn't--Dan, Mother! ..."
+
+Unheeding her protest, he put his arms around her. An instant he felt
+her yield, then quickly thrusting him aside, she ran from the room,
+leaving him standing alone there, trembling with excitement, chagrin,
+happiness, alarm.
+
+In a moment his friend returned and Tom pulled himself together. "Come
+on," said Dan, "I have a lot to tell you."
+
+"Did you find anything this afternoon?" exclaimed Pembroke.
+
+"Sh! for heaven's sake be careful. Don't talk here. Let's go upstairs."
+
+A few minutes later they were closeted in Dan's chamber. The curtains
+were tightly drawn and a heavy quilt was hung over the door. Good Lord!
+thought Tom, could it be possible that these precautions in part at least
+were taken against Nancy. The world seemed to have turned upside down for
+him in the last twenty-four hours.
+
+"Aren't we going to keep watch to-night?" he asked.
+
+"Yes, but later. They are just getting to bed--or pretending to. Look
+here, this may throw light on the mystery. I found this paper in a secret
+cubby-hole in the old cabinet in the Oak Parlour. Draw a chair up to the
+table so that you can see."
+
+"The cabinet," he continued, as he took the paper out of his strong-box
+and began to unfold it, "was brought from some old manor house in
+England. It has four little secret cubby-holes, opened by hidden springs,
+that Mother says were probably used by the Roman Catholics to hide pages
+of their mass-books during the days of persecution. She remembered
+fortunately a little about them. They were all empty but one, and in that
+I found this torn scrap of paper."
+
+He handed the yellowed bit of writing to Tom, who flattened it out on the
+table before him.
+
+"Why it's written in French," Pembroke exclaimed, as he bent over to
+examine it.
+
+"Yes, I know it is," said Dan. "I can't make head or tail of it. Besides
+it seems to be only a part of a note or letter. I could hardly wait to
+give you a chance at it. You can make something of it, can't you?"
+
+"I don't know--I guess I can. It's hard to read the handwriting. The
+thing's torn in two--haven't you the rest of it?"
+
+"No, I tell you; that's all I could find; that's all, I am sure, that can
+be in the cabinet now. My theory is that the old marquis has somehow come
+across the other half and is still looking for this. God only knows who
+hid it there.
+
+"How the deuce could the Marquis know about it. Ah! look--it's signed
+somebody, something _de Boisdhyver_--'_ancois_--that's short for
+Francois, I guess. Evidently 't wasn't the Marquis himself. Wonder what
+it means?"
+
+For goodness' sake, try to read it."
+
+"Wait. Get that old French dictionary out of the bookcase downstairs,
+will you? I'll see if I can translate."
+
+Dan crept softly out, leaving Tom bent over the paper. Again he smoothed
+it out carefully on the table, bringing the two candles nearer, and tried
+to puzzle out the faint fine handwriting.
+
+"I can make out some of it," he remarked to Dan, when his friend returned
+with the dictionary. "Let me have that thing; there are a few words I
+don't know at all, but I'll write out as good a translation as I can."
+
+While Tom was busy with the dictionary, Dan placed writing materials to
+his hand, and sat down to wait as patiently as he could. His curiosity
+was intensified by Pembroke's occasional exclamations and the absorption
+with which he bent over the task.
+
+"There!" Tom exclaimed after half-an-hour's labour, "that's the
+best I can do with it. You see the original note was evidently torn
+into two or three strips and we have only got the righthand one, so we
+don't get a single complete sentence--, but what we have is mighty
+suggestive. Listen--This is what it says: Make great efforts ... gap ...
+glorious, I am about to leave' ... gap ... 'to offer my' ... gap ...
+'that I should not return' ... gap ... 'directions' ... gap ... 'this
+paper which I tear' ... gap ... 'the explanation' ... something
+missing ... 'to discover' ... that's the end of a sentence. The next one
+begins, 'This treasure' ... than another gap ... 'jewels and money' ...
+'secret chamber' ... 'one can enter' ... something gone here ... 'by the
+_salon de chene_'--that's the Oak Parlour, I suppose ... something
+missing again ... 'by a spring' ... 'hand of the lady in the picture' ...
+'chimney on the north side of the' ... 'side a panel which reveals' ...
+'one will find the directions' ... more missing ... 'of the treasure in a
+golden chest' ... That's the end of it. And, as I said before it is
+signed,--'ancois de Boisdhyver.' There, you can read it. That's the best
+I can make of it."
+
+Dan bent over his friend's translation. "Whoever wrote it was
+about to leave here to offer something to somebody, and if he did
+not return, apparently he is giving directions, in this paper, which
+he tears in to two or three parts, how to discover--a treasure?--jewels
+and money, I guess,--that he is about to hide or has hidden in a secret
+chamber, which is entered in some way from the Oak Parlour--? ... pushes
+a spring,--Something to do with the hand of the lady in the picture,
+near the chimney on the north side of the room ... then a panel which
+reveals ...where? ... the directions will be found, for getting the
+treasure, in a golden chest in the secret chamber? How's that for a
+version? I reckon the other half doesn't tell as much ...'ancois de
+Boisdhyver!--That can't be the Marquis, for none of his names end
+'ancois; do they? Let's see, what are they?--Marie, Anne, Timelon,
+Armand ... Tom,"--and Dan faced his friend excitedly,--"that old devil is
+after treasure! Who the deuce is 'ancois de Boisdhyver, and how did he
+come to leave money in the Oak Parlour? Hanged if I believe there's any
+secret chamber! By gad, man, if I didn't hurt when I pinch myself, I'd
+think I was asleep and dreaming. What do you make of it?"
+
+"Pretty much what you do. Somebody sometime,--a good many years ago,
+concealed some valuables here in the Inn. It must be some one who is
+connected with our marquis, for the last names are the same. These are
+directions, or half the directions, for finding it. The Marquis knows
+enough about it to have been hunting for this paper. Who the devil is
+the Marquis?"
+
+"The Lord knows. But how does Nance come in?"
+
+"Blamed if I can see; wish I could! This accounts for the Marquis's
+mysterious investigations, anyway. Probably he's no right to the paper.
+Maybe he isn't a Boisdhyver at all. I'll be damned if I can understand
+how he has got Nance to league with him."
+
+"And now what the deuce are we going to do about it?" asked Dan.
+
+"Hunt for the treasure ourselves, eh?"
+
+"Well, why not? but to do that we've got to get rid of the Marquis. He'll
+be suspicious if we begin to poke about the north wing. Hanged if I
+wouldn't like to have it all out with him!"
+
+"Yes, but we'd better think and talk it over before we decide to do
+anything. We can watch them. We'll watch to-night any way, and plan
+something definite to-morrow."
+
+"I tell you one thing, Tom, I am going to make Mother tell me all she
+knows about Nancy. Perhaps she is mixed up in some way with all this. But
+it's time to keep watch now. We'll put out the candles and I'll watch for
+the first two hours. If you go to sleep, I'll wake you up to take the
+next turn. How about it?"
+
+"Hang sleep!" Tom replied.
+
+"All right, but we must blow out the light. Lucky it's clear. Let's
+whisper after this."
+
+Tom threw himself on the bed, while Dan sat near the window and kept his
+eyes fixed on the door of the bowling-alley. They talked for some time in
+low tones, but eventually Tom fell asleep. Dan waked him at twelve for
+his vigil, and he in turn was wakened at two. During the third watch they
+both succumbed to weariness.
+
+Tow awoke with a start about four, and sprang to the window. The moon was
+sinking low in the western sky, but its light still flooded the deserted
+courtyard beneath. He heard the patter of a horse's hoofs on the road
+beyond and the crunching of the snow beneath the runners of a sleigh.
+Well, he thought, as he rubbed his eyes, it was too near morning for
+anything to happen, so he turned in and was soon asleep, as though no
+difficult problems were puzzling his mind and heart and no mysteries were
+being enacted around him.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+A DISAPPEARANCE
+
+
+When Dan came downstairs in the morning Mrs. Frost called him to the door
+of her bedroom. "What on earth is the matter with Nancy?" she exclaimed;
+"I have been waiting for her the past hour. No one has been near me since
+Deborah came in to lay the fire. Call the girl Danny; I want to get up."
+
+"All right, mother. She has probably overslept; she had a long walk
+yesterday."
+
+"But that is no excuse for sleeping till this time of day. Tell her
+to hurry."
+
+"It is only seven, mother."
+
+"Yes, Danny, dear, but I mean to breakfast with you all this morning if I
+ever succeed in getting dressed."
+
+Dan crossed the hall and knocked at Nancy's door. There was no response.
+He knocked again, then opened the door and looked within. Nancy was not
+there, and her bed had not been slept in.
+
+He went back to his mother. "Nancy is not in her room," he said. "She
+has probably gone out for a walk. I'll go and look for her."
+
+He went to the kitchens to enquire of the maids, but they had not seen
+their young mistress since the night before.
+
+"Spec she's taken dem dogs a walkin'," said black Deborah unconcernedly.
+"Miss Nance she like de early morn' 'fore de sun come up."
+
+Dan went out to the stables. The setters came rushing out, bounding and
+barking joyously about him.
+
+"Have you seen Miss Nancy this morning, Jess?" he asked.
+
+"No, Mister Dan, ain't seen her this mornin'. Be n't she in the house?"
+
+"She doesn't seem to be. Take a look down the road, and call after her,
+will you? Down, Boy; down, Girl!" he cried to the dogs.
+
+Dan began to be thoroughly alarmed. If Nancy had gone out, the dogs would
+certainly have followed her. She must be within!
+
+He went back into the house, and searched room after room, but no trace
+of her was to be found. He returned at last to his mother's chamber.
+
+"I can't find Nancy," he said. "She must have gone off somewhere."
+
+"Gone off! why, she must have left very early then. I have been awake
+these two hours--since daylight--; I would have heard every sound."
+
+"Well, she isn't about now, Mother. She will be back by breakfast time, I
+don't doubt. Just stay abed this morning, I will send her to you as soon
+as she comes."
+
+"I shall have to, I suppose. Really, Dan, it is extraordinary how
+neglectful of me that child can sometimes be. She knew--"
+
+"Mother, don't find fault with her. She is devoted to you, and you know
+it."
+
+"I daresay she is. Of course she is, and I am devoted to her. Where would
+she be, I wonder, if it hadn't been for me? Good heavens! Dan, can
+anything have happened to her?"
+
+"No, no--of course not,--nothing."
+
+"Search the house, boy; she may be lying some place in a faint. She isn't
+strong--I have always been worried--"
+
+"Don't get excited, Mother. We will wait until breakfast time. If she
+doesn't turn up then, you may be sure I shall find her."
+
+He looked at his watch. It was already nearly eight o'clock, so he
+decided to say nothing to Pembroke until after breakfast. He found the
+Marquis and Tom chatting before the fire in the bar.
+
+"Shall we have breakfast?" said Dan. "Mother will not be in this
+morning."
+
+"Ah!" exclaimed the Marquis, as they took their seats at table, "that is
+a disappointment. And shall we not wait for Mademoiselle Nancy?"
+
+"My sister has stepped out, monsieur; she may be late. Shall I give you
+some coffee?"
+
+"If you please--. We have another of these so beautiful days, eh? This so
+glorious weather, these moonlight nights, this snow--_C'est merveilleux_.
+Last night I sat myself for a long time in my window. Ah _la nuit_--the
+moon past its full, say you not?--the sea superbly dark, superbly blue,
+the wonderful white country! As I sat there, messieurs, a sight too
+beautiful greeted my eyes. A ship, with three great sails, appeared out
+on the sea and sailed as a bird up the river to our little cove, _Voila,
+mes amis_"--he waved his hand toward the eastern windows--"She is
+anchored at our feet."
+
+The two young men looked in the direction in which the marquis pointed,
+and to their astonishment they saw, riding securely at her moorings in
+the cove, a large sailing vessel. She was a three-masted schooner of
+perhaps fifteen hundred tons, a larger ship than they had seen at anchor
+in the Strathsey for many a year.
+
+"By all that's good!" exclaimed Tom, "that is exactly the sort of ship my
+father used to have in the West Indie trade, a dozen or fifteen years
+ago. What is she? I wonder; and why is she anchored here instead of in
+the Port?"
+
+The Marquis shrugged his shoulders. "That I can tell you not, my friend;
+but I am happy that she is anchored there for the hours of beauty she
+has already given to me. On this strange coast of yours one so rarely
+sees a sail."
+
+"No, they go too far to the south... But what is she?" asked Dan. "We
+must find out." He went to the cupboard, and got out his marine glass and
+took a long look at the stranger.
+
+"What do you make her out?" asked Tom.
+
+"There are men on deck, some swabbing out the roundhouse. One of them is
+lolling at the wheel. She flies the British flag."
+
+"Do you, perhaps, make out the name?" asked the Marquis.
+
+"I don't know--yes," Dan replied, twisting the lens to suit his eyes
+better and spelling out the letters, "S,O,U,T,H,E,R,N,C,R--the
+_Southern Cross_. By Jingo, Tom, we'll have to go down to the beach and
+have a look at her."
+
+Tom took the glasses; turning them over presently to the Marquis. "She is
+a good fine boat, eh?" exclaimed M. de Boisdhyver, as he applied his eye
+to the end of the glass.
+
+"She certainly is," said Dan.
+
+They sat down at length and resumed their breakfast. The ship had
+diverted Tom's attention for the moment from the fact that Nancy had
+not appeared.
+
+"Where is Nance, Dan?" he asked at length, striving to conceal his
+impatience.
+
+"I don't know," Dan replied. "I think she has gone over to see Mrs. Meath
+and stayed for breakfast."
+
+"Madame Meath--?" enquired the Marquis.
+
+"At the House on the Dunes," Dan answered, a trifle sharply.
+
+"A long walk for Mademoiselle on a cold morning," commented Monsieur
+Boisdhyver, as he sipped his coffee.
+
+In a few moments Dan rose. "Going to the Port to-day, Tom?"
+
+"Not till later, any way; I am going down to the beach to have a look at
+that ship."
+
+"Wait a little, and I'll go with you," He turned to the door and motioned
+Tom to follow him.
+
+Outside he took his friend's arm and drew him close. "Tom, something's
+up; Nancy's not here."
+
+"Nancy's not here;" exclaimed Pembroke. "What do you mean? Where is she?"
+
+"To tell the truth, I don't know where she is; her bed has not been slept
+in. I thought at first she had gone for a walk with the dogs as she does
+sometimes, but Boy and Girl are both in the barn. It's half-past eight
+now, and she ought to be back,"
+
+"Good Lord! man, have you searched the house?"
+
+"I've been over it from garret to cellar."
+
+"And you can't find her?"
+
+"Not a sign of her."
+
+"Have you been through the north wing?"
+
+"Yes, all over it. I have been in every room in the house, boy. Nance
+isn't there. You heard nothing in the night, did you?"
+
+"Nothing."
+
+"When did you go to sleep?"
+
+"Perhaps about half-past three. Come to think of it, I awoke at four
+with a start, for I heard a sleigh on the Port Road. After that I
+went to bed."
+
+"The sleigh hadn't been at the Inn?"
+
+"It couldn't have been--I'd have heard of it if it had; you see it woke
+me up just going along the road."
+
+"I don't suppose we need worry. But it is queer--none of the servants
+have seen her since last night."
+
+"My God, what can have happened to her?" cried Tom.
+
+"Sh, boy! We have nothing to go on, but I wager that old French devil
+knows more than he will tell."
+
+"Then, we'll choke it out of him."
+
+"No, no, don't be a fool! She may be back any minute. I'll get the sleigh
+and go over to the House on the Dunes. In the meanwhile don't show that
+you are anxious! I'll be back inside of an hour, and we can have a look
+at the ship. If Nance isn't with Mrs. Meath, why I am sure I'll find her
+here. Let's not worry till we have to."
+
+Tom assented to this proposition somewhat unwillingly. Despite his
+friend's reassuring words, he did not feel that Nancy would be found at
+the House on the Dunes or that she would immediately return. He
+remembered her telling him of her desire to go away. He remembered how
+strangely she had received the declaration of his love, and he feared
+almost as much that she had fled from him, as that the Marquis, weird and
+evil as he began to think him, had any hand in her disappearance.
+
+After Dan's departure in the sleigh, Tom wandered about restlessly. When
+half an hour passed and Frost did not return, he went out to look down
+the road and see if he were coming. The white open country was still and
+empty, and the only sign of life was the great three-masted ship riding
+at anchor in the cove, with seamen lolling about her deck.
+
+As Tom stood under the Red Oak, the Marquis stepped out of the front
+door. He was wrapped in his great coat, about to take his morning walk up
+and down the gallery.
+
+"Why so pensive, Monsieur Pembroke? Is it that you are moved by the
+beauty of the scene--, the land so white, the sea so blue, and the
+_Southern Cross_ shining as it were in a northern sky!"
+
+Tom grunted a scarcely civil reply, and turning away to avoid further
+conversation, strolled down the avenue of maples toward the road.
+
+Monsieur de Boisdhyver raised his eyebrows slightly, and began his walk.
+By and by, still more impatient, Pembroke walked back toward the house.
+If Dan did not return soon, he determined he would go after him. As he
+came up to the gallery again the Marquis paused and spoke to him. "And
+Mademoiselle, she has not returned?" he asked.
+
+"No!" Pembroke replied sharply. "She has gone to the House on the Dunes
+and her brother has driven over to fetch her."
+
+"Ah! pardon," exclaimed Monsieur de Boisdhyver; "I did not know... But it
+is cold for me, Monsieur Pembroke; I seek the fire."
+
+Tom did not reply. The Marquis went inside, and presently Tom could see
+him standing at the window, the marine glass in his hands, sweeping the
+countryside.
+
+Pembroke passed an anxious morning. Ten o'clock came; half-past; eleven
+struck. Nancy had not appeared, or was there a sign of Dan. Unable to be
+patient longer, he set out on the Port Road to meet his friend.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+GREEN LIGHTS
+
+
+The smoke was curling from the chimneys of the House on the Dunes as Dan
+drove up the long marsh road from the beach. He had half convinced
+himself that Nancy would be there, and he hoped that she herself would
+answer his knock. When at length the door was opened it was not by Nancy
+nor by Mrs. Meath, but by a stranger whom he had never seen before.
+
+"Yes?" a pleasant voice questioned, but giving an accent to the
+monosyllable that made Dan think instantly of France.
+
+He found himself facing a charming woman, her bright blue eyes looking
+into his with a smile that instantly attracted him. She was well-dressed,
+with a different air from the women he knew. And she was undeniably
+pretty--of that Dan was convinced, and the conviction overwhelmed him
+with shyness. He stood awkward and ill-at-ease; for the moment forgetting
+his errand. "I suppose," he stammered, "--I beg your pardon--but I
+suppose you are Mrs. Heath's new boarder,--Mrs. Fountain?"
+
+"Yes," replied the strange lady with an amused smile, "that is what I
+imagine that I am called. My name is Madame de La Fontaine. And you--?"
+
+"I?--Oh, yes--of course--I am Dan Frost from the Inn over yonder. I came
+to see Mrs. Meath to ask if my sister Nancy is here."
+
+"Alas!" replied Madame de La Fontaine, "poor Mrs. Meath she this morning
+is quite unwell. She is in her room, so that I am afraid you cannot see
+her. But, I may tell you, there is no one else here, just myself and my
+servants."
+
+"You have not seen or heard anything then of my sister, Nancy Frost?"
+repeated Dan.
+
+"Nancy Frost?--your sister?--No, monsieur. I am arrived only last night
+and have seen no one."
+
+"I had hoped my sister would be here. I am sorry about Mrs. Meath;
+perhaps I can be of some service. If you should need me at any time, I
+can almost always be found at the Inn at the Red Oak."
+
+"The Inn at the Red Oak?" repeated Madame de La Fontaine, "and is
+that near by?"
+
+"It is about a mile and a half by the road," Frost replied, "but you can
+see it plainly from the doorstep here."
+
+The foreign lady stepped out in the crisp February air. "Can you point it
+out to me? I may need your assistance some time."
+
+"You see the woods and the oak at the edge of them," said Dan, pointing
+across the Dunes. "That great tree is the Red Oak, the rambling old
+building beneath it is the Inn."
+
+"Ah! one can see quite plainly from one house to the other, is it not
+so?"
+
+"Quite," Dan replied.
+
+"Thank you, monsieur. I trust there will be no need for assistance. But
+it makes one glad to know where are neighbours, especially--" she added,
+"while poor Mrs. Meath is ill."
+
+As she spoke she turned to the door with the air of dismissing him, but
+on second thoughts she faced him again. "I wonder, Mr. Frost, will you do
+me a favour?"
+
+"I shall be delighted," Dan exclaimed.
+
+"My luggage arrived last night," said Madame de La Fontaine, "upon the
+ship that is at anchor in the bay. They are to bring my boxes ashore. But
+before that I desire to give directions to the captain at the beach, and
+I cannot well do so by my servant. Will you be kind enough to walk with
+me and show me the way?"
+
+Dan forgot about Nancy in his eagerness to assure this unusually
+attractive lady that he was at her disposal. She disappeared within, and
+he heard her give some quick, sharp directions in French to a maid. Then
+in a moment she reappeared on the little porch, bonneted and wrapped for
+a walk in the cold.
+
+As they set out across the Dunes, she kept up a rapid fire of questions
+that might have seemed inquisitive to one more accustomed to the world
+than Dan. He found himself in the course of that quarter of an hour
+talking quite freely with the charming stranger.
+
+"No, I did not make the journey from France in the _Southern Cross_," she
+replied to one of his interrogations, "that would have been
+uncomfortable, I fear. But she brings over my boxes. She is arrived
+somewhat sooner than I was promised."
+
+"Do you expect to signal her from the beach?"
+
+"But yes."
+
+"How will they know who you are?"
+
+"Oh, they have instructions. You must think all this curious!" she
+commented with a smile. "You must think me an odd person."
+
+The possible oddness of Madame de La Fontaine made less impression upon
+Dan than did her charm. He was conversing easily with a very lovely
+woman, and all else was forgotten in that agreeable sensation.
+
+As they emerged from the Dunes upon the little beach of the Cove, Dan
+observed on the deck of the _Southern Cross_ a sailor watching them
+through a glass. Madame de La Fontaine drew her handkerchief from beneath
+her cloak and waved it toward the ship.
+
+"This is the signal," she explained, "that they were instructed to look
+out for. If I am not mistaken Captain Bonhomme will come to the shore for
+my directions. You speak French, monsieur?"
+
+"Not at all," Dan replied.
+
+"Ah!" sighed the lady, "you lose a great deal."
+
+"I might have learned some this winter," said Dan; "for we have had a
+French gentleman as our guest at the Inn."
+
+"Indeed! And who, may I ask, is your French gentleman?"
+
+"His name is the Marquis de Boisdhyver. Do you, by any chance, know him?"
+
+"The Marquis de Boisdhyver?" repeated Madame de La Fontaine. "I know the
+name certainly; it is an old family with us, monsieur. But I do not
+recall that I have ever had the pleasure of meeting any one who bore
+it... But see! they are lowering the boat."
+
+They were now at the edge of the surf. Madame de La Fontaine again waved
+a hand in the direction of the clipper. Dan saw a small boat alongside
+her, into which several sailors and an officer, as it seemed, were
+clambering over the rail. They pushed off, and began to row vigorously
+for the shore.
+
+The French lady stood watching them intently. Within a few moments the
+little boat was beached, the officer sprang out, advanced to Madame de La
+Fontaine, and saluted. She exchanged sentences with him in French of
+which Dan understood nothing. Then the seaman touched his cap, got into
+his small boat, and gave orders to push off.
+
+"He understands no English," remarked Madame de La Fontaine. "I gave
+directions about my boxes. We may return now, monsieur; or doubtless I am
+able to find my way back alone."
+
+"Oh no," exclaimed Dan gallantly, "I will go with you."
+
+The lady smiled graciously. As they walked back across the Dunes, she
+kept up a lively conversation, no longer asking him questions, nor, he
+observed, giving him the opportunity to ask any.
+
+At the door of the House on the Dunes she dismissed him finally. "I am
+but too grateful, Monsieur, for your kindness. I hope that we shall meet
+again while I dwell in your beautiful country. In the meantime, I trust
+you will find your sister."
+
+Dan flushed, how could he have forgotten Nancy! Taking the hand that his
+new acquaintance offered, he hurried away. He met Tom on the Port Road
+about half a mile from the Inn and was truly worried to find that Nancy
+had not returned; he explained briefly his own delay in his expedition
+with the strange lady to the beach.
+
+"It is certainly odd, though perhaps not so odd as stupid, that they
+should have anchored in the Cove just to disembark one woman's boxes. It
+would have been much simpler to go to the Port, as every well-bred
+skipper does, and had the French woman's stuff carted out. At any rate,
+we'll go down this afternoon and have a look at her."
+
+By the time they reached the Inn it was noon, and still there was no word
+of Nancy. The dinner was a silent one, as the Marquis tactfully did not
+disturb his companions' preoccupation, and Mrs. Frost, who was unusually
+nervous, did not appear.
+
+After the meal the two young men started for the beach. At Tom's
+suggestion they got a little dory from the boathouse and rowed out to the
+clipper. The wind had shifted to the southeast, but still there was not
+enough of a sea to give them any trouble; and in a few minutes they were
+under the bows of _The Southern Cross_. Dan hailed a seaman who was
+leaning over the gunwale and watching them with idle curiosity. If the
+man replied in French, it was in a variety of that tongue that Tom's
+limited attainments did not understand, and, annoyed by the
+incomprehensible replies, he asked for "le captaine". At
+length,--possibly attracted by the altercation at the bows,--the
+authoritative-looking person who had come ashore in the morning in
+response to Madame de La Fontaine's signal, now appeared at the gunwale
+and glanced below at the two young men in the dory. His expression
+betrayed no sign that he recognized Frost. Indeed he vouchsafed no
+syllable of reply to the questions Dan asked in English or to those that
+Tom ventured to phrase in Dr. Watson's French.
+
+He was not, they thought, an attractive person; his countenance was
+swarthy, his eyes were black his hair was black, his heavy jaw was
+shadowed by an enormous black mustachio. A kerchief of brilliant red tied
+about his throat gave him the appearance of the matador in a Spanish
+bullfight rather than the officer of an English merchantman. He glanced
+at the dory occasionally, shook his head silently in response to the
+requests to go aboard, and at length when that did not serve to put an
+end to them, he shrugged his shoulders and disappeared. The seaman
+continued to lean over the gunwale and spat nonchalantly as though that
+were the measure of their appreciation of this unasked-for visit.
+
+"I move we skip up the rope," said Tom, "and explain ourselves at close
+quarters."
+
+"Thanks, no," replied Dan. "Either of those two amiable gentlemen
+looks capable and willing of pitching us overboard. The water is too
+cold for bathing."
+
+"Very well," said Tom, "I will yield to your sober judgment for the
+moment; but I propose to see the inside of that ship sooner or later
+unless she weighs anchor in the hour and sails away. But we ought to be
+getting to town to make enquiries about Nancy. For Heavens' sake, Dan,
+where do you suppose she can be?"
+
+They rowed back to the beach, stowed the dory in the boathouse, and set
+out in the sleigh for Monday Port. Diligent enquiry there, in likely and
+unlikely places, proved fruitless. It was nightfall when they returned
+to the Inn.
+
+They were greeted by the Marquis in the bar. "Mademoiselle Nancy, she has
+not been found?"
+
+"No," said Dan. "I take it from your question that she has not come home
+yet either."
+
+"She is not come, no. Perhaps she stays at the House on the Dunes?"
+
+"I do not know," Dan answered tartly. "I expect her every moment, but it
+is idle to conceal from you, Monsieur, that we are much concerned as to
+her absence."
+
+The Marquis grew sympathetic,--optimistically sympathetic. Tom clutched
+at his re-assuring words, but Dan was even more irritated by the silence
+that Monsieur de Boisdhyver had maintained throughout the day.
+
+Directly after supper Dan went into his mother's parlour, leaving the
+others to their own devices. The Marquis settled himself near the fire
+and was soon absorbed in reading an old folio; Tom wandered restlessly
+about, now up and down the long bar, now in the corridors, now on the
+gallery and in the court without.
+
+The night, after the bright day, had set in raw and cold; a damp breeze
+blew from the southwest, and gave promise both of wind and rain. From his
+position under the Red Oak, Tom could see the red and green lights of
+_The Southern Cross_ at her moorings in the Cove below, and across the
+Neck the lighted windows of the House on the Dunes. Over all else the
+night had cast its black damp mantle.
+
+As he stood watching, deeply anxious for the welfare of the girl he
+loved, he noticed a new light appear in one of the upper windows of the
+House on the Dunes--not yellow as is the light of candles, but green like
+the light on the port side of the clipper in the Cove. Had he not seen
+the lights from the other windows he could have thought it was another
+ship on the ocean side of the Neck.
+
+He looked for a long time at the tiny spark in the distance, wondering
+what whim had induced Mrs. Meath to shade her candles with so deep a
+green. As he strolled back toward the Inn, he glanced through the windows
+of the bar where the Marquis still read by the fireside. Suddenly the
+old gentleman, as Tom curiously watched him, laid his book down on the
+table and rose from his chair. He looked about the room and then advanced
+to the window. Tom instinctively slipped behind the trunk of the great
+oak. Monsieur de Boisdhyver stood for several moments peering into the
+darkness. Then he turned away and crossed the room to the door into the
+front hall. It flashed through Tom's mind that possibly the Marquis had
+started on another of his mysterious tours. He ran down again into the
+court far enough from the house to command a view of the entire facade,
+and watched curiously, particularly the north wing. All was dark, save
+for the lights below.
+
+Suddenly he saw the flicker of a candle in one of the windows, not of the
+north wing, but of the south. A moment's glance, and he made sure that it
+was the room occupied as a sleeping apartment by Monsieur de Boisdhyver.
+
+The Marquis was standing by the window, with his face pressed close to
+the pane, peering out into the night. He still held the candle in his
+hand. To Dan's surprise, he placed it carefully on the broad window-sill,
+and drew down the dark shade to within a foot of the sill, blotting out
+all save a narrow band of light. Then the Marquis disappeared for several
+moments into the interior of the room. Dan was about to turn back into
+the house, when again Monsieur de Boisdhyver came to the window. He did
+not raise the shade, but inserted between the windowpane and the candle a
+strip of dark green paper. It was translucent and had the effect of
+sending a beam of green light southward, across the meadows and the
+dunes, to meet--Tom suddenly realized--the rays of the green light from
+the House on the Dunes.
+
+Was it a signal being exchanged, and between whom? The coincidence of
+green lights from the Inn and the House on the Dunes, at the same moment,
+was too marked to be without significance. To what end was the Marquis de
+Boisdhyver exchanging mysterious signals with some one in that lonely
+farmhouse, and what did they mean?
+
+Tom repressed his agitation and remained for some time watching the two
+green lights that glowed toward one another over the dark landscape.
+
+Suddenly the light in the House on the Dunes was extinguished; then,
+momentarily it shone again, but quickly went out and left the great sweep
+of dunes in darkness. Two minutes later the same thing took place in the
+window of the south chamber of the Inn. The light flashed and was gone,
+flashed again and shone no more.
+
+Tom went in, by a rear entrance, to the bar. The Marquis was seated by a
+table, absorbed in reading. He started as Tom entered. "Still no word of
+Mademoiselle?" he piped.
+
+"Still no word, monsieur," Pembroke answered laconically. He also
+seated himself in the candle light and took up the last issue of the
+_Port News_.
+
+"Do you know what has become of Dan?" Pembroke asked presently.
+
+"Monsieur Frost he has been closeted with madame his mother for the past
+half-hour. You have no further plans for seeking Mademoiselle? For
+myself, I grow alarmed."
+
+"I know nothing but what you know, monsieur. Nancy has not returned.
+There has been no word of her. We shall have to wait." With tremendous
+effort to conceal his agitation and annoyance, Tom resumed his reading.
+
+Monsieur de Boisdhyver glanced at him for a moment with a little air of
+interrogation, then shrugged his shoulders slightly and turned again to
+his French paper.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+MRS. FROST'S RECOLLECTIONS OF A FRENCH EXILE
+
+
+After the long day of fruitless search and enquiry for the vanished
+Nancy, supper being over and Tom having gone outside, Dan joined his
+mother in the blue parlour.
+
+Mrs. Frost was weary with waiting and anxiety, but as Dan threw himself
+on a couch near her chair, she watched him patiently.
+
+"There is no clue, Dan?" she ventured at last.
+
+"No clue, mother, not the slightest. Nancy seems to have vanished as
+completely as if she had dissolved into air. As you know, the house has
+been thoroughly searched; the servants carefully questioned; and
+enquiries have been made at every conceivable place in Monday Port. I
+have been to the House on the Dunes, and to the farmhouses on every road
+round about. No one has seen or heard of her. She has taken French leave,
+but for what reason I can't imagine."
+
+"Nancy has not been happy for some time, Dan," said Mrs. Frost.
+
+"No, I have fancied that she was not. But why? Do you suppose she has
+left us deliberately? or--". He paused uncertain whether or not to give
+voice to his suspicions.
+
+"Or what?" asked his mother.
+
+"Or she has been forced away against her will."
+
+"Against her will!" the old lady exclaimed. "Who could have forced her?
+and for what reason? Do you think she may have been kidnapped?"
+
+"Either kidnapped or decoyed away."
+
+"But who could have designs upon Nancy? It is more reasonable to suppose
+that she left of her own accord. I confess that would not altogether
+surprise me."
+
+"I don't know, mother, but I have my fears and suspicions. There may be
+some one who has a deep interest in Nancy, who for reasons of his own,
+which I don't yet understand, may wish to control her movements. I wish
+you would tell me all you know of Nancy's origin. You have never told
+me;--you have never told her, I fancy,--who she really is and how you
+came to adopt her as your own child. I have never been curious to know,
+in fact I have not wanted to know, for she has always been to me
+precisely what a sister of my own blood would be. But now, it may help
+me to understand certain strange things that have happened in the last
+few days."
+
+For a moment Mrs. Frost was silent. "No, I have never spoken to you or
+to Nancy of her early history, Dan; simply because, to all intent she
+has been our own. I have always wished that she should feel absolutely
+one with us; and I think she always has, until this winter. But of late
+I have noticed her discontent, her growing restlessness, and I have
+sometimes wondered if she could be brooding over the mystery of her
+early years. But she has never asked me a direct question; and I have
+kept silent."
+
+"I think now, mother," Dan replied, "it is your duty to tell me all
+you know."
+
+"I have no reason, my dear, to keep anything from you. I should have told
+you years ago, if you had asked me. There is not much to tell. You may
+remember when you were a boy about six or seven years old, a French exile
+came to the Inn, a military gentleman, who had left France in consequence
+of the fall of the great Napoleon."
+
+"Yes, I remember him distinctly," said Dan. "He used to tell stories to
+Tom and me of his adventures in the wars. Tom was speaking of him only
+the other day."
+
+"Well," continued Mrs. Frost, "this gentleman called himself General
+Pointelle. I learned afterwards it was not his real name. Who he actually
+was, I have not the slightest idea. He brought with him a little girl two
+years old, a sweet little black-eyed girl, to whom I, having lost your
+only sister at about that age, took a great fancy. The General also had
+two servants with him, a valet, and a maid. The maid, a pretty young
+thing, took care of the child. They arrived in mid-summer, on a
+merchantman that plied between Marseilles and Monday Port. I do not know
+why General Pointelle came to this part of the country, or why he chose
+to stay at the Inn; at any rate he came, and he engaged for an indefinite
+period the best suite of apartments in the old north wing. He had the Oak
+Parlour--"
+
+"The Oak Parlour!" exclaimed Dan.
+
+"Yes," replied Mrs. Frost, "that was part of the suite reserved usually
+for our most distinguished guests. The general used that for a
+sitting-room and the adjoining chamber as a bed-room. The maid and child
+occupied connecting rooms across the hall. The valet, I believe, was in
+some other part of the house. General Pointelle proved himself a
+fascinating guest, and his little daughter Eloise was a favourite with
+all the household. The maid, pretty as she certainly was and apparently
+above her station, I somehow never trusted. I have always believed that
+the relations between the general and herself were not what they should
+have been. But Frenchmen look at such things differently, I am told; and
+it was not to our interests to be over-curious.
+
+"They had been with us about two months when one fine morning we awoke to
+find that General Pointelle, his valet, and the charming Marie had
+disappeared, and little Eloise was crying alone in her big room. You have
+probably guessed the child was Nancy."
+
+"Yes," Dan agreed, "but do you mean that the father actually
+abandoned her?"
+
+"Practically. He left a note for me and a little bag of gold amounting to
+two thousand dollars to be used for the child. If you will hand me that
+old secretary there, I will show you the letter."
+
+Dan placed the old-fashioned writing-desk on the table beside her, and
+waited anxiously while she fumbled in her pocket for the key. She
+unlocked the desk, and after searching a few moments amongst innumerable
+papers, drew out an old letter. This she unfolded carefully and handed
+to Dan. It was written in English, in a fine running hand. He read it
+attentively.
+
+"_The Inn at the Red Oak, Deal_:
+
+"14 October, '814.
+
+"Madame:
+
+"Political circumstances over which I have no control, patriotic
+considerations which I cannot withstand, demand my immediate return to
+France. In the conditions into which I am about to be plunged the care of
+my dear little daughter becomes an impossibility. Inhuman as it must seem
+to you, lacking in all sense of Christian duty as it must appear to you,
+I entrust, without the formality of consulting you, my beautiful little
+Eloise to your humane and tender care. With this letter I deposit with
+you the sum of two thousand dollars in gold, which will go a little way
+at least to compensate you for the burden I thus unceremoniously, but of
+necessity, thrust upon you. I appeal to and confide in the goodness of
+your heart, of which already I have such abundant testimony, that will
+take pity upon the misfortune of a helpless infant and an equally
+helpless parent. May you be a mother to the motherless, and may the
+Heavenly Father bless you for what you shall do.
+
+"I embark, madame, upon a dangerous and uncertain mission. Should that
+mission prove successful and restore the fortunes of my house, I will
+return and claim my daughter. Should fate overwhelm me with disaster, I
+must beg that you will continue to regard her and love her as your own.
+The issue will have been decided within five years. Permit me to add but
+one thing more,--in the event that I fall in the cause I have embraced, I
+have made arrangements whereby communications shall be established with
+you, madame, that will redound to your own good fortune and that of the
+little Eloise.
+
+"All effort to thwart my plans or to establish my identity in the
+meantime, will, I must warn you, be fruitless.
+
+"Adieu, madame: accept the assurance of my gratitude for all that you
+have already done to sweeten exile and of my earnest prayer for the
+blessing of God upon your great good heart.
+
+"I remain, madame, for the present, but always, under whatever name,
+
+"Your grateful and sincere servant,
+
+"GASTON POINTELLE,"
+
+As Dan, with gathering brows, concluded the reading of this
+extraordinary letter, Mrs. Frost resumed her story.
+
+"We always imagined that the general and his companions had sailed in a
+French vessel that lay at that time in the Passage and left that morning
+at dawn. There was nothing to do but adopt little Eloise Pointelle for my
+own. I changed her name, at your father's suggestion, to Nancy Frost;
+knowing that Pointelle was not the general's real name. For five years we
+looked to see our guest return; and afterwards for years, we hoped to
+receive some communication that would prove, as he promised, of advantage
+to Nancy and ourselves. But from the night General Pointelle left our
+house to this day, I have not heard one word to show that he still
+existed or, indeed, that he ever had existed. We brought Nancy up as our
+own daughter, though, never concealing from her the fact that she was not
+of our blood. Indeed, Dan, I have loved her dearly."
+
+"Certainly, you have always treated her with the greatest kindness. But
+this is quite extraordinary, Mother. I think it will throw light on
+Nancy's present disappearance."
+
+"Do you think the father is alive, Dan? that he has communicated
+with her?"
+
+"Not that, mother; I am really in the dark. But I believe that the
+Marquis de Boisdhyver has some connection with your General Pointelle,
+and that his stay with us this winter has something to do with Nancy."
+
+In response to Mrs. Frost's questions, he told of the meetings of Nancy
+and the marquis, but decided to say nothing about the paper that he had
+found in the Oak Parlour.
+
+"I want you to be careful, Mother, to give no hint to the Marquis that we
+suspect him in any way. Tom and I are trying to solve the mystery, and
+secrecy is of the greatest importance. It is a more complicated business
+than we imagined. I must go now and find Tom. May I keep this letter?"
+
+"Yes, but keep it under lock and key. I have guarded it for sixteen
+years; and it is the only evidence I possess of Nancy's origin."
+
+Dan returned to the bar, where he found the Marquis and Tom still reading
+their papers.
+
+"Ah!" exclaimed Monsieur de Boisdhyver, "I trust, Monsieur Frost, you
+bring us the good news at last of the return of Mademoiselle."
+
+"Unfortunately, I do not, monsieur," Dan replied. "Our efforts to find
+out what has become of her have been entirely unsuccessful. I am very
+anxious, as you may imagine."
+
+"And to what mishap do you attribute Mademoiselle's so unceremonious
+departure?"
+
+"I do not attribute it to any mishap," replied Dan. "I think that my
+sister has gone off on a visit to some friends, and that her messages to
+us have been miscarried. I feel certain that to-morrow we will be
+completely reassured."
+
+"Ah! I hope so with all my heart," exclaimed the Marquis fervently. "It
+is a matter of deep distress to me--monsieur. But if--to-morrow passes
+and still you do not hear--?"
+
+"God knows, sir. We must do everything to find her."
+
+"We shall find her," cried Tom, as he sprang to his feet, unable longer
+to repress his anxiety or his irritation. "And if we do not find her safe
+and well, woe to the man who has harmed her."
+
+"Bravo!" cried the Marquis. "Permit me to adopt those words to express
+my own sentiments. I applaud this determination, monsieur, _de tout
+mon coeur_."
+
+Tom glared at the little old man with an expression of illconcealed rage.
+He was about to blurt out some angry reply, when a warning gesture from
+Dan checked him. Without speaking, he flung himself out of the room.
+
+"Poor Tom!" said Dan quickly, to cover Pembroke's attitude toward the
+Marquis, "this takes him especially hard. He is in love with Nancy."
+
+"_Eh bien_! I sympathize with his good taste. It is that that accounts
+for his vigour of his expressions, so much more _emphatique_ than our
+good host."
+
+"More emphatic, perhaps," said Dan, "though I do not feel less strongly."
+
+The Marquis made a little bow, as he rose to retire. "If, chance,
+monsieur could require my assistance--"
+
+"Thank you," said Dan quickly. "In that case, sir, I shall be only too
+happy to call upon you." He rose also, and courteously held the candle
+till the Marquis had reached the top of the stairs.
+
+Tom waited his friend impatiently in their common chamber. And when at
+last, having closed the house for the night, Dan joined him, he told at
+once of the signals which he supposed had been exchanged between the
+Marquis at the Inn and someone at the House on the Dunes. In return Dan
+repeated what he had learned about Nancy from Mrs. Frost.
+
+"There is no doubt in my mind," said Dan, "that the Marquis knows all
+about Nancy's disappearance and where she is, and further I believe that
+Nancy's disappearance is part of a plot with the Marquis here, Madame de
+la Fontaine at the House on the Dunes, and that schooner riding at anchor
+in the Cove. I have a plan, Tom."
+
+"Go ahead for heaven's sake. If we don't do something, I'll go in and
+choke the truth out of that old reprobate. He applauds my sentiments, eh!
+Good God! If he knew them!"
+
+"Yes, yes," said Dan. "But the time for choking has not come. You nearly
+gave yourself away to-night, you will ruin our plans, and involve Nancy
+in some harm. She is probably in that old villain's power. Now listen to
+me. The first thing to do is to discover Nancy's whereabouts. The second
+is to get at the bottom of the Marquis's plot and the secret of the torn
+scrap of paper. We will find the clew to both, I think, if we can
+discover the meaning of the signals between the Marquis and the lady in
+the House on the Dunes."
+
+"Right!" cried Tom. "But how?"
+
+"One of us must stay at the Inn and watch the Marquis to-night, and the
+other investigate the House on the Dunes. I have already been there and
+made the acquaintance of the lady, so I had better do that, and you stay
+here. Do you agree?"
+
+"Yes, of course; though I envy you the chance to be out and doing."
+
+"You will be doing something here. I want you to hide yourself in the
+hallway near the Marquis's door and watch all night--till dawn anyway.
+He cannot get out of his room without coming into the hall, and we must
+know what he does to-night. If the Marquis can spend a sleepless night,
+we can afford to do so. I don't know what I can do at the House on the
+Dunes but I shall take the pistol, and you can keep my gun. To-morrow I
+will get more arms, for I shouldn't be surprised if we needed them. Is
+everything clear?"
+
+"Perfectly," said Tom. "I'll watch as soon as you are off."
+
+"Good-night, old boy, good luck."
+
+"Good-night," and Dan slipped out of the room and down the dark stairs.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+MIDNIGHT VIGILS
+
+
+As soon as Dan had gone Tom blew out his light and slipped into
+the hallway.
+
+This portion of the Inn was simple in design. A long corridor ran through
+the middle of the house to meet a similar passage at the southern end
+extending at right angles to the main hall. The South Chamber, occupied
+by the Marquis de Boisdhyver, opened into the southwest passage, but the
+door was well beyond the juncture of the two corridors. It was Pembroke's
+intention to conceal himself in the bedroom next the Marquis's chamber,
+from the door of which he could look down the entire length of the main
+hall, and by stepping outside get a view of the branch hallway into which
+the door of this room and that of the Marquis actually opened. A further
+advantage was that the windows of this room, like those of the South
+Chamber, looked out upon the Dunes and the Cove.
+
+As Tom stepped from his chamber, the house seemed utterly deserted; save
+for the roaring of the wind without and an occasional creak or crack in
+the time-worn boards, there were no sounds.
+
+The night was not a dark one, although the wind was rising and rain was
+threatening; for a full moon lurked behind the thick veil of cloud and
+something of its weird weak light relieved the darkness even of the great
+corridor of the Inn.
+
+Tom stole softly down the hallway and gained the room next the Marquis's.
+He took his position in a great chair, which he drew near the open door,
+and laid his gun on the floor near at hand. No one could enter the hall
+without his seeing him. Every few moments he would tiptoe to the doorway,
+thrust his head into the corridor, and listen intently for any sound in
+the South Chamber.
+
+It was a lonely and unpleasant vigil. The night was wild, the storm was
+rising, the old Inn was moaning as though in distress; and, despite his
+natural courage, fantastic terrors and dangers thrust themselves upon his
+excited imagination. He would much have preferred, he felt, to be out in
+the open as Dan was, even facing real dangers and greater difficulties.
+Deeper than by these imaginary fears of the night, he was racked with
+anxiety to know what had become of the girl he loved. Had she been
+decoyed away by the evil genius of the place; was she in danger? Had she
+disappeared of her own free will; and didn't she really love him?
+
+He was not in the least sleepy; but after a while the vigil began to tell
+upon his nerves. He found it almost impossible to sit still and wait,
+perhaps in vain. He made innumerable trips across the room to the windows
+to look out into the bleak night. The landscape was blotted out. Not a
+light showed from the House on the Dunes; only the two lamps on the
+schooner at anchor in the Cove gleamed across the night. Eleven o'clock,
+twelve o'clock struck solemnly from the old clock on the stairs.
+
+Once as he was looking out of the window, it seemed to him that the green
+light on the _Southern Cross_ was moving. But it was impossible that she
+should weigh anchor in the teeth of the rising storm. He was mistaken.
+Nay, he was sure. But it was rising, slowly, steadily, as though drawn by
+an invisible hand, to about the height of the masthead. There at last it
+stopped, and swung to the wind, to and fro, to and fro; high above its
+red companion, high above the deck.
+
+And then, suddenly, as if to answer this mysterious manoeuvre, the green
+light, that earlier in the evening had glowed from a north window of the
+House on the Dunes, now flashed from an east window of the old farmhouse;
+flashed, then gleamed steadily. The light on the _Southern Cross_ was
+lowered slowly, then raised again. The light in the House on the Dunes
+vanished; soon flashed again and then vanished once more. Slowly the
+light in the schooner descended to its normal position. A moment later
+the green light appeared on the north side of the House on the Dunes,
+where it had been earlier, and shone there steadily.
+
+Was it a signal to the Marquis de Boisdhyver? Tom tiptoed to the
+partition between his room and the South Chamber, and put his ear to the
+wall to listen. Not a sound reached him. He turned to the door to go into
+the corridor, and stood suddenly motionless. For there, advancing ever so
+cautiously down the hall, carrying a lighted candle in his hand, was the
+old Marquis. He was clad in night dress and cap, with a gayly-coloured
+dressing-gown worn over the white shirt. Slowly, silently, pausing every
+instant to listen; he stole on, gun in hand, and Tom followed him as
+cautiously and as quietly. Instead of turning to the right at the
+partition that divides the north and south wings of the Inn and going
+down stairs, the Marquis turned to the left, into the short hall that led
+directly to the great chamber occupied by Tom and Dan.
+
+By the time Pembroke in pursuit had reached the turn and dared to peep
+around the corner of the wall, the Marquis was at the door of Dan's room.
+He stood there, ear bent close to the panel, intently listening.
+
+Tom waited breathless. Not satisfied, Monsieur de Boisdhyver turned about
+and went into an adjoining chamber, the door of which stood open.
+Pembroke was about to advance, when the Marquis emerged again into the
+corridor, having left his lighted candle in the empty room. This
+manoeuvre, whatever advantage it had for the Marquis, was fortunate for
+Pembroke, for it left the end of the little hall, where he stood
+watching, in deep shadow. He could now step boldly from behind the
+concealing wall without fear of immediate detection.
+
+Again the Marquis stood and listened at the door of Dan's room, then
+cautiously turned the knob. The door yielded and opened an inch or so.
+Monsieur de Boisdhyver put his ear to the crack. Dissatisfied with the
+absolute silence that must have met him, he pushed open the door a little
+further and thrust his head inside. In a moment he disappeared within.
+
+Tom realized that the Marquis would soon discover the fact that the
+room was empty. He looked about quickly for a place of concealment that
+would command a view of all the halls. Fortunately the partition that
+divided the long corridor between the north and south wings was hung
+with heavy curtains. Deciding instantly, Pembroke slipped behind them,
+and ruthlessly slit an opening in the thick green stuff, through which
+he could peek out. He was just in time, as the Marquis came out of
+their bedroom and softly closed the door. He stood irresolute; then,
+with even greater caution, re-entered the room in which he had left his
+candle. To Tom's chagrin, the candle was suddenly extinguished and the
+Inn left in darkness.
+
+For some moments, there was absolute silence. Then Tom could hear
+faintly,--or feel rather than hear--the Marquis cautiously finding his
+way back. Luckily, the old Frenchman was groping his way next the other
+wall. Pembroke slipped from behind the curtains and stole softly in
+pursuit. As he reached the south end of the corridor, he heard the latch
+of the Marquis's door click softly. Alarmed by discovering that they were
+not in bed, thought Tom, he had abandoned whatever purpose he had in mind
+for his midnight prowl.
+
+After waiting a little and hearing no more, Tom went again to the window.
+The rain had begun now and the wind was blowing a gale. Suddenly Pembroke
+discerned a light shining from the window next the very one from which he
+was peering into the darkness,--the steady glow of a deep red light.
+
+"Another signal!" he murmured; then waited to see if it would be answered
+by the House on the Dunes. Perhaps fifteen minutes passed, and then,
+suddenly, there gleamed through the rain and dark, a tiny bit of red
+flame, just where the House on the Dunes must be. A little later the red
+lamp on the _Southern Cross_ performed a fantastic ascension to what
+Pembroke took to be the masthead.
+
+The red light in the neighbouring window was extinguished. Almost
+instantly the red spark on the Dunes disappeared, and in a few moments
+the schooner's lamp began its descent. Simultaneously they glowed again
+and the ship's light danced upward; then the two red lights on shore
+vanished and the lamp on the _Southern Cross_ sank to its proper place
+and stayed there.
+
+Of one thing Tom was sure: The Marquis, the lady at the House on the
+Dunes, and the skipper of the schooner in the Cove, were in collusion. Of
+another thing he felt almost equally certain: the red light was a signal
+of danger, and the message of danger flashed across the night was the
+fact that he and Dan were not safe asleep in bed.
+
+For a long time he watched, keen with excitement; listened patiently;
+started at every sound. But nothing more unusual did he hear that night
+than the roar of the wind, the dash of the brawling southeaster against
+the panes, and the groans of the old house, shaken by the storm. Toward
+morning he crept back to bed and fell instantly into a deep and
+dreamless sleep.
+
+While Tom was thus watching and sleeping a somewhat different experience
+had fallen to the lot of Dan Frost. He had no definite plan in making a
+midnight visit to the vicinity of the House on the Dunes, but he hoped to
+discover some clue to the surrounding mysteries. From time to time during
+the day he had taken his field glasses to one of the upper rooms of the
+Inn, and scanned the countryside but nothing unusual seemed astir in the
+white world without. The _Southern Cross_ had lain on the surface of the
+little cove all day, swaying with wind and tide, no sign of activity upon
+her decks. It was after ten when he started forth. The night was not
+quite dark, for the full moon was shining somewhere behind the thick veil
+of clouds. Earlier in the evening Dan had intended to go boldly to the
+House itself and demand an interview with old Mrs. Meath; but he
+reflected that he would probably be met with the excuse that Mrs. Meath
+was ill, and he did not know how he could force himself in, particularly
+past the barrier of Madame de la Fontaine's charming manner.
+
+It was an unpleasant walk with the wind in his face, and it was nearly
+eleven before he turned into the long dune road, which branched from the
+Port Road near the Rocking Stone and led directly to the old farmhouse on
+Strathsey Neck. To his chagrin it appeared that all lights had been
+extinguished as if the inmates of the house had gone to bed.
+
+The old farmhouse loomed before him, dark and forbidding. On either side
+there were outhouses, and in the rear quite near the house a barn. There
+was not a tree on the place; indeed, there was little vegetation upon the
+entire Neck, save the grass of the middle meadows which in summer
+furnished scant nourishment for the cattle and a flock of sheep. Now all
+was bleak and covered with snow, and a freshening gale swept out of the
+great maw of the Atlantic.
+
+Keeping close to the fence, Frost began to make a complete circuit of
+the farmhouse. As he turned a corner of the south end, or rear of the
+house, he was relieved to see a light burning in the kitchen. He stole
+cautiously to a position within the shadow of the barn from which he
+could get a glimpse of the interior. In the kitchen standing before a
+deal table, he saw a young woman--not Jane, Mrs. Heath's
+maid-of-all-work, but a stranger,--with her hands deep in a bowl of
+dough. Her back was toward him, but he guessed that she was Madame de la
+Fontaine's maid, whom he had seen in the morning. The door into the
+dining-room beyond stood open, and by craning his neck, Dan could see
+that the room was lighter, but he could not discover whether or not it
+were occupied. The shutters of the dining-room were so closely barred
+and the curtains so tightly drawn that not a ray of light penetrated to
+the outside.
+
+The girl in the kitchen proceeded busily about her work. She was
+evidently engaged, despite the lateness of the hour, in mixing bread.
+
+Once while he waited patiently, to what end he hardly knew, Madame de la
+Fontaine entered the kitchen. She was clad in black and held in her hands
+what Dan took to be a ship's lamp. She stood for a moment in the doorway
+and spoke to the servant maid. The girl stopped her work, and taking a
+strip of paper, ignited it at a candle and lighted the lamp, which Madame
+de la Fontaine held up for her. It glowed instantly with a deep green
+flame, such as Tom had described as shining from a window of the House on
+the Dunes in the early evening.
+
+As soon as her lamp was lighted Madame de la Fontaine left the room.
+Supposing that she was about to give a signal, Dan's heart leaped at the
+prospect of some result to his eavesdropping, and he stole carefully
+around to the front of the house. Presently from an upper window in the
+east side of the house, not the north as he had expected, he saw the
+green light sending forth its message across the Dunes--to whom? Probably
+the signal could be seen from the Inn, but it more likely was intended
+for the schooner in the Cove. Sure enough, as he watched, Dan saw the
+phenomenon of the ascending lamp on the _Southern Cross_, which at that
+identical moment Tom Pembroke was watching from his post of vantage in
+one of the south windows of the Inn.
+
+A little later the signal was removed from the east window of the
+farmhouse and placed in a north window. Dan looked to see the answering
+gleam from the Inn at the Red Oak. But none came. Crouched in a corner of
+the fence, he waited perhaps for half-an-hour.
+
+Suddenly a signal gleamed from the Inn, but this time it was not green as
+he expected, but red. In a few moments a form appeared in the window of
+the farmhouse, and a white hand, which he supposed was that of Madame de
+la Fontaine, took hold of the lamp and reversed it, so that now it showed
+red. The light in the Inn vanished, reappeared, vanished again. The same
+thing happened to the light in the House on the Dunes. And looking
+eastward, Dan saw the ship's red lamp perform its fantastic ascent and
+descent. Soon all was left in darkness. Frost slipped back to his post
+near the barn and looked again into the kitchen.
+
+Madame de la Fontaine was standing in the doorway as before. The maid,
+turning away from the table, came at that moment to the window, and
+raised the sash, as though she were overheated. Presently, leaving the
+window open, she turned to her mistress, and Dan could hear the sharp
+staccato of her voice as she said something in what seemed to him her
+barbarous French.
+
+Impelled by curiosity, he crept closer to the house. He was within six
+feet of the window, standing on the tip of his toes. Suddenly he felt
+himself pinioned from behind; his arms were gripped as in a vise, a hand
+grasped his throat and began to choke him, and a sharp knee was planted
+with terrific force in the small of his back. He made a gurgling sound as
+he went backward, but there was no opportunity for struggling. He
+recovered from the shock to find himself stretched at full length in the
+wet snow. Some one was sitting upon him, struggling to thrust a gag into
+his mouth; some one else was binding his hands and feet.
+
+He could just distinguish, in the sickly moonlight and the dim rays of
+the candle from the kitchen, the faces of his assailants. One was the
+murderous looking Frenchman, the skipper of the _Southern Cross_, the
+other he took to be a common seaman.
+
+Attracted by the scuffle, the French maid had thrust her head out of the
+window and was addressing the combatants in vigorous French. Neither then
+nor later did Madame de la Fontaine appear. When Frost was safely bound
+and gagged, Captain Bonhomme arose, said a few words to his companion,
+and disappeared into the farmhouse. Dan's guard searched him rapidly,
+confiscated his revolver and knife, and then resumed his seat upon his
+legs. Inside the kitchen Dan could hear the sounds of an animated French
+dialogue, in which he imagined from time to time that he detected the
+silvery tones of Madame de la Fontaine's voice. Perhaps fifteen minutes
+elapsed. Captain Bonhomme came out of the house, strode to the spot where
+Dan was lying, and addressed him in excellent English.
+
+"Monsieur; for purposes which it is superfluous to explain, it is decided
+to extend to you for a while the hospitality of my good ship the
+_Southern Cross_--a hospitality, I may say, that your unceremonious
+eavesdropping has thrust upon you. I will release your feet; and then,
+monsieur, you follow my good Jean across the sands. If you are quiet, no
+harm shall come to you. If you resist, _cher monsieur_, it will be of
+painful duty that I entrust the contents of this revolver into--_mais
+non! Vous comprenez, n'est-ce pas?--Bien_!"
+
+He gave a sharp order to the seaman. The handkerchief about Dan's ankles
+was untied, and he was roughly assisted to his feet.
+
+"The snow is wet, eh! Yes, for the good wind is moist. Now, _Allons_!"
+
+Jean led the way, and Dan, deciding that he had no choice in the matter,
+followed obediently. The captain brought up the rear. As they went out
+through the gate, Dan turned for a moment and looked back at the house.
+He could see the French maid still at the kitchen window. At the same
+moment Captain Bonhomme glanced back and ceremoniously raised his hat.
+
+"_Bonsoir, mam'zelle_."
+
+"_Bonsoir, monsieur_," was the sharp reply, and the window was lowered
+with a bang.
+
+They went on in silence across the Dunes to the beach. There, drawn up
+above high water line, they found a skiff. The captain and Jean shoved
+off, sprang in, and the little boat plunged into the combing waves. They
+reached the _Southern Cross_ without misadventure. The captain blew a
+call upon a boatswain's whistle. A rope was lowered and Jean made the
+skiff fast to the ladder at the schooner's side. The captain took out
+his revolver and held it in his hand, while Jean unloosed the cords that
+bound Dan's wrists.
+
+"Now up, _mon ami_."
+
+For a moment Dan thought of risking a scuffle in the unsteady skiff, but
+discretion proved the better part of valour, and he climbed obediently on
+to the deck. The seaman stood close by till the captain and Jean had
+clambered up after him. A few words in French to his men, then Captain
+Bonhomme, beckoning to Dan to follow, led the way down the companion. He
+opened the door of a little cabin amidships and bade Frost enter.
+
+"You will find everything required for your comfort, monsieur," he said,
+"and I trust you will make yourself at home, as you say; and enjoy a good
+night and a sound sleep. We can discuss our affairs in the morning."
+
+And with the words, he closed the door, turned the key in the lock, and
+left Dan to his reflections.
+
+
+
+
+PART III
+
+THE SCHOONER IN THE COVE
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+THE SOUTHERN CROSS
+
+
+Dan spent a miserable night. He had soon satisfied himself that escape
+was impossible. A child could not have squeezed through the port hole,
+and the stoutness of the door--barred, he fancied, as well as locked on
+the outside,--seemed to indicate that this particular cabin had been
+constructed for the purpose of keeping an enemy out of mischief.
+
+Young Frost's reflections, as at length he stretched himself upon the
+bunk, were anything but agreeable. The reconnoitre at the House on the
+Dunes had established nothing but what they already practically
+knew--that the Marquis, the lady, and the captain of the schooner were
+working together. If they were responsible for Nancy's disappearance, as
+Dan was convinced, he had not succeeded in getting a scrap of evidence
+against them. And to cap the climax, he had stupidly allowed himself to
+be captured. The method of his capture seemed to him quite as ignominious
+as the fact.
+
+He was not particularly alarmed for his own safety. He did not doubt that
+eventually he would escape, though at the moment he could not imagine
+how; or, failing in that, he supposed he would be released,--honorably
+discharged, as it were,--when it was too late for him to interfere with
+the designs of the conspirators. And this was the bitterest reflection of
+all: that a carefully-planned conspiracy was on foot, and no sooner had
+he and Tom realized it than through sheer stupidity he must not only make
+it clear to the Marquis and his colleagues that they were being watched,
+but must let himself fall into their power. Poor Tom! thought Dan
+ruefully as he tossed upon the little bunk, there must fall upon him now
+the brunt of whatever was to be done for Nancy's rescue, for the
+thwarting of whatever nefarious designs this gang of French desperados
+were concocting.
+
+Escape! A dozen times and more he sprang from his bed to press his face
+against the thick glass of the little port and to rage futilely that he
+could not elongate his six feet of anatomy, and slip through. In vain he
+would throw his weight against the door, without so much as shaking it.
+And then he would sink back upon the bunk and determine to conserve his
+strength by snatching a bit of sleep. And he would wait--since he must
+wait--till morning.
+
+The gale had lashed itself into a fury; the rain was pouring in
+torrents; and the ship rolled distressingly in the rising sea. It was
+near dawn before Dan succeeded in getting to sleep at all, but from then
+on for several hours he slept heavily. When he awoke the storm, like
+many storms that come out of the south, had exhausted itself. The rain
+had ceased, the wind had fallen, and it was evident from the motion of
+the ship, that the sea was going down. Dan sprang to the port hole and
+peered out, and was thankful to realize that the peep hole of his prison
+gave upon the shore.
+
+Though it had stopped raining, the clouds were still grey and lowering,
+and the morning light was weak and pale. The Dunes, beyond the disturbed
+waters of the little cove, looked dirty and bedraggled. The snow had been
+washed off the hillocks, the little streams that here and there emptied
+into the Cove had swollen to the size of respectable brooks, and the high
+water of the night had strewn the beach with brown tangled seaweed. There
+was no sign of human life in evidence. Dan could just see the upper story
+of the House on the Dunes, but no other habitation save the deserted
+fisherman's huts that straggled along the beach.
+
+His watch showed half-past seven when the evil-visaged Jean unbarred the
+door, opened it about a foot, and thrust in upon the floor a tray of
+food. Dan sprang forward and succeeded in getting his foot into the
+opening, so that Jean could not close the door. He was prepared to fight
+for his liberty. Despite Jean's superior strength, Dan had the advantage
+in that his own body acted as a lever, and for a moment it seemed that he
+was to be successful; but the Frenchman, with a violent execration,
+suddenly let go his hold on the knob, the door swung in, and Dan fell
+back on all fours upon the floor. By the time he had recovered himself
+for another dash, he was confronted by Jean, a disagreeable leer upon his
+unpleasant countenance and a cocked pistol in his hand.
+
+Dan stood in his tracks. "I want to see Captain Bonhomme!" he demanded,
+making up in the tone of his voice for the vigor his movements
+suddenly lacked.
+
+"_Je ne parle pas englais_," was the irritating reply, as Jean, menacing
+the prisoner with the pistol, reached for the door and closed it with a
+snap. Dan had the chagrin of hearing the key turn in the lock and the
+heavy bar fall into place across the panels.
+
+He sat down ruefully, but after a moment or so took up the tray and
+placed it on the bunk before him. He made a bad breakfast off thick
+gruel, black bread and villainous coffee, and then kicked his heels
+impatiently for an hour or more.
+
+Eventually Jean reappeared, this time pistol in hand, and behind him, to
+Dan's relief, Captain Bonhomme. The captain entered the little cabin,
+leaving the door open behind him while Jean stood in the passage on duty
+as guard. The swarthy unattractive face of Captain Bonhomme wore this
+morning an expression of sarcastic levity that was more irritating to
+Frost than its ferocious anger had been the night before.
+
+"_Bon jour, monsieur_," said the captain in a tone of obnoxious
+pleasantry. "I trust the night has gone well with you."
+
+"You will oblige me," snapped Dan for reply, "by omitting your
+hypocritical courtesy. I demand to know what you mean by this
+proceeding,--capturing me like a common thief and imprisoning me on this
+confounded ship?"
+
+Captain Bonhomme's countenance quickly lost its factitious cheerfulness.
+"Monsieur," he replied sharply, "I did not come to you to bandy words. If
+you will reflect on the occupation you were indulging last night at the
+moment we surprised you, you will comprehend that it was certainly to be
+inferred that, if you were not a thief, you were an eavesdropper; which,
+to my way of thinking, is as bad. If you address me again in that
+insulting tone, I shall leave you till such a time as you may be willing
+to listen at least with common courtesy to what I have to say. You are,
+young gentleman, a prisoner on my ship and very much in my power. You
+have grossly offended a distinguished countrywoman who is under my
+protection in your barbarous country. Madame de la Fontaine, however, has
+been good enough to interest herself in your behalf and to beg that I
+shall not unceremoniously pitch you overboard to feed the fishes as you
+so richly deserve."
+
+Dan bit his lips, but for the moment kept silent.
+
+"I am come this morning," continued Captain Bonhomme, "not for the
+pleasure of entering upon a discussion, but to inform you that a little
+later in the morning, when this infernal wind of yours has blown itself
+out, Madame de la Fontaine proposes to come aboard. For reasons of her
+own, she does you the honor to desire a conversation with you. I have to
+ask that you will meet my distinguished patroness as the gentleman you
+doubtless profess to be, and that you will give me your word not to
+attempt to escape while Madame is on board the ship."
+
+"I shall not give my word," protested Dan, "under any circumstances to a
+pirate such as I take you to be."
+
+"_Eh bien, monsieur_; in that case, you will appear before Madame in
+irons. From your window, so admirably small, you will see at what hour
+Madame comes aboard. If in the meantime you have decided to give us your
+word of honour, well and good; if you continue to display your freedom of
+choice by the exercise of your stupidity, also, well and good. And now,
+_an revoir_." Captain Bonhomme smiled grimly, bowed again with insulting
+politeness, and left Dan alone in the cabin.
+
+An hour, two hours passed. The wind had abated, the sun was struggling to
+dissipate the murky bank of cloud that hung from zenith to the eastern
+horizon. From his coign of vantage at the little port hole Dan saw Madame
+de la Fontaine pick her way across the Dunes and come upon the little
+beach. A small boat had put off from the schooner and was being rowed to
+shore by two seamen. The French lady gathered her skirts about her
+ankles, and stepped lightly into the skiff, as the men held it at the
+edge of the surf. The little boat was then pushed off and rowed briskly
+toward the _Southern Cross_.
+
+Half-an-hour passed before the door of Dan's cabin was opened again, and
+Captain Bonhomme, attended by the faithful Jean, reappeared. In the
+skipper's hand was a pair of irons.
+
+"Monsieur," said the captain, holding up the irons, "Madame de la
+Fontaine does you the honour of desiring an interview in the saloon. May
+I venture to enquire your pleasure?"
+
+The ignominy of appearing before his charming acquaintance of the day
+before manacled like a criminal, was too much for Dan's vanity. "I give
+you my word of honour," he said gruffly.
+
+"Ah, monsieur," murmured the captain, "permit me to applaud your good
+taste. But let us be exact: until you are returned to this cabin and are
+again under lock and key, that is to say until Madame is safely upon
+shore again,--you give me your word of honour as a gentleman to make no
+attempt to escape?"
+
+"Yes, yes," said Dan, striving to conceal his irritation. "But spare me,
+I beg, your explanations. As you know, I am practically helpless. We
+understand each other. I trust that Madame de la Fontaine will give me an
+explanation of the outrage that you have refused."
+
+"_Sans doute, sane doute_!" exclaimed the captain. He waved his
+hand toward the door. "_Apres vous, monsieur_. Our worthy Jean will
+lead the way."
+
+Without more ado they left the little cabin that had served as
+Dan's prison and traversed a narrow passageway aft to the door of a
+little saloon.
+
+In the saloon, seated in a deep arm chair by the side of the table, was
+Madame de la Fontaine. She was clad in some soft green gown, with furs
+about her neck and wrists, and a little bonnet, adorned by the gay
+plumage of a tropical bird, worn close upon her head. At first glance she
+was as bewitchingly beautiful, as entirely charming, as she had seemed to
+Dan the day before. He blushed to the roots of his hair and for the
+moment quite forgot the extraordinary predicament in which he was placed.
+Madame de la Fontaine rose, a bright smile beaming from her soft blue
+eyes, and waited for Dan to approach.
+
+"Good morning, Mr. Frost. This is charming of you. And now, Captain
+Bonhomme, if you will be so kind,--" she turned with her delightful smile
+to the skipper. "_Eh bien_, Jean!" This last remark was uttered in a
+sharp tone of command, very different from the silvery accents in which
+she had spoken to Frost and the captain. Dan wondered at it.
+
+The disagreeable impression was but momentary, for the lady turned
+again to Dan, engaged him with her frank and pleasant glance, and young
+Frost forgot everything in the presence of the most charming woman he
+had ever met.
+
+Captain Bonhomme and his watchdog had disappeared, closing the saloon
+door behind them. Dan and Madame de la Fontaine were alone.
+
+"Will you not seat yourself, monsieur?" she said. "We shall then talk so
+much more at our ease."
+
+"Thank you," Dan murmured vaguely, and advancing a step or two nearer,
+seated himself in the first chair within reach.
+
+"Ah, not there, Mr. Frost," the lady protested with a little laugh
+of amusement. "It will never be that we are able to talk at so
+great a distance." She indicated a more comfortable chair at much
+closer quarters.
+
+Dan obediently changed his seat, and waited for Madame de la Fontaine to
+begin the conversation. But she continued for a moment silently to regard
+him with a naive air of interest and of unconcealed admiration.
+
+"May I ask," said Dan at length, disturbed by this scrutiny, and rising
+to a courtesy that was in reality beyond him, "for what reason you have
+done me the honour to wish to speak with me?"
+
+"_Vraiment_," replied Madame de la Fontaine; "after the events of last
+night there is need that we should have some conversation. You are very
+young and I have reason to be grateful to you for courtesy and kindness,
+so I have yielded to impulse, against my judgment, to interfere with
+Captain Bonhomme who has great anger with you."
+
+"You are very kind, madame," Dan replied with dignity. "I am to infer
+then that my liberty or my further unwarranted imprisonment on this ship
+is to be determined by you?"
+
+"_Mais non, Monsieur_. It is true only that I have a little influence
+with Captain Bonhomme. Last night you were watching me, so it interests
+me to know why."
+
+"I was watching Mrs. Heath's house," Dan answered.
+
+"Ah! but I and my maid were alone in the room into which you so
+unceremoniously looked, monsieur!"
+
+"Yes, madame, but why should you infer that my motive in looking into
+that room was interest in your affairs?"
+
+"I do not altogether assume that, Mr. Frost," the lady protested. "I
+infer simply--but, pardon! you were to say--?"
+
+"Merely to ask you, madame, what Captain Bonhomme proposes to do with me,
+should you not be so good as to use your influence in my behalf?"
+
+For reply the lady shrugged her shoulders a trifle. "I have fear,
+monsieur," she said after a moment, "that Captain Bonhomme will take you
+for a sail, perhaps a long sail, on the _Southern Cross_."
+
+"Then," said Dan, "since there is no doubt in my mind of your influence
+with the captain, I beg that you will have him release me."
+
+"It is that that I desire, monsieur; and yet--?" Madame de la Fontaine
+paused and glanced at her companion with a charming little air of
+interrogation.
+
+"And yet?" repeated Dan, flushing a little as he looked into the lovely
+blue eyes that met his so frankly.
+
+"I confess, monsieur, I must first discover if you are really deserving
+of my efforts. I care to know very much why you watched me last night
+at the House on the Dunes. For what reason do you watch me at midnight?
+a stranger, a woman? Why is it that my affairs give you interest? I
+would know."
+
+Her voice, her countenance expressed now only her sense of injury, an
+injury which, as it were, she was striving not to regard also as an
+insult. Under the persistent searching of her soft glance, Dan felt
+himself very small indeed.
+
+"Answer me, if you please," she said. This time Dan detected just a trace
+of the sharpness with which she had dismissed the obsequious Jean. It
+gave him courage and a sense of protection from the fascination he knew
+that this strange woman was successfully exerting over him.
+
+As he replied, his glance encountered hers with frankness. "Madame de la
+Fontaine, I told you yesterday morning, my sister, Nancy Frost, has
+disappeared. We searched for her all day in vain. Not a trace of her has
+been found. But certain strange events have led me to suspect that
+certain persons have had something to do with her disappearance and must
+know her whereabouts. I will be frank Madame. One of the persons whom I
+so suspect is yourself."
+
+"I!--_mon Dieu_! and why is it that you believe this, Monsieur?"
+
+"I suspect you, madame, because I suspect the Marquis de Boisdhyver."
+
+"Ah! the French gentleman who is staying with you at the Inn at the Red
+Oak, is it not so?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"But--why me?"
+
+"Because, madame, I discovered that you and the Marquis de Boisdhyver
+have been in secret communication with each other."
+
+"_C'est impossible. Te me comprende pas, monsieur_. Will you tell me why
+it is that you can think that this Marquis de Bois--what is the name?"
+
+"De Boisdhyver."
+
+"_Merci_. Why is it that you can think that the Marquis de Boisdhyver and
+I have been in secret communication?"
+
+"Lights, green and red lights, have been used as signals; by the Marquis
+at the Inn; by you, madame, from the House on the Dunes; and by some
+one,--Captain Bonhomme, I suppose,--from this ship."
+
+"Lights, you have seen lights?"
+
+"Several times last night, Madame. My suspicions were aroused. I was
+determined to find my sister. I resolved to learn the meaning of those
+mysterious signals. My method was stupid: I blundered, and as you have
+several times so gently hinted, I am in your power."
+
+For a moment Madame de la Fontaine was silent, then she looked quickly
+up; a half-vexed, half-amused expression curling her pretty lips.
+
+"Look at me, monsieur," she said. "Do you know what you tell me? That I
+am an adventuress?"
+
+Dan flushed suddenly as he met her steadfast gaze. "I have stated only a
+suspicion, madame, to account for my own stupid blundering. But if you
+think that my suspicions are extraordinary, don't you think that our
+present situation and conversation are also extraordinary, and that they
+might rather confirm my suspicions?"
+
+Madame de la Fontaine dropped her eyes with a perceptible frown of
+displeasure; but again she looked up, smiling.
+
+"_C'est drole_, monsieur, but I find you very attractive? You are at once
+so naive and so clever?"
+
+Dan, finding nothing to reply to this unexpected remark, bit his lips.
+
+"Will you not trust me?" she asked him suddenly, and putting out her hand
+she touched his own with the tips of her fingers.
+
+Poor Frost tingled at this unaccustomed contact. "I--I--" he stammered
+awkwardly. "I have certainly no desire to distrust you, madame."
+
+"And yet it is that you do distrust me."
+
+"But what would you have me do?"
+
+"Ah!" Her hand spontaneously closed upon his with a clasp that delighted
+and yet disconcerted him. "I hope that we shall make each other to
+understand."
+
+"What would you have me do?" Dan repeated.
+
+"Monsieur, let me make to you a confession. I understand your
+suspicions; I understand your desire to find if they are true. You have
+reason; Monsieur le Marquis de Boisdhyver and I have exchanged the
+mysterious signals that you have witnessed. Why should I deny that which
+already you know? Monsieur de Boisdhyver and I are occupied with affairs
+of great importance, and it is necessary that all is kept secret. But I
+believe, that it is that I can trust you, monsieur."
+
+"And Nancy--?" exclaimed Dan.
+
+"_Pas si vite, pas si vite_!" said the lady, laughing gayly, Dan's hand
+still in her friendly pressure. "All in good time, _mon ami_. It is
+necessary before I confide in you our little secret that I consult
+Monsieur le Marquis."
+
+Dan's face betrayed his disappointment. "But you do know about Nancy," he
+insisted; "you will assure me--"
+
+"Of nothing, dear boy,"--and she withdrew her hand. "But it had been so
+much better for us all if only Monsieur le Marquis had at the first
+confided in you."
+
+Madame de la Fontaine had risen now and was holding out her hand to
+say good-bye.
+
+"It is necessary that I return to the shore. I will see Monsieur le
+Marquis this afternoon, and immediately afterward--"
+
+"But, madame, surely," Dan exclaimed, "I am to accompany you?"
+
+"Ah! monsieur," she replied with a charming little smile, "for the
+present you must rest content to be _mon captif_. We must quite clearly
+understand each other before--well. But you are too impetuous, Monsieur
+Dan. For the moment I leave you here."
+
+"But Madame de la Fontaine," cried Dan, "I cannot consent--"
+
+"No! no!" she said, as with a gay laugh, she placed a cool little hand
+across his mouth to prevent his finishing his sentence.
+
+What absurd impulse fired his blood at this sudden familiarity, Dan did
+not know; but, quite spontaneously, as though all his life he had been in
+the habit of paying such gallantries to charming ladies, he kissed the
+soft fingers upon his lips. Madame de la Fontaine quickly withdrew them.
+
+"Ah, _mon ami_;" she said, "I expected not to find here _une telle
+galanterie_."
+
+"I have offended you," murmured Dan, blushing furiously.
+
+"Ah, _pas du tout_!" said Madame de la Fontaine. "You are a dear boy,
+monsieur Dan, and I--well, I find you charming."
+
+As she said this, to Dan's complete confusion, Madame de la Fontaine
+lightly brushed his cheeks with her lips, and passing him rapidly, went
+out of the door of the saloon.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+TOM TURNS THE TABLES
+
+
+Owing to his long watch during the greater part of the night, Pembroke
+slept heavily until late the next morning. Indeed, he did not waken until
+Jesse, alarmed that neither Dan nor he had appeared, knocked on their
+door. He sprang up quickly then, and began to dress hastily. Dan's bed
+had not been slept in, and Tom wondered how the night had gone with him.
+
+In a few moments he was down stairs and in the breakfast-room. He found
+the Marquis de Boisdhyver already at table, pouring out his coffee, which
+Deborah had just placed before him. Mrs. Frost had not appeared.
+
+Tom murmured an apology for being late, and delayed the black woman, who
+was on the point of leaving the room, by a question.
+
+"Where is Mr. Dan?"
+
+"Sure an, Mass' Tom, I ain't seen him dis mornin' yet. Ain't he done
+over-slept hisself like you?"
+
+"No; but I dare say he is about the place somewheres. All right, Deb;
+bring my breakfast quickly, please."
+
+"You will pardon me," said Monsieur de Boisdhyver, "for having begun
+without you?"
+
+"Oh, certainly," said Tom; "Don't know what was the matter, but I slept
+unusually soundly last night; that is, after I got to sleep, for the
+storm kept me awake for hours."
+
+"_Et moi aussi_," said the Marquis. "What wind! I am but thankful it
+has exhausted itself at last. And Monsieur Frost, he has also
+over-slept, you say?"
+
+"No. He got up early without disturbing me. I guess he will be in any
+minute now."
+
+The Marquis stirred his coffee and slowly sipped it.
+
+Tom made a hasty breakfast, and then went outside to reconnoitre. He
+discovered no trace of his friend. There was but one inference in his
+uneasy mind: Dan had met with some misadventure at the House on the
+Dunes. At last, after wandering about aimlessly for some time, he decided
+to tell Jesse of his uneasiness.
+
+"If Mr. Dan is not back by dinner time, I shall go over to the House on
+the Dunes and try to find out what has become of him. Heaven knows what
+has become of Miss Nancy. I don't like that schooner, Jess, and its ugly
+crew, lying there in the Cove. It's all a darn queer business."
+
+"They're certainly a rough-looking lot, Mr. Tom, as I saw when I was on
+the beach yesterday. And she don't appear to have any particular business
+anchoring there. I hope they've nothing to do with Miss Nancy's and Mr.
+Dan's being away."
+
+"I don't know, Jess, what to think. But listen here I want you to go into
+the Port this morning and engage Ezra Manners to come out here and stay
+with us for a week or so. Don't tell him too much, but I guess Ezra won't
+balk at the notion of a scrap. Bring him out with you, and offer to pay
+him enough to make sure of his coming. And I want you to go to Breeze's
+on the Parade and get some guns and powder, enough to arm every blessed
+soul of us in the Inn. Charge the stuff to me. And be careful how you
+bring it back, for I don't want any one here to know about it,
+particularly the old Frenchman. Understand? You ought to get back by
+dinner-time, if you start at once. I'll stay here till you return."
+
+"I'll start right off, sir. Guess I'll have to drive, for the
+rain'll have washed the snow off the roads. I'll be back by halfpast
+twelve, Mr. Tom."
+
+"All right," said Pembroke. "Be sure not to let any one know what you
+are doing."
+
+"Sure I won't, sir. I've been pretty much worried myself about Miss
+Nancy. Didn't seem a bit like Miss Nance to go off without sayin' a word
+to anybody.
+
+"Well, hurry along now, Jesse."
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+Tom's next task was to try to explain to Mrs. Frost without alarming her.
+She happily jumped to the idea that Dan had gotten trace of Nancy, had
+gone to fetch her, and would return with her before nightfall. So Tom
+left her quite cheerfully knitting in her room for the day.
+
+From time to time during the morning Tom wandered into the bar always to
+find Monsieur de Boisdhyver absorbed in his writing before the fire. The
+morning passed--a long restless morning for Pembroke--and nothing had
+happened. Dan had not returned. He tried to think out a plan of action.
+He went into the north wing of the Inn and barricaded the door leading
+from the bowling alley into the hallway. He made sure that all other
+doors and windows were fastened, and he put the key of the door that
+opened from the bar into the old wing into his pocket. Then he looked at
+the doors and windows in the south wing.
+
+About noon, as he was standing at an upper window anxiously scanning the
+landscape for any sign of his friend, Tom saw the Marquis, wrapped in his
+great black cloak, emerge from the gallery, go down the steps by the Red
+Oak, and walk rapidly down the avenue of maples. He went along the Port
+Road, to the point where a little road branched off and led to the beach
+of the Cove; here he turned and walked in the direction of the beach.
+With the field glass Tom could follow him quite easily as he picked his
+way through the slush.
+
+Beyond, on the waters of the Cove, the _Southern Cross_ rode at anchor. A
+small boat had put off from the schooner, two seamen at the oars, and a
+woman seated in the stern. The boat reached the shore, the lady was
+lifted out upon the sands, the men jumped in again, pushed off and rowed
+briskly back to the schooner. Tom could not distinguish the lady's
+features, but from the style of her dress, cut in so different a fashion
+than that the ladies of Caesarea were wont to display, and from the
+character of her easy graceful walk, he judged that that was the Madame
+de la Fontaine, of whom Dan had told him the day before. The lady,
+whoever she might be, advanced along the beach and turned into the road
+down which the Marquis de Boisdhyver was going to meet her. Tom could see
+her extend her hand, and the old gentleman, bending ceremoniously, lift
+it to his lips. Then leaning against a stone wall beside a meadow of
+bedraggled snow, they engaged in animated conversation. The lady talked,
+the Marquis talked. They shrugged their shoulders, they nodded their
+heads, they pointed this way and then that. Poor Tom felt he must know
+what was being said. At last, their conference ended, they parted as
+ceremoniously as they had met, the lady starting across the Dunes and the
+Marquis retracing his steps toward the Inn.
+
+In the meantime, fortunately before the Marquis reached the Port Road,
+Jesse had returned, accompanied by the able-bodied Ezra Manners, and
+laden with the supply of arms and ammunition that Pembroke had ordered.
+
+Within half-an-hour Tom and Monsieur de Boisdhyver were seated together
+in the dining-room.
+
+"Ah, and where is Monsieur Dan?" asked the Marquis, with an affectation
+of cheerfulness. "Is he not returned?"
+
+"Not yet, monsieur," Tom replied grimly.
+
+"But you have heard from him?"
+
+"Oh, yes," was Tom's answer; "I have heard from him of course."
+
+"And from Mademoiselle Nancy, I trust, also?"
+
+"Yes, from Nancy also."
+
+"Ah, I am so relieved, Monsieur Pembroke. I was most anxious for their
+safety. One knows not what may happen. We shall have a charming little
+reunion at supper, _n'est-ce pas_?"
+
+"Delightful," said Tom, but in a tone of voice that did not encourage the
+Marquis to ask further questions or to continue his comments.
+
+After dinner, Tom slipped the field glass beneath his jacket, and ran
+upstairs to take another view of the countryside. To his great
+satisfaction he saw a dark spot moving across the snowy dunes and
+recognized the lady of the morning. Apparently she was on her way to the
+Cove again.
+
+He took a loaded pistol, ran down stairs, gave Jesse strict orders to
+keep his eye on the Marquis, saddled his horse, and galloped off madly
+for Mrs. Meath's house.
+
+When he reached the gate of the farmhouse, Tom hitched his horse to the
+fence, went rapidly up the little walk, and knocked boldly and loudly on
+the front door. Repeated and prolonged knocking brought no response. He
+tried the door and found it fastened. He walked about the house. Every
+window on the ground floor was tightly closed and barred. There was no
+sign of life. He knocked at the door of the kitchen, but with no result.
+He tried it, and found it also locked. Determined not to be thwarted in
+his effort to see Mrs. Meath, he kicked vigourously against the door with
+his great hob-nailed boots. Unsuccessful in this, he detached a rail from
+the top of the fence and used it against the door as a battering-ram. At
+the first crash of timbers, the sash of a window in the second story,
+directly above the kitchen, was thrown open, and a dark-eyed,
+dark-haired, excessively angry-looking, young woman thrust her head out.
+
+"_Qui va la_?" she exclaimed.
+
+"Well," said Tom, smiling a little in spite of himself, for the young
+woman was in a state of great indignation. "I want to see Mrs. Meath. I
+may say, I am determined to see Mrs. Meath."
+
+"_Peste! Je ne parle pas anglais_!" snapped the damsel.
+
+"Very well then, mademoiselle, I'll try you in French," said Tom. And in
+very bad French indeed, scarcely even the French of Dr. Watson's school
+for the sons of gentlemen, Pembroke repeated his remarks.
+
+"_Je ne comprend pas_," said the young woman.
+
+Tom essayed his explanation again, but whether the youthful female in the
+window could or would not understand, she kept repeating in the midst of
+his every sentence "_Je ne parle pas anglais_," till Tom lost his temper.
+
+"_Bien_, my fine girl," he exclaimed at last; "I am going to enter this
+house. If you won't open the door, I will batter it down. Understand?
+_Comprenez-vous_?"
+
+"_Je ne parle pas anglais_."
+
+"As you will." He raised the fence-rail again and made as if to ram the
+door. "_Ouvrez la porte_! Do you understand that?"
+
+"_Bete_!" cried the girl, withdrawing her head and slamming down
+the window.
+
+Tom waited a moment to see if his threats had been effective, and was
+relieved by hearing the bar within removed and the key turned in the
+lock. The door was opened, and the young woman stood on the sill and
+volleyed forth a series of French execrations that made Tom wince,
+though he did not understand a word she was saying. Despite her protests,
+he brushed her aside and stalked into the house. He went rapidly from
+room to room, upstairs and down, from garret to cellar, the girl
+following him with her chorus of abusive reproach. She might have held
+her peace, thought Tom, for within half-an-hour he was convinced that
+there was not a person in the House on the Dunes save himself and his
+excited companion. All he discovered for his pains was that old Mrs.
+Meath was also among the missing.
+
+"_Ou est Madame Meath_?"
+
+"_Madame Meath! Que voulez vous? Je ne connais pas Madame Meath_...." And
+infinitely more of which Tom could gather neither head nor tail.
+
+Satisfied at last that there was nothing to be gained by further search
+or parley with the woman, he thanked her civilly enough and went out. He
+unhitched his horse, vaulted into the saddle, and dashed back, as fast as
+his beast could be urged to carry him, to the Inn. He was certain now
+that the schooner held the secret of his vanished friends, and it
+occurred to him to play their own game and turn the tables on Monsieur
+the Marquis de Boisdhyver.
+
+Arrived at the Inn, Tom turned his horse, white with lather, over to
+Jesse; made sure that the Marquis was in the bar; and then, with the help
+of Manners, rapidly made a few preparations.
+
+It was about five o'clock when, his arrangements completed, he returned
+to the bar, where Monsieur de Boisdhyver was quietly taking his tea. Tom
+bowed to the old gentleman, seated himself in a great chair about five
+feet away, and somewhat ostentatiously took from his pocket a pistol,
+laid it on the arm of his chair, and let his fingers lightly play upon
+the handle. The old marquis watched Pembroke's movements out of the
+corner of his eye, still somewhat deliberately sipping his tea. Manners,
+meanwhile, had entered, and stood respectfully in the doorway, oddly
+enough also with a pistol in his hand.
+
+Suddenly Monsieur de Boisdhyver placed his teacup on the table, and
+leaning back in his chair, surveyed Tom with an air of indignant
+astonishment.
+
+"Monsieur Pembroke," he said, "to what am I to attribute these so unusual
+attentions? Is it that you are mad?"
+
+"You may attribute these unusual attentions, marquis, to the fact that
+from now on, you are not a guest of the Inn at the Red Oak, but a
+prisoner."
+
+"Ah!" exclaimed the Marquis with a start, as he made a spasmodic motion
+toward the pocket of his coat. But if his intention had been to draw a
+weapon, Tom was too quick for him. The Marquis found himself staring into
+the barrel of a pistol and heard the unpleasant click of the trigger as
+it was cocked.
+
+The old gentleman paled, whether with fright or indignation, Tom was not
+concerned to know. "You will please keep perfectly still, marquis."
+
+"Monsieur Pembroke," exclaimed the old gentleman, "_C'est_ abominable,
+outrageous, _Mon Dieu_, what insult!"
+
+"Manners," said Tom, "kindly search that gentleman and put his firearms
+out of his reach."
+
+"Monsieur, _c'est extraordinaire_. I protest."
+
+"Quick, Ezra," replied Tom, "or one of us is likely to know how it feels
+to have a bullet in his skin. Up with your hands, marquis."
+
+Monsieur de Boisdhyver obeyed perforce, while Manners quickly searched
+him, removed a small pistol from his coat pocket and a stiletto from his
+waistcoat, and handed them to Tom.
+
+"I thought as much," said Pembroke, slipping them into his pocket. "Now,
+sir, you will oblige me by dropping that attitude of surprised
+indignation."
+
+"Monsieur," said the Marquis, "What is it that you do? Why is it that you
+so insult me?"
+
+"Monsieur, I will explain. You are my prisoner. I intend to lock you up
+safely and securely until my friend and his sister return, unharmed, to
+the Inn. When they are safe at home, when Madame de la Fontaine has taken
+her departure from the House on the Dunes, and when the _Southern Cross_
+has sailed out of the Strathsey, we shall release you and see you also
+safely out of this country. Is that clear?"
+
+"_Mais, monsieur_--"
+
+"I am quite convinced that you know where Nancy is and what has happened
+to Dan. As my friends are probably in your power or in the power of your
+friends, so, dear marquis, you are in mine. If you wish to regain your
+own liberty, you will have to see that they have theirs. Now kindly
+follow Manners; it will give him pleasure to show you to your apartment.
+There you may burn either red or green lights, and I am sure the
+snowbirds and rabbits of Lovel's Woods will enjoy them. After you,
+monsieur."
+
+"Sir, I refuse."
+
+"My dear marquis, do not make me add force to discourtesy. After you."
+
+The Marquis bowed ironically, shrugged his shoulders, and followed
+Manners up the stairs. He was ushered into a chamber on the west side of
+the Inn, whose windows, had they not been heavily barred, would have
+given him a view but of the thick tangles of the Woods.
+
+"I trust you will be able to make yourself comfortable here," said Tom.
+"Your meals will be served at the accustomed hours. I shall return myself
+in a short time, and perhaps by then you will have reconciled yourself to
+the insult I have offered you and be prepared to talk with me."
+
+With that Tom bowed as ironically as the Marquis had done, went out and
+closed the door, and securely locked and barred it outside. Monsieur de
+Boisdhyver was left to his reflections.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+MADAME DE LA FONTAINE
+
+
+For several hours after his return to the little cabin Dan had ample
+leisure in which to think over his extraordinary interview. There could
+be no doubt that the conspirators, for such he had come to call them to
+himself, were determined and desperate enough to go to any lengths in
+accomplishing their designs. Whether his suspicions and activity in
+seeking Nancy had precipitated their plans, his unexpected capture seemed
+to embarrass his captors as much as it did himself. At least, he gathered
+this from Madame de la Fontaine's conversation. Whatever might be the
+motive of the lady's proposed confidence, poor Frost could see nothing
+for it but to await their disclosure and then seize whatever advantage
+they might open to him. Notwithstanding the fact that Dan had cautioned
+himself against trusting the flattery of his charming visitor,
+notwithstanding that he told himself to be forewarned, even by his own
+suspicions, was to be forearmed, he was in reality unconscious of the
+degree to which he had proved susceptible to the lady's blandishments, if
+indeed she had employed blandishments and had not merely given him the
+evidence of a good heart upon which his youth and naivete had made a
+genuine impression.
+
+Dan's experiences with girls up to this time had been limited. His
+emotional nature had never, as yet, been deeply stirred. But no one could
+be insensible to Madame de la Fontaine's beauty and charm, and her
+delightfully natural familiarity; and, finally, her fleeting kiss had
+seemed to Dan but evidence of a warm impulsive heart. To be sure, with
+all the good will in the world, he could not acquit her of being
+concerned in a mysterious plot--indeed, had she not admitted so
+much?--though, also, he must in justice remember that he knew very little
+of the nature of the plot in question.
+
+As he paced restlessly back and forth the length of his prison, he tried
+to think clearly of the accumulating mystery. Was there a hidden treasure
+and how did the Marquis know about it? What part had the _Southern Cross_
+to play with its diabolical looking captain, and what could have become
+of Nancy? Then why had Madame de la Fontaine--but again his cheek would
+burn and remembrance of the bewitching Frenchwoman blotted out all else.
+
+At half-past twelve Captain Bonhomme appeared again. This time he invited
+Dan to partake of luncheon with him on the condition once more of a
+parole. And Dan accepted. He and the Captain made their luncheon
+together, attended by the faithful Jean; and, though no mention was made
+to their anomalous position, the meal was not altogether a comfortable
+one. Captain Bonhomme asked a great many questions about the country, to
+which Frost was inclined to give but the briefest replies; nor, on his
+part, did he show more disposition to be communicative in response to
+Dan's questions about France. Jean regarded the situation with obviously
+surly disapproval. When the meal was finished, Frost was conducted back
+to his little cabin.
+
+About two o'clock he saw the small boat put off for shore, and glancing
+in that direction, he was relieved to see Madame de la Fontaine already
+waiting upon the beach. Within half-an-hour he was again in her
+presence in the Captain's saloon, where their conversation had taken
+place in the morning.
+
+The lady received him graciously. "Ah! monsieur Dan, I fear you have had
+a weary day of it; but it was impossible for me to return sooner."
+
+"It is very kind of you to return at all," replied Dan, gallantly enough.
+
+"Now, Monsieur, you are anxious, I know, that I keep my promise of
+the morning."
+
+"Most anxious," said Dan.
+
+"Without doubt. Come here, my friend, sit near me and listen attentively
+to a long story."
+
+"You have consulted with the Marquis?"
+
+"_Mais oui_. It was difficult, but I have brought him to my way of
+thinking. I am certain that it was an error in the first place not
+taking you into our confidence. _Eh bien_! Tell me, do you know how
+your foster-sister came to be in the charge of your mother at the Inn
+at the Red Oak?"
+
+"Yes, I know what my mother has told me. The child was abandoned to her
+rather than left in her charge."
+
+"_Mais non_" said Madame de la Fontaine; "General Pointelle was impelled
+to act as he did by the strongest motives,--nothing less than the
+tremendous task, undertaken for his country, to liberate the Emperor
+Napoleon from Elba. General Pointelle was a soldier,--more, he was a
+marechal of the Empire; the greatest responsibilities devolved upon him.
+It was impossible for him to be burdened with a child."
+
+"But why, madame, did he not take my mother into his confidence?"
+
+"Secrecy was imperative, monsieur. Even to this day, you do not know who
+General Pointelle actually was. His was a name well-known in France,
+glorious in the annals of the Empire; a name, too, familiar to you in a
+somewhat different connection. 'General Pointelle' was the
+_nom-de-guerre_, as it were, of Francois, Marquis de Boisdhyver, marechal
+de France."
+
+"Francois! you say, _Francois_!" exclaimed Dan.
+
+"_Mais oui_, monsieur; but that should hardly astonish you so much as the
+fact that he was a Boisdhyver. Why are you surprised?"
+
+"Simply, madame," exclaimed Dan hastily, "by the fact that it is the same
+name as that of our Marquis."
+
+"Not quite," corrected the lady; "our Marquis--as you say--is
+Marie-Anne-Timelon-Armand de Boisdhyver, the General's younger brother."
+
+"Ah! and therefore Nancy's uncle?"
+
+"Yes, the uncle of Nancy Frost, or of Eloise de Boisdhyver."
+
+"I see," said Dan. "I begin to see."
+
+"_Eh bien_, monsieur. General Pointelle--the marechal de
+Boisdhyver,--left the Inn at the Red Oak upon a mission for the Emperor,
+then at Elba. _Helas_! that mission ended with disaster after the Hundred
+Days; for, as you know, the Emperor was sent in exile to St. Helena; and,
+as you may not know, the Marechal de Boisdhyver was killed on the plains
+of Waterloo. _Allons_; when he left Deal, he concealed in a hidden
+chamber, which one enters, I believe, from a room you call the Oak
+Parlour, a large treasure, of jewels and gold. This treasure, saved from
+the _debacle_ in France, he had brought with him to America, and he hid
+it in the Inn, for the future of his little daughter Eloise. You remember
+that your mother was to hear something of advantage to her and the child,
+did not the General return. It was the secret of the treasure and the
+directions to find it. Well, Monsieur, at Waterloo, you must know, the
+Marechal and his brother, the present Marquis, fought side by side.
+Francois de Boisdhyver fell, nobly fighting for the glory of France;
+Marie-Anne had the good fortune to preserve his life, but was taken
+prisoner by the English. Before the Marechal received his death wound,
+the two brothers spoke with each other for the last time. In that
+moment, monsieur, the Marquis Francois revealed to the Marquis Marie-Anne
+that he had abandoned his daughter in America and that he had concealed
+in your old inn a treasure sufficient to provide for her future. He
+charged his brother to go to America, if he survived the battle; claim
+the little Eloise; rescue the treasure, and return with her to France and
+restore the fallen fortunes of the House of Boisdhyver.
+
+"It took the Marquis Marie-Anne a long time to carry out his brother's
+dying injunctions," said Dan.
+
+"Ah! but yes. You do not realize that the Marquis Marie-Anne, after the
+fall of Napoleon, spent many years in a military prison in England, for I
+have already told you that he fell into the hands of the enemy on the
+field of Waterloo. When at last he was released, he was aged, broken, and
+in poverty. His brother, in those dreadful moments on the battlefield,
+had been able to give him but the briefest description of the Inn at the
+Red Oak and the hidden treasure. He did not tell him where the treasure
+was, but only how he might obtain the paper of instructions which the
+Marechal had concealed in a curiously-carved old cabinet in the Oak
+Parlour. The Marechal, monsieur, loved the mysterious, and chose the
+device of tearing into two parts this paper of directions and concealing
+them in different hiding-places of the cabinet. Those directions, after
+many years, grew vague in the younger brother's memory.
+
+"_Eh bien_, the Marquis was at last able to make the journey to this
+country. You must remember he had nothing wherewith to prove his story,
+if he gave you his confidence at once; and so, he decided, to investigate
+quietly alone. But he won the confidence of Mademoiselle Nancy,--that is,
+of his niece, Eloise de Boisdhyver,--and revealed to her the secret of
+her identity and the mysterious story of the treasure. You follow me in
+all this, Monsieur Dan?"
+
+"Perfectly, madame," Frost replied. "But as yet you have told me nothing
+of your own connection with this strange history."
+
+"Pardon, dear boy," rejoined Madame de la Fontaine; "I was about to do
+so, but there is so much to tell. My own connection with the affair is
+quite simple. I am an old friend, one of the oldest, of Monsieur le
+Marquis de Boisdhyver, and, when I was a very young girl, I knew the
+Marechal himself. It has been my happiness to be able to prove my
+friendship for a noble and a fallen family. One day last summer, Monsieur
+de Boisdhyver told me his brother's dying words, and it was I, Monsieur
+Dan, who was able to give the money for this strange expedition. The poor
+Marquis had lost quite all his fortune."
+
+"I understand," said Frost. "But, yet, madame, I do not see the necessity
+for the secrecy, the mystery, for these strange signals at night, for
+these midnight investigations, for this schooner and its rough crew, for
+Nancy's disappearance, for my own imprisonment here."
+
+"Please, please," murmured Madame de la Fontaine, as she held up her
+hands in smiling protest. "You go too fast for me. _Un moment, mon ami,
+un moment_. It was sixteen years ago that the Marechal de Boisdhyver was
+a guest at the Inn at the Red Oak. You forget that the Marquis de
+Boisdhyver had no proof of his right to the treasure, save his own story,
+save his account of his brother's instructions on the field of Waterloo.
+By telling all he might have awakened deeper suspicions than by secrecy."
+
+"That, I must say," Dan interrupted, "would hardly be possible."
+
+"So!" exclaimed Madame de la Fontaine, with an accent of displeasure.
+"_Ecoutez_! Monsieur le Marquis was to come a month in advance, as he did
+come; take up his quarters at the Inn; reconnoitre the ground; and win,
+if possible, the confidence and aid of mademoiselle. He fortunately
+succeeded in this last, for he found it otherwise impossible to enter
+into the old wing of the Inn and examine the Oak Parlour. With the
+assistance of Eloise, this was accomplished at last, and the paper of
+directions was found; at least, found in part.
+
+"Then I, having impressed the services of Captain Bonhomme and his ship
+the _Southern Cross_, set sail and arrived at the House on the Dunes only
+a few days ago, as you already know. The signals that you saw flashing at
+night were to indicate that all was well."
+
+"The green light, I suppose," commented Dan, "was to indicate that; and
+the red--"
+
+"Was the signal of danger. Because the Marquis discovered last night that
+you were not in the house; he flashed the warning that made Captain
+Bonhomme go to the House on the Dunes. Quite recently the manners of your
+friend, Mr.--eh--?"
+
+"Pembroke?"
+
+"Yes, Mr. Pembroke--led the Marquis to believe that he was being
+watched.
+
+"I understand," said Dan, "but nothing you have told me so far, madame,
+accounts for Nancy's disappearance, and I am as anxious as ever to know
+where she is."
+
+"Mademoiselle is perfectly safe, Monsieur Dan; I assure you. She left the
+Inn because she had fear of betraying our plans, particularly as she
+loved your friend, Mr. Pembroke."
+
+"It is still strange to me, madame, that Nancy should distrust her oldest
+and best friends. But now you will let me see her?"
+
+"Of course I shall soon, very soon, my dear boy. I have told you all, and
+now you will aid me to find the treasure that is your foster-sister's
+heritage, will you not?"
+
+"Why certainly I want Nancy to have what is hers," replied Dan.
+
+"Bravo, my friend. We are to count you one of us, I am sure."
+
+"Just a moment," said Dan, resisting the temptation to touch the little
+hand that had been placed impulsively upon his arm. "May I ask one more
+question?"
+
+"A thousand, my dear, if you desire."
+
+"Why then, since until last night everything has gone as you planned it,
+why has not the treasure already been discovered?"
+
+"Because, _mon ami_; the Marquis has only been able to visit the Oak
+Parlour at night. And also it was decided to wait until I arrived."
+
+"With the schooner?" suggested Dan.
+
+"With the schooner, if you will. And you may remember that it was only
+the day before yesterday that I reached your so hospitable countryside."
+
+"Ah! I understand; so then all that you desire of me, madame, is that I
+shall permit the Marquis or anyone else whom you may select for the
+purpose, to make such investigation of the Oak Parlour as is desired."
+
+"Yes, my friend; and also there is yet another thing that we desire."
+
+"But suppose, madame, that I cannot agree to that?"
+
+"Ah! _cher ami_, but you will. I confess--you must remember that the
+Marquis de Boisdhyver has been a soldier--that my friends have not agreed
+with me entirely. It has seemed to them simpler that we should keep you a
+prisoner on this ship, as we could so easily do, until our mission is
+accomplished. But,--I like you too much to agree to that."
+
+Dan flushed a trifle, but he was not yet quite sure enough to fall in
+entirely with his charming gaoler's suggestions. "Madame de la Fontaine,"
+he said after a moment's reflection, "I am greatly obliged to you for
+explaining the situation to me so fully. I shall be only too happy to
+help you, particularly in anything that is for the benefit of Nancy."
+
+"I was sure of it. Now, my friend, there is a service that you can
+immediately render."
+
+"And that is?" asked Dan.
+
+"To entrust to me the other half of the paper of directions written by
+Francois de Boisdhyver, which you found in a secret cubby-hole in the
+old cabinet."
+
+"What makes you think that I was successful in finding that, when the
+Marquis failed?"
+
+"Because, at first having forgotten his precise directions after so many
+years, the Marquis could not find the fourth and last hiding-place in the
+cabinet, in which he knew the Marechal had placed the other half of the
+torn scrap of paper. Another time he did find the cubby-hole, and it was
+empty. So knowing he was watched by you and Mr. Pembroke, he decided
+that you must have found it. Is it not so, that you have it?"
+
+"It is certainly not in my possession at this moment," said Dan.
+
+"No, but you have it?"
+
+"And if I have?"
+
+"It is necessary for our success."
+
+"Then, my first service, is to put you into complete possession of
+the secret?"
+
+"If you will so express it."
+
+"Very well, madame, I will do so; but, on one condition."
+
+"And what is that, my friend?"
+
+"That I be allowed to see Nancy, and that she herself shall ask me to do
+as you desire."
+
+For a moment Madame de la Fontaine was silent. "_Eh bien_," she said at
+last, "you do not trust me?"
+
+"But, dear madame, think of my situation, it is hard for me."
+
+"Ah! I know it, believe me. _C'est difficile_. But I hoped you would
+trust me as I have you."
+
+"Indeed, madame," exclaimed Dan, "I must try to think of everything,
+the mystery, this extraordinary mission upon which you are engaged, the
+fact that I am quite literally your prisoner. When I think about you,
+I know only you are beautiful, that you are lovely, and that I am happy
+near you."
+
+She looked at him for a moment with a glance of anxious interrogation,
+as if to ask were it safe for her to believe these protestations. "You
+say, my friend," she asked at length, "that you care a little for me,
+for just me? _C'est impossible_. If Claire de la Fontaine could
+believe that, understand me, monsieur, it would be very sweet and very
+precious to her."
+
+"I do care," cried Dan.
+
+"Ah!" she exclaimed. "You have touched my heart. I am not a young girl,
+_mon ami_, but I confess that you have made me to know again the dreams
+of youth."
+
+"Only let me prove that I care," cried Dan, considering but little now to
+what he committed himself.
+
+"Let me prove," cried she, "that I too believe in you. I must first see
+the Marquis, and then, tonight, if it can be arranged, you shall receive
+from Eloise de Boisdhyver's own lips the request I have made of you. But
+if, for any reason, this cannot be arranged for to-night, you must be
+patient till morning; you must trust me to the extent of remaining on
+this ship. I cannot act entirely on my own judgment, but I assure you
+that in the end my judgment will prevail. And now, _au revoir_."
+
+She placed her hand in his, and responded to the impulsive pressure with
+which he clasped it. Their eyes met; in Dan's the frankest expression of
+her conquest of his emotions; in her's a glance at once tender and sad,
+above all a glance that seemed to search his spirit for assurance that he
+was in earnest. Suddenly fired by her alluring beauty, Dan drew her to
+him and bent his head to hers.
+
+"Ah! my friend," she murmured, "you are taking an unfair advantage of the
+fact that this morning I too rashly yielded to an impulse."
+
+"I cannot help it," Dan stammered. "You bewitch me." He bent lower to
+kiss her cheek, when he suddenly thrilled to the realization that his
+lips had met hers.
+
+A moment later Madame de la Fontaine was gone and Captain Bonhomme had
+reappeared in the doorway.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+IN THE FOG
+
+
+Tom Pembroke was as good as his word. He returned to the little room, in
+which he had confined the Marquis, within an hour after he had left him.
+It was then nearly supper-time and dusk was fast settling upon the gloomy
+countryside. An unwonted calm had fallen upon land and sea after the
+sharp blow of the previous night, but the sky was still gray and there
+was promise of more rain, if not of wind.
+
+To Tom's indignation and alarm, though scarcely to his surprise, there
+had been no sign or word from Dan or Nancy. Shortly after he had left the
+Marquis, he saw, by aid of the field-glass, Madame de la Fontaine,
+attended by two seamen, leave the schooner and return to the House on the
+Dunes. He smiled a little as he thought of the account the lively young
+maid-servant would give of his recent visit. But withal, he felt very
+much as if he were playing a game of blind man's buff and that he was
+"it." He was impatient for his interview with the Marquis, though he was
+but little hopeful that an hour's confinement would have been sufficient
+to bring the old gentleman to terms. Nor was he to be surprised.
+
+He found Monsieur de Boisdhyver huddled in a great arm chair near the
+fire that that been kindled on the hearth of his prison. The Marquis
+glanced up, as Tom entered, but dropped his eyes at once and offered him
+no greeting. Tom placed his candle on the table and, drawing up a chair,
+seated himself between the Marquis and the door.
+
+"Well, sir," he said at last, "as I promised you, I have returned within
+an hour. Have you anything to say to me?"
+
+"Have I anything to say to you!" exclaimed the Marquis. "For why,
+monsieur? If I venture to express my astonishment and indignation at the
+way I am treated, you subject me to a barbarity that could be matched no
+where else in the civilized world than in this extraordinary country. My
+life is menaced with firearms. My protests are sneered at. I have left
+but one inference--you have gone mad."
+
+"No, marquis," said Pembroke, "I am not mad. I am simply determined that
+the mysteries by which we have been surrounded and of which you are the
+center, shall cease. You have a free choice: put me in the way of getting
+my friend and his sister back to the Inn, or resign yourself to a
+prolonged confinement in this room."
+
+"But monsieur I have nothing to communicate to you concerning the
+disappearance of your friends."
+
+"Pardon me, marquis," returned Pembroke; "you have much to communicate to
+me. Perhaps you are not aware that I know the motive of your coming to
+the Inn at the Red Oak; that I know the reason for your prolonged stay
+here; that I know of the influence that you have acquired over Nancy
+Frost; and that I have been a witness of your midnight prowlings about
+the Inn. Nor am I in ignorance of your connection with the
+rascally-looking captain of the schooner at anchor in the Cove and with
+the mysterious woman, who has taken possession of the House on the Dunes.
+I am convinced that you know what has become of Dan as well as what has
+happened to Nancy. And, believe me, I am determined to find out."
+
+"_Bien_!" exclaimed Monsieur de Boisdhyver, "permit me to wish you good
+luck in your undertaking. I repeat, Monsieur Pembroke, I have no
+information to give to you. I do not know to what extent I have been
+watched, but I may say with truth that my actions do not in the least
+concern you."
+
+"They concern my friends," said Tom. "Dan, as you know, is more to me
+than a brother; and as for his sister Nancy, I hope and expect to make
+her my wife."
+
+"In that case," rejoined the Marquis with ill-concealed irony, "I may be
+permitted to offer to you my congratulations. But even so, monsieur,
+there is nothing that I can do to facilitate your matrimonial plans."
+
+"You refuse then to come to terms?" asked Pembroke.
+
+The Marquis raised his hands with a gesture of despair. "What shall I
+say, monsieur? If you insisted upon my flying from here to yonder beach,
+I might have all the desire in the world to oblige you, but the fact
+would remain that I was without the means of doing so. Since you are so
+little disposed to accept my protestations, I will no longer make them,
+but simply decline your proposal. And, pardon me, but so long as I am
+submitted to the indignity of this confinement, it would be a courtesy
+that I should appreciate if you would spare me your company."
+
+"Very good," said Tom. "Your meals will be served regularly; and you may
+ask the servant for anything necessary. I shall not visit you again until
+you request me to do so."
+
+"_Merci_," said the Marquis drily. He rose from his seat as Dan turned
+toward the door, and bowed ironically.
+
+Pembroke went downstairs to have his supper with Mrs. Frost. He said what
+he could to pacify her, not altogether with success, for as darkness fell
+the old lady became increasingly apprehensive.
+
+"I know you are anxious, Mrs. Frost," said Tom, "but you must not worry.
+Try to believe that all will come out right. I am going out after supper,
+but I shall leave Jesse and Ezra on guard, and you may be sure everything
+will be safe."
+
+It was some time before Mrs. Frost would consent to his leaving the Inn.
+If she had yielded to her inclinations, she would have spent the evening
+in hysterics with Tom at hand to administer comfort. Pembroke, however,
+deputed that office to black Deborah, and immediately after supper set
+about his business.
+
+He gave the necessary instructions to Jesse, Ezra and the maids, saw that
+everything was closely locked and barred, supplied himself with arms and
+ammunition, and slipped out into the night. Having saddled Fleetwing, he
+swung himself on the young hunter's back, and trotted down the avenue to
+the Port Road. The night was intensely dark and still. The moon had not
+yet risen, and a thick fog rolled in from the sea, shrouding the
+countryside with its impenetrable veil.
+
+At the Beach Road Pembroke dismounted, tied his horse to a fence rail,
+and proceeded thence on foot toward the Cove. Stumbling along through the
+heavy sand, he made his way to the boathouse at the northern end of the
+little beach. There he ventured to light his lantern, unlocked the door
+and stepped within. On either side of the entrance were the two sailboats
+that he and Dan used in summer and to the rear was the old-fashioned
+whaleboat with which they did their deep fishing. Over it, in a rudely
+constructed rack, was the Indian birch-bark canoe which Dan had purchased
+in the mountains a few years before. As the sea had fallen to a dead
+calm, he decided to use this canoe, which he could paddle quite
+noiselessly, and pulling down the little craft from its winter
+resting-place, he carried it to the water's edge. The sea, so angry the
+night before, now scarcely murmured; only a low lazy swell, at regularly
+recurring intervals, slapped the shore and hissed upon the sands. Tom
+pushed the nose of the canoe into the water, leaped lightly over the
+rail, and with his paddle thrust it off the beach. He was launched
+without mishap.
+
+Not the faintest gleam of light showed the position of the _Southern
+Cross_, but estimating as well as he could the general direction, he
+paddled out through the enshrouding fog. For ten minutes or so, he pushed
+on into the strange, misty night. Then suddenly he found himself
+alongside an old fisherman's yawl that had been rotting all winter at her
+moorings, and he knew from her position that he could not be far from the
+_Southern Cross_.
+
+A few more strokes to leeward, and a spot of dull light broke through the
+darkness. He headed directly for it. To his relief it grew brighter; when
+suddenly, too late to stop the progress of his canoe, he shot under it,
+and the bow of his craft bumped with a dull thud against the timber side
+of the schooner. Its dark outlines were just perceptible above him; and
+at one or two points there gleamed rays of light in the fog, green and
+red from the night lamps on the masthead, and dull yellow from the port
+holes in the rear. A second after the contact the canoe receded, then the
+wash of the sea drew her toward the stern. Another moment and Pembroke
+felt his prow scrape gently against the rudder, which prevented further
+drifting. Apparently, since he heard nothing from the deck above, he had
+reached his goal without attracting attention.
+
+He kept perfectly still, however, for some little time, until satisfied
+that there was no one at the wheel above, he pushed the canoe softly back
+to the rope ladder, that a day or so before he had seen hanging over the
+side. It was the work of a moment to make his little boat fast to the
+lower rung. Then slipping over the rail, he climbed stealthily up till
+his head protruded above the gunwhale. The immediate deck seemed
+deserted; but he was sure that some one was keeping the watch, and
+probably near the point where he was, that is to say, where access to the
+deck was easiest. But the fog and the darkness afforded him protection,
+as he climbed over the gunwhale and, without making a sound, moved toward
+the stern, crossed the after-deck and found the wheel. As he had
+surmised, it was deserted. The watch evidently was forward. Beneath him,
+sending its ineffectual rays obliquely into the fog, shone the light from
+the little cabin below.
+
+Determined to get a look through the port, he climbed over the gunwhale
+again, fastened a stern-sheet about his waist and to a staple, and at the
+risk, if he slipped or if the rope gave way, of plunging head foremost
+into the icy waters of the Cove, he let himself down until his head was
+on a level of the port.
+
+Through the blurred glass he peered into a tiny cabin. There with back
+toward him, just a few feet away stood Nancy Frost. He steadied himself
+with an effort, and looking again saw that she was alone. A moment's
+hesitation, and he tapped resolutely on the pane with his finger tips. At
+first Nancy did not hear, but presently, aroused by the slight tapping,
+she glanced with a frightened expression toward the door, and stood
+anxiously listening. Tom continued to knock on the window, not daring to
+make it louder for fear of being heard above. The alarm deepened on
+Nancy's face, and in sheer pity Tom was tempted to desist; but at that
+instant her attention was riveted upon the spot whence the tapping came.
+At last, still with the expression of alarm on her face, she came slowly
+toward the port. She hesitated, then pressed her face against the pane
+over which Tom had spread his fingers. At whatever risk, of frightening
+her or of danger to himself, as she drew back, he pressed his own face
+against the outside of the little window glass. She stared at him as if
+she were looking at a ghost.
+
+He moved his lips to form the word "Open." At length, in obedience to
+this direction, Nancy cautiously unloosened the window of the port and
+drew it back.
+
+"Good heavens, Tom!" she whispered. "Is it you?"
+
+"Yes, yes," Pembroke whispered back. "But for God's sake, speak softly.
+I'm in a devilishly unpleasant position, and can hang here but a minute.
+Tell me quickly--are you here of your own free will or are you a
+prisoner?"
+
+"How can you ask?" she exclaimed. "For the love of heaven, help me
+to escape."
+
+"That's what I'm here for," was Toms reply. "Now, quick; are you only
+locked in or barred as well? I've brought some keys along."
+
+"Only locked, I think."
+
+"Where does that door lead?"
+
+"Into a little passage off the companion-way. Give me your keys. They
+have but one man on watch. The captain is on shore to-night, apt to
+return at any moment. And you?"
+
+"I have a canoe tied to the ladder on the shore side. If the captain
+returns, I'm caught. Try those keys." He slipped into her the bunch of
+keys that he had brought along. "I was sure you were here, and against
+your will."
+
+"Dan, too, is locked up on board."
+
+"I thought as much; but you first. Hurry."
+
+Nancy sprang to the door, trying one key after another in feverish haste.
+At last, to Tom's infinite relief, he saw the key turn in the lock, and
+the door open.
+
+"On deck," she whispered; "at the ladder. I'm not likely to be caught."
+Then she waved her hand and disappeared into the passage.
+
+Tom pulled himself up, unloosed the rope, and stole along the rail toward
+the ladder. For a few moments, which seemed like a thousand years, he
+stood in anguished suspense waiting for Nancy. Then suddenly she came out
+of the mist and was at his side. They stood for a moment like disembodied
+spirits, creatures of the night and the fog. The next instant a hand shot
+out and grasped the girl's shoulder.
+
+"_Peste! mam'zelle_," a rough voice hissed, "_ou allez-vous_?"
+
+As the man spoke Tom swung at him with the butt of his revolver, and
+without a murmur the figure fell to the deck.
+
+"Quick now," Pembroke whispered, "down the ladder."
+
+Instantly Nancy was over the rail and Tom was climbing down after her. As
+he knelt in the bow and fumbled with the painter, the plash of oars
+sounded a dozen yards away.
+
+"_Ho! Croix du Midi_!" came a hail through the fog.
+
+"Curse it!" muttered Tom; "the painter's caught." He drew out his knife,
+slashed the rope that bound them to the schooner, got to his place
+amidships, and pushed the canoe free. The lights of a small boat were
+just emerging from the dark a dozen feet away. But the canoe slid by
+unobserved, in the fog. They heard the nose of the small boat bump
+against the schooner; then an oath, and a man's voice calling the watch.
+
+"They've found my painter," whispered Tom, "and in a second they'll find
+the sailor on their deck."
+
+The lights of the _Southern Cross_ grew dim; vanished; the sound of angry
+voices became muffled. They were half-way to shore when they heard the
+noise of oars again. Evidently some one had started in pursuit. For a
+moment Tom rested, listening intently; but the sound was still some
+distance away. Probably, he thought, they were heading directly for the
+shore, whereas he, at a considerable angle, was making for the boathouse
+at the north end of the beach. In ten minutes he had beached the canoe
+within a rod of the point from where he embarked.
+
+"I can't hear them," whispered Tom, after a moment's listening. "They've
+made for shore down the beach. They can't find us in the dark. I've got
+Fleetwing tied to a fence in the meadow yonder. Come."
+
+It was the work of a moment to stow the canoe, lock the boathouse, run
+across the sands, and mount Nancy in front of him on the back of his
+trusty hunter. A second later Fleetwing's hoofs were striking fire on the
+stones that the high tides had washed into the beach road. In the
+distance there was a cry, the sharp ring of a pistol shot; but they were
+safe on their way, racing wildly for the Inn. The escape, the adventure
+had thrilled Nancy. Tom's arms were around her, and her hands on his that
+grasped the bridle. At last they were in the avenue, and Tom pulled in
+under the great branches of the Red Oak. He slipped from the back of the
+horse and held out his arms to Nance.
+
+"We are safe, girl," he whispered.
+
+"You are sure? Oh, thank God, thank God! Quick, let us in! Can they be
+following?"
+
+"No, no. They won't follow. It's all right. Easy,--before we go
+in--please, dear--once--kiss me."
+
+"Oh, Tom, Tom," she whispered, as she lifted her face to his.
+
+"I have you at last, sweetheart," he murmured. "You love me?"
+
+"Ah!" she cried, "with my whole heart and soul."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+NANCY
+
+
+It was after eleven before Nancy rejoined Tom in the bar. She seemed more
+like herself as she slipped in and took her accustomed seat beside the
+blazing logs.
+
+"Oh, I am all right, thank you," she insisted, declining the glass of
+wine that Pembroke poured out for her. "I wonder, Tom, if you killed that
+poor wretch on the deck?"
+
+"Don't know," Tom answered. "I hope so. But what the deuce, Nance, has
+been happening? I can wait till to-morrow to hear, if you are too tired
+to tell me; but I do want awfully to know."
+
+"I am not tired," Nancy replied, "and I shan't sleep a wink anyway. If I
+close my eyes I'll feel that hand on my shoulder and hear the thud of
+that man's fall on the deck. I can't bear to think that this miserable
+business will bring bloodshed."
+
+"But tell me, Nance, who is the Marquis--what happened--how did they get
+you away?"
+
+"Ah! the Marquis," exclaimed Nancy with a shudder. "I am glad you have
+him locked up. I can't bear to think of him, but I'll tell you what I
+know. You remember, Tom, he tried to be friends with me from the first;
+and he seemed to fascinate me in some unaccountable way. Then he
+questioned me about my identity, and began to drop hints that he knew
+more than he cared to let appear to the others, and my curiosity was
+excited. I have always known of course that there was some mystery about
+my being left to Mrs. Frost's care. She has been kind, good, all that she
+should be; but she wasn't my mother. Well, the Marquis stirred all the
+old wonder that I had as a child, and before long quite won my
+confidence. He told me after a time that I was the daughter of his elder
+brother, the Marquis Francois de Boisdhyver, who in 1814 stayed here at
+the Inn at the Red Oak under the name of General Pointelle. I was not
+altogether surprised, for I have always believed that I was French by
+birth, and his assertion that I was his niece seemed to account for his
+interest in me. My father, if this Marquis de Boisdhyver was my father,
+was one of the Emperor Napoleon's marshals and was a party to the plot to
+rescue the Emperor from Elba. He was obliged to return to France, and
+since it was impossible for him to take me with him--I was a little girl
+of two at the time--he left me with Mrs. Frost. Thinking of my future, he
+hid a large treasure in some secret chamber off the Oak Parlour."
+
+"I know," Tom interrupted.
+
+"What? You mean there is a treasure?"
+
+"I think there is; but go on. I will tell you afterwards."
+
+"Then he set sail for France, took part in the great events of the
+Hundred Days, and fell at Waterloo. It was on the field of Waterloo that
+he met his younger brother--our Marquis--and told him about the child
+left in America and about the treasure hidden in the Inn at the Red Oak."
+
+"Well," Nancy continued, having answered a volley of questions from Tom,
+"the Marquis--I mean our old Marquis--was held for many years in a
+military prison in England. Upon his release he was poor and unable to
+come to America to seek his little niece and the fortune that he believed
+to be hidden in the Inn. Tom, at first I didn't believe this strange
+story about a treasure; but gradually I became convinced; for the Marquis
+believed in it thoroughly, and for proof of it he showed me a torn scrap
+of paper that he found in the cabinet in the Oak Parlour the day after
+he arrived at the Inn. It seems the old marshal had torn the paper in two
+and hidden the parts in different cubby-holes of that old Dorsetshire
+cabinet. He couldn't find an opportunity to hunt for the other half, so
+at last he persuaded me to help him in the search. Of course, he swore me
+to secrecy, and I was foolish enough to give him my promise. I got the
+key to the bowling alley from the ring in Dan's closet, and two or three
+times went with him at night after you all were asleep."
+
+"I know you did," said Tom.
+
+"How could you know it--has the Marquis--?"
+
+"No, Dan and I saw you. I woke one night, happened to look out of the
+window and saw the Marquis going into the bowling alley. It was
+moonlight, you know. I woke Dan, we slipped down stairs, saw a light in
+the Oak Parlour, peeped through the shutters and saw you and the old
+Marquis at the cabinet."
+
+"When was this?" asked Nancy.
+
+"The night--before our walk in the woods."
+
+"And you did not tell me! What could you think I was doing?"
+
+"I didn't know. How could I know? It was that which first made me
+suspicious of the Marquis. We made up our minds to watch. But that day in
+the woods--well, I forgot everything in the world but just that I was in
+love with you."
+
+"Ah!" exclaimed Nancy, flushing.
+
+"But tell me," asked Tom, "What did you find in the cabinet?"
+
+"We found nothing. I began to think that the Marquis had deceived me. I
+didn't know what to believe. I didn't know what to do. I threatened each
+day to tell Dan. And then came our walk. When we came in that night--do
+you recall?--we found the Marquis sitting in the bar before the fire, and
+I went over and spoke to him."
+
+"Yes, I remember," Tom answered.
+
+"I had made up my mind that I must take you all,--mother and you and
+Dan,--into my confidence. I told him so. He begged me to wait until the
+next day and promised that he would tell you then himself. I was
+beginning to think he might be a little crazy, that there was no hidden
+treasure."
+
+"I'm sure there is," said Tom. "There was another half of that torn scrap
+of paper, hidden in one of the cubby-holes of the old cabinet. Dan found
+it. It's the directions, sure enough, for finding the treasure."
+
+"Ah! but what has it all to do with me?"
+
+"I don't know; something I fancy, or the Marquis would not have told you
+as much as he did. But here is the other half. You can tell whether it is
+part of the paper he showed you."
+
+He drew from his pocket the yellowed bit of paper and spread it on the
+table before them. Nance bent over and examined it closely.
+
+"I believe it is the other half. See, it is signed ...'ancois de
+Boisdhyver'. I remember perfectly that the signature of the other was
+missing, except for the letters 'F-r-' It is, it must be, Francois de
+Boisdhyver, who, the Marquis says, was my father. Then look! here are the
+words '_tresor', 'bijoux et monaie_'. I remember in the other there were
+phrases that seemed to go with these--'_tresor cache' 'lingots d'or_'.
+Ah! do you suppose there really is a fortune hidden away in the Inn all
+these years?"
+
+"Yes, I think so," said Tom. "And I feel certain you have some claim to
+it, or they wouldn't have made such an effort to involve you in their
+plot. But, please, Nance, tell me the rest. You got to the night of your
+disappearance."
+
+"It was a horror--that night!" exclaimed Nancy. "It must have been about
+twelve that the Marquis came and tapped at my door. For some reason I was
+restless and had not gone to bed. I slipped out into the hall with him
+and we came in here to talk. He begged me to make one more expedition
+with him to the Oak Parlour. But I refused--I insisted that I must tell
+Dan. Suddenly, Tom, without the slightest warning, I felt my arms
+pinioned from behind, and before I could scream, the Marquis himself had
+thrust a handkerchief in my mouth, and I was gagged and bound. Everything
+was done so quickly, so noiselessly, that not a soul in the house could
+have heard. They carried me out of the Inn and into the avenue of maples.
+From there on I was forced to walk. We went to the beach. I was put into
+a small boat and rowed out to the schooner, and there they locked me up
+in the little cabin in which you found me."
+
+"What time did you say it was?" asked Tom.
+
+"About twelve--after midnight, perhaps; I don't know for sure. The
+Marquis went to the beach with us and pretended to assure me that I was
+in no danger; that I would be released in good time, and that he would
+see me again. As a matter of fact for three days I have seen no one but
+Captain Bonhomme. He brought my meals, and was inclined to talk about
+anything that come into his head. Last night he told me that Dan was also
+a prisoner on the _Southern Cross_, if that would be of any consolation
+to me. Then he said he had to go ashore and locked me up. Several times I
+was taken on deck for exercise, but the captain kept close by my side."
+
+"And you haven't seen or heard from the Marquis again?"
+
+"No! nor do I want to see him. But, Tom, what is the meaning of it all?
+How are we going to rescue Dan? What are we going to do? We can't keep
+the Marquis a prisoner indefinitely."
+
+Tom gave her his own version of the last few days. He told her of what he
+and Dan had suspected, of Dan's proposal to visit the House on the Dunes
+and his disappearance, of his own investigations there, and his
+determination to play the same game with the Marquis as hostage.
+
+"But what to do next, I confess I don't know," he continued. "At present
+it seems to be stale mate. For to-night, any way, we are safe, I think,
+for I shall take turns in keeping guard with Jesse and Ezra. I have the
+idea that to-morrow, when they realize something has happened to the
+Marquis we shall hear from Madame de la Fontaine or from the schooner. In
+the morning I am going to take you and Mrs. Frost to the Red Farm for
+safety. I intend to fight this thing out with that gang, whatever
+happens. If there is treasure, according to their own story, it belongs
+to you. If I don't get a proposal from them, I shall make the offer,
+through Madame de la Fontaine, of exchanging the Marquis for Dan.... But
+I must go now, Nance, and relieve one of the men. We must all get some
+sleep to-night, and it's already after twelve. Go to bed, sweetheart, and
+try to get some rest. One of us will be within call all night, watching
+right there in the hall; so don't be afraid."
+
+"It was my wretched curiosity that got us into all this trouble."
+
+"Not a bit of it! The trouble was all arranged by the Marquis; he was
+simply waiting for the schooner. Now that I have you back again, my heart
+is fairly light. We shall get Dan to-morrow, I am sure."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+MADAME AT THE INN
+
+
+In the morning the fog lifted, a bright sun shone from a cloudless sky,
+the marshes sparkled with pools of melted snow and the long-promised thaw
+seemed definitely to have set in. Soon after breakfast Tom sent Jesse to
+the Red Farm with directions for the people there to make preparations
+for Mrs. Frost and Nancy, whom he proposed to drive over himself in the
+course of the afternoon.
+
+About the middle of the morning as Tom and Nancy stood on the gallery
+discussing the situation, Tom drew her attention to a small boat putting
+off from _The Southern Cross_. They examined it through the glass, and
+Nancy recognized the figure of Captain Bonhomme sitting amongst the
+stern-sheets.
+
+"You may depend upon it," said Tom, "he is going to the House on the
+Dunes to report your disappearance to Madame de la Fontaine. The most
+curious thing about this whole business to me is the mixing-up in it of
+such a woman as Dan described Madame de la Fontaine to be."
+
+"It is strange," Nancy agreed, "but from the bits of talk I've overheard,
+I should say that she was the prime mover in it all."
+
+"In a way I am rather glad of that," said Tom, "for with a woman at the
+head of things there is less chance of their resorting to force to gain
+their ends. But the stake they are playing for must be a big one, and
+already they have done enough to make me sure that we should be prepared
+for anything. I shall be surprised if we don't get some communication
+from them to-day. The old Marquis counts on it, or he would not keep so
+still. At any cost, we must get Dan back."
+
+They talked for some time longer and were about to go in, when Nancy
+pointed to a horse and rider coming down the avenue of Maples. A
+glance sufficed to show that the rider was a woman. Nancy slipped
+inside to escape observation, while Tom waited on the gallery to
+receive the visitor.
+
+As the lady drew rein under the Red Oak, he ran down the steps, and
+helped her to dismount. Her grace, her beauty, her manner as of the
+great world, made him sure that he was in the presence of Madame de
+la Fontaine.
+
+"Good morning, sir," said the lady, with a charming smile, "if I mistake
+not, I have the pleasure of addressing Mr. Pembroke?"
+
+"Yes, madam,--at you service," replied Tom.
+
+"I am come on a strange errand, monsieur; as an ambassadress, so to say,
+of those whom I fear you take to be your enemies."
+
+"You are frank, madam. I believe that I am speaking with--?"
+
+"Madame de la Fontaine," the lady instantly supplied. "Events have so
+precipitated themselves, monsieur, that pretense and conventionality were
+an affectation. I am informed, you understand, of your brilliant rescue
+of Mademoiselle Eloise de Boisdhyver."
+
+"If you mean Nancy Frost by Mademoiselle Eloise de Boisdhyver, madam,
+your information is correct. I gathered that you had been told of
+this, when I saw Captain Bonhomme make his way to the House on the
+Dunes this morning."
+
+"Ah! What eyes, monsieur!" exclaimed the lady. "But I have grown
+accustomed to having my privacy examined over-curiously during the few
+days I have spent on your hospitable shores. _Mais pardon_--my purpose in
+coming to the Inn at the Red Oak this morning was but to request that my
+name be conveyed to Monsieur the Marquis de Boisdhyver."
+
+"You mean, madam, that you wish to see the Marquis?"
+
+"Yes, monsieur, if you will be so good as to allow me to do so."
+
+"I am sorry," Tom rejoined, "that I must disappoint you. Circumstances
+over which the Marquis has no control will deprive him of the pleasure of
+seeing you this morning."
+
+"Ah!" exclaimed Madame de la Fontaine, "I was right then. Monsieur le
+Marquis is, shall we say, in confinement?"
+
+"As you please, madam; as safe, for the time, as is my friend Dan Frost."
+
+"_Eh bien_, monsieur! It is that you have--do you not say?--turned the
+tables upon us?"
+
+"Precisely, madam," assented Tom.
+
+"And you will not permit me even a word--ever so little a word--with my
+poor friend?" murmured Madame de la Fontaine plaintively.
+
+"Again I am sorry to refuse you, madam; but--not even a little word."
+
+"So! _Mais oui_, I am not greatly surprised. I was assured last
+night...."
+
+"When you did not see the signals?" suggested Tom quickly.
+
+"When I did not see the signals," repeated the lady, with a glance of the
+briefest enquiry, "I was assured that something had befallen Monsieur le
+Marquis. _Mais vraiment_, monsieur, you do us much dishonour in assuming
+a wicked conspiracy on our parts. The Marquis is my friend; he is also
+the friend of the charming Mademoiselle. All that we wish, all that we
+would do is as much in her interest as in his own. But it is impossible
+that my old friend shall remain in confinement. On what condition,
+monsieur, will you release the Marquis de Boisdhyver?"
+
+"On the condition, naturally, that my friend Dan Frost is released from
+the _Southern Cross_."
+
+"Ah! Is it that you are quite sure that Monsieur Frost is confined on
+the ship?"
+
+"Quite sure, Madame de la Fontaine. I was on board _The Southern Cross_
+last night."
+
+"Yes, I know it; and I congratulate you upon your extraordinary success.
+Very well, then, I accept your condition. Monsieur Dan Frost returns;
+Monsieur le Marquis is released. And now you will perhaps have the
+kindness--"
+
+"No, madame; in this affair the Marquis and his friends have been the
+aggressors. I cannot consent that you should hold any communication with
+the Marquis till Dan returns free and unharmed to the Inn."
+
+"And what assurance then shall I have that the Marquis will be released?"
+
+"None, madame, but my word of honour."
+
+"_Pardon, monsieur_. I accept your terms. Monsieur Frost shall
+return. The instant he enters the Inn at the Red Oak, you promise
+that the Marquis de Boisdhyver be released and that he be given this
+note from me?"
+
+"Certainly, madam."
+
+The lady took a sealed note from the pocket of her habit and handed it to
+Tom. "There remains, monsieur," she murmured, "but to bid you good-day.
+If you will be so kind--"
+
+She ran lightly down the steps, and held up her foot for Tom to assist
+her into the saddle.
+
+"Your friend will return _tout de suite_, monsieur," she cried gayly, as
+she drew in the rein.
+
+"And we shall have the pleasure of seeing you again?" asked Tom.
+
+"Ah! who can tell?" She touched the horse lightly with her whip, inclined
+her head, and soon disappeared down the avenue of maples.
+
+Some time later Nancy and Tom watched her cantering across the beach.
+She waved her handkerchief as a signal to the schooner; a small boat put
+ashore, and she was rowed out to _The Southern Cross_.
+
+"Once Dan is back, and we get rid of the old Marquis," said Tom, "I shall
+breathe considerably easier."
+
+"I can't believe they will give the game up so easily," was Nancy's
+reply. "Seizing the Marquis, Tom, was a check, not a mate."
+
+Out on the schooner in the Cove, Madame de la Fontaine and Dan Frost were
+once more talking together.
+
+"Dear boy," said the lady. "I cannot do that which I promised. It is
+impossible that your sister shall make to you the request to give me the
+torn scrap of paper, for the reason that Mademoiselle Nancy has chosen to
+disappear. Have no fear, monsieur, for I have good reason to believe she
+has returned to the Inn at the Red Oak. Our schemes, _mon ami_, have
+failed. You are no longer a prisoner, you are free. And this is good-bye.
+I abandon our mission. I leave the House on the Dunes to-day; to-morrow I
+return to France."
+
+"But, madame, you bewilder me," exclaimed Dan. "Why should you go; why
+should we not all join forces, hunt for the treasure together, if there
+is a treasure; why this division of interests?"
+
+"_C'est impossible_!" she exclaimed impetuously. "Monsieur le Marquis
+will not consent. He is treated with intolerable rudeness by your friend
+Mr. Pembroke. He will not accept that which I propose. And I--_vraiment,
+I_ desire no longer to work against you. No, monsieur Dan, _tout est
+fini_, we must say good-bye."
+
+She held out her hands and Dan impetuously seized them. Then, suddenly,
+she was in his arms and his lips were seeking hers.
+
+"I cannot let you go," he cried hoarsely. "I cannot say good-bye."
+
+For a moment he held her, but soon, almost brusquely, she repulsed him.
+"_C'est folie, mon ami, folie_! We lose our heads, we lose our hearts."
+
+"But I love you," cried Dan. "You must believe it; will you believe it if
+I give you the paper?"
+
+"No, no!--What!--you wish to give to me the secret of the Oak Parlour?--"
+
+"Aye, to entrust to you my life, my soul, my honour."
+
+"Ah, but you must go," she murmured tensely.
+
+"Captain Bonhomme is returning. It is better that he knows of your
+release after you are gone. _C'est vrai_, my friend, that I risk not a
+little in your behalf. Go now, quickly ... No! No!" she protested, as she
+drew away from him. "I tell you, _C'est folie_,--madness and folly. You
+do not know me. Go now, while there is time!"
+
+"But you will see me again?" insisted Dan. "Promise me that; or, on my
+honour, I refuse to leave. Do with me what you will, but--"
+
+"Listen!" she whispered hurriedly. "I shall meet you to-night at ten
+o'clock, at the end of the avenue of maples near to your inn; you know
+the place? _Bien_! Bring me the paper there, to prove that you trust me.
+And I--_mais non_, I implore you--go quickly!"
+
+Dan turned at last and opened the door. Madame de la Fontaine called
+sharply to the waiting Jean, and he, motioning to Dan to follow him, led
+the way on deck. In a moment they were in a little boat heading for the
+shore. The afternoon sun was bright in the western sky. The _Southern
+Cross_ rode serenely at anchor, and from her deck, Madame de la Fontaine
+was waving him good-bye.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+THE MARQUIS LEAVES THE INN
+
+
+By the time Dan was put ashore on the beach of the Cove it was afternoon.
+During the short row from the schooner he had been unable to exchange
+remarks with the surly Jean, for that individual's only response to his
+repeated efforts, was a surly "_Je ne parle pas anglais_," which seemed
+to answer as a general formula to the conspirators. He gave up at last in
+disgust, and waited impatiently for the small boat to be beached,
+distrustful lest at the last moment some fresh trick be played upon him.
+Not that his ingenuous faith in the beautiful French lady failed him, but
+he was suspicious lest, having acted independently of the Marquis and
+Captain Bonhomme in releasing him, she should not have the power to make
+that release genuinely effective.
+
+But his apprehensions were groundless. The seaman rowed straight for the
+shore, beached the boat with a last sturdy pull at the oars, and leaping
+out into the curling surf, held the skiff steady.
+
+"Thank you very much," said Dan, shaking the spray from his coat.
+
+"Eh?" grunted Jean.
+
+"Oh!--beg pardon!--_merci_," he explained, exaggerating the pronunciation
+of the French word.
+
+"Huh!" was the gutteral reply, as the man jumped back into the skiff, and
+pushed off. Dan looked once more towards the distant schooner and the
+slight figure in the stern. Then he started at a rapid pace for the Inn.
+
+As he turned into the avenue of maples, he was surprised to see
+Jesse standing on the gallery, musket in hand, as though he were a
+sentinel on guard.
+
+"Bless my soul, Mister Dan! I thought the Frenchies had made way with
+you. You're a blessed sight to lay eyes on. But Mister Tom was right, he
+said you'd be coming back this afternoon."
+
+"Well, here I am, Jesse," Dan replied grasping his hand, "as large as
+life and twice as natural, I guess. I feel as if I'd been away for a year
+and a day. But tell me, what's the news? Where is Tom? Has Nancy come
+back? How is Mother? Have you been having trouble, that you are guarding
+the door like a soldier on duty?"
+
+"Well, now, Mister Dan, one at a time, _if_ you please. Can't say
+exactly as we've been havin' trouble; but we've sort of been lookin' for
+it. And Mister Tom--"
+
+"Where is Tom? I must see him at once.'
+
+"He ain't here, sir; he left about an hour ago, driving the old Miss and
+Miss Nancy to the Red Farm, sir; so as to be out of harm's way. He'll be
+back before night, sir."
+
+"Ah, good! Then Nance is back? When did she come?"
+
+"She come back last night, sir; leastways Mister Tom brought her back.
+Mister Tom, he got the idea that they'd cooped Miss Nance up on that
+there schooner laying in the Cove, and sure enough, he found her there
+and got her off somehows last night."
+
+"Good for Tom! How did he work it?"
+
+"I ain't heard no particulars, Mister Dan. We've been too busy watching
+things to talk much. We got Ezra Manners out from the Port to help do
+guard duty."
+
+"Guard?--what?"
+
+"Why, the Inn, sir. Mister Tom he's been sort of expectin' some kind of
+attack. That's the reason he took the women folks over to the Red Farm."
+
+"I see--and where's the old Marquis?"
+
+Jesse chuckled. "The old Marquis's where he hasn't been doin' any harm
+for the last twenty-four hours, sir. Mister Tom he locked him up last
+night in one of the south bedrooms. That reminds me, I was to let him out
+just as soon as you come back."
+
+"Why lock him up, and then let him out? Things have been moving at the
+Inn, Jess, since I've been gone!"
+
+"Moving--yes, sir. But them's my orders--first thing I was to do soon as
+you come back was to let the old Frenchy out and do as he pleased. Mister
+Tom was to arrange everything else with you, sir."
+
+"Seems as if Tom had a whole campaign planned out. All right--we'll obey
+orders, Jess. Let the Marquis out, and tell him he can find me in the bar
+if he wants to see me. What time will Tom be back?"
+
+"Before dark, sir, I'm sure. He's been gone over an hour."
+
+Dan ran up to his bedroom, made a quick toilet, took the torn scrap of
+paper from his strong-box, and put it in his wallet. Then he went down
+stairs into the bar. The Marquis, released from his confinement, was
+awaiting him.
+
+"Ah, Monsieur Frost!" the old gentleman exclaimed, coming forward with
+outstretched hands, "I rejoice at your return. Now this so horrible
+nightmare will end... Ah!" This last exclamation was uttered in a tone of
+surprise and indignation, for Dan faced him with folded arms,
+deliberately refusing the handclasp.
+
+"Yes, Marquis," he said, "I have returned; but I cannot say that I am
+particularly pleased to see you."
+
+"Monsieur, _te me comprends pas_; this abuse, this insult--it is
+impossible that I understand."
+
+"Pray, Monsieur de Boisdhyver," replied Dan, with dignity, "Let us have
+done with make-believe and sham. For two days I have been in prison on
+that confounded ship yonder, whose villainous crew are in your pay."
+
+"You in prison--the ship--the villainous crew!" repeated the Marquis.
+"What is it that you say?"
+
+"Come, Marquis, your protests are useless," Dan interrupted. "I know of
+the conspiracy in which you are engaged, of your deceit and trickery
+here, of your part in my poor sister's disappearance. You know that
+Madame de la Fontaine has told me much. Do you expect me to meet you as
+though nothing had happened?"
+
+"But, _mon cher, monsieur_," continued the Marquis, "if it is that you
+have been told anything by Madame de la Fontaine, my so good friend, the
+bright angel of an old age too-cruelly shattered by misfortune, you well
+know how innocent are my designs, how sincere my efforts for your
+foster-sister, for her who is my niece."
+
+"Marquis, I do not understand all that has taken place. I may say further
+that I do not care to discuss the situation with you until I have talked
+with my sister and Mr. Pembroke."
+
+"Ah! then Eloise--then Mademoiselle Nancy, is returned?" exclaimed the
+old gentleman.
+
+"I believe so. But I have not seen her. I must decline, Marquis, to
+continue this conversation. I must first learn what has taken place in my
+absence. When Tom returns--he is out just now--I am perfectly willing to
+talk matters over with you and him together."
+
+The Marquis's eyes flashed. "But, Monsieur," he protested, "you must
+understand that I cannot submit to meet with Monsieur Pembroke again. A
+Marquis de Boisdhyver does not twice put himself in the position to be
+insulted with impunity."
+
+"I should hardly imagine," Dan replied, "that it would be more
+difficult for you to meet Pembroke again than it has been difficult for
+me to meet you."
+
+"How--me?--_je ne comprends pas_. But I have been insulted, imprisoned, I
+have suffered much that is terrible."
+
+"I found myself in an identical situation," said Dan.
+
+"But, monsieur, _un moment_" protested the old gentleman, as Dan made as
+if to leave the room, "give me the time to explain to you this
+misunderstanding.--"
+
+"No, Marquis. I will not talk until I have seen Tom."
+
+The black eyes of Monsieur de Boisdhyver gleamed unpleasantly. "I have
+said to you, Monsieur Frost, that I refuse to meet Monsieur Tom Pembroke
+once more. It would be intolerable. _Impossible, absolutment_! I must
+insist that you will be kind enough to facilitate my departure at once."
+
+"Certainly, as you wish, Marquis."
+
+The old gentleman hesitated. For once indecision was shown by the
+agitation of his features and the shifting of his eyes, but he gave no
+other expression to the quandaries in his mind. After a moment's silence
+he drew himself up with exaggerated dignity. With one hand upon his
+breast and the other extended, in a fashion at once absurd and a little
+pathetic, he addressed Dan for the last time, as might an ambassador
+taking leave of a sovereign upon his declaration of war.
+
+"Monsieur, I renew my gratitude for the hospitality of the Inn at the Red
+Oak, so long enjoyed, so discourteously withdrawn. I require but the
+presentation of my account for the time, I have trespassed upon your good
+will, and I request the assistance of a servant to facilitate my
+departure. But I do not take my farewell without protesting, _avec tout
+mon coeur_, at the misunderstanding to which I am persistently subjected.
+The inevitable bitterness in my soul does not prevent me even now to
+forget the sweet hours of rest that I have enjoyed here. The
+unwillingness on your part, monsieur, to comprehend my position, does not
+interfere to stifle in my breast the consciousness but of honourable
+purpose. I make my compliments to mesdames."
+
+"Very good, marquis--and at what time shall I have a carriage
+ready for you?"
+
+The Marquis glanced nonchalantly at his watch, "In fifteen minutes,
+monsieur."
+
+"It will be ready, Marquis."
+
+"Your very obedient servant; Monsieur Frost."
+
+"Your obedient servant, Marquis de Boisdhyver."
+
+The old gentleman bowed again with elaborate courtesy and, turning
+sharply on his heel, left the room.
+
+Somewhat disturbed by the turn affairs had taken, Dan stood for a moment
+lost in thought. There was nothing for it, he supposed: Tom, who had
+been in command, had given orders, and they should be obeyed; besides
+there was no reason that he could see why the Marquis should be detained
+at the Inn if he chose to leave it. So he sat down at a table, made out
+the old gentleman's bill for the month, and then stepped to the door to
+call for Jesse.
+
+"Take this," he said when the man appeared in response to his summons,
+"to the old Marquis. It is the bill for his board. If he pays you, well
+and good; if not--in any case, treat him courteously, and do not
+interfere with his movements. He is leaving the Inn for good. I want you
+to have the buggy ready within half-an-hour and drive him where he wishes
+to go. I fancy he will want his stuff put on the schooner in the Cove."
+
+"All right, sir," replied Jesse. "Now that you and Miss Nance are back,
+sir, I guess the sooner we get rid of the Marquis the better."
+
+Jesse carried the bill to the Marquis, then came down and went to the
+barn to harness the horse. A little later he drove round to the
+courtyard, hitched the horse to a ring in the Red Oak, and ran upstairs
+to fetch the Marquis's boxes.
+
+Perhaps half-an-hour had passed when he returned to Dan in the Bar. "The
+old gentleman's gone, sir," he said.
+
+"Gone!--where?" cried Dan.
+
+"Don't know, sir," Jesse replied. "To the schooner, I guess. He left this
+money on his dressing-bureau."
+
+Dan took the gold which Jesse held out to him. "Well, well," he murmured,
+"quite on his dignity, eh? All right, Jess, take his stuff to the beach
+and hail the schooner. He will probably have given directions. I hope
+we've seen the last of him."
+
+
+
+
+PART IV
+
+THE ATTACK ON THE INN
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+THE AVENUE OF MAPLES
+
+
+The Marquis's belongings were sent after him to the schooner, where,
+however, it appeared that they had not been expected, for it was some
+time before Jesse could obtain an answer to his hail from the shore, and
+still longer before he could make the men on the ship understand what it
+was he wanted with them. Eventually Captain Bonhomme had rowed ashore,
+and the Marquis's bags, boxes, writing-desk, and fiddle were loaded into
+the small boat and taken off to _The Southern Cross_.
+
+It appeared from Jesse's report that the Captain had been sufficiently
+polite, and had attributed the misunderstanding of his men to their
+inability to speak English. They had not gotten their orders for the
+Marquis. He had asked no further questions about Monsieur de Boisdhyver
+or about his recent prisoners, but had feed Jesse liberally, and
+dismissed him, with his own and the Marquis's thanks.
+
+"Well," said Tom, who had returned an hour before and had been
+exchanging experiences with Dan, "that seems to be the end of him for
+the present. I don't know that I did right in promising your French lady
+that I should release him, but there seemed no other way to make sure of
+getting you back."
+
+"I am glad you promised," replied Dan. "It is a relief not to have him
+under our roof. For the last week I've felt as if the place were haunted
+by an evil spirit."
+
+"So it has been, and so it still will be, I am afraid," was Tom's reply.
+"If there is treasure here, you may be sure that gang won't sail away
+without making a desperate effort to get it. I move that we beat them out
+by hunting for it ourselves. Why not begin to-night?"
+
+"Not to-night," protested Dan. "I am tired to death. You can imagine that
+I didn't get much sleep cooped up on that confounded ship."
+
+"No more have I, old boy. But I believe in striking while the iron is
+hot. Every day's delay gives them a better chance for their plans, if
+they mean to attack the Inn."
+
+"I doubt if they'll do that. I don't think force is precisely their line.
+You know, I believe that the story Madame de la Fontaine told isn't
+altogether a fiction."
+
+"Pshaw!" exclaimed Tom. "I don't believe a word of it. Naturally they
+wouldn't use force, if they could help it. But their plans have all been
+upset, and a gang like that won't stop at anything."
+
+"But we live in a civilized community, my boy. This isn't the
+middle ages."
+
+"We live in a civilized community, perhaps; but if you can find a more
+isolated spot, a place more remote from help, in any other part of the
+civilized world, I'd be glad to see it. We might as well be in the middle
+of the Sahara desert. Find the treasure and get it out of harm's
+way--that's my idea."
+
+"All right, but to-morrow; I swear I'm not up to it to-night."
+
+"To-morrow! Well, then to-morrow. Though for the life of me, I don't see
+why you want to delay things. Jesse and Ezra can keep watch tonight."
+
+"But we must get some sleep, Tom."
+
+"The devil with sleep! However, you're the boss now. It's your inn, your
+treasure, your sister, that are involved. I'll take a back seat."
+
+"Come, come, Tom--don't let's quarrel. Give me to-night to--to get myself
+together, and tomorrow I'll pull the Inn down with you, if you wish."
+
+Perhaps Dan was right, he did need rest and sleep and a few hours would
+restore him. They had their supper, then, apportioned the night into
+watches, and Dan went upstairs for his first period of sleep.
+
+His brain was a-whirl. All through the afternoon, during his talk with
+the Marquis, and later during his talk with Tom, one idea had been
+dominating his thought, dictating his plan of action, colouring his
+judgment. The fascination which Madame de la Fontaine exerted over his
+senses was too strong for him even to contemplate resisting it. She was
+confessedly in league with a gang of adventurers upon a quest for
+treasure. She had lied to him at first about the Marquis, she had lied
+to him about Nancy, she had lied to him about his release; and when she
+had left him under the pretext of arranging his return to the Inn, she
+had in fact gone to Tom to bargain an exchange of him for the old
+Marquis. Her lies, her subterfuges, her flatteries, had been evidently
+designed but to get possession of the torn scrap of paper which was so
+necessary to their finding the hidden treasure. All this Dan told
+himself a hundred times, and then, quickly dispelling the witness of
+these cold hard facts, there would flash before him the vision of her
+wonderful eyes, of her strange appealing beauty, of her stirring
+personality; he would feel once more the touch of her cheek and her lips
+pressing his, intoxicating as wine; and delicious fires flamed through
+his veins, and set his heart to beating, and made havoc of his honour
+and his conscience. Whatever were the consequences, he would meet her
+again that night as he had promised. It was his first experience of
+passion and it was sweeping him off his feet.
+
+Alone in his room Dan sat down at the table. He drew from his pocket the
+torn paper, and as an act of justice to the friends he felt that he was
+about to betray, he labourously made a copy of the difficult French
+handwriting. This done, he locked the copy in his strong box and put the
+original back in his pocket. Then, like the criminal he thought himself
+to be, he crept cautiously down the stairs. The door into the bar was
+open, and he stood for a moment, shoes in hand, peering into the
+dimly-lit room. Tom sat by the hearth, reading, a pipe in his mouth and a
+cocked pistol on the table by his side. A pang went through Dan's breast,
+but he checked the impulse to speak, and stole softly across the hall and
+into his mother's parlour. Ever so cautiously he closed the door behind
+him, crossed the room, and raised the sash of one of the windows.
+
+It was dark, but starlight; the moon had not yet risen. In a moment he
+had slipped over the sill and stood upon the porch. Lowering the sash, he
+crept across the band of light that shone from the windows of the bar,
+and into the shadow of the Red Oak. There he buttoned his great coat
+tightly about him, put on his shoes, and started softly down the avenue
+of maples. Scarcely a sound disturbed the silence of the night, save the
+lazy creaking of the windmill as it turned now and then to the puff of a
+gentle breeze.
+
+At every few steps, he paused to listen, fearful lest his absence had
+been detected and he were followed by some one from the Inn. Then he
+would start on again, peering eagerly into the darkness ahead for any
+sign of her whom he sought. At last he reached the end of the avenue.
+His heart was beating wildly, in a very terror that she might not come.
+Nothing--no catastrophe, no danger, no disgrace,--could be so terrible
+to him as that the woman he loved so recklessly and madly should not
+come. She must not fail! He looked at his watch; it was already three
+minutes past ten. If in five--then minutes she did not come, he would go
+to seek her--to the House on the Dunes, aye, if must be to _The Southern
+Cross_ itself.
+
+Suddenly a dark figure slipped out of the gloom, and Claire de la
+Fontaine was in his arms. For a moment she let him clasp her, let his
+lips again meet hers; then quickly she disengaged herself. "Are we safe?"
+she asked in a whisper. "Is it that we can talk here."
+
+"We are perfectly safe," he answered. "Nothing can be heard from the Inn.
+No one is about."
+
+"You escaped without notice? Are you certain that no one follows you?"
+
+"Absolutely. I am sure. And you?"
+
+"I?--Oh, no, no--. There is no one to question me. I have been at the
+House on the Dunes all the evening. Marie, my maid,--she thinks that I
+am gone to the schooner. _Mon Dieu! cher ami_, what terrors I have
+suffered for you. It had not seemed possible that Claire de la Fontaine
+would ride and walk two so long miles in a desolate country to meet a
+lover--It must be that we are gone mad."
+
+"Madness then is the sweetest experience of life," said Dan, seizing her
+hand again and carrying it to his lips.
+
+"Ah _peut-etre, mon ami_. But now there are many affairs to discuss. Tell
+me--the Marquis, he was released, as your friend has promised me he
+should be?"
+
+"Of course, didn't you know it?"
+
+"I know nothing. Why then is it he has not left the Inn?"
+
+"But he did leave--in the middle of the afternoon, half an hour after I
+returned."
+
+"And where is it that he has gone?"
+
+"To the schooner, I suppose. He left alone, giving directions for his
+things to be sent after him."
+
+"Ah! to the schooner, you say? You are certain?"
+
+"Yes--that is, I think he went there. Jesse took his boxes and bags down
+to the shore, and Captain Bonhomme received them, and thanked him in the
+Marquis's name,''
+
+"_Mais non! Est-ce possible_?" For a moment she was silent, considering
+deeply. "_Bien_!" she exclaimed presently. "It is as you say, of course.
+And you, my friend?" She stopped suddenly, for they had been walking
+slowly forward, and withdrawing her hand from his arm, she held it out
+before him. "The paper?" she demanded.
+
+"Here it is," murmured Dan, fumbling in his pocket, and pulling out the
+scrap of paper. She took it eagerly from his hand and held it up before
+her eyes as though trying to see it in the dark.
+
+"This is it, really?" she asked.
+
+"I swear it," he answered. "It is the piece of writing that I found in
+the hidden cubby-hole of the old cabinet in the Oak Parlour. It is written
+in French, you know."
+
+"Yes, I know, I know," she assented absently. For a moment she was quite
+still, and then, with a strange exclamation, she put the paper to her
+lips. "_Quels souvenirs, d'autrefois_!" she murmured. "_Ah, mon Dieu,
+mon Dieu_!"
+
+"Dearest, what is it?" asked Dan.
+
+"Nothing, nothing," she replied, withdrawing a little from his touch. "I
+was unwell for the moment,--_ce ne fait rien_. No, no, you are not to
+kiss me, please." Again she unloosed his arm from about her neck, slipped
+the paper into her muff, and pressed a little forward. For a space they
+walked slowly, silently, toward the Inn.
+
+"But, dearest one," murmured Dan, "this proves to you my love, doesn't
+it? You no longer doubt me. For your sake, I give my honour; it may be,
+the safety of my friends. You must see how I love you with all my heart
+and soul. Won't you,--"
+
+Suddenly she stopped again quite still and faced him. "My poor boy," she
+said gently, "you really love me?"
+
+"Love you! My God, have I not proved it! What more would you have me do?"
+
+"_Mais oui_," she answered quickly. "You have proved it, but I have
+thought that it was not possible."
+
+"And you--you do care--oh, tell me--"
+
+"_Helas, mon paurve ami_. I love as tenderly as it remains in me to love.
+Ah, dear, dear boy, so sincerely, that I cannot have you to sell your
+honour for the futile kisses of Claire de la Fontaine."
+
+"What do you mean? Have I--"
+
+"No, no, no! This--take the paper. You must not again give it me, I
+desire that you will not." She drew the paper from her muff with an
+impulsive movement and thrust it toward him. "Take it, I implore you."
+
+"But why--?"
+
+"Because that you shall not give your honour to a woman such as I am.
+_Mai vraiment_, I love you. That is why you must take back the paper."
+
+"But you must explain--"
+
+"_Mon Dieu_! is it that I have not explained? There is time for nothing
+more. I have fear, _mon ami_; a kiss, and it is necessary that I go. It
+is good-bye."
+
+"But you love me, you have said so. I cannot, I will not let you go."
+
+"Listen to me, my friend," she said, her voice rising for the moment
+above the whisper in which she had cautiously spoken heretofore. "From
+the first I have deceived you, betrayed you, played upon your affection
+but to betray you afresh. And now I find that I love you. I am not that
+which you call good, but it is impossible that I injure you. Go back to
+your friends."
+
+"Never! I love you. What matters now anything that you have said or done?
+And you love me. Ah dearest one, what can that mean but good?"
+
+"_Bien-aime_, what will you that I say?" she interrupted speaking
+rapidly, "I am what you Americans call 'a bad woman',--the sort of woman
+that you know nothing of. I was the woman who sixteen years ago stayed at
+the Inn at the Red Oak with Francois de Boisdhyver, the woman your mother
+called nurse, who cared for his little daughter. And now I have told you
+all. Will you know from now that I am a thousand times unworthy? _Pour
+l'amour de Dieu_, give it to me to do this one act of honour and of
+generosity."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+THE ATTACK
+
+
+With these words she thrust the scrap of paper into his hands and turning
+swiftly, started forward as though to escape his further importunities by
+flight. But Dan was instantly by her side, trying to catch her hand in
+the darkness.
+
+Again she faced him passionately. "_C'est folie_," she cried hoarsely,
+"have I not told you that we are in great danger? Go, go back to the Inn.
+It is there only that you will be safe.--O, _mon Dieu!"_
+
+A figure had sprung suddenly from the blackness of the trees. Dan felt a
+sharp blow on his shoulder, and then he was grappling with a wiry
+antagonist, striving to keep at safe distance a hand that clutched an
+open knife. Locked in a close embrace, swaying from side to side of the
+road, they fought desperately. Dan striving to get at the pistol which he
+carried, his assailant trying to use his knife.
+
+It seemed as if Dan could no longer hold the man off when two small
+hands closed over the fist that held the gleaming knife and a clear voice
+rang out in French. Dan felt his antagonist's grip loosen and he wrenched
+himself free. Madame de la Fontaine had come to his rescue. "Quick,
+quick--to the Inn. I am safe. You have but one chance for your life," she
+cried. Already his assailant had put a boatswain's whistle to his lips
+and was sounding a shrill blast.
+
+As Dan hesitated, uncertain what to do, he heard a number of men come
+crashing through the underbrush of the neighbouring field. Again Madame
+de la Fontaine cried, "_Mon Dieu_! will you not run?" Then she turned and
+disappeared in the darkness. Simultaneously came the crack of a pistol
+shot, and a bullet whizzed by his ear. There was nothing for it but to
+run; and run he did, shouting at the top of his voice the while to Tom in
+the Inn. He probably owed his start to the fact that for the moment his
+attacker, who had been held at bay by Madame de la Fontaine, was
+uncertain whether to follow her or Dan. That moment's delay saved Dan's
+life, for though, with a curse, the man started after him now, he had a
+poor chance of catching him in the darkness. But on he came only a dozen
+yards or so behind, and after him the thundering steps and harsh cries
+of those who had responded to the call of the whistle.
+
+At last Dan was at the door of the Inn, beating wildly upon it, and
+calling, "Open, Tom; quick, for God's sake! It's Dan." As the door was
+flung back, he sprang in and slammed it shut. Already the attackers were
+in the courtyard, a volley of shots rang against the stout oak, followed
+almost at once, by the flinging against it of half-a-dozen men. But the
+great oaken beam had been slipped into place and held firmly. Dan was
+none the worse for his experience, save for a graze on the cheek where
+the knife had glanced, and a slit on his shoulder from a bullet.
+
+"They're here!" he cried. "No time for explanations, Tom. I went
+out--fool that I was!--was attacked. They're here in force."
+
+By this time Jesse had rushed into the bar, attracted by the firing, and
+soon Ezra Manners came running down from the floor above. After the first
+impact against the door those without had withdrawn, evidently taking up
+a position in the courtyard again, for almost at once there was a
+fusilade of shots against door and windows, which luckily the heavy oak
+was proof against.
+
+"They're welcome to keep that up all night," said Tom. "Only a waste of
+ammunition. How many are there?" He would liked to have asked Dan why he
+had gone out, but there was no time for discussion.
+
+"I don't know--half-a-dozen at least, I should guess," was Dan's reply.
+"Bonhomme is at their head, I'm sure. It was he who tackled me in the
+avenue. They may have the whole crew of the schooner here. That would
+mean a dozen or more."
+
+"Well," said Tom, "we're in for it now, I guess. We'll have to watch in
+different parts of the house, for we don't know where they will attack.
+Unless they are all fools, it won't be here."
+
+"You're right. I'll stay and look out for the south wing. You go to the
+north wing, Tom; Jesse to the kitchen, and Ezra to the end of the south
+passage. That'll cover the house as well as we can cover it. They'll try
+to force an entrance somewheres. Have you all got guns? Good. Leave the
+doors open so that we can hear each other call."
+
+Evidently the attacking party had concluded that they were wasting their
+lead and their time in shooting at doors and window-shutters, for as Tom
+had said, all was now quiet outside. Fifteen minutes, half-an-hour
+passed, and nothing occurred to alarm or to relieve the tension on the
+anxious watchers within. At length Dan stole upstairs to reconnoitre.
+
+It was fortunate that he chose the precise moment he did, for as his
+head emerged above the last stair, he saw that the great shutters at
+the end of the south corridor were open, and a man stood before the
+window, evidently on the top rung of a ladder, trying the sash. It was
+locked to be sure, but at the instant Dan saw him, he raised his fist
+and smashed it. He was about to leap through the opening, fringed
+though it was with jagged glass, when Dan aimed his pistol carefully,
+and fired. There was a cry, and the form at the window fell crashing to
+the ground below. Dan rushed to the casement, and could hear in the
+court beneath him the curses and exclamations of the surprised
+assailants. Quickly he thrust the end of the ladder from the wall, then
+seizing a fresh pistol from his belt, fired at random into the darkness
+below. Another cry of pain attested to the fact that his chance shot
+had taken effect. By this time Tom had rushed to his assistance, and
+together they barred the window again.
+
+Dan gave a brief account of the incident. "But, for heaven's sake, Tom,"
+he concluded, "get back to the north wing. We are in danger there every
+moment. I'll watch out here."
+
+As Tom returned to his post in the cold corridor of the north wing, he
+heard heavy crashes, as of a battering-ram, against the great door that
+opened into the gallery. A shrill whistle brought Ezra Manners to his
+assistance. "Watch here!" he commanded. "If the door crashes in, shoot,
+and shoot to kill; then run into the bar and barricade the door between.
+I've a plan."
+
+He himself ran into the bar, blew out the candles, and risking perhaps
+too much on the chance of success, cautiously opened the front door. He
+could scarcely make out the group at the farther end of the gallery, as
+he stepped out; but he could hear the resounding crashes against the door
+into the north hall, each one of which seemed to be the last that even
+that massive frame could hold out against. Leveling his pistol at the
+group; he took aim, and fired; snatched another from his pocket, and
+fired a second time. Again, by good luck, the defender's shots had told.
+There was a thud on the gallery floor, and the besiegers scurried to
+cover beyond the courtyard fence. Tom dashed safely back into the house,
+and slipped the great beam into place.
+
+Upstairs Dan's attention had been attracted by the commotion in front of
+the inn. He opened a window on to the roof of the gallery, climbed out,
+and crawled along on his belly till his head just abutted over the eaves.
+For a few moments, after the firing, he could hear the attackers moving
+about behind the fence across the courtyard. At length, a couple of them
+stole across the court and up on to the gallery beneath him. In a moment
+they returned carrying the dead or wounded comrade; then all of them
+seemed to go off together up the dark avenue of maples. He waited till
+they could be heard no more, then crept back into the house and ran down
+to tell Dan of their temporary withdrawal. For an hour or more the four
+defenders of the Inn kept themselves occupied parading the corridors and
+rooms, on the watch for a fresh attack. But nothing happened. They felt
+no security, however, and would feel none till daylight.
+
+In the silent watching of that night Dan had ample opportunity to reflect
+upon his extraordinary interview with Madame de la Fontaine. He loved
+her. Good heavens how he loved her, but--had she been sincere in her
+refusal at the last to keep the scrap of paper for the possession of
+which she had so desperately intrigued? Had she decoyed him to the
+rendezvous in the dark but to betray him to the bandits with whom she was
+in league? At first it would seem so. And yet the paper was in his
+possession; and, she it was who had rescued him from the assassin's
+knife. Where was she now? What had become of her? What was to be the end
+of this mad night's work? That she was the woman who had accompanied
+General Pointelle--or the Marechal de Boisdhyver--somehow did not
+surprise him. And for the time the full import of what that implied did
+not dawn upon him. But what mattered anything now that he loved her?
+
+He determined at last to reconnoitre again from the roof of the gallery.
+It still lay in shadow, but it would not be long before the moon, now
+rising over the eastern hills beyond the Strathsey flooded it with light.
+In a moment, he had opened the window, was over the sill, and, creeping
+cautiously along the roof to the ledge, he worked his way toward the
+great oak at the farther end.
+
+All was still and deserted below as the Inn courtyard would have been in
+the middle of any winter's night. While he stood peering into the
+darkness, listening intently, the moon, just showing above the distant
+tree tops, cast the first rays of its light into the courtyard beneath
+him. At the instant the figure of a woman stole across the flagged
+pavement and crept fearfully to the Red Oak. With a strange thrill he
+recognized Claire de la Fontaine. Reaching the shelter of the great tree,
+she stooped, gathered a handful of gravel from the road bed, and then
+cast it boldly at the shutters of the bar, calling softly, "Dan, Dan."
+
+Instantly he replied. "Claire! Is that you? What is it? I am here, above
+you, on the roof."
+
+"Ah, _mon Dieu_!" she exclaimed, as she looked up startled, and
+discerned his form leaning over the eaves, "for the love of heaven, my
+friend, open to me. I am in danger and I must tell you that which is of
+great importance to you. _Mais vite, mon ami_. In ten minutes they will
+return again."
+
+It did not occur to Dan to doubt her. Careless of the risk, he rushed
+back to the window, climbed in, and in a few seconds had opened the door
+to the anxious woman without. She seemed physically exhausted as she
+stepped into the warm bar. Taking her in his arms, he carried her to a
+chair, and poured out a glass of wine, which she eagerly drank.
+
+"It matters not what I have been doing," she murmured in reply to his
+questions, "I have but little time to give you my warning. _Ecoute_.
+Bonhomme and his men are gone only to carry back their dead and wounded,
+and to bring cutlasses, and the two or three sailors who were left on the
+schooner. I have followed them--God knows how--and heard something of
+their plans. They will make an attack--now, in a moment--in two different
+places. But these attacks will be shams,--is not that the word?--they
+will mean nothing. It is the Oak Parlour that they desire to enter. At
+the window of that so horrible room Bonhomme will try to make an entrance
+without alarm while the others hold your attention at the front and back
+of the Inn. Is it that you understand? It is necessary that you are
+prepared for these sham attacks, but the great danger is Bonhomme. The
+window in the Oak Parlour is not strong. They have information--recent
+information--from the Marquis probably,--that it will not be difficult to
+break in. One of you must conceal himself in the dark and shoot Bonhomme
+when he enters; you must shoot and shoot to kill, then we will be safe.
+I have no fear of Monsieur le Marquis. The others--they are brutes--but
+they will flee. And they know nothing, they do this for money,--ah, _mon
+Dieu_, for money which I have furnished!"
+
+For a moment, torn between his love and his deep distrust of this woman,
+poor Dan stood uncertainly. Suddenly he knelt at her side and clasped his
+arms about her. "Claire, you are on our side? You swear it."
+
+"Ah, _mon Dieu_! is it that I deserve this?" she exclaimed bitterly.
+"Ah! I tell you truth," she cried. "You must believe me--Listen! Are
+they come already?"
+
+"No, no, there is nothing. But I trust you, I will go."
+
+Suddenly she sprang to her feet. "Let me go with you. It is terrible to
+me to enter again that room; but I desire to prove myself of honour.
+_Allous, allous_!"
+
+"Tom is there."
+
+"Ah! send him here to the bar. But do you come, _mon ami_. See, I go with
+you." She rose and forcing herself to the effort, led the way across the
+bar and into the corridor of the north wing, as if to show him that in
+sixteen years she had not forgotten.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+IN THE OAK PARLOUR
+
+
+"You know the way?" Dan exclaimed as he caught up with her, and held open
+the door that led into the old north wing.
+
+"But so well," she replied, catching her breath. "Would to God that
+I did not!"
+
+"Ah!" he murmured, "I forgot that you have been here before."
+
+They pressed on silently. At the turn of the corridor upon which the Oak
+Parlour gave, they discerned Tom Pembroke, a weird figure, in the dim
+light of the tallow dip upon the table, that cast fantastic shadows upon
+the whitewashed walls.
+
+As he recognized them, he sprang forward in astonishment. "Madame de la
+Fontaine! Dan! What does this mean?" he cried.
+
+"You know Madame?" Dan replied hastily and in evident confusion. "At
+great risk she has come to warn us--she is our friend, understand.--She
+has come to tell us how Bonhomme and his men will attack the Inn."
+
+Tom listened to his explanation with unconcealed dismay. "Good heavens,
+Dan!" he protested, "You trust this woman? You know she is in league with
+these ruffians. Do you want us to fall into a trap?"
+
+"No, no, Monsieur Pembroke," interrupted Madame de la Fontaine, "you must
+listen to me. I understand your fear. But at last you can trust me. I
+repent that which I have done. Ah, _mon Dieu_, with what bitterness! And
+now I desire to do all that is possible to save you. You must trust me."
+
+"I do not--I can not trust you," Tom cried sternly. "Don't go in there,
+Dan. Don't I beg of you, trust this woman's word. It is a trick."
+
+"Perhaps," said Dan grimly, "but go back. I take the responsibility. I
+do trust her, I shall trust her--to death. There is no time to lose,
+man. Go back!"
+
+"What deviltry has bewitched you?" cried Tom passionately. "Already once
+to-night you have risked our lives by your fool-hardiness,--for the sake
+of this woman, eh? By gad, man, I begin to see. But I tell you now, I
+refuse to be a victim to your madness."
+
+"_Mais non_, Monsieur Pembroke," Claire cried again. "By all that is good
+and holy, I swear to you, that that which I have said is true. You must
+go. They will attack the bar and the kitchen. If those places are not
+defended, there will be danger."
+
+"At any rate," said Dan, "I am going into the Oak Parlour. If you refuse
+to act with me, barricade the door between the bar and the north wing. If
+need be, I shall fight alone. Only now we lose time, precious time."
+
+Pembroke looked at him as if he had gone mad, then shrugging his
+shoulders he turned back into the bar, whistling for Jesse and Ezra as
+he did so.
+
+For a moment, glancing after Tom's retreating figure, shaken to his soul
+by conflicting emotions, Dan stood irresolute.
+
+"But come," said Madame de la Fontaine, touching his arm. Again like the
+weird genius of this strange night she led the way on down the shadowy
+hall, and paused only when her hand rested upon the knob of the door into
+the Oak Parlour. "It is here," she said simply.
+
+As Dan reached her side, she opened the door. The light of the candle
+down the hallway did not penetrate the gloom of the disused room. A musty
+smell as of cold stagnant air came strong to their nostrils, and Dan
+felt, as they crossed the threshold together, that he was entering a
+place where no life had been for a long long time, a place full of dead
+nameless horrors.
+
+The woman by his side was trembling violently. He put his arm about her
+to reassure her, and there shot through him a sensation of strange and
+terrible joy to be with her alone in this darkness and danger. For the
+moment he was exulting that for her sake he had risked his honour, that
+for her sake now he was risking life itself. He bent his head to hers.
+
+"No! no!--not here!" she whispered hoarsely, but yet clinging to him with
+shaking hands. "It is so cold, so dark. I have fear," she murmured.
+
+"It is like a tomb," he said.
+
+"The tomb of my hopes, of my youth," she breathed softly.
+
+"Shall I strike a light?"
+
+"No, no,--no light, I implore you. _Ecoute_! What is it that I hear?"
+
+"I hear nothing. It is the wind in the Red Oak outside."
+
+"But listen!"
+
+"It is an owl hooting."
+
+Suddenly she drew her hand from his, and he could hear her moving swiftly
+about. "All is as it used to be?" she asked.
+
+"Precisely," he answered; "nothing has been changed."
+
+"Here is the cabinet," she said, from across the room. "I can feel the
+lion's head. It is opposite to the window and the moonlight will stream
+in when the casement is opened, but if I crouch low I shall not be seen.
+_Bien_! And you, _mon ami_? Tell me, is the old _escritoire_ still to the
+left of the door?" Now she was back at his side once again.
+
+"The _escritoire_?" he repeated.
+
+"The little table where one writes. Ah! yes, it is here. See, behind
+this, _mon ami_, shall you hide yourself. The moonlight will not reach
+here--and it is so arranged that you will see plainly any one that
+appears at the window. When the casement is opened, you will shoot, will
+you not, and shoot to kill?"
+
+"Yes, I will shoot," said Dan, his voice trembling.
+
+"You promise me?" she cried in a tense whisper, as she grasped his arm
+and held it tight in her grip.
+
+"I tell you, yes."
+
+"You must not fail."
+
+"No. Shall I shoot at any one who opens?"
+
+"Any one?--it will be Bonhomme,--no other."
+
+Suddenly there came, from the front and the rear of the Inn, at the same
+instant it seemed, the sharp staccato of a fusilade of pistol shots, and
+the lumbering blows as of beams being thrust at distant doors.
+
+"They are come!" she whispered, "hide." Dan could hear the swish of her
+garments as she rapidly glided across the room to the old cabinet, then
+he turned and crouched low behind the writing desk that she had chosen
+for his place of concealment. He knelt there motionless, a cocked pistol
+clenched in his right hand. His breath seemed to have stopped, but his
+heart was pounding as though it must burst through his breast. How could
+he shoot down in cold blood a fellow man? The horror of it crowded out
+all other impressions, sensations fears. He could fight, risk his life,
+but to pull the trigger of that pistol when the casement should open
+seemed to him an impossibility. He would wait, grapple with him, fight
+as men should.
+
+Suddenly a ray of moonlight fell across the dark floor. Dan, looking up,
+seemed frozen by horror. The shutters had opened, the casement swung back
+noiselessly, and there in the opening, sharply outlined against the
+moonlight-flooded night, was the great black hulk of Captain Bonhomme.
+
+For a moment he stood there irresolute, listening intently. Dan was
+fascinated, motionless, held as in a vice by the horror of the thing.
+
+Suddenly Bonhomme moved his head to one side as if to listen more
+acutely. As he did so, the ray of moonlight fell upon the cabinet, fell
+upon Claire de la Fontaine, upon something that she held in an
+outstretched hand that gleamed.
+
+"_Nom de Dieu_!" There was the flash and crack of a pistol, a sharp cry,
+and the great figure fell back and sank out of sight.
+
+With that Dan sprang forward, reckless of danger, and ran to the window.
+He heard without the confused sounds as of persons scurrying to cover,
+saw their forms dash across the moonlit courtyard, into the shadows of
+the trees and outhouses. Beneath him on the floor of the gallery was
+something horrible and still.
+
+Almost instantly Claire de la Fontaine was by his side, and as
+regardless of danger as he, she was calling sharply, calling men by their
+names. Her hair had been loosened and fell over her shoulders in black
+waves, her dark eyes flashed with excitement and passion, and her face,
+strangely pale, in the silver moonlight, was set in stern harsh lines.
+Even then this vision of her tragic beauty thrilled the man at her side.
+
+But she was as unconscious of him as she was of her danger. With hand
+uplifted she called by name the desperados, who had taken shelter in the
+darkness and to those who now came running from front and rear where
+their attacks had been unsuccessful.
+
+Appalled, spell-bound by the vision, even as Dan was, they stopped, and
+stood listening mutely to the torrent of words that she poured
+forth,--vehement French of which Dan had no understanding.
+
+At last, ending the frightful tension of the scene, two of the men came
+forward, crept up to the lifeless body of Bonhomme, and grasping it by
+head and feet, carried it away, across the courtyard, into the darkness
+of the avenue of maples. One by one, still mysteriously silent, the
+others of the gang followed, till at length the last one had disappeared
+into the gloom. Weird silence fell once more upon the Inn.
+
+It was only then that Madame de la Fontaine turned to Dan. "They will
+come no more," she said in a strained unnatural voice. "We are saved,
+safe.... I have proved, is it not so?--my honour, my love."
+
+With the words she sank at his feet, just as Tom, candle in hand,
+appeared in the doorway.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+THE TREASURE
+
+
+Owing doubtless to the death of Bonhomme and to the orders given in no
+uncertain tones by Madame de la Fontaine, the bandits from the schooner
+in the cove did not make a further effort to attack the Inn that night.
+There was no rest, however, for Madame de la Fontaine, after her heroic
+exploit in the Oak Parlour, had swooned completely away. They carried her
+to the couch in Mrs. Frost's parlour, and, awkwardly enough, did what
+could be done for her by men. It was over an hour before they succeeded
+in restoring her to consciousness, and when they did so, she awoke to
+delirium and fever. Distracted by anxiety and by their helplessness, at
+the first streak of dawn, Dan started for town to get a doctor, and Ezra
+Manners volunteered to go to the Red Farm and bring back Mrs. Frost,
+Nancy, and the maids.
+
+About six o'clock in the morning the women folk returned to the Inn. But
+the briefest account of the attack was given them, though they were told
+in no uncertain terms of Madame de la Fontaine's heroic action in coming
+to warn them and of her courageous shot at the leader. Then Mrs. Frost
+and Nancy turned all their attention to the sick woman, caring for her as
+tenderly and devotedly as if she were their own. Half-an-hour later Dan
+returned from Monday Port with the family doctor, a grave silent old
+gentleman, in whose skill and discretion they trusted. After making an
+examination of his patient, he nodded his head encouragingly; gave a few
+directions to Mrs. Frost, and then left, promising to return later in the
+morning with medicines and supplies.
+
+At last, utterly worn out, the four men threw themselves on their beds
+and slept from sheer exhaustion. The sun was high in the sky when they
+came down stairs again and found Nancy waiting for them, and a smoking
+breakfast ready on the table. After greeting them, she pointed to the
+window, across the fields, almost bare of snow now and gleaming in the
+morning sunlight, to the bright waters of the cove. "See!" she cried,
+"the schooner has disappeared."
+
+They both looked. "By Jove, it has!" exclaimed Tom, rushing to the other
+side of the room, and peering out at the shipless sea. "Heigho! that's a
+relief. Pray God we've seen the last of her. The Marquis gone, the
+schooner gone,--we three together once more! Perhaps we shall begin to
+live again. Ah!" he added more softly, glancing with sudden sympathy at
+Dan's white drawn face, "I forgot the poor woman across the hall."
+
+Dan turned aside to hide his emotion, for though a load of anxiety had
+been lifted from his heart by the vanishing of _The Southern Cross_, he
+was sick with fear for the issue of the illness that had stricken down
+the woman he loved,--the woman who had proved her love for him by so
+terrible and so tragic a deed.
+
+As though aware that for the moment they were best left together alone,
+Nancy slipped away into the kitchen.
+
+"You love her, Dan?" asked Tom simply.
+
+"Yes, Tom, with all my heart and soul. I staked my honour, my life, on
+her sincerity. And how she has proved that we were right to trust her! It
+can't be--she mustn't die--I couldn't bear it!"
+
+"She'll be all right, old fellow, don't worry; trust to your mother and
+Nance. It is only the shock of the terrible things she went through last
+night. Come on, we must take something to eat. Here is Nancy back again."
+
+There was no doubt of the fact, _The Southern Cross_ had sailed away,
+vanished in the night as mysteriously as a week before she had appeared
+in the Strathsey and found moorings in the Cove. They did not count on
+the certainty of her not reappearing, however; and that night and for
+many nights thereafter the Inn was securely barricaded and a watch was
+kept, but neither then nor ever did _The Southern Cross_ spread her sails
+in those waters again. She and her crew disappeared from their lives as
+completely as from the seas that stretched around the coast of Deal.
+
+Tom at once was for making a search in the Oak Parlour for the hidden
+treasure, but for the time Dan had no heart for the undertaking. He urged
+delay at least until Madame de la Fontaine had recovered; and as for
+Nancy she would not hear of it.
+
+"I can't bear to think of it,--of the trouble, the crime, the suffering
+of which it has been the cause. When our poor lady recovers, she will
+tell us all we need to know. I dread the Oak Parlour. I would not go into
+that room for anything in the world. Nor, believe me, Tom, could Dan do
+so now. You have guessed, haven't you, that he loves Madame de la
+Fontaine?"
+
+"Of course, dearest; poor fellow! he betrays his love by every word and
+act. But good heaven, Nance, he couldn't marry her!"
+
+"No--I don't know. I suppose not. But Dan will do as he will. To oppose
+him now would only make him the more wretched."
+
+"Does your mother know?"
+
+"No, and it is best she should not. I don't think she has the faintest
+suspicion."
+
+"Well, I suppose we had better let things rest awhile;" Tom assented,
+"but I swear I would like to get at the Oak Parlour and tear the secret
+out of it."
+
+"We must wait a bit, Tom dear. Let's just be glad now of what we
+have and are."
+
+And with that he drew her toward him and pressed for a definite answer to
+the question which so deeply concerned their future.
+
+"When Madame has recovered, when we know all and the mystery is solved,"
+she replied; then she added inconsequently, "I wonder if we shall ever
+hear of the old Marquis again."
+
+"I wonder too," Tom exclaimed. "Though he has sailed away on _The
+Southern Cross_, I doubt if he will willingly leave the treasure
+behind him."
+
+"That dreadful treasure, Tom," cried Nancy. "I wish to goodness that the
+Marquis had it and might keep it always. We have each other."
+
+The evening of the second day after the terrible night of the attack, as
+Dan was entering the Inn from his work outside, he saw Madame de la
+Fontaine standing on the gallery under the Red Oak. It was the dusk of a
+mild pleasant day. She was clad still in her soft grey gown with furs
+about her waists and neck, and a grey scarf over her head. But there was
+something infinitely pathetic to him in the listlessness of her attitude,
+in the expression of a deep and melancholy that had come into her face.
+
+He stole swiftly to her side, and taking her hand in his pressed it to
+his lips, with a gesture that was as reverent as it was tender. For a
+moment something of the old brightness returned to her face as she bent
+her clear gaze upon his bowed head.
+
+"You love me, Dan?" she murmured.
+
+"You know I love you," he whispered passionately.
+
+"Yes, I believe that you do," she said simply. "I shall always be
+thankful that I have won a good man's love." But suddenly she withdrew
+her hand, as the door of the bar opened. "See, here is Mademoiselle
+Nancy. She is coming for me: she is to be with me to-night. There is
+much for me to do."
+
+His heart surged within him; for he knew that in her simple words there
+was the tragic note of farewell; but he could not speak, he could not
+plead from that sad and broken woman for a passion that he knew but too
+well she could never give. He knew that she would leave him on the
+morrow, that his protests would be vain;--nay,--he would not even utter
+them! With the gathering of the darkness about the old Inn, he felt that
+the light in his heart was being obscured forever.
+
+The evening passed, the night. Morning came, and Madame de la Fontaine,
+accompanied by Nancy, left the Inn at the Red Oak for Coventry. There
+remained to Dan of his brief and tragic passion but one letter, which Tom
+handed to him that morning, and which, with despairing heart, he read and
+re-read a hundred times.
+
+"_Mon cher ami_:
+
+"You would forgive that I do not know well how to express myself as I
+desire, if you could read my heart. I bade you good-bye to-night under
+the Red Oak, tree for me of such tragic and such beautiful memories. I
+could not say farewell otherwise, dear friend, nor could you. We have
+loved sincerely, have we not? We will remember that in days to come; you
+will remember it even in the happier days to come that I pray God to
+grant you. I know all that you would say, my friend, but it cannot be. I
+must vanish from your life, be gone as completely as though I had never
+entered it. I love you deeply, tenderly, but I could not be to you what I
+know that now you wish. All the past forbids. The very tragedy that
+proved to you that I was worthy of your trust forbids. It is my only
+justification that I saved your lives, dear friend; but oh how bitterly I
+ask pardon of God for what has been done! Then also, dearest friend, my
+heart is no longer capable to bear passion, but only to feel great
+tenderness. I could not say these things, and yet they must be written. I
+cannot go with them unsaid. Certain other things must be told you in
+justice to all.
+
+"The story I told you on the schooner that day was largely truth. The
+General Pointelle, who was at the Inn at the Red Oak in 1814, was in
+reality the Marechal de Boisdhyver, the father of your foster-sister
+Nancy. She is truly Eloise de Boisdhyver. The Marechal returned to France
+to support the Emperor, as he wrote to madame your good mother; and he
+fell, as I told you, on the field of Waterloo. Admitting the importance
+of his mission, admitting my ambiguous relation to him (indefensible as
+it was), to have left the child as he did was an act of kindness. In
+truth the treasure concealed in the Oak Parlour is considerable, and it
+was always my purpose to return, but the necessary directions for finding
+it were not entrusted to me, but to the Marquis Marie-Anne, whom I didn't
+meet until many years after Waterloo. Then I was induced by the
+Marquis,--your old Marquis--to provide the money for the miserable
+enterprise, of which we know the tragic result. From the first I was
+uncertain about the method we adopted; and then soon after our arrival
+here, from a hundred little indications, I became convinced that Bonhomme
+was prepared to betray us, once we secured the treasure. As for the
+Marquis, I suppose that he sailed away on the schooner. You need fear him
+no longer. It was he, I am convinced, that conveyed to them the
+information of the loosened casement in the Oak Parlour, and unwittingly
+arranged for his own undoing and our salvation. At all events he will
+have realized now that he has hopelessly lost the fight. As for the
+treasure, by right it belongs to Eloise, who should not disdain to use
+it. I enclose a transcription of the other half of the torn scrap of
+paper, which will supplement the directions in your possession.
+
+"And as for me, my friend, I shall seek a shelter in my own country apart
+from the world in which I have lived so to little purpose and for the
+most part so unhappily. Believe me, so it is best. My heart is too full
+for me to express all that I feel for you.
+
+"Dear, dear friend, do not render me the more unhappy to know that my
+brief friendship with you shall have harmed your life. Your place is in
+the world, to take part in the life of your own country, not, dear Dan,
+to waste youth and energy in the fruitless desolation of this beautiful
+Deal, not above all to grieve for a woman who was unworthy.
+
+"I commend you to God, and I shall never forget you.
+
+"CLAIRE DE LA FONTAINE."
+
+It was with a heavy heart that Dan consented later in the morning to
+Tom's proposal that they force at last the secret of the Oak Parlour. He
+got the torn scrap of paper which he had found,--such ages ago it seemed,
+though it was scarcely a week,--in the old cabinet, and gave it to Tom,
+with the copy of the other half which Madame de la Fontaine had enclosed
+in her letter of farewell. The copy in Madame de la Fontaine's
+handwriting did not dovetail exactly into the jagged edges of the
+original portion, so that it was some time before they could get it into
+position for reading. But at last it was pasted together on a large bit
+of cardboard, and Tom, with the aid of a dictionary, succeeded in making
+a translation, which Dan took down.
+
+"Learning of the attempt of my Emperor to regain his glorious throne, I
+leave these hospitable shores to offer my sword to his cause. In case I
+do not return, the person having instructions for the discovery of this
+paper, which I tear in two parts, will find herein the necessary
+directions for the finding of my hidden treasure. This treasure, bullion,
+jewels, and coins, is concealed in a secret chamber in this Inn at the
+Red Oak. This secret chamber will be entered from the Oak Parlour. The
+hidden door is released by a spring beneath the hand of the lady in the
+picture nearest the fireplace on the north side of the room. A panel
+slides back revealing the entrance. Instructions as to the deposition of
+the treasure will be found in the golden casket therewith.
+
+"FRANCOIS DE BOISDHYVER."
+
+"Well?" said Tom, "the instructions are definite enough. Now we can put
+them to the test. Let's get to work at once. Wait a second till I get
+some wood, and well make a fire in the Oak Parlour." He filled his arms
+with logs from the bin under the settle in the bar, while Dan got the key
+for the north wing.
+
+Soon they were at the end of the old hall. It was with an effort that Dan
+brought himself to enter the room, for there flashed into his mind the
+vision of the last time he was there,--the cold silver moonlight, the
+dark burly form at the casement, the white drawn face of Claire de la
+Fontaine, and then the sharp flash and crack of the pistol.
+
+But with an impatient gesture, as if to thrust aside these tragic
+memories, he stepped across the threshold, and kneeling at the hearth,
+took the wood from Tom's arms and began to lay a fire. In the meantime
+his friend fumbled at the window casements, opened them, and let in the
+light of day and the pure air of out-of-doors. Soon the fire was
+crackling cheerily on the great andirons and casting its bright
+reflection on the dark oak panelling of the walls. Nothing had been
+disturbed--the old cabinet with the lions' heads stood opposite the
+window; the little _escritoire_, behind which he had crouched on the
+fatal night, was pushed back against the wall; the chairs, the tables,
+thick with dust, stood just as they had been standing for many years.
+
+"Do you realize, Tom," Dan said, as they stood side by side watching the
+blazing logs, "that it is sixteen years since General Pointelle stayed at
+the Inn and used this room? And the treasure, if there is any treasure,
+has been mouldering here all that time."
+
+"Let's get at it," said Tom. "I confess this place gives me the creeps.
+Have you got my translation of the directions?"
+
+"Yes, here it is." Dan spread out the bit of paper on one of the tables.
+"'The hidden door is released by a spring beneath the hand of the lady in
+the picture nearest the fireplace on the north side of the room.' Ah!
+that must be it--that old landscape let into the panel there." He walked
+nearer and examined it closely.
+
+It was a simple landscape, a garden in the foreground, forest and hills
+in the distance; and in the midst a lady in Eighteenth century costume
+caressing the head of a greyhound. It was beautifully mellow in tone, and
+might well have been a production of Gainsborough, though the Frosts had
+preserved no such tradition.
+
+Dan began to fumble, according to the directions, beneath the hand of
+the stately lady, pressing vigourously here and there with thumb and
+forefinger. "What's that?" he cried suddenly. A faint click, as of a
+spring in action, had sounded sharp in the stillness, but apparently with
+no other effect. "By Jove!" he exclaimed, "I believe there is something
+behind it. You heard the click? See there! the panel's opened a bit at
+the side." Surely enough, there was a long crack on the right--the length
+of the picture. "Here, let's push."
+
+Careless of the landscape, they put their hands upon the panel and
+pressed with all their force to the left. It yielded slowly, slipping
+back side-wise into the wall, and revealed a narrow opening, beyond which
+was a little circular stairway, leading apparently to some chamber above.
+
+"Here's the entrance to the secret chamber all right," Dan exclaimed.
+"Let's see where it goes to." He climbed in and started up the winding
+flight of stairs, Tom close behind him. About half way up the height
+of the Oak Parlour he came to a door. "Can't go any farther," he
+called to Tom.
+
+"What's the matter?"
+
+"There's a door here; it leads, evidently, into some little room between
+the Oak Parlour and the bedroom next. Who would ever have guessed it?"
+
+"Can't you open the door; is it locked?"
+
+Dan fumbled about till he found and turned the knob. "No," he answered.
+"I've opened it. But it's pitch dark inside. Get a candle."
+
+He waited anxiously while Tom went below again to get a candle, a
+strange feeling of dread creeping over him now that at last he was about
+to penetrate the secret which had been of such tragic purport in his
+life. In a moment Tom had returned, a candle in either hand, one of
+which he handed to Dan, and together they entered the secret chamber. It
+was a little room scarcely six feet square, without light, and so far as
+they could see without ventilation. As they stood looking about the
+candle flickered strangely casting weird shadows over the walls.
+Suddenly they saw at their feet a tiny golden casket, and then, in a
+corner of the room a row of small cloth bags, several of which had been
+ripped open, so that a stream of golden coin flowed out upon the floor.
+Nearby stood another little golden chest; and Tom, lifting the lid,
+started back astonished. For there sparkling and glowing in the candle
+light as though they were living moving things, lay a heap of precious
+gems--diamonds, rubies, opals, sapphires, amethysts, that might have
+been the ransom of a princess.
+
+"It's a treasure right enough!" cried Dan. "But what's this?" He turned
+to the opposite corner where there lay a heap of something covered with a
+great black cloth. They approached gingerly, and Dan stooped and picked
+up an edge of the covering. "It's a cloak," he exclaimed. Startled, he
+paused for a moment; then quickly pulled the cloak away, uncovering, to
+their horror, a lifeless body.
+
+"Tom!" Dan cried in a ghastly whisper. "A man has died here."
+
+Tom held the candle over the gruesome heap. "But who?" he asked in a
+hoarse whisper.
+
+For reply Dan pointed significantly to the cloak which he had dropped on
+the floor.
+
+"What!" cried Tom. "Good God! the old Marquis! But how? I don't
+understand--" he added, staring blankly.
+
+"He must have come here the afternoon he pretended to leave the Inn, must
+have learned the secret passage somehow. It was he who loosened the
+casement in the Oak Parlour that night, and got his message to Bonhomme.
+He was waiting here for him. Can't you see it all--the panel slipped
+back; he couldn't open it again; Bonhomme didn't come; he was caught like
+a rat in a trap."
+
+"My God, what a fate!"
+
+"We can't leave his body here. We must give it decent burial, you and I,
+Tom, for we can't let this be known."
+
+"And the treasure?"
+
+"Ah! there was treasure, wasn't there? Wait, let's see what is in the
+little casket." He picked up the golden casket that they had stepped over
+as they entered, and raised the lid. A single scrap of paper was inside
+on the little velvet cushion, inscribed in the same handwriting as the
+paper of directions, "_Pour Eloise de Boisdhyver_."
+
+"But come," Tom whispered, holding back the door, "I can't stand this any
+longer. We'll come back again, and do what must be done. Come, Dan."
+
+Dan gave a last look into the strange horrible little room, then he
+followed his friend. They closed the door behind them and crept slowly
+down the narrow winding stairs to the Oak Parlour, leaving the
+treasure in the secret chamber and the Marquis guarding it in the
+silence and darkness of death. What had been so basely striven for was
+sorrily won at last.
+
+THE END.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Inn at the Red Oak, by Latta Griswold
+
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Inn at the Red Oak, by Latta Griswold
+
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+*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!*****
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+Title: The Inn at the Red Oak
+
+Author: Latta Griswold
+
+Release Date: February, 2006 [EBook #9856]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on October 24, 2003]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE INN AT THE RED OAK ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Mary Meehan, David Garcia
+and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+THE INN AT THE RED OAK
+
+BY LATTA GRISWOLD
+
+1917
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: "It's a treasure right enough!" cried Dan.]
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+PART I
+THE OLD MARQUIS
+
+I THE MARQUIS ARRIVES AT THE INN
+
+II THE LION'S EYE
+
+III THE MARQUIS AT NIGHT
+
+IV THE OAK PARLOUR
+
+V THE WALK THROUGH THE WOODS
+
+
+PART II
+THE TORN SCRAP OF PAPER
+
+VI THE HALF OF AN OLD SCRAP OF PAPER
+
+VII A DISAPPEARANCE
+
+VIII GREEN LIGHTS
+
+IX RECOLLECTIONS OF A FRENCH EXILE
+
+X MIDNIGHT VIGILS
+
+
+PART III
+THE SCHOONER IN THE COVE
+
+XI THE SOUTHERN CROSS
+
+XII TOM TURNS THE TABLES
+
+XIII MADAME DE LA FONTAINE
+
+XIV IN THE FOG
+
+XV NANCY
+
+XVI MADAME AT THE INN
+
+XVII THE MARQUIS LEAVES THE INN
+
+
+PART IV
+THE ATTACK ON THE INN
+
+XVIII THE AVENUE OF MAPLES
+
+XIX THE ATTACK
+
+XX THE OAK PARLOUR
+
+XXI THE TREASURE
+
+
+
+
+The Inn at the Red Oak
+
+
+
+
+PART I
+
+THE OLD MARQUIS
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+THE MARQUIS ARRIVES AT THE INN
+
+
+By the end of the second decade of the last century Monday Port had
+passed the height of prosperity as one of the principal depots for the
+West Indian trade. The shipping was rapidly being transferred to New York
+and Boston, and the old families of the Port, having made their fortunes,
+in rum and tobacco as often as not, were either moving away to follow the
+trade or had acquiesced in the changed conditions and were settling down
+to enjoy the fruit of their labours. The harbour now was frequently
+deserted, except for an occasional coastwise trader; the streets began to
+wear that melancholy aspect of a town whose good days are more a memory
+than a present reality; and the old stage roads to Coventry and Perth
+Anhault were no longer the arteries of travel they once had been.
+
+To the east of Monday Port, across Deal Great Water, an estuary of the
+sea that expanded almost to the dignity of a lake, lay a pleasant rolling
+wooded country known in Caesarea as Deal. It boasted no village, scarcely
+a hamlet. Dr. Jeremiah Watson, a famous pedagogue and a graduate of
+Kingsbridge, had started his modest establishment for "the education of
+the sons of gentlemen" on Deal Hill; there were half-a-dozen prospering
+farms, Squire Pembroke's Red Farm and Judge Meath's curiously lonely but
+beautiful House on the Dunes among them; a little Episcopalian chapel on
+the shores of the Strathsey river, a group of houses at the cross roads
+north of Level's Woods, and the Inn at the Red Oak,--and that was all.
+
+In its day this inn had been a famous hostelry, much more popular with
+travellers than the ill-kept provincial hotels in Monday Port; but now
+for a long time it had scarcely provided a livelihood for old Mrs. Frost,
+widow of the famous Peter who for so many years had been its popular
+host. No one knew when the house had been built; though there was an old
+corner stone on which local antiquarians professed to decipher the
+figures "1693," and that year was assigned by tradition as the date of
+its foundation.
+
+It was a long crazy building, with a great sloping roof, a wide porch
+running its entire length, and attached to its sides and rear in all
+sorts of unexpected ways and places were numerous out houses and offices.
+Behind its high brick chimneys rose the thick growth of Lovel's Woods,
+crowning the ridge that ran between Beaver Pond and the Strathsey river
+to the sea. The house faced southwards, and from the cobbled court before
+it meadow and woodland sloped to the beaches and the long line of sand
+dunes that straggled out and lost themselves in Strathsey Neck. To the
+east lay marshes and the dunes and beyond them the Strathsey, two miles
+wide where its waters met those of the Atlantic; west lay the great
+curve, known as the Second Beach, the blue surface of Deal Bay, and a
+line of rocky shore, three miles in length, terminated by Rough Point,
+near which began the out-lying houses of Monday Port.
+
+The old hostelry took its name from a giant oak which grew at its
+doorstep just to one side of the maple-lined driveway that led down to
+the Port Road, a hundred yards or so beyond. This enormous tree spread
+its branches over the entire width and half the length of the roof.
+Ordinarily, of course, its foliage was as green as the leaves on the
+maples of the avenue or on the neighbouring elms, and the name of the Inn
+might have seemed to the summer or winter traveller an odd misnomer; but
+in autumn when the frost came early and the great mass of green flushed
+to a deep crimson it could not have been known more appropriately than as
+the Inn at the Red Oak.
+
+It was a solidly-built house, such as even in the early part of the
+nineteenth century men were complaining they could no longer obtain;
+built to weather centuries of biting southeasters, and--the legend
+ran--to afford protection in its early days against Indians. At the time
+of the Revolution it had been barricaded, pierced with portholes, and had
+served, like innumerable other houses from Virginia to Massachusetts, as
+Washington's headquarters. When Tom Pembroke knew it best, its old age
+and decay had well set in.
+
+Pembroke was the son of the neighbouring squire, whose house, known as
+the Red Farm, lay In the little valley on the other side of the Woods at
+the head of Beaver Pond. From the time he had been able to thread his way
+across the woodland by its devious paths--Tom had been at the Inn almost
+every day to play with Dan Frost, the landlord's son. They had played in
+the stables, then stocked with a score of horses, where now there were
+only two or three; in the great haymows of the old barn in the clearing
+back of the Inn; in the ramshackle garret under that amazing roof; or,
+best of all, in the abandoned bowling-alley, where they rolled
+dilapidated balls at rickety ten-pins.
+
+When Tom and Dan were eighteen--they were born within a day of each
+other one bitter February--old Peter died, leaving the Inn to his wife.
+Mrs. Frost pretended to carry on the business, but the actual task of
+doing so soon devolved upon her son. And in this he was subjected to
+little interference; for the poor lady, kindly inefficient soul that she
+was, became almost helpless with rheumatism. But indeed it was rather on
+the farm than to the Inn that more and more they depended for their
+living. In the social hierarchy of Caesarea the Pembrokes held
+themselves as vastly superior to the Frosts; but thanks to the
+easy-going democratic customs of the young republic, more was made of
+this by the women than the men.
+
+The two boys loved each other devotedly, though love is doubtless the
+last word they would have chosen to express their relation. Dan was tall,
+dark, muscular; he had a well-shaped head on his square shoulders; strong
+well-cut features; a face that the sun had deeply tanned and dark hair
+that it had burnished with gold. Altogether he was a prepossessing lad,
+though he looked several years older than he was, and he was commonly
+treated by his neighbours with a consideration that his years did not
+merit. Tom Pembroke was fairer; more attractive, perhaps, on first
+acquaintance; certainly more boyish in appearance and behaviour. He was
+quicker in his movements and in his mental processes; more aristocratic
+in his bearing. His blue eyes were more intelligent than Dan's, but no
+less frank and kindly. Young Frost admired his friend almost as much as
+he cared for him; for Dan, deprived of schooling, had a reverence for
+learning, of which Tom had got a smattering at Dr. Watson's establishment
+for "the sons of gentlemen" on the nearby hill.
+
+One stormy night in early January, the eve of Dan Frost's twenty-second
+birthday, the two young men had their supper together at the Inn, and
+afterwards sat for half-an-hour in the hot, stove-heated parlour until
+Mrs. Frost began to nod over her knitting.
+
+"Off with you, boys," she said at length; "you will be wanting to smoke
+your dreadful pipes. Nancy will keep me company."
+
+They took instant advantage of this permission and went into the deserted
+bar, where they made a roaring fire on the great hearth, drew their
+chairs near, filled their long clay pipes with Virginia tobacco, and fell
+to talking.
+
+"Think of it!" exclaimed young Frost, as he took a great whiff at his
+pipe; "here we are--the middle of the winter--and not a guest in the
+house. Why we used to have a dozen travellers round the bar here, and the
+whole house bustling. I've known my father to serve a hundred and more
+with rum on a night like this. Now we do a fine business if we serve as
+many in a winter. Times have changed since we were boys."
+
+"Aye," Tom agreed, "and it isn't so long ago, either. It seemed to me as
+if the whole county used to be here on a Saturday night."
+
+"I'm thinking," resumed Dan musingly, "of throwing up the business,
+what's the use of pretending to keep an inn? If it wasn't for mother
+and for Nancy, I'd clear out, boy; go off and hunt my fortune. As it is,
+with what I make on the farm and lose on the house, I just pull through
+the year."
+
+"By gad," exclaimed Tom, "I'd go with you, Dan. I'm tired to my soul with
+reading law in father's office. Why, you and I haven't been farther than
+Coventry to the county fair, or to Perth Anhault to make a horse trade.
+I'd like to see the world, go to London and Paris. I've wanted to go to
+France ever since that queer Frenchman was here--remember?--and told us
+those jolly tales about the Revolution and the great Napoleon. We were
+hardly more than seven or eight then, I guess."
+
+"I would like to go, hanged if I wouldn't," said Dan. "I'm getting more
+and more discontented. But there's not much use crying for the moon, and
+France might as well be the moon, for all of me." He relapsed then into a
+brooding silence. It was hard for an inn-keeper to be cheerful in
+midwinter with an empty house. Tom too was silent, dreaming vividly, if
+vaguely, of the France he longed to see.
+
+"Hark!" exclaimed Dan presently. "How it blows! There must be a big sea
+outside to-night."
+
+He strode to the window, pushed back the curtains of faded chintz, and
+stared out into the darkness. The wind was howling in the trees and about
+the eaves of the old inn, the harsh roar of the surf mingled with the
+noise of the storm, and the sleet lashed the window-panes in fury.
+
+"You will not be thinking of going home tonight, Tom?"
+
+"Not I," Pembroke answered, for he was as much at home in Dan's enormous
+chamber as he was in his own little room under the roof at the Red Farm.
+
+As he turned from the window, the door into the parlour opened, and a
+young girl quietly slipped in and seated herself in the chimney-corner.
+
+"Hello, Nance," Dan exclaimed, as she entered; "come close, child; you
+need to be near the fire on a night like this."
+
+"Mother is asleep," the girl answered briefly, and then, resting her
+chin upon her hands, she fixed her great dark eyes upon the glowing
+logs. She was Dan's foster-sister, eighteen years of age, though she
+looked hardly more than sixteen; a shy, slender, girl, lovely with a
+wild, unusual charm. To Tom she had always been a silent elfin
+creature, delightful as their playmate when a child, but now though
+still so familiar, she seemed in an odd way, to grow more remote.
+Apparently she liked to sit with them on these winter evenings in the
+deserted bar, when Mrs. Frost had gone to bed; and to listen to their
+conversation, though she took little part in it.
+
+As Dan resumed his seat, he looked at her with evident concern, for she
+was shivering as she sat so quietly by the fireside.
+
+"Are you cold, Nance?" he asked.
+
+"A little," she replied. "I was afraid in the parlour with Mother asleep,
+and the wind and the waves roaring so horribly."
+
+"Afraid?" exclaimed Tom, with an incredulous laugh. "I never knew you to
+be really afraid of anything in the world, Nancy."
+
+She turned her dark eyes upon him for the moment, with a sharp
+inquisitive glance which caused him to flush unaccountably. An answering
+crimson showed in her cheeks, and she turned back to the fire. The colour
+fled almost as quickly as it had come, and left her pale, despite the
+glow of firelight.
+
+"I was afraid--to-night," she said, after a moment's silence.
+
+Suddenly there came the sound of a tremendous knocking on the door which
+opened from the bar into the outer porch, and all three started in
+momentary alarm.
+
+Dan jumped to his feet. "Who's that?" he cried.
+
+Again came the vigorous knocking. He ran across the room, let down the
+great oaken beam, and opened the door to the night and storm.
+
+"Come in, travellers." A gust of wind and sleet rushed through the
+opening and stung their faces. With the gust there seemed to blow in the
+figure of a little old man wrapped in a great black coat, bouncing into
+their midst as if he were an India rubber ball thrown by a gigantic hand.
+Behind him strode in Manners, the liveryman of Monday Port.
+
+"Here's a guest for you, Mr. Frost. I confess I did my best to keep him
+in town till morning, but nothing 'd do; he must get to the Inn at the
+Red Oak to-night. We had a hellish time getting here too, begging the
+lady's pardon; but here we are."
+
+Good-naturedly he had taken hold of his fare and, as he spoke, was
+helping the stranger unwrap himself from the enveloping cloak.
+
+"He's welcome," said Dan. "Here, sir, let me help you." He put out his
+hand to steady the curious old gentleman, who, at last, gasping for
+breath and blinking the sleet out of his eyes, had been unrolled by
+Manners from the dripping cloak.
+
+He was a strange figure of a man, they thought, as Dan led him to the
+fire to thaw himself out. He was scarcely more than five and a half feet
+in height, with tiny hands and feet almost out of proportion even to his
+diminutive size. He was an old man, they would have said, though his
+movements were quick and agile as if he were set up on springs. His face,
+small, sharp-featured and weazened, was seamed with a thousand wrinkles.
+His wig was awry, its powder, washed out by the melting sleet, was
+dripping on his face in pasty streaks; and from beneath it had fallen
+wisps of thin grey hair, which plastered themselves against his temples
+and forehead. This last feature was also out of proportion to the rest of
+his physiognomy, for it was of extraordinary height, and of a polished
+smoothness, in strange contrast to his wrinkled cheeks. Beneath shone two
+flashing black eyes, with the fire of youth in them, for all he seemed so
+old. The lower part of his face was less distinctive. He had a small,
+Suddenly there came the sound of a tremendous knocking on the door which
+opened from the bar into the outer porch, and all three started in
+momentary alarm.
+
+Dan jumped to his feet. "Who's that?" he cried.
+
+Again came the vigorous knocking. He ran across the room, let down the
+great oaken beam, and opened the door to the night and storm.
+
+"Come in, travellers." A gust of wind and sleet rushed through the
+opening and stung their faces. With the gust there seemed to blow in the
+figure of a little old man wrapped in a great black coat, bouncing into
+their midst as if he were an India rubber ball thrown by a gigantic hand.
+Behind him strode in Manners, the liveryman of Monday Port.
+
+"Here's a guest for you, Mr. Frost. I confess I did my best to keep him
+in town till morning, but nothing'd do; he must get to the Inn at the Red
+Oak to-night. We had a hellish time getting here too, begging the lady's
+pardon; but here we are."
+
+Good-naturedly he had taken hold of his fare and, as he spoke, was
+helping the stranger unwrap himself from the enveloping cloak.
+
+"He's welcome," said Dan. "Here, sir, let me sharply-pointed nose; a
+weak mouth, half-hidden by drooping white moustaches; and a small sharp
+chin, accentuated by a white beard nattily trimmed to a point. He was
+dressed entirely in black; a flowing coat of French cut, black small
+clothes, black stockings and boots that reached to the calves of his
+little legs. These boots were ornamented with great silver buckles, and
+about his neck and wrists showed bedraggled bits of yellowed lace."
+
+He stood before the fire, speechless still; standing first on one foot
+then on the other; rubbing his hands the while as he held them to the
+grateful warmth.
+
+Nancy had in the meanwhile drawn a glass of rum, and now advancing
+held it toward him a little gingerly. He took it eagerly and drained
+it at a gulp.
+
+"_Merci, ma petite ange; merci, messieurs_" he exclaimed at last; and
+then added in distinct, though somewhat strongly accented English, "I ask
+your pardon. I forget you may not know my language. But now that this
+good liquor has put new life in my poor old bones, I explain myself. I am
+arrived, I infer, at the Inn at the Red Oak; and you, monsieur, though so
+young, I take to be my host. I have your description, you perceive, from
+the good postilion. You will do me the kindness to provide me with supper
+and a bed?"
+
+"Certainly, sir," said Dan. "It is late and we are unprepared, but we
+will put you up somehow. You too, Manners, had best let me bunk you till
+morning; you'll not be going back to the Port tonight? Nancy a fresh
+bumper for Mr. Manners."
+
+"Thankee, sir; I managed to get out with the gentleman yonder, and I
+guess I'll manage to get back. But it's a rare night, masters. Just a
+minute, sir, and I'll be getting his honour's bags.... Thank ye kindly,
+Miss Nancy."
+
+He drained the tumbler of raw spirit that Nancy held out. Then he opened
+the door again and went out into the storm, returning almost at once with
+the stranger's bags.
+
+Dan turned to his sister. "Nancy dear, go stir up Susan and Deborah. We
+must have a fire made in the south chamber and some hot supper got ready.
+Tell Susan to rout out Jesse to help her. Say nothing to Mother; no need
+to disturb her. And now, sir," he continued, turning again to the
+stranger, "may I ask your name?"
+
+The old gentleman ceased his springing seesaw for a moment, and fixed
+his keen black eyes on the questioner.
+
+"_Certainment, monsieur_--certainly, I should say," he replied in a high,
+but not unpleasant, voice. "I am the Marquis de Boisdhyver, at your
+service. I am to travel in the United States--oh! for a long time. I stay
+here, if you are so good as to accommodate me, perhaps till you are weary
+and wish me to go elsewhere. You have been greatly recommended to me by
+my friend,--quiet, remote, secluded, an _auberge_--what you call it?--an
+inn, well-suited to my habits, my tastes, my desire for rest. I am very
+_fatigué_, monsieur."
+
+"Yes," said Dan, with a grim smile, "we are remote and quiet and
+secluded. You are welcome, sir, to what we have. Tom, see that Manners
+has another drink before he goes, will you? and do the honours for our
+guest, while Nance and I get things ready."
+
+As he disappeared into the kitchen, following Nancy, the Marquis looking
+after him with a comical expression of gratitude upon his face. Tom drew
+another glass of rum, which Manners eagerly, if rashly, devoured. Then
+the liveryman wrapped himself in his furs, bade them good-night, and
+started out again into the storm for his drive back to Monday Port.
+
+All this time the old gentleman stood warming his feet and hands at the
+fire, watching his two companions with quickly-shifting eyes, or glancing
+curiously over the great bar which the light of the fire and the few
+candles but faintly illuminated.
+
+Having barred the door, Tom turned back to the hearth. "It is a bad
+night, sir."
+
+"But yes," exclaimed the Marquis. "I think I perish. Oh! that dreary
+tavern at your Monday Port. I think when I arrive there I prefer to
+perish. But this, this is the old Inn at the Red Oak, is it not? And it
+dates, yes,--from the year 1693? The old inn, eh, by the great tree?"
+
+"Yes, certainly," Pembroke answered; "at least, that is the date that
+some people claim is on the old cornerstone. You have been here before
+then, sir?"
+
+"I?" exclaimed Monsieur de Boisdhyver. "Oh, no! not I. I have heard from
+my friend who was here some years ago."
+
+"Oh, I see. And you have come far to-day?"
+
+"From Coventry, monsieur--Monsieur--?"
+
+"Pembroke," Tom replied, with a little start.
+
+"Ah! yes, Monsieur Pembroke. A member of the household?"
+
+"No--a friend."
+
+"I make a mistake," quickly interposed the traveller, "Pardon. I am come
+from Coventry, Monsieur Pembroke, in an everlasting an eternal stage, a
+monster of a carriage, monsieur. It is only a few days since that I
+arrive from France."
+
+"Ah, France!" exclaimed Tom, recalling that only a little while before he
+and Dan had been dreaming of that magic country. And here was a person
+who actually lived in France, who had just come from there, who
+extraordinarily chose to leave that delightful land for the Inn at the
+Red Oak in mid-winter.
+
+"France," he repeated; "all my life, sir, I have been longing to
+go there."
+
+"So?" said the Marquis, raising his white eyebrows with interest. "You
+love _ma belle patrie_, eh? _Qui Sait_?--you will perhaps some day go
+there. You have interests, friends in my country?"
+
+"No, none," Tom answered. "I wish I had. You come from Paris, sir?"
+
+"_Mais oui_."
+
+For some time they chatted in such fashion, the Marquis answering Tom's
+many questions with characteristic French politeness, but turning ever
+and anon a pathetic glance toward the door through which Dan and Nancy
+had disappeared. It was with undisguised satisfaction that he greeted
+young Frost when he returned to announce that supper was ready.
+
+"I famish!" the old gentleman exclaimed. "I have dined to-day on a
+biscuit and a glass of water."
+
+They found the kitchen table amply spread with food,--cold meats, hot
+eggs and coffee, and a bottle of port. Monsieur de Boisdhyver ate
+heartily and drank his wine with relish, gracefully toasting Nancy as he
+did so. When his meal was finished, he begged with many excuses to be
+shown to his bedroom; and indeed his fatigue was evident. Dan saw him to
+the great south chamber, carrying a pair of lighted candles before. He
+made sure that all had been done that sulky sleepy maids could be induced
+to do, and then left him to make ready for the night.
+
+Lights were extinguished in the parlour and the bar, the fires were
+banked, and the two young men went up to Dan's own room. There on either
+side of the warm hearth, had been drawn two great four-posted beds, and
+it took the lads but a moment to tumble into them.
+
+"It's queer," said Dan, as he pulled the comfort snugly about his
+shoulders, calling to Tom across the way; "it's queer--the old chap
+evidently means to stay awhile. What does a French marquis want in a
+deserted hole like this, I'd like to know? But if he pays, why the longer
+he stays the better."
+
+"I hope he does," said Tom sleepily. "He has a reason, I fancy, for he
+asked questions enough while you were out seeing to his supper. He seems
+to know the place almost as well as if he had been here before, though he
+said he hadn't. But, by gad, I wish you and I were snug in a little hotel
+on the banks of the Seine to-night and not bothering our heads about a
+doddering old marquis who hadn't sense enough to stay there."
+
+"Wish we were," Dan replied. "Good-night," he called, realizing that his
+friend was too sleepy to lie awake and discuss any longer their
+unexpected guest.
+
+"Good-night," murmured Tom, and promptly drifted away into dreams of the
+wonderful land he had never seen. As for Dan he lay awake a long time,
+wondering what could possibly have brought the old Marquis to the
+deserted inn at such a time of the year and on such a night.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+THE LIONS EYE
+
+
+Toward daylight the storm blew itself out, the wind swung round to the
+northwest, and the morning dawned clear and cold, with a sharp breeze
+blowing and a bright sun shining upon a snow-clad, ice-crusted world and
+a sparkling sapphire sea.
+
+Dan had risen early and had set Jesse to clear a way across the court and
+down the avenue to the road. The maids, astir by dawn, were no longer
+sulky but bustled about at the preparation of an unusually good breakfast
+in honour of the new guest.
+
+Mrs. Frost, who habitually lay till nine or ten o'clock behind the
+crimson curtains of her great bed, had caught wind of something out of
+the ordinary, demanded Nancy's early assistance, and announced her
+intention of breakfasting with the household.
+
+She was fretful during the complicated process of her toilette and so
+hurt the feelings of her foster-daughter, that when Dan came to take her
+into the breakfast room, Nancy found an excuse for not accompanying them.
+
+The Marquis was awaiting their appearance. He stood with his back-to the
+fire, a spruce and carefully-dressed little figure, passing remarks upon
+the weather with young Pembroke, who leaned his graceful length against
+the mantelpiece.
+
+The noble traveller was presented with due ceremony to Mrs. Frost, who
+greeted him with old-world courtesy. She had had, indeed, considerably
+more association with distinguished personages than had most of the dames
+of the neighbouring farms who considered themselves her social superiors.
+She welcomed Monsieur de Boisdhyver graciously, enquiring with interest
+of his journey and with solicitude as to his rest during the night. She
+received with satisfaction his rapturous compliments on the comforts that
+had been provided him, on the beauty of the surrounding country upon
+which he had looked from the windows of his chamber, and on her own
+condescension in vouchsafing to breakfast with them. She was delighted
+that he should find the Inn at the Red Oak so much to his taste that he
+proposed to stay with them indefinitely.
+
+They were soon seated at the breakfast-table and had addressed
+themselves to the various good things that black Deborah had provided.
+The native Johnny cakes, made of meal ground by their own windmill, the
+Marquis professed to find particularly tempting.
+
+Despite Mrs. Frost's questions, despite his own voluble replies, Monsieur
+de Boisdhyver gave no hint, that there was any deeper reason for his
+seeking exile at the Inn of the Red Oak than that he desired rest and
+quiet and had been assured that he would find them there. And who had so
+complimented their simple abode of hospitality?
+
+"Ah, madame," he murmured, lifting his tiny hands, "so many!"
+
+"But I fear, monsieur," replied his hostess, "that you, who are
+accustomed to the luxuries of a splendid city like Paris, to so many
+things of which we read, will find little to interest and amuse you in
+our remote countryside."
+
+"As for interest, madame," the Marquis protested, "there are the beauties
+of nature, your so delightful household, my few books, my writing; and
+for amusement, I have my violin;--I so love to play. You will not
+mind?--perhaps, enjoy it?"
+
+"Indeed yes," said Mrs. Frost. "Dan, too, is a fiddler after a fashion;
+and as for Nancy, she has a passion for music, and dreams away many an
+evening while my son plays his old tunes."
+
+"Ah, yes," said the Marquis, "Mademoiselle Nancy, I have not the pleasure
+to see her this morning?"
+
+"No," replied Mrs. Frost, flushing a trifle at the recollection of why
+Nancy was not present, "she is somewhat indisposed--a mere trifle. You
+will see her later in the day. But, monsieur, you should have come to us
+in the spring or the summer, for then the country is truly beautiful;
+now, with these snow-bound roads, when not even the stagecoach passes, we
+are indeed lonely and remote."
+
+"It is that," insisted the Marquis, "which so charms me. When one is
+old and when one has lived a life too occupied, it is this peace,
+this quiet, this remoteness one desires. To walk a little, to sit by
+your so marvellously warm fires, to look upon your beautiful country,
+_cest bou_!"
+
+He held her for a moment with his piercing little eyes, a faint smile
+upon his lips, as though to say that it was impossible he should be
+convinced that he had not found precisely what he was seeking, and
+insisting, as it were, that his hostess take his words as the compliment
+they were designed to be.
+
+Before she had time to reply, he had turned to Dan. "What a fine harbour
+you have, Monsieur Frost," he said, pointing through the window toward
+the Cove, separated from the river and the sea by the great curve of
+Strathsey Neck, its blue waters sparkling now in the light of the
+morning sun.
+
+"Yes," replied Dan, glancing out upon the well-known shoreline, "it is a
+good harbour, though nothing, of course, to compare with a Port. But it's
+seldom that we see a ship at anchor here, now."
+
+"There is, however," inquired the Marquis with interest, "anchorage for a
+vessel, a large vessel?"
+
+"Yes, indeed," Tom interrupted, "in the old days when my father had his
+ships plying between Havana and the Port, he would often have them anchor
+in the Cove for convenience in lading them with corn from the farm."
+
+"And they were large ships?"
+
+"Full-rigged, sir; many of 'em, and drawing eight feet at least."
+
+"_Eh bien_! And the old Inn, madame, it dates, your son tells me,
+from 1693?"
+
+"We think so, sir, though I have no positive knowledge of its existence
+before 1750. My husband purchased the place in '94, and it had then been
+a hostelry for some years, certainly from the middle of the century. But
+we have made many additions. Danny dear, perhaps it will interest the
+Marquis if you should take him over the house. We are proud of our old
+inn, sir."
+
+"And with reason, madame. If monsieur will, I shall be charmed."
+
+"I will leave you then with my son. Give me your arm, Dan, to the
+parlour. Unfortunately, Monsieur le Marquis, affliction has crippled me
+and I spend the day in my chair in the blue parlour. I shall be so
+pleased, if you will come and chat with me. Tommy, you will be staying to
+dinner with us?"
+
+"Thank you, Mrs. Frost, but I must get to the Port for the day. Mother
+and Father are leaving by the afternoon stage, if it gets through. They
+are going to spend the winter in Coventry. But I shall be back to-night
+as I have promised Dan to spend that time with him."
+
+"We shall be glad to have you, as you know."
+
+Soon after Mrs. Frost had left the breakfast-room and Tom had started
+forth with horse and sleigh, Dan returned. The Marquis promptly reminded
+him of the suggestion that he should be taken over the Inn. It seemed to
+Dan an uninteresting way to entertain his guest and the morning was a
+busy one. However, he promised to be ready at eleven o'clock to show the
+Marquis all there was in the old house.
+
+As Dan went about the offices and stables, performing himself much of the
+work that in prosperous times fell to grooms and hostlers, he found
+himself thinking about his new guest. Dan knew enough of French history
+to be aware there were frequent occasions in France when partisans of the
+various factions, royalist, imperialist, or republican, found it best to
+expatriate themselves. He knew that in times past many of the most
+distinguished exiles had found asylum in America. But at the present, he
+understood, King Louis Philippe, was reigning quietly at the Tuileries
+and, moreover, the Marquis de Boisdhyver, mysterious as he was, did not
+suggest the political adventurer of whom Dan as a boy had heard his
+parents tell such extraordinary tales. In the few years immediately after
+the final fall of the great Bonaparte there had been an influx of
+imperialistic supporters in America, some of whom had even found their
+way to Monday Port and Deal. One of these, Dan remembered, had stayed
+for some months in '14 or '15 at the Inn at the Red Oak, and it was he
+whom Tom had recalled the night before as having told them stories of his
+adventurous exploits in the wars of the Little Corporal. But it was too
+long after Napoleon's fall to connect his present guest with the imperial
+exiles. He could imagine no ulterior reason for the Marquis's coming and
+was inclined to put it down as the caprice of an old restless gentleman
+who had a genuine mania for solitude. Of solitude, certainly, he was apt
+to get his fill at the Inn at the Red Oak.
+
+At eleven o'clock he returned to keep his appointment. He found the
+Marquis established at a small table in the bar by an east window, from
+which was obtained a view of the Cove, of the sand-dunes along the Neck,
+and of the open sea beyond. A writing-desk was on the table, ink and
+quills had been provided, a number of books and papers were strewn about,
+and Monsieur de Boisdhyver was apparently busy with his correspondence.
+
+"Enchanted" he exclaimed, as he pulled out a great gold watch. "Punctual.
+I find another virtue, monsieur, in a character to which I have already
+had so much reason to pay my compliments. I trust I do not trespass upon
+your more important duties." As he spoke, he rapidly swept the papers
+into the writing-desk, closed and locked it, and carefully placed the
+tiny golden key into the pocket of his gayly-embroidered waistcoat.
+
+"Not at all," Dan replied courteously, "I shall be glad to show you
+about. But I fear you will find it cold and dismal, for the greater part
+of the house is seldom used or even entered."
+
+"I bring my cloak," said the Marquis. "Interest will give me warmth. What
+I have already seen of the Inn at the Red Oak is so charming, that I
+doubt not there is much more to delight one. I imagine, monsieur, how gay
+must have been this place once."
+
+He took his great cloak from the peg near the fire where it had been hung
+the night before to dry wrapped himself snugly in it; and then, with a
+little bow, preceded Dan into the cold and draughty corridor that opened
+from the bar into the older part of the house.
+
+This hallway extended fifty or sixty feet to the north wall of the main
+part of the inn whence a large window at the turn of a flight of stairs
+gave light. On the right, extending the same distance as the hall
+itself, was a great room known as the Red Drawing-room, into which Dan
+first showed the Marquis. This room had not been used since father's
+death four or five years before, and for a long time previous to that
+only on the rare occasions when a county gathering of some sort was held
+at the inn. It had been furnished in good taste and style in colonial
+days, but was now dilapidated and musty. The heavy red damask curtains
+were drawn before the windows, and the room was dark and cheerless. Dan
+admitted the dazzling light of the sun; but the Marquis only shivered and
+seemed anxious to pass quickly on.
+
+"You see, sir," observed the young landlord, "it is dismal enough."
+
+"_Mais oui_--_mais oui_," exclaimed the Marquis.
+
+At the foot of the stairway the corridor turned at right angles and ran
+north. On either side opened a number of chambers in like conditions of
+disrepair, which had been used as bedrooms in the palmy days of the
+hostelry. This corridor ended at the bowling-alley, where as children Tom
+and Dan had loved to play. Half-way to the entrance to the bowling-alley
+a third hallway branched off to the right, leading to a similar set of
+chambers. Into all these they entered, the Marquis examining each with
+quick glances, dismissing them with the briefest interest and the most
+obvious comment.
+
+Dan saved the _piéce-de-resistance_ till last. This was a little room
+entered from the second corridor just at the turn--the only room indeed,
+as he truthfully said, that merited a visit.
+
+"This," he explained, "we call the Oak Parlour. It is the only room on
+this floor worth showing you. My father brought the wainscoting from an
+old English country-house in Dorsetshire. My father's people were
+Torries, sir, and kept up their connection with the old country."
+
+It was a delightful room into which Dan now admitted the light of day,
+drawing aside the heavy green curtains from the eastern windows. It was
+wainscoted from floor to cornice in old black English oak, curiously and
+elaborately carved, and divided into long narrow panels. The ceiling, of
+similar materials and alike elaborately decorated, was supported by heavy
+transverse beams that seemed solid and strong enough to support the roof
+of a cathedral. On one side two windows opened upon the gallery and court
+and looked out upon the Cove, on the other side stood a cabinet. It was
+the most striking piece of furniture in the room, of enormous dimensions
+and beautifully carved on the doors of the cupboards below and on the
+top-pieces between the mirrors were lion's heads of almost life-size.
+Opposite the heavy door, by which they had entered, was a large
+fireplace, containing a pair of elaborately ornamented brass and irons.
+There was not otherwise a great deal of furniture,--two or three tables,
+some chairs, a deep window-seat, a writing-desk of French design; but
+all, except this last, in keeping with the character of the room, and all
+brought across the seas from the old Dorsetshire mansion, from which
+Peter Frost had obtained the interior.
+
+"_Charmant_!" exclaimed the Marquis. "You have a jewel, _mon ami_; a bit
+of old England or of old France in the heart of America; a room one finds
+not elsewhere in the States. It is a _creation superbe_."
+
+With enthusiastic interest he moved about, touching each article of
+furniture, examining with care the two of three old English landscapes
+that had been let into panels on the west side of the room, pausing in
+ecstacies before the great cabinet and standing before the fireplace as
+if he were warming his hands at that generous hearth.
+
+"Ah, Monsieur Frost, could I but write, read, dream here...!"
+
+"I fear that would be impossible, sir," replied Dan. "It is difficult to
+heat this portion of the house; and in fact, we never use it."
+
+"_Hélas_!" exclaimed the Marquis, "those things which allure us in this
+world are so often impossible. Perhaps in the spring, in the summer, when
+there is no longer the necessity of the fire, you will permit me."
+
+"It may be, monsieur," Dan replied, "that long before the summer comes
+you will have left us."
+
+"_Mais non_!" cried M. de Boisdhyver. "Every hour that I stay but proves
+to me how long you will have to endure my company."
+
+Somewhat ungraciously, it seemed, young Frost made no reply to this
+pleasantry; for already he was impatient to be gone. Although the room
+was intensely cold and uncomfortable, still his guest lingered, standing
+before the massive cabinet, exclaiming upon the exquisiteness of the
+workmanship, and every now and then running his dainty fingers along the
+carving of its front. As Dan stood waiting for the Marquis to leave, he
+chanced to glance through the window to the court without, and saw Jesse
+starting out in the sleigh. As he had given him no such order he ran
+quickly to the window, rapped vigourously and then, excusing himself to
+the Marquis, hurried out to ask Jesse to explain his errand.
+
+The Marquis de Boisdhyver stood for a moment, as Dan left him, motionless
+in front of the cabinet. His face was bright with surprise and delight,
+his eyes alert with interest and cunning. After a moment's hesitation he
+stole cautiously to the window, and seeing Frost was engaged in
+conversation with Jesse, he sprang back with quick steps to the cabinet.
+He hastily ran the tips of his fingers along the beveled edges of the
+wide shelf from end to end several times, each time the expression of
+alertness deepening into one of disappointment. He stopped for a moment
+and listened. All was quiet. Again with quick motions he felt beneath the
+edges. Suddenly his eyes brightened and he breathed quickly; his
+sensitive fingers had detected a slight unevenness in the smooth
+woodwork. Again he paused and listened, and then pressed heavily until he
+heard a slight click. He glanced up, as directly in front of him the eye
+of one of the carved wooden lion's heads on the front of the board winked
+and slowly raised, revealing a small aperture. With a look of
+satisfaction, the Marquis thrust his fingers into the tiny opening and
+drew forth a bit of tightly folded yellow paper; he glanced at it for an
+instant and thrust it quickly into the pocket of his waistcoat. Then he
+lowered the lid of the lion's eye. There was a slight click again; and he
+turned, just as Dan reappeared in the doorway.
+
+"Excuse my leaving you so abruptly," said Frost, "but I saw Jesse going
+off with the sleigh, and as I had given him no orders, I wanted to know
+where he was going. But it was all right. Are you ready, sir? I am afraid
+if we stay much longer you will catch cold." This last remark was added
+as the Marquis politely smothered a sneeze with his flimsy lace
+handkerchief.
+
+"_C'est bien_, monsieur. I fear I have taken a little cold. Perhaps it
+would be just as well if we explore no further to-day."
+
+"If you prefer, sir," answered Dan, holding the door open for his guest
+to go out. Monsieur de Boisdhyver turned and surveyed the Oak Parlour
+once more before he left it. "Ah!" he exclaimed, "this so charming
+room--it is of a perfection! Dorsetshire, you say? ... To me it would
+seem French." They walked back rapidly along the dark cold corridors to
+the bar. All the way the Marquis, wrapped tightly in his great cloak,
+kept the thumb of his left hand in his waistcoat pocket, pressing
+securely against the paper he had taken from the old cabinet in the Oak
+Parlour.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+THE MARQUIS AT NIGHT
+
+
+The household of the Inn at the Red Oak soon became accustomed to the
+presence of their new member; indeed, he seemed to them during those
+bleak winter months a most welcome addition. Except for an occasional
+traveller who spent a night or a Sunday at the Inn, he was the only
+guest. He was gregarious and talkative, and would frequently keep them
+for an hour or so at table as he talked to them of his life in France,
+and of his adventures in the exciting times through which his country had
+passed during the last fifty years. He was the cadet, he told them, of a
+noble family of the Vendée, the head of which, though long faithful to
+the exiled Bourbons, had gone over to Napoleon upon the establishment of
+the Empire. But as for himself--Marie-Anne-Timélon-Armand de
+Boisdhyver--he still clung to the Imperial cause, and though now for many
+years his age and infirmities had forced him to withdraw from any part in
+intrigues aiming at the restoration of the Empire, his sympathies were
+still keen.
+
+When he talked in this strain, of his thrilling memories of the Terror
+and of the extraordinary days when Bonaparte was Emperor, Dan and Tom
+would listen to him by the hour. But Mrs. Frost preferred to hear the
+Marquis's reminiscences of the _ancien régime_ and of the old court life
+at Versailles. He had been a page, he said, to the unfortunate Marie
+Antoinette; he would cross himself piously at the mention of the magic
+name, and digress rapturously upon her beauty and grace, and bemoan, with
+tears, her unhappy fate. She liked also to hear of the court of Napoleon
+and of the life of the _faubourgs_ in the Paris of the day. On these
+occasions the young men were apt to slip away and leave the Marquis alone
+with Mrs. Frost and Nancy.
+
+For Nancy Monsieur de Boisdhyver seemed to have a fascination. She would
+listen absorbed to his voluble tales, her bright eyes fixed on his
+fantastic countenance, her head usually resting upon her hand, and her
+body bent forward in an attitude of eager attention. She rarely spoke
+even to ask a question; indeed, her only words would be an occasional
+exclamation of interest, or the briefest reply.
+
+During the day their noble guest would potter about the house or, when
+the weather was fine, stroll down to the shore, where he would walk up
+and down the strip of sandy beach in the lee of the wind hour after hour.
+Now and then he wandered out upon the dunes that stretched along the
+Neck; and once, Dan afterwards learned, he paid a call upon old Mrs.
+Meath who lived by herself in the lonely farmhouse on Strathsey Neck,
+that was known as the House of the Dunes.
+
+After supper they were wont to gather in Mrs. Frost's parlour or in the
+old bar before the great hearth on which a splendid fire always blazed;
+and when the Marquis had had his special cup of black coffee, he would
+get out his violin and play to them the long evening through. He played
+well, with the skill of a master of the art, and with feeling. He seemed
+at such times to forget himself and his surroundings; his bright eyes
+would grow soft, a dreamy look would steal into them, and a happy little
+smile play about the corners of his thin pale lips. Obligingly he gave
+Dan lessons, and often the young man would accompany him, in the songs
+his mother had known and loved in her youth, when old Peter had come
+wooing with fiddle in hand.
+
+But best of all were the evenings when the Marquis chose to improvise.
+Plaintive, tender melodies for the most part; prolonged trembling,
+faintly-expiring airs; and sometimes harsh, strident notes that evoked
+weird echoes from the bare wainscoted walls. Mrs. Frost would sit, tears
+of sadness and of pleasure in her eyes, the kindly homely features of her
+face moving with interest and delight. Nancy was usually by the table,
+her sharp little chin propped up on the palms of her hands, never taking
+her fascinated gaze from the musician. Sometimes Tom would look at her
+and wonder of what she could be thinking. For certainly her spirit seemed
+to be far away wandering in a world of dreams and of strange
+inexpressible emotions. For Tom the music stirred delicate thoughts
+bright dreams of beauty and of love; the vivid intangible dreams of
+awakening youth. He had not had much experience with emotion; the story
+of his love affairs contained no more dramatic moments than the stealing
+of occasional kisses from the glowing cheeks of Maria Stonywell, the
+beauty of the Tinterton road, as he had walked back to the old farm with
+her on moonlight evenings.
+
+They would all be sorry when Monsieur pleaded weariness and bade them
+good-night. Sometimes his music so moved the old Frenchman that the tears
+would gather in his faded blue eyes and steal down his powdered cheeks;
+and then, like as not, he was apt to break off suddenly, drop violin and
+bow upon his knees, and exclaim, "_Ah! la musique! mon Dieu, mon Dieu!
+elle me rappelle ma jeunesse. Et maintenant--et maintenant_!" And then,
+brushing away the tears he would rise, make them a courtly bow, and hurry
+out of the room.
+
+Dan alone did not fall under his spell. He and Tom would often talk of
+their strange guest after they were gone to bed in the great chamber over
+the dining-room.
+
+"I don't know what it is," Dan said one night, "but I am sorry he ever
+came to the Inn; I wish he would go away."
+
+"How absurd, old boy!" protested Tom. "He has saved our lives this
+frightful winter. I never knew your mother to be so cheerful and
+contented; Nancy seems to adore him, and you yourself are making the most
+of his fiddle lessons."
+
+"I know," Dan replied, "all that is true, but it is only half the truth.
+Mother's cheerfulness is costing me a pretty penny, for I can't keep her
+from ordering the most expensive things,--wines, and the like,--that we
+can't afford. Maybe Nance adores him, as you say,--she is such a strange
+wild child; but I have never known her to be so unlike herself. We used
+to have good times together--Nance and I. But this winter I see nothing
+of her at all." For the moment Dan forgot his complaint in the tender
+thought of his foster-sister. "It probably is absurd," he added
+presently, "but I don't like it; I don't like him, Tom! He plays the
+fiddle well, I admit but he is so queer and shifty, nosing about, looking
+this way and that, never meeting your eyes. It's just as though he were
+waiting, biding his time, for--I don't know what."
+
+"Nonsense, Dan; you're not an old woman."
+
+"It may be, Tom, but I feel so anyway. The place hasn't seemed the same
+to me since that Frenchman came. I wish he would go away; and apparently
+he means to stay on forever."
+
+"I think you would miss him, if he were to go," insisted Pembroke, "for
+my part I'm glad he is here. To tell the truth, Dan, he's been the life
+of the house."
+
+"He has fascinated you as he has fascinated Mother and Nance," Dan
+replied. "But it stands to reason, boy, that he can't be quite all
+right. What does he want poking about in a deserted old hole like Deal?"
+
+"What he has said a thousand times; just what he so beautifully
+gets--quiet and seclusion."
+
+"Perhaps you are right and I am wrong; but all the same I shall be glad
+to see the last of him."
+
+The night was one of bright moonlight at the end of February. The bedroom
+windows were open to the cold clear air. Tom was not sleepy, and he lay
+for a long time recalling the dreams and emotions that had so stirred him
+earlier in the evening, as he had listened to the Marquis's playing. He
+kept whistling softly to himself such bars of the music as he could
+remember. Dan's chamber faced west, and Tom's bed was so placed that he
+could look out, without raising his head from the pillow, over the court
+in the rear of the Inn and into the misty depths of Lovel's Woods beyond
+the offices and stables.
+
+As he lay half-consciously musing--it must have been near midnight--his
+attention was suddenly riveted upon the court below. It seemed to him
+that he heard footsteps. He was instantly wide awake, and jumped from the
+bed to the window, whence he peered from behind the curtain into the
+courtyard. Close to the wall of the Inn, directly beneath the window, a
+shadow flitted on the moonlight-flooded pavement, and he could hear the
+crumbling of the snow. Cautiously he thrust his head out of the window.
+Moving rapidly along near to the house, was a little figure wrapped in a
+dark cloak, which looked to Tom for all the world like the Marquis de
+Boisdhyver.
+
+For the moment he had the impulse to call to him by name, but the
+conversation he had so recently had with Dan flashed into his mind, and
+he decided to keep still and watch. The figure moved rapidly along the
+west wall of the Inn almost the entire length of the building, until it
+arrived at the entrance of the bowling-alley which abutted from the old
+northern wing. Reaching this it paused for a moment, glancing about; then
+inserted a key, fumbled for a moment with the latch, opened the door, and
+disappeared within.
+
+Tom was perplexed. He could not be sure that it was the Marquis; but
+whether it were or not, he knew that there was no reason for any one
+entering the old portion of the Inn at midnight. His first thought was to
+go down alone and investigate; his second was to waken Dan.
+
+He lowered the window gently, drew the curtains across it, and
+bending over his friend, shook him gently by the shoulder. "Dan, Dan,
+I say; wake up!"
+
+"What's the matter?" exclaimed Dan with a start of alarm, as he sat
+up in bed.
+
+"Nothing, nothing; don't make a noise. I happened to be awake, and
+hearing footsteps under the window, I got up and looked out. I saw some
+one moving along close to the wall until he got to the bowling alley. He
+opened the door and disappeared."
+
+"The door's locked," exclaimed Dan. "Who was it?"
+
+"He had a key, whoever he was then. To tell the truth, Dan, it looked
+like the Marquis; though I couldn't swear to him. I certainly saw
+some one."
+
+"You have not been asleep and dreaming, have you?" asked his friend,
+rubbing his eyes.
+
+"I should say not. I'm going down to investigate; thought you'd like to
+come along."
+
+"So I shall," said Dan, jumping out of bed and beginning to dress. "If
+you really have seen any one, I'll wager you are right in thinking it's
+the old marquis. That is just the sort of thing I have imagined him
+being up to. What he wants though in the old part of the house is more
+than I can think. He has pestered me to get back there ever since I
+showed him over the place the day he arrived. Are you ready? Bring a
+candle, and some matches. Ill just take my gun along on general
+principles. I don't care how soon we get rid of the Marquis de
+Boisdhyver, but I shouldn't exactly like to shoot him out with a load of
+buckshot in his hide."
+
+Tom stood waiting with his boots in hand. Dan went to his bureau and took
+out his father's old pistol, that had done duty in the West India trade
+years ago, when pirates were not romantic memories but genuine menaces.
+
+"Sh!" whispered Dan as he opened the door. "Let's blow out the candle.
+It's moonlight, and we will be safer without it. Be careful as you go
+down stairs not to wake Mother and Nancy."
+
+Tom blew out the candle and slipped the end into his pocket, as he
+tiptoed after Dan down the stairs. At every step the old boards seemed to
+creak as though in pain. As they paused breathless half-way down on the
+landing, they heard no sound save the loud ticking of the clock in the
+hall below and the gentle whispering of the breeze without. The moon
+gave light enough had they needed it, but each of them could have found
+his way through every nook and corner of the Inn in darkness as well as
+in broad day-light. They crept down the short flight from the landing,
+paused and listened at the doors of Mrs. Frost's and Nancy's chambers,
+and then slipped noiselessly into the bar where the logs still glowed on
+the hearth.
+
+"Shall we," asked Tom in a low tone, "go down the corridor or
+around outside?"
+
+"Best outside," Dan whispered. "If we go down the corridor we are like to
+frighten him if he is the Marquis, or get a bullet in our gizzards if he
+is not. Should he be inside, he'll have a light and we can find just
+where he is. I have a notion that it's the Marquis and that he'll be in
+the Oak Parlour. We'd better creep along the porch."
+
+Very softly he unlocked the door, and stepped outside. Tom was close
+behind him. They crept stealthily along next the wall well within the
+shadow of the roof, pausing at every window to peer through the
+cracks of the shutters. But all were dark. As they turned the corner
+of the porch at the end of the main portion of the inn from which
+the north wing extended, Dan suddenly put his hand back and stopped
+Tom. "Wait," he breathed, "there's a light in the Oak Parlour. Stay
+here, while I peek in."
+
+With gun in hand he crept up to the nearest window of the Oak Parlour.
+The heavy shutters were closed, but between the crack made by the warping
+of the wood, he could distinguish a streak of golden light. He waited a
+moment; and, then at the risk of alarming the intruder within, carefully
+tried the shutter. To his great satisfaction it yielded and swung slowly,
+almost noiselessly, back upon its hinges; the inside curtains were drawn;
+but a slight gap had been left. Peering in through this, Dan found he
+could get a view of a small section of the interior,--the end of the
+great Dorsetshire cabinet on the farther side of the room and a part of
+the wall. Before the cabinet, bending over its shelf, stood the familiar
+form of the Marquis de Boisdhyver, apparently absorbed in a minute
+examination of the carving. But Dan's attention was quickly diverted from
+the figure of the old Frenchman, for by his side, also engaged in a
+similar examination of the cabinet, stood Nancy. For a moment he watched
+them with intent interest, but as he could not discover what so absorbed
+them he slipped back to Tom, who was waiting at the turn of the porch.
+
+"It's the Marquis," he whispered in his friend's ear.
+
+"What is he up to?"
+
+"I don't know. Apparently he is examining the old cabinet. But, Tom,
+Nancy is with him and as absorbed in the thing as he is. Look!" he
+exclaimed suddenly. "They've blown out the light."
+
+As he spoke, he pointed to the window, now dark. "Come," he said, making
+an instant decision, "let's hide ourselves in the hall and see if they
+come back."
+
+"But Nancy--?"
+
+"No time for talk now. Come along."
+
+They ran back along the porch, slipped into the bar, and thence into the
+hall. Dan motioned to Tom to conceal himself in a closet beneath the
+stairway, and he himself slipped behind the clock. Hardly were they
+safely hidden thus, than they heard a fumble at the latch of the door
+into the bar. Then the door was pushed open, and the Marquis stepped
+cautiously in the hall. He paused for a moment, listening intently. Then
+he held open the door a little wider; and another figure, quite enveloped
+by a long black coat, entered after him. They silently crossed the hall
+to the door of Nancy's chamber. This the Marquis opened; then bowed low,
+as his companion passed within. They were so close to him that Dan could
+have reached out his hand and touched them. As Nancy entered her room,
+Dan distinctly heard Monsieur de Boisdhyver whisper, "More success next
+time, mademoiselle!"
+
+There was no reply.
+
+The Marquis turned, stole softly up the stairs, and in a moment Dan heard
+the click of the latch as he closed his door. He slipped out from his
+hiding place, and whispered to Tom.
+
+In a few moments they were back again in their bedroom.
+
+"Heavens! man, what do you make of it?" asked Tom.
+
+"Make of it!" exclaimed Dan, "I don't know what to make of it. It's
+incomprehensible. What the devil is that old rascal after, and how has he
+bewitched Nance?"
+
+"Perhaps," suggested Tom, more for Nancy's sake than because he believed
+what he was saying, "it is simply that he is curious, and knowing that
+you don't want him in the old part of the Inn, he has persuaded Nancy to
+take him there at night."
+
+"Nonsense! that couldn't possibly account for such secrecy and caution.
+No, Tom, he has some deviltry on foot, and we must find out what it is."
+
+"That should be simple enough. Ask Nance."
+
+"Ah!" exclaimed his friend, "you don't know Nance as well as I. You may
+be sure he has sworn her to secrecy, and Nance would never betray a
+promise whether she had been wise in making it or not."
+
+"Then go to the old man himself and demand an explanation."
+
+"He'd lie ..."
+
+"Turn him out."
+
+"I could do that, of course. But I think I would rather find out what he
+is up to. It has something to do with the old cabinet in the Oak Parlour.
+I'll find out the mystery of that if I have to hack the thing into a
+thousand pieces. What I hate, is Nance's being mixed up in it."
+
+"We can watch again."
+
+"Yes; we'll do that. In the meanwhile, I am going to investigate that old
+ark myself. There's something about, something concealed in it, that he
+wants to get. When I took him in there the day after he came, he
+couldn't keep his eyes off it. If you can get Nance out of the way
+tomorrow afternoon, I'll send the Marquis off with Jesse for that
+long-talked-of visit to Mondy Port; and I'll give Jesse instructions not
+to get him back before dark. And while they are away, I'll investigate
+the Oak Parlour myself. Can you get Nance off?"
+
+"I might ask her to go and look over the Red Farm with me. She might like
+the walk through the woods. I could easily manage to be away for three or
+four hours."
+
+"Good! You may think it odd, Tom, that I should seem to distrust Nance. I
+don't distrust her, but there has always been a mystery about her. Mother
+knows a good deal more than she has even been willing to tell to me, or
+even to Nance, I guess. I know nothing except that she is of French
+extraction, and I have sometimes wondered since she has been so often
+with the old Marquis this winter, if he didn't know something about her.
+It flashed over me to-night as I saw them in that deserted room. Whatever
+is a-foot, I am going to get at the bottom of it. We will watch again
+to-morrow night. I heard him whisper as he left Nance, 'More success next
+time!' This sort of thing may have been going on for a month."
+
+They undressed again, and Dan put his gun away in his bureau. "We may
+have use for that yet, Tommy," he said. "It would do me good, after what
+I have seen to-night, to put a bit of lead into the Marquis de Boisdhyver
+as a memento of his so delightful sojourn at _L'Auberge au Chene Rouge_."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+THE OAK PARLOUR
+
+
+The two young men felt self-conscious and ill-at-ease the next morning at
+the breakfast table, but apparently their embarrassment was neither
+shared nor observed. Mrs. Frost had kept her room, but Nancy and the
+Marquis were in their accustomed places; the old gentleman, chattering
+away in a fashion that demanded few answers and no attention; Nancy,
+speaking only to ask necessary questions as to their wants at table and
+meeting the occasional glances of Dan and Tom without suspicion. Tom
+could scarcely realize in that bright morning light, that only seven or
+eight hours earlier he and his friend had spied upon their companions
+prowling about in the abandoned wing of the inn.
+
+Monsieur de Boisdhyver assented readily enough when Dan proposed that
+Jesse should take him that day to Monday Port. He was curious to see the
+old town, he said, having heard much of it from his friend; much also
+from his celebrated compatriot, the Marquis de Lafayette.
+
+Tom took occasion during the discussion to ask Nancy if she would walk
+across the woods with him after dinner, that he might pay a visit to the
+Red Farm and see that all was going well in the absence of his parents.
+He felt that the tones of his voice were charged with unwonted
+significance; but Nancy accepted the invitation with a simple expression
+of pleasure. When Mrs. Frost was informed of the plans for the day, she
+came near thwarting Dan's carefully laid schemes. She had counted upon
+Jesse to do her bidding and had, she declared, arranged that Nancy should
+help her put together the silken patches of the quilt upon which she was
+perennially engaged. Her foster-daughter's glance of displeasure at this
+was tinder to the old lady's temper, and Dan entered most opportunely.
+
+"So!" she was exclaiming, "I am always the one to be sacrificed when it
+is a question of some one's else pleasure."
+
+"Mother, Mother," Dan protested good-naturedly, as he bent over to kiss
+her good-morning, "aren't you ever willing to spend a day alone with me?"
+
+"Danny dear," cried the old lady, as she began to smile again, "you know
+I'm always willing. Of course, if Tom wants Nancy to go, the quilt can
+wait; it has waited long enough, in all conscience. There, my dear," she
+added, turning to the girl, "order an early dinner, and since you are
+going to the Red Farm, you might as well come back by the dunes and
+enquire for old Mrs. Meath. We have neglected that poor woman shamefully
+this winter."
+
+"Yes, Mother,--if we have time."
+
+"Take the time, my dear," added Mrs. Frost sharply.
+
+"Yes, Mother."
+
+The Marquis started off with Jesse at eleven o'clock, as eager for the
+excursion as a boy; and by half-past twelve Nancy and Tom had set out
+across the woods for the Red Farm. Dan was impatient for them to be gone.
+As soon as he saw them disappear in the woods back of the Inn, he made
+excuses to his mother, and hurried to the north wing. He found the door
+of the bowling alley securely locked, which convinced him that either the
+Marquis or Nancy had taken the key from the closet of his chamber. Having
+satisfied himself, he went directly to the Oak Parlour.
+
+It was cold and dark there. He opened the shutters and drew back the
+curtains, letting in the cheerful midday sun, which revealed all the
+antique, sombre beauty of the room, of the soft landscapes and the
+exquisite carving of the Dorsetshire cabinet. But Dan was in no mood to
+appreciate the old-world beauty of the Oak Parlour. In that cabinet he
+felt sure there was something concealed which would reveal the mystery of
+the Marquis's stay at the inn and possibly the nature of his influence
+over Nancy. Whatever had been the object of the Marquis's search, it had
+not been found: his parting words to Nancy the night before showed that.
+
+Dan took a long look at the cabinet first, estimating the possibility of
+its containing secret drawers. Hidden compartments in old cabinets,
+secret chambers in old houses, subterranean passageways leading to
+dungeons in romantic castles, had been the material of many a tale that
+Dan and Tom had told each other as boys. For years their dearest
+possession had been a forbidden copy of "_The Mysteries of Udolpho_"
+which they read in the mow of the barn lying in the dusty hay. However
+unusual, the situation was real; and he felt himself confronted by as
+hard a problem as he had ever tried to solve in fiction. He knew
+something about carpentry, so that his first step, after examining the
+drawers and cupboards and finding them empty, was to take careful
+measurements of the entire cabinet, particularly of the thicknesses of
+its sides, back, and partitions. It proved a piece of furniture of
+absolutely simple and straightforward construction. After long
+examination and careful soundings he came to the conclusion that a secret
+drawer was an impossibility.
+
+Suddenly an idea occurred to him and he returned to the sitting-room.
+"Mother," he said, "I have been looking over the old cabinet in the Oak
+Parlour, thinking perhaps that I would have it brought into the
+dining-room. I wonder, if by chance, there are any secret drawers in it.
+
+"Secret drawers? What an idea!" exclaimed Mrs. Frost.
+
+"You never knew of any did you?"
+
+"No.... Stop, let me think. Upon my word, I think there was something of
+the sort, but it has been so long ago I have almost forgotten."
+
+"Try to remember, do!" urged Dan, striving to repress his excitement.
+
+"It was not a secret drawer, but there were little hidden
+cubby-holes--three or four of them. I remember, now, your father once
+showed me how they opened. They were little places where the Roman
+Catholics used to hide the pages of their mass-books and such like in the
+days of persecution in England."
+
+"Yes, yes," said Dan, "that makes it awfully interesting. Did father
+ever find anything in them?"
+
+"No, I think not; but, dear me, it was over thirty years ago we brought
+that old cabinet from England,--long before you were born, Dan."
+
+"Can you remember how to open the secret places? I have been looking it
+over, but I can't see where they can be, much less how to get into them."
+
+"There were four of them, I think; all in the carving on the front, in
+the eyes of the lions it seems to me, and in the lion's mouth, or in the
+leaves somewhere. One spring that opened them I recollect, was under the
+ledge of the shelf, another at the back of the cabinet and,--but no, I
+really can't remember where the others were."
+
+Dan was impatient to try his luck at finding them, and hurried back to
+the Oak Parlour. He ran his fingers many times under the ledge of the
+shelf before he heard the click of a tiny spring, and, looking up, saw
+the lion's eyelid wink and slowly open. With an exclamation of
+satisfaction, he thrust his fingers into the tiny aperture, felt
+carefully about, and was chagrined to find it empty. "More success next
+time, _monsieur le marquis_!" he muttered.
+
+At length he found the spring that released the eyelid on the carved lion
+on the other side of the panel. He glanced into the little opening and,
+to his delight, saw the end of a bit of paper tucked away there. He dug
+it out with the blade of his pocket knife and unfolded it. It was yellow
+and brittle with age, covered with writing in a fine clear hand. But he
+was annoyed to discover, as he bent closely over to read it, that it was
+written in French, still worse, part of the paper was missing, for one
+side of it was ragged as if it had been torn in two.
+
+Remembering with relief, that Pembroke had acquired a smattering of
+French at Dr. Watson's school for the sons of gentlemen, he put the paper
+carefully away in his pocket to wait for Tom's assistance in deciphering
+it. Then he set to work to find the missing half.
+
+He fumbled about at the back of the cabinet for a spring that would
+release another secret cubby-hole, and was rewarded at last by an
+unexpected click, and the seemingly solid jaws of the lion fell apart
+about half-an-inch. But the little aperture which they revealed was
+empty. Further experiment at last discovered the fourth hiding place, but
+this also contained nothing.
+
+It occurred to him then that the Marquis had already discovered the other
+half of the paper, and like himself was searching for a missing portion.
+As he stood thinking over the problem, he suddenly noticed that the room
+was in deep shadow, and realized that the sun had set over the ridge of
+Lovel's Woods. The Marquis would soon be returning. Carefully closing the
+four openings in the carving he pushed the old cabinet back against the
+wall, closed the shutters and drew the curtains. Then with a last glance
+to see that all was as he found it, he went out and closed the door the
+precious bit of paper in his inside pocket.
+
+He went directly to Mrs. Frost's parlour. "Mother," he said, "please
+don't tell anyone that I have been in the north wing today. I have good
+reasons which I will explain to you before long. Now, I shall be deeply
+offended if you give the slightest hint."
+
+"Gracious! Dan, what is all this mystery about?"
+
+"You will never know, mother, unless you trust me absolutely. Mind! not
+a word to Tom, Nancy or the Marquis."
+
+"Very well, Danny. You know I am as safe with a secret as though it had
+been breathed into the grave."
+
+Dan did not quite share his mother's confidence in her own discretion,
+but he knew he could count on her devotion to him to keep her silent even
+where curiosity and the love of talk would render her indiscreet. He also
+knew, and had often deplored it, that fond as she was of Nancy she was
+not inclined to take the girl into her confidence.
+
+Having said all he dared to his mother, Dan went to his room and
+carefully locked up the mysterious paper. He returned to the first
+floor just as the Marquis and Jesse drove up in the sleigh to the door
+of the inn.
+
+Monsieur de Boisdhyver was enthusiastic about all that he had seen--the
+headquarters of General Washington, the house in which the Marquis de
+Lafayette had slept, the old mill in the parade, the fort at the Narrows,
+the shipping, the quaint old streets.... "But, O Monsieur Frost," he
+exclaimed, "the weariness that is now so delightful! How soundly shall I
+sleep to-night!"
+
+Dan smiled grimly as he assured his guest of his sympathy for a good
+night and a sound sleep; thinking to himself, however, that if the
+Marquis walked, he would not walk unattended. He had no intention of
+trusting too implicitly to that loudly proclaimed fatigue.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+THE WALK THROUGH THE WOODS
+
+
+While Dan Frost was hunting for the secret places of the old cabinet, Tom
+and Nancy were picking their way across the snowcovered paths of Lovel's
+Woods to the Red Farm. These woods were a striking feature in the
+landscape of the open coast country around Deal. Rising somewhat
+precipitously almost out of the sea, three ridges extended far back into
+the country, with deep ravines between. They were thickly wooded, for the
+most part with juniper and pine. In some places the descent to the
+ravines was sheer and massed with rocks heaped there by a primeval
+glacier; in other parts they dipped more gently to the little valleys,
+which were threaded with many a path worn smooth by the dwellers on the
+eastern shore. Nearly two miles might be saved in a walk from the Inn to
+Squire Pembroke's Farm by going across the Woods rather than by the
+encircling road.
+
+As they were used to the frozen country Tom and Nancy preferred the
+shorter if more difficult route. They had often found their way together
+through the tangled thickets of the Woods or along the shores of the
+Strathsey River, in season accompanied by dog and gun hunting fox and
+rabbit or partridge and wild duck. In Tom's company Nancy seemed to
+forget her shyness and would talk freely enough of her interests and her
+doings. He had always been fond of her, though until lately she had
+seemed to him hardly more than a child. This winter, as so frequently he
+had watched her sitting in the firelight listening to the old Marquis's
+playing and dreaming perhaps as he also dreamed, he realized that she was
+growing up. A new beauty had come into her face and slender form, her
+great dark eyes seemed to hold deeper interests, she was no longer in the
+world of childhood. The mystery enveloping her origin, which for some
+reason Mrs. Frost had never chosen to dispel, gave a certain piquancy to
+the interest and affection Tom felt for her. In the imaginative tales he
+had been fond of weaving for his own amusement, Nancy would frequently
+figure, revealed at last as the child of noble parents, as a princess
+doomed by some strange fate to exile. He thought of these things as from
+time to time he glanced back at her, holding aside some branch that
+crossed the path or giving her his hand to help her over a boulder in the
+way. The red scarf about her neck, red cap on her dark hair, flashing in
+and out of the tangled pathway against the background of the snow-clad
+woods, gave a bright note of colour to the scene.
+
+They were obliged for the most part to walk in single file until the last
+ridge descended over a mass of rocks to the marshes along Beaver Pond.
+Then having given her his hand to help her down, he kept hold of it as
+they went along the free path to the open meadows. The feeling of Nancy's
+cool little hand in his gave Tom an odd and conscious sense of pleasure.
+
+"You have been uncommonly silent, Nance, even for you," he said at last.
+
+"Oh, I'm always silent, Tom," she replied. "It is because I am stupid and
+have nothing to say."
+
+"Nonsense, my dear, you always have a lot to say to me. But you are
+forever reading, thinking ... what's it all about?"
+
+"Oh, I think, Tom, because I have little else to do; but my thoughts
+aren't often worth the telling. In truth there is no one, not even you,
+who particularly cares to hear them. Tom," she said, "I am restless and
+discontented. Sometimes I wish I were far away from the Inn at the Red
+Oak and Deal, from all that I know,--even from you and Dan."
+
+Pembroke suddenly realized that he could not laugh at these
+fancies, as he had so often done, and dismiss as if they were the
+vagaries of a child.
+
+"Why are you restless and discontented, Nancy?" he asked seriously.
+
+"Aren't you ever?" she questioned for reply. "Don't you ever get weary
+with the emptiness of it all, the everlasting round, the dullness? Don't
+you ever want to get away from Deal, and know people and see things and
+be somebody?"
+
+"I do that, Nance. I mean to go as soon as I am a lawyer. I won't poke
+about Deal long after that, nor Monday Port either. I mean to set up in
+Coventry."
+
+"Coventry!" exclaimed the girl with an accent of disdain. "That is just a
+provincial town like the Port, only a little more important because it is
+the capital of the state."
+
+"Being the capital means a lot," protested Tom in defense of his
+ambitions of which for the first time he felt ashamed. "Men are sent to
+Congress from there. Nance, girl, ours is a wonderful country; we are
+making a great nation."
+
+"Some people may be. None of us are, Tom. I wonder at you more than I do
+at Dan, for you have had more advantages. As for me, I am only a girl;
+there's nothing for girls but to sit and sew, and prepare meals for men
+to eat, and wait until some one comes and chooses to marry them. Then
+they go off and do the same thing some place else."
+
+"But what have you to complain of, Nancy? you have the kindest brother, a
+good mother, a comfortable home...."
+
+"The kindest brother, yes. But you know Mrs. Frost is not my mother. She
+doesn't care for me and I can't care for her as if she were. I have never
+loved any one but Dan."
+
+"You can't help loving Dan," said Tom, thinking of his good friend.
+"But then, little girl, you love me too." And he pressed the hand in
+his warmly.
+
+Nancy quickly withdrew her hand. "I am not a little girl. I have been
+grown up in lots of ways ever so long."
+
+"But you love me?"
+
+"I like you. Oh, Tom, the life we all lead is so futile. If I weren't a
+girl, I should go away."
+
+They had reached the stile by now that led into the meadow which sloped
+down from the clump of poplars a hundred rods or so above, in the midst
+of which the Red Farmhouse stood. Instead of helping his companion over
+the steps in the wall, Tom stopped and stood with his back to them.
+"Let's stay here a minute, Nance, and have it out."
+
+"Have what out?" she asked a trifle sharply.
+
+"You haven't any queer wild plan in your head to go away, have you?"
+
+"I don't know--sometimes I think I have. I dare say there are things
+somewhere a girl could find to do."
+
+"But Mrs. Frost--?"
+
+"Oh, Mother would not miss me long--she'd have Dan."
+
+"But Dan would miss you."
+
+"Yes, Dan might. I couldn't go, if Dan really needed me here. I think
+sometimes he doesn't. But, Tom, if you were in my position, if you didn't
+know who your parents were, if all your life you had been living on the
+charity of others--good and kind as they are, wonderful even as Dan has
+always been--you couldn't be happy. I'm not happy."
+
+"But, Nance, what has come over you?"
+
+"No--nothing in particular; I have often felt this way."
+
+"But, dear, I couldn't let you go. I'd mind a lot, Nance."
+
+She looked at him with a sudden smile of incredulity. "You, Tommy?"
+
+"You can't go--you musn't go," Tom repeated, as he drew nearer to her.
+
+Suddenly he reached out and seized her hands. "Don't you realize it?--I
+love you, Nance; I've always loved you!" He drew her close to him. She
+did not resist nor did she yield, but still with her eyes she questioned
+him. "Kiss me, Nancy," he whispered. She let him press his lips to hers
+but without responding to the pressure, as though she still were
+wondering of the meaning of this sudden unforeseen passion. But at last,
+caught up in its intensity, she gave him back his kisses. He took her
+face then between his hands and looked into it with a gaze that in itself
+was a caress. "Oh my sweetheart!" he said softly.
+
+Slowly she disengaged herself. "Tom, Tom," she said, "this is
+foolishness. We musn't do this."
+
+"Why not?" demanded Pembroke. "I tell you I love you!"
+
+"No--not that way, not that way. I didn't mean that. Why, you foolish
+boy, haven't we kissed each other hundreds of times before?"
+
+"No, Nancy, not like that--not like this," he added, as again he put his
+arm around her and drew her face to his. And again she yielded. "Say
+it--say it, Nance--you love me."
+
+She drew back from him. "I think I must, Tom. I don't think I could let
+you kiss me that way if I didn't. But now come ... Tom ... dear Tom ...
+do come ... don't kiss me again."
+
+"But say it," he insisted, "say you love me."
+
+"Please help me over the stile."
+
+He gave her his hand and she sprang lightly to the top of the steps. In a
+second he was by her side, both of them balancing somewhat uncertainly on
+the top of the stone wall. "I won't let you down till you say it."
+
+"Please--".
+
+"No--you love me?"
+
+"Yes--there--I love you--now--".
+
+"No, kiss me again."
+
+"Tom--no." But the negative was weak and Pembroke took it so.
+
+"Now," he said, as they began to cross the meadow, "we must tell Mrs.
+Frost and Dan."
+
+"Tell them what?"
+
+"Why, that we are in love with each other, and that you are going to
+marry me. What else?"
+
+"No, no," exclaimed Nancy, "You must say nothing. I am not in love. I
+don't mean to marry you."
+
+"But why not? You are. You do."
+
+"Are--do--?"
+
+"In love--you do mean to marry me."
+
+"No--Tom, listen--you know your father and mother would hate it. You have
+at least two years before you can practice. We couldn't marry--we can't
+marry. Oh, there are things I must do, before I can think of that."
+
+"Not marry me? Good Lord, what does it mean when people are in love with
+each other, what does it mean when a girl kisses a fellow like that?"
+
+"I don't know! what it means--madness, I guess. Do you think I could
+marry as I am, not knowing who I am?"
+
+"Oh, what do I care who your parents were! We'll find out. I swear we
+will. Good Lord, I love you, Nancy; I love you!"
+
+"Please, please don't make me talk about it now."
+
+"But soon--?"
+
+"Yes, soon--only promise you'll say nothing to Dan or to Mother till we
+have talked again. I must think; it is all so queer and unexpected; I
+never dreamed that you cared for me except as a little girl."
+
+"I didn't know I did. But come to think of it, Nance, it has been you as
+much as Dan that has brought me to the Inn at the Red Oak. Why it was you
+I wanted to walk and talk and play with."
+
+"Please,--dear Tom--G--ive me time to think what it all means. Now be
+careful, there's the farmer. You have a lot to do, and we have been
+lingering too long. Mother wants us to go back by the dunes and enquire
+for old Mrs. Meath; so we must hurry."
+
+The sun had set before they started on the homeward journey in one of
+the squire's sleighs. As they turned the bend at the beach and started
+across the dune road close to the sea, a great yellow moon rose over
+Strathsey Neck.
+
+Tom had been so preoccupied with his own emotions and the unexpected and
+absorbing relation in which he found himself with Nancy, that he had
+altogether forgotten why he had asked her to go off with him that
+afternoon. As they skimmed along over the snow-packed road across the
+sands, Tom spied another sleigh on the Port road, the occupants of which
+he recognized as Jesse and the Marquis. Suddenly the memory of the night
+before flashed over him. He pointed with his whip in their direction.
+"There's the old Marquis coming back from Monday Port," he said.
+
+Nancy looked without comment, but Tom thought the colour deepened in
+her cheeks.
+
+"See here, Nance," he exclaimed impulsively; "has the Marquis anything to
+do with the mood you were in this afternoon? Has he said anything to make
+you discontented?"
+
+He was sure that now she paled.
+
+"What makes you ask?"
+
+"Oh--a number of things. I've seen you with him more or less; felt he had
+some influence over you."--Tom was blundering now and knew it.--
+
+She looked at him coldly. "I have been with the Marquis very little save
+when others have been about. He has no influence over me. I don't care to
+discuss such queer ideas."
+
+"Oh, all right ... I dare say I'm mistaken ... I only thought..."
+He hesitated... "If you care for me, I don't mind what you think of
+the Marquis."
+
+"Remember, Tom--you promised to say nothing until I gave you leave.
+You're not fair..."
+
+"But you do love me?"
+
+Nancy was silent.
+
+"There is nothing between you and the old Frenchman--no mystery?"
+
+There was no reply. Nancy sat with compressed lips and drawn brows,
+gazing fixedly at the distant House on the Dunes at the end of their
+road. For a long while they drove on in silence.
+
+At the House on the Dunes they chatted for a while with old Mrs. Meath,
+who lived there alone with a maid-of-all-work. She was a source of much
+anxiety to Mrs. Frost, who sent several times each week to learn if all
+was going well. But Mrs. Meath was a Quaker and apparently never gave a
+thought to loneliness or fear.
+
+"They will never guess," she said to Nancy and Tom as they sat in the
+tiled kitchen talking with her, "what I am going to do."
+
+"Not going to leave the House on the Dunes, Mrs. Meath?"
+
+"Deary me! no; but I am going to take a boarder."
+
+"Really?--you are setting up to rival the Inn, eh?" said Tom.
+
+"No", Tommy, nothing of the sort. But I am offered good pay for my front
+room, and as Jane Frost is always nagging me about living here alone, I
+thought I'd take her."
+
+"And who pray is your new boarder?" asked Nancy.
+
+"That is the funny part of it," replied Mrs. Meath, "I know nothing but
+her name--Mrs. Fountain. Everything has been arranged by a lawyer man
+from Coventry, and she is coming in a few days. Tell thy mother, Nancy
+dear, that she need worry about me no longer."
+
+"I will, Mrs. Meath. I think it is a splendid idea, and I hope you will
+like the lady. Mother will be so glad that you have some one with you."
+
+Soon they were on their way across the dunes and marshes to Tinterton
+road and home. Dan was preoccupied, not with the news that was so
+exciting to Mrs. Meath, but with the recollection of his conversation
+with Nancy as they had driven toward the house. Despite her implicit
+denial he knew there was a secret between the Marquis de Boisdhyver and
+herself. He could not imagine what it might be, and it was evident
+that she did not mean to tell him at present. But his anxieties on this
+or kindred subjects were not relieved by his companion during the
+remainder of the drive. Moreover his attempts to speak again of his
+newly discovered passion were received coldly--so coldly indeed that he
+had no heart for pleading for such proofs as she had given him earlier
+in the afternoon that she shared his emotion. So despite the splendid
+moon, the bright cold night, the merry jangle of the sleigh bells, the
+drive back was not the unmixed joy Tom had promised himself; and he
+felt his role of a declared and practically-accepted lover anything but
+a satisfactory one.
+
+Finally they reached the Inn and entered the bar where they found the
+Marquis sitting alone before a cheerful fire. All of Tom's suspicious
+jealousies returned with fresh force, for Nancy rapidly crossed the room,
+spoke a few words to the old gentleman in an inaudible tone of voice, and
+passed quickly on to her own apartments.
+
+
+
+
+PART II
+
+THE TORN SCRAP OF PAPER
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+THE HALF OF AN OLD PAPER
+
+
+That evening Mrs. Frost made a particular request for music. Poor Dan,
+impatient to be alone with Tom and show him the torn scrap of paper that
+he had found that afternoon was forced to bring out his fiddle and
+accompany the Marquis. Tom, for first part, was more concerned with his
+own relations with Nancy than with the mysterious possibilities of the
+previous night. The poignant notes of the violin set his pulses to
+beating in tune with the throbbing of the music and transported him again
+into the realms of youthful dreams. They were quaint plaintive songs of
+old France that the Marquis chose to play that evening, folk tunes of the
+Vendée, love songs of olden time.
+
+From where he sat in the shadow Tom got a full view of Nancy seated on
+the oaken setlle near the fire. Her brows were drawn a little in deep
+thought, her lips for the most part compressed, though ever and anon
+relaxing at some gentler thought. Her hands were clasped, her head was
+bent a little, but her body was held straight and tense. Her eyes, dark
+and lustrous in the light of the flaming logs, always fixed upon the
+musician, not once wandering in his direction.
+
+What was the influence, the fascination that strange old Frenchman seemed
+to exert? It seemed to Tom impossible that there could be a secret which
+she felt necessary to hide from them, her lifelong friends. But apart
+from what he knew had taken place the night before as he looked back over
+the past month, he was conscious that there had been a change in Nancy, a
+change that mystified him. It was the danger in this change, he told
+himself, that had awakened in him the knowledge of his love.
+
+But then as he looked across at her so lovely, in the firelight, he felt
+again the thrill as when first he had taken her hand that afternoon. In
+that moment all the dreams, the vague longings of his boyhood had found
+their reality.
+
+Suddenly, while he was thinking thus, the Marquis laid his violin upon
+his knees. "Ah, _ma jeunnesse_!" he exclaimed in a dramatic whisper, "_et
+maintenant_--_et maintenant_!"
+
+For a moment no one spoke or stirred. They looked at him curiously as
+they always did when he brought his playing to an end in such fashion.
+Then he rose. "_Bon soir, madame; bon soir, messieurs; bon soir,
+mademoiselle_"
+
+Tom saw his little faded blue eyes meet Nancy's with a look of swift
+significance. Then he bowed with a flourish that included them all.
+
+"A thousand thanks, Monsieur le Marquis," murmured Mrs. Frost, "how much
+pleasure you give us!"
+
+They all rose then, as the Marquis smiled his appreciation and withdrew.
+
+"Give me your arm, Dan," the old lady said. "It must be past my bedtime.
+Come, Nancy."
+
+"Yes, mother." The girl rose wearily, stopping a moment at the
+mantelpiece to snuff the candles there. Tom seized his opportunity, and
+was by her side. She started, as she realized him near her.
+
+"Nance, Nance, I must have a word with you," he exclaimed in a tense
+whisper, "don't go!"
+
+"Nance, come," called Mrs. Frost from the hall.
+
+"Yes, Mother, I am coming ... I must go, Tom. Don't delay me. You know
+how Mother is ..."
+
+"What difference will it make if you wait a moment? Good Lord! Nance, I
+have been trying all evening to get a word with you, and you have not so
+much as given me a glance. Don't go--please don't go! Oh, Nancy dear,--I
+love you so!"
+
+He seized her hands and kissed them passionately. "Nance, Nance ...
+please ..." His arms were about her.
+
+"Tom, you make it so hard ... Remember, you promised me ... No word
+of love until I can think, until I have time to know ... Please, Tom,
+let me go."
+
+"I can't let you go. Oh sweetheart dear."
+
+"Tom, we musn't--Dan, Mother! ..."
+
+Unheeding her protest, he put his arms around her. An instant he felt
+her yield, then quickly thrusting him aside, she ran from the room,
+leaving him standing alone there, trembling with excitement, chagrin,
+happiness, alarm.
+
+In a moment his friend returned and Tom pulled himself together. "Come
+on," said Dan, "I have a lot to tell you."
+
+"Did you find anything this afternoon?" exclaimed Pembroke.
+
+"Sh! for heaven's sake be careful. Don't talk here. Let's go upstairs."
+
+A few minutes later they were closeted in Dan's chamber. The curtains
+were tightly drawn and a heavy quilt was hung over the door. Good Lord!
+thought Tom, could it be possible that these precautions in part at least
+were taken against Nancy. The world seemed to have turned upside down for
+him in the last twenty-four hours.
+
+"Aren't we going to keep watch to-night?" he asked.
+
+"Yes, but later. They are just getting to bed--or pretending to. Look
+here, this may throw light on the mystery. I found this paper in a secret
+cubby-hole in the old cabinet in the Oak Parlour. Draw a chair up to the
+table so that you can see."
+
+"The cabinet," he continued, as he took the paper out of his strong-box
+and began to unfold it, "was brought from some old manor house in
+England. It has four little secret cubby-holes, opened by hidden springs,
+that Mother says were probably used by the Roman Catholics to hide pages
+of their mass-books during the days of persecution. She remembered
+fortunately a little about them. They were all empty but one, and in that
+I found this torn scrap of paper."
+
+He handed the yellowed bit of writing to Tom, who flattened it out on the
+table before him.
+
+"Why it's written in French," Pembroke exclaimed, as he bent over to
+examine it.
+
+"Yes, I know it is," said Dan. "I can't make head or tail of it. Besides
+it seems to be only a part of a note or letter. I could hardly wait to
+give you a chance at it. You can make something of it, can't you?"
+
+"I don't know--I guess I can. It's hard to read the handwriting. The
+thing's torn in two--haven't you the rest of it?"
+
+"No, I tell you; that's all I could find; that's all, I am sure, that can
+be in the cabinet now. My theory is that the old marquis has somehow come
+across the other half and is still looking for this. God only knows who
+hid it there.
+
+"How the deuce could the Marquis know about it. Ah! look--it's signed
+somebody, something _de Boisdhyver_--'_ançois_--that's short for
+François, I guess. Evidently 't wasn't the Marquis himself. Wonder what
+it means?"
+
+For goodness' sake, try to read it."
+
+"Wait. Get that old French dictionary out of the bookcase downstairs,
+will you? I'll see if I can translate."
+
+Dan crept softly out, leaving Tom bent over the paper. Again he smoothed
+it out carefully on the table, bringing the two candles nearer, and tried
+to puzzle out the faint fine handwriting.
+
+"I can make out some of it," he remarked to Dan, when his friend returned
+with the dictionary. "Let me have that thing; there are a few words I
+don't know at all, but I'll write out as good a translation as I can."
+
+While Tom was busy with the dictionary, Dan placed writing materials to
+his hand, and sat down to wait as patiently as he could. His curiosity
+was intensified by Pembroke's occasional exclamations and the absorption
+with which he bent over the task.
+
+"There!" Tom exclaimed after half-an-hour's labour, "that's the
+best I can do with it. You see the original note was evidently torn
+into two or three strips and we have only got the righthand one, so we
+don't get a single complete sentence--, but what we have is mighty
+suggestive. Listen--This is what it says: Make great efforts ... gap ...
+glorious, I am about to leave' ... gap ... 'to offer my' ... gap ...
+'that I should not return' ... gap ... 'directions' ... gap ... 'this
+paper which I tear' ... gap ... 'the explanation' ... something
+missing ... 'to discover' ... that's the end of a sentence. The next one
+begins, 'This treasure' ... than another gap ... 'jewels and money' ...
+'secret chamber' ... 'one can enter' ... something gone here ... 'by the
+_salon de chene_'--that's the Oak Parlour, I suppose ... something
+missing again ... 'by a spring' ... 'hand of the lady in the picture' ...
+'chimney on the north side of the' ... 'side a panel which reveals' ...
+'one will find the directions' ... more missing ... 'of the treasure in a
+golden chest' ... That's the end of it. And, as I said before it is
+signed,--'ançois de Boisdhyver.' There, you can read it. That's the best
+I can make of it."
+
+Dan bent over his friend's translation. "Whoever wrote it was
+about to leave here to offer something to somebody, and if he did
+not return, apparently he is giving directions, in this paper, which
+he tears in to two or three parts, how to discover--a treasure?--jewels
+and money, I guess,--that he is about to hide or has hidden in a secret
+chamber, which is entered in some way from the Oak Parlour--? ... pushes
+a spring,--Something to do with the hand of the lady in the picture,
+near the chimney on the north side of the room ... then a panel which
+reveals ...where? ... the directions will be found, for getting the
+treasure, in a golden chest in the secret chamber? How's that for a
+version? I reckon the other half doesn't tell as much ...'ançois de
+Boisdhyver!--That can't be the Marquis, for none of his names end
+'ançois; do they? Let's see, what are they?--Marie, Anne, Timélon,
+Armand ... Tom,"--and Dan faced his friend excitedly,--"that old devil is
+after treasure! Who the deuce is 'ançois de Boisdhyver, and how did he
+come to leave money in the Oak Parlour? Hanged if I believe there's any
+secret chamber! By gad, man, if I didn't hurt when I pinch myself, I'd
+think I was asleep and dreaming. What do you make of it?"
+
+"Pretty much what you do. Somebody sometime,--a good many years ago,
+concealed some valuables here in the Inn. It must be some one who is
+connected with our marquis, for the last names are the same. These are
+directions, or half the directions, for finding it. The Marquis knows
+enough about it to have been hunting for this paper. Who the devil is
+the Marquis?"
+
+"The Lord knows. But how does Nance come in?"
+
+"Blamed if I can see; wish I could! This accounts for the Marquis's
+mysterious investigations, anyway. Probably he's no right to the paper.
+Maybe he isn't a Boisdhyver at all. I'll be damned if I can understand
+how he has got Nance to league with him."
+
+"And now what the deuce are we going to do about it?" asked Dan.
+
+"Hunt for the treasure ourselves, eh?"
+
+"Well, why not? but to do that we've got to get rid of the Marquis. He'll
+be suspicious if we begin to poke about the north wing. Hanged if I
+wouldn't like to have it all out with him!"
+
+"Yes, but we'd better think and talk it over before we decide to do
+anything. We can watch them. We'll watch to-night any way, and plan
+something definite to-morrow."
+
+"I tell you one thing, Tom, I am going to make Mother tell me all she
+knows about Nancy. Perhaps she is mixed up in some way with all this. But
+it's time to keep watch now. We'll put out the candles and I'll watch for
+the first two hours. If you go to sleep, I'll wake you up to take the
+next turn. How about it?"
+
+"Hang sleep!" Tom replied.
+
+"All right, but we must blow out the light. Lucky it's clear. Let's
+whisper after this."
+
+Tom threw himself on the bed, while Dan sat near the window and kept his
+eyes fixed on the door of the bowling-alley. They talked for some time in
+low tones, but eventually Tom fell asleep. Dan waked him at twelve for
+his vigil, and he in turn was wakened at two. During the third watch they
+both succumbed to weariness.
+
+Tow awoke with a start about four, and sprang to the window. The moon was
+sinking low in the western sky, but its light still flooded the deserted
+courtyard beneath. He heard the patter of a horse's hoofs on the road
+beyond and the crunching of the snow beneath the runners of a sleigh.
+Well, he thought, as he rubbed his eyes, it was too near morning for
+anything to happen, so he turned in and was soon asleep, as though no
+difficult problems were puzzling his mind and heart and no mysteries were
+being enacted around him.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+A DISAPPEARANCE
+
+
+When Dan came downstairs in the morning Mrs. Frost called him to the door
+of her bedroom. "What on earth is the matter with Nancy?" she exclaimed;
+"I have been waiting for her the past hour. No one has been near me since
+Deborah came in to lay the fire. Call the girl Danny; I want to get up."
+
+"All right, mother. She has probably overslept; she had a long walk
+yesterday."
+
+"But that is no excuse for sleeping till this time of day. Tell her
+to hurry."
+
+"It is only seven, mother."
+
+"Yes, Danny, dear, but I mean to breakfast with you all this morning if I
+ever succeed in getting dressed."
+
+Dan crossed the hall and knocked at Nancy's door. There was no response.
+He knocked again, then opened the door and looked within. Nancy was not
+there, and her bed had not been slept in.
+
+He went back to his mother. "Nancy is not in her room," he said. "She
+has probably gone out for a walk. I'll go and look for her."
+
+He went to the kitchens to enquire of the maids, but they had not seen
+their young mistress since the night before.
+
+"Spec she's taken dem dogs a walkin'," said black Deborah unconcernedly.
+"Miss Nance she like de early morn' 'fore de sun come up."
+
+Dan went out to the stables. The setters came rushing out, bounding and
+barking joyously about him.
+
+"Have you seen Miss Nancy this morning, Jess?" he asked.
+
+"No, Mister Dan, ain't seen her this mornin'. Be n't she in the house?"
+
+"She doesn't seem to be. Take a look down the road, and call after her,
+will you? Down, Boy; down, Girl!" he cried to the dogs.
+
+Dan began to be thoroughly alarmed. If Nancy had gone out, the dogs would
+certainly have followed her. She must be within!
+
+He went back into the house, and searched room after room, but no trace
+of her was to be found. He returned at last to his mother's chamber.
+
+"I can't find Nancy," he said. "She must have gone off somewhere."
+
+"Gone off! why, she must have left very early then. I have been awake
+these two hours--since daylight--; I would have heard every sound."
+
+"Well, she isn't about now, Mother. She will be back by breakfast time, I
+don't doubt. Just stay abed this morning, I will send her to you as soon
+as she comes."
+
+"I shall have to, I suppose. Really, Dan, it is extraordinary how
+neglectful of me that child can sometimes be. She knew--"
+
+"Mother, don't find fault with her. She is devoted to you, and you know
+it."
+
+"I daresay she is. Of course she is, and I am devoted to her. Where would
+she be, I wonder, if it hadn't been for me? Good heavens! Dan, can
+anything have happened to her?"
+
+"No, no--of course not,--nothing."
+
+"Search the house, boy; she may be lying some place in a faint. She isn't
+strong--I have always been worried--"
+
+"Don't get excited, Mother. We will wait until breakfast time. If she
+doesn't turn up then, you may be sure I shall find her."
+
+He looked at his watch. It was already nearly eight o'clock, so he
+decided to say nothing to Pembroke until after breakfast. He found the
+Marquis and Tom chatting before the fire in the bar.
+
+"Shall we have breakfast?" said Dan. "Mother will not be in this
+morning."
+
+"Ah!" exclaimed the Marquis, as they took their seats at table, "that is
+a disappointment. And shall we not wait for Mademoiselle Nancy?"
+
+"My sister has stepped out, monsieur; she may be late. Shall I give you
+some coffee?"
+
+"If you please--. We have another of these so beautiful days, eh? This so
+glorious weather, these moonlight nights, this snow--_C'est merveilleux_.
+Last night I sat myself for a long time in my window. Ah _la nuit_--the
+moon past its full, say you not?--the sea superbly dark, superbly blue,
+the wonderful white country! As I sat there, messieurs, a sight too
+beautiful greeted my eyes. A ship, with three great sails, appeared out
+on the sea and sailed as a bird up the river to our little cove, _Voila,
+mes amis_"--he waved his hand toward the eastern windows--"She is
+anchored at our feet."
+
+The two young men looked in the direction in which the marquis pointed,
+and to their astonishment they saw, riding securely at her moorings in
+the cove, a large sailing vessel. She was a three-masted schooner of
+perhaps fifteen hundred tons, a larger ship than they had seen at anchor
+in the Strathsey for many a year.
+
+"By all that's good!" exclaimed Tom, "that is exactly the sort of ship my
+father used to have in the West Indie trade, a dozen or fifteen years
+ago. What is she? I wonder; and why is she anchored here instead of in
+the Port?"
+
+The Marquis shrugged his shoulders. "That I can tell you not, my friend;
+but I am happy that she is anchored there for the hours of beauty she
+has already given to me. On this strange coast of yours one so rarely
+sees a sail."
+
+"No, they go too far to the south... But what is she?" asked Dan. "We
+must find out." He went to the cupboard, and got out his marine glass and
+took a long look at the stranger.
+
+"What do you make her out?" asked Tom.
+
+"There are men on deck, some swabbing out the roundhouse. One of them is
+lolling at the wheel. She flies the British flag."
+
+"Do you, perhaps, make out the name?" asked the Marquis.
+
+"I don't know--yes," Dan replied, twisting the lens to suit his eyes
+better and spelling out the letters, "S,O,U,T,H,E,R,N,C,R--the
+_Southern Cross_. By Jingo, Tom, we'll have to go down to the beach and
+have a look at her."
+
+Tom took the glasses; turning them over presently to the Marquis. "She is
+a good fine boat, eh?" exclaimed M. de Boisdhyver, as he applied his eye
+to the end of the glass.
+
+"She certainly is," said Dan.
+
+They sat down at length and resumed their breakfast. The ship had
+diverted Tom's attention for the moment from the fact that Nancy had
+not appeared.
+
+"Where is Nance, Dan?" he asked at length, striving to conceal his
+impatience.
+
+"I don't know," Dan replied. "I think she has gone over to see Mrs. Meath
+and stayed for breakfast."
+
+"Madame Meath--?" enquired the Marquis.
+
+"At the House on the Dunes," Dan answered, a trifle sharply.
+
+"A long walk for Mademoiselle on a cold morning," commented Monsieur
+Boisdhyver, as he sipped his coffee.
+
+In a few moments Dan rose. "Going to the Port to-day, Tom?"
+
+"Not till later, any way; I am going down to the beach to have a look at
+that ship."
+
+"Wait a little, and I'll go with you," He turned to the door and motioned
+Tom to follow him.
+
+Outside he took his friend's arm and drew him close. "Tom, something's
+up; Nancy's not here."
+
+"Nancy's not here;" exclaimed Pembroke. "What do you mean? Where is she?"
+
+"To tell the truth, I don't know where she is; her bed has not been slept
+in. I thought at first she had gone for a walk with the dogs as she does
+sometimes, but Boy and Girl are both in the barn. It's half-past eight
+now, and she ought to be back,"
+
+"Good Lord! man, have you searched the house?"
+
+"I've been over it from garret to cellar."
+
+"And you can't find her?"
+
+"Not a sign of her."
+
+"Have you been through the north wing?"
+
+"Yes, all over it. I have been in every room in the house, boy. Nance
+isn't there. You heard nothing in the night, did you?"
+
+"Nothing."
+
+"When did you go to sleep?"
+
+"Perhaps about half-past three. Come to think of it, I awoke at four
+with a start, for I heard a sleigh on the Port Road. After that I
+went to bed."
+
+"The sleigh hadn't been at the Inn?"
+
+"It couldn't have been--I'd have heard of it if it had; you see it woke
+me up just going along the road."
+
+"I don't suppose we need worry. But it is queer--none of the servants
+have seen her since last night."
+
+"My God, what can have happened to her?" cried Tom.
+
+"Sh, boy! We have nothing to go on, but I wager that old French devil
+knows more than he will tell."
+
+"Then, we'll choke it out of him."
+
+"No, no, don't be a fool! She may be back any minute. I'll get the sleigh
+and go over to the House on the Dunes. In the meanwhile don't show that
+you are anxious! I'll be back inside of an hour, and we can have a look
+at the ship. If Nance isn't with Mrs. Meath, why I am sure I'll find her
+here. Let's not worry till we have to."
+
+Tom assented to this proposition somewhat unwillingly. Despite his
+friend's reassuring words, he did not feel that Nancy would be found at
+the House on the Dunes or that she would immediately return. He
+remembered her telling him of her desire to go away. He remembered how
+strangely she had received the declaration of his love, and he feared
+almost as much that she had fled from him, as that the Marquis, weird and
+evil as he began to think him, had any hand in her disappearance.
+
+After Dan's departure in the sleigh, Tom wandered about restlessly. When
+half an hour passed and Frost did not return, he went out to look down
+the road and see if he were coming. The white open country was still and
+empty, and the only sign of life was the great three-masted ship riding
+at anchor in the cove, with seamen lolling about her deck.
+
+As Tom stood under the Red Oak, the Marquis stepped out of the front
+door. He was wrapped in his great coat, about to take his morning walk up
+and down the gallery.
+
+"Why so pensive, Monsieur Pembroke? Is it that you are moved by the
+beauty of the scene--, the land so white, the sea so blue, and the
+_Southern Cross_ shining as it were in a northern sky!"
+
+Tom grunted a scarcely civil reply, and turning away to avoid further
+conversation, strolled down the avenue of maples toward the road.
+
+Monsieur de Boisdhyver raised his eyebrows slightly, and began his walk.
+By and by, still more impatient, Pembroke walked back toward the house.
+If Dan did not return soon, he determined he would go after him. As he
+came up to the gallery again the Marquis paused and spoke to him. "And
+Mademoiselle, she has not returned?" he asked.
+
+"No!" Pembroke replied sharply. "She has gone to the House on the Dunes
+and her brother has driven over to fetch her."
+
+"Ah! pardon," exclaimed Monsieur de Boisdhyver; "I did not know... But it
+is cold for me, Monsieur Pembroke; I seek the fire."
+
+Tom did not reply. The Marquis went inside, and presently Tom could see
+him standing at the window, the marine glass in his hands, sweeping the
+countryside.
+
+Pembroke passed an anxious morning. Ten o'clock came; half-past; eleven
+struck. Nancy had not appeared, or was there a sign of Dan. Unable to be
+patient longer, he set out on the Port Road to meet his friend.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+GREEN LIGHTS
+
+
+The smoke was curling from the chimneys of the House on the Dunes as Dan
+drove up the long marsh road from the beach. He had half convinced
+himself that Nancy would be there, and he hoped that she herself would
+answer his knock. When at length the door was opened it was not by Nancy
+nor by Mrs. Meath, but by a stranger whom he had never seen before.
+
+"Yes?" a pleasant voice questioned, but giving an accent to the
+monosyllable that made Dan think instantly of France.
+
+He found himself facing a charming woman, her bright blue eyes looking
+into his with a smile that instantly attracted him. She was well-dressed,
+with a different air from the women he knew. And she was undeniably
+pretty--of that Dan was convinced, and the conviction overwhelmed him
+with shyness. He stood awkward and ill-at-ease; for the moment forgetting
+his errand. "I suppose," he stammered, "--I beg your pardon--but I
+suppose you are Mrs. Heath's new boarder,--Mrs. Fountain?"
+
+"Yes," replied the strange lady with an amused smile, "that is what I
+imagine that I am called. My name is Madame de La Fontaine. And you--?"
+
+"I?--Oh, yes--of course--I am Dan Frost from the Inn over yonder. I came
+to see Mrs. Meath to ask if my sister Nancy is here."
+
+"Alas!" replied Madame de La Fontaine, "poor Mrs. Meath she this morning
+is quite unwell. She is in her room, so that I am afraid you cannot see
+her. But, I may tell you, there is no one else here, just myself and my
+servants."
+
+"You have not seen or heard anything then of my sister, Nancy Frost?"
+repeated Dan.
+
+"Nancy Frost?--your sister?--No, monsieur. I am arrived only last night
+and have seen no one."
+
+"I had hoped my sister would be here. I am sorry about Mrs. Meath;
+perhaps I can be of some service. If you should need me at any time, I
+can almost always be found at the Inn at the Red Oak."
+
+"The Inn at the Red Oak?" repeated Madame de La Fontaine, "and is
+that near by?"
+
+"It is about a mile and a half by the road," Frost replied, "but you can
+see it plainly from the doorstep here."
+
+The foreign lady stepped out in the crisp February air. "Can you point it
+out to me? I may need your assistance some time."
+
+"You see the woods and the oak at the edge of them," said Dan, pointing
+across the Dunes. "That great tree is the Red Oak, the rambling old
+building beneath it is the Inn."
+
+"Ah! one can see quite plainly from one house to the other, is it not
+so?"
+
+"Quite," Dan replied.
+
+"Thank you, monsieur. I trust there will be no need for assistance. But
+it makes one glad to know where are neighbours, especially--" she added,
+"while poor Mrs. Meath is ill."
+
+As she spoke she turned to the door with the air of dismissing him, but
+on second thoughts she faced him again. "I wonder, Mr. Frost, will you do
+me a favour?"
+
+"I shall be delighted," Dan exclaimed.
+
+"My luggage arrived last night," said Madame de La Fontaine, "upon the
+ship that is at anchor in the bay. They are to bring my boxes ashore. But
+before that I desire to give directions to the captain at the beach, and
+I cannot well do so by my servant. Will you be kind enough to walk with
+me and show me the way?"
+
+Dan forgot about Nancy in his eagerness to assure this unusually
+attractive lady that he was at her disposal. She disappeared within, and
+he heard her give some quick, sharp directions in French to a maid. Then
+in a moment she reappeared on the little porch, bonneted and wrapped for
+a walk in the cold.
+
+As they set out across the Dunes, she kept up a rapid fire of questions
+that might have seemed inquisitive to one more accustomed to the world
+than Dan. He found himself in the course of that quarter of an hour
+talking quite freely with the charming stranger.
+
+"No, I did not make the journey from France in the _Southern Cross_," she
+replied to one of his interrogations, "that would have been
+uncomfortable, I fear. But she brings over my boxes. She is arrived
+somewhat sooner than I was promised."
+
+"Do you expect to signal her from the beach?"
+
+"But yes."
+
+"How will they know who you are?"
+
+"Oh, they have instructions. You must think all this curious!" she
+commented with a smile. "You must think me an odd person."
+
+The possible oddness of Madame de La Fontaine made less impression upon
+Dan than did her charm. He was conversing easily with a very lovely
+woman, and all else was forgotten in that agreeable sensation.
+
+As they emerged from the Dunes upon the little beach of the Cove, Dan
+observed on the deck of the _Southern Cross_ a sailor watching them
+through a glass. Madame de La Fontaine drew her handkerchief from beneath
+her cloak and waved it toward the ship.
+
+"This is the signal," she explained, "that they were instructed to look
+out for. If I am not mistaken Captain Bonhomme will come to the shore for
+my directions. You speak French, monsieur?"
+
+"Not at all," Dan replied.
+
+"Ah!" sighed the lady, "you lose a great deal."
+
+"I might have learned some this winter," said Dan; "for we have had a
+French gentleman as our guest at the Inn."
+
+"Indeed! And who, may I ask, is your French gentleman?"
+
+"His name is the Marquis de Boisdhyver. Do you, by any chance, know him?"
+
+"The Marquis de Boisdhyver?" repeated Madame de La Fontaine. "I know the
+name certainly; it is an old family with us, monsieur. But I do not
+recall that I have ever had the pleasure of meeting any one who bore
+it... But see! they are lowering the boat."
+
+They were now at the edge of the surf. Madame de La Fontaine again waved
+a hand in the direction of the clipper. Dan saw a small boat alongside
+her, into which several sailors and an officer, as it seemed, were
+clambering over the rail. They pushed off, and began to row vigorously
+for the shore.
+
+The French lady stood watching them intently. Within a few moments the
+little boat was beached, the officer sprang out, advanced to Madame de La
+Fontaine, and saluted. She exchanged sentences with him in French of
+which Dan understood nothing. Then the seaman touched his cap, got into
+his small boat, and gave orders to push off.
+
+"He understands no English," remarked Madame de La Fontaine. "I gave
+directions about my boxes. We may return now, monsieur; or doubtless I am
+able to find my way back alone."
+
+"Oh no," exclaimed Dan gallantly, "I will go with you."
+
+The lady smiled graciously. As they walked back across the Dunes, she
+kept up a lively conversation, no longer asking him questions, nor, he
+observed, giving him the opportunity to ask any.
+
+At the door of the House on the Dunes she dismissed him finally. "I am
+but too grateful, Monsieur, for your kindness. I hope that we shall meet
+again while I dwell in your beautiful country. In the meantime, I trust
+you will find your sister."
+
+Dan flushed, how could he have forgotten Nancy! Taking the hand that his
+new acquaintance offered, he hurried away. He met Tom on the Port Road
+about half a mile from the Inn and was truly worried to find that Nancy
+had not returned; he explained briefly his own delay in his expedition
+with the strange lady to the beach.
+
+"It is certainly odd, though perhaps not so odd as stupid, that they
+should have anchored in the Cove just to disembark one woman's boxes. It
+would have been much simpler to go to the Port, as every well-bred
+skipper does, and had the French woman's stuff carted out. At any rate,
+we'll go down this afternoon and have a look at her."
+
+By the time they reached the Inn it was noon, and still there was no word
+of Nancy. The dinner was a silent one, as the Marquis tactfully did not
+disturb his companions' preoccupation, and Mrs. Frost, who was unusually
+nervous, did not appear.
+
+After the meal the two young men started for the beach. At Tom's
+suggestion they got a little dory from the boathouse and rowed out to the
+clipper. The wind had shifted to the southeast, but still there was not
+enough of a sea to give them any trouble; and in a few minutes they were
+under the bows of _The Southern Cross_. Dan hailed a seaman who was
+leaning over the gunwale and watching them with idle curiosity. If the
+man replied in French, it was in a variety of that tongue that Tom's
+limited attainments did not understand, and, annoyed by the
+incomprehensible replies, he asked for "le captaine". At
+length,--possibly attracted by the altercation at the bows,--the
+authoritative-looking person who had come ashore in the morning in
+response to Madame de La Fontaine's signal, now appeared at the gunwale
+and glanced below at the two young men in the dory. His expression
+betrayed no sign that he recognized Frost. Indeed he vouchsafed no
+syllable of reply to the questions Dan asked in English or to those that
+Tom ventured to phrase in Dr. Watson's French.
+
+He was not, they thought, an attractive person; his countenance was
+swarthy, his eyes were black his hair was black, his heavy jaw was
+shadowed by an enormous black mustachio. A kerchief of brilliant red tied
+about his throat gave him the appearance of the matador in a Spanish
+bullfight rather than the officer of an English merchantman. He glanced
+at the dory occasionally, shook his head silently in response to the
+requests to go aboard, and at length when that did not serve to put an
+end to them, he shrugged his shoulders and disappeared. The seaman
+continued to lean over the gunwale and spat nonchalantly as though that
+were the measure of their appreciation of this unasked-for visit.
+
+"I move we skip up the rope," said Tom, "and explain ourselves at close
+quarters."
+
+"Thanks, no," replied Dan. "Either of those two amiable gentlemen
+looks capable and willing of pitching us overboard. The water is too
+cold for bathing."
+
+"Very well," said Tom, "I will yield to your sober judgment for the
+moment; but I propose to see the inside of that ship sooner or later
+unless she weighs anchor in the hour and sails away. But we ought to be
+getting to town to make enquiries about Nancy. For Heavens' sake, Dan,
+where do you suppose she can be?"
+
+They rowed back to the beach, stowed the dory in the boathouse, and set
+out in the sleigh for Monday Port. Diligent enquiry there, in likely and
+unlikely places, proved fruitless. It was nightfall when they returned
+to the Inn.
+
+They were greeted by the Marquis in the bar. "Mademoiselle Nancy, she has
+not been found?"
+
+"No," said Dan. "I take it from your question that she has not come home
+yet either."
+
+"She is not come, no. Perhaps she stays at the House on the Dunes?"
+
+"I do not know," Dan answered tartly. "I expect her every moment, but it
+is idle to conceal from you, Monsieur, that we are much concerned as to
+her absence."
+
+The Marquis grew sympathetic,--optimistically sympathetic. Tom clutched
+at his re-assuring words, but Dan was even more irritated by the silence
+that Monsieur de Boisdhyver had maintained throughout the day.
+
+Directly after supper Dan went into his mother's parlour, leaving the
+others to their own devices. The Marquis settled himself near the fire
+and was soon absorbed in reading an old folio; Tom wandered restlessly
+about, now up and down the long bar, now in the corridors, now on the
+gallery and in the court without.
+
+The night, after the bright day, had set in raw and cold; a damp breeze
+blew from the southwest, and gave promise both of wind and rain. From his
+position under the Red Oak, Tom could see the red and green lights of
+_The Southern Cross_ at her moorings in the Cove below, and across the
+Neck the lighted windows of the House on the Dunes. Over all else the
+night had cast its black damp mantle.
+
+As he stood watching, deeply anxious for the welfare of the girl he
+loved, he noticed a new light appear in one of the upper windows of the
+House on the Dunes--not yellow as is the light of candles, but green like
+the light on the port side of the clipper in the Cove. Had he not seen
+the lights from the other windows he could have thought it was another
+ship on the ocean side of the Neck.
+
+He looked for a long time at the tiny spark in the distance, wondering
+what whim had induced Mrs. Meath to shade her candles with so deep a
+green. As he strolled back toward the Inn, he glanced through the windows
+of the bar where the Marquis still read by the fireside. Suddenly the
+old gentleman, as Tom curiously watched him, laid his book down on the
+table and rose from his chair. He looked about the room and then advanced
+to the window. Tom instinctively slipped behind the trunk of the great
+oak. Monsieur de Boisdhyver stood for several moments peering into the
+darkness. Then he turned away and crossed the room to the door into the
+front hall. It flashed through Tom's mind that possibly the Marquis had
+started on another of his mysterious tours. He ran down again into the
+court far enough from the house to command a view of the entire facade,
+and watched curiously, particularly the north wing. All was dark, save
+for the lights below.
+
+Suddenly he saw the flicker of a candle in one of the windows, not of the
+north wing, but of the south. A moment's glance, and he made sure that it
+was the room occupied as a sleeping apartment by Monsieur de Boisdhyver.
+
+The Marquis was standing by the window, with his face pressed close to
+the pane, peering out into the night. He still held the candle in his
+hand. To Dan's surprise, he placed it carefully on the broad window-sill,
+and drew down the dark shade to within a foot of the sill, blotting out
+all save a narrow band of light. Then the Marquis disappeared for several
+moments into the interior of the room. Dan was about to turn back into
+the house, when again Monsieur de Boisdhyver came to the window. He did
+not raise the shade, but inserted between the windowpane and the candle a
+strip of dark green paper. It was translucent and had the effect of
+sending a beam of green light southward, across the meadows and the
+dunes, to meet--Tom suddenly realized--the rays of the green light from
+the House on the Dunes.
+
+Was it a signal being exchanged, and between whom? The coincidence of
+green lights from the Inn and the House on the Dunes, at the same moment,
+was too marked to be without significance. To what end was the Marquis de
+Boisdhyver exchanging mysterious signals with some one in that lonely
+farmhouse, and what did they mean?
+
+Tom repressed his agitation and remained for some time watching the two
+green lights that glowed toward one another over the dark landscape.
+
+Suddenly the light in the House on the Dunes was extinguished; then,
+momentarily it shone again, but quickly went out and left the great sweep
+of dunes in darkness. Two minutes later the same thing took place in the
+window of the south chamber of the Inn. The light flashed and was gone,
+flashed again and shone no more.
+
+Tom went in, by a rear entrance, to the bar. The Marquis was seated by a
+table, absorbed in reading. He started as Tom entered. "Still no word of
+Mademoiselle?" he piped.
+
+"Still no word, monsieur," Pembroke answered laconically. He also
+seated himself in the candle light and took up the last issue of the
+_Port News_.
+
+"Do you know what has become of Dan?" Pembroke asked presently.
+
+"Monsieur Frost he has been closeted with madame his mother for the past
+half-hour. You have no further plans for seeking Mademoiselle? For
+myself, I grow alarmed."
+
+"I know nothing but what you know, monsieur. Nancy has not returned.
+There has been no word of her. We shall have to wait." With tremendous
+effort to conceal his agitation and annoyance, Tom resumed his reading.
+
+Monsieur de Boisdhyver glanced at him for a moment with a little air of
+interrogation, then shrugged his shoulders slightly and turned again to
+his French paper.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+MRS. FROST'S RECOLLECTIONS OF A FRENCH EXILE
+
+
+After the long day of fruitless search and enquiry for the vanished
+Nancy, supper being over and Tom having gone outside, Dan joined his
+mother in the blue parlour.
+
+Mrs. Frost was weary with waiting and anxiety, but as Dan threw himself
+on a couch near her chair, she watched him patiently.
+
+"There is no clue, Dan?" she ventured at last.
+
+"No clue, mother, not the slightest. Nancy seems to have vanished as
+completely as if she had dissolved into air. As you know, the house has
+been thoroughly searched; the servants carefully questioned; and
+enquiries have been made at every conceivable place in Monday Port. I
+have been to the House on the Dunes, and to the farmhouses on every road
+round about. No one has seen or heard of her. She has taken French leave,
+but for what reason I can't imagine."
+
+"Nancy has not been happy for some time, Dan," said Mrs. Frost.
+
+"No, I have fancied that she was not. But why? Do you suppose she has
+left us deliberately? or--". He paused uncertain whether or not to give
+voice to his suspicions.
+
+"Or what?" asked his mother.
+
+"Or she has been forced away against her will."
+
+"Against her will!" the old lady exclaimed. "Who could have forced her?
+and for what reason? Do you think she may have been kidnapped?"
+
+"Either kidnapped or decoyed away."
+
+"But who could have designs upon Nancy? It is more reasonable to suppose
+that she left of her own accord. I confess that would not altogether
+surprise me."
+
+"I don't know, mother, but I have my fears and suspicions. There may be
+some one who has a deep interest in Nancy, who for reasons of his own,
+which I don't yet understand, may wish to control her movements. I wish
+you would tell me all you know of Nancy's origin. You have never told
+me;--you have never told her, I fancy,--who she really is and how you
+came to adopt her as your own child. I have never been curious to know,
+in fact I have not wanted to know, for she has always been to me
+precisely what a sister of my own blood would be. But now, it may help
+me to understand certain strange things that have happened in the last
+few days."
+
+For a moment Mrs. Frost was silent. "No, I have never spoken to you or
+to Nancy of her early history, Dan; simply because, to all intent she
+has been our own. I have always wished that she should feel absolutely
+one with us; and I think she always has, until this winter. But of late
+I have noticed her discontent, her growing restlessness, and I have
+sometimes wondered if she could be brooding over the mystery of her
+early years. But she has never asked me a direct question; and I have
+kept silent."
+
+"I think now, mother," Dan replied, "it is your duty to tell me all
+you know."
+
+"I have no reason, my dear, to keep anything from you. I should have told
+you years ago, if you had asked me. There is not much to tell. You may
+remember when you were a boy about six or seven years old, a French exile
+came to the Inn, a military gentleman, who had left France in consequence
+of the fall of the great Napoleon."
+
+"Yes, I remember him distinctly," said Dan. "He used to tell stories to
+Tom and me of his adventures in the wars. Tom was speaking of him only
+the other day."
+
+"Well," continued Mrs. Frost, "this gentleman called himself General
+Pointelle. I learned afterwards it was not his real name. Who he actually
+was, I have not the slightest idea. He brought with him a little girl two
+years old, a sweet little black-eyed girl, to whom I, having lost your
+only sister at about that age, took a great fancy. The General also had
+two servants with him, a valet, and a maid. The maid, a pretty young
+thing, took care of the child. They arrived in mid-summer, on a
+merchantman that plied between Marseilles and Monday Port. I do not know
+why General Pointelle came to this part of the country, or why he chose
+to stay at the Inn; at any rate he came, and he engaged for an indefinite
+period the best suite of apartments in the old north wing. He had the Oak
+Parlour--"
+
+"The Oak Parlour!" exclaimed Dan.
+
+"Yes," replied Mrs. Frost, "that was part of the suite reserved usually
+for our most distinguished guests. The general used that for a
+sitting-room and the adjoining chamber as a bed-room. The maid and child
+occupied connecting rooms across the hall. The valet, I believe, was in
+some other part of the house. General Pointelle proved himself a
+fascinating guest, and his little daughter Eloise was a favourite with
+all the household. The maid, pretty as she certainly was and apparently
+above her station, I somehow never trusted. I have always believed that
+the relations between the general and herself were not what they should
+have been. But Frenchmen look at such things differently, I am told; and
+it was not to our interests to be over-curious.
+
+"They had been with us about two months when one fine morning we awoke to
+find that General Pointelle, his valet, and the charming Marie had
+disappeared, and little Eloise was crying alone in her big room. You have
+probably guessed the child was Nancy."
+
+"Yes," Dan agreed, "but do you mean that the father actually
+abandoned her?"
+
+"Practically. He left a note for me and a little bag of gold amounting to
+two thousand dollars to be used for the child. If you will hand me that
+old secretary there, I will show you the letter."
+
+Dan placed the old-fashioned writing-desk on the table beside her, and
+waited anxiously while she fumbled in her pocket for the key. She
+unlocked the desk, and after searching a few moments amongst innumerable
+papers, drew out an old letter. This she unfolded carefully and handed
+to Dan. It was written in English, in a fine running hand. He read it
+attentively.
+
+"_The Inn at the Red Oak, Deal_:
+
+"14 October, '814.
+
+"Madame:
+
+"Political circumstances over which I have no control, patriotic
+considerations which I cannot withstand, demand my immediate return to
+France. In the conditions into which I am about to be plunged the care of
+my dear little daughter becomes an impossibility. Inhuman as it must seem
+to you, lacking in all sense of Christian duty as it must appear to you,
+I entrust, without the formality of consulting you, my beautiful little
+Eloise to your humane and tender care. With this letter I deposit with
+you the sum of two thousand dollars in gold, which will go a little way
+at least to compensate you for the burden I thus unceremoniously, but of
+necessity, thrust upon you. I appeal to and confide in the goodness of
+your heart, of which already I have such abundant testimony, that will
+take pity upon the misfortune of a helpless infant and an equally
+helpless parent. May you be a mother to the motherless, and may the
+Heavenly Father bless you for what you shall do.
+
+"I embark, madame, upon a dangerous and uncertain mission. Should that
+mission prove successful and restore the fortunes of my house, I will
+return and claim my daughter. Should fate overwhelm me with disaster, I
+must beg that you will continue to regard her and love her as your own.
+The issue will have been decided within five years. Permit me to add but
+one thing more,--in the event that I fall in the cause I have embraced, I
+have made arrangements whereby communications shall be established with
+you, madame, that will redound to your own good fortune and that of the
+little Eloise.
+
+"All effort to thwart my plans or to establish my identity in the
+meantime, will, I must warn you, be fruitless.
+
+"Adieu, madame: accept the assurance of my gratitude for all that you
+have already done to sweeten exile and of my earnest prayer for the
+blessing of God upon your great good heart.
+
+"I remain, madame, for the present, but always, under whatever name,
+
+"Your grateful and sincere servant,
+
+"GASTON POINTELLE,"
+
+As Dan, with gathering brows, concluded the reading of this
+extraordinary letter, Mrs. Frost resumed her story.
+
+"We always imagined that the general and his companions had sailed in a
+French vessel that lay at that time in the Passage and left that morning
+at dawn. There was nothing to do but adopt little Eloise Pointelle for my
+own. I changed her name, at your father's suggestion, to Nancy Frost;
+knowing that Pointelle was not the general's real name. For five years we
+looked to see our guest return; and afterwards for years, we hoped to
+receive some communication that would prove, as he promised, of advantage
+to Nancy and ourselves. But from the night General Pointelle left our
+house to this day, I have not heard one word to show that he still
+existed or, indeed, that he ever had existed. We brought Nancy up as our
+own daughter, though, never concealing from her the fact that she was not
+of our blood. Indeed, Dan, I have loved her dearly."
+
+"Certainly, you have always treated her with the greatest kindness. But
+this is quite extraordinary, Mother. I think it will throw light on
+Nancy's present disappearance."
+
+"Do you think the father is alive, Dan? that he has communicated
+with her?"
+
+"Not that, mother; I am really in the dark. But I believe that the
+Marquis de Boisdhyver has some connection with your General Pointelle,
+and that his stay with us this winter has something to do with Nancy."
+
+In response to Mrs. Frost's questions, he told of the meetings of Nancy
+and the marquis, but decided to say nothing about the paper that he had
+found in the Oak Parlour.
+
+"I want you to be careful, Mother, to give no hint to the Marquis that we
+suspect him in any way. Tom and I are trying to solve the mystery, and
+secrecy is of the greatest importance. It is a more complicated business
+than we imagined. I must go now and find Tom. May I keep this letter?"
+
+"Yes, but keep it under lock and key. I have guarded it for sixteen
+years; and it is the only evidence I possess of Nancy's origin."
+
+Dan returned to the bar, where he found the Marquis and Tom still reading
+their papers.
+
+"Ah!" exclaimed Monsieur de Boisdhyver, "I trust, Monsieur Frost, you
+bring us the good news at last of the return of Mademoiselle."
+
+"Unfortunately, I do not, monsieur," Dan replied. "Our efforts to find
+out what has become of her have been entirely unsuccessful. I am very
+anxious, as you may imagine."
+
+"And to what mishap do you attribute Mademoiselle's so unceremonious
+departure?"
+
+"I do not attribute it to any mishap," replied Dan. "I think that my
+sister has gone off on a visit to some friends, and that her messages to
+us have been miscarried. I feel certain that to-morrow we will be
+completely reassured."
+
+"Ah! I hope so with all my heart," exclaimed the Marquis fervently. "It
+is a matter of deep distress to me--monsieur. But if--to-morrow passes
+and still you do not hear--?"
+
+"God knows, sir. We must do everything to find her."
+
+"We shall find her," cried Tom, as he sprang to his feet, unable longer
+to repress his anxiety or his irritation. "And if we do not find her safe
+and well, woe to the man who has harmed her."
+
+"Bravo!" cried the Marquis. "Permit me to adopt those words to express
+my own sentiments. I applaud this determination, monsieur, _de tout
+mon coeur_."
+
+Tom glared at the little old man with an expression of illconcealed rage.
+He was about to blurt out some angry reply, when a warning gesture from
+Dan checked him. Without speaking, he flung himself out of the room.
+
+"Poor Tom!" said Dan quickly, to cover Pembroke's attitude toward the
+Marquis, "this takes him especially hard. He is in love with Nancy."
+
+"_Eh bien_! I sympathize with his good taste. It is that that accounts
+for his vigour of his expressions, so much more _emphatique_ than our
+good host."
+
+"More emphatic, perhaps," said Dan, "though I do not feel less strongly."
+
+The Marquis made a little bow, as he rose to retire. "If, chance,
+monsieur could require my assistance--"
+
+"Thank you," said Dan quickly. "In that case, sir, I shall be only too
+happy to call upon you." He rose also, and courteously held the candle
+till the Marquis had reached the top of the stairs.
+
+Tom waited his friend impatiently in their common chamber. And when at
+last, having closed the house for the night, Dan joined him, he told at
+once of the signals which he supposed had been exchanged between the
+Marquis at the Inn and someone at the House on the Dunes. In return Dan
+repeated what he had learned about Nancy from Mrs. Frost.
+
+"There is no doubt in my mind," said Dan, "that the Marquis knows all
+about Nancy's disappearance and where she is, and further I believe that
+Nancy's disappearance is part of a plot with the Marquis here, Madame de
+la Fontaine at the House on the Dunes, and that schooner riding at anchor
+in the Cove. I have a plan, Tom."
+
+"Go ahead for heaven's sake. If we don't do something, I'll go in and
+choke the truth out of that old reprobate. He applauds my sentiments, eh!
+Good God! If he knew them!"
+
+"Yes, yes," said Dan. "But the time for choking has not come. You nearly
+gave yourself away to-night, you will ruin our plans, and involve Nancy
+in some harm. She is probably in that old villain's power. Now listen to
+me. The first thing to do is to discover Nancy's whereabouts. The second
+is to get at the bottom of the Marquis's plot and the secret of the torn
+scrap of paper. We will find the clew to both, I think, if we can
+discover the meaning of the signals between the Marquis and the lady in
+the House on the Dunes."
+
+"Right!" cried Tom. "But how?"
+
+"One of us must stay at the Inn and watch the Marquis to-night, and the
+other investigate the House on the Dunes. I have already been there and
+made the acquaintance of the lady, so I had better do that, and you stay
+here. Do you agree?"
+
+"Yes, of course; though I envy you the chance to be out and doing."
+
+"You will be doing something here. I want you to hide yourself in the
+hallway near the Marquis's door and watch all night--till dawn anyway.
+He cannot get out of his room without coming into the hall, and we must
+know what he does to-night. If the Marquis can spend a sleepless night,
+we can afford to do so. I don't know what I can do at the House on the
+Dunes but I shall take the pistol, and you can keep my gun. To-morrow I
+will get more arms, for I shouldn't be surprised if we needed them. Is
+everything clear?"
+
+"Perfectly," said Tom. "I'll watch as soon as you are off."
+
+"Good-night, old boy, good luck."
+
+"Good-night," and Dan slipped out of the room and down the dark stairs.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+MIDNIGHT VIGILS
+
+
+As soon as Dan had gone Tom blew out his light and slipped into
+the hallway.
+
+This portion of the Inn was simple in design. A long corridor ran through
+the middle of the house to meet a similar passage at the southern end
+extending at right angles to the main hall. The South Chamber, occupied
+by the Marquis de Boisdhyver, opened into the southwest passage, but the
+door was well beyond the juncture of the two corridors. It was Pembroke's
+intention to conceal himself in the bedroom next the Marquis's chamber,
+from the door of which he could look down the entire length of the main
+hall, and by stepping outside get a view of the branch hallway into which
+the door of this room and that of the Marquis actually opened. A further
+advantage was that the windows of this room, like those of the South
+Chamber, looked out upon the Dunes and the Cove.
+
+As Tom stepped from his chamber, the house seemed utterly deserted; save
+for the roaring of the wind without and an occasional creak or crack in
+the time-worn boards, there were no sounds.
+
+The night was not a dark one, although the wind was rising and rain was
+threatening; for a full moon lurked behind the thick veil of cloud and
+something of its weird weak light relieved the darkness even of the great
+corridor of the Inn.
+
+Tom stole softly down the hallway and gained the room next the Marquis's.
+He took his position in a great chair, which he drew near the open door,
+and laid his gun on the floor near at hand. No one could enter the hall
+without his seeing him. Every few moments he would tiptoe to the doorway,
+thrust his head into the corridor, and listen intently for any sound in
+the South Chamber.
+
+It was a lonely and unpleasant vigil. The night was wild, the storm was
+rising, the old Inn was moaning as though in distress; and, despite his
+natural courage, fantastic terrors and dangers thrust themselves upon his
+excited imagination. He would much have preferred, he felt, to be out in
+the open as Dan was, even facing real dangers and greater difficulties.
+Deeper than by these imaginary fears of the night, he was racked with
+anxiety to know what had become of the girl he loved. Had she been
+decoyed away by the evil genius of the place; was she in danger? Had she
+disappeared of her own free will; and didn't she really love him?
+
+He was not in the least sleepy; but after a while the vigil began to tell
+upon his nerves. He found it almost impossible to sit still and wait,
+perhaps in vain. He made innumerable trips across the room to the windows
+to look out into the bleak night. The landscape was blotted out. Not a
+light showed from the House on the Dunes; only the two lamps on the
+schooner at anchor in the Cove gleamed across the night. Eleven o'clock,
+twelve o'clock struck solemnly from the old clock on the stairs.
+
+Once as he was looking out of the window, it seemed to him that the green
+light on the _Southern Cross_ was moving. But it was impossible that she
+should weigh anchor in the teeth of the rising storm. He was mistaken.
+Nay, he was sure. But it was rising, slowly, steadily, as though drawn by
+an invisible hand, to about the height of the masthead. There at last it
+stopped, and swung to the wind, to and fro, to and fro; high above its
+red companion, high above the deck.
+
+And then, suddenly, as if to answer this mysterious manoeuvre, the green
+light, that earlier in the evening had glowed from a north window of the
+House on the Dunes, now flashed from an east window of the old farmhouse;
+flashed, then gleamed steadily. The light on the _Southern Cross_ was
+lowered slowly, then raised again. The light in the House on the Dunes
+vanished; soon flashed again and then vanished once more. Slowly the
+light in the schooner descended to its normal position. A moment later
+the green light appeared on the north side of the House on the Dunes,
+where it had been earlier, and shone there steadily.
+
+Was it a signal to the Marquis de Boisdhyver? Tom tiptoed to the
+partition between his room and the South Chamber, and put his ear to the
+wall to listen. Not a sound reached him. He turned to the door to go into
+the corridor, and stood suddenly motionless. For there, advancing ever so
+cautiously down the hall, carrying a lighted candle in his hand, was the
+old Marquis. He was clad in night dress and cap, with a gayly-coloured
+dressing-gown worn over the white shirt. Slowly, silently, pausing every
+instant to listen; he stole on, gun in hand, and Tom followed him as
+cautiously and as quietly. Instead of turning to the right at the
+partition that divides the north and south wings of the Inn and going
+down stairs, the Marquis turned to the left, into the short hall that led
+directly to the great chamber occupied by Tom and Dan.
+
+By the time Pembroke in pursuit had reached the turn and dared to peep
+around the corner of the wall, the Marquis was at the door of Dan's room.
+He stood there, ear bent close to the panel, intently listening.
+
+Tom waited breathless. Not satisfied, Monsieur de Boisdhyver turned about
+and went into an adjoining chamber, the door of which stood open.
+Pembroke was about to advance, when the Marquis emerged again into the
+corridor, having left his lighted candle in the empty room. This
+manoeuvre, whatever advantage it had for the Marquis, was fortunate for
+Pembroke, for it left the end of the little hall, where he stood
+watching, in deep shadow. He could now step boldly from behind the
+concealing wall without fear of immediate detection.
+
+Again the Marquis stood and listened at the door of Dan's room, then
+cautiously turned the knob. The door yielded and opened an inch or so.
+Monsieur de Boisdhyver put his ear to the crack. Dissatisfied with the
+absolute silence that must have met him, he pushed open the door a little
+further and thrust his head inside. In a moment he disappeared within.
+
+Tom realized that the Marquis would soon discover the fact that the
+room was empty. He looked about quickly for a place of concealment that
+would command a view of all the halls. Fortunately the partition that
+divided the long corridor between the north and south wings was hung
+with heavy curtains. Deciding instantly, Pembroke slipped behind them,
+and ruthlessly slit an opening in the thick green stuff, through which
+he could peek out. He was just in time, as the Marquis came out of
+their bedroom and softly closed the door. He stood irresolute; then,
+with even greater caution, re-entered the room in which he had left his
+candle. To Tom's chagrin, the candle was suddenly extinguished and the
+Inn left in darkness.
+
+For some moments, there was absolute silence. Then Tom could hear
+faintly,--or feel rather than hear--the Marquis cautiously finding his
+way back. Luckily, the old Frenchman was groping his way next the other
+wall. Pembroke slipped from behind the curtains and stole softly in
+pursuit. As he reached the south end of the corridor, he heard the latch
+of the Marquis's door click softly. Alarmed by discovering that they were
+not in bed, thought Tom, he had abandoned whatever purpose he had in mind
+for his midnight prowl.
+
+After waiting a little and hearing no more, Tom went again to the window.
+The rain had begun now and the wind was blowing a gale. Suddenly Pembroke
+discerned a light shining from the window next the very one from which he
+was peering into the darkness,--the steady glow of a deep red light.
+
+"Another signal!" he murmured; then waited to see if it would be answered
+by the House on the Dunes. Perhaps fifteen minutes passed, and then,
+suddenly, there gleamed through the rain and dark, a tiny bit of red
+flame, just where the House on the Dunes must be. A little later the red
+lamp on the _Southern Cross_ performed a fantastic ascension to what
+Pembroke took to be the masthead.
+
+The red light in the neighbouring window was extinguished. Almost
+instantly the red spark on the Dunes disappeared, and in a few moments
+the schooner's lamp began its descent. Simultaneously they glowed again
+and the ship's light danced upward; then the two red lights on shore
+vanished and the lamp on the _Southern Cross_ sank to its proper place
+and stayed there.
+
+Of one thing Tom was sure: The Marquis, the lady at the House on the
+Dunes, and the skipper of the schooner in the Cove, were in collusion. Of
+another thing he felt almost equally certain: the red light was a signal
+of danger, and the message of danger flashed across the night was the
+fact that he and Dan were not safe asleep in bed.
+
+For a long time he watched, keen with excitement; listened patiently;
+started at every sound. But nothing more unusual did he hear that night
+than the roar of the wind, the dash of the brawling southeaster against
+the panes, and the groans of the old house, shaken by the storm. Toward
+morning he crept back to bed and fell instantly into a deep and
+dreamless sleep.
+
+While Tom was thus watching and sleeping a somewhat different experience
+had fallen to the lot of Dan Frost. He had no definite plan in making a
+midnight visit to the vicinity of the House on the Dunes, but he hoped to
+discover some clue to the surrounding mysteries. From time to time during
+the day he had taken his field glasses to one of the upper rooms of the
+Inn, and scanned the countryside but nothing unusual seemed astir in the
+white world without. The _Southern Cross_ had lain on the surface of the
+little cove all day, swaying with wind and tide, no sign of activity upon
+her decks. It was after ten when he started forth. The night was not
+quite dark, for the full moon was shining somewhere behind the thick veil
+of clouds. Earlier in the evening Dan had intended to go boldly to the
+House itself and demand an interview with old Mrs. Meath; but he
+reflected that he would probably be met with the excuse that Mrs. Meath
+was ill, and he did not know how he could force himself in, particularly
+past the barrier of Madame de la Fontaine's charming manner.
+
+It was an unpleasant walk with the wind in his face, and it was nearly
+eleven before he turned into the long dune road, which branched from the
+Port Road near the Rocking Stone and led directly to the old farmhouse on
+Strathsey Neck. To his chagrin it appeared that all lights had been
+extinguished as if the inmates of the house had gone to bed.
+
+The old farmhouse loomed before him, dark and forbidding. On either side
+there were outhouses, and in the rear quite near the house a barn. There
+was not a tree on the place; indeed, there was little vegetation upon the
+entire Neck, save the grass of the middle meadows which in summer
+furnished scant nourishment for the cattle and a flock of sheep. Now all
+was bleak and covered with snow, and a freshening gale swept out of the
+great maw of the Atlantic.
+
+Keeping close to the fence, Frost began to make a complete circuit of
+the farmhouse. As he turned a corner of the south end, or rear of the
+house, he was relieved to see a light burning in the kitchen. He stole
+cautiously to a position within the shadow of the barn from which he
+could get a glimpse of the interior. In the kitchen standing before a
+deal table, he saw a young woman--not Jane, Mrs. Heath's
+maid-of-all-work, but a stranger,--with her hands deep in a bowl of
+dough. Her back was toward him, but he guessed that she was Madame de la
+Fontaine's maid, whom he had seen in the morning. The door into the
+dining-room beyond stood open, and by craning his neck, Dan could see
+that the room was lighter, but he could not discover whether or not it
+were occupied. The shutters of the dining-room were so closely barred
+and the curtains so tightly drawn that not a ray of light penetrated to
+the outside.
+
+The girl in the kitchen proceeded busily about her work. She was
+evidently engaged, despite the lateness of the hour, in mixing bread.
+
+Once while he waited patiently, to what end he hardly knew, Madame de la
+Fontaine entered the kitchen. She was clad in black and held in her hands
+what Dan took to be a ship's lamp. She stood for a moment in the doorway
+and spoke to the servant maid. The girl stopped her work, and taking a
+strip of paper, ignited it at a candle and lighted the lamp, which Madame
+de la Fontaine held up for her. It glowed instantly with a deep green
+flame, such as Tom had described as shining from a window of the House on
+the Dunes in the early evening.
+
+As soon as her lamp was lighted Madame de la Fontaine left the room.
+Supposing that she was about to give a signal, Dan's heart leaped at the
+prospect of some result to his eavesdropping, and he stole carefully
+around to the front of the house. Presently from an upper window in the
+east side of the house, not the north as he had expected, he saw the
+green light sending forth its message across the Dunes--to whom? Probably
+the signal could be seen from the Inn, but it more likely was intended
+for the schooner in the Cove. Sure enough, as he watched, Dan saw the
+phenomenon of the ascending lamp on the _Southern Cross_, which at that
+identical moment Tom Pembroke was watching from his post of vantage in
+one of the south windows of the Inn.
+
+A little later the signal was removed from the east window of the
+farmhouse and placed in a north window. Dan looked to see the answering
+gleam from the Inn at the Red Oak. But none came. Crouched in a corner of
+the fence, he waited perhaps for half-an-hour.
+
+Suddenly a signal gleamed from the Inn, but this time it was not green as
+he expected, but red. In a few moments a form appeared in the window of
+the farmhouse, and a white hand, which he supposed was that of Madame de
+la Fontaine, took hold of the lamp and reversed it, so that now it showed
+red. The light in the Inn vanished, reappeared, vanished again. The same
+thing happened to the light in the House on the Dunes. And looking
+eastward, Dan saw the ship's red lamp perform its fantastic ascent and
+descent. Soon all was left in darkness. Frost slipped back to his post
+near the barn and looked again into the kitchen.
+
+Madame de la Fontaine was standing in the doorway as before. The maid,
+turning away from the table, came at that moment to the window, and
+raised the sash, as though she were overheated. Presently, leaving the
+window open, she turned to her mistress, and Dan could hear the sharp
+staccato of her voice as she said something in what seemed to him her
+barbarous French.
+
+Impelled by curiosity, he crept closer to the house. He was within six
+feet of the window, standing on the tip of his toes. Suddenly he felt
+himself pinioned from behind; his arms were gripped as in a vise, a hand
+grasped his throat and began to choke him, and a sharp knee was planted
+with terrific force in the small of his back. He made a gurgling sound as
+he went backward, but there was no opportunity for struggling. He
+recovered from the shock to find himself stretched at full length in the
+wet snow. Some one was sitting upon him, struggling to thrust a gag into
+his mouth; some one else was binding his hands and feet.
+
+He could just distinguish, in the sickly moonlight and the dim rays of
+the candle from the kitchen, the faces of his assailants. One was the
+murderous looking Frenchman, the skipper of the _Southern Cross_, the
+other he took to be a common seaman.
+
+Attracted by the scuffle, the French maid had thrust her head out of the
+window and was addressing the combatants in vigorous French. Neither then
+nor later did Madame de la Fontaine appear. When Frost was safely bound
+and gagged, Captain Bonhomme arose, said a few words to his companion,
+and disappeared into the farmhouse. Dan's guard searched him rapidly,
+confiscated his revolver and knife, and then resumed his seat upon his
+legs. Inside the kitchen Dan could hear the sounds of an animated French
+dialogue, in which he imagined from time to time that he detected the
+silvery tones of Madame de la Fontaine's voice. Perhaps fifteen minutes
+elapsed. Captain Bonhomme came out of the house, strode to the spot where
+Dan was lying, and addressed him in excellent English.
+
+"Monsieur; for purposes which it is superfluous to explain, it is decided
+to extend to you for a while the hospitality of my good ship the
+_Southern Cross_--a hospitality, I may say, that your unceremonious
+eavesdropping has thrust upon you. I will release your feet; and then,
+monsieur, you follow my good Jean across the sands. If you are quiet, no
+harm shall come to you. If you resist, _cher monsieur_, it will be of
+painful duty that I entrust the contents of this revolver into--_mais
+non! Vous comprenez, n'est-ce pas?--Bien_!"
+
+He gave a sharp order to the seaman. The handkerchief about Dan's ankles
+was untied, and he was roughly assisted to his feet.
+
+"The snow is wet, eh! Yes, for the good wind is moist. Now, _Allons_!"
+
+Jean led the way, and Dan, deciding that he had no choice in the matter,
+followed obediently. The captain brought up the rear. As they went out
+through the gate, Dan turned for a moment and looked back at the house.
+He could see the French maid still at the kitchen window. At the same
+moment Captain Bonhomme glanced back and ceremoniously raised his hat.
+
+"_Bonsoir, mam'zelle_."
+
+"_Bonsoir, monsieur_," was the sharp reply, and the window was lowered
+with a bang.
+
+They went on in silence across the Dunes to the beach. There, drawn up
+above high water line, they found a skiff. The captain and Jean shoved
+off, sprang in, and the little boat plunged into the combing waves. They
+reached the _Southern Cross_ without misadventure. The captain blew a
+call upon a boatswain's whistle. A rope was lowered and Jean made the
+skiff fast to the ladder at the schooner's side. The captain took out
+his revolver and held it in his hand, while Jean unloosed the cords that
+bound Dan's wrists.
+
+"Now up, _mon ami_."
+
+For a moment Dan thought of risking a scuffle in the unsteady skiff, but
+discretion proved the better part of valour, and he climbed obediently on
+to the deck. The seaman stood close by till the captain and Jean had
+clambered up after him. A few words in French to his men, then Captain
+Bonhomme, beckoning to Dan to follow, led the way down the companion. He
+opened the door of a little cabin amidships and bade Frost enter.
+
+"You will find everything required for your comfort, monsieur," he said,
+"and I trust you will make yourself at home, as you say; and enjoy a good
+night and a sound sleep. We can discuss our affairs in the morning."
+
+And with the words, he closed the door, turned the key in the lock, and
+left Dan to his reflections.
+
+
+
+
+PART III
+
+THE SCHOONER IN THE COVE
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+THE SOUTHERN CROSS
+
+
+Dan spent a miserable night. He had soon satisfied himself that escape
+was impossible. A child could not have squeezed through the port hole,
+and the stoutness of the door--barred, he fancied, as well as locked on
+the outside,--seemed to indicate that this particular cabin had been
+constructed for the purpose of keeping an enemy out of mischief.
+
+Young Frost's reflections, as at length he stretched himself upon the
+bunk, were anything but agreeable. The reconnoitre at the House on the
+Dunes had established nothing but what they already practically
+knew--that the Marquis, the lady, and the captain of the schooner were
+working together. If they were responsible for Nancy's disappearance, as
+Dan was convinced, he had not succeeded in getting a scrap of evidence
+against them. And to cap the climax, he had stupidly allowed himself to
+be captured. The method of his capture seemed to him quite as ignominious
+as the fact.
+
+He was not particularly alarmed for his own safety. He did not doubt that
+eventually he would escape, though at the moment he could not imagine
+how; or, failing in that, he supposed he would be released,--honorably
+discharged, as it were,--when it was too late for him to interfere with
+the designs of the conspirators. And this was the bitterest reflection of
+all: that a carefully-planned conspiracy was on foot, and no sooner had
+he and Tom realized it than through sheer stupidity he must not only make
+it clear to the Marquis and his colleagues that they were being watched,
+but must let himself fall into their power. Poor Tom! thought Dan
+ruefully as he tossed upon the little bunk, there must fall upon him now
+the brunt of whatever was to be done for Nancy's rescue, for the
+thwarting of whatever nefarious designs this gang of French desperados
+were concocting.
+
+Escape! A dozen times and more he sprang from his bed to press his face
+against the thick glass of the little port and to rage futilely that he
+could not elongate his six feet of anatomy, and slip through. In vain he
+would throw his weight against the door, without so much as shaking it.
+And then he would sink back upon the bunk and determine to conserve his
+strength by snatching a bit of sleep. And he would wait--since he must
+wait--till morning.
+
+The gale had lashed itself into a fury; the rain was pouring in
+torrents; and the ship rolled distressingly in the rising sea. It was
+near dawn before Dan succeeded in getting to sleep at all, but from then
+on for several hours he slept heavily. When he awoke the storm, like
+many storms that come out of the south, had exhausted itself. The rain
+had ceased, the wind had fallen, and it was evident from the motion of
+the ship, that the sea was going down. Dan sprang to the port hole and
+peered out, and was thankful to realize that the peep hole of his prison
+gave upon the shore.
+
+Though it had stopped raining, the clouds were still grey and lowering,
+and the morning light was weak and pale. The Dunes, beyond the disturbed
+waters of the little cove, looked dirty and bedraggled. The snow had been
+washed off the hillocks, the little streams that here and there emptied
+into the Cove had swollen to the size of respectable brooks, and the high
+water of the night had strewn the beach with brown tangled seaweed. There
+was no sign of human life in evidence. Dan could just see the upper story
+of the House on the Dunes, but no other habitation save the deserted
+fisherman's huts that straggled along the beach.
+
+His watch showed half-past seven when the evil-visaged Jean unbarred the
+door, opened it about a foot, and thrust in upon the floor a tray of
+food. Dan sprang forward and succeeded in getting his foot into the
+opening, so that Jean could not close the door. He was prepared to fight
+for his liberty. Despite Jean's superior strength, Dan had the advantage
+in that his own body acted as a lever, and for a moment it seemed that he
+was to be successful; but the Frenchman, with a violent execration,
+suddenly let go his hold on the knob, the door swung in, and Dan fell
+back on all fours upon the floor. By the time he had recovered himself
+for another dash, he was confronted by Jean, a disagreeable leer upon his
+unpleasant countenance and a cocked pistol in his hand.
+
+Dan stood in his tracks. "I want to see Captain Bonhomme!" he demanded,
+making up in the tone of his voice for the vigor his movements
+suddenly lacked.
+
+"_Je ne parle pas englais_," was the irritating reply, as Jean, menacing
+the prisoner with the pistol, reached for the door and closed it with a
+snap. Dan had the chagrin of hearing the key turn in the lock and the
+heavy bar fall into place across the panels.
+
+He sat down ruefully, but after a moment or so took up the tray and
+placed it on the bunk before him. He made a bad breakfast off thick
+gruel, black bread and villainous coffee, and then kicked his heels
+impatiently for an hour or more.
+
+Eventually Jean reappeared, this time pistol in hand, and behind him, to
+Dan's relief, Captain Bonhomme. The captain entered the little cabin,
+leaving the door open behind him while Jean stood in the passage on duty
+as guard. The swarthy unattractive face of Captain Bonhomme wore this
+morning an expression of sarcastic levity that was more irritating to
+Frost than its ferocious anger had been the night before.
+
+"_Bon jour, monsieur_," said the captain in a tone of obnoxious
+pleasantry. "I trust the night has gone well with you."
+
+"You will oblige me," snapped Dan for reply, "by omitting your
+hypocritical courtesy. I demand to know what you mean by this
+proceeding,--capturing me like a common thief and imprisoning me on this
+confounded ship?"
+
+Captain Bonhomme's countenance quickly lost its factitious cheerfulness.
+"Monsieur," he replied sharply, "I did not come to you to bandy words. If
+you will reflect on the occupation you were indulging last night at the
+moment we surprised you, you will comprehend that it was certainly to be
+inferred that, if you were not a thief, you were an eavesdropper; which,
+to my way of thinking, is as bad. If you address me again in that
+insulting tone, I shall leave you till such a time as you may be willing
+to listen at least with common courtesy to what I have to say. You are,
+young gentleman, a prisoner on my ship and very much in my power. You
+have grossly offended a distinguished countrywoman who is under my
+protection in your barbarous country. Madame de la Fontaine, however, has
+been good enough to interest herself in your behalf and to beg that I
+shall not unceremoniously pitch you overboard to feed the fishes as you
+so richly deserve."
+
+Dan bit his lips, but for the moment kept silent.
+
+"I am come this morning," continued Captain Bonhomme, "not for the
+pleasure of entering upon a discussion, but to inform you that a little
+later in the morning, when this infernal wind of yours has blown itself
+out, Madame de la Fontaine proposes to come aboard. For reasons of her
+own, she does you the honor to desire a conversation with you. I have to
+ask that you will meet my distinguished patroness as the gentleman you
+doubtless profess to be, and that you will give me your word not to
+attempt to escape while Madame is on board the ship."
+
+"I shall not give my word," protested Dan, "under any circumstances to a
+pirate such as I take you to be."
+
+"_Eh bien, monsieur_; in that case, you will appear before Madame in
+irons. From your window, so admirably small, you will see at what hour
+Madame comes aboard. If in the meantime you have decided to give us your
+word of honour, well and good; if you continue to display your freedom of
+choice by the exercise of your stupidity, also, well and good. And now,
+_an revoir_." Captain Bonhomme smiled grimly, bowed again with insulting
+politeness, and left Dan alone in the cabin.
+
+An hour, two hours passed. The wind had abated, the sun was struggling to
+dissipate the murky bank of cloud that hung from zenith to the eastern
+horizon. From his coign of vantage at the little port hole Dan saw Madame
+de la Fontaine pick her way across the Dunes and come upon the little
+beach. A small boat had put off from the schooner and was being rowed to
+shore by two seamen. The French lady gathered her skirts about her
+ankles, and stepped lightly into the skiff, as the men held it at the
+edge of the surf. The little boat was then pushed off and rowed briskly
+toward the _Southern Cross_.
+
+Half-an-hour passed before the door of Dan's cabin was opened again, and
+Captain Bonhomme, attended by the faithful Jean, reappeared. In the
+skipper's hand was a pair of irons.
+
+"Monsieur," said the captain, holding up the irons, "Madame de la
+Fontaine does you the honour of desiring an interview in the saloon. May
+I venture to enquire your pleasure?"
+
+The ignominy of appearing before his charming acquaintance of the day
+before manacled like a criminal, was too much for Dan's vanity. "I give
+you my word of honour," he said gruffly.
+
+"Ah, monsieur," murmured the captain, "permit me to applaud your good
+taste. But let us be exact: until you are returned to this cabin and are
+again under lock and key, that is to say until Madame is safely upon
+shore again,--you give me your word of honour as a gentleman to make no
+attempt to escape?"
+
+"Yes, yes," said Dan, striving to conceal his irritation. "But spare me,
+I beg, your explanations. As you know, I am practically helpless. We
+understand each other. I trust that Madame de la Fontaine will give me an
+explanation of the outrage that you have refused."
+
+"_Sans doute, sane doute_!" exclaimed the captain. He waved his
+hand toward the door. "_Aprés vous, monsieur_. Our worthy Jean will
+lead the way."
+
+Without more ado they left the little cabin that had served as
+Dan's prison and traversed a narrow passageway aft to the door of a
+little saloon.
+
+In the saloon, seated in a deep arm chair by the side of the table, was
+Madame de la Fontaine. She was clad in some soft green gown, with furs
+about her neck and wrists, and a little bonnet, adorned by the gay
+plumage of a tropical bird, worn close upon her head. At first glance she
+was as bewitchingly beautiful, as entirely charming, as she had seemed to
+Dan the day before. He blushed to the roots of his hair and for the
+moment quite forgot the extraordinary predicament in which he was placed.
+Madame de la Fontaine rose, a bright smile beaming from her soft blue
+eyes, and waited for Dan to approach.
+
+"Good morning, Mr. Frost. This is charming of you. And now, Captain
+Bonhomme, if you will be so kind,--" she turned with her delightful smile
+to the skipper. "_Eh bien_, Jean!" This last remark was uttered in a
+sharp tone of command, very different from the silvery accents in which
+she had spoken to Frost and the captain. Dan wondered at it.
+
+The disagreeable impression was but momentary, for the lady turned
+again to Dan, engaged him with her frank and pleasant glance, and young
+Frost forgot everything in the presence of the most charming woman he
+had ever met.
+
+Captain Bonhomme and his watchdog had disappeared, closing the saloon
+door behind them. Dan and Madame de la Fontaine were alone.
+
+"Will you not seat yourself, monsieur?" she said. "We shall then talk so
+much more at our ease."
+
+"Thank you," Dan murmured vaguely, and advancing a step or two nearer,
+seated himself in the first chair within reach.
+
+"Ah, not there, Mr. Frost," the lady protested with a little laugh
+of amusement. "It will never be that we are able to talk at so
+great a distance." She indicated a more comfortable chair at much
+closer quarters.
+
+Dan obediently changed his seat, and waited for Madame de la Fontaine to
+begin the conversation. But she continued for a moment silently to regard
+him with a naive air of interest and of unconcealed admiration.
+
+"May I ask," said Dan at length, disturbed by this scrutiny, and rising
+to a courtesy that was in reality beyond him, "for what reason you have
+done me the honour to wish to speak with me?"
+
+"_Vraiment_," replied Madame de la Fontaine; "after the events of last
+night there is need that we should have some conversation. You are very
+young and I have reason to be grateful to you for courtesy and kindness,
+so I have yielded to impulse, against my judgment, to interfere with
+Captain Bonhomme who has great anger with you."
+
+"You are very kind, madame," Dan replied with dignity. "I am to infer
+then that my liberty or my further unwarranted imprisonment on this ship
+is to be determined by you?"
+
+"_Mais non, Monsieur_. It is true only that I have a little influence
+with Captain Bonhomme. Last night you were watching me, so it interests
+me to know why."
+
+"I was watching Mrs. Heath's house," Dan answered.
+
+"Ah! but I and my maid were alone in the room into which you so
+unceremoniously looked, monsieur!"
+
+"Yes, madame, but why should you infer that my motive in looking into
+that room was interest in your affairs?"
+
+"I do not altogether assume that, Mr. Frost," the lady protested. "I
+infer simply--but, pardon! you were to say--?"
+
+"Merely to ask you, madame, what Captain Bonhomme proposes to do with me,
+should you not be so good as to use your influence in my behalf?"
+
+For reply the lady shrugged her shoulders a trifle. "I have fear,
+monsieur," she said after a moment, "that Captain Bonhomme will take you
+for a sail, perhaps a long sail, on the _Southern Cross_."
+
+"Then," said Dan, "since there is no doubt in my mind of your influence
+with the captain, I beg that you will have him release me."
+
+"It is that that I desire, monsieur; and yet--?" Madame de la Fontaine
+paused and glanced at her companion with a charming little air of
+interrogation.
+
+"And yet?" repeated Dan, flushing a little as he looked into the lovely
+blue eyes that met his so frankly.
+
+"I confess, monsieur, I must first discover if you are really deserving
+of my efforts. I care to know very much why you watched me last night
+at the House on the Dunes. For what reason do you watch me at midnight?
+a stranger, a woman? Why is it that my affairs give you interest? I
+would know."
+
+Her voice, her countenance expressed now only her sense of injury, an
+injury which, as it were, she was striving not to regard also as an
+insult. Under the persistent searching of her soft glance, Dan felt
+himself very small indeed.
+
+"Answer me, if you please," she said. This time Dan detected just a trace
+of the sharpness with which she had dismissed the obsequious Jean. It
+gave him courage and a sense of protection from the fascination he knew
+that this strange woman was successfully exerting over him.
+
+As he replied, his glance encountered hers with frankness. "Madame de la
+Fontaine, I told you yesterday morning, my sister, Nancy Frost, has
+disappeared. We searched for her all day in vain. Not a trace of her has
+been found. But certain strange events have led me to suspect that
+certain persons have had something to do with her disappearance and must
+know her whereabouts. I will be frank Madame. One of the persons whom I
+so suspect is yourself."
+
+"I!--_mon Dieu_! and why is it that you believe this, Monsieur?"
+
+"I suspect you, madame, because I suspect the Marquis de Boisdhyver."
+
+"Ah! the French gentleman who is staying with you at the Inn at the Red
+Oak, is it not so?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"But--why me?"
+
+"Because, madame, I discovered that you and the Marquis de Boisdhyver
+have been in secret communication with each other."
+
+"_C'est impossible. Te me comprende pas, monsieur_. Will you tell me why
+it is that you can think that this Marquis de Bois--what is the name?"
+
+"De Boisdhyver."
+
+"_Merci_. Why is it that you can think that the Marquis de Boisdhyver and
+I have been in secret communication?"
+
+"Lights, green and red lights, have been used as signals; by the Marquis
+at the Inn; by you, madame, from the House on the Dunes; and by some
+one,--Captain Bonhomme, I suppose,--from this ship."
+
+"Lights, you have seen lights?"
+
+"Several times last night, Madame. My suspicions were aroused. I was
+determined to find my sister. I resolved to learn the meaning of those
+mysterious signals. My method was stupid: I blundered, and as you have
+several times so gently hinted, I am in your power."
+
+For a moment Madame de la Fontaine was silent, then she looked quickly
+up; a half-vexed, half-amused expression curling her pretty lips.
+
+"Look at me, monsieur," she said. "Do you know what you tell me? That I
+am an adventuress?"
+
+Dan flushed suddenly as he met her steadfast gaze. "I have stated only a
+suspicion, madame, to account for my own stupid blundering. But if you
+think that my suspicions are extraordinary, don't you think that our
+present situation and conversation are also extraordinary, and that they
+might rather confirm my suspicions?"
+
+Madame de la Fontaine dropped her eyes with a perceptible frown of
+displeasure; but again she looked up, smiling.
+
+"_C'est drole_, monsieur, but I find you very attractive? You are at once
+so naive and so clever?"
+
+Dan, finding nothing to reply to this unexpected remark, bit his lips.
+
+"Will you not trust me?" she asked him suddenly, and putting out her hand
+she touched his own with the tips of her fingers.
+
+Poor Frost tingled at this unaccustomed contact. "I--I--" he stammered
+awkwardly. "I have certainly no desire to distrust you, madame."
+
+"And yet it is that you do distrust me."
+
+"But what would you have me do?"
+
+"Ah!" Her hand spontaneously closed upon his with a clasp that delighted
+and yet disconcerted him. "I hope that we shall make each other to
+understand."
+
+"What would you have me do?" Dan repeated.
+
+"Monsieur, let me make to you a confession. I understand your
+suspicions; I understand your desire to find if they are true. You have
+reason; Monsieur le Marquis de Boisdhyver and I have exchanged the
+mysterious signals that you have witnessed. Why should I deny that which
+already you know? Monsieur de Boisdhyver and I are occupied with affairs
+of great importance, and it is necessary that all is kept secret. But I
+believe, that it is that I can trust you, monsieur."
+
+"And Nancy--?" exclaimed Dan.
+
+"_Pas si vite, pas si vite_!" said the lady, laughing gayly, Dan's hand
+still in her friendly pressure. "All in good time, _mon ami_. It is
+necessary before I confide in you our little secret that I consult
+Monsieur le Marquis."
+
+Dan's face betrayed his disappointment. "But you do know about Nancy," he
+insisted; "you will assure me--"
+
+"Of nothing, dear boy,"--and she withdrew her hand. "But it had been so
+much better for us all if only Monsieur le Marquis had at the first
+confided in you."
+
+Madame de la Fontaine had risen now and was holding out her hand to
+say good-bye.
+
+"It is necessary that I return to the shore. I will see Monsieur le
+Marquis this afternoon, and immediately afterward--"
+
+"But, madame, surely," Dan exclaimed, "I am to accompany you?"
+
+"Ah! monsieur," she replied with a charming little smile, "for the
+present you must rest content to be _mon captif_. We must quite clearly
+understand each other before--well. But you are too impetuous, Monsieur
+Dan. For the moment I leave you here."
+
+"But Madame de la Fontaine," cried Dan, "I cannot consent--"
+
+"No! no!" she said, as with a gay laugh, she placed a cool little hand
+across his mouth to prevent his finishing his sentence.
+
+What absurd impulse fired his blood at this sudden familiarity, Dan did
+not know; but, quite spontaneously, as though all his life he had been in
+the habit of paying such gallantries to charming ladies, he kissed the
+soft fingers upon his lips. Madame de la Fontaine quickly withdrew them.
+
+"Ah, _mon ami_;" she said, "I expected not to find here _une telle
+galanterie_."
+
+"I have offended you," murmured Dan, blushing furiously.
+
+"Ah, _pas du tout_!" said Madame de la Fontaine. "You are a dear boy,
+monsieur Dan, and I--well, I find you charming."
+
+As she said this, to Dan's complete confusion, Madame de la Fontaine
+lightly brushed his cheeks with her lips, and passing him rapidly, went
+out of the door of the saloon.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+TOM TURNS THE TABLES
+
+
+Owing to his long watch during the greater part of the night, Pembroke
+slept heavily until late the next morning. Indeed, he did not waken until
+Jesse, alarmed that neither Dan nor he had appeared, knocked on their
+door. He sprang up quickly then, and began to dress hastily. Dan's bed
+had not been slept in, and Tom wondered how the night had gone with him.
+
+In a few moments he was down stairs and in the breakfast-room. He found
+the Marquis de Boisdhyver already at table, pouring out his coffee, which
+Deborah had just placed before him. Mrs. Frost had not appeared.
+
+Tom murmured an apology for being late, and delayed the black woman, who
+was on the point of leaving the room, by a question.
+
+"Where is Mr. Dan?"
+
+"Sure an, Mass' Tom, I ain't seen him dis mornin' yet. Ain't he done
+over-slept hisself like you?"
+
+"No; but I dare say he is about the place somewheres. All right, Deb;
+bring my breakfast quickly, please."
+
+"You will pardon me," said Monsieur de Boisdhyver, "for having begun
+without you?"
+
+"Oh, certainly," said Tom; "Don't know what was the matter, but I slept
+unusually soundly last night; that is, after I got to sleep, for the
+storm kept me awake for hours."
+
+"_Et moi aussi_," said the Marquis. "What wind! I am but thankful it
+has exhausted itself at last. And Monsieur Frost, he has also
+over-slept, you say?"
+
+"No. He got up early without disturbing me. I guess he will be in any
+minute now."
+
+The Marquis stirred his coffee and slowly sipped it.
+
+Tom made a hasty breakfast, and then went outside to reconnoitre. He
+discovered no trace of his friend. There was but one inference in his
+uneasy mind: Dan had met with some misadventure at the House on the
+Dunes. At last, after wandering about aimlessly for some time, he decided
+to tell Jesse of his uneasiness.
+
+"If Mr. Dan is not back by dinner time, I shall go over to the House on
+the Dunes and try to find out what has become of him. Heaven knows what
+has become of Miss Nancy. I don't like that schooner, Jess, and its ugly
+crew, lying there in the Cove. It's all a darn queer business."
+
+"They're certainly a rough-looking lot, Mr. Tom, as I saw when I was on
+the beach yesterday. And she don't appear to have any particular business
+anchoring there. I hope they've nothing to do with Miss Nancy's and Mr.
+Dan's being away."
+
+"I don't know, Jess, what to think. But listen here I want you to go into
+the Port this morning and engage Ezra Manners to come out here and stay
+with us for a week or so. Don't tell him too much, but I guess Ezra won't
+balk at the notion of a scrap. Bring him out with you, and offer to pay
+him enough to make sure of his coming. And I want you to go to Breeze's
+on the Parade and get some guns and powder, enough to arm every blessed
+soul of us in the Inn. Charge the stuff to me. And be careful how you
+bring it back, for I don't want any one here to know about it,
+particularly the old Frenchman. Understand? You ought to get back by
+dinner-time, if you start at once. I'll stay here till you return."
+
+"I'll start right off, sir. Guess I'll have to drive, for the
+rain'll have washed the snow off the roads. I'll be back by halfpast
+twelve, Mr. Tom."
+
+"All right," said Pembroke. "Be sure not to let any one know what you
+are doing."
+
+"Sure I won't, sir. I've been pretty much worried myself about Miss
+Nancy. Didn't seem a bit like Miss Nance to go off without sayin' a word
+to anybody.
+
+"Well, hurry along now, Jesse."
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+Tom's next task was to try to explain to Mrs. Frost without alarming her.
+She happily jumped to the idea that Dan had gotten trace of Nancy, had
+gone to fetch her, and would return with her before nightfall. So Tom
+left her quite cheerfully knitting in her room for the day.
+
+From time to time during the morning Tom wandered into the bar always to
+find Monsieur de Boisdhyver absorbed in his writing before the fire. The
+morning passed--a long restless morning for Pembroke--and nothing had
+happened. Dan had not returned. He tried to think out a plan of action.
+He went into the north wing of the Inn and barricaded the door leading
+from the bowling alley into the hallway. He made sure that all other
+doors and windows were fastened, and he put the key of the door that
+opened from the bar into the old wing into his pocket. Then he looked at
+the doors and windows in the south wing.
+
+About noon, as he was standing at an upper window anxiously scanning the
+landscape for any sign of his friend, Tom saw the Marquis, wrapped in his
+great black cloak, emerge from the gallery, go down the steps by the Red
+Oak, and walk rapidly down the avenue of maples. He went along the Port
+Road, to the point where a little road branched off and led to the beach
+of the Cove; here he turned and walked in the direction of the beach.
+With the field glass Tom could follow him quite easily as he picked his
+way through the slush.
+
+Beyond, on the waters of the Cove, the _Southern Cross_ rode at anchor. A
+small boat had put off from the schooner, two seamen at the oars, and a
+woman seated in the stern. The boat reached the shore, the lady was
+lifted out upon the sands, the men jumped in again, pushed off and rowed
+briskly back to the schooner. Tom could not distinguish the lady's
+features, but from the style of her dress, cut in so different a fashion
+than that the ladies of Caesarea were wont to display, and from the
+character of her easy graceful walk, he judged that that was the Madame
+de la Fontaine, of whom Dan had told him the day before. The lady,
+whoever she might be, advanced along the beach and turned into the road
+down which the Marquis de Boisdhyver was going to meet her. Tom could see
+her extend her hand, and the old gentleman, bending ceremoniously, lift
+it to his lips. Then leaning against a stone wall beside a meadow of
+bedraggled snow, they engaged in animated conversation. The lady talked,
+the Marquis talked. They shrugged their shoulders, they nodded their
+heads, they pointed this way and then that. Poor Tom felt he must know
+what was being said. At last, their conference ended, they parted as
+ceremoniously as they had met, the lady starting across the Dunes and the
+Marquis retracing his steps toward the Inn.
+
+In the meantime, fortunately before the Marquis reached the Port Road,
+Jesse had returned, accompanied by the able-bodied Ezra Manners, and
+laden with the supply of arms and ammunition that Pembroke had ordered.
+
+Within half-an-hour Tom and Monsieur de Boisdhyver were seated together
+in the dining-room.
+
+"Ah, and where is Monsieur Dan?" asked the Marquis, with an affectation
+of cheerfulness. "Is he not returned?"
+
+"Not yet, monsieur," Tom replied grimly.
+
+"But you have heard from him?"
+
+"Oh, yes," was Tom's answer; "I have heard from him of course."
+
+"And from Mademoiselle Nancy, I trust, also?"
+
+"Yes, from Nancy also."
+
+"Ah, I am so relieved, Monsieur Pembroke. I was most anxious for their
+safety. One knows not what may happen. We shall have a charming little
+reunion at supper, _n'est-ce pas_?"
+
+"Delightful," said Tom, but in a tone of voice that did not encourage the
+Marquis to ask further questions or to continue his comments.
+
+After dinner, Tom slipped the field glass beneath his jacket, and ran
+upstairs to take another view of the countryside. To his great
+satisfaction he saw a dark spot moving across the snowy dunes and
+recognized the lady of the morning. Apparently she was on her way to the
+Cove again.
+
+He took a loaded pistol, ran down stairs, gave Jesse strict orders to
+keep his eye on the Marquis, saddled his horse, and galloped off madly
+for Mrs. Meath's house.
+
+When he reached the gate of the farmhouse, Tom hitched his horse to the
+fence, went rapidly up the little walk, and knocked boldly and loudly on
+the front door. Repeated and prolonged knocking brought no response. He
+tried the door and found it fastened. He walked about the house. Every
+window on the ground floor was tightly closed and barred. There was no
+sign of life. He knocked at the door of the kitchen, but with no result.
+He tried it, and found it also locked. Determined not to be thwarted in
+his effort to see Mrs. Meath, he kicked vigourously against the door with
+his great hob-nailed boots. Unsuccessful in this, he detached a rail from
+the top of the fence and used it against the door as a battering-ram. At
+the first crash of timbers, the sash of a window in the second story,
+directly above the kitchen, was thrown open, and a dark-eyed,
+dark-haired, excessively angry-looking, young woman thrust her head out.
+
+"_Qui va la_?" she exclaimed.
+
+"Well," said Tom, smiling a little in spite of himself, for the young
+woman was in a state of great indignation. "I want to see Mrs. Meath. I
+may say, I am determined to see Mrs. Meath."
+
+"_Peste! Je ne parle pas anglais_!" snapped the damsel.
+
+"Very well then, mademoiselle, I'll try you in French," said Tom. And in
+very bad French indeed, scarcely even the French of Dr. Watson's school
+for the sons of gentlemen, Pembroke repeated his remarks.
+
+"_Je ne comprend pas_," said the young woman.
+
+Tom essayed his explanation again, but whether the youthful female in the
+window could or would not understand, she kept repeating in the midst of
+his every sentence "_Je ne parle pas anglais_," till Tom lost his temper.
+
+"_Bien_, my fine girl," he exclaimed at last; "I am going to enter this
+house. If you won't open the door, I will batter it down. Understand?
+_Comprenez-vous_?"
+
+"_Je ne parle pas anglais_."
+
+"As you will." He raised the fence-rail again and made as if to ram the
+door. "_Ouvrez la porte_! Do you understand that?"
+
+"_Bete_!" cried the girl, withdrawing her head and slamming down
+the window.
+
+Tom waited a moment to see if his threats had been effective, and was
+relieved by hearing the bar within removed and the key turned in the
+lock. The door was opened, and the young woman stood on the sill and
+volleyed forth a series of French execrations that made Tom wince,
+though he did not understand a word she was saying. Despite her protests,
+he brushed her aside and stalked into the house. He went rapidly from
+room to room, upstairs and down, from garret to cellar, the girl
+following him with her chorus of abusive reproach. She might have held
+her peace, thought Tom, for within half-an-hour he was convinced that
+there was not a person in the House on the Dunes save himself and his
+excited companion. All he discovered for his pains was that old Mrs.
+Meath was also among the missing.
+
+"_Ou est Madame Meath_?"
+
+"_Madame Meath! Que voulez vous? Je ne connais pas Madame Meath_...." And
+infinitely more of which Tom could gather neither head nor tail.
+
+Satisfied at last that there was nothing to be gained by further search
+or parley with the woman, he thanked her civilly enough and went out. He
+unhitched his horse, vaulted into the saddle, and dashed back, as fast as
+his beast could be urged to carry him, to the Inn. He was certain now
+that the schooner held the secret of his vanished friends, and it
+occurred to him to play their own game and turn the tables on Monsieur
+the Marquis de Boisdhyver.
+
+Arrived at the Inn, Tom turned his horse, white with lather, over to
+Jesse; made sure that the Marquis was in the bar; and then, with the help
+of Manners, rapidly made a few preparations.
+
+It was about five o'clock when, his arrangements completed, he returned
+to the bar, where Monsieur de Boisdhyver was quietly taking his tea. Tom
+bowed to the old gentleman, seated himself in a great chair about five
+feet away, and somewhat ostentatiously took from his pocket a pistol,
+laid it on the arm of his chair, and let his fingers lightly play upon
+the handle. The old marquis watched Pembroke's movements out of the
+corner of his eye, still somewhat deliberately sipping his tea. Manners,
+meanwhile, had entered, and stood respectfully in the doorway, oddly
+enough also with a pistol in his hand.
+
+Suddenly Monsieur de Boisdhyver placed his teacup on the table, and
+leaning back in his chair, surveyed Tom with an air of indignant
+astonishment.
+
+"Monsieur Pembroke," he said, "to what am I to attribute these so unusual
+attentions? Is it that you are mad?"
+
+"You may attribute these unusual attentions, marquis, to the fact that
+from now on, you are not a guest of the Inn at the Red Oak, but a
+prisoner."
+
+"Ah!" exclaimed the Marquis with a start, as he made a spasmodic motion
+toward the pocket of his coat. But if his intention had been to draw a
+weapon, Tom was too quick for him. The Marquis found himself staring into
+the barrel of a pistol and heard the unpleasant click of the trigger as
+it was cocked.
+
+The old gentleman paled, whether with fright or indignation, Tom was not
+concerned to know. "You will please keep perfectly still, marquis."
+
+"Monsieur Pembroke," exclaimed the old gentleman, "_C'est_ abominable,
+outrageous, _Mon Dieu_, what insult!"
+
+"Manners," said Tom, "kindly search that gentleman and put his firearms
+out of his reach."
+
+"Monsieur, _c'est extraordinaire_. I protest."
+
+"Quick, Ezra," replied Tom, "or one of us is likely to know how it feels
+to have a bullet in his skin. Up with your hands, marquis."
+
+Monsieur de Boisdhyver obeyed perforce, while Manners quickly searched
+him, removed a small pistol from his coat pocket and a stiletto from his
+waistcoat, and handed them to Tom.
+
+"I thought as much," said Pembroke, slipping them into his pocket. "Now,
+sir, you will oblige me by dropping that attitude of surprised
+indignation."
+
+"Monsieur," said the Marquis, "What is it that you do? Why is it that you
+so insult me?"
+
+"Monsieur, I will explain. You are my prisoner. I intend to lock you up
+safely and securely until my friend and his sister return, unharmed, to
+the Inn. When they are safe at home, when Madame de la Fontaine has taken
+her departure from the House on the Dunes, and when the _Southern Cross_
+has sailed out of the Strathsey, we shall release you and see you also
+safely out of this country. Is that clear?"
+
+"_Mais, monsieur_--"
+
+"I am quite convinced that you know where Nancy is and what has happened
+to Dan. As my friends are probably in your power or in the power of your
+friends, so, dear marquis, you are in mine. If you wish to regain your
+own liberty, you will have to see that they have theirs. Now kindly
+follow Manners; it will give him pleasure to show you to your apartment.
+There you may burn either red or green lights, and I am sure the
+snowbirds and rabbits of Lovel's Woods will enjoy them. After you,
+monsieur."
+
+"Sir, I refuse."
+
+"My dear marquis, do not make me add force to discourtesy. After you."
+
+The Marquis bowed ironically, shrugged his shoulders, and followed
+Manners up the stairs. He was ushered into a chamber on the west side of
+the Inn, whose windows, had they not been heavily barred, would have
+given him a view but of the thick tangles of the Woods.
+
+"I trust you will be able to make yourself comfortable here," said Tom.
+"Your meals will be served at the accustomed hours. I shall return myself
+in a short time, and perhaps by then you will have reconciled yourself to
+the insult I have offered you and be prepared to talk with me."
+
+With that Tom bowed as ironically as the Marquis had done, went out and
+closed the door, and securely locked and barred it outside. Monsieur de
+Boisdhyver was left to his reflections.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+MADAME DE LA FONTAINE
+
+
+For several hours after his return to the little cabin Dan had ample
+leisure in which to think over his extraordinary interview. There could
+be no doubt that the conspirators, for such he had come to call them to
+himself, were determined and desperate enough to go to any lengths in
+accomplishing their designs. Whether his suspicions and activity in
+seeking Nancy had precipitated their plans, his unexpected capture seemed
+to embarrass his captors as much as it did himself. At least, he gathered
+this from Madame de la Fontaine's conversation. Whatever might be the
+motive of the lady's proposed confidence, poor Frost could see nothing
+for it but to await their disclosure and then seize whatever advantage
+they might open to him. Notwithstanding the fact that Dan had cautioned
+himself against trusting the flattery of his charming visitor,
+notwithstanding that he told himself to be forewarned, even by his own
+suspicions, was to be forearmed, he was in reality unconscious of the
+degree to which he had proved susceptible to the lady's blandishments, if
+indeed she had employed blandishments and had not merely given him the
+evidence of a good heart upon which his youth and naiveté had made a
+genuine impression.
+
+Dan's experiences with girls up to this time had been limited. His
+emotional nature had never, as yet, been deeply stirred. But no one could
+be insensible to Madame de la Fontaine's beauty and charm, and her
+delightfully natural familiarity; and, finally, her fleeting kiss had
+seemed to Dan but evidence of a warm impulsive heart. To be sure, with
+all the good will in the world, he could not acquit her of being
+concerned in a mysterious plot--indeed, had she not admitted so
+much?--though, also, he must in justice remember that he knew very little
+of the nature of the plot in question.
+
+As he paced restlessly back and forth the length of his prison, he tried
+to think clearly of the accumulating mystery. Was there a hidden treasure
+and how did the Marquis know about it? What part had the _Southern Cross_
+to play with its diabolical looking captain, and what could have become
+of Nancy? Then why had Madame de la Fontaine--but again his cheek would
+burn and remembrance of the bewitching Frenchwoman blotted out all else.
+
+At half-past twelve Captain Bonhomme appeared again. This time he invited
+Dan to partake of luncheon with him on the condition once more of a
+parole. And Dan accepted. He and the Captain made their luncheon
+together, attended by the faithful Jean; and, though no mention was made
+to their anomalous position, the meal was not altogether a comfortable
+one. Captain Bonhomme asked a great many questions about the country, to
+which Frost was inclined to give but the briefest replies; nor, on his
+part, did he show more disposition to be communicative in response to
+Dan's questions about France. Jean regarded the situation with obviously
+surly disapproval. When the meal was finished, Frost was conducted back
+to his little cabin.
+
+About two o'clock he saw the small boat put off for shore, and glancing
+in that direction, he was relieved to see Madame de la Fontaine already
+waiting upon the beach. Within half-an-hour he was again in her
+presence in the Captain's saloon, where their conversation had taken
+place in the morning.
+
+The lady received him graciously. "Ah! monsieur Dan, I fear you have had
+a weary day of it; but it was impossible for me to return sooner."
+
+"It is very kind of you to return at all," replied Dan, gallantly enough.
+
+"Now, Monsieur, you are anxious, I know, that I keep my promise of
+the morning."
+
+"Most anxious," said Dan.
+
+"Without doubt. Come here, my friend, sit near me and listen attentively
+to a long story."
+
+"You have consulted with the Marquis?"
+
+"_Mais oui_. It was difficult, but I have brought him to my way of
+thinking. I am certain that it was an error in the first place not
+taking you into our confidence. _Eh bien_! Tell me, do you know how
+your foster-sister came to be in the charge of your mother at the Inn
+at the Red Oak?"
+
+"Yes, I know what my mother has told me. The child was abandoned to her
+rather than left in her charge."
+
+"_Mais non_" said Madame de la Fontaine; "General Pointelle was impelled
+to act as he did by the strongest motives,--nothing less than the
+tremendous task, undertaken for his country, to liberate the Emperor
+Napoleon from Elba. General Pointelle was a soldier,--more, he was a
+maréchal of the Empire; the greatest responsibilities devolved upon him.
+It was impossible for him to be burdened with a child."
+
+"But why, madame, did he not take my mother into his confidence?"
+
+"Secrecy was imperative, monsieur. Even to this day, you do not know who
+General Pointelle actually was. His was a name well-known in France,
+glorious in the annals of the Empire; a name, too, familiar to you in a
+somewhat different connection. 'General Pointelle' was the
+_nom-de-guerre_, as it were, of François, Marquis de Boisdhyver, maréchal
+de France."
+
+"François! you say, _François_!" exclaimed Dan.
+
+"_Mais oui_, monsieur; but that should hardly astonish you so much as the
+fact that he was a Boisdhyver. Why are you surprised?"
+
+"Simply, madame," exclaimed Dan hastily, "by the fact that it is the same
+name as that of our Marquis."
+
+"Not quite," corrected the lady; "our Marquis--as you say--is
+Marie-Anne-Timélon-Armand de Boisdhyver, the General's younger brother."
+
+"Ah! and therefore Nancy's uncle?"
+
+"Yes, the uncle of Nancy Frost, or of Eloise de Boisdhyver."
+
+"I see," said Dan. "I begin to see."
+
+"_Eh bien_, monsieur. General Pointelle--the maréchal de
+Boisdhyver,--left the Inn at the Red Oak upon a mission for the Emperor,
+then at Elba. _Hélas_! that mission ended with disaster after the Hundred
+Days; for, as you know, the Emperor was sent in exile to St. Helena; and,
+as you may not know, the Maréchal de Boisdhyver was killed on the plains
+of Waterloo. _Allons_; when he left Deal, he concealed in a hidden
+chamber, which one enters, I believe, from a room you call the Oak
+Parlour, a large treasure, of jewels and gold. This treasure, saved from
+the _debacle_ in France, he had brought with him to America, and he hid
+it in the Inn, for the future of his little daughter Eloise. You remember
+that your mother was to hear something of advantage to her and the child,
+did not the General return. It was the secret of the treasure and the
+directions to find it. Well, Monsieur, at Waterloo, you must know, the
+Maréchal and his brother, the present Marquis, fought side by side.
+François de Boisdhyver fell, nobly fighting for the glory of France;
+Marie-Anne had the good fortune to preserve his life, but was taken
+prisoner by the English. Before the Maréchal received his death wound,
+the two brothers spoke with each other for the last time. In that
+moment, monsieur, the Marquis François revealed to the Marquis Marie-Anne
+that he had abandoned his daughter in America and that he had concealed
+in your old inn a treasure sufficient to provide for her future. He
+charged his brother to go to America, if he survived the battle; claim
+the little Eloise; rescue the treasure, and return with her to France and
+restore the fallen fortunes of the House of Boisdhyver.
+
+"It took the Marquis Marie-Anne a long time to carry out his brother's
+dying injunctions," said Dan.
+
+"Ah! but yes. You do not realize that the Marquis Marie-Anne, after the
+fall of Napoleon, spent many years in a military prison in England, for I
+have already told you that he fell into the hands of the enemy on the
+field of Waterloo. When at last he was released, he was aged, broken, and
+in poverty. His brother, in those dreadful moments on the battlefield,
+had been able to give him but the briefest description of the Inn at the
+Red Oak and the hidden treasure. He did not tell him where the treasure
+was, but only how he might obtain the paper of instructions which the
+Maréchal had concealed in a curiously-carved old cabinet in the Oak
+Parlour. The Maréchal, monsieur, loved the mysterious, and chose the
+device of tearing into two parts this paper of directions and concealing
+them in different hiding-places of the cabinet. Those directions, after
+many years, grew vague in the younger brother's memory.
+
+"_Eh bien_, the Marquis was at last able to make the journey to this
+country. You must remember he had nothing wherewith to prove his story,
+if he gave you his confidence at once; and so, he decided, to investigate
+quietly alone. But he won the confidence of Mademoiselle Nancy,--that is,
+of his niece, Eloise de Boisdhyver,--and revealed to her the secret of
+her identity and the mysterious story of the treasure. You follow me in
+all this, Monsieur Dan?"
+
+"Perfectly, madame," Frost replied. "But as yet you have told me nothing
+of your own connection with this strange history."
+
+"Pardon, dear boy," rejoined Madame de la Fontaine; "I was about to do
+so, but there is so much to tell. My own connection with the affair is
+quite simple. I am an old friend, one of the oldest, of Monsieur le
+Marquis de Boisdhyver, and, when I was a very young girl, I knew the
+Maréchal himself. It has been my happiness to be able to prove my
+friendship for a noble and a fallen family. One day last summer, Monsieur
+de Boisdhyver told me his brother's dying words, and it was I, Monsieur
+Dan, who was able to give the money for this strange expedition. The poor
+Marquis had lost quite all his fortune."
+
+"I understand," said Frost. "But, yet, madame, I do not see the necessity
+for the secrecy, the mystery, for these strange signals at night, for
+these midnight investigations, for this schooner and its rough crew, for
+Nancy's disappearance, for my own imprisonment here."
+
+"Please, please," murmured Madame de la Fontaine, as she held up her
+hands in smiling protest. "You go too fast for me. _Un moment, mon ami,
+un moment_. It was sixteen years ago that the Maréchal de Boisdhyver was
+a guest at the Inn at the Red Oak. You forget that the Marquis de
+Boisdhyver had no proof of his right to the treasure, save his own story,
+save his account of his brother's instructions on the field of Waterloo.
+By telling all he might have awakened deeper suspicions than by secrecy."
+
+"That, I must say," Dan interrupted, "would hardly be possible."
+
+"So!" exclaimed Madame de la Fontaine, with an accent of displeasure.
+"_Ecoutez_! Monsieur le Marquis was to come a month in advance, as he did
+come; take up his quarters at the Inn; reconnoitre the ground; and win,
+if possible, the confidence and aid of mademoiselle. He fortunately
+succeeded in this last, for he found it otherwise impossible to enter
+into the old wing of the Inn and examine the Oak Parlour. With the
+assistance of Eloise, this was accomplished at last, and the paper of
+directions was found; at least, found in part.
+
+"Then I, having impressed the services of Captain Bonhomme and his ship
+the _Southern Cross_, set sail and arrived at the House on the Dunes only
+a few days ago, as you already know. The signals that you saw flashing at
+night were to indicate that all was well."
+
+"The green light, I suppose," commented Dan, "was to indicate that; and
+the red--"
+
+"Was the signal of danger. Because the Marquis discovered last night that
+you were not in the house; he flashed the warning that made Captain
+Bonhomme go to the House on the Dunes. Quite recently the manners of your
+friend, Mr.--eh--?"
+
+"Pembroke?"
+
+"Yes, Mr. Pembroke--led the Marquis to believe that he was being
+watched.
+
+"I understand," said Dan, "but nothing you have told me so far, madame,
+accounts for Nancy's disappearance, and I am as anxious as ever to know
+where she is."
+
+"Mademoiselle is perfectly safe, Monsieur Dan; I assure you. She left the
+Inn because she had fear of betraying our plans, particularly as she
+loved your friend, Mr. Pembroke."
+
+"It is still strange to me, madame, that Nancy should distrust her oldest
+and best friends. But now you will let me see her?"
+
+"Of course I shall soon, very soon, my dear boy. I have told you all, and
+now you will aid me to find the treasure that is your foster-sister's
+heritage, will you not?"
+
+"Why certainly I want Nancy to have what is hers," replied Dan.
+
+"Bravo, my friend. We are to count you one of us, I am sure."
+
+"Just a moment," said Dan, resisting the temptation to touch the little
+hand that had been placed impulsively upon his arm. "May I ask one more
+question?"
+
+"A thousand, my dear, if you desire."
+
+"Why then, since until last night everything has gone as you planned it,
+why has not the treasure already been discovered?"
+
+"Because, _mon ami_; the Marquis has only been able to visit the Oak
+Parlour at night. And also it was decided to wait until I arrived."
+
+"With the schooner?" suggested Dan.
+
+"With the schooner, if you will. And you may remember that it was only
+the day before yesterday that I reached your so hospitable countryside."
+
+"Ah! I understand; so then all that you desire of me, madame, is that I
+shall permit the Marquis or anyone else whom you may select for the
+purpose, to make such investigation of the Oak Parlour as is desired."
+
+"Yes, my friend; and also there is yet another thing that we desire."
+
+"But suppose, madame, that I cannot agree to that?"
+
+"Ah! _cher ami_, but you will. I confess--you must remember that the
+Marquis de Boisdhyver has been a soldier--that my friends have not agreed
+with me entirely. It has seemed to them simpler that we should keep you a
+prisoner on this ship, as we could so easily do, until our mission is
+accomplished. But,--I like you too much to agree to that."
+
+Dan flushed a trifle, but he was not yet quite sure enough to fall in
+entirely with his charming gaoler's suggestions. "Madame de la Fontaine,"
+he said after a moment's reflection, "I am greatly obliged to you for
+explaining the situation to me so fully. I shall be only too happy to
+help you, particularly in anything that is for the benefit of Nancy."
+
+"I was sure of it. Now, my friend, there is a service that you can
+immediately render."
+
+"And that is?" asked Dan.
+
+"To entrust to me the other half of the paper of directions written by
+François de Boisdhyver, which you found in a secret cubby-hole in the
+old cabinet."
+
+"What makes you think that I was successful in finding that, when the
+Marquis failed?"
+
+"Because, at first having forgotten his precise directions after so many
+years, the Marquis could not find the fourth and last hiding-place in the
+cabinet, in which he knew the Maréchal had placed the other half of the
+torn scrap of paper. Another time he did find the cubby-hole, and it was
+empty. So knowing he was watched by you and Mr. Pembroke, he decided
+that you must have found it. Is it not so, that you have it?"
+
+"It is certainly not in my possession at this moment," said Dan.
+
+"No, but you have it?"
+
+"And if I have?"
+
+"It is necessary for our success."
+
+"Then, my first service, is to put you into complete possession of
+the secret?"
+
+"If you will so express it."
+
+"Very well, madame, I will do so; but, on one condition."
+
+"And what is that, my friend?"
+
+"That I be allowed to see Nancy, and that she herself shall ask me to do
+as you desire."
+
+For a moment Madame de la Fontaine was silent. "_Eh bien_," she said at
+last, "you do not trust me?"
+
+"But, dear madame, think of my situation, it is hard for me."
+
+"Ah! I know it, believe me. _C'est difficile_. But I hoped you would
+trust me as I have you."
+
+"Indeed, madame," exclaimed Dan, "I must try to think of everything,
+the mystery, this extraordinary mission upon which you are engaged, the
+fact that I am quite literally your prisoner. When I think about you,
+I know only you are beautiful, that you are lovely, and that I am happy
+near you."
+
+She looked at him for a moment with a glance of anxious interrogation,
+as if to ask were it safe for her to believe these protestations. "You
+say, my friend," she asked at length, "that you care a little for me,
+for just me? _C'est impossible_. If Claire de la Fontaine could
+believe that, understand me, monsieur, it would be very sweet and very
+precious to her."
+
+"I do care," cried Dan.
+
+"Ah!" she exclaimed. "You have touched my heart. I am not a young girl,
+_mon ami_, but I confess that you have made me to know again the dreams
+of youth."
+
+"Only let me prove that I care," cried Dan, considering but little now to
+what he committed himself.
+
+"Let me prove," cried she, "that I too believe in you. I must first see
+the Marquis, and then, tonight, if it can be arranged, you shall receive
+from Eloise de Boisdhyver's own lips the request I have made of you. But
+if, for any reason, this cannot be arranged for to-night, you must be
+patient till morning; you must trust me to the extent of remaining on
+this ship. I cannot act entirely on my own judgment, but I assure you
+that in the end my judgment will prevail. And now, _au revoir_."
+
+She placed her hand in his, and responded to the impulsive pressure with
+which he clasped it. Their eyes met; in Dan's the frankest expression of
+her conquest of his emotions; in her's a glance at once tender and sad,
+above all a glance that seemed to search his spirit for assurance that he
+was in earnest. Suddenly fired by her alluring beauty, Dan drew her to
+him and bent his head to hers.
+
+"Ah! my friend," she murmured, "you are taking an unfair advantage of the
+fact that this morning I too rashly yielded to an impulse."
+
+"I cannot help it," Dan stammered. "You bewitch me." He bent lower to
+kiss her cheek, when he suddenly thrilled to the realization that his
+lips had met hers.
+
+A moment later Madame de la Fontaine was gone and Captain Bonhomme had
+reappeared in the doorway.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+IN THE FOG
+
+
+Tom Pembroke was as good as his word. He returned to the little room, in
+which he had confined the Marquis, within an hour after he had left him.
+It was then nearly supper-time and dusk was fast settling upon the gloomy
+countryside. An unwonted calm had fallen upon land and sea after the
+sharp blow of the previous night, but the sky was still gray and there
+was promise of more rain, if not of wind.
+
+To Tom's indignation and alarm, though scarcely to his surprise, there
+had been no sign or word from Dan or Nancy. Shortly after he had left the
+Marquis, he saw, by aid of the field-glass, Madame de la Fontaine,
+attended by two seamen, leave the schooner and return to the House on the
+Dunes. He smiled a little as he thought of the account the lively young
+maid-servant would give of his recent visit. But withal, he felt very
+much as if he were playing a game of blind man's buff and that he was
+"it." He was impatient for his interview with the Marquis, though he was
+but little hopeful that an hour's confinement would have been sufficient
+to bring the old gentleman to terms. Nor was he to be surprised.
+
+He found Monsieur de Boisdhyver huddled in a great arm chair near the
+fire that that been kindled on the hearth of his prison. The Marquis
+glanced up, as Tom entered, but dropped his eyes at once and offered him
+no greeting. Tom placed his candle on the table and, drawing up a chair,
+seated himself between the Marquis and the door.
+
+"Well, sir," he said at last, "as I promised you, I have returned within
+an hour. Have you anything to say to me?"
+
+"Have I anything to say to you!" exclaimed the Marquis. "For why,
+monsieur? If I venture to express my astonishment and indignation at the
+way I am treated, you subject me to a barbarity that could be matched no
+where else in the civilized world than in this extraordinary country. My
+life is menaced with firearms. My protests are sneered at. I have left
+but one inference--you have gone mad."
+
+"No, marquis," said Pembroke, "I am not mad. I am simply determined that
+the mysteries by which we have been surrounded and of which you are the
+center, shall cease. You have a free choice: put me in the way of getting
+my friend and his sister back to the Inn, or resign yourself to a
+prolonged confinement in this room."
+
+"But monsieur I have nothing to communicate to you concerning the
+disappearance of your friends."
+
+"Pardon me, marquis," returned Pembroke; "you have much to communicate to
+me. Perhaps you are not aware that I know the motive of your coming to
+the Inn at the Red Oak; that I know the reason for your prolonged stay
+here; that I know of the influence that you have acquired over Nancy
+Frost; and that I have been a witness of your midnight prowlings about
+the Inn. Nor am I in ignorance of your connection with the
+rascally-looking captain of the schooner at anchor in the Cove and with
+the mysterious woman, who has taken possession of the House on the Dunes.
+I am convinced that you know what has become of Dan as well as what has
+happened to Nancy. And, believe me, I am determined to find out."
+
+"_Bien_!" exclaimed Monsieur de Boisdhyver, "permit me to wish you good
+luck in your undertaking. I repeat, Monsieur Pembroke, I have no
+information to give to you. I do not know to what extent I have been
+watched, but I may say with truth that my actions do not in the least
+concern you."
+
+"They concern my friends," said Tom. "Dan, as you know, is more to me
+than a brother; and as for his sister Nancy, I hope and expect to make
+her my wife."
+
+"In that case," rejoined the Marquis with ill-concealed irony, "I may be
+permitted to offer to you my congratulations. But even so, monsieur,
+there is nothing that I can do to facilitate your matrimonial plans."
+
+"You refuse then to come to terms?" asked Pembroke.
+
+The Marquis raised his hands with a gesture of despair. "What shall I
+say, monsieur? If you insisted upon my flying from here to yonder beach,
+I might have all the desire in the world to oblige you, but the fact
+would remain that I was without the means of doing so. Since you are so
+little disposed to accept my protestations, I will no longer make them,
+but simply decline your proposal. And, pardon me, but so long as I am
+submitted to the indignity of this confinement, it would be a courtesy
+that I should appreciate if you would spare me your company."
+
+"Very good," said Tom. "Your meals will be served regularly; and you may
+ask the servant for anything necessary. I shall not visit you again until
+you request me to do so."
+
+"_Merci_," said the Marquis drily. He rose from his seat as Dan turned
+toward the door, and bowed ironically.
+
+Pembroke went downstairs to have his supper with Mrs. Frost. He said what
+he could to pacify her, not altogether with success, for as darkness fell
+the old lady became increasingly apprehensive.
+
+"I know you are anxious, Mrs. Frost," said Tom, "but you must not worry.
+Try to believe that all will come out right. I am going out after supper,
+but I shall leave Jesse and Ezra on guard, and you may be sure everything
+will be safe."
+
+It was some time before Mrs. Frost would consent to his leaving the Inn.
+If she had yielded to her inclinations, she would have spent the evening
+in hysterics with Tom at hand to administer comfort. Pembroke, however,
+deputed that office to black Deborah, and immediately after supper set
+about his business.
+
+He gave the necessary instructions to Jesse, Ezra and the maids, saw that
+everything was closely locked and barred, supplied himself with arms and
+ammunition, and slipped out into the night. Having saddled Fleetwing, he
+swung himself on the young hunter's back, and trotted down the avenue to
+the Port Road. The night was intensely dark and still. The moon had not
+yet risen, and a thick fog rolled in from the sea, shrouding the
+countryside with its impenetrable veil.
+
+At the Beach Road Pembroke dismounted, tied his horse to a fence rail,
+and proceeded thence on foot toward the Cove. Stumbling along through the
+heavy sand, he made his way to the boathouse at the northern end of the
+little beach. There he ventured to light his lantern, unlocked the door
+and stepped within. On either side of the entrance were the two sailboats
+that he and Dan used in summer and to the rear was the old-fashioned
+whaleboat with which they did their deep fishing. Over it, in a rudely
+constructed rack, was the Indian birch-bark canoe which Dan had purchased
+in the mountains a few years before. As the sea had fallen to a dead
+calm, he decided to use this canoe, which he could paddle quite
+noiselessly, and pulling down the little craft from its winter
+resting-place, he carried it to the water's edge. The sea, so angry the
+night before, now scarcely murmured; only a low lazy swell, at regularly
+recurring intervals, slapped the shore and hissed upon the sands. Tom
+pushed the nose of the canoe into the water, leaped lightly over the
+rail, and with his paddle thrust it off the beach. He was launched
+without mishap.
+
+Not the faintest gleam of light showed the position of the _Southern
+Cross_, but estimating as well as he could the general direction, he
+paddled out through the enshrouding fog. For ten minutes or so, he pushed
+on into the strange, misty night. Then suddenly he found himself
+alongside an old fisherman's yawl that had been rotting all winter at her
+moorings, and he knew from her position that he could not be far from the
+_Southern Cross_.
+
+A few more strokes to leeward, and a spot of dull light broke through the
+darkness. He headed directly for it. To his relief it grew brighter; when
+suddenly, too late to stop the progress of his canoe, he shot under it,
+and the bow of his craft bumped with a dull thud against the timber side
+of the schooner. Its dark outlines were just perceptible above him; and
+at one or two points there gleamed rays of light in the fog, green and
+red from the night lamps on the masthead, and dull yellow from the port
+holes in the rear. A second after the contact the canoe receded, then the
+wash of the sea drew her toward the stern. Another moment and Pembroke
+felt his prow scrape gently against the rudder, which prevented further
+drifting. Apparently, since he heard nothing from the deck above, he had
+reached his goal without attracting attention.
+
+He kept perfectly still, however, for some little time, until satisfied
+that there was no one at the wheel above, he pushed the canoe softly back
+to the rope ladder, that a day or so before he had seen hanging over the
+side. It was the work of a moment to make his little boat fast to the
+lower rung. Then slipping over the rail, he climbed stealthily up till
+his head protruded above the gunwhale. The immediate deck seemed
+deserted; but he was sure that some one was keeping the watch, and
+probably near the point where he was, that is to say, where access to the
+deck was easiest. But the fog and the darkness afforded him protection,
+as he climbed over the gunwhale and, without making a sound, moved toward
+the stern, crossed the after-deck and found the wheel. As he had
+surmised, it was deserted. The watch evidently was forward. Beneath him,
+sending its ineffectual rays obliquely into the fog, shone the light from
+the little cabin below.
+
+Determined to get a look through the port, he climbed over the gunwhale
+again, fastened a stern-sheet about his waist and to a staple, and at the
+risk, if he slipped or if the rope gave way, of plunging head foremost
+into the icy waters of the Cove, he let himself down until his head was
+on a level of the port.
+
+Through the blurred glass he peered into a tiny cabin. There with back
+toward him, just a few feet away stood Nancy Frost. He steadied himself
+with an effort, and looking again saw that she was alone. A moment's
+hesitation, and he tapped resolutely on the pane with his finger tips. At
+first Nancy did not hear, but presently, aroused by the slight tapping,
+she glanced with a frightened expression toward the door, and stood
+anxiously listening. Tom continued to knock on the window, not daring to
+make it louder for fear of being heard above. The alarm deepened on
+Nancy's face, and in sheer pity Tom was tempted to desist; but at that
+instant her attention was riveted upon the spot whence the tapping came.
+At last, still with the expression of alarm on her face, she came slowly
+toward the port. She hesitated, then pressed her face against the pane
+over which Tom had spread his fingers. At whatever risk, of frightening
+her or of danger to himself, as she drew back, he pressed his own face
+against the outside of the little window glass. She stared at him as if
+she were looking at a ghost.
+
+He moved his lips to form the word "Open." At length, in obedience to
+this direction, Nancy cautiously unloosened the window of the port and
+drew it back.
+
+"Good heavens, Tom!" she whispered. "Is it you?"
+
+"Yes, yes," Pembroke whispered back. "But for God's sake, speak softly.
+I'm in a devilishly unpleasant position, and can hang here but a minute.
+Tell me quickly--are you here of your own free will or are you a
+prisoner?"
+
+"How can you ask?" she exclaimed. "For the love of heaven, help me
+to escape."
+
+"That's what I'm here for," was Toms reply. "Now, quick; are you only
+locked in or barred as well? I've brought some keys along."
+
+"Only locked, I think."
+
+"Where does that door lead?"
+
+"Into a little passage off the companion-way. Give me your keys. They
+have but one man on watch. The captain is on shore to-night, apt to
+return at any moment. And you?"
+
+"I have a canoe tied to the ladder on the shore side. If the captain
+returns, I'm caught. Try those keys." He slipped into her the bunch of
+keys that he had brought along. "I was sure you were here, and against
+your will."
+
+"Dan, too, is locked up on board."
+
+"I thought as much; but you first. Hurry."
+
+Nancy sprang to the door, trying one key after another in feverish haste.
+At last, to Tom's infinite relief, he saw the key turn in the lock, and
+the door open.
+
+"On deck," she whispered; "at the ladder. I'm not likely to be caught."
+Then she waved her hand and disappeared into the passage.
+
+Tom pulled himself up, unloosed the rope, and stole along the rail toward
+the ladder. For a few moments, which seemed like a thousand years, he
+stood in anguished suspense waiting for Nancy. Then suddenly she came out
+of the mist and was at his side. They stood for a moment like disembodied
+spirits, creatures of the night and the fog. The next instant a hand shot
+out and grasped the girl's shoulder.
+
+"_Peste! mam'zelle_," a rough voice hissed, "_ou allez-vous_?"
+
+As the man spoke Tom swung at him with the butt of his revolver, and
+without a murmur the figure fell to the deck.
+
+"Quick now," Pembroke whispered, "down the ladder."
+
+Instantly Nancy was over the rail and Tom was climbing down after her. As
+he knelt in the bow and fumbled with the painter, the plash of oars
+sounded a dozen yards away.
+
+"_Ho! Croix du Midi_!" came a hail through the fog.
+
+"Curse it!" muttered Tom; "the painter's caught." He drew out his knife,
+slashed the rope that bound them to the schooner, got to his place
+amidships, and pushed the canoe free. The lights of a small boat were
+just emerging from the dark a dozen feet away. But the canoe slid by
+unobserved, in the fog. They heard the nose of the small boat bump
+against the schooner; then an oath, and a man's voice calling the watch.
+
+"They've found my painter," whispered Tom, "and in a second they'll find
+the sailor on their deck."
+
+The lights of the _Southern Cross_ grew dim; vanished; the sound of angry
+voices became muffled. They were half-way to shore when they heard the
+noise of oars again. Evidently some one had started in pursuit. For a
+moment Tom rested, listening intently; but the sound was still some
+distance away. Probably, he thought, they were heading directly for the
+shore, whereas he, at a considerable angle, was making for the boathouse
+at the north end of the beach. In ten minutes he had beached the canoe
+within a rod of the point from where he embarked.
+
+"I can't hear them," whispered Tom, after a moment's listening. "They've
+made for shore down the beach. They can't find us in the dark. I've got
+Fleetwing tied to a fence in the meadow yonder. Come."
+
+It was the work of a moment to stow the canoe, lock the boathouse, run
+across the sands, and mount Nancy in front of him on the back of his
+trusty hunter. A second later Fleetwing's hoofs were striking fire on the
+stones that the high tides had washed into the beach road. In the
+distance there was a cry, the sharp ring of a pistol shot; but they were
+safe on their way, racing wildly for the Inn. The escape, the adventure
+had thrilled Nancy. Tom's arms were around her, and her hands on his that
+grasped the bridle. At last they were in the avenue, and Tom pulled in
+under the great branches of the Red Oak. He slipped from the back of the
+horse and held out his arms to Nance.
+
+"We are safe, girl," he whispered.
+
+"You are sure? Oh, thank God, thank God! Quick, let us in! Can they be
+following?"
+
+"No, no. They won't follow. It's all right. Easy,--before we go
+in--please, dear--once--kiss me."
+
+"Oh, Tom, Tom," she whispered, as she lifted her face to his.
+
+"I have you at last, sweetheart," he murmured. "You love me?"
+
+"Ah!" she cried, "with my whole heart and soul."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+NANCY
+
+
+It was after eleven before Nancy rejoined Tom in the bar. She seemed more
+like herself as she slipped in and took her accustomed seat beside the
+blazing logs.
+
+"Oh, I am all right, thank you," she insisted, declining the glass of
+wine that Pembroke poured out for her. "I wonder, Tom, if you killed that
+poor wretch on the deck?"
+
+"Don't know," Tom answered. "I hope so. But what the deuce, Nance, has
+been happening? I can wait till to-morrow to hear, if you are too tired
+to tell me; but I do want awfully to know."
+
+"I am not tired," Nancy replied, "and I shan't sleep a wink anyway. If I
+close my eyes I'll feel that hand on my shoulder and hear the thud of
+that man's fall on the deck. I can't bear to think that this miserable
+business will bring bloodshed."
+
+"But tell me, Nance, who is the Marquis--what happened--how did they get
+you away?"
+
+"Ah! the Marquis," exclaimed Nancy with a shudder. "I am glad you have
+him locked up. I can't bear to think of him, but I'll tell you what I
+know. You remember, Tom, he tried to be friends with me from the first;
+and he seemed to fascinate me in some unaccountable way. Then he
+questioned me about my identity, and began to drop hints that he knew
+more than he cared to let appear to the others, and my curiosity was
+excited. I have always known of course that there was some mystery about
+my being left to Mrs. Frost's care. She has been kind, good, all that she
+should be; but she wasn't my mother. Well, the Marquis stirred all the
+old wonder that I had as a child, and before long quite won my
+confidence. He told me after a time that I was the daughter of his elder
+brother, the Marquis François de Boisdhyver, who in 1814 stayed here at
+the Inn at the Red Oak under the name of General Pointelle. I was not
+altogether surprised, for I have always believed that I was French by
+birth, and his assertion that I was his niece seemed to account for his
+interest in me. My father, if this Marquis de Boisdhyver was my father,
+was one of the Emperor Napoleon's marshals and was a party to the plot to
+rescue the Emperor from Elba. He was obliged to return to France, and
+since it was impossible for him to take me with him--I was a little girl
+of two at the time--he left me with Mrs. Frost. Thinking of my future, he
+hid a large treasure in some secret chamber off the Oak Parlour."
+
+"I know," Tom interrupted.
+
+"What? You mean there is a treasure?"
+
+"I think there is; but go on. I will tell you afterwards."
+
+"Then he set sail for France, took part in the great events of the
+Hundred Days, and fell at Waterloo. It was on the field of Waterloo that
+he met his younger brother--our Marquis--and told him about the child
+left in America and about the treasure hidden in the Inn at the Red Oak."
+
+"Well," Nancy continued, having answered a volley of questions from Tom,
+"the Marquis--I mean our old Marquis--was held for many years in a
+military prison in England. Upon his release he was poor and unable to
+come to America to seek his little niece and the fortune that he believed
+to be hidden in the Inn. Tom, at first I didn't believe this strange
+story about a treasure; but gradually I became convinced; for the Marquis
+believed in it thoroughly, and for proof of it he showed me a torn scrap
+of paper that he found in the cabinet in the Oak Parlour the day after
+he arrived at the Inn. It seems the old marshal had torn the paper in two
+and hidden the parts in different cubby-holes of that old Dorsetshire
+cabinet. He couldn't find an opportunity to hunt for the other half, so
+at last he persuaded me to help him in the search. Of course, he swore me
+to secrecy, and I was foolish enough to give him my promise. I got the
+key to the bowling alley from the ring in Dan's closet, and two or three
+times went with him at night after you all were asleep."
+
+"I know you did," said Tom.
+
+"How could you know it--has the Marquis--?"
+
+"No, Dan and I saw you. I woke one night, happened to look out of the
+window and saw the Marquis going into the bowling alley. It was
+moonlight, you know. I woke Dan, we slipped down stairs, saw a light in
+the Oak Parlour, peeped through the shutters and saw you and the old
+Marquis at the cabinet."
+
+"When was this?" asked Nancy.
+
+"The night--before our walk in the woods."
+
+"And you did not tell me! What could you think I was doing?"
+
+"I didn't know. How could I know? It was that which first made me
+suspicious of the Marquis. We made up our minds to watch. But that day in
+the woods--well, I forgot everything in the world but just that I was in
+love with you."
+
+"Ah!" exclaimed Nancy, flushing.
+
+"But tell me," asked Tom, "What did you find in the cabinet?"
+
+"We found nothing. I began to think that the Marquis had deceived me. I
+didn't know what to believe. I didn't know what to do. I threatened each
+day to tell Dan. And then came our walk. When we came in that night--do
+you recall?--we found the Marquis sitting in the bar before the fire, and
+I went over and spoke to him."
+
+"Yes, I remember," Tom answered.
+
+"I had made up my mind that I must take you all,--mother and you and
+Dan,--into my confidence. I told him so. He begged me to wait until the
+next day and promised that he would tell you then himself. I was
+beginning to think he might be a little crazy, that there was no hidden
+treasure."
+
+"I'm sure there is," said Tom. "There was another half of that torn scrap
+of paper, hidden in one of the cubby-holes of the old cabinet. Dan found
+it. It's the directions, sure enough, for finding the treasure."
+
+"Ah! but what has it all to do with me?"
+
+"I don't know; something I fancy, or the Marquis would not have told you
+as much as he did. But here is the other half. You can tell whether it is
+part of the paper he showed you."
+
+He drew from his pocket the yellowed bit of paper and spread it on the
+table before them. Nance bent over and examined it closely.
+
+"I believe it is the other half. See, it is signed ...'ançois de
+Boisdhyver'. I remember perfectly that the signature of the other was
+missing, except for the letters 'F-r-' It is, it must be, François de
+Boisdhyver, who, the Marquis says, was my father. Then look! here are the
+words '_trésor', 'bijoux et monaie_'. I remember in the other there were
+phrases that seemed to go with these--'_trésor caché' 'lingots d'or_'.
+Ah! do you suppose there really is a fortune hidden away in the Inn all
+these years?"
+
+"Yes, I think so," said Tom. "And I feel certain you have some claim to
+it, or they wouldn't have made such an effort to involve you in their
+plot. But, please, Nance, tell me the rest. You got to the night of your
+disappearance."
+
+"It was a horror--that night!" exclaimed Nancy. "It must have been about
+twelve that the Marquis came and tapped at my door. For some reason I was
+restless and had not gone to bed. I slipped out into the hall with him
+and we came in here to talk. He begged me to make one more expedition
+with him to the Oak Parlour. But I refused--I insisted that I must tell
+Dan. Suddenly, Tom, without the slightest warning, I felt my arms
+pinioned from behind, and before I could scream, the Marquis himself had
+thrust a handkerchief in my mouth, and I was gagged and bound. Everything
+was done so quickly, so noiselessly, that not a soul in the house could
+have heard. They carried me out of the Inn and into the avenue of maples.
+From there on I was forced to walk. We went to the beach. I was put into
+a small boat and rowed out to the schooner, and there they locked me up
+in the little cabin in which you found me."
+
+"What time did you say it was?" asked Tom.
+
+"About twelve--after midnight, perhaps; I don't know for sure. The
+Marquis went to the beach with us and pretended to assure me that I was
+in no danger; that I would be released in good time, and that he would
+see me again. As a matter of fact for three days I have seen no one but
+Captain Bonhomme. He brought my meals, and was inclined to talk about
+anything that come into his head. Last night he told me that Dan was also
+a prisoner on the _Southern Cross_, if that would be of any consolation
+to me. Then he said he had to go ashore and locked me up. Several times I
+was taken on deck for exercise, but the captain kept close by my side."
+
+"And you haven't seen or heard from the Marquis again?"
+
+"No! nor do I want to see him. But, Tom, what is the meaning of it all?
+How are we going to rescue Dan? What are we going to do? We can't keep
+the Marquis a prisoner indefinitely."
+
+Tom gave her his own version of the last few days. He told her of what he
+and Dan had suspected, of Dan's proposal to visit the House on the Dunes
+and his disappearance, of his own investigations there, and his
+determination to play the same game with the Marquis as hostage.
+
+"But what to do next, I confess I don't know," he continued. "At present
+it seems to be stale mate. For to-night, any way, we are safe, I think,
+for I shall take turns in keeping guard with Jesse and Ezra. I have the
+idea that to-morrow, when they realize something has happened to the
+Marquis we shall hear from Madame de la Fontaine or from the schooner. In
+the morning I am going to take you and Mrs. Frost to the Red Farm for
+safety. I intend to fight this thing out with that gang, whatever
+happens. If there is treasure, according to their own story, it belongs
+to you. If I don't get a proposal from them, I shall make the offer,
+through Madame de la Fontaine, of exchanging the Marquis for Dan.... But
+I must go now, Nance, and relieve one of the men. We must all get some
+sleep to-night, and it's already after twelve. Go to bed, sweetheart, and
+try to get some rest. One of us will be within call all night, watching
+right there in the hall; so don't be afraid."
+
+"It was my wretched curiosity that got us into all this trouble."
+
+"Not a bit of it! The trouble was all arranged by the Marquis; he was
+simply waiting for the schooner. Now that I have you back again, my heart
+is fairly light. We shall get Dan to-morrow, I am sure."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+MADAME AT THE INN
+
+
+In the morning the fog lifted, a bright sun shone from a cloudless sky,
+the marshes sparkled with pools of melted snow and the long-promised thaw
+seemed definitely to have set in. Soon after breakfast Tom sent Jesse to
+the Red Farm with directions for the people there to make preparations
+for Mrs. Frost and Nancy, whom he proposed to drive over himself in the
+course of the afternoon.
+
+About the middle of the morning as Tom and Nancy stood on the gallery
+discussing the situation, Tom drew her attention to a small boat putting
+off from _The Southern Cross_. They examined it through the glass, and
+Nancy recognized the figure of Captain Bonhomme sitting amongst the
+stern-sheets.
+
+"You may depend upon it," said Tom, "he is going to the House on the
+Dunes to report your disappearance to Madame de la Fontaine. The most
+curious thing about this whole business to me is the mixing-up in it of
+such a woman as Dan described Madame de la Fontaine to be."
+
+"It is strange," Nancy agreed, "but from the bits of talk I've overheard,
+I should say that she was the prime mover in it all."
+
+"In a way I am rather glad of that," said Tom, "for with a woman at the
+head of things there is less chance of their resorting to force to gain
+their ends. But the stake they are playing for must be a big one, and
+already they have done enough to make me sure that we should be prepared
+for anything. I shall be surprised if we don't get some communication
+from them to-day. The old Marquis counts on it, or he would not keep so
+still. At any cost, we must get Dan back."
+
+They talked for some time longer and were about to go in, when Nancy
+pointed to a horse and rider coming down the avenue of Maples. A
+glance sufficed to show that the rider was a woman. Nancy slipped
+inside to escape observation, while Tom waited on the gallery to
+receive the visitor.
+
+As the lady drew rein under the Red Oak, he ran down the steps, and
+helped her to dismount. Her grace, her beauty, her manner as of the
+great world, made him sure that he was in the presence of Madame de
+la Fontaine.
+
+"Good morning, sir," said the lady, with a charming smile, "if I mistake
+not, I have the pleasure of addressing Mr. Pembroke?"
+
+"Yes, madam,--at you service," replied Tom.
+
+"I am come on a strange errand, monsieur; as an ambassadress, so to say,
+of those whom I fear you take to be your enemies."
+
+"You are frank, madam. I believe that I am speaking with--?"
+
+"Madame de la Fontaine," the lady instantly supplied. "Events have so
+precipitated themselves, monsieur, that pretense and conventionality were
+an affectation. I am informed, you understand, of your brilliant rescue
+of Mademoiselle Eloise de Boisdhyver."
+
+"If you mean Nancy Frost by Mademoiselle Eloise de Boisdhyver, madam,
+your information is correct. I gathered that you had been told of
+this, when I saw Captain Bonhomme make his way to the House on the
+Dunes this morning."
+
+"Ah! What eyes, monsieur!" exclaimed the lady. "But I have grown
+accustomed to having my privacy examined over-curiously during the few
+days I have spent on your hospitable shores. _Mais pardon_--my purpose in
+coming to the Inn at the Red Oak this morning was but to request that my
+name be conveyed to Monsieur the Marquis de Boisdhyver."
+
+"You mean, madam, that you wish to see the Marquis?"
+
+"Yes, monsieur, if you will be so good as to allow me to do so."
+
+"I am sorry," Tom rejoined, "that I must disappoint you. Circumstances
+over which the Marquis has no control will deprive him of the pleasure of
+seeing you this morning."
+
+"Ah!" exclaimed Madame de la Fontaine, "I was right then. Monsieur le
+Marquis is, shall we say, in confinement?"
+
+"As you please, madam; as safe, for the time, as is my friend Dan Frost."
+
+"_Eh bien_, monsieur! It is that you have--do you not say?--turned the
+tables upon us?"
+
+"Precisely, madam," assented Tom.
+
+"And you will not permit me even a word--ever so little a word--with my
+poor friend?" murmured Madame de la Fontaine plaintively.
+
+"Again I am sorry to refuse you, madam; but--not even a little word."
+
+"So! _Mais oui_, I am not greatly surprised. I was assured last
+night...."
+
+"When you did not see the signals?" suggested Tom quickly.
+
+"When I did not see the signals," repeated the lady, with a glance of the
+briefest enquiry, "I was assured that something had befallen Monsieur le
+Marquis. _Mais vraiment_, monsieur, you do us much dishonour in assuming
+a wicked conspiracy on our parts. The Marquis is my friend; he is also
+the friend of the charming Mademoiselle. All that we wish, all that we
+would do is as much in her interest as in his own. But it is impossible
+that my old friend shall remain in confinement. On what condition,
+monsieur, will you release the Marquis de Boisdhyver?"
+
+"On the condition, naturally, that my friend Dan Frost is released from
+the _Southern Cross_."
+
+"Ah! Is it that you are quite sure that Monsieur Frost is confined on
+the ship?"
+
+"Quite sure, Madame de la Fontaine. I was on board _The Southern Cross_
+last night."
+
+"Yes, I know it; and I congratulate you upon your extraordinary success.
+Very well, then, I accept your condition. Monsieur Dan Frost returns;
+Monsieur le Marquis is released. And now you will perhaps have the
+kindness--"
+
+"No, madame; in this affair the Marquis and his friends have been the
+aggressors. I cannot consent that you should hold any communication with
+the Marquis till Dan returns free and unharmed to the Inn."
+
+"And what assurance then shall I have that the Marquis will be released?"
+
+"None, madame, but my word of honour."
+
+"_Pardon, monsieur_. I accept your terms. Monsieur Frost shall
+return. The instant he enters the Inn at the Red Oak, you promise
+that the Marquis de Boisdhyver be released and that he be given this
+note from me?"
+
+"Certainly, madam."
+
+The lady took a sealed note from the pocket of her habit and handed it to
+Tom. "There remains, monsieur," she murmured, "but to bid you good-day.
+If you will be so kind--"
+
+She ran lightly down the steps, and held up her foot for Tom to assist
+her into the saddle.
+
+"Your friend will return _tout de suite_, monsieur," she cried gayly, as
+she drew in the rein.
+
+"And we shall have the pleasure of seeing you again?" asked Tom.
+
+"Ah! who can tell?" She touched the horse lightly with her whip, inclined
+her head, and soon disappeared down the avenue of maples.
+
+Some time later Nancy and Tom watched her cantering across the beach.
+She waved her handkerchief as a signal to the schooner; a small boat put
+ashore, and she was rowed out to _The Southern Cross_.
+
+"Once Dan is back, and we get rid of the old Marquis," said Tom, "I shall
+breathe considerably easier."
+
+"I can't believe they will give the game up so easily," was Nancy's
+reply. "Seizing the Marquis, Tom, was a check, not a mate."
+
+Out on the schooner in the Cove, Madame de la Fontaine and Dan Frost were
+once more talking together.
+
+"Dear boy," said the lady. "I cannot do that which I promised. It is
+impossible that your sister shall make to you the request to give me the
+torn scrap of paper, for the reason that Mademoiselle Nancy has chosen to
+disappear. Have no fear, monsieur, for I have good reason to believe she
+has returned to the Inn at the Red Oak. Our schemes, _mon ami_, have
+failed. You are no longer a prisoner, you are free. And this is good-bye.
+I abandon our mission. I leave the House on the Dunes to-day; to-morrow I
+return to France."
+
+"But, madame, you bewilder me," exclaimed Dan. "Why should you go; why
+should we not all join forces, hunt for the treasure together, if there
+is a treasure; why this division of interests?"
+
+"_C'est impossible_!" she exclaimed impetuously. "Monsieur le Marquis
+will not consent. He is treated with intolerable rudeness by your friend
+Mr. Pembroke. He will not accept that which I propose. And I--_vraiment,
+I_ desire no longer to work against you. No, monsieur Dan, _tout est
+fini_, we must say good-bye."
+
+She held out her hands and Dan impetuously seized them. Then, suddenly,
+she was in his arms and his lips were seeking hers.
+
+"I cannot let you go," he cried hoarsely. "I cannot say good-bye."
+
+For a moment he held her, but soon, almost brusquely, she repulsed him.
+"_C'est folie, mon ami, folie_! We lose our heads, we lose our hearts."
+
+"But I love you," cried Dan. "You must believe it; will you believe it if
+I give you the paper?"
+
+"No, no!--What!--you wish to give to me the secret of the Oak Parlour?--"
+
+"Aye, to entrust to you my life, my soul, my honour."
+
+"Ah, but you must go," she murmured tensely.
+
+"Captain Bonhomme is returning. It is better that he knows of your
+release after you are gone. _C'est vrai_, my friend, that I risk not a
+little in your behalf. Go now, quickly ... No! No!" she protested, as she
+drew away from him. "I tell you, _C'est folie_,--madness and folly. You
+do not know me. Go now, while there is time!"
+
+"But you will see me again?" insisted Dan. "Promise me that; or, on my
+honour, I refuse to leave. Do with me what you will, but--"
+
+"Listen!" she whispered hurriedly. "I shall meet you to-night at ten
+o'clock, at the end of the avenue of maples near to your inn; you know
+the place? _Bien_! Bring me the paper there, to prove that you trust me.
+And I--_mais non_, I implore you--go quickly!"
+
+Dan turned at last and opened the door. Madame de la Fontaine called
+sharply to the waiting Jean, and he, motioning to Dan to follow him, led
+the way on deck. In a moment they were in a little boat heading for the
+shore. The afternoon sun was bright in the western sky. The _Southern
+Cross_ rode serenely at anchor, and from her deck, Madame de la Fontaine
+was waving him good-bye.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+THE MARQUIS LEAVES THE INN
+
+
+By the time Dan was put ashore on the beach of the Cove it was afternoon.
+During the short row from the schooner he had been unable to exchange
+remarks with the surly Jean, for that individual's only response to his
+repeated efforts, was a surly "_Je ne parle pas anglais_," which seemed
+to answer as a general formula to the conspirators. He gave up at last in
+disgust, and waited impatiently for the small boat to be beached,
+distrustful lest at the last moment some fresh trick be played upon him.
+Not that his ingenuous faith in the beautiful French lady failed him, but
+he was suspicious lest, having acted independently of the Marquis and
+Captain Bonhomme in releasing him, she should not have the power to make
+that release genuinely effective.
+
+But his apprehensions were groundless. The seaman rowed straight for the
+shore, beached the boat with a last sturdy pull at the oars, and leaping
+out into the curling surf, held the skiff steady.
+
+"Thank you very much," said Dan, shaking the spray from his coat.
+
+"Eh?" grunted Jean.
+
+"Oh!--beg pardon!--_merci_," he explained, exaggerating the pronunciation
+of the French word.
+
+"Huh!" was the gutteral reply, as the man jumped back into the skiff, and
+pushed off. Dan looked once more towards the distant schooner and the
+slight figure in the stern. Then he started at a rapid pace for the Inn.
+
+As he turned into the avenue of maples, he was surprised to see
+Jesse standing on the gallery, musket in hand, as though he were a
+sentinel on guard.
+
+"Bless my soul, Mister Dan! I thought the Frenchies had made way with
+you. You're a blessed sight to lay eyes on. But Mister Tom was right, he
+said you'd be coming back this afternoon."
+
+"Well, here I am, Jesse," Dan replied grasping his hand, "as large as
+life and twice as natural, I guess. I feel as if I'd been away for a year
+and a day. But tell me, what's the news? Where is Tom? Has Nancy come
+back? How is Mother? Have you been having trouble, that you are guarding
+the door like a soldier on duty?"
+
+"Well, now, Mister Dan, one at a time, _if_ you please. Can't say
+exactly as we've been havin' trouble; but we've sort of been lookin' for
+it. And Mister Tom--"
+
+"Where is Tom? I must see him at once.'
+
+"He ain't here, sir; he left about an hour ago, driving the old Miss and
+Miss Nancy to the Red Farm, sir; so as to be out of harm's way. He'll be
+back before night, sir."
+
+"Ah, good! Then Nance is back? When did she come?"
+
+"She come back last night, sir; leastways Mister Tom brought her back.
+Mister Tom, he got the idea that they'd cooped Miss Nance up on that
+there schooner laying in the Cove, and sure enough, he found her there
+and got her off somehows last night."
+
+"Good for Tom! How did he work it?"
+
+"I ain't heard no particulars, Mister Dan. We've been too busy watching
+things to talk much. We got Ezra Manners out from the Port to help do
+guard duty."
+
+"Guard?--what?"
+
+"Why, the Inn, sir. Mister Tom he's been sort of expectin' some kind of
+attack. That's the reason he took the women folks over to the Red Farm."
+
+"I see--and where's the old Marquis?"
+
+Jesse chuckled. "The old Marquis's where he hasn't been doin' any harm
+for the last twenty-four hours, sir. Mister Tom he locked him up last
+night in one of the south bedrooms. That reminds me, I was to let him out
+just as soon as you come back."
+
+"Why lock him up, and then let him out? Things have been moving at the
+Inn, Jess, since I've been gone!"
+
+"Moving--yes, sir. But them's my orders--first thing I was to do soon as
+you come back was to let the old Frenchy out and do as he pleased. Mister
+Tom was to arrange everything else with you, sir."
+
+"Seems as if Tom had a whole campaign planned out. All right--we'll obey
+orders, Jess. Let the Marquis out, and tell him he can find me in the bar
+if he wants to see me. What time will Tom be back?"
+
+"Before dark, sir, I'm sure. He's been gone over an hour."
+
+Dan ran up to his bedroom, made a quick toilet, took the torn scrap of
+paper from his strong-box, and put it in his wallet. Then he went down
+stairs into the bar. The Marquis, released from his confinement, was
+awaiting him.
+
+"Ah, Monsieur Frost!" the old gentleman exclaimed, coming forward with
+outstretched hands, "I rejoice at your return. Now this so horrible
+nightmare will end... Ah!" This last exclamation was uttered in a tone of
+surprise and indignation, for Dan faced him with folded arms,
+deliberately refusing the handclasp.
+
+"Yes, Marquis," he said, "I have returned; but I cannot say that I am
+particularly pleased to see you."
+
+"Monsieur, _te me comprends pas_; this abuse, this insult--it is
+impossible that I understand."
+
+"Pray, Monsieur de Boisdhyver," replied Dan, with dignity, "Let us have
+done with make-believe and sham. For two days I have been in prison on
+that confounded ship yonder, whose villainous crew are in your pay."
+
+"You in prison--the ship--the villainous crew!" repeated the Marquis.
+"What is it that you say?"
+
+"Come, Marquis, your protests are useless," Dan interrupted. "I know of
+the conspiracy in which you are engaged, of your deceit and trickery
+here, of your part in my poor sister's disappearance. You know that
+Madame de la Fontaine has told me much. Do you expect me to meet you as
+though nothing had happened?"
+
+"But, _mon cher, monsieur_," continued the Marquis, "if it is that you
+have been told anything by Madame de la Fontaine, my so good friend, the
+bright angel of an old age too-cruelly shattered by misfortune, you well
+know how innocent are my designs, how sincere my efforts for your
+foster-sister, for her who is my niece."
+
+"Marquis, I do not understand all that has taken place. I may say further
+that I do not care to discuss the situation with you until I have talked
+with my sister and Mr. Pembroke."
+
+"Ah! then Eloise--then Mademoiselle Nancy, is returned?" exclaimed the
+old gentleman.
+
+"I believe so. But I have not seen her. I must decline, Marquis, to
+continue this conversation. I must first learn what has taken place in my
+absence. When Tom returns--he is out just now--I am perfectly willing to
+talk matters over with you and him together."
+
+The Marquis's eyes flashed. "But, Monsieur," he protested, "you must
+understand that I cannot submit to meet with Monsieur Pembroke again. A
+Marquis de Boisdhyver does not twice put himself in the position to be
+insulted with impunity."
+
+"I should hardly imagine," Dan replied, "that it would be more
+difficult for you to meet Pembroke again than it has been difficult for
+me to meet you."
+
+"How--me?--_je ne comprends pas_. But I have been insulted, imprisoned, I
+have suffered much that is terrible."
+
+"I found myself in an identical situation," said Dan.
+
+"But, monsieur, _un moment_" protested the old gentleman, as Dan made as
+if to leave the room, "give me the time to explain to you this
+misunderstanding.--"
+
+"No, Marquis. I will not talk until I have seen Tom."
+
+The black eyes of Monsieur de Boisdhyver gleamed unpleasantly. "I have
+said to you, Monsieur Frost, that I refuse to meet Monsieur Tom Pembroke
+once more. It would be intolerable. _Impossible, absolutment_! I must
+insist that you will be kind enough to facilitate my departure at once."
+
+"Certainly, as you wish, Marquis."
+
+The old gentleman hesitated. For once indecision was shown by the
+agitation of his features and the shifting of his eyes, but he gave no
+other expression to the quandaries in his mind. After a moment's silence
+he drew himself up with exaggerated dignity. With one hand upon his
+breast and the other extended, in a fashion at once absurd and a little
+pathetic, he addressed Dan for the last time, as might an ambassador
+taking leave of a sovereign upon his declaration of war.
+
+"Monsieur, I renew my gratitude for the hospitality of the Inn at the Red
+Oak, so long enjoyed, so discourteously withdrawn. I require but the
+presentation of my account for the time, I have trespassed upon your good
+will, and I request the assistance of a servant to facilitate my
+departure. But I do not take my farewell without protesting, _avec tout
+mon coeur_, at the misunderstanding to which I am persistently subjected.
+The inevitable bitterness in my soul does not prevent me even now to
+forget the sweet hours of rest that I have enjoyed here. The
+unwillingness on your part, monsieur, to comprehend my position, does not
+interfere to stifle in my breast the consciousness but of honourable
+purpose. I make my compliments to mesdames."
+
+"Very good, marquis--and at what time shall I have a carriage
+ready for you?"
+
+The Marquis glanced nonchalantly at his watch, "In fifteen minutes,
+monsieur."
+
+"It will be ready, Marquis."
+
+"Your very obedient servant; Monsieur Frost."
+
+"Your obedient servant, Marquis de Boisdhyver."
+
+The old gentleman bowed again with elaborate courtesy and, turning
+sharply on his heel, left the room.
+
+Somewhat disturbed by the turn affairs had taken, Dan stood for a moment
+lost in thought. There was nothing for it, he supposed: Tom, who had
+been in command, had given orders, and they should be obeyed; besides
+there was no reason that he could see why the Marquis should be detained
+at the Inn if he chose to leave it. So he sat down at a table, made out
+the old gentleman's bill for the month, and then stepped to the door to
+call for Jesse.
+
+"Take this," he said when the man appeared in response to his summons,
+"to the old Marquis. It is the bill for his board. If he pays you, well
+and good; if not--in any case, treat him courteously, and do not
+interfere with his movements. He is leaving the Inn for good. I want you
+to have the buggy ready within half-an-hour and drive him where he wishes
+to go. I fancy he will want his stuff put on the schooner in the Cove."
+
+"All right, sir," replied Jesse. "Now that you and Miss Nance are back,
+sir, I guess the sooner we get rid of the Marquis the better."
+
+Jesse carried the bill to the Marquis, then came down and went to the
+barn to harness the horse. A little later he drove round to the
+courtyard, hitched the horse to a ring in the Red Oak, and ran upstairs
+to fetch the Marquis's boxes.
+
+Perhaps half-an-hour had passed when he returned to Dan in the Bar. "The
+old gentleman's gone, sir," he said.
+
+"Gone!--where?" cried Dan.
+
+"Don't know, sir," Jesse replied. "To the schooner, I guess. He left this
+money on his dressing-bureau."
+
+Dan took the gold which Jesse held out to him. "Well, well," he murmured,
+"quite on his dignity, eh? All right, Jess, take his stuff to the beach
+and hail the schooner. He will probably have given directions. I hope
+we've seen the last of him."
+
+
+
+
+PART IV
+
+THE ATTACK ON THE INN
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+THE AVENUE OF MAPLES
+
+
+The Marquis's belongings were sent after him to the schooner, where,
+however, it appeared that they had not been expected, for it was some
+time before Jesse could obtain an answer to his hail from the shore, and
+still longer before he could make the men on the ship understand what it
+was he wanted with them. Eventually Captain Bonhomme had rowed ashore,
+and the Marquis's bags, boxes, writing-desk, and fiddle were loaded into
+the small boat and taken off to _The Southern Cross_.
+
+It appeared from Jesse's report that the Captain had been sufficiently
+polite, and had attributed the misunderstanding of his men to their
+inability to speak English. They had not gotten their orders for the
+Marquis. He had asked no further questions about Monsieur de Boisdhyver
+or about his recent prisoners, but had feed Jesse liberally, and
+dismissed him, with his own and the Marquis's thanks.
+
+"Well," said Tom, who had returned an hour before and had been
+exchanging experiences with Dan, "that seems to be the end of him for
+the present. I don't know that I did right in promising your French lady
+that I should release him, but there seemed no other way to make sure of
+getting you back."
+
+"I am glad you promised," replied Dan. "It is a relief not to have him
+under our roof. For the last week I've felt as if the place were haunted
+by an evil spirit."
+
+"So it has been, and so it still will be, I am afraid," was Tom's reply.
+"If there is treasure here, you may be sure that gang won't sail away
+without making a desperate effort to get it. I move that we beat them out
+by hunting for it ourselves. Why not begin to-night?"
+
+"Not to-night," protested Dan. "I am tired to death. You can imagine that
+I didn't get much sleep cooped up on that confounded ship."
+
+"No more have I, old boy. But I believe in striking while the iron is
+hot. Every day's delay gives them a better chance for their plans, if
+they mean to attack the Inn."
+
+"I doubt if they'll do that. I don't think force is precisely their line.
+You know, I believe that the story Madame de la Fontaine told isn't
+altogether a fiction."
+
+"Pshaw!" exclaimed Tom. "I don't believe a word of it. Naturally they
+wouldn't use force, if they could help it. But their plans have all been
+upset, and a gang like that won't stop at anything."
+
+"But we live in a civilized community, my boy. This isn't the
+middle ages."
+
+"We live in a civilized community, perhaps; but if you can find a more
+isolated spot, a place more remote from help, in any other part of the
+civilized world, I'd be glad to see it. We might as well be in the middle
+of the Sahara desert. Find the treasure and get it out of harm's
+way--that's my idea."
+
+"All right, but to-morrow; I swear I'm not up to it to-night."
+
+"To-morrow! Well, then to-morrow. Though for the life of me, I don't see
+why you want to delay things. Jesse and Ezra can keep watch tonight."
+
+"But we must get some sleep, Tom."
+
+"The devil with sleep! However, you're the boss now. It's your inn, your
+treasure, your sister, that are involved. I'll take a back seat."
+
+"Come, come, Tom--don't let's quarrel. Give me to-night to--to get myself
+together, and tomorrow I'll pull the Inn down with you, if you wish."
+
+Perhaps Dan was right, he did need rest and sleep and a few hours would
+restore him. They had their supper, then, apportioned the night into
+watches, and Dan went upstairs for his first period of sleep.
+
+His brain was a-whirl. All through the afternoon, during his talk with
+the Marquis, and later during his talk with Tom, one idea had been
+dominating his thought, dictating his plan of action, colouring his
+judgment. The fascination which Madame de la Fontaine exerted over his
+senses was too strong for him even to contemplate resisting it. She was
+confessedly in league with a gang of adventurers upon a quest for
+treasure. She had lied to him at first about the Marquis, she had lied
+to him about Nancy, she had lied to him about his release; and when she
+had left him under the pretext of arranging his return to the Inn, she
+had in fact gone to Tom to bargain an exchange of him for the old
+Marquis. Her lies, her subterfuges, her flatteries, had been evidently
+designed but to get possession of the torn scrap of paper which was so
+necessary to their finding the hidden treasure. All this Dan told
+himself a hundred times, and then, quickly dispelling the witness of
+these cold hard facts, there would flash before him the vision of her
+wonderful eyes, of her strange appealing beauty, of her stirring
+personality; he would feel once more the touch of her cheek and her lips
+pressing his, intoxicating as wine; and delicious fires flamed through
+his veins, and set his heart to beating, and made havoc of his honour
+and his conscience. Whatever were the consequences, he would meet her
+again that night as he had promised. It was his first experience of
+passion and it was sweeping him off his feet.
+
+Alone in his room Dan sat down at the table. He drew from his pocket the
+torn paper, and as an act of justice to the friends he felt that he was
+about to betray, he labourously made a copy of the difficult French
+handwriting. This done, he locked the copy in his strong box and put the
+original back in his pocket. Then, like the criminal he thought himself
+to be, he crept cautiously down the stairs. The door into the bar was
+open, and he stood for a moment, shoes in hand, peering into the
+dimly-lit room. Tom sat by the hearth, reading, a pipe in his mouth and a
+cocked pistol on the table by his side. A pang went through Dan's breast,
+but he checked the impulse to speak, and stole softly across the hall and
+into his mother's parlour. Ever so cautiously he closed the door behind
+him, crossed the room, and raised the sash of one of the windows.
+
+It was dark, but starlight; the moon had not yet risen. In a moment he
+had slipped over the sill and stood upon the porch. Lowering the sash, he
+crept across the band of light that shone from the windows of the bar,
+and into the shadow of the Red Oak. There he buttoned his great coat
+tightly about him, put on his shoes, and started softly down the avenue
+of maples. Scarcely a sound disturbed the silence of the night, save the
+lazy creaking of the windmill as it turned now and then to the puff of a
+gentle breeze.
+
+At every few steps, he paused to listen, fearful lest his absence had
+been detected and he were followed by some one from the Inn. Then he
+would start on again, peering eagerly into the darkness ahead for any
+sign of her whom he sought. At last he reached the end of the avenue.
+His heart was beating wildly, in a very terror that she might not come.
+Nothing--no catastrophe, no danger, no disgrace,--could be so terrible
+to him as that the woman he loved so recklessly and madly should not
+come. She must not fail! He looked at his watch; it was already three
+minutes past ten. If in five--then minutes she did not come, he would go
+to seek her--to the House on the Dunes, aye, if must be to _The Southern
+Cross_ itself.
+
+Suddenly a dark figure slipped out of the gloom, and Claire de la
+Fontaine was in his arms. For a moment she let him clasp her, let his
+lips again meet hers; then quickly she disengaged herself. "Are we safe?"
+she asked in a whisper. "Is it that we can talk here."
+
+"We are perfectly safe," he answered. "Nothing can be heard from the Inn.
+No one is about."
+
+"You escaped without notice? Are you certain that no one follows you?"
+
+"Absolutely. I am sure. And you?"
+
+"I?--Oh, no, no--. There is no one to question me. I have been at the
+House on the Dunes all the evening. Marie, my maid,--she thinks that I
+am gone to the schooner. _Mon Dieu! cher ami_, what terrors I have
+suffered for you. It had not seemed possible that Claire de la Fontaine
+would ride and walk two so long miles in a desolate country to meet a
+lover--It must be that we are gone mad."
+
+"Madness then is the sweetest experience of life," said Dan, seizing her
+hand again and carrying it to his lips.
+
+"Ah _peut-etre, mon ami_. But now there are many affairs to discuss. Tell
+me--the Marquis, he was released, as your friend has promised me he
+should be?"
+
+"Of course, didn't you know it?"
+
+"I know nothing. Why then is it he has not left the Inn?"
+
+"But he did leave--in the middle of the afternoon, half an hour after I
+returned."
+
+"And where is it that he has gone?"
+
+"To the schooner, I suppose. He left alone, giving directions for his
+things to be sent after him."
+
+"Ah! to the schooner, you say? You are certain?"
+
+"Yes--that is, I think he went there. Jesse took his boxes and bags down
+to the shore, and Captain Bonhomme received them, and thanked him in the
+Marquis's name,''
+
+"_Mais non! Est-ce possible_?" For a moment she was silent, considering
+deeply. "_Bien_!" she exclaimed presently. "It is as you say, of course.
+And you, my friend?" She stopped suddenly, for they had been walking
+slowly forward, and withdrawing her hand from his arm, she held it out
+before him. "The paper?" she demanded.
+
+"Here it is," murmured Dan, fumbling in his pocket, and pulling out the
+scrap of paper. She took it eagerly from his hand and held it up before
+her eyes as though trying to see it in the dark.
+
+"This is it, really?" she asked.
+
+"I swear it," he answered. "It is the piece of writing that I found in
+the hidden cubby-hole of the old cabinet in the Oak Parlour. It is written
+in French, you know."
+
+"Yes, I know, I know," she assented absently. For a moment she was quite
+still, and then, with a strange exclamation, she put the paper to her
+lips. "_Quels souvenirs, d'autrefois_!" she murmured. "_Ah, mon Dieu,
+mon Dieu_!"
+
+"Dearest, what is it?" asked Dan.
+
+"Nothing, nothing," she replied, withdrawing a little from his touch. "I
+was unwell for the moment,--_ce ne fait rien_. No, no, you are not to
+kiss me, please." Again she unloosed his arm from about her neck, slipped
+the paper into her muff, and pressed a little forward. For a space they
+walked slowly, silently, toward the Inn.
+
+"But, dearest one," murmured Dan, "this proves to you my love, doesn't
+it? You no longer doubt me. For your sake, I give my honour; it may be,
+the safety of my friends. You must see how I love you with all my heart
+and soul. Won't you,--"
+
+Suddenly she stopped again quite still and faced him. "My poor boy," she
+said gently, "you really love me?"
+
+"Love you! My God, have I not proved it! What more would you have me do?"
+
+"_Mais oui_," she answered quickly. "You have proved it, but I have
+thought that it was not possible."
+
+"And you--you do care--oh, tell me--"
+
+"_Hélas, mon paurve ami_. I love as tenderly as it remains in me to love.
+Ah, dear, dear boy, so sincerely, that I cannot have you to sell your
+honour for the futile kisses of Claire de la Fontaine."
+
+"What do you mean? Have I--"
+
+"No, no, no! This--take the paper. You must not again give it me, I
+desire that you will not." She drew the paper from her muff with an
+impulsive movement and thrust it toward him. "Take it, I implore you."
+
+"But why--?"
+
+"Because that you shall not give your honour to a woman such as I am.
+_Mai vraiment_, I love you. That is why you must take back the paper."
+
+"But you must explain--"
+
+"_Mon Dieu_! is it that I have not explained? There is time for nothing
+more. I have fear, _mon ami_; a kiss, and it is necessary that I go. It
+is good-bye."
+
+"But you love me, you have said so. I cannot, I will not let you go."
+
+"Listen to me, my friend," she said, her voice rising for the moment
+above the whisper in which she had cautiously spoken heretofore. "From
+the first I have deceived you, betrayed you, played upon your affection
+but to betray you afresh. And now I find that I love you. I am not that
+which you call good, but it is impossible that I injure you. Go back to
+your friends."
+
+"Never! I love you. What matters now anything that you have said or done?
+And you love me. Ah dearest one, what can that mean but good?"
+
+"_Bien-aimé_, what will you that I say?" she interrupted speaking
+rapidly, "I am what you Americans call 'a bad woman',--the sort of woman
+that you know nothing of. I was the woman who sixteen years ago stayed at
+the Inn at the Red Oak with François de Boisdhyver, the woman your mother
+called nurse, who cared for his little daughter. And now I have told you
+all. Will you know from now that I am a thousand times unworthy? _Pour
+l'amour de Dieu_, give it to me to do this one act of honour and of
+generosity."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+THE ATTACK
+
+
+With these words she thrust the scrap of paper into his hands and turning
+swiftly, started forward as though to escape his further importunities by
+flight. But Dan was instantly by her side, trying to catch her hand in
+the darkness.
+
+Again she faced him passionately. "_C'est folie_," she cried hoarsely,
+"have I not told you that we are in great danger? Go, go back to the Inn.
+It is there only that you will be safe.--O, _mon Dieu!"_
+
+A figure had sprung suddenly from the blackness of the trees. Dan felt a
+sharp blow on his shoulder, and then he was grappling with a wiry
+antagonist, striving to keep at safe distance a hand that clutched an
+open knife. Locked in a close embrace, swaying from side to side of the
+road, they fought desperately. Dan striving to get at the pistol which he
+carried, his assailant trying to use his knife.
+
+It seemed as if Dan could no longer hold the man off when two small
+hands closed over the fist that held the gleaming knife and a clear voice
+rang out in French. Dan felt his antagonist's grip loosen and he wrenched
+himself free. Madame de la Fontaine had come to his rescue. "Quick,
+quick--to the Inn. I am safe. You have but one chance for your life," she
+cried. Already his assailant had put a boatswain's whistle to his lips
+and was sounding a shrill blast.
+
+As Dan hesitated, uncertain what to do, he heard a number of men come
+crashing through the underbrush of the neighbouring field. Again Madame
+de la Fontaine cried, "_Mon Dieu_! will you not run?" Then she turned and
+disappeared in the darkness. Simultaneously came the crack of a pistol
+shot, and a bullet whizzed by his ear. There was nothing for it but to
+run; and run he did, shouting at the top of his voice the while to Tom in
+the Inn. He probably owed his start to the fact that for the moment his
+attacker, who had been held at bay by Madame de la Fontaine, was
+uncertain whether to follow her or Dan. That moment's delay saved Dan's
+life, for though, with a curse, the man started after him now, he had a
+poor chance of catching him in the darkness. But on he came only a dozen
+yards or so behind, and after him the thundering steps and harsh cries
+of those who had responded to the call of the whistle.
+
+At last Dan was at the door of the Inn, beating wildly upon it, and
+calling, "Open, Tom; quick, for God's sake! It's Dan." As the door was
+flung back, he sprang in and slammed it shut. Already the attackers were
+in the courtyard, a volley of shots rang against the stout oak, followed
+almost at once, by the flinging against it of half-a-dozen men. But the
+great oaken beam had been slipped into place and held firmly. Dan was
+none the worse for his experience, save for a graze on the cheek where
+the knife had glanced, and a slit on his shoulder from a bullet.
+
+"They're here!" he cried. "No time for explanations, Tom. I went
+out--fool that I was!--was attacked. They're here in force."
+
+By this time Jesse had rushed into the bar, attracted by the firing, and
+soon Ezra Manners came running down from the floor above. After the first
+impact against the door those without had withdrawn, evidently taking up
+a position in the courtyard again, for almost at once there was a
+fusilade of shots against door and windows, which luckily the heavy oak
+was proof against.
+
+"They're welcome to keep that up all night," said Tom. "Only a waste of
+ammunition. How many are there?" He would liked to have asked Dan why he
+had gone out, but there was no time for discussion.
+
+"I don't know--half-a-dozen at least, I should guess," was Dan's reply.
+"Bonhomme is at their head, I'm sure. It was he who tackled me in the
+avenue. They may have the whole crew of the schooner here. That would
+mean a dozen or more."
+
+"Well," said Tom, "we're in for it now, I guess. We'll have to watch in
+different parts of the house, for we don't know where they will attack.
+Unless they are all fools, it won't be here."
+
+"You're right. I'll stay and look out for the south wing. You go to the
+north wing, Tom; Jesse to the kitchen, and Ezra to the end of the south
+passage. That'll cover the house as well as we can cover it. They'll try
+to force an entrance somewheres. Have you all got guns? Good. Leave the
+doors open so that we can hear each other call."
+
+Evidently the attacking party had concluded that they were wasting their
+lead and their time in shooting at doors and window-shutters, for as Tom
+had said, all was now quiet outside. Fifteen minutes, half-an-hour
+passed, and nothing occurred to alarm or to relieve the tension on the
+anxious watchers within. At length Dan stole upstairs to reconnoitre.
+
+It was fortunate that he chose the precise moment he did, for as his
+head emerged above the last stair, he saw that the great shutters at
+the end of the south corridor were open, and a man stood before the
+window, evidently on the top rung of a ladder, trying the sash. It was
+locked to be sure, but at the instant Dan saw him, he raised his fist
+and smashed it. He was about to leap through the opening, fringed
+though it was with jagged glass, when Dan aimed his pistol carefully,
+and fired. There was a cry, and the form at the window fell crashing to
+the ground below. Dan rushed to the casement, and could hear in the
+court beneath him the curses and exclamations of the surprised
+assailants. Quickly he thrust the end of the ladder from the wall, then
+seizing a fresh pistol from his belt, fired at random into the darkness
+below. Another cry of pain attested to the fact that his chance shot
+had taken effect. By this time Tom had rushed to his assistance, and
+together they barred the window again.
+
+Dan gave a brief account of the incident. "But, for heaven's sake, Tom,"
+he concluded, "get back to the north wing. We are in danger there every
+moment. I'll watch out here."
+
+As Tom returned to his post in the cold corridor of the north wing, he
+heard heavy crashes, as of a battering-ram, against the great door that
+opened into the gallery. A shrill whistle brought Ezra Manners to his
+assistance. "Watch here!" he commanded. "If the door crashes in, shoot,
+and shoot to kill; then run into the bar and barricade the door between.
+I've a plan."
+
+He himself ran into the bar, blew out the candles, and risking perhaps
+too much on the chance of success, cautiously opened the front door. He
+could scarcely make out the group at the farther end of the gallery, as
+he stepped out; but he could hear the resounding crashes against the door
+into the north hall, each one of which seemed to be the last that even
+that massive frame could hold out against. Leveling his pistol at the
+group; he took aim, and fired; snatched another from his pocket, and
+fired a second time. Again, by good luck, the defender's shots had told.
+There was a thud on the gallery floor, and the besiegers scurried to
+cover beyond the courtyard fence. Tom dashed safely back into the house,
+and slipped the great beam into place.
+
+Upstairs Dan's attention had been attracted by the commotion in front of
+the inn. He opened a window on to the roof of the gallery, climbed out,
+and crawled along on his belly till his head just abutted over the eaves.
+For a few moments, after the firing, he could hear the attackers moving
+about behind the fence across the courtyard. At length, a couple of them
+stole across the court and up on to the gallery beneath him. In a moment
+they returned carrying the dead or wounded comrade; then all of them
+seemed to go off together up the dark avenue of maples. He waited till
+they could be heard no more, then crept back into the house and ran down
+to tell Dan of their temporary withdrawal. For an hour or more the four
+defenders of the Inn kept themselves occupied parading the corridors and
+rooms, on the watch for a fresh attack. But nothing happened. They felt
+no security, however, and would feel none till daylight.
+
+In the silent watching of that night Dan had ample opportunity to reflect
+upon his extraordinary interview with Madame de la Fontaine. He loved
+her. Good heavens how he loved her, but--had she been sincere in her
+refusal at the last to keep the scrap of paper for the possession of
+which she had so desperately intrigued? Had she decoyed him to the
+rendezvous in the dark but to betray him to the bandits with whom she was
+in league? At first it would seem so. And yet the paper was in his
+possession; and, she it was who had rescued him from the assassin's
+knife. Where was she now? What had become of her? What was to be the end
+of this mad night's work? That she was the woman who had accompanied
+General Pointelle--or the Maréchal de Boisdhyver--somehow did not
+surprise him. And for the time the full import of what that implied did
+not dawn upon him. But what mattered anything now that he loved her?
+
+He determined at last to reconnoitre again from the roof of the gallery.
+It still lay in shadow, but it would not be long before the moon, now
+rising over the eastern hills beyond the Strathsey flooded it with light.
+In a moment, he had opened the window, was over the sill, and, creeping
+cautiously along the roof to the ledge, he worked his way toward the
+great oak at the farther end.
+
+All was still and deserted below as the Inn courtyard would have been in
+the middle of any winter's night. While he stood peering into the
+darkness, listening intently, the moon, just showing above the distant
+tree tops, cast the first rays of its light into the courtyard beneath
+him. At the instant the figure of a woman stole across the flagged
+pavement and crept fearfully to the Red Oak. With a strange thrill he
+recognized Claire de la Fontaine. Reaching the shelter of the great tree,
+she stooped, gathered a handful of gravel from the road bed, and then
+cast it boldly at the shutters of the bar, calling softly, "Dan, Dan."
+
+Instantly he replied. "Claire! Is that you? What is it? I am here, above
+you, on the roof."
+
+"Ah, _mon Dieu_!" she exclaimed, as she looked up startled, and
+discerned his form leaning over the eaves, "for the love of heaven, my
+friend, open to me. I am in danger and I must tell you that which is of
+great importance to you. _Mais vite, mon ami_. In ten minutes they will
+return again."
+
+It did not occur to Dan to doubt her. Careless of the risk, he rushed
+back to the window, climbed in, and in a few seconds had opened the door
+to the anxious woman without. She seemed physically exhausted as she
+stepped into the warm bar. Taking her in his arms, he carried her to a
+chair, and poured out a glass of wine, which she eagerly drank.
+
+"It matters not what I have been doing," she murmured in reply to his
+questions, "I have but little time to give you my warning. _Ecoute_.
+Bonhomme and his men are gone only to carry back their dead and wounded,
+and to bring cutlasses, and the two or three sailors who were left on the
+schooner. I have followed them--God knows how--and heard something of
+their plans. They will make an attack--now, in a moment--in two different
+places. But these attacks will be shams,--is not that the word?--they
+will mean nothing. It is the Oak Parlour that they desire to enter. At
+the window of that so horrible room Bonhomme will try to make an entrance
+without alarm while the others hold your attention at the front and back
+of the Inn. Is it that you understand? It is necessary that you are
+prepared for these sham attacks, but the great danger is Bonhomme. The
+window in the Oak Parlour is not strong. They have information--recent
+information--from the Marquis probably,--that it will not be difficult to
+break in. One of you must conceal himself in the dark and shoot Bonhomme
+when he enters; you must shoot and shoot to kill, then we will be safe.
+I have no fear of Monsieur le Marquis. The others--they are brutes--but
+they will flee. And they know nothing, they do this for money,--ah, _mon
+Dieu_, for money which I have furnished!"
+
+For a moment, torn between his love and his deep distrust of this woman,
+poor Dan stood uncertainly. Suddenly he knelt at her side and clasped his
+arms about her. "Claire, you are on our side? You swear it."
+
+"Ah, _mon Dieu_! is it that I deserve this?" she exclaimed bitterly.
+"Ah! I tell you truth," she cried. "You must believe me--Listen! Are
+they come already?"
+
+"No, no, there is nothing. But I trust you, I will go."
+
+Suddenly she sprang to her feet. "Let me go with you. It is terrible to
+me to enter again that room; but I desire to prove myself of honour.
+_Allous, allous_!"
+
+"Tom is there."
+
+"Ah! send him here to the bar. But do you come, _mon ami_. See, I go with
+you." She rose and forcing herself to the effort, led the way across the
+bar and into the corridor of the north wing, as if to show him that in
+sixteen years she had not forgotten.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+IN THE OAK PARLOUR
+
+
+"You know the way?" Dan exclaimed as he caught up with her, and held open
+the door that led into the old north wing.
+
+"But so well," she replied, catching her breath. "Would to God that
+I did not!"
+
+"Ah!" he murmured, "I forgot that you have been here before."
+
+They pressed on silently. At the turn of the corridor upon which the Oak
+Parlour gave, they discerned Tom Pembroke, a weird figure, in the dim
+light of the tallow dip upon the table, that cast fantastic shadows upon
+the whitewashed walls.
+
+As he recognized them, he sprang forward in astonishment. "Madame de la
+Fontaine! Dan! What does this mean?" he cried.
+
+"You know Madame?" Dan replied hastily and in evident confusion. "At
+great risk she has come to warn us--she is our friend, understand.--She
+has come to tell us how Bonhomme and his men will attack the Inn."
+
+Tom listened to his explanation with unconcealed dismay. "Good heavens,
+Dan!" he protested, "You trust this woman? You know she is in league with
+these ruffians. Do you want us to fall into a trap?"
+
+"No, no, Monsieur Pembroke," interrupted Madame de la Fontaine, "you must
+listen to me. I understand your fear. But at last you can trust me. I
+repent that which I have done. Ah, _mon Dieu_, with what bitterness! And
+now I desire to do all that is possible to save you. You must trust me."
+
+"I do not--I can not trust you," Tom cried sternly. "Don't go in there,
+Dan. Don't I beg of you, trust this woman's word. It is a trick."
+
+"Perhaps," said Dan grimly, "but go back. I take the responsibility. I
+do trust her, I shall trust her--to death. There is no time to lose,
+man. Go back!"
+
+"What deviltry has bewitched you?" cried Tom passionately. "Already once
+to-night you have risked our lives by your fool-hardiness,--for the sake
+of this woman, eh? By gad, man, I begin to see. But I tell you now, I
+refuse to be a victim to your madness."
+
+"_Mais non_, Monsieur Pembroke," Claire cried again. "By all that is good
+and holy, I swear to you, that that which I have said is true. You must
+go. They will attack the bar and the kitchen. If those places are not
+defended, there will be danger."
+
+"At any rate," said Dan, "I am going into the Oak Parlour. If you refuse
+to act with me, barricade the door between the bar and the north wing. If
+need be, I shall fight alone. Only now we lose time, precious time."
+
+Pembroke looked at him as if he had gone mad, then shrugging his
+shoulders he turned back into the bar, whistling for Jesse and Ezra as
+he did so.
+
+For a moment, glancing after Tom's retreating figure, shaken to his soul
+by conflicting emotions, Dan stood irresolute.
+
+"But come," said Madame de la Fontaine, touching his arm. Again like the
+weird genius of this strange night she led the way on down the shadowy
+hall, and paused only when her hand rested upon the knob of the door into
+the Oak Parlour. "It is here," she said simply.
+
+As Dan reached her side, she opened the door. The light of the candle
+down the hallway did not penetrate the gloom of the disused room. A musty
+smell as of cold stagnant air came strong to their nostrils, and Dan
+felt, as they crossed the threshold together, that he was entering a
+place where no life had been for a long long time, a place full of dead
+nameless horrors.
+
+The woman by his side was trembling violently. He put his arm about her
+to reassure her, and there shot through him a sensation of strange and
+terrible joy to be with her alone in this darkness and danger. For the
+moment he was exulting that for her sake he had risked his honour, that
+for her sake now he was risking life itself. He bent his head to hers.
+
+"No! no!--not here!" she whispered hoarsely, but yet clinging to him with
+shaking hands. "It is so cold, so dark. I have fear," she murmured.
+
+"It is like a tomb," he said.
+
+"The tomb of my hopes, of my youth," she breathed softly.
+
+"Shall I strike a light?"
+
+"No, no,--no light, I implore you. _Ecoute_! What is it that I hear?"
+
+"I hear nothing. It is the wind in the Red Oak outside."
+
+"But listen!"
+
+"It is an owl hooting."
+
+Suddenly she drew her hand from his, and he could hear her moving swiftly
+about. "All is as it used to be?" she asked.
+
+"Precisely," he answered; "nothing has been changed."
+
+"Here is the cabinet," she said, from across the room. "I can feel the
+lion's head. It is opposite to the window and the moonlight will stream
+in when the casement is opened, but if I crouch low I shall not be seen.
+_Bien_! And you, _mon ami_? Tell me, is the old _escritoire_ still to the
+left of the door?" Now she was back at his side once again.
+
+"The _escritoire_?" he repeated.
+
+"The little table where one writes. Ah! yes, it is here. See, behind
+this, _mon ami_, shall you hide yourself. The moonlight will not reach
+here--and it is so arranged that you will see plainly any one that
+appears at the window. When the casement is opened, you will shoot, will
+you not, and shoot to kill?"
+
+"Yes, I will shoot," said Dan, his voice trembling.
+
+"You promise me?" she cried in a tense whisper, as she grasped his arm
+and held it tight in her grip.
+
+"I tell you, yes."
+
+"You must not fail."
+
+"No. Shall I shoot at any one who opens?"
+
+"Any one?--it will be Bonhomme,--no other."
+
+Suddenly there came, from the front and the rear of the Inn, at the same
+instant it seemed, the sharp staccato of a fusilade of pistol shots, and
+the lumbering blows as of beams being thrust at distant doors.
+
+"They are come!" she whispered, "hide." Dan could hear the swish of her
+garments as she rapidly glided across the room to the old cabinet, then
+he turned and crouched low behind the writing desk that she had chosen
+for his place of concealment. He knelt there motionless, a cocked pistol
+clenched in his right hand. His breath seemed to have stopped, but his
+heart was pounding as though it must burst through his breast. How could
+he shoot down in cold blood a fellow man? The horror of it crowded out
+all other impressions, sensations fears. He could fight, risk his life,
+but to pull the trigger of that pistol when the casement should open
+seemed to him an impossibility. He would wait, grapple with him, fight
+as men should.
+
+Suddenly a ray of moonlight fell across the dark floor. Dan, looking up,
+seemed frozen by horror. The shutters had opened, the casement swung back
+noiselessly, and there in the opening, sharply outlined against the
+moonlight-flooded night, was the great black hulk of Captain Bonhomme.
+
+For a moment he stood there irresolute, listening intently. Dan was
+fascinated, motionless, held as in a vice by the horror of the thing.
+
+Suddenly Bonhomme moved his head to one side as if to listen more
+acutely. As he did so, the ray of moonlight fell upon the cabinet, fell
+upon Claire de la Fontaine, upon something that she held in an
+outstretched hand that gleamed.
+
+"_Nom de Dieu_!" There was the flash and crack of a pistol, a sharp cry,
+and the great figure fell back and sank out of sight.
+
+With that Dan sprang forward, reckless of danger, and ran to the window.
+He heard without the confused sounds as of persons scurrying to cover,
+saw their forms dash across the moonlit courtyard, into the shadows of
+the trees and outhouses. Beneath him on the floor of the gallery was
+something horrible and still.
+
+Almost instantly Claire de la Fontaine was by his side, and as
+regardless of danger as he, she was calling sharply, calling men by their
+names. Her hair had been loosened and fell over her shoulders in black
+waves, her dark eyes flashed with excitement and passion, and her face,
+strangely pale, in the silver moonlight, was set in stern harsh lines.
+Even then this vision of her tragic beauty thrilled the man at her side.
+
+But she was as unconscious of him as she was of her danger. With hand
+uplifted she called by name the desperados, who had taken shelter in the
+darkness and to those who now came running from front and rear where
+their attacks had been unsuccessful.
+
+Appalled, spell-bound by the vision, even as Dan was, they stopped, and
+stood listening mutely to the torrent of words that she poured
+forth,--vehement French of which Dan had no understanding.
+
+At last, ending the frightful tension of the scene, two of the men came
+forward, crept up to the lifeless body of Bonhomme, and grasping it by
+head and feet, carried it away, across the courtyard, into the darkness
+of the avenue of maples. One by one, still mysteriously silent, the
+others of the gang followed, till at length the last one had disappeared
+into the gloom. Weird silence fell once more upon the Inn.
+
+It was only then that Madame de la Fontaine turned to Dan. "They will
+come no more," she said in a strained unnatural voice. "We are saved,
+safe.... I have proved, is it not so?--my honour, my love."
+
+With the words she sank at his feet, just as Tom, candle in hand,
+appeared in the doorway.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+THE TREASURE
+
+
+Owing doubtless to the death of Bonhomme and to the orders given in no
+uncertain tones by Madame de la Fontaine, the bandits from the schooner
+in the cove did not make a further effort to attack the Inn that night.
+There was no rest, however, for Madame de la Fontaine, after her heroic
+exploit in the Oak Parlour, had swooned completely away. They carried her
+to the couch in Mrs. Frost's parlour, and, awkwardly enough, did what
+could be done for her by men. It was over an hour before they succeeded
+in restoring her to consciousness, and when they did so, she awoke to
+delirium and fever. Distracted by anxiety and by their helplessness, at
+the first streak of dawn, Dan started for town to get a doctor, and Ezra
+Manners volunteered to go to the Red Farm and bring back Mrs. Frost,
+Nancy, and the maids.
+
+About six o'clock in the morning the women folk returned to the Inn. But
+the briefest account of the attack was given them, though they were told
+in no uncertain terms of Madame de la Fontaine's heroic action in coming
+to warn them and of her courageous shot at the leader. Then Mrs. Frost
+and Nancy turned all their attention to the sick woman, caring for her as
+tenderly and devotedly as if she were their own. Half-an-hour later Dan
+returned from Monday Port with the family doctor, a grave silent old
+gentleman, in whose skill and discretion they trusted. After making an
+examination of his patient, he nodded his head encouragingly; gave a few
+directions to Mrs. Frost, and then left, promising to return later in the
+morning with medicines and supplies.
+
+At last, utterly worn out, the four men threw themselves on their beds
+and slept from sheer exhaustion. The sun was high in the sky when they
+came down stairs again and found Nancy waiting for them, and a smoking
+breakfast ready on the table. After greeting them, she pointed to the
+window, across the fields, almost bare of snow now and gleaming in the
+morning sunlight, to the bright waters of the cove. "See!" she cried,
+"the schooner has disappeared."
+
+They both looked. "By Jove, it has!" exclaimed Tom, rushing to the other
+side of the room, and peering out at the shipless sea. "Heigho! that's a
+relief. Pray God we've seen the last of her. The Marquis gone, the
+schooner gone,--we three together once more! Perhaps we shall begin to
+live again. Ah!" he added more softly, glancing with sudden sympathy at
+Dan's white drawn face, "I forgot the poor woman across the hall."
+
+Dan turned aside to hide his emotion, for though a load of anxiety had
+been lifted from his heart by the vanishing of _The Southern Cross_, he
+was sick with fear for the issue of the illness that had stricken down
+the woman he loved,--the woman who had proved her love for him by so
+terrible and so tragic a deed.
+
+As though aware that for the moment they were best left together alone,
+Nancy slipped away into the kitchen.
+
+"You love her, Dan?" asked Tom simply.
+
+"Yes, Tom, with all my heart and soul. I staked my honour, my life, on
+her sincerity. And how she has proved that we were right to trust her! It
+can't be--she mustn't die--I couldn't bear it!"
+
+"She'll be all right, old fellow, don't worry; trust to your mother and
+Nance. It is only the shock of the terrible things she went through last
+night. Come on, we must take something to eat. Here is Nancy back again."
+
+There was no doubt of the fact, _The Southern Cross_ had sailed away,
+vanished in the night as mysteriously as a week before she had appeared
+in the Strathsey and found moorings in the Cove. They did not count on
+the certainty of her not reappearing, however; and that night and for
+many nights thereafter the Inn was securely barricaded and a watch was
+kept, but neither then nor ever did _The Southern Cross_ spread her sails
+in those waters again. She and her crew disappeared from their lives as
+completely as from the seas that stretched around the coast of Deal.
+
+Tom at once was for making a search in the Oak Parlour for the hidden
+treasure, but for the time Dan had no heart for the undertaking. He urged
+delay at least until Madame de la Fontaine had recovered; and as for
+Nancy she would not hear of it.
+
+"I can't bear to think of it,--of the trouble, the crime, the suffering
+of which it has been the cause. When our poor lady recovers, she will
+tell us all we need to know. I dread the Oak Parlour. I would not go into
+that room for anything in the world. Nor, believe me, Tom, could Dan do
+so now. You have guessed, haven't you, that he loves Madame de la
+Fontaine?"
+
+"Of course, dearest; poor fellow! he betrays his love by every word and
+act. But good heaven, Nance, he couldn't marry her!"
+
+"No--I don't know. I suppose not. But Dan will do as he will. To oppose
+him now would only make him the more wretched."
+
+"Does your mother know?"
+
+"No, and it is best she should not. I don't think she has the faintest
+suspicion."
+
+"Well, I suppose we had better let things rest awhile;" Tom assented,
+"but I swear I would like to get at the Oak Parlour and tear the secret
+out of it."
+
+"We must wait a bit, Tom dear. Let's just be glad now of what we
+have and are."
+
+And with that he drew her toward him and pressed for a definite answer to
+the question which so deeply concerned their future.
+
+"When Madame has recovered, when we know all and the mystery is solved,"
+she replied; then she added inconsequently, "I wonder if we shall ever
+hear of the old Marquis again."
+
+"I wonder too," Tom exclaimed. "Though he has sailed away on _The
+Southern Cross_, I doubt if he will willingly leave the treasure
+behind him."
+
+"That dreadful treasure, Tom," cried Nancy. "I wish to goodness that the
+Marquis had it and might keep it always. We have each other."
+
+The evening of the second day after the terrible night of the attack, as
+Dan was entering the Inn from his work outside, he saw Madame de la
+Fontaine standing on the gallery under the Red Oak. It was the dusk of a
+mild pleasant day. She was clad still in her soft grey gown with furs
+about her waists and neck, and a grey scarf over her head. But there was
+something infinitely pathetic to him in the listlessness of her attitude,
+in the expression of a deep and melancholy that had come into her face.
+
+He stole swiftly to her side, and taking her hand in his pressed it to
+his lips, with a gesture that was as reverent as it was tender. For a
+moment something of the old brightness returned to her face as she bent
+her clear gaze upon his bowed head.
+
+"You love me, Dan?" she murmured.
+
+"You know I love you," he whispered passionately.
+
+"Yes, I believe that you do," she said simply. "I shall always be
+thankful that I have won a good man's love." But suddenly she withdrew
+her hand, as the door of the bar opened. "See, here is Mademoiselle
+Nancy. She is coming for me: she is to be with me to-night. There is
+much for me to do."
+
+His heart surged within him; for he knew that in her simple words there
+was the tragic note of farewell; but he could not speak, he could not
+plead from that sad and broken woman for a passion that he knew but too
+well she could never give. He knew that she would leave him on the
+morrow, that his protests would be vain;--nay,--he would not even utter
+them! With the gathering of the darkness about the old Inn, he felt that
+the light in his heart was being obscured forever.
+
+The evening passed, the night. Morning came, and Madame de la Fontaine,
+accompanied by Nancy, left the Inn at the Red Oak for Coventry. There
+remained to Dan of his brief and tragic passion but one letter, which Tom
+handed to him that morning, and which, with despairing heart, he read and
+re-read a hundred times.
+
+"_Mon cher ami_:
+
+"You would forgive that I do not know well how to express myself as I
+desire, if you could read my heart. I bade you good-bye to-night under
+the Red Oak, tree for me of such tragic and such beautiful memories. I
+could not say farewell otherwise, dear friend, nor could you. We have
+loved sincerely, have we not? We will remember that in days to come; you
+will remember it even in the happier days to come that I pray God to
+grant you. I know all that you would say, my friend, but it cannot be. I
+must vanish from your life, be gone as completely as though I had never
+entered it. I love you deeply, tenderly, but I could not be to you what I
+know that now you wish. All the past forbids. The very tragedy that
+proved to you that I was worthy of your trust forbids. It is my only
+justification that I saved your lives, dear friend; but oh how bitterly I
+ask pardon of God for what has been done! Then also, dearest friend, my
+heart is no longer capable to bear passion, but only to feel great
+tenderness. I could not say these things, and yet they must be written. I
+cannot go with them unsaid. Certain other things must be told you in
+justice to all.
+
+"The story I told you on the schooner that day was largely truth. The
+General Pointelle, who was at the Inn at the Red Oak in 1814, was in
+reality the Maréchal de Boisdhyver, the father of your foster-sister
+Nancy. She is truly Eloise de Boisdhyver. The Maréchal returned to France
+to support the Emperor, as he wrote to madame your good mother; and he
+fell, as I told you, on the field of Waterloo. Admitting the importance
+of his mission, admitting my ambiguous relation to him (indefensible as
+it was), to have left the child as he did was an act of kindness. In
+truth the treasure concealed in the Oak Parlour is considerable, and it
+was always my purpose to return, but the necessary directions for finding
+it were not entrusted to me, but to the Marquis Marie-Anne, whom I didn't
+meet until many years after Waterloo. Then I was induced by the
+Marquis,--your old Marquis--to provide the money for the miserable
+enterprise, of which we know the tragic result. From the first I was
+uncertain about the method we adopted; and then soon after our arrival
+here, from a hundred little indications, I became convinced that Bonhomme
+was prepared to betray us, once we secured the treasure. As for the
+Marquis, I suppose that he sailed away on the schooner. You need fear him
+no longer. It was he, I am convinced, that conveyed to them the
+information of the loosened casement in the Oak Parlour, and unwittingly
+arranged for his own undoing and our salvation. At all events he will
+have realized now that he has hopelessly lost the fight. As for the
+treasure, by right it belongs to Eloise, who should not disdain to use
+it. I enclose a transcription of the other half of the torn scrap of
+paper, which will supplement the directions in your possession.
+
+"And as for me, my friend, I shall seek a shelter in my own country apart
+from the world in which I have lived so to little purpose and for the
+most part so unhappily. Believe me, so it is best. My heart is too full
+for me to express all that I feel for you.
+
+"Dear, dear friend, do not render me the more unhappy to know that my
+brief friendship with you shall have harmed your life. Your place is in
+the world, to take part in the life of your own country, not, dear Dan,
+to waste youth and energy in the fruitless desolation of this beautiful
+Deal, not above all to grieve for a woman who was unworthy.
+
+"I commend you to God, and I shall never forget you.
+
+"CLAIRE DE LA FONTAINE."
+
+It was with a heavy heart that Dan consented later in the morning to
+Tom's proposal that they force at last the secret of the Oak Parlour. He
+got the torn scrap of paper which he had found,--such ages ago it seemed,
+though it was scarcely a week,--in the old cabinet, and gave it to Tom,
+with the copy of the other half which Madame de la Fontaine had enclosed
+in her letter of farewell. The copy in Madame de la Fontaine's
+handwriting did not dovetail exactly into the jagged edges of the
+original portion, so that it was some time before they could get it into
+position for reading. But at last it was pasted together on a large bit
+of cardboard, and Tom, with the aid of a dictionary, succeeded in making
+a translation, which Dan took down.
+
+"Learning of the attempt of my Emperor to regain his glorious throne, I
+leave these hospitable shores to offer my sword to his cause. In case I
+do not return, the person having instructions for the discovery of this
+paper, which I tear in two parts, will find herein the necessary
+directions for the finding of my hidden treasure. This treasure, bullion,
+jewels, and coins, is concealed in a secret chamber in this Inn at the
+Red Oak. This secret chamber will be entered from the Oak Parlour. The
+hidden door is released by a spring beneath the hand of the lady in the
+picture nearest the fireplace on the north side of the room. A panel
+slides back revealing the entrance. Instructions as to the deposition of
+the treasure will be found in the golden casket therewith.
+
+"FRANÇOIS DE BOISDHYVER."
+
+"Well?" said Tom, "the instructions are definite enough. Now we can put
+them to the test. Let's get to work at once. Wait a second till I get
+some wood, and well make a fire in the Oak Parlour." He filled his arms
+with logs from the bin under the settle in the bar, while Dan got the key
+for the north wing.
+
+Soon they were at the end of the old hall. It was with an effort that Dan
+brought himself to enter the room, for there flashed into his mind the
+vision of the last time he was there,--the cold silver moonlight, the
+dark burly form at the casement, the white drawn face of Claire de la
+Fontaine, and then the sharp flash and crack of the pistol.
+
+But with an impatient gesture, as if to thrust aside these tragic
+memories, he stepped across the threshold, and kneeling at the hearth,
+took the wood from Tom's arms and began to lay a fire. In the meantime
+his friend fumbled at the window casements, opened them, and let in the
+light of day and the pure air of out-of-doors. Soon the fire was
+crackling cheerily on the great andirons and casting its bright
+reflection on the dark oak panelling of the walls. Nothing had been
+disturbed--the old cabinet with the lions' heads stood opposite the
+window; the little _escritoire_, behind which he had crouched on the
+fatal night, was pushed back against the wall; the chairs, the tables,
+thick with dust, stood just as they had been standing for many years.
+
+"Do you realize, Tom," Dan said, as they stood side by side watching the
+blazing logs, "that it is sixteen years since General Pointelle stayed at
+the Inn and used this room? And the treasure, if there is any treasure,
+has been mouldering here all that time."
+
+"Let's get at it," said Tom. "I confess this place gives me the creeps.
+Have you got my translation of the directions?"
+
+"Yes, here it is." Dan spread out the bit of paper on one of the tables.
+"'The hidden door is released by a spring beneath the hand of the lady in
+the picture nearest the fireplace on the north side of the room.' Ah!
+that must be it--that old landscape let into the panel there." He walked
+nearer and examined it closely.
+
+It was a simple landscape, a garden in the foreground, forest and hills
+in the distance; and in the midst a lady in Eighteenth century costume
+caressing the head of a greyhound. It was beautifully mellow in tone, and
+might well have been a production of Gainsborough, though the Frosts had
+preserved no such tradition.
+
+Dan began to fumble, according to the directions, beneath the hand of
+the stately lady, pressing vigourously here and there with thumb and
+forefinger. "What's that?" he cried suddenly. A faint click, as of a
+spring in action, had sounded sharp in the stillness, but apparently with
+no other effect. "By Jove!" he exclaimed, "I believe there is something
+behind it. You heard the click? See there! the panel's opened a bit at
+the side." Surely enough, there was a long crack on the right--the length
+of the picture. "Here, let's push."
+
+Careless of the landscape, they put their hands upon the panel and
+pressed with all their force to the left. It yielded slowly, slipping
+back side-wise into the wall, and revealed a narrow opening, beyond which
+was a little circular stairway, leading apparently to some chamber above.
+
+"Here's the entrance to the secret chamber all right," Dan exclaimed.
+"Let's see where it goes to." He climbed in and started up the winding
+flight of stairs, Tom close behind him. About half way up the height
+of the Oak Parlour he came to a door. "Can't go any farther," he
+called to Tom.
+
+"What's the matter?"
+
+"There's a door here; it leads, evidently, into some little room between
+the Oak Parlour and the bedroom next. Who would ever have guessed it?"
+
+"Can't you open the door; is it locked?"
+
+Dan fumbled about till he found and turned the knob. "No," he answered.
+"I've opened it. But it's pitch dark inside. Get a candle."
+
+He waited anxiously while Tom went below again to get a candle, a
+strange feeling of dread creeping over him now that at last he was about
+to penetrate the secret which had been of such tragic purport in his
+life. In a moment Tom had returned, a candle in either hand, one of
+which he handed to Dan, and together they entered the secret chamber. It
+was a little room scarcely six feet square, without light, and so far as
+they could see without ventilation. As they stood looking about the
+candle flickered strangely casting weird shadows over the walls.
+Suddenly they saw at their feet a tiny golden casket, and then, in a
+corner of the room a row of small cloth bags, several of which had been
+ripped open, so that a stream of golden coin flowed out upon the floor.
+Nearby stood another little golden chest; and Tom, lifting the lid,
+started back astonished. For there sparkling and glowing in the candle
+light as though they were living moving things, lay a heap of precious
+gems--diamonds, rubies, opals, sapphires, amethysts, that might have
+been the ransom of a princess.
+
+"It's a treasure right enough!" cried Dan. "But what's this?" He turned
+to the opposite corner where there lay a heap of something covered with a
+great black cloth. They approached gingerly, and Dan stooped and picked
+up an edge of the covering. "It's a cloak," he exclaimed. Startled, he
+paused for a moment; then quickly pulled the cloak away, uncovering, to
+their horror, a lifeless body.
+
+"Tom!" Dan cried in a ghastly whisper. "A man has died here."
+
+Tom held the candle over the gruesome heap. "But who?" he asked in a
+hoarse whisper.
+
+For reply Dan pointed significantly to the cloak which he had dropped on
+the floor.
+
+"What!" cried Tom. "Good God! the old Marquis! But how? I don't
+understand--" he added, staring blankly.
+
+"He must have come here the afternoon he pretended to leave the Inn, must
+have learned the secret passage somehow. It was he who loosened the
+casement in the Oak Parlour that night, and got his message to Bonhomme.
+He was waiting here for him. Can't you see it all--the panel slipped
+back; he couldn't open it again; Bonhomme didn't come; he was caught like
+a rat in a trap."
+
+"My God, what a fate!"
+
+"We can't leave his body here. We must give it decent burial, you and I,
+Tom, for we can't let this be known."
+
+"And the treasure?"
+
+"Ah! there was treasure, wasn't there? Wait, let's see what is in the
+little casket." He picked up the golden casket that they had stepped over
+as they entered, and raised the lid. A single scrap of paper was inside
+on the little velvet cushion, inscribed in the same handwriting as the
+paper of directions, "_Pour Eloise de Boisdhyver_."
+
+"But come," Tom whispered, holding back the door, "I can't stand this any
+longer. We'll come back again, and do what must be done. Come, Dan."
+
+Dan gave a last look into the strange horrible little room, then he
+followed his friend. They closed the door behind them and crept slowly
+down the narrow winding stairs to the Oak Parlour, leaving the
+treasure in the secret chamber and the Marquis guarding it in the
+silence and darkness of death. What had been so basely striven for was
+sorrily won at last.
+
+THE END.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Inn at the Red Oak, by Latta Griswold
+
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+Title: The Inn at the Red Oak
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+Author: Latta Griswold
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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE INN AT THE RED OAK ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Mary Meehan, David Garcia and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ THE INN AT THE RED OAK
+ </h1>
+ <center>
+ <b>BY LATTA GRISWOLD</b>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>1917
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="image-1"><!-- Image 1 --></a>
+ <center>
+ <img src="frontis.png" height="555" width="450" alt=
+ "'It's a treasure right enough!' cried Dan.">
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ CONTENTS
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ <a href="#PART1">PART I</a><br>
+ THE OLD MARQUIS
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH1">I THE MARQUIS ARRIVES AT THE INN</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH2">II THE LION'S EYE</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH3">III THE MARQUIS AT NIGHT</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH4">IV THE OAK PARLOUR</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH5">V THE WALK THROUGH THE WOODS</a>
+ </p>
+ <center>
+ <a href="#PART2">PART II</a><br>
+ THE TORN SCRAP OF PAPER
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH6">VI THE HALF OF AN OLD SCRAP OF PAPER</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH7">VII A DISAPPEARANCE</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH8">VIII GREEN LIGHTS</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH9">IX RECOLLECTIONS OF A FRENCH EXILE</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH10">X MIDNIGHT VIGILS</a>
+ </p>
+ <center>
+ <a href="#PART3">PART III</a><br>
+ THE SCHOONER IN THE COVE
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH11">XI THE SOUTHERN CROSS</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH12">XII TOM TURNS THE TABLES</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH13">XIII MADAME DE LA FONTAINE</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH14">XIV IN THE FOG</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH15">XV NANCY</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH16">XVI MADAME AT THE INN</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH17">XVII THE MARQUIS LEAVES THE INN</a>
+ </p>
+ <center>
+ <a href="#PART4">PART IV</a><br>
+ THE ATTACK ON THE INN
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH18">XVIII THE AVENUE OF MAPLES</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH19">XIX THE ATTACK</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH20">XX THE OAK PARLOUR</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH21">XXI THE TREASURE</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ The Inn at the Red Oak
+ </h1><a name="PART1"><!-- PART1 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ PART I
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ THE OLD MARQUIS
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH1"><!-- CH1 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ THE MARQUIS ARRIVES AT THE INN
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ By the end of the second decade of the last century Monday
+ Port had passed the height of prosperity as one of the
+ principal depots for the West Indian trade. The shipping was
+ rapidly being transferred to New York and Boston, and the old
+ families of the Port, having made their fortunes, in rum and
+ tobacco as often as not, were either moving away to follow
+ the trade or had acquiesced in the changed conditions and
+ were settling down to enjoy the fruit of their labours. The
+ harbour now was frequently deserted, except for an occasional
+ coastwise trader; the streets began to wear that melancholy
+ aspect of a town whose good days are more a memory than a
+ present reality; and the old stage roads to Coventry and
+ Perth Anhault were no longer the arteries of travel they once
+ had been.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To the east of Monday Port, across Deal Great Water, an
+ estuary of the sea that expanded almost to the dignity of a
+ lake, lay a pleasant rolling wooded country known in Caesarea
+ as Deal. It boasted no village, scarcely a hamlet. Dr.
+ Jeremiah Watson, a famous pedagogue and a graduate of
+ Kingsbridge, had started his modest establishment for "the
+ education of the sons of gentlemen" on Deal Hill; there were
+ half-a-dozen prospering farms, Squire Pembroke's Red Farm and
+ Judge Meath's curiously lonely but beautiful House on the
+ Dunes among them; a little Episcopalian chapel on the shores
+ of the Strathsey river, a group of houses at the cross roads
+ north of Level's Woods, and the Inn at the Red Oak,&#8212;and
+ that was all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In its day this inn had been a famous hostelry, much more
+ popular with travellers than the ill-kept provincial hotels
+ in Monday Port; but now for a long time it had scarcely
+ provided a livelihood for old Mrs. Frost, widow of the famous
+ Peter who for so many years had been its popular host. No one
+ knew when the house had been built; though there was an old
+ corner stone on which local antiquarians professed to
+ decipher the figures "1693," and that year was assigned by
+ tradition as the date of its foundation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a long crazy building, with a great sloping roof, a
+ wide porch running its entire length, and attached to its
+ sides and rear in all sorts of unexpected ways and places
+ were numerous out houses and offices. Behind its high brick
+ chimneys rose the thick growth of Lovel's Woods, crowning the
+ ridge that ran between Beaver Pond and the Strathsey river to
+ the sea. The house faced southwards, and from the cobbled
+ court before it meadow and woodland sloped to the beaches and
+ the long line of sand dunes that straggled out and lost
+ themselves in Strathsey Neck. To the east lay marshes and the
+ dunes and beyond them the Strathsey, two miles wide where its
+ waters met those of the Atlantic; west lay the great curve,
+ known as the Second Beach, the blue surface of Deal Bay, and
+ a line of rocky shore, three miles in length, terminated by
+ Rough Point, near which began the out-lying houses of Monday
+ Port.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old hostelry took its name from a giant oak which grew at
+ its doorstep just to one side of the maple-lined driveway
+ that led down to the Port Road, a hundred yards or so beyond.
+ This enormous tree spread its branches over the entire width
+ and half the length of the roof. Ordinarily, of course, its
+ foliage was as green as the leaves on the maples of the
+ avenue or on the neighbouring elms, and the name of the Inn
+ might have seemed to the summer or winter traveller an odd
+ misnomer; but in autumn when the frost came early and the
+ great mass of green flushed to a deep crimson it could not
+ have been known more appropriately than as the Inn at the Red
+ Oak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a solidly-built house, such as even in the early part
+ of the nineteenth century men were complaining they could no
+ longer obtain; built to weather centuries of biting
+ southeasters, and&#8212;the legend ran&#8212;to afford
+ protection in its early days against Indians. At the time of
+ the Revolution it had been barricaded, pierced with
+ portholes, and had served, like innumerable other houses from
+ Virginia to Massachusetts, as Washington's headquarters. When
+ Tom Pembroke knew it best, its old age and decay had well set
+ in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pembroke was the son of the neighbouring squire, whose house,
+ known as the Red Farm, lay In the little valley on the other
+ side of the Woods at the head of Beaver Pond. From the time
+ he had been able to thread his way across the woodland by its
+ devious paths&#8212;Tom had been at the Inn almost every day
+ to play with Dan Frost, the landlord's son. They had played
+ in the stables, then stocked with a score of horses, where
+ now there were only two or three; in the great haymows of the
+ old barn in the clearing back of the Inn; in the ramshackle
+ garret under that amazing roof; or, best of all, in the
+ abandoned bowling-alley, where they rolled dilapidated balls
+ at rickety ten-pins.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Tom and Dan were eighteen&#8212;they were born within a
+ day of each other one bitter February&#8212;old Peter died,
+ leaving the Inn to his wife. Mrs. Frost pretended to carry on
+ the business, but the actual task of doing so soon devolved
+ upon her son. And in this he was subjected to little
+ interference; for the poor lady, kindly inefficient soul that
+ she was, became almost helpless with rheumatism. But indeed
+ it was rather on the farm than to the Inn that more and more
+ they depended for their living. In the social hierarchy of
+ Caesarea the Pembrokes held themselves as vastly superior to
+ the Frosts; but thanks to the easy-going democratic customs
+ of the young republic, more was made of this by the women
+ than the men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two boys loved each other devotedly, though love is
+ doubtless the last word they would have chosen to express
+ their relation. Dan was tall, dark, muscular; he had a
+ well-shaped head on his square shoulders; strong well-cut
+ features; a face that the sun had deeply tanned and dark hair
+ that it had burnished with gold. Altogether he was a
+ prepossessing lad, though he looked several years older than
+ he was, and he was commonly treated by his neighbours with a
+ consideration that his years did not merit. Tom Pembroke was
+ fairer; more attractive, perhaps, on first acquaintance;
+ certainly more boyish in appearance and behaviour. He was
+ quicker in his movements and in his mental processes; more
+ aristocratic in his bearing. His blue eyes were more
+ intelligent than Dan's, but no less frank and kindly. Young
+ Frost admired his friend almost as much as he cared for him;
+ for Dan, deprived of schooling, had a reverence for learning,
+ of which Tom had got a smattering at Dr. Watson's
+ establishment for "the sons of gentlemen" on the nearby hill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One stormy night in early January, the eve of Dan Frost's
+ twenty-second birthday, the two young men had their supper
+ together at the Inn, and afterwards sat for half-an-hour in
+ the hot, stove-heated parlour until Mrs. Frost began to nod
+ over her knitting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Off with you, boys," she said at length; "you will be
+ wanting to smoke your dreadful pipes. Nancy will keep me
+ company."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They took instant advantage of this permission and went into
+ the deserted bar, where they made a roaring fire on the great
+ hearth, drew their chairs near, filled their long clay pipes
+ with Virginia tobacco, and fell to talking.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Think of it!" exclaimed young Frost, as he took a great
+ whiff at his pipe; "here we are&#8212;the middle of the
+ winter&#8212;and not a guest in the house. Why we used to
+ have a dozen travellers round the bar here, and the whole
+ house bustling. I've known my father to serve a hundred and
+ more with rum on a night like this. Now we do a fine business
+ if we serve as many in a winter. Times have changed since we
+ were boys."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Aye," Tom agreed, "and it isn't so long ago, either. It
+ seemed to me as if the whole county used to be here on a
+ Saturday night."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I'm thinking," resumed Dan musingly, "of throwing up the
+ business, what's the use of pretending to keep an inn? If it
+ wasn't for mother and for Nancy, I'd clear out, boy; go off
+ and hunt my fortune. As it is, with what I make on the farm
+ and lose on the house, I just pull through the year."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "By gad," exclaimed Tom, "I'd go with you, Dan. I'm tired to
+ my soul with reading law in father's office. Why, you and I
+ haven't been farther than Coventry to the county fair, or to
+ Perth Anhault to make a horse trade. I'd like to see the
+ world, go to London and Paris. I've wanted to go to France
+ ever since that queer Frenchman was
+ here&#8212;remember?&#8212;and told us those jolly tales
+ about the Revolution and the great Napoleon. We were hardly
+ more than seven or eight then, I guess."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I would like to go, hanged if I wouldn't," said Dan. "I'm
+ getting more and more discontented. But there's not much use
+ crying for the moon, and France might as well be the moon,
+ for all of me." He relapsed then into a brooding silence. It
+ was hard for an inn-keeper to be cheerful in midwinter with
+ an empty house. Tom too was silent, dreaming vividly, if
+ vaguely, of the France he longed to see.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hark!" exclaimed Dan presently. "How it blows! There must be
+ a big sea outside to-night."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He strode to the window, pushed back the curtains of faded
+ chintz, and stared out into the darkness. The wind was
+ howling in the trees and about the eaves of the old inn, the
+ harsh roar of the surf mingled with the noise of the storm,
+ and the sleet lashed the window-panes in fury.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You will not be thinking of going home tonight, Tom?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not I," Pembroke answered, for he was as much at home in
+ Dan's enormous chamber as he was in his own little room under
+ the roof at the Red Farm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he turned from the window, the door into the parlour
+ opened, and a young girl quietly slipped in and seated
+ herself in the chimney-corner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hello, Nance," Dan exclaimed, as she entered; "come close,
+ child; you need to be near the fire on a night like this."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mother is asleep," the girl answered briefly, and then,
+ resting her chin upon her hands, she fixed her great dark
+ eyes upon the glowing logs. She was Dan's foster-sister,
+ eighteen years of age, though she looked hardly more than
+ sixteen; a shy, slender, girl, lovely with a wild, unusual
+ charm. To Tom she had always been a silent elfin creature,
+ delightful as their playmate when a child, but now though
+ still so familiar, she seemed in an odd way, to grow more
+ remote. Apparently she liked to sit with them on these winter
+ evenings in the deserted bar, when Mrs. Frost had gone to
+ bed; and to listen to their conversation, though she took
+ little part in it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Dan resumed his seat, he looked at her with evident
+ concern, for she was shivering as she sat so quietly by the
+ fireside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Are you cold, Nance?" he asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A little," she replied. "I was afraid in the parlour with
+ Mother asleep, and the wind and the waves roaring so
+ horribly."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Afraid?" exclaimed Tom, with an incredulous laugh. "I never
+ knew you to be really afraid of anything in the world,
+ Nancy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She turned her dark eyes upon him for the moment, with a
+ sharp inquisitive glance which caused him to flush
+ unaccountably. An answering crimson showed in her cheeks, and
+ she turned back to the fire. The colour fled almost as
+ quickly as it had come, and left her pale, despite the glow
+ of firelight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I was afraid&#8212;to-night," she said, after a moment's
+ silence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly there came the sound of a tremendous knocking on the
+ door which opened from the bar into the outer porch, and all
+ three started in momentary alarm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan jumped to his feet. "Who's that?" he cried.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again came the vigorous knocking. He ran across the room, let
+ down the great oaken beam, and opened the door to the night
+ and storm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Come in, travellers." A gust of wind and sleet rushed
+ through the opening and stung their faces. With the gust
+ there seemed to blow in the figure of a little old man
+ wrapped in a great black coat, bouncing into their midst as
+ if he were an India rubber ball thrown by a gigantic hand.
+ Behind him strode in Manners, the liveryman of Monday Port.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Here's a guest for you, Mr. Frost. I confess I did my best
+ to keep him in town till morning, but nothing 'd do; he must
+ get to the Inn at the Red Oak to-night. We had a hellish time
+ getting here too, begging the lady's pardon; but here we
+ are."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Good-naturedly he had taken hold of his fare and, as he
+ spoke, was helping the stranger unwrap himself from the
+ enveloping cloak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He's welcome," said Dan. "Here, sir, let me help you." He
+ put out his hand to steady the curious old gentleman, who, at
+ last, gasping for breath and blinking the sleet out of his
+ eyes, had been unrolled by Manners from the dripping cloak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was a strange figure of a man, they thought, as Dan led
+ him to the fire to thaw himself out. He was scarcely more
+ than five and a half feet in height, with tiny hands and feet
+ almost out of proportion even to his diminutive size. He was
+ an old man, they would have said, though his movements were
+ quick and agile as if he were set up on springs. His face,
+ small, sharp-featured and weazened, was seamed with a
+ thousand wrinkles. His wig was awry, its powder, washed out
+ by the melting sleet, was dripping on his face in pasty
+ streaks; and from beneath it had fallen wisps of thin grey
+ hair, which plastered themselves against his temples and
+ forehead. This last feature was also out of proportion to the
+ rest of his physiognomy, for it was of extraordinary height,
+ and of a polished smoothness, in strange contrast to his
+ wrinkled cheeks. Beneath shone two flashing black eyes, with
+ the fire of youth in them, for all he seemed so old. The
+ lower part of his face was less distinctive. He had a small,
+ Suddenly there came the sound of a tremendous knocking on the
+ door which opened from the bar into the outer porch, and all
+ three started in momentary alarm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan jumped to his feet. "Who's that?" he cried.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again came the vigorous knocking. He ran across the room, let
+ down the great oaken beam, and opened the door to the night
+ and storm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Come in, travellers." A gust of wind and sleet rushed
+ through the opening and stung their faces. With the gust
+ there seemed to blow in the figure of a little old man
+ wrapped in a great black coat, bouncing into their midst as
+ if he were an India rubber ball thrown by a gigantic hand.
+ Behind him strode in Manners, the liveryman of Monday Port.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Here's a guest for you, Mr. Frost. I confess I did my best
+ to keep him in town till morning, but nothing'd do; he must
+ get to the Inn at the Red Oak to-night. We had a hellish time
+ getting here too, begging the lady's pardon; but here we
+ are."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Good-naturedly he had taken hold of his fare and, as he
+ spoke, was helping the stranger unwrap himself from the
+ enveloping cloak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He's welcome," said Dan. "Here, sir, let me sharply-pointed
+ nose; a weak mouth, half-hidden by drooping white moustaches;
+ and a small sharp chin, accentuated by a white beard nattily
+ trimmed to a point. He was dressed entirely in black; a
+ flowing coat of French cut, black small clothes, black
+ stockings and boots that reached to the calves of his little
+ legs. These boots were ornamented with great silver buckles,
+ and about his neck and wrists showed bedraggled bits of
+ yellowed lace."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He stood before the fire, speechless still; standing first on
+ one foot then on the other; rubbing his hands the while as he
+ held them to the grateful warmth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nancy had in the meanwhile drawn a glass of rum, and now
+ advancing held it toward him a little gingerly. He took it
+ eagerly and drained it at a gulp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Merci, ma petite ange; merci, messieurs</i>" he exclaimed
+ at last; and then added in distinct, though somewhat strongly
+ accented English, "I ask your pardon. I forget you may not
+ know my language. But now that this good liquor has put new
+ life in my poor old bones, I explain myself. I am arrived, I
+ infer, at the Inn at the Red Oak; and you, monsieur, though
+ so young, I take to be my host. I have your description, you
+ perceive, from the good postilion. You will do me the
+ kindness to provide me with supper and a bed?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Certainly, sir," said Dan. "It is late and we are
+ unprepared, but we will put you up somehow. You too, Manners,
+ had best let me bunk you till morning; you'll not be going
+ back to the Port tonight? Nancy a fresh bumper for Mr.
+ Manners."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thankee, sir; I managed to get out with the gentleman
+ yonder, and I guess I'll manage to get back. But it's a rare
+ night, masters. Just a minute, sir, and I'll be getting his
+ honour's bags.... Thank ye kindly, Miss Nancy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He drained the tumbler of raw spirit that Nancy held out.
+ Then he opened the door again and went out into the storm,
+ returning almost at once with the stranger's bags.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan turned to his sister. "Nancy dear, go stir up Susan and
+ Deborah. We must have a fire made in the south chamber and
+ some hot supper got ready. Tell Susan to rout out Jesse to
+ help her. Say nothing to Mother; no need to disturb her. And
+ now, sir," he continued, turning again to the stranger, "may
+ I ask your name?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old gentleman ceased his springing seesaw for a moment,
+ and fixed his keen black eyes on the questioner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Certainment, monsieur</i>&#8212;certainly, I should say,"
+ he replied in a high, but not unpleasant, voice. "I am the
+ Marquis de Boisdhyver, at your service. I am to travel in the
+ United States&#8212;oh! for a long time. I stay here, if you
+ are so good as to accommodate me, perhaps till you are weary
+ and wish me to go elsewhere. You have been greatly
+ recommended to me by my friend,&#8212;quiet, remote,
+ secluded, an <i>auberge</i>&#8212;what you call it?&#8212;an
+ inn, well-suited to my habits, my tastes, my desire for rest.
+ I am very <i>fatigu&eacute;</i>, monsieur."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes," said Dan, with a grim smile, "we are remote and quiet
+ and secluded. You are welcome, sir, to what we have. Tom, see
+ that Manners has another drink before he goes, will you? and
+ do the honours for our guest, while Nance and I get things
+ ready."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he disappeared into the kitchen, following Nancy, the
+ Marquis looking after him with a comical expression of
+ gratitude upon his face. Tom drew another glass of rum, which
+ Manners eagerly, if rashly, devoured. Then the liveryman
+ wrapped himself in his furs, bade them good-night, and
+ started out again into the storm for his drive back to Monday
+ Port.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this time the old gentleman stood warming his feet and
+ hands at the fire, watching his two companions with
+ quickly-shifting eyes, or glancing curiously over the great
+ bar which the light of the fire and the few candles but
+ faintly illuminated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having barred the door, Tom turned back to the hearth. "It is
+ a bad night, sir."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But yes," exclaimed the Marquis. "I think I perish. Oh! that
+ dreary tavern at your Monday Port. I think when I arrive
+ there I prefer to perish. But this, this is the old Inn at
+ the Red Oak, is it not? And it dates, yes,&#8212;from the
+ year 1693? The old inn, eh, by the great tree?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, certainly," Pembroke answered; "at least, that is the
+ date that some people claim is on the old cornerstone. You
+ have been here before then, sir?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I?" exclaimed Monsieur de Boisdhyver. "Oh, no! not I. I have
+ heard from my friend who was here some years ago."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, I see. And you have come far to-day?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "From Coventry, monsieur&#8212;Monsieur&#8212;?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Pembroke," Tom replied, with a little start.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah! yes, Monsieur Pembroke. A member of the household?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No&#8212;a friend."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I make a mistake," quickly interposed the traveller,
+ "Pardon. I am come from Coventry, Monsieur Pembroke, in an
+ everlasting an eternal stage, a monster of a carriage,
+ monsieur. It is only a few days since that I arrive from
+ France."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah, France!" exclaimed Tom, recalling that only a little
+ while before he and Dan had been dreaming of that magic
+ country. And here was a person who actually lived in France,
+ who had just come from there, who extraordinarily chose to
+ leave that delightful land for the Inn at the Red Oak in
+ mid-winter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "France," he repeated; "all my life, sir, I have been longing
+ to go there."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So?" said the Marquis, raising his white eyebrows with
+ interest. "You love <i>ma belle patrie</i>, eh? <i>Qui
+ Sait</i>?&#8212;you will perhaps some day go there. You have
+ interests, friends in my country?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, none," Tom answered. "I wish I had. You come from Paris,
+ sir?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Mais oui</i>."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For some time they chatted in such fashion, the Marquis
+ answering Tom's many questions with characteristic French
+ politeness, but turning ever and anon a pathetic glance
+ toward the door through which Dan and Nancy had disappeared.
+ It was with undisguised satisfaction that he greeted young
+ Frost when he returned to announce that supper was ready.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I famish!" the old gentleman exclaimed. "I have dined to-day
+ on a biscuit and a glass of water."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They found the kitchen table amply spread with
+ food,&#8212;cold meats, hot eggs and coffee, and a bottle of
+ port. Monsieur de Boisdhyver ate heartily and drank his wine
+ with relish, gracefully toasting Nancy as he did so. When his
+ meal was finished, he begged with many excuses to be shown to
+ his bedroom; and indeed his fatigue was evident. Dan saw him
+ to the great south chamber, carrying a pair of lighted
+ candles before. He made sure that all had been done that
+ sulky sleepy maids could be induced to do, and then left him
+ to make ready for the night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lights were extinguished in the parlour and the bar, the
+ fires were banked, and the two young men went up to Dan's own
+ room. There on either side of the warm hearth, had been drawn
+ two great four-posted beds, and it took the lads but a moment
+ to tumble into them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It's queer," said Dan, as he pulled the comfort snugly about
+ his shoulders, calling to Tom across the way; "it's
+ queer&#8212;the old chap evidently means to stay awhile. What
+ does a French marquis want in a deserted hole like this, I'd
+ like to know? But if he pays, why the longer he stays the
+ better."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I hope he does," said Tom sleepily. "He has a reason, I
+ fancy, for he asked questions enough while you were out
+ seeing to his supper. He seems to know the place almost as
+ well as if he had been here before, though he said he hadn't.
+ But, by gad, I wish you and I were snug in a little hotel on
+ the banks of the Seine to-night and not bothering our heads
+ about a doddering old marquis who hadn't sense enough to stay
+ there."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Wish we were," Dan replied. "Good-night," he called,
+ realizing that his friend was too sleepy to lie awake and
+ discuss any longer their unexpected guest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Good-night," murmured Tom, and promptly drifted away into
+ dreams of the wonderful land he had never seen. As for Dan he
+ lay awake a long time, wondering what could possibly have
+ brought the old Marquis to the deserted inn at such a time of
+ the year and on such a night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH2"><!-- CH2 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ THE LIONS EYE
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ Toward daylight the storm blew itself out, the wind swung
+ round to the northwest, and the morning dawned clear and
+ cold, with a sharp breeze blowing and a bright sun shining
+ upon a snow-clad, ice-crusted world and a sparkling sapphire
+ sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan had risen early and had set Jesse to clear a way across
+ the court and down the avenue to the road. The maids, astir
+ by dawn, were no longer sulky but bustled about at the
+ preparation of an unusually good breakfast in honour of the
+ new guest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Frost, who habitually lay till nine or ten o'clock
+ behind the crimson curtains of her great bed, had caught wind
+ of something out of the ordinary, demanded Nancy's early
+ assistance, and announced her intention of breakfasting with
+ the household.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was fretful during the complicated process of her
+ toilette and so hurt the feelings of her foster-daughter,
+ that when Dan came to take her into the breakfast room, Nancy
+ found an excuse for not accompanying them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Marquis was awaiting their appearance. He stood with his
+ back-to the fire, a spruce and carefully-dressed little
+ figure, passing remarks upon the weather with young Pembroke,
+ who leaned his graceful length against the mantelpiece.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The noble traveller was presented with due ceremony to Mrs.
+ Frost, who greeted him with old-world courtesy. She had had,
+ indeed, considerably more association with distinguished
+ personages than had most of the dames of the neighbouring
+ farms who considered themselves her social superiors. She
+ welcomed Monsieur de Boisdhyver graciously, enquiring with
+ interest of his journey and with solicitude as to his rest
+ during the night. She received with satisfaction his
+ rapturous compliments on the comforts that had been provided
+ him, on the beauty of the surrounding country upon which he
+ had looked from the windows of his chamber, and on her own
+ condescension in vouchsafing to breakfast with them. She was
+ delighted that he should find the Inn at the Red Oak so much
+ to his taste that he proposed to stay with them indefinitely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were soon seated at the breakfast-table and had
+ addressed themselves to the various good things that black
+ Deborah had provided. The native Johnny cakes, made of meal
+ ground by their own windmill, the Marquis professed to find
+ particularly tempting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Despite Mrs. Frost's questions, despite his own voluble
+ replies, Monsieur de Boisdhyver gave no hint, that there was
+ any deeper reason for his seeking exile at the Inn of the Red
+ Oak than that he desired rest and quiet and had been assured
+ that he would find them there. And who had so complimented
+ their simple abode of hospitality?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah, madame," he murmured, lifting his tiny hands, "so many!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But I fear, monsieur," replied his hostess, "that you, who
+ are accustomed to the luxuries of a splendid city like Paris,
+ to so many things of which we read, will find little to
+ interest and amuse you in our remote countryside."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As for interest, madame," the Marquis protested, "there are
+ the beauties of nature, your so delightful household, my few
+ books, my writing; and for amusement, I have my
+ violin;&#8212;I so love to play. You will not
+ mind?&#8212;perhaps, enjoy it?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Indeed yes," said Mrs. Frost. "Dan, too, is a fiddler after
+ a fashion; and as for Nancy, she has a passion for music, and
+ dreams away many an evening while my son plays his old
+ tunes."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah, yes," said the Marquis, "Mademoiselle Nancy, I have not
+ the pleasure to see her this morning?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No," replied Mrs. Frost, flushing a trifle at the
+ recollection of why Nancy was not present, "she is somewhat
+ indisposed&#8212;a mere trifle. You will see her later in the
+ day. But, monsieur, you should have come to us in the spring
+ or the summer, for then the country is truly beautiful; now,
+ with these snow-bound roads, when not even the stagecoach
+ passes, we are indeed lonely and remote."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is that," insisted the Marquis, "which so charms me. When
+ one is old and when one has lived a life too occupied, it is
+ this peace, this quiet, this remoteness one desires. To walk
+ a little, to sit by your so marvellously warm fires, to look
+ upon your beautiful country, <i>cest bou</i>!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He held her for a moment with his piercing little eyes, a
+ faint smile upon his lips, as though to say that it was
+ impossible he should be convinced that he had not found
+ precisely what he was seeking, and insisting, as it were,
+ that his hostess take his words as the compliment they were
+ designed to be.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before she had time to reply, he had turned to Dan. "What a
+ fine harbour you have, Monsieur Frost," he said, pointing
+ through the window toward the Cove, separated from the river
+ and the sea by the great curve of Strathsey Neck, its blue
+ waters sparkling now in the light of the morning sun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes," replied Dan, glancing out upon the well-known
+ shoreline, "it is a good harbour, though nothing, of course,
+ to compare with a Port. But it's seldom that we see a ship at
+ anchor here, now."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There is, however," inquired the Marquis with interest,
+ "anchorage for a vessel, a large vessel?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, indeed," Tom interrupted, "in the old days when my
+ father had his ships plying between Havana and the Port, he
+ would often have them anchor in the Cove for convenience in
+ lading them with corn from the farm."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And they were large ships?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Full-rigged, sir; many of 'em, and drawing eight feet at
+ least."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Eh bien</i>! And the old Inn, madame, it dates, your son
+ tells me, from 1693?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We think so, sir, though I have no positive knowledge of its
+ existence before 1750. My husband purchased the place in '94,
+ and it had then been a hostelry for some years, certainly
+ from the middle of the century. But we have made many
+ additions. Danny dear, perhaps it will interest the Marquis
+ if you should take him over the house. We are proud of our
+ old inn, sir."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And with reason, madame. If monsieur will, I shall be
+ charmed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will leave you then with my son. Give me your arm, Dan, to
+ the parlour. Unfortunately, Monsieur le Marquis, affliction
+ has crippled me and I spend the day in my chair in the blue
+ parlour. I shall be so pleased, if you will come and chat
+ with me. Tommy, you will be staying to dinner with us?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thank you, Mrs. Frost, but I must get to the Port for the
+ day. Mother and Father are leaving by the afternoon stage, if
+ it gets through. They are going to spend the winter in
+ Coventry. But I shall be back to-night as I have promised Dan
+ to spend that time with him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We shall be glad to have you, as you know."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon after Mrs. Frost had left the breakfast-room and Tom had
+ started forth with horse and sleigh, Dan returned. The
+ Marquis promptly reminded him of the suggestion that he
+ should be taken over the Inn. It seemed to Dan an
+ uninteresting way to entertain his guest and the morning was
+ a busy one. However, he promised to be ready at eleven
+ o'clock to show the Marquis all there was in the old house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Dan went about the offices and stables, performing himself
+ much of the work that in prosperous times fell to grooms and
+ hostlers, he found himself thinking about his new guest. Dan
+ knew enough of French history to be aware there were frequent
+ occasions in France when partisans of the various factions,
+ royalist, imperialist, or republican, found it best to
+ expatriate themselves. He knew that in times past many of the
+ most distinguished exiles had found asylum in America. But at
+ the present, he understood, King Louis Philippe, was reigning
+ quietly at the Tuileries and, moreover, the Marquis de
+ Boisdhyver, mysterious as he was, did not suggest the
+ political adventurer of whom Dan as a boy had heard his
+ parents tell such extraordinary tales. In the few years
+ immediately after the final fall of the great Bonaparte there
+ had been an influx of imperialistic supporters in America,
+ some of whom had even found their way to Monday Port and
+ Deal. One of these, Dan remembered, had stayed for some
+ months in '14 or '15 at the Inn at the Red Oak, and it was he
+ whom Tom had recalled the night before as having told them
+ stories of his adventurous exploits in the wars of the Little
+ Corporal. But it was too long after Napoleon's fall to
+ connect his present guest with the imperial exiles. He could
+ imagine no ulterior reason for the Marquis's coming and was
+ inclined to put it down as the caprice of an old restless
+ gentleman who had a genuine mania for solitude. Of solitude,
+ certainly, he was apt to get his fill at the Inn at the Red
+ Oak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At eleven o'clock he returned to keep his appointment. He
+ found the Marquis established at a small table in the bar by
+ an east window, from which was obtained a view of the Cove,
+ of the sand-dunes along the Neck, and of the open sea beyond.
+ A writing-desk was on the table, ink and quills had been
+ provided, a number of books and papers were strewn about, and
+ Monsieur de Boisdhyver was apparently busy with his
+ correspondence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Enchanted" he exclaimed, as he pulled out a great gold
+ watch. "Punctual. I find another virtue, monsieur, in a
+ character to which I have already had so much reason to pay
+ my compliments. I trust I do not trespass upon your more
+ important duties." As he spoke, he rapidly swept the papers
+ into the writing-desk, closed and locked it, and carefully
+ placed the tiny golden key into the pocket of his
+ gayly-embroidered waistcoat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not at all," Dan replied courteously, "I shall be glad to
+ show you about. But I fear you will find it cold and dismal,
+ for the greater part of the house is seldom used or even
+ entered."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I bring my cloak," said the Marquis. "Interest will give me
+ warmth. What I have already seen of the Inn at the Red Oak is
+ so charming, that I doubt not there is much more to delight
+ one. I imagine, monsieur, how gay must have been this place
+ once."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He took his great cloak from the peg near the fire where it
+ had been hung the night before to dry wrapped himself snugly
+ in it; and then, with a little bow, preceded Dan into the
+ cold and draughty corridor that opened from the bar into the
+ older part of the house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This hallway extended fifty or sixty feet to the north wall
+ of the main part of the inn whence a large window at the turn
+ of a flight of stairs gave light. On the right, extending the
+ same distance as the hall itself, was a great room known as
+ the Red Drawing-room, into which Dan first showed the
+ Marquis. This room had not been used since father's death
+ four or five years before, and for a long time previous to
+ that only on the rare occasions when a county gathering of
+ some sort was held at the inn. It had been furnished in good
+ taste and style in colonial days, but was now dilapidated and
+ musty. The heavy red damask curtains were drawn before the
+ windows, and the room was dark and cheerless. Dan admitted
+ the dazzling light of the sun; but the Marquis only shivered
+ and seemed anxious to pass quickly on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You see, sir," observed the young landlord, "it is dismal
+ enough."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Mais oui</i>&#8212;<i>mais oui</i>," exclaimed the
+ Marquis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the foot of the stairway the corridor turned at right
+ angles and ran north. On either side opened a number of
+ chambers in like conditions of disrepair, which had been used
+ as bedrooms in the palmy days of the hostelry. This corridor
+ ended at the bowling-alley, where as children Tom and Dan had
+ loved to play. Half-way to the entrance to the bowling-alley
+ a third hallway branched off to the right, leading to a
+ similar set of chambers. Into all these they entered, the
+ Marquis examining each with quick glances, dismissing them
+ with the briefest interest and the most obvious comment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan saved the <i>pi&eacute;ce-de-resistance</i> till last.
+ This was a little room entered from the second corridor just
+ at the turn&#8212;the only room indeed, as he truthfully
+ said, that merited a visit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This," he explained, "we call the Oak Parlour. It is the
+ only room on this floor worth showing you. My father brought
+ the wainscoting from an old English country-house in
+ Dorsetshire. My father's people were Torries, sir, and kept
+ up their connection with the old country."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a delightful room into which Dan now admitted the
+ light of day, drawing aside the heavy green curtains from the
+ eastern windows. It was wainscoted from floor to cornice in
+ old black English oak, curiously and elaborately carved, and
+ divided into long narrow panels. The ceiling, of similar
+ materials and alike elaborately decorated, was supported by
+ heavy transverse beams that seemed solid and strong enough to
+ support the roof of a cathedral. On one side two windows
+ opened upon the gallery and court and looked out upon the
+ Cove, on the other side stood a cabinet. It was the most
+ striking piece of furniture in the room, of enormous
+ dimensions and beautifully carved on the doors of the
+ cupboards below and on the top-pieces between the mirrors
+ were lion's heads of almost life-size. Opposite the heavy
+ door, by which they had entered, was a large fireplace,
+ containing a pair of elaborately ornamented brass and irons.
+ There was not otherwise a great deal of furniture,&#8212;two
+ or three tables, some chairs, a deep window-seat, a
+ writing-desk of French design; but all, except this last, in
+ keeping with the character of the room, and all brought
+ across the seas from the old Dorsetshire mansion, from which
+ Peter Frost had obtained the interior.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Charmant</i>!" exclaimed the Marquis. "You have a jewel,
+ <i>mon ami</i>; a bit of old England or of old France in the
+ heart of America; a room one finds not elsewhere in the
+ States. It is a <i>creation superbe</i>."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With enthusiastic interest he moved about, touching each
+ article of furniture, examining with care the two of three
+ old English landscapes that had been let into panels on the
+ west side of the room, pausing in ecstacies before the great
+ cabinet and standing before the fireplace as if he were
+ warming his hands at that generous hearth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah, Monsieur Frost, could I but write, read, dream here...!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I fear that would be impossible, sir," replied Dan. "It is
+ difficult to heat this portion of the house; and in fact, we
+ never use it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>H&eacute;las</i>!" exclaimed the Marquis, "those things
+ which allure us in this world are so often impossible.
+ Perhaps in the spring, in the summer, when there is no longer
+ the necessity of the fire, you will permit me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It may be, monsieur," Dan replied, "that long before the
+ summer comes you will have left us."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Mais non</i>!" cried M. de Boisdhyver. "Every hour that I
+ stay but proves to me how long you will have to endure my
+ company."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Somewhat ungraciously, it seemed, young Frost made no reply
+ to this pleasantry; for already he was impatient to be gone.
+ Although the room was intensely cold and uncomfortable, still
+ his guest lingered, standing before the massive cabinet,
+ exclaiming upon the exquisiteness of the workmanship, and
+ every now and then running his dainty fingers along the
+ carving of its front. As Dan stood waiting for the Marquis to
+ leave, he chanced to glance through the window to the court
+ without, and saw Jesse starting out in the sleigh. As he had
+ given him no such order he ran quickly to the window, rapped
+ vigourously and then, excusing himself to the Marquis,
+ hurried out to ask Jesse to explain his errand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Marquis de Boisdhyver stood for a moment, as Dan left
+ him, motionless in front of the cabinet. His face was bright
+ with surprise and delight, his eyes alert with interest and
+ cunning. After a moment's hesitation he stole cautiously to
+ the window, and seeing Frost was engaged in conversation with
+ Jesse, he sprang back with quick steps to the cabinet. He
+ hastily ran the tips of his fingers along the beveled edges
+ of the wide shelf from end to end several times, each time
+ the expression of alertness deepening into one of
+ disappointment. He stopped for a moment and listened. All was
+ quiet. Again with quick motions he felt beneath the edges.
+ Suddenly his eyes brightened and he breathed quickly; his
+ sensitive fingers had detected a slight unevenness in the
+ smooth woodwork. Again he paused and listened, and then
+ pressed heavily until he heard a slight click. He glanced up,
+ as directly in front of him the eye of one of the carved
+ wooden lion's heads on the front of the board winked and
+ slowly raised, revealing a small aperture. With a look of
+ satisfaction, the Marquis thrust his fingers into the tiny
+ opening and drew forth a bit of tightly folded yellow paper;
+ he glanced at it for an instant and thrust it quickly into
+ the pocket of his waistcoat. Then he lowered the lid of the
+ lion's eye. There was a slight click again; and he turned,
+ just as Dan reappeared in the doorway.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Excuse my leaving you so abruptly," said Frost, "but I saw
+ Jesse going off with the sleigh, and as I had given him no
+ orders, I wanted to know where he was going. But it was all
+ right. Are you ready, sir? I am afraid if we stay much longer
+ you will catch cold." This last remark was added as the
+ Marquis politely smothered a sneeze with his flimsy lace
+ handkerchief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>C'est bien</i>, monsieur. I fear I have taken a little
+ cold. Perhaps it would be just as well if we explore no
+ further to-day."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If you prefer, sir," answered Dan, holding the door open for
+ his guest to go out. Monsieur de Boisdhyver turned and
+ surveyed the Oak Parlour once more before he left it. "Ah!"
+ he exclaimed, "this so charming room&#8212;it is of a
+ perfection! Dorsetshire, you say? ... To me it would seem
+ French." They walked back rapidly along the dark cold
+ corridors to the bar. All the way the Marquis, wrapped
+ tightly in his great cloak, kept the thumb of his left hand
+ in his waistcoat pocket, pressing securely against the paper
+ he had taken from the old cabinet in the Oak Parlour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH3"><!-- CH3 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER III
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ THE MARQUIS AT NIGHT
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ The household of the Inn at the Red Oak soon became
+ accustomed to the presence of their new member; indeed, he
+ seemed to them during those bleak winter months a most
+ welcome addition. Except for an occasional traveller who
+ spent a night or a Sunday at the Inn, he was the only guest.
+ He was gregarious and talkative, and would frequently keep
+ them for an hour or so at table as he talked to them of his
+ life in France, and of his adventures in the exciting times
+ through which his country had passed during the last fifty
+ years. He was the cadet, he told them, of a noble family of
+ the Vend&eacute;e, the head of which, though long faithful to
+ the exiled Bourbons, had gone over to Napoleon upon the
+ establishment of the Empire. But as for
+ himself&#8212;Marie-Anne-Tim&eacute;lon-Armand de
+ Boisdhyver&#8212;he still clung to the Imperial cause, and
+ though now for many years his age and infirmities had forced
+ him to withdraw from any part in intrigues aiming at the
+ restoration of the Empire, his sympathies were still keen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he talked in this strain, of his thrilling memories of
+ the Terror and of the extraordinary days when Bonaparte was
+ Emperor, Dan and Tom would listen to him by the hour. But
+ Mrs. Frost preferred to hear the Marquis's reminiscences of
+ the <i>ancien r&eacute;gime</i> and of the old court life at
+ Versailles. He had been a page, he said, to the unfortunate
+ Marie Antoinette; he would cross himself piously at the
+ mention of the magic name, and digress rapturously upon her
+ beauty and grace, and bemoan, with tears, her unhappy fate.
+ She liked also to hear of the court of Napoleon and of the
+ life of the <i>faubourgs</i> in the Paris of the day. On
+ these occasions the young men were apt to slip away and leave
+ the Marquis alone with Mrs. Frost and Nancy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For Nancy Monsieur de Boisdhyver seemed to have a
+ fascination. She would listen absorbed to his voluble tales,
+ her bright eyes fixed on his fantastic countenance, her head
+ usually resting upon her hand, and her body bent forward in
+ an attitude of eager attention. She rarely spoke even to ask
+ a question; indeed, her only words would be an occasional
+ exclamation of interest, or the briefest reply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the day their noble guest would potter about the house
+ or, when the weather was fine, stroll down to the shore,
+ where he would walk up and down the strip of sandy beach in
+ the lee of the wind hour after hour. Now and then he wandered
+ out upon the dunes that stretched along the Neck; and once,
+ Dan afterwards learned, he paid a call upon old Mrs. Meath
+ who lived by herself in the lonely farmhouse on Strathsey
+ Neck, that was known as the House of the Dunes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After supper they were wont to gather in Mrs. Frost's parlour
+ or in the old bar before the great hearth on which a splendid
+ fire always blazed; and when the Marquis had had his special
+ cup of black coffee, he would get out his violin and play to
+ them the long evening through. He played well, with the skill
+ of a master of the art, and with feeling. He seemed at such
+ times to forget himself and his surroundings; his bright eyes
+ would grow soft, a dreamy look would steal into them, and a
+ happy little smile play about the corners of his thin pale
+ lips. Obligingly he gave Dan lessons, and often the young man
+ would accompany him, in the songs his mother had known and
+ loved in her youth, when old Peter had come wooing with
+ fiddle in hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But best of all were the evenings when the Marquis chose to
+ improvise. Plaintive, tender melodies for the most part;
+ prolonged trembling, faintly-expiring airs; and sometimes
+ harsh, strident notes that evoked weird echoes from the bare
+ wainscoted walls. Mrs. Frost would sit, tears of sadness and
+ of pleasure in her eyes, the kindly homely features of her
+ face moving with interest and delight. Nancy was usually by
+ the table, her sharp little chin propped up on the palms of
+ her hands, never taking her fascinated gaze from the
+ musician. Sometimes Tom would look at her and wonder of what
+ she could be thinking. For certainly her spirit seemed to be
+ far away wandering in a world of dreams and of strange
+ inexpressible emotions. For Tom the music stirred delicate
+ thoughts bright dreams of beauty and of love; the vivid
+ intangible dreams of awakening youth. He had not had much
+ experience with emotion; the story of his love affairs
+ contained no more dramatic moments than the stealing of
+ occasional kisses from the glowing cheeks of Maria Stonywell,
+ the beauty of the Tinterton road, as he had walked back to
+ the old farm with her on moonlight evenings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They would all be sorry when Monsieur pleaded weariness and
+ bade them good-night. Sometimes his music so moved the old
+ Frenchman that the tears would gather in his faded blue eyes
+ and steal down his powdered cheeks; and then, like as not, he
+ was apt to break off suddenly, drop violin and bow upon his
+ knees, and exclaim, "<i>Ah! la musique! mon Dieu, mon Dieu!
+ elle me rappelle ma jeunesse. Et maintenant&#8212;et
+ maintenant</i>!" And then, brushing away the tears he would
+ rise, make them a courtly bow, and hurry out of the room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan alone did not fall under his spell. He and Tom would
+ often talk of their strange guest after they were gone to bed
+ in the great chamber over the dining-room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't know what it is," Dan said one night, "but I am
+ sorry he ever came to the Inn; I wish he would go away."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How absurd, old boy!" protested Tom. "He has saved our lives
+ this frightful winter. I never knew your mother to be so
+ cheerful and contented; Nancy seems to adore him, and you
+ yourself are making the most of his fiddle lessons."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I know," Dan replied, "all that is true, but it is only half
+ the truth. Mother's cheerfulness is costing me a pretty
+ penny, for I can't keep her from ordering the most expensive
+ things,&#8212;wines, and the like,&#8212;that we can't
+ afford. Maybe Nance adores him, as you say,&#8212;she is such
+ a strange wild child; but I have never known her to be so
+ unlike herself. We used to have good times
+ together&#8212;Nance and I. But this winter I see nothing of
+ her at all." For the moment Dan forgot his complaint in the
+ tender thought of his foster-sister. "It probably is absurd,"
+ he added presently, "but I don't like it; I don't like him,
+ Tom! He plays the fiddle well, I admit but he is so queer and
+ shifty, nosing about, looking this way and that, never
+ meeting your eyes. It's just as though he were waiting,
+ biding his time, for&#8212;I don't know what."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nonsense, Dan; you're not an old woman."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It may be, Tom, but I feel so anyway. The place hasn't
+ seemed the same to me since that Frenchman came. I wish he
+ would go away; and apparently he means to stay on forever."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I think you would miss him, if he were to go," insisted
+ Pembroke, "for my part I'm glad he is here. To tell the
+ truth, Dan, he's been the life of the house."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He has fascinated you as he has fascinated Mother and
+ Nance," Dan replied. "But it stands to reason, boy, that he
+ can't be quite all right. What does he want poking about in a
+ deserted old hole like Deal?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What he has said a thousand times; just what he so
+ beautifully gets&#8212;quiet and seclusion."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Perhaps you are right and I am wrong; but all the same I
+ shall be glad to see the last of him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The night was one of bright moonlight at the end of February.
+ The bedroom windows were open to the cold clear air. Tom was
+ not sleepy, and he lay for a long time recalling the dreams
+ and emotions that had so stirred him earlier in the evening,
+ as he had listened to the Marquis's playing. He kept
+ whistling softly to himself such bars of the music as he
+ could remember. Dan's chamber faced west, and Tom's bed was
+ so placed that he could look out, without raising his head
+ from the pillow, over the court in the rear of the Inn and
+ into the misty depths of Lovel's Woods beyond the offices and
+ stables.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he lay half-consciously musing&#8212;it must have been
+ near midnight&#8212;his attention was suddenly riveted upon
+ the court below. It seemed to him that he heard footsteps. He
+ was instantly wide awake, and jumped from the bed to the
+ window, whence he peered from behind the curtain into the
+ courtyard. Close to the wall of the Inn, directly beneath the
+ window, a shadow flitted on the moonlight-flooded pavement,
+ and he could hear the crumbling of the snow. Cautiously he
+ thrust his head out of the window. Moving rapidly along near
+ to the house, was a little figure wrapped in a dark cloak,
+ which looked to Tom for all the world like the Marquis de
+ Boisdhyver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the moment he had the impulse to call to him by name, but
+ the conversation he had so recently had with Dan flashed into
+ his mind, and he decided to keep still and watch. The figure
+ moved rapidly along the west wall of the Inn almost the
+ entire length of the building, until it arrived at the
+ entrance of the bowling-alley which abutted from the old
+ northern wing. Reaching this it paused for a moment, glancing
+ about; then inserted a key, fumbled for a moment with the
+ latch, opened the door, and disappeared within.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom was perplexed. He could not be sure that it was the
+ Marquis; but whether it were or not, he knew that there was
+ no reason for any one entering the old portion of the Inn at
+ midnight. His first thought was to go down alone and
+ investigate; his second was to waken Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He lowered the window gently, drew the curtains across it,
+ and bending over his friend, shook him gently by the
+ shoulder. "Dan, Dan, I say; wake up!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What's the matter?" exclaimed Dan with a start of alarm, as
+ he sat up in bed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nothing, nothing; don't make a noise. I happened to be
+ awake, and hearing footsteps under the window, I got up and
+ looked out. I saw some one moving along close to the wall
+ until he got to the bowling alley. He opened the door and
+ disappeared."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The door's locked," exclaimed Dan. "Who was it?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He had a key, whoever he was then. To tell the truth, Dan,
+ it looked like the Marquis; though I couldn't swear to him. I
+ certainly saw some one."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You have not been asleep and dreaming, have you?" asked his
+ friend, rubbing his eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I should say not. I'm going down to investigate; thought
+ you'd like to come along."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So I shall," said Dan, jumping out of bed and beginning to
+ dress. "If you really have seen any one, I'll wager you are
+ right in thinking it's the old marquis. That is just the sort
+ of thing I have imagined him being up to. What he wants
+ though in the old part of the house is more than I can think.
+ He has pestered me to get back there ever since I showed him
+ over the place the day he arrived. Are you ready? Bring a
+ candle, and some matches. Ill just take my gun along on
+ general principles. I don't care how soon we get rid of the
+ Marquis de Boisdhyver, but I shouldn't exactly like to shoot
+ him out with a load of buckshot in his hide."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom stood waiting with his boots in hand. Dan went to his
+ bureau and took out his father's old pistol, that had done
+ duty in the West India trade years ago, when pirates were not
+ romantic memories but genuine menaces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sh!" whispered Dan as he opened the door. "Let's blow out
+ the candle. It's moonlight, and we will be safer without it.
+ Be careful as you go down stairs not to wake Mother and
+ Nancy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom blew out the candle and slipped the end into his pocket,
+ as he tiptoed after Dan down the stairs. At every step the
+ old boards seemed to creak as though in pain. As they paused
+ breathless half-way down on the landing, they heard no sound
+ save the loud ticking of the clock in the hall below and the
+ gentle whispering of the breeze without. The moon gave light
+ enough had they needed it, but each of them could have found
+ his way through every nook and corner of the Inn in darkness
+ as well as in broad day-light. They crept down the short
+ flight from the landing, paused and listened at the doors of
+ Mrs. Frost's and Nancy's chambers, and then slipped
+ noiselessly into the bar where the logs still glowed on the
+ hearth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Shall we," asked Tom in a low tone, "go down the corridor or
+ around outside?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Best outside," Dan whispered. "If we go down the corridor we
+ are like to frighten him if he is the Marquis, or get a
+ bullet in our gizzards if he is not. Should he be inside,
+ he'll have a light and we can find just where he is. I have a
+ notion that it's the Marquis and that he'll be in the Oak
+ Parlour. We'd better creep along the porch."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Very softly he unlocked the door, and stepped outside. Tom
+ was close behind him. They crept stealthily along next the
+ wall well within the shadow of the roof, pausing at every
+ window to peer through the cracks of the shutters. But all
+ were dark. As they turned the corner of the porch at the end
+ of the main portion of the inn from which the north wing
+ extended, Dan suddenly put his hand back and stopped Tom.
+ "Wait," he breathed, "there's a light in the Oak Parlour.
+ Stay here, while I peek in."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With gun in hand he crept up to the nearest window of the Oak
+ Parlour. The heavy shutters were closed, but between the
+ crack made by the warping of the wood, he could distinguish a
+ streak of golden light. He waited a moment; and, then at the
+ risk of alarming the intruder within, carefully tried the
+ shutter. To his great satisfaction it yielded and swung
+ slowly, almost noiselessly, back upon its hinges; the inside
+ curtains were drawn; but a slight gap had been left. Peering
+ in through this, Dan found he could get a view of a small
+ section of the interior,&#8212;the end of the great
+ Dorsetshire cabinet on the farther side of the room and a
+ part of the wall. Before the cabinet, bending over its shelf,
+ stood the familiar form of the Marquis de Boisdhyver,
+ apparently absorbed in a minute examination of the carving.
+ But Dan's attention was quickly diverted from the figure of
+ the old Frenchman, for by his side, also engaged in a similar
+ examination of the cabinet, stood Nancy. For a moment he
+ watched them with intent interest, but as he could not
+ discover what so absorbed them he slipped back to Tom, who
+ was waiting at the turn of the porch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It's the Marquis," he whispered in his friend's ear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What is he up to?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't know. Apparently he is examining the old cabinet.
+ But, Tom, Nancy is with him and as absorbed in the thing as
+ he is. Look!" he exclaimed suddenly. "They've blown out the
+ light."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he spoke, he pointed to the window, now dark. "Come," he
+ said, making an instant decision, "let's hide ourselves in
+ the hall and see if they come back."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But Nancy&#8212;?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No time for talk now. Come along."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They ran back along the porch, slipped into the bar, and
+ thence into the hall. Dan motioned to Tom to conceal himself
+ in a closet beneath the stairway, and he himself slipped
+ behind the clock. Hardly were they safely hidden thus, than
+ they heard a fumble at the latch of the door into the bar.
+ Then the door was pushed open, and the Marquis stepped
+ cautiously in the hall. He paused for a moment, listening
+ intently. Then he held open the door a little wider; and
+ another figure, quite enveloped by a long black coat, entered
+ after him. They silently crossed the hall to the door of
+ Nancy's chamber. This the Marquis opened; then bowed low, as
+ his companion passed within. They were so close to him that
+ Dan could have reached out his hand and touched them. As
+ Nancy entered her room, Dan distinctly heard Monsieur de
+ Boisdhyver whisper, "More success next time, mademoiselle!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was no reply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Marquis turned, stole softly up the stairs, and in a
+ moment Dan heard the click of the latch as he closed his
+ door. He slipped out from his hiding place, and whispered to
+ Tom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a few moments they were back again in their bedroom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Heavens! man, what do you make of it?" asked Tom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Make of it!" exclaimed Dan, "I don't know what to make of
+ it. It's incomprehensible. What the devil is that old rascal
+ after, and how has he bewitched Nance?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Perhaps," suggested Tom, more for Nancy's sake than because
+ he believed what he was saying, "it is simply that he is
+ curious, and knowing that you don't want him in the old part
+ of the Inn, he has persuaded Nancy to take him there at
+ night."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nonsense! that couldn't possibly account for such secrecy
+ and caution. No, Tom, he has some deviltry on foot, and we
+ must find out what it is."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That should be simple enough. Ask Nance."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah!" exclaimed his friend, "you don't know Nance as well as
+ I. You may be sure he has sworn her to secrecy, and Nance
+ would never betray a promise whether she had been wise in
+ making it or not."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then go to the old man himself and demand an explanation."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He'd lie ..."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Turn him out."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I could do that, of course. But I think I would rather find
+ out what he is up to. It has something to do with the old
+ cabinet in the Oak Parlour. I'll find out the mystery of that
+ if I have to hack the thing into a thousand pieces. What I
+ hate, is Nance's being mixed up in it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We can watch again."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes; we'll do that. In the meanwhile, I am going to
+ investigate that old ark myself. There's something about,
+ something concealed in it, that he wants to get. When I took
+ him in there the day after he came, he couldn't keep his eyes
+ off it. If you can get Nance out of the way tomorrow
+ afternoon, I'll send the Marquis off with Jesse for that
+ long-talked-of visit to Mondy Port; and I'll give Jesse
+ instructions not to get him back before dark. And while they
+ are away, I'll investigate the Oak Parlour myself. Can you
+ get Nance off?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I might ask her to go and look over the Red Farm with me.
+ She might like the walk through the woods. I could easily
+ manage to be away for three or four hours."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Good! You may think it odd, Tom, that I should seem to
+ distrust Nance. I don't distrust her, but there has always
+ been a mystery about her. Mother knows a good deal more than
+ she has even been willing to tell to me, or even to Nance, I
+ guess. I know nothing except that she is of French
+ extraction, and I have sometimes wondered since she has been
+ so often with the old Marquis this winter, if he didn't know
+ something about her. It flashed over me to-night as I saw
+ them in that deserted room. Whatever is a-foot, I am going to
+ get at the bottom of it. We will watch again to-morrow night.
+ I heard him whisper as he left Nance, 'More success next
+ time!' This sort of thing may have been going on for a
+ month."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They undressed again, and Dan put his gun away in his bureau.
+ "We may have use for that yet, Tommy," he said. "It would do
+ me good, after what I have seen to-night, to put a bit of
+ lead into the Marquis de Boisdhyver as a memento of his so
+ delightful sojourn at <i>L'Auberge au Chene Rouge</i>."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH4"><!-- CH4 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IV
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ THE OAK PARLOUR
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ The two young men felt self-conscious and ill-at-ease the
+ next morning at the breakfast table, but apparently their
+ embarrassment was neither shared nor observed. Mrs. Frost had
+ kept her room, but Nancy and the Marquis were in their
+ accustomed places; the old gentleman, chattering away in a
+ fashion that demanded few answers and no attention; Nancy,
+ speaking only to ask necessary questions as to their wants at
+ table and meeting the occasional glances of Dan and Tom
+ without suspicion. Tom could scarcely realize in that bright
+ morning light, that only seven or eight hours earlier he and
+ his friend had spied upon their companions prowling about in
+ the abandoned wing of the inn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Monsieur de Boisdhyver assented readily enough when Dan
+ proposed that Jesse should take him that day to Monday Port.
+ He was curious to see the old town, he said, having heard
+ much of it from his friend; much also from his celebrated
+ compatriot, the Marquis de Lafayette.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom took occasion during the discussion to ask Nancy if she
+ would walk across the woods with him after dinner, that he
+ might pay a visit to the Red Farm and see that all was going
+ well in the absence of his parents. He felt that the tones of
+ his voice were charged with unwonted significance; but Nancy
+ accepted the invitation with a simple expression of pleasure.
+ When Mrs. Frost was informed of the plans for the day, she
+ came near thwarting Dan's carefully laid schemes. She had
+ counted upon Jesse to do her bidding and had, she declared,
+ arranged that Nancy should help her put together the silken
+ patches of the quilt upon which she was perennially engaged.
+ Her foster-daughter's glance of displeasure at this was
+ tinder to the old lady's temper, and Dan entered most
+ opportunely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So!" she was exclaiming, "I am always the one to be
+ sacrificed when it is a question of some one's else
+ pleasure."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mother, Mother," Dan protested good-naturedly, as he bent
+ over to kiss her good-morning, "aren't you ever willing to
+ spend a day alone with me?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Danny dear," cried the old lady, as she began to smile
+ again, "you know I'm always willing. Of course, if Tom wants
+ Nancy to go, the quilt can wait; it has waited long enough,
+ in all conscience. There, my dear," she added, turning to the
+ girl, "order an early dinner, and since you are going to the
+ Red Farm, you might as well come back by the dunes and
+ enquire for old Mrs. Meath. We have neglected that poor woman
+ shamefully this winter."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, Mother,&#8212;if we have time."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Take the time, my dear," added Mrs. Frost sharply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, Mother."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Marquis started off with Jesse at eleven o'clock, as
+ eager for the excursion as a boy; and by half-past twelve
+ Nancy and Tom had set out across the woods for the Red Farm.
+ Dan was impatient for them to be gone. As soon as he saw them
+ disappear in the woods back of the Inn, he made excuses to
+ his mother, and hurried to the north wing. He found the door
+ of the bowling alley securely locked, which convinced him
+ that either the Marquis or Nancy had taken the key from the
+ closet of his chamber. Having satisfied himself, he went
+ directly to the Oak Parlour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was cold and dark there. He opened the shutters and drew
+ back the curtains, letting in the cheerful midday sun, which
+ revealed all the antique, sombre beauty of the room, of the
+ soft landscapes and the exquisite carving of the Dorsetshire
+ cabinet. But Dan was in no mood to appreciate the old-world
+ beauty of the Oak Parlour. In that cabinet he felt sure there
+ was something concealed which would reveal the mystery of the
+ Marquis's stay at the inn and possibly the nature of his
+ influence over Nancy. Whatever had been the object of the
+ Marquis's search, it had not been found: his parting words to
+ Nancy the night before showed that.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan took a long look at the cabinet first, estimating the
+ possibility of its containing secret drawers. Hidden
+ compartments in old cabinets, secret chambers in old houses,
+ subterranean passageways leading to dungeons in romantic
+ castles, had been the material of many a tale that Dan and
+ Tom had told each other as boys. For years their dearest
+ possession had been a forbidden copy of "<i>The Mysteries of
+ Udolpho</i>" which they read in the mow of the barn lying in
+ the dusty hay. However unusual, the situation was real; and
+ he felt himself confronted by as hard a problem as he had
+ ever tried to solve in fiction. He knew something about
+ carpentry, so that his first step, after examining the
+ drawers and cupboards and finding them empty, was to take
+ careful measurements of the entire cabinet, particularly of
+ the thicknesses of its sides, back, and partitions. It proved
+ a piece of furniture of absolutely simple and straightforward
+ construction. After long examination and careful soundings he
+ came to the conclusion that a secret drawer was an
+ impossibility.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly an idea occurred to him and he returned to the
+ sitting-room. "Mother," he said, "I have been looking over
+ the old cabinet in the Oak Parlour, thinking perhaps that I
+ would have it brought into the dining-room. I wonder, if by
+ chance, there are any secret drawers in it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Secret drawers? What an idea!" exclaimed Mrs. Frost.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You never knew of any did you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No.... Stop, let me think. Upon my word, I think there was
+ something of the sort, but it has been so long ago I have
+ almost forgotten."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Try to remember, do!" urged Dan, striving to repress his
+ excitement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was not a secret drawer, but there were little hidden
+ cubby-holes&#8212;three or four of them. I remember, now,
+ your father once showed me how they opened. They were little
+ places where the Roman Catholics used to hide the pages of
+ their mass-books and such like in the days of persecution in
+ England."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, yes," said Dan, "that makes it awfully interesting. Did
+ father ever find anything in them?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, I think not; but, dear me, it was over thirty years ago
+ we brought that old cabinet from England,&#8212;long before
+ you were born, Dan."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Can you remember how to open the secret places? I have been
+ looking it over, but I can't see where they can be, much less
+ how to get into them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There were four of them, I think; all in the carving on the
+ front, in the eyes of the lions it seems to me, and in the
+ lion's mouth, or in the leaves somewhere. One spring that
+ opened them I recollect, was under the ledge of the shelf,
+ another at the back of the cabinet and,&#8212;but no, I
+ really can't remember where the others were."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan was impatient to try his luck at finding them, and
+ hurried back to the Oak Parlour. He ran his fingers many
+ times under the ledge of the shelf before he heard the click
+ of a tiny spring, and, looking up, saw the lion's eyelid wink
+ and slowly open. With an exclamation of satisfaction, he
+ thrust his fingers into the tiny aperture, felt carefully
+ about, and was chagrined to find it empty. "More success next
+ time, <i>monsieur le marquis</i>!" he muttered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At length he found the spring that released the eyelid on the
+ carved lion on the other side of the panel. He glanced into
+ the little opening and, to his delight, saw the end of a bit
+ of paper tucked away there. He dug it out with the blade of
+ his pocket knife and unfolded it. It was yellow and brittle
+ with age, covered with writing in a fine clear hand. But he
+ was annoyed to discover, as he bent closely over to read it,
+ that it was written in French, still worse, part of the paper
+ was missing, for one side of it was ragged as if it had been
+ torn in two.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Remembering with relief, that Pembroke had acquired a
+ smattering of French at Dr. Watson's school for the sons of
+ gentlemen, he put the paper carefully away in his pocket to
+ wait for Tom's assistance in deciphering it. Then he set to
+ work to find the missing half.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He fumbled about at the back of the cabinet for a spring that
+ would release another secret cubby-hole, and was rewarded at
+ last by an unexpected click, and the seemingly solid jaws of
+ the lion fell apart about half-an-inch. But the little
+ aperture which they revealed was empty. Further experiment at
+ last discovered the fourth hiding place, but this also
+ contained nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It occurred to him then that the Marquis had already
+ discovered the other half of the paper, and like himself was
+ searching for a missing portion. As he stood thinking over
+ the problem, he suddenly noticed that the room was in deep
+ shadow, and realized that the sun had set over the ridge of
+ Lovel's Woods. The Marquis would soon be returning. Carefully
+ closing the four openings in the carving he pushed the old
+ cabinet back against the wall, closed the shutters and drew
+ the curtains. Then with a last glance to see that all was as
+ he found it, he went out and closed the door the precious bit
+ of paper in his inside pocket.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He went directly to Mrs. Frost's parlour. "Mother," he said,
+ "please don't tell anyone that I have been in the north wing
+ today. I have good reasons which I will explain to you before
+ long. Now, I shall be deeply offended if you give the
+ slightest hint."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Gracious! Dan, what is all this mystery about?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You will never know, mother, unless you trust me absolutely.
+ Mind! not a word to Tom, Nancy or the Marquis."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Very well, Danny. You know I am as safe with a secret as
+ though it had been breathed into the grave."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan did not quite share his mother's confidence in her own
+ discretion, but he knew he could count on her devotion to him
+ to keep her silent even where curiosity and the love of talk
+ would render her indiscreet. He also knew, and had often
+ deplored it, that fond as she was of Nancy she was not
+ inclined to take the girl into her confidence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having said all he dared to his mother, Dan went to his room
+ and carefully locked up the mysterious paper. He returned to
+ the first floor just as the Marquis and Jesse drove up in the
+ sleigh to the door of the inn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Monsieur de Boisdhyver was enthusiastic about all that he had
+ seen&#8212;the headquarters of General Washington, the house
+ in which the Marquis de Lafayette had slept, the old mill in
+ the parade, the fort at the Narrows, the shipping, the quaint
+ old streets.... "But, O Monsieur Frost," he exclaimed, "the
+ weariness that is now so delightful! How soundly shall I
+ sleep to-night!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan smiled grimly as he assured his guest of his sympathy for
+ a good night and a sound sleep; thinking to himself, however,
+ that if the Marquis walked, he would not walk unattended. He
+ had no intention of trusting too implicitly to that loudly
+ proclaimed fatigue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH5"><!-- CH5 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ THE WALK THROUGH THE WOODS
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ While Dan Frost was hunting for the secret places of the old
+ cabinet, Tom and Nancy were picking their way across the
+ snowcovered paths of Lovel's Woods to the Red Farm. These
+ woods were a striking feature in the landscape of the open
+ coast country around Deal. Rising somewhat precipitously
+ almost out of the sea, three ridges extended far back into
+ the country, with deep ravines between. They were thickly
+ wooded, for the most part with juniper and pine. In some
+ places the descent to the ravines was sheer and massed with
+ rocks heaped there by a primeval glacier; in other parts they
+ dipped more gently to the little valleys, which were threaded
+ with many a path worn smooth by the dwellers on the eastern
+ shore. Nearly two miles might be saved in a walk from the Inn
+ to Squire Pembroke's Farm by going across the Woods rather
+ than by the encircling road.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As they were used to the frozen country Tom and Nancy
+ preferred the shorter if more difficult route. They had often
+ found their way together through the tangled thickets of the
+ Woods or along the shores of the Strathsey River, in season
+ accompanied by dog and gun hunting fox and rabbit or
+ partridge and wild duck. In Tom's company Nancy seemed to
+ forget her shyness and would talk freely enough of her
+ interests and her doings. He had always been fond of her,
+ though until lately she had seemed to him hardly more than a
+ child. This winter, as so frequently he had watched her
+ sitting in the firelight listening to the old Marquis's
+ playing and dreaming perhaps as he also dreamed, he realized
+ that she was growing up. A new beauty had come into her face
+ and slender form, her great dark eyes seemed to hold deeper
+ interests, she was no longer in the world of childhood. The
+ mystery enveloping her origin, which for some reason Mrs.
+ Frost had never chosen to dispel, gave a certain piquancy to
+ the interest and affection Tom felt for her. In the
+ imaginative tales he had been fond of weaving for his own
+ amusement, Nancy would frequently figure, revealed at last as
+ the child of noble parents, as a princess doomed by some
+ strange fate to exile. He thought of these things as from
+ time to time he glanced back at her, holding aside some
+ branch that crossed the path or giving her his hand to help
+ her over a boulder in the way. The red scarf about her neck,
+ red cap on her dark hair, flashing in and out of the tangled
+ pathway against the background of the snow-clad woods, gave a
+ bright note of colour to the scene.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were obliged for the most part to walk in single file
+ until the last ridge descended over a mass of rocks to the
+ marshes along Beaver Pond. Then having given her his hand to
+ help her down, he kept hold of it as they went along the free
+ path to the open meadows. The feeling of Nancy's cool little
+ hand in his gave Tom an odd and conscious sense of pleasure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You have been uncommonly silent, Nance, even for you," he
+ said at last.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, I'm always silent, Tom," she replied. "It is because I
+ am stupid and have nothing to say."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nonsense, my dear, you always have a lot to say to me. But
+ you are forever reading, thinking ... what's it all about?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, I think, Tom, because I have little else to do; but my
+ thoughts aren't often worth the telling. In truth there is no
+ one, not even you, who particularly cares to hear them. Tom,"
+ she said, "I am restless and discontented. Sometimes I wish I
+ were far away from the Inn at the Red Oak and Deal, from all
+ that I know,&#8212;even from you and Dan."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pembroke suddenly realized that he could not laugh at these
+ fancies, as he had so often done, and dismiss as if they were
+ the vagaries of a child.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why are you restless and discontented, Nancy?" he asked
+ seriously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Aren't you ever?" she questioned for reply. "Don't you ever
+ get weary with the emptiness of it all, the everlasting
+ round, the dullness? Don't you ever want to get away from
+ Deal, and know people and see things and be somebody?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I do that, Nance. I mean to go as soon as I am a lawyer. I
+ won't poke about Deal long after that, nor Monday Port
+ either. I mean to set up in Coventry."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Coventry!" exclaimed the girl with an accent of disdain.
+ "That is just a provincial town like the Port, only a little
+ more important because it is the capital of the state."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Being the capital means a lot," protested Tom in defense of
+ his ambitions of which for the first time he felt ashamed.
+ "Men are sent to Congress from there. Nance, girl, ours is a
+ wonderful country; we are making a great nation."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Some people may be. None of us are, Tom. I wonder at you
+ more than I do at Dan, for you have had more advantages. As
+ for me, I am only a girl; there's nothing for girls but to
+ sit and sew, and prepare meals for men to eat, and wait until
+ some one comes and chooses to marry them. Then they go off
+ and do the same thing some place else."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But what have you to complain of, Nancy? you have the
+ kindest brother, a good mother, a comfortable home...."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The kindest brother, yes. But you know Mrs. Frost is not my
+ mother. She doesn't care for me and I can't care for her as
+ if she were. I have never loved any one but Dan."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You can't help loving Dan," said Tom, thinking of his good
+ friend. "But then, little girl, you love me too." And he
+ pressed the hand in his warmly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nancy quickly withdrew her hand. "I am not a little girl. I
+ have been grown up in lots of ways ever so long."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But you love me?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I like you. Oh, Tom, the life we all lead is so futile. If I
+ weren't a girl, I should go away."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They had reached the stile by now that led into the meadow
+ which sloped down from the clump of poplars a hundred rods or
+ so above, in the midst of which the Red Farmhouse stood.
+ Instead of helping his companion over the steps in the wall,
+ Tom stopped and stood with his back to them. "Let's stay here
+ a minute, Nance, and have it out."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Have what out?" she asked a trifle sharply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You haven't any queer wild plan in your head to go away,
+ have you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't know&#8212;sometimes I think I have. I dare say
+ there are things somewhere a girl could find to do."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But Mrs. Frost&#8212;?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, Mother would not miss me long&#8212;she'd have Dan."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But Dan would miss you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, Dan might. I couldn't go, if Dan really needed me here.
+ I think sometimes he doesn't. But, Tom, if you were in my
+ position, if you didn't know who your parents were, if all
+ your life you had been living on the charity of
+ others&#8212;good and kind as they are, wonderful even as Dan
+ has always been&#8212;you couldn't be happy. I'm not happy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But, Nance, what has come over you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No&#8212;nothing in particular; I have often felt this way."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But, dear, I couldn't let you go. I'd mind a lot, Nance."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She looked at him with a sudden smile of incredulity. "You,
+ Tommy?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You can't go&#8212;you musn't go," Tom repeated, as he drew
+ nearer to her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly he reached out and seized her hands. "Don't you
+ realize it?&#8212;I love you, Nance; I've always loved you!"
+ He drew her close to him. She did not resist nor did she
+ yield, but still with her eyes she questioned him. "Kiss me,
+ Nancy," he whispered. She let him press his lips to hers but
+ without responding to the pressure, as though she still were
+ wondering of the meaning of this sudden unforeseen passion.
+ But at last, caught up in its intensity, she gave him back
+ his kisses. He took her face then between his hands and
+ looked into it with a gaze that in itself was a caress. "Oh
+ my sweetheart!" he said softly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Slowly she disengaged herself. "Tom, Tom," she said, "this is
+ foolishness. We musn't do this."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why not?" demanded Pembroke. "I tell you I love you!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No&#8212;not that way, not that way. I didn't mean that.
+ Why, you foolish boy, haven't we kissed each other hundreds
+ of times before?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, Nancy, not like that&#8212;not like this," he added, as
+ again he put his arm around her and drew her face to his. And
+ again she yielded. "Say it&#8212;say it, Nance&#8212;you love
+ me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She drew back from him. "I think I must, Tom. I don't think I
+ could let you kiss me that way if I didn't. But now come ...
+ Tom ... dear Tom ... do come ... don't kiss me again."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But say it," he insisted, "say you love me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Please help me over the stile."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He gave her his hand and she sprang lightly to the top of the
+ steps. In a second he was by her side, both of them balancing
+ somewhat uncertainly on the top of the stone wall. "I won't
+ let you down till you say it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Please&#8212;".
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No&#8212;you love me?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes&#8212;there&#8212;I love you&#8212;now&#8212;".
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, kiss me again."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Tom&#8212;no." But the negative was weak and Pembroke took
+ it so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now," he said, as they began to cross the meadow, "we must
+ tell Mrs. Frost and Dan."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Tell them what?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, that we are in love with each other, and that you are
+ going to marry me. What else?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, no," exclaimed Nancy, "You must say nothing. I am not in
+ love. I don't mean to marry you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But why not? You are. You do."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Are&#8212;do&#8212;?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In love&#8212;you do mean to marry me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No&#8212;Tom, listen&#8212;you know your father and mother
+ would hate it. You have at least two years before you can
+ practice. We couldn't marry&#8212;we can't marry. Oh, there
+ are things I must do, before I can think of that."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not marry me? Good Lord, what does it mean when people are
+ in love with each other, what does it mean when a girl kisses
+ a fellow like that?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't know! what it means&#8212;madness, I guess. Do you
+ think I could marry as I am, not knowing who I am?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, what do I care who your parents were! We'll find out. I
+ swear we will. Good Lord, I love you, Nancy; I love you!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Please, please don't make me talk about it now."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But soon&#8212;?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, soon&#8212;only promise you'll say nothing to Dan or to
+ Mother till we have talked again. I must think; it is all so
+ queer and unexpected; I never dreamed that you cared for me
+ except as a little girl."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I didn't know I did. But come to think of it, Nance, it has
+ been you as much as Dan that has brought me to the Inn at the
+ Red Oak. Why it was you I wanted to walk and talk and play
+ with."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Please,&#8212;dear Tom&#8212;G&#8212;ive me time to think
+ what it all means. Now be careful, there's the farmer. You
+ have a lot to do, and we have been lingering too long. Mother
+ wants us to go back by the dunes and enquire for old Mrs.
+ Meath; so we must hurry."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sun had set before they started on the homeward journey
+ in one of the squire's sleighs. As they turned the bend at
+ the beach and started across the dune road close to the sea,
+ a great yellow moon rose over Strathsey Neck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom had been so preoccupied with his own emotions and the
+ unexpected and absorbing relation in which he found himself
+ with Nancy, that he had altogether forgotten why he had asked
+ her to go off with him that afternoon. As they skimmed along
+ over the snow-packed road across the sands, Tom spied another
+ sleigh on the Port road, the occupants of which he recognized
+ as Jesse and the Marquis. Suddenly the memory of the night
+ before flashed over him. He pointed with his whip in their
+ direction. "There's the old Marquis coming back from Monday
+ Port," he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nancy looked without comment, but Tom thought the colour
+ deepened in her cheeks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "See here, Nance," he exclaimed impulsively; "has the Marquis
+ anything to do with the mood you were in this afternoon? Has
+ he said anything to make you discontented?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was sure that now she paled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What makes you ask?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh&#8212;a number of things. I've seen you with him more or
+ less; felt he had some influence over you."&#8212;Tom was
+ blundering now and knew it.&#8212;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She looked at him coldly. "I have been with the Marquis very
+ little save when others have been about. He has no influence
+ over me. I don't care to discuss such queer ideas."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, all right ... I dare say I'm mistaken ... I only
+ thought..." He hesitated... "If you care for me, I don't mind
+ what you think of the Marquis."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Remember, Tom&#8212;you promised to say nothing until I gave
+ you leave. You're not fair..."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But you do love me?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nancy was silent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There is nothing between you and the old Frenchman&#8212;no
+ mystery?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was no reply. Nancy sat with compressed lips and drawn
+ brows, gazing fixedly at the distant House on the Dunes at
+ the end of their road. For a long while they drove on in
+ silence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the House on the Dunes they chatted for a while with old
+ Mrs. Meath, who lived there alone with a maid-of-all-work.
+ She was a source of much anxiety to Mrs. Frost, who sent
+ several times each week to learn if all was going well. But
+ Mrs. Meath was a Quaker and apparently never gave a thought
+ to loneliness or fear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They will never guess," she said to Nancy and Tom as they
+ sat in the tiled kitchen talking with her, "what I am going
+ to do."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not going to leave the House on the Dunes, Mrs. Meath?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Deary me! no; but I am going to take a boarder."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Really?&#8212;you are setting up to rival the Inn, eh?" said
+ Tom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No", Tommy, nothing of the sort. But I am offered good pay
+ for my front room, and as Jane Frost is always nagging me
+ about living here alone, I thought I'd take her."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And who pray is your new boarder?" asked Nancy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is the funny part of it," replied Mrs. Meath, "I know
+ nothing but her name&#8212;Mrs. Fountain. Everything has been
+ arranged by a lawyer man from Coventry, and she is coming in
+ a few days. Tell thy mother, Nancy dear, that she need worry
+ about me no longer."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will, Mrs. Meath. I think it is a splendid idea, and I
+ hope you will like the lady. Mother will be so glad that you
+ have some one with you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon they were on their way across the dunes and marshes to
+ Tinterton road and home. Dan was preoccupied, not with the
+ news that was so exciting to Mrs. Meath, but with the
+ recollection of his conversation with Nancy as they had
+ driven toward the house. Despite her implicit denial he knew
+ there was a secret between the Marquis de Boisdhyver and
+ herself. He could not imagine what it might be, and it was
+ evident that she did not mean to tell him at present. But his
+ anxieties on this or kindred subjects were not relieved by
+ his companion during the remainder of the drive. Moreover his
+ attempts to speak again of his newly discovered passion were
+ received coldly&#8212;so coldly indeed that he had no heart
+ for pleading for such proofs as she had given him earlier in
+ the afternoon that she shared his emotion. So despite the
+ splendid moon, the bright cold night, the merry jangle of the
+ sleigh bells, the drive back was not the unmixed joy Tom had
+ promised himself; and he felt his role of a declared and
+ practically-accepted lover anything but a satisfactory one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally they reached the Inn and entered the bar where they
+ found the Marquis sitting alone before a cheerful fire. All
+ of Tom's suspicious jealousies returned with fresh force, for
+ Nancy rapidly crossed the room, spoke a few words to the old
+ gentleman in an inaudible tone of voice, and passed quickly
+ on to her own apartments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="PART2"><!-- PART2 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ PART II
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ THE TORN SCRAP OF PAPER
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH6"><!-- CH6 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VI
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ THE HALF OF AN OLD PAPER
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ That evening Mrs. Frost made a particular request for music.
+ Poor Dan, impatient to be alone with Tom and show him the
+ torn scrap of paper that he had found that afternoon was
+ forced to bring out his fiddle and accompany the Marquis.
+ Tom, for first part, was more concerned with his own
+ relations with Nancy than with the mysterious possibilities
+ of the previous night. The poignant notes of the violin set
+ his pulses to beating in tune with the throbbing of the music
+ and transported him again into the realms of youthful dreams.
+ They were quaint plaintive songs of old France that the
+ Marquis chose to play that evening, folk tunes of the
+ Vend&eacute;e, love songs of olden time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From where he sat in the shadow Tom got a full view of Nancy
+ seated on the oaken setlle near the fire. Her brows were
+ drawn a little in deep thought, her lips for the most part
+ compressed, though ever and anon relaxing at some gentler
+ thought. Her hands were clasped, her head was bent a little,
+ but her body was held straight and tense. Her eyes, dark and
+ lustrous in the light of the flaming logs, always fixed upon
+ the musician, not once wandering in his direction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What was the influence, the fascination that strange old
+ Frenchman seemed to exert? It seemed to Tom impossible that
+ there could be a secret which she felt necessary to hide from
+ them, her lifelong friends. But apart from what he knew had
+ taken place the night before as he looked back over the past
+ month, he was conscious that there had been a change in
+ Nancy, a change that mystified him. It was the danger in this
+ change, he told himself, that had awakened in him the
+ knowledge of his love.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But then as he looked across at her so lovely, in the
+ firelight, he felt again the thrill as when first he had
+ taken her hand that afternoon. In that moment all the dreams,
+ the vague longings of his boyhood had found their reality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly, while he was thinking thus, the Marquis laid his
+ violin upon his knees. "Ah, <i>ma jeunnesse</i>!" he
+ exclaimed in a dramatic whisper, "<i>et
+ maintenant</i>&#8212;<i>et maintenant</i>!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a moment no one spoke or stirred. They looked at him
+ curiously as they always did when he brought his playing to
+ an end in such fashion. Then he rose. "<i>Bon soir, madame;
+ bon soir, messieurs; bon soir, mademoiselle</i>"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom saw his little faded blue eyes meet Nancy's with a look
+ of swift significance. Then he bowed with a flourish that
+ included them all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A thousand thanks, Monsieur le Marquis," murmured Mrs.
+ Frost, "how much pleasure you give us!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They all rose then, as the Marquis smiled his appreciation
+ and withdrew.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Give me your arm, Dan," the old lady said. "It must be past
+ my bedtime. Come, Nancy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, mother." The girl rose wearily, stopping a moment at
+ the mantelpiece to snuff the candles there. Tom seized his
+ opportunity, and was by her side. She started, as she
+ realized him near her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nance, Nance, I must have a word with you," he exclaimed in
+ a tense whisper, "don't go!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nance, come," called Mrs. Frost from the hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, Mother, I am coming ... I must go, Tom. Don't delay me.
+ You know how Mother is ..."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What difference will it make if you wait a moment? Good
+ Lord! Nance, I have been trying all evening to get a word
+ with you, and you have not so much as given me a glance.
+ Don't go&#8212;please don't go! Oh, Nancy dear,&#8212;I love
+ you so!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He seized her hands and kissed them passionately. "Nance,
+ Nance ... please ..." His arms were about her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Tom, you make it so hard ... Remember, you promised me ...
+ No word of love until I can think, until I have time to know
+ ... Please, Tom, let me go."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I can't let you go. Oh sweetheart dear."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Tom, we musn't&#8212;Dan, Mother! ..."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unheeding her protest, he put his arms around her. An instant
+ he felt her yield, then quickly thrusting him aside, she ran
+ from the room, leaving him standing alone there, trembling
+ with excitement, chagrin, happiness, alarm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a moment his friend returned and Tom pulled himself
+ together. "Come on," said Dan, "I have a lot to tell you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Did you find anything this afternoon?" exclaimed Pembroke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sh! for heaven's sake be careful. Don't talk here. Let's go
+ upstairs."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few minutes later they were closeted in Dan's chamber. The
+ curtains were tightly drawn and a heavy quilt was hung over
+ the door. Good Lord! thought Tom, could it be possible that
+ these precautions in part at least were taken against Nancy.
+ The world seemed to have turned upside down for him in the
+ last twenty-four hours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Aren't we going to keep watch to-night?" he asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, but later. They are just getting to bed&#8212;or
+ pretending to. Look here, this may throw light on the
+ mystery. I found this paper in a secret cubby-hole in the old
+ cabinet in the Oak Parlour. Draw a chair up to the table so
+ that you can see."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The cabinet," he continued, as he took the paper out of his
+ strong-box and began to unfold it, "was brought from some old
+ manor house in England. It has four little secret
+ cubby-holes, opened by hidden springs, that Mother says were
+ probably used by the Roman Catholics to hide pages of their
+ mass-books during the days of persecution. She remembered
+ fortunately a little about them. They were all empty but one,
+ and in that I found this torn scrap of paper."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He handed the yellowed bit of writing to Tom, who flattened
+ it out on the table before him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why it's written in French," Pembroke exclaimed, as he bent
+ over to examine it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, I know it is," said Dan. "I can't make head or tail of
+ it. Besides it seems to be only a part of a note or letter. I
+ could hardly wait to give you a chance at it. You can make
+ something of it, can't you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't know&#8212;I guess I can. It's hard to read the
+ handwriting. The thing's torn in two&#8212;haven't you the
+ rest of it?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, I tell you; that's all I could find; that's all, I am
+ sure, that can be in the cabinet now. My theory is that the
+ old marquis has somehow come across the other half and is
+ still looking for this. God only knows who hid it there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How the deuce could the Marquis know about it. Ah!
+ look&#8212;it's signed somebody, something <i>de
+ Boisdhyver</i>&#8212;'<i>an&ccedil;ois</i>&#8212;that's short
+ for Fran&ccedil;ois, I guess. Evidently 't wasn't the Marquis
+ himself. Wonder what it means?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For goodness' sake, try to read it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Wait. Get that old French dictionary out of the bookcase
+ downstairs, will you? I'll see if I can translate."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan crept softly out, leaving Tom bent over the paper. Again
+ he smoothed it out carefully on the table, bringing the two
+ candles nearer, and tried to puzzle out the faint fine
+ handwriting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I can make out some of it," he remarked to Dan, when his
+ friend returned with the dictionary. "Let me have that thing;
+ there are a few words I don't know at all, but I'll write out
+ as good a translation as I can."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While Tom was busy with the dictionary, Dan placed writing
+ materials to his hand, and sat down to wait as patiently as
+ he could. His curiosity was intensified by Pembroke's
+ occasional exclamations and the absorption with which he bent
+ over the task.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There!" Tom exclaimed after half-an-hour's labour, "that's
+ the best I can do with it. You see the original note was
+ evidently torn into two or three strips and we have only got
+ the righthand one, so we don't get a single complete
+ sentence&#8212;, but what we have is mighty suggestive.
+ Listen&#8212;This is what it says: Make great efforts ... gap
+ ... glorious, I am about to leave' ... gap ... 'to offer my'
+ ... gap ... 'that I should not return' ... gap ...
+ 'directions' ... gap ... 'this paper which I tear' ... gap
+ ... 'the explanation' ... something missing ... 'to discover'
+ ... that's the end of a sentence. The next one begins, 'This
+ treasure' ... than another gap ... 'jewels and money' ...
+ 'secret chamber' ... 'one can enter' ... something gone here
+ ... 'by the <i>salon de chene</i>'&#8212;that's the Oak
+ Parlour, I suppose ... something missing again ... 'by a
+ spring' ... 'hand of the lady in the picture' ... 'chimney on
+ the north side of the' ... 'side a panel which reveals' ...
+ 'one will find the directions' ... more missing ... 'of the
+ treasure in a golden chest' ... That's the end of it. And, as
+ I said before it is signed,&#8212;'an&ccedil;ois de
+ Boisdhyver.' There, you can read it. That's the best I can
+ make of it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan bent over his friend's translation. "Whoever wrote it was
+ about to leave here to offer something to somebody, and if he
+ did not return, apparently he is giving directions, in this
+ paper, which he tears in to two or three parts, how to
+ discover&#8212;a treasure?&#8212;jewels and money, I
+ guess,&#8212;that he is about to hide or has hidden in a
+ secret chamber, which is entered in some way from the Oak
+ Parlour&#8212;? ... pushes a spring,&#8212;Something to do
+ with the hand of the lady in the picture, near the chimney on
+ the north side of the room ... then a panel which reveals
+ ...where? ... the directions will be found, for getting the
+ treasure, in a golden chest in the secret chamber? How's that
+ for a version? I reckon the other half doesn't tell as much
+ ...'an&ccedil;ois de Boisdhyver!&#8212;That can't be the
+ Marquis, for none of his names end 'an&ccedil;ois; do they?
+ Let's see, what are they?&#8212;Marie, Anne, Tim&eacute;lon,
+ Armand ... Tom,"&#8212;and Dan faced his friend
+ excitedly,&#8212;"that old devil is after treasure! Who the
+ deuce is 'an&ccedil;ois de Boisdhyver, and how did he come to
+ leave money in the Oak Parlour? Hanged if I believe there's
+ any secret chamber! By gad, man, if I didn't hurt when I
+ pinch myself, I'd think I was asleep and dreaming. What do
+ you make of it?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Pretty much what you do. Somebody sometime,&#8212;a good
+ many years ago, concealed some valuables here in the Inn. It
+ must be some one who is connected with our marquis, for the
+ last names are the same. These are directions, or half the
+ directions, for finding it. The Marquis knows enough about it
+ to have been hunting for this paper. Who the devil is the
+ Marquis?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Lord knows. But how does Nance come in?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Blamed if I can see; wish I could! This accounts for the
+ Marquis's mysterious investigations, anyway. Probably he's no
+ right to the paper. Maybe he isn't a Boisdhyver at all. I'll
+ be damned if I can understand how he has got Nance to league
+ with him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And now what the deuce are we going to do about it?" asked
+ Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hunt for the treasure ourselves, eh?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, why not? but to do that we've got to get rid of the
+ Marquis. He'll be suspicious if we begin to poke about the
+ north wing. Hanged if I wouldn't like to have it all out with
+ him!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, but we'd better think and talk it over before we decide
+ to do anything. We can watch them. We'll watch to-night any
+ way, and plan something definite to-morrow."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I tell you one thing, Tom, I am going to make Mother tell me
+ all she knows about Nancy. Perhaps she is mixed up in some
+ way with all this. But it's time to keep watch now. We'll put
+ out the candles and I'll watch for the first two hours. If
+ you go to sleep, I'll wake you up to take the next turn. How
+ about it?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hang sleep!" Tom replied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "All right, but we must blow out the light. Lucky it's clear.
+ Let's whisper after this."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom threw himself on the bed, while Dan sat near the window
+ and kept his eyes fixed on the door of the bowling-alley.
+ They talked for some time in low tones, but eventually Tom
+ fell asleep. Dan waked him at twelve for his vigil, and he in
+ turn was wakened at two. During the third watch they both
+ succumbed to weariness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tow awoke with a start about four, and sprang to the window.
+ The moon was sinking low in the western sky, but its light
+ still flooded the deserted courtyard beneath. He heard the
+ patter of a horse's hoofs on the road beyond and the
+ crunching of the snow beneath the runners of a sleigh. Well,
+ he thought, as he rubbed his eyes, it was too near morning
+ for anything to happen, so he turned in and was soon asleep,
+ as though no difficult problems were puzzling his mind and
+ heart and no mysteries were being enacted around him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH7"><!-- CH7 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VII
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ A DISAPPEARANCE
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ When Dan came downstairs in the morning Mrs. Frost called him
+ to the door of her bedroom. "What on earth is the matter with
+ Nancy?" she exclaimed; "I have been waiting for her the past
+ hour. No one has been near me since Deborah came in to lay
+ the fire. Call the girl Danny; I want to get up."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "All right, mother. She has probably overslept; she had a
+ long walk yesterday."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But that is no excuse for sleeping till this time of day.
+ Tell her to hurry."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is only seven, mother."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, Danny, dear, but I mean to breakfast with you all this
+ morning if I ever succeed in getting dressed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan crossed the hall and knocked at Nancy's door. There was
+ no response. He knocked again, then opened the door and
+ looked within. Nancy was not there, and her bed had not been
+ slept in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He went back to his mother. "Nancy is not in her room," he
+ said. "She has probably gone out for a walk. I'll go and look
+ for her."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He went to the kitchens to enquire of the maids, but they had
+ not seen their young mistress since the night before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Spec she's taken dem dogs a walkin'," said black Deborah
+ unconcernedly. "Miss Nance she like de early morn' 'fore de
+ sun come up."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan went out to the stables. The setters came rushing out,
+ bounding and barking joyously about him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Have you seen Miss Nancy this morning, Jess?" he asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, Mister Dan, ain't seen her this mornin'. Be n't she in
+ the house?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She doesn't seem to be. Take a look down the road, and call
+ after her, will you? Down, Boy; down, Girl!" he cried to the
+ dogs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan began to be thoroughly alarmed. If Nancy had gone out,
+ the dogs would certainly have followed her. She must be
+ within!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He went back into the house, and searched room after room,
+ but no trace of her was to be found. He returned at last to
+ his mother's chamber.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I can't find Nancy," he said. "She must have gone off
+ somewhere."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Gone off! why, she must have left very early then. I have
+ been awake these two hours&#8212;since daylight&#8212;; I
+ would have heard every sound."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, she isn't about now, Mother. She will be back by
+ breakfast time, I don't doubt. Just stay abed this morning, I
+ will send her to you as soon as she comes."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I shall have to, I suppose. Really, Dan, it is extraordinary
+ how neglectful of me that child can sometimes be. She
+ knew&#8212;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mother, don't find fault with her. She is devoted to you,
+ and you know it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I daresay she is. Of course she is, and I am devoted to her.
+ Where would she be, I wonder, if it hadn't been for me? Good
+ heavens! Dan, can anything have happened to her?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, no&#8212;of course not,&#8212;nothing."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Search the house, boy; she may be lying some place in a
+ faint. She isn't strong&#8212;I have always been
+ worried&#8212;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Don't get excited, Mother. We will wait until breakfast
+ time. If she doesn't turn up then, you may be sure I shall
+ find her."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He looked at his watch. It was already nearly eight o'clock,
+ so he decided to say nothing to Pembroke until after
+ breakfast. He found the Marquis and Tom chatting before the
+ fire in the bar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Shall we have breakfast?" said Dan. "Mother will not be in
+ this morning."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah!" exclaimed the Marquis, as they took their seats at
+ table, "that is a disappointment. And shall we not wait for
+ Mademoiselle Nancy?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My sister has stepped out, monsieur; she may be late. Shall
+ I give you some coffee?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If you please&#8212;. We have another of these so beautiful
+ days, eh? This so glorious weather, these moonlight nights,
+ this snow&#8212;<i>C'est merveilleux</i>. Last night I sat
+ myself for a long time in my window. Ah <i>la
+ nuit</i>&#8212;the moon past its full, say you not?&#8212;the
+ sea superbly dark, superbly blue, the wonderful white
+ country! As I sat there, messieurs, a sight too beautiful
+ greeted my eyes. A ship, with three great sails, appeared out
+ on the sea and sailed as a bird up the river to our little
+ cove, <i>Voila, mes amis</i>"&#8212;he waved his hand toward
+ the eastern windows&#8212;"She is anchored at our feet."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two young men looked in the direction in which the
+ marquis pointed, and to their astonishment they saw, riding
+ securely at her moorings in the cove, a large sailing vessel.
+ She was a three-masted schooner of perhaps fifteen hundred
+ tons, a larger ship than they had seen at anchor in the
+ Strathsey for many a year.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "By all that's good!" exclaimed Tom, "that is exactly the
+ sort of ship my father used to have in the West Indie trade,
+ a dozen or fifteen years ago. What is she? I wonder; and why
+ is she anchored here instead of in the Port?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Marquis shrugged his shoulders. "That I can tell you not,
+ my friend; but I am happy that she is anchored there for the
+ hours of beauty she has already given to me. On this strange
+ coast of yours one so rarely sees a sail."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, they go too far to the south... But what is she?" asked
+ Dan. "We must find out." He went to the cupboard, and got out
+ his marine glass and took a long look at the stranger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What do you make her out?" asked Tom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There are men on deck, some swabbing out the roundhouse. One
+ of them is lolling at the wheel. She flies the British flag."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do you, perhaps, make out the name?" asked the Marquis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't know&#8212;yes," Dan replied, twisting the lens to
+ suit his eyes better and spelling out the letters,
+ "S,O,U,T,H,E,R,N,C,R&#8212;the <i>Southern Cross</i>. By
+ Jingo, Tom, we'll have to go down to the beach and have a
+ look at her."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom took the glasses; turning them over presently to the
+ Marquis. "She is a good fine boat, eh?" exclaimed M. de
+ Boisdhyver, as he applied his eye to the end of the glass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She certainly is," said Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They sat down at length and resumed their breakfast. The ship
+ had diverted Tom's attention for the moment from the fact
+ that Nancy had not appeared.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Where is Nance, Dan?" he asked at length, striving to
+ conceal his impatience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't know," Dan replied. "I think she has gone over to
+ see Mrs. Meath and stayed for breakfast."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Madame Meath&#8212;?" enquired the Marquis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At the House on the Dunes," Dan answered, a trifle sharply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A long walk for Mademoiselle on a cold morning," commented
+ Monsieur Boisdhyver, as he sipped his coffee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a few moments Dan rose. "Going to the Port to-day, Tom?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not till later, any way; I am going down to the beach to
+ have a look at that ship."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Wait a little, and I'll go with you," He turned to the door
+ and motioned Tom to follow him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Outside he took his friend's arm and drew him close. "Tom,
+ something's up; Nancy's not here."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nancy's not here;" exclaimed Pembroke. "What do you mean?
+ Where is she?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To tell the truth, I don't know where she is; her bed has
+ not been slept in. I thought at first she had gone for a walk
+ with the dogs as she does sometimes, but Boy and Girl are
+ both in the barn. It's half-past eight now, and she ought to
+ be back,"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Good Lord! man, have you searched the house?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I've been over it from garret to cellar."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And you can't find her?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not a sign of her."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Have you been through the north wing?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, all over it. I have been in every room in the house,
+ boy. Nance isn't there. You heard nothing in the night, did
+ you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nothing."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When did you go to sleep?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Perhaps about half-past three. Come to think of it, I awoke
+ at four with a start, for I heard a sleigh on the Port Road.
+ After that I went to bed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The sleigh hadn't been at the Inn?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It couldn't have been&#8212;I'd have heard of it if it had;
+ you see it woke me up just going along the road."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't suppose we need worry. But it is queer&#8212;none of
+ the servants have seen her since last night."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My God, what can have happened to her?" cried Tom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sh, boy! We have nothing to go on, but I wager that old
+ French devil knows more than he will tell."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then, we'll choke it out of him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, no, don't be a fool! She may be back any minute. I'll
+ get the sleigh and go over to the House on the Dunes. In the
+ meanwhile don't show that you are anxious! I'll be back
+ inside of an hour, and we can have a look at the ship. If
+ Nance isn't with Mrs. Meath, why I am sure I'll find her
+ here. Let's not worry till we have to."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom assented to this proposition somewhat unwillingly.
+ Despite his friend's reassuring words, he did not feel that
+ Nancy would be found at the House on the Dunes or that she
+ would immediately return. He remembered her telling him of
+ her desire to go away. He remembered how strangely she had
+ received the declaration of his love, and he feared almost as
+ much that she had fled from him, as that the Marquis, weird
+ and evil as he began to think him, had any hand in her
+ disappearance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After Dan's departure in the sleigh, Tom wandered about
+ restlessly. When half an hour passed and Frost did not
+ return, he went out to look down the road and see if he were
+ coming. The white open country was still and empty, and the
+ only sign of life was the great three-masted ship riding at
+ anchor in the cove, with seamen lolling about her deck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Tom stood under the Red Oak, the Marquis stepped out of
+ the front door. He was wrapped in his great coat, about to
+ take his morning walk up and down the gallery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why so pensive, Monsieur Pembroke? Is it that you are moved
+ by the beauty of the scene&#8212;, the land so white, the sea
+ so blue, and the <i>Southern Cross</i> shining as it were in
+ a northern sky!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom grunted a scarcely civil reply, and turning away to avoid
+ further conversation, strolled down the avenue of maples
+ toward the road.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Monsieur de Boisdhyver raised his eyebrows slightly, and
+ began his walk. By and by, still more impatient, Pembroke
+ walked back toward the house. If Dan did not return soon, he
+ determined he would go after him. As he came up to the
+ gallery again the Marquis paused and spoke to him. "And
+ Mademoiselle, she has not returned?" he asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No!" Pembroke replied sharply. "She has gone to the House on
+ the Dunes and her brother has driven over to fetch her."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah! pardon," exclaimed Monsieur de Boisdhyver; "I did not
+ know... But it is cold for me, Monsieur Pembroke; I seek the
+ fire."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom did not reply. The Marquis went inside, and presently Tom
+ could see him standing at the window, the marine glass in his
+ hands, sweeping the countryside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pembroke passed an anxious morning. Ten o'clock came;
+ half-past; eleven struck. Nancy had not appeared, or was
+ there a sign of Dan. Unable to be patient longer, he set out
+ on the Port Road to meet his friend.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH8"><!-- CH8 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VIII
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ GREEN LIGHTS
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ The smoke was curling from the chimneys of the House on the
+ Dunes as Dan drove up the long marsh road from the beach. He
+ had half convinced himself that Nancy would be there, and he
+ hoped that she herself would answer his knock. When at length
+ the door was opened it was not by Nancy nor by Mrs. Meath,
+ but by a stranger whom he had never seen before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes?" a pleasant voice questioned, but giving an accent to
+ the monosyllable that made Dan think instantly of France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He found himself facing a charming woman, her bright blue
+ eyes looking into his with a smile that instantly attracted
+ him. She was well-dressed, with a different air from the
+ women he knew. And she was undeniably pretty&#8212;of that
+ Dan was convinced, and the conviction overwhelmed him with
+ shyness. He stood awkward and ill-at-ease; for the moment
+ forgetting his errand. "I suppose," he stammered, "&#8212;I
+ beg your pardon&#8212;but I suppose you are Mrs. Heath's new
+ boarder,&#8212;Mrs. Fountain?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes," replied the strange lady with an amused smile, "that
+ is what I imagine that I am called. My name is Madame de La
+ Fontaine. And you&#8212;?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I?&#8212;Oh, yes&#8212;of course&#8212;I am Dan Frost from
+ the Inn over yonder. I came to see Mrs. Meath to ask if my
+ sister Nancy is here."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Alas!" replied Madame de La Fontaine, "poor Mrs. Meath she
+ this morning is quite unwell. She is in her room, so that I
+ am afraid you cannot see her. But, I may tell you, there is
+ no one else here, just myself and my servants."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You have not seen or heard anything then of my sister, Nancy
+ Frost?" repeated Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nancy Frost?&#8212;your sister?&#8212;No, monsieur. I am
+ arrived only last night and have seen no one."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I had hoped my sister would be here. I am sorry about Mrs.
+ Meath; perhaps I can be of some service. If you should need
+ me at any time, I can almost always be found at the Inn at
+ the Red Oak."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Inn at the Red Oak?" repeated Madame de La Fontaine,
+ "and is that near by?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is about a mile and a half by the road," Frost replied,
+ "but you can see it plainly from the doorstep here."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The foreign lady stepped out in the crisp February air. "Can
+ you point it out to me? I may need your assistance some
+ time."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You see the woods and the oak at the edge of them," said
+ Dan, pointing across the Dunes. "That great tree is the Red
+ Oak, the rambling old building beneath it is the Inn."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah! one can see quite plainly from one house to the other,
+ is it not so?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Quite," Dan replied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thank you, monsieur. I trust there will be no need for
+ assistance. But it makes one glad to know where are
+ neighbours, especially&#8212;" she added, "while poor Mrs.
+ Meath is ill."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As she spoke she turned to the door with the air of
+ dismissing him, but on second thoughts she faced him again.
+ "I wonder, Mr. Frost, will you do me a favour?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I shall be delighted," Dan exclaimed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My luggage arrived last night," said Madame de La Fontaine,
+ "upon the ship that is at anchor in the bay. They are to
+ bring my boxes ashore. But before that I desire to give
+ directions to the captain at the beach, and I cannot well do
+ so by my servant. Will you be kind enough to walk with me and
+ show me the way?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan forgot about Nancy in his eagerness to assure this
+ unusually attractive lady that he was at her disposal. She
+ disappeared within, and he heard her give some quick, sharp
+ directions in French to a maid. Then in a moment she
+ reappeared on the little porch, bonneted and wrapped for a
+ walk in the cold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As they set out across the Dunes, she kept up a rapid fire of
+ questions that might have seemed inquisitive to one more
+ accustomed to the world than Dan. He found himself in the
+ course of that quarter of an hour talking quite freely with
+ the charming stranger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, I did not make the journey from France in the
+ <i>Southern Cross</i>," she replied to one of his
+ interrogations, "that would have been uncomfortable, I fear.
+ But she brings over my boxes. She is arrived somewhat sooner
+ than I was promised."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do you expect to signal her from the beach?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But yes."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How will they know who you are?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, they have instructions. You must think all this
+ curious!" she commented with a smile. "You must think me an
+ odd person."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The possible oddness of Madame de La Fontaine made less
+ impression upon Dan than did her charm. He was conversing
+ easily with a very lovely woman, and all else was forgotten
+ in that agreeable sensation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As they emerged from the Dunes upon the little beach of the
+ Cove, Dan observed on the deck of the <i>Southern Cross</i> a
+ sailor watching them through a glass. Madame de La Fontaine
+ drew her handkerchief from beneath her cloak and waved it
+ toward the ship.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This is the signal," she explained, "that they were
+ instructed to look out for. If I am not mistaken Captain
+ Bonhomme will come to the shore for my directions. You speak
+ French, monsieur?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not at all," Dan replied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah!" sighed the lady, "you lose a great deal."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I might have learned some this winter," said Dan; "for we
+ have had a French gentleman as our guest at the Inn."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Indeed! And who, may I ask, is your French gentleman?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "His name is the Marquis de Boisdhyver. Do you, by any
+ chance, know him?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Marquis de Boisdhyver?" repeated Madame de La Fontaine.
+ "I know the name certainly; it is an old family with us,
+ monsieur. But I do not recall that I have ever had the
+ pleasure of meeting any one who bore it... But see! they are
+ lowering the boat."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were now at the edge of the surf. Madame de La Fontaine
+ again waved a hand in the direction of the clipper. Dan saw a
+ small boat alongside her, into which several sailors and an
+ officer, as it seemed, were clambering over the rail. They
+ pushed off, and began to row vigorously for the shore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The French lady stood watching them intently. Within a few
+ moments the little boat was beached, the officer sprang out,
+ advanced to Madame de La Fontaine, and saluted. She exchanged
+ sentences with him in French of which Dan understood nothing.
+ Then the seaman touched his cap, got into his small boat, and
+ gave orders to push off.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He understands no English," remarked Madame de La Fontaine.
+ "I gave directions about my boxes. We may return now,
+ monsieur; or doubtless I am able to find my way back alone."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh no," exclaimed Dan gallantly, "I will go with you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lady smiled graciously. As they walked back across the
+ Dunes, she kept up a lively conversation, no longer asking
+ him questions, nor, he observed, giving him the opportunity
+ to ask any.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the door of the House on the Dunes she dismissed him
+ finally. "I am but too grateful, Monsieur, for your kindness.
+ I hope that we shall meet again while I dwell in your
+ beautiful country. In the meantime, I trust you will find
+ your sister."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan flushed, how could he have forgotten Nancy! Taking the
+ hand that his new acquaintance offered, he hurried away. He
+ met Tom on the Port Road about half a mile from the Inn and
+ was truly worried to find that Nancy had not returned; he
+ explained briefly his own delay in his expedition with the
+ strange lady to the beach.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is certainly odd, though perhaps not so odd as stupid,
+ that they should have anchored in the Cove just to disembark
+ one woman's boxes. It would have been much simpler to go to
+ the Port, as every well-bred skipper does, and had the French
+ woman's stuff carted out. At any rate, we'll go down this
+ afternoon and have a look at her."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By the time they reached the Inn it was noon, and still there
+ was no word of Nancy. The dinner was a silent one, as the
+ Marquis tactfully did not disturb his companions'
+ preoccupation, and Mrs. Frost, who was unusually nervous, did
+ not appear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the meal the two young men started for the beach. At
+ Tom's suggestion they got a little dory from the boathouse
+ and rowed out to the clipper. The wind had shifted to the
+ southeast, but still there was not enough of a sea to give
+ them any trouble; and in a few minutes they were under the
+ bows of <i>The Southern Cross</i>. Dan hailed a seaman who
+ was leaning over the gunwale and watching them with idle
+ curiosity. If the man replied in French, it was in a variety
+ of that tongue that Tom's limited attainments did not
+ understand, and, annoyed by the incomprehensible replies, he
+ asked for "le captaine". At length,&#8212;possibly attracted
+ by the altercation at the bows,&#8212;the
+ authoritative-looking person who had come ashore in the
+ morning in response to Madame de La Fontaine's signal, now
+ appeared at the gunwale and glanced below at the two young
+ men in the dory. His expression betrayed no sign that he
+ recognized Frost. Indeed he vouchsafed no syllable of reply
+ to the questions Dan asked in English or to those that Tom
+ ventured to phrase in Dr. Watson's French.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was not, they thought, an attractive person; his
+ countenance was swarthy, his eyes were black his hair was
+ black, his heavy jaw was shadowed by an enormous black
+ mustachio. A kerchief of brilliant red tied about his throat
+ gave him the appearance of the matador in a Spanish bullfight
+ rather than the officer of an English merchantman. He glanced
+ at the dory occasionally, shook his head silently in response
+ to the requests to go aboard, and at length when that did not
+ serve to put an end to them, he shrugged his shoulders and
+ disappeared. The seaman continued to lean over the gunwale
+ and spat nonchalantly as though that were the measure of
+ their appreciation of this unasked-for visit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I move we skip up the rope," said Tom, "and explain
+ ourselves at close quarters."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thanks, no," replied Dan. "Either of those two amiable
+ gentlemen looks capable and willing of pitching us overboard.
+ The water is too cold for bathing."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Very well," said Tom, "I will yield to your sober judgment
+ for the moment; but I propose to see the inside of that ship
+ sooner or later unless she weighs anchor in the hour and
+ sails away. But we ought to be getting to town to make
+ enquiries about Nancy. For Heavens' sake, Dan, where do you
+ suppose she can be?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They rowed back to the beach, stowed the dory in the
+ boathouse, and set out in the sleigh for Monday Port.
+ Diligent enquiry there, in likely and unlikely places, proved
+ fruitless. It was nightfall when they returned to the Inn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were greeted by the Marquis in the bar. "Mademoiselle
+ Nancy, she has not been found?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No," said Dan. "I take it from your question that she has
+ not come home yet either."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She is not come, no. Perhaps she stays at the House on the
+ Dunes?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I do not know," Dan answered tartly. "I expect her every
+ moment, but it is idle to conceal from you, Monsieur, that we
+ are much concerned as to her absence."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Marquis grew sympathetic,&#8212;optimistically
+ sympathetic. Tom clutched at his re-assuring words, but Dan
+ was even more irritated by the silence that Monsieur de
+ Boisdhyver had maintained throughout the day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Directly after supper Dan went into his mother's parlour,
+ leaving the others to their own devices. The Marquis settled
+ himself near the fire and was soon absorbed in reading an old
+ folio; Tom wandered restlessly about, now up and down the
+ long bar, now in the corridors, now on the gallery and in the
+ court without.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The night, after the bright day, had set in raw and cold; a
+ damp breeze blew from the southwest, and gave promise both of
+ wind and rain. From his position under the Red Oak, Tom could
+ see the red and green lights of <i>The Southern Cross</i> at
+ her moorings in the Cove below, and across the Neck the
+ lighted windows of the House on the Dunes. Over all else the
+ night had cast its black damp mantle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he stood watching, deeply anxious for the welfare of the
+ girl he loved, he noticed a new light appear in one of the
+ upper windows of the House on the Dunes&#8212;not yellow as
+ is the light of candles, but green like the light on the port
+ side of the clipper in the Cove. Had he not seen the lights
+ from the other windows he could have thought it was another
+ ship on the ocean side of the Neck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He looked for a long time at the tiny spark in the distance,
+ wondering what whim had induced Mrs. Meath to shade her
+ candles with so deep a green. As he strolled back toward the
+ Inn, he glanced through the windows of the bar where the
+ Marquis still read by the fireside. Suddenly the old
+ gentleman, as Tom curiously watched him, laid his book down
+ on the table and rose from his chair. He looked about the
+ room and then advanced to the window. Tom instinctively
+ slipped behind the trunk of the great oak. Monsieur de
+ Boisdhyver stood for several moments peering into the
+ darkness. Then he turned away and crossed the room to the
+ door into the front hall. It flashed through Tom's mind that
+ possibly the Marquis had started on another of his mysterious
+ tours. He ran down again into the court far enough from the
+ house to command a view of the entire facade, and watched
+ curiously, particularly the north wing. All was dark, save
+ for the lights below.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly he saw the flicker of a candle in one of the
+ windows, not of the north wing, but of the south. A moment's
+ glance, and he made sure that it was the room occupied as a
+ sleeping apartment by Monsieur de Boisdhyver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Marquis was standing by the window, with his face pressed
+ close to the pane, peering out into the night. He still held
+ the candle in his hand. To Dan's surprise, he placed it
+ carefully on the broad window-sill, and drew down the dark
+ shade to within a foot of the sill, blotting out all save a
+ narrow band of light. Then the Marquis disappeared for
+ several moments into the interior of the room. Dan was about
+ to turn back into the house, when again Monsieur de
+ Boisdhyver came to the window. He did not raise the shade,
+ but inserted between the windowpane and the candle a strip of
+ dark green paper. It was translucent and had the effect of
+ sending a beam of green light southward, across the meadows
+ and the dunes, to meet&#8212;Tom suddenly realized&#8212;the
+ rays of the green light from the House on the Dunes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Was it a signal being exchanged, and between whom? The
+ coincidence of green lights from the Inn and the House on the
+ Dunes, at the same moment, was too marked to be without
+ significance. To what end was the Marquis de Boisdhyver
+ exchanging mysterious signals with some one in that lonely
+ farmhouse, and what did they mean?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom repressed his agitation and remained for some time
+ watching the two green lights that glowed toward one another
+ over the dark landscape.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly the light in the House on the Dunes was
+ extinguished; then, momentarily it shone again, but quickly
+ went out and left the great sweep of dunes in darkness. Two
+ minutes later the same thing took place in the window of the
+ south chamber of the Inn. The light flashed and was gone,
+ flashed again and shone no more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom went in, by a rear entrance, to the bar. The Marquis was
+ seated by a table, absorbed in reading. He started as Tom
+ entered. "Still no word of Mademoiselle?" he piped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Still no word, monsieur," Pembroke answered laconically. He
+ also seated himself in the candle light and took up the last
+ issue of the <i>Port News</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do you know what has become of Dan?" Pembroke asked
+ presently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Monsieur Frost he has been closeted with madame his mother
+ for the past half-hour. You have no further plans for seeking
+ Mademoiselle? For myself, I grow alarmed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I know nothing but what you know, monsieur. Nancy has not
+ returned. There has been no word of her. We shall have to
+ wait." With tremendous effort to conceal his agitation and
+ annoyance, Tom resumed his reading.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Monsieur de Boisdhyver glanced at him for a moment with a
+ little air of interrogation, then shrugged his shoulders
+ slightly and turned again to his French paper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH9"><!-- CH9 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IX
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ MRS. FROST'S RECOLLECTIONS OF A FRENCH EXILE
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ After the long day of fruitless search and enquiry for the
+ vanished Nancy, supper being over and Tom having gone
+ outside, Dan joined his mother in the blue parlour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Frost was weary with waiting and anxiety, but as Dan
+ threw himself on a couch near her chair, she watched him
+ patiently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There is no clue, Dan?" she ventured at last.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No clue, mother, not the slightest. Nancy seems to have
+ vanished as completely as if she had dissolved into air. As
+ you know, the house has been thoroughly searched; the
+ servants carefully questioned; and enquiries have been made
+ at every conceivable place in Monday Port. I have been to the
+ House on the Dunes, and to the farmhouses on every road round
+ about. No one has seen or heard of her. She has taken French
+ leave, but for what reason I can't imagine."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nancy has not been happy for some time, Dan," said Mrs.
+ Frost.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, I have fancied that she was not. But why? Do you suppose
+ she has left us deliberately? or&#8212;". He paused uncertain
+ whether or not to give voice to his suspicions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Or what?" asked his mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Or she has been forced away against her will."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Against her will!" the old lady exclaimed. "Who could have
+ forced her? and for what reason? Do you think she may have
+ been kidnapped?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Either kidnapped or decoyed away."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But who could have designs upon Nancy? It is more reasonable
+ to suppose that she left of her own accord. I confess that
+ would not altogether surprise me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't know, mother, but I have my fears and suspicions.
+ There may be some one who has a deep interest in Nancy, who
+ for reasons of his own, which I don't yet understand, may
+ wish to control her movements. I wish you would tell me all
+ you know of Nancy's origin. You have never told me;&#8212;you
+ have never told her, I fancy,&#8212;who she really is and how
+ you came to adopt her as your own child. I have never been
+ curious to know, in fact I have not wanted to know, for she
+ has always been to me precisely what a sister of my own blood
+ would be. But now, it may help me to understand certain
+ strange things that have happened in the last few days."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a moment Mrs. Frost was silent. "No, I have never spoken
+ to you or to Nancy of her early history, Dan; simply because,
+ to all intent she has been our own. I have always wished that
+ she should feel absolutely one with us; and I think she
+ always has, until this winter. But of late I have noticed her
+ discontent, her growing restlessness, and I have sometimes
+ wondered if she could be brooding over the mystery of her
+ early years. But she has never asked me a direct question;
+ and I have kept silent."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I think now, mother," Dan replied, "it is your duty to tell
+ me all you know."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have no reason, my dear, to keep anything from you. I
+ should have told you years ago, if you had asked me. There is
+ not much to tell. You may remember when you were a boy about
+ six or seven years old, a French exile came to the Inn, a
+ military gentleman, who had left France in consequence of the
+ fall of the great Napoleon."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, I remember him distinctly," said Dan. "He used to tell
+ stories to Tom and me of his adventures in the wars. Tom was
+ speaking of him only the other day."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well," continued Mrs. Frost, "this gentleman called himself
+ General Pointelle. I learned afterwards it was not his real
+ name. Who he actually was, I have not the slightest idea. He
+ brought with him a little girl two years old, a sweet little
+ black-eyed girl, to whom I, having lost your only sister at
+ about that age, took a great fancy. The General also had two
+ servants with him, a valet, and a maid. The maid, a pretty
+ young thing, took care of the child. They arrived in
+ mid-summer, on a merchantman that plied between Marseilles
+ and Monday Port. I do not know why General Pointelle came to
+ this part of the country, or why he chose to stay at the Inn;
+ at any rate he came, and he engaged for an indefinite period
+ the best suite of apartments in the old north wing. He had
+ the Oak Parlour&#8212;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Oak Parlour!" exclaimed Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes," replied Mrs. Frost, "that was part of the suite
+ reserved usually for our most distinguished guests. The
+ general used that for a sitting-room and the adjoining
+ chamber as a bed-room. The maid and child occupied connecting
+ rooms across the hall. The valet, I believe, was in some
+ other part of the house. General Pointelle proved himself a
+ fascinating guest, and his little daughter Eloise was a
+ favourite with all the household. The maid, pretty as she
+ certainly was and apparently above her station, I somehow
+ never trusted. I have always believed that the relations
+ between the general and herself were not what they should
+ have been. But Frenchmen look at such things differently, I
+ am told; and it was not to our interests to be over-curious.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They had been with us about two months when one fine morning
+ we awoke to find that General Pointelle, his valet, and the
+ charming Marie had disappeared, and little Eloise was crying
+ alone in her big room. You have probably guessed the child
+ was Nancy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes," Dan agreed, "but do you mean that the father actually
+ abandoned her?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Practically. He left a note for me and a little bag of gold
+ amounting to two thousand dollars to be used for the child.
+ If you will hand me that old secretary there, I will show you
+ the letter."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan placed the old-fashioned writing-desk on the table beside
+ her, and waited anxiously while she fumbled in her pocket for
+ the key. She unlocked the desk, and after searching a few
+ moments amongst innumerable papers, drew out an old letter.
+ This she unfolded carefully and handed to Dan. It was written
+ in English, in a fine running hand. He read it attentively.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>The Inn at the Red Oak, Deal</i>:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "14 October, '814.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Madame:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Political circumstances over which I have no control,
+ patriotic considerations which I cannot withstand, demand my
+ immediate return to France. In the conditions into which I am
+ about to be plunged the care of my dear little daughter
+ becomes an impossibility. Inhuman as it must seem to you,
+ lacking in all sense of Christian duty as it must appear to
+ you, I entrust, without the formality of consulting you, my
+ beautiful little Eloise to your humane and tender care. With
+ this letter I deposit with you the sum of two thousand
+ dollars in gold, which will go a little way at least to
+ compensate you for the burden I thus unceremoniously, but of
+ necessity, thrust upon you. I appeal to and confide in the
+ goodness of your heart, of which already I have such abundant
+ testimony, that will take pity upon the misfortune of a
+ helpless infant and an equally helpless parent. May you be a
+ mother to the motherless, and may the Heavenly Father bless
+ you for what you shall do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I embark, madame, upon a dangerous and uncertain mission.
+ Should that mission prove successful and restore the fortunes
+ of my house, I will return and claim my daughter. Should fate
+ overwhelm me with disaster, I must beg that you will continue
+ to regard her and love her as your own. The issue will have
+ been decided within five years. Permit me to add but one
+ thing more,&#8212;in the event that I fall in the cause I
+ have embraced, I have made arrangements whereby
+ communications shall be established with you, madame, that
+ will redound to your own good fortune and that of the little
+ Eloise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "All effort to thwart my plans or to establish my identity in
+ the meantime, will, I must warn you, be fruitless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Adieu, madame: accept the assurance of my gratitude for all
+ that you have already done to sweeten exile and of my earnest
+ prayer for the blessing of God upon your great good heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I remain, madame, for the present, but always, under
+ whatever name,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your grateful and sincere servant,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "GASTON POINTELLE,"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Dan, with gathering brows, concluded the reading of this
+ extraordinary letter, Mrs. Frost resumed her story.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We always imagined that the general and his companions had
+ sailed in a French vessel that lay at that time in the
+ Passage and left that morning at dawn. There was nothing to
+ do but adopt little Eloise Pointelle for my own. I changed
+ her name, at your father's suggestion, to Nancy Frost;
+ knowing that Pointelle was not the general's real name. For
+ five years we looked to see our guest return; and afterwards
+ for years, we hoped to receive some communication that would
+ prove, as he promised, of advantage to Nancy and ourselves.
+ But from the night General Pointelle left our house to this
+ day, I have not heard one word to show that he still existed
+ or, indeed, that he ever had existed. We brought Nancy up as
+ our own daughter, though, never concealing from her the fact
+ that she was not of our blood. Indeed, Dan, I have loved her
+ dearly."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Certainly, you have always treated her with the greatest
+ kindness. But this is quite extraordinary, Mother. I think it
+ will throw light on Nancy's present disappearance."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do you think the father is alive, Dan? that he has
+ communicated with her?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not that, mother; I am really in the dark. But I believe
+ that the Marquis de Boisdhyver has some connection with your
+ General Pointelle, and that his stay with us this winter has
+ something to do with Nancy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In response to Mrs. Frost's questions, he told of the
+ meetings of Nancy and the marquis, but decided to say nothing
+ about the paper that he had found in the Oak Parlour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I want you to be careful, Mother, to give no hint to the
+ Marquis that we suspect him in any way. Tom and I are trying
+ to solve the mystery, and secrecy is of the greatest
+ importance. It is a more complicated business than we
+ imagined. I must go now and find Tom. May I keep this
+ letter?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, but keep it under lock and key. I have guarded it for
+ sixteen years; and it is the only evidence I possess of
+ Nancy's origin."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan returned to the bar, where he found the Marquis and Tom
+ still reading their papers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah!" exclaimed Monsieur de Boisdhyver, "I trust, Monsieur
+ Frost, you bring us the good news at last of the return of
+ Mademoiselle."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Unfortunately, I do not, monsieur," Dan replied. "Our
+ efforts to find out what has become of her have been entirely
+ unsuccessful. I am very anxious, as you may imagine."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And to what mishap do you attribute Mademoiselle's so
+ unceremonious departure?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I do not attribute it to any mishap," replied Dan. "I think
+ that my sister has gone off on a visit to some friends, and
+ that her messages to us have been miscarried. I feel certain
+ that to-morrow we will be completely reassured."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah! I hope so with all my heart," exclaimed the Marquis
+ fervently. "It is a matter of deep distress to
+ me&#8212;monsieur. But if&#8212;to-morrow passes and still
+ you do not hear&#8212;?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "God knows, sir. We must do everything to find her."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We shall find her," cried Tom, as he sprang to his feet,
+ unable longer to repress his anxiety or his irritation. "And
+ if we do not find her safe and well, woe to the man who has
+ harmed her."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Bravo!" cried the Marquis. "Permit me to adopt those words
+ to express my own sentiments. I applaud this determination,
+ monsieur, <i>de tout mon coeur</i>."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom glared at the little old man with an expression of
+ illconcealed rage. He was about to blurt out some angry
+ reply, when a warning gesture from Dan checked him. Without
+ speaking, he flung himself out of the room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Poor Tom!" said Dan quickly, to cover Pembroke's attitude
+ toward the Marquis, "this takes him especially hard. He is in
+ love with Nancy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Eh bien</i>! I sympathize with his good taste. It is that
+ that accounts for his vigour of his expressions, so much more
+ <i>emphatique</i> than our good host."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "More emphatic, perhaps," said Dan, "though I do not feel
+ less strongly."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Marquis made a little bow, as he rose to retire. "If,
+ chance, monsieur could require my assistance&#8212;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thank you," said Dan quickly. "In that case, sir, I shall be
+ only too happy to call upon you." He rose also, and
+ courteously held the candle till the Marquis had reached the
+ top of the stairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom waited his friend impatiently in their common chamber.
+ And when at last, having closed the house for the night, Dan
+ joined him, he told at once of the signals which he supposed
+ had been exchanged between the Marquis at the Inn and someone
+ at the House on the Dunes. In return Dan repeated what he had
+ learned about Nancy from Mrs. Frost.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There is no doubt in my mind," said Dan, "that the Marquis
+ knows all about Nancy's disappearance and where she is, and
+ further I believe that Nancy's disappearance is part of a
+ plot with the Marquis here, Madame de la Fontaine at the
+ House on the Dunes, and that schooner riding at anchor in the
+ Cove. I have a plan, Tom."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Go ahead for heaven's sake. If we don't do something, I'll
+ go in and choke the truth out of that old reprobate. He
+ applauds my sentiments, eh! Good God! If he knew them!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, yes," said Dan. "But the time for choking has not come.
+ You nearly gave yourself away to-night, you will ruin our
+ plans, and involve Nancy in some harm. She is probably in
+ that old villain's power. Now listen to me. The first thing
+ to do is to discover Nancy's whereabouts. The second is to
+ get at the bottom of the Marquis's plot and the secret of the
+ torn scrap of paper. We will find the clew to both, I think,
+ if we can discover the meaning of the signals between the
+ Marquis and the lady in the House on the Dunes."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Right!" cried Tom. "But how?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "One of us must stay at the Inn and watch the Marquis
+ to-night, and the other investigate the House on the Dunes. I
+ have already been there and made the acquaintance of the
+ lady, so I had better do that, and you stay here. Do you
+ agree?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, of course; though I envy you the chance to be out and
+ doing."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You will be doing something here. I want you to hide
+ yourself in the hallway near the Marquis's door and watch all
+ night&#8212;till dawn anyway. He cannot get out of his room
+ without coming into the hall, and we must know what he does
+ to-night. If the Marquis can spend a sleepless night, we can
+ afford to do so. I don't know what I can do at the House on
+ the Dunes but I shall take the pistol, and you can keep my
+ gun. To-morrow I will get more arms, for I shouldn't be
+ surprised if we needed them. Is everything clear?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Perfectly," said Tom. "I'll watch as soon as you are off."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Good-night, old boy, good luck."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Good-night," and Dan slipped out of the room and down the
+ dark stairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH10"><!-- CH10 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER X
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ MIDNIGHT VIGILS
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ As soon as Dan had gone Tom blew out his light and slipped
+ into the hallway.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This portion of the Inn was simple in design. A long corridor
+ ran through the middle of the house to meet a similar passage
+ at the southern end extending at right angles to the main
+ hall. The South Chamber, occupied by the Marquis de
+ Boisdhyver, opened into the southwest passage, but the door
+ was well beyond the juncture of the two corridors. It was
+ Pembroke's intention to conceal himself in the bedroom next
+ the Marquis's chamber, from the door of which he could look
+ down the entire length of the main hall, and by stepping
+ outside get a view of the branch hallway into which the door
+ of this room and that of the Marquis actually opened. A
+ further advantage was that the windows of this room, like
+ those of the South Chamber, looked out upon the Dunes and the
+ Cove.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Tom stepped from his chamber, the house seemed utterly
+ deserted; save for the roaring of the wind without and an
+ occasional creak or crack in the time-worn boards, there were
+ no sounds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The night was not a dark one, although the wind was rising
+ and rain was threatening; for a full moon lurked behind the
+ thick veil of cloud and something of its weird weak light
+ relieved the darkness even of the great corridor of the Inn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom stole softly down the hallway and gained the room next
+ the Marquis's. He took his position in a great chair, which
+ he drew near the open door, and laid his gun on the floor
+ near at hand. No one could enter the hall without his seeing
+ him. Every few moments he would tiptoe to the doorway, thrust
+ his head into the corridor, and listen intently for any sound
+ in the South Chamber.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a lonely and unpleasant vigil. The night was wild, the
+ storm was rising, the old Inn was moaning as though in
+ distress; and, despite his natural courage, fantastic terrors
+ and dangers thrust themselves upon his excited imagination.
+ He would much have preferred, he felt, to be out in the open
+ as Dan was, even facing real dangers and greater
+ difficulties. Deeper than by these imaginary fears of the
+ night, he was racked with anxiety to know what had become of
+ the girl he loved. Had she been decoyed away by the evil
+ genius of the place; was she in danger? Had she disappeared
+ of her own free will; and didn't she really love him?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was not in the least sleepy; but after a while the vigil
+ began to tell upon his nerves. He found it almost impossible
+ to sit still and wait, perhaps in vain. He made innumerable
+ trips across the room to the windows to look out into the
+ bleak night. The landscape was blotted out. Not a light
+ showed from the House on the Dunes; only the two lamps on the
+ schooner at anchor in the Cove gleamed across the night.
+ Eleven o'clock, twelve o'clock struck solemnly from the old
+ clock on the stairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once as he was looking out of the window, it seemed to him
+ that the green light on the <i>Southern Cross</i> was moving.
+ But it was impossible that she should weigh anchor in the
+ teeth of the rising storm. He was mistaken. Nay, he was sure.
+ But it was rising, slowly, steadily, as though drawn by an
+ invisible hand, to about the height of the masthead. There at
+ last it stopped, and swung to the wind, to and fro, to and
+ fro; high above its red companion, high above the deck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And then, suddenly, as if to answer this mysterious
+ manoeuvre, the green light, that earlier in the evening had
+ glowed from a north window of the House on the Dunes, now
+ flashed from an east window of the old farmhouse; flashed,
+ then gleamed steadily. The light on the <i>Southern Cross</i>
+ was lowered slowly, then raised again. The light in the House
+ on the Dunes vanished; soon flashed again and then vanished
+ once more. Slowly the light in the schooner descended to its
+ normal position. A moment later the green light appeared on
+ the north side of the House on the Dunes, where it had been
+ earlier, and shone there steadily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Was it a signal to the Marquis de Boisdhyver? Tom tiptoed to
+ the partition between his room and the South Chamber, and put
+ his ear to the wall to listen. Not a sound reached him. He
+ turned to the door to go into the corridor, and stood
+ suddenly motionless. For there, advancing ever so cautiously
+ down the hall, carrying a lighted candle in his hand, was the
+ old Marquis. He was clad in night dress and cap, with a
+ gayly-coloured dressing-gown worn over the white shirt.
+ Slowly, silently, pausing every instant to listen; he stole
+ on, gun in hand, and Tom followed him as cautiously and as
+ quietly. Instead of turning to the right at the partition
+ that divides the north and south wings of the Inn and going
+ down stairs, the Marquis turned to the left, into the short
+ hall that led directly to the great chamber occupied by Tom
+ and Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By the time Pembroke in pursuit had reached the turn and
+ dared to peep around the corner of the wall, the Marquis was
+ at the door of Dan's room. He stood there, ear bent close to
+ the panel, intently listening.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom waited breathless. Not satisfied, Monsieur de Boisdhyver
+ turned about and went into an adjoining chamber, the door of
+ which stood open. Pembroke was about to advance, when the
+ Marquis emerged again into the corridor, having left his
+ lighted candle in the empty room. This manoeuvre, whatever
+ advantage it had for the Marquis, was fortunate for Pembroke,
+ for it left the end of the little hall, where he stood
+ watching, in deep shadow. He could now step boldly from
+ behind the concealing wall without fear of immediate
+ detection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again the Marquis stood and listened at the door of Dan's
+ room, then cautiously turned the knob. The door yielded and
+ opened an inch or so. Monsieur de Boisdhyver put his ear to
+ the crack. Dissatisfied with the absolute silence that must
+ have met him, he pushed open the door a little further and
+ thrust his head inside. In a moment he disappeared within.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom realized that the Marquis would soon discover the fact
+ that the room was empty. He looked about quickly for a place
+ of concealment that would command a view of all the halls.
+ Fortunately the partition that divided the long corridor
+ between the north and south wings was hung with heavy
+ curtains. Deciding instantly, Pembroke slipped behind them,
+ and ruthlessly slit an opening in the thick green stuff,
+ through which he could peek out. He was just in time, as the
+ Marquis came out of their bedroom and softly closed the door.
+ He stood irresolute; then, with even greater caution,
+ re-entered the room in which he had left his candle. To Tom's
+ chagrin, the candle was suddenly extinguished and the Inn
+ left in darkness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For some moments, there was absolute silence. Then Tom could
+ hear faintly,&#8212;or feel rather than hear&#8212;the
+ Marquis cautiously finding his way back. Luckily, the old
+ Frenchman was groping his way next the other wall. Pembroke
+ slipped from behind the curtains and stole softly in pursuit.
+ As he reached the south end of the corridor, he heard the
+ latch of the Marquis's door click softly. Alarmed by
+ discovering that they were not in bed, thought Tom, he had
+ abandoned whatever purpose he had in mind for his midnight
+ prowl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After waiting a little and hearing no more, Tom went again to
+ the window. The rain had begun now and the wind was blowing a
+ gale. Suddenly Pembroke discerned a light shining from the
+ window next the very one from which he was peering into the
+ darkness,&#8212;the steady glow of a deep red light.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Another signal!" he murmured; then waited to see if it would
+ be answered by the House on the Dunes. Perhaps fifteen
+ minutes passed, and then, suddenly, there gleamed through the
+ rain and dark, a tiny bit of red flame, just where the House
+ on the Dunes must be. A little later the red lamp on the
+ <i>Southern Cross</i> performed a fantastic ascension to what
+ Pembroke took to be the masthead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The red light in the neighbouring window was extinguished.
+ Almost instantly the red spark on the Dunes disappeared, and
+ in a few moments the schooner's lamp began its descent.
+ Simultaneously they glowed again and the ship's light danced
+ upward; then the two red lights on shore vanished and the
+ lamp on the <i>Southern Cross</i> sank to its proper place
+ and stayed there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of one thing Tom was sure: The Marquis, the lady at the House
+ on the Dunes, and the skipper of the schooner in the Cove,
+ were in collusion. Of another thing he felt almost equally
+ certain: the red light was a signal of danger, and the
+ message of danger flashed across the night was the fact that
+ he and Dan were not safe asleep in bed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a long time he watched, keen with excitement; listened
+ patiently; started at every sound. But nothing more unusual
+ did he hear that night than the roar of the wind, the dash of
+ the brawling southeaster against the panes, and the groans of
+ the old house, shaken by the storm. Toward morning he crept
+ back to bed and fell instantly into a deep and dreamless
+ sleep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While Tom was thus watching and sleeping a somewhat different
+ experience had fallen to the lot of Dan Frost. He had no
+ definite plan in making a midnight visit to the vicinity of
+ the House on the Dunes, but he hoped to discover some clue to
+ the surrounding mysteries. From time to time during the day
+ he had taken his field glasses to one of the upper rooms of
+ the Inn, and scanned the countryside but nothing unusual
+ seemed astir in the white world without. The <i>Southern
+ Cross</i> had lain on the surface of the little cove all day,
+ swaying with wind and tide, no sign of activity upon her
+ decks. It was after ten when he started forth. The night was
+ not quite dark, for the full moon was shining somewhere
+ behind the thick veil of clouds. Earlier in the evening Dan
+ had intended to go boldly to the House itself and demand an
+ interview with old Mrs. Meath; but he reflected that he would
+ probably be met with the excuse that Mrs. Meath was ill, and
+ he did not know how he could force himself in, particularly
+ past the barrier of Madame de la Fontaine's charming manner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was an unpleasant walk with the wind in his face, and it
+ was nearly eleven before he turned into the long dune road,
+ which branched from the Port Road near the Rocking Stone and
+ led directly to the old farmhouse on Strathsey Neck. To his
+ chagrin it appeared that all lights had been extinguished as
+ if the inmates of the house had gone to bed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old farmhouse loomed before him, dark and forbidding. On
+ either side there were outhouses, and in the rear quite near
+ the house a barn. There was not a tree on the place; indeed,
+ there was little vegetation upon the entire Neck, save the
+ grass of the middle meadows which in summer furnished scant
+ nourishment for the cattle and a flock of sheep. Now all was
+ bleak and covered with snow, and a freshening gale swept out
+ of the great maw of the Atlantic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Keeping close to the fence, Frost began to make a complete
+ circuit of the farmhouse. As he turned a corner of the south
+ end, or rear of the house, he was relieved to see a light
+ burning in the kitchen. He stole cautiously to a position
+ within the shadow of the barn from which he could get a
+ glimpse of the interior. In the kitchen standing before a
+ deal table, he saw a young woman&#8212;not Jane, Mrs. Heath's
+ maid-of-all-work, but a stranger,&#8212;with her hands deep
+ in a bowl of dough. Her back was toward him, but he guessed
+ that she was Madame de la Fontaine's maid, whom he had seen
+ in the morning. The door into the dining-room beyond stood
+ open, and by craning his neck, Dan could see that the room
+ was lighter, but he could not discover whether or not it were
+ occupied. The shutters of the dining-room were so closely
+ barred and the curtains so tightly drawn that not a ray of
+ light penetrated to the outside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The girl in the kitchen proceeded busily about her work. She
+ was evidently engaged, despite the lateness of the hour, in
+ mixing bread.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once while he waited patiently, to what end he hardly knew,
+ Madame de la Fontaine entered the kitchen. She was clad in
+ black and held in her hands what Dan took to be a ship's
+ lamp. She stood for a moment in the doorway and spoke to the
+ servant maid. The girl stopped her work, and taking a strip
+ of paper, ignited it at a candle and lighted the lamp, which
+ Madame de la Fontaine held up for her. It glowed instantly
+ with a deep green flame, such as Tom had described as shining
+ from a window of the House on the Dunes in the early evening.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as her lamp was lighted Madame de la Fontaine left
+ the room. Supposing that she was about to give a signal,
+ Dan's heart leaped at the prospect of some result to his
+ eavesdropping, and he stole carefully around to the front of
+ the house. Presently from an upper window in the east side of
+ the house, not the north as he had expected, he saw the green
+ light sending forth its message across the Dunes&#8212;to
+ whom? Probably the signal could be seen from the Inn, but it
+ more likely was intended for the schooner in the Cove. Sure
+ enough, as he watched, Dan saw the phenomenon of the
+ ascending lamp on the <i>Southern Cross</i>, which at that
+ identical moment Tom Pembroke was watching from his post of
+ vantage in one of the south windows of the Inn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A little later the signal was removed from the east window of
+ the farmhouse and placed in a north window. Dan looked to see
+ the answering gleam from the Inn at the Red Oak. But none
+ came. Crouched in a corner of the fence, he waited perhaps
+ for half-an-hour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly a signal gleamed from the Inn, but this time it was
+ not green as he expected, but red. In a few moments a form
+ appeared in the window of the farmhouse, and a white hand,
+ which he supposed was that of Madame de la Fontaine, took
+ hold of the lamp and reversed it, so that now it showed red.
+ The light in the Inn vanished, reappeared, vanished again.
+ The same thing happened to the light in the House on the
+ Dunes. And looking eastward, Dan saw the ship's red lamp
+ perform its fantastic ascent and descent. Soon all was left
+ in darkness. Frost slipped back to his post near the barn and
+ looked again into the kitchen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madame de la Fontaine was standing in the doorway as before.
+ The maid, turning away from the table, came at that moment to
+ the window, and raised the sash, as though she were
+ overheated. Presently, leaving the window open, she turned to
+ her mistress, and Dan could hear the sharp staccato of her
+ voice as she said something in what seemed to him her
+ barbarous French.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Impelled by curiosity, he crept closer to the house. He was
+ within six feet of the window, standing on the tip of his
+ toes. Suddenly he felt himself pinioned from behind; his arms
+ were gripped as in a vise, a hand grasped his throat and
+ began to choke him, and a sharp knee was planted with
+ terrific force in the small of his back. He made a gurgling
+ sound as he went backward, but there was no opportunity for
+ struggling. He recovered from the shock to find himself
+ stretched at full length in the wet snow. Some one was
+ sitting upon him, struggling to thrust a gag into his mouth;
+ some one else was binding his hands and feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He could just distinguish, in the sickly moonlight and the
+ dim rays of the candle from the kitchen, the faces of his
+ assailants. One was the murderous looking Frenchman, the
+ skipper of the <i>Southern Cross</i>, the other he took to be
+ a common seaman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Attracted by the scuffle, the French maid had thrust her head
+ out of the window and was addressing the combatants in
+ vigorous French. Neither then nor later did Madame de la
+ Fontaine appear. When Frost was safely bound and gagged,
+ Captain Bonhomme arose, said a few words to his companion,
+ and disappeared into the farmhouse. Dan's guard searched him
+ rapidly, confiscated his revolver and knife, and then resumed
+ his seat upon his legs. Inside the kitchen Dan could hear the
+ sounds of an animated French dialogue, in which he imagined
+ from time to time that he detected the silvery tones of
+ Madame de la Fontaine's voice. Perhaps fifteen minutes
+ elapsed. Captain Bonhomme came out of the house, strode to
+ the spot where Dan was lying, and addressed him in excellent
+ English.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Monsieur; for purposes which it is superfluous to explain,
+ it is decided to extend to you for a while the hospitality of
+ my good ship the <i>Southern Cross</i>&#8212;a hospitality, I
+ may say, that your unceremonious eavesdropping has thrust
+ upon you. I will release your feet; and then, monsieur, you
+ follow my good Jean across the sands. If you are quiet, no
+ harm shall come to you. If you resist, <i>cher monsieur</i>,
+ it will be of painful duty that I entrust the contents of
+ this revolver into&#8212;<i>mais non! Vous comprenez,
+ n'est-ce pas?&#8212;Bien</i>!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He gave a sharp order to the seaman. The handkerchief about
+ Dan's ankles was untied, and he was roughly assisted to his
+ feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The snow is wet, eh! Yes, for the good wind is moist. Now,
+ <i>Allons</i>!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jean led the way, and Dan, deciding that he had no choice in
+ the matter, followed obediently. The captain brought up the
+ rear. As they went out through the gate, Dan turned for a
+ moment and looked back at the house. He could see the French
+ maid still at the kitchen window. At the same moment Captain
+ Bonhomme glanced back and ceremoniously raised his hat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Bonsoir, mam'zelle</i>."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Bonsoir, monsieur</i>," was the sharp reply, and the
+ window was lowered with a bang.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They went on in silence across the Dunes to the beach. There,
+ drawn up above high water line, they found a skiff. The
+ captain and Jean shoved off, sprang in, and the little boat
+ plunged into the combing waves. They reached the <i>Southern
+ Cross</i> without misadventure. The captain blew a call upon
+ a boatswain's whistle. A rope was lowered and Jean made the
+ skiff fast to the ladder at the schooner's side. The captain
+ took out his revolver and held it in his hand, while Jean
+ unloosed the cords that bound Dan's wrists.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now up, <i>mon ami</i>."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a moment Dan thought of risking a scuffle in the unsteady
+ skiff, but discretion proved the better part of valour, and
+ he climbed obediently on to the deck. The seaman stood close
+ by till the captain and Jean had clambered up after him. A
+ few words in French to his men, then Captain Bonhomme,
+ beckoning to Dan to follow, led the way down the companion.
+ He opened the door of a little cabin amidships and bade Frost
+ enter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You will find everything required for your comfort,
+ monsieur," he said, "and I trust you will make yourself at
+ home, as you say; and enjoy a good night and a sound sleep.
+ We can discuss our affairs in the morning."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And with the words, he closed the door, turned the key in the
+ lock, and left Dan to his reflections.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="PART3"><!-- PART3 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ PART III
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ THE SCHOONER IN THE COVE
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH11"><!-- CH11 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XI
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ THE SOUTHERN CROSS
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ Dan spent a miserable night. He had soon satisfied himself
+ that escape was impossible. A child could not have squeezed
+ through the port hole, and the stoutness of the
+ door&#8212;barred, he fancied, as well as locked on the
+ outside,&#8212;seemed to indicate that this particular cabin
+ had been constructed for the purpose of keeping an enemy out
+ of mischief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Young Frost's reflections, as at length he stretched himself
+ upon the bunk, were anything but agreeable. The reconnoitre
+ at the House on the Dunes had established nothing but what
+ they already practically knew&#8212;that the Marquis, the
+ lady, and the captain of the schooner were working together.
+ If they were responsible for Nancy's disappearance, as Dan
+ was convinced, he had not succeeded in getting a scrap of
+ evidence against them. And to cap the climax, he had stupidly
+ allowed himself to be captured. The method of his capture
+ seemed to him quite as ignominious as the fact.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was not particularly alarmed for his own safety. He did
+ not doubt that eventually he would escape, though at the
+ moment he could not imagine how; or, failing in that, he
+ supposed he would be released,&#8212;honorably discharged, as
+ it were,&#8212;when it was too late for him to interfere with
+ the designs of the conspirators. And this was the bitterest
+ reflection of all: that a carefully-planned conspiracy was on
+ foot, and no sooner had he and Tom realized it than through
+ sheer stupidity he must not only make it clear to the Marquis
+ and his colleagues that they were being watched, but must let
+ himself fall into their power. Poor Tom! thought Dan ruefully
+ as he tossed upon the little bunk, there must fall upon him
+ now the brunt of whatever was to be done for Nancy's rescue,
+ for the thwarting of whatever nefarious designs this gang of
+ French desperados were concocting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Escape! A dozen times and more he sprang from his bed to
+ press his face against the thick glass of the little port and
+ to rage futilely that he could not elongate his six feet of
+ anatomy, and slip through. In vain he would throw his weight
+ against the door, without so much as shaking it. And then he
+ would sink back upon the bunk and determine to conserve his
+ strength by snatching a bit of sleep. And he would
+ wait&#8212;since he must wait&#8212;till morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The gale had lashed itself into a fury; the rain was pouring
+ in torrents; and the ship rolled distressingly in the rising
+ sea. It was near dawn before Dan succeeded in getting to
+ sleep at all, but from then on for several hours he slept
+ heavily. When he awoke the storm, like many storms that come
+ out of the south, had exhausted itself. The rain had ceased,
+ the wind had fallen, and it was evident from the motion of
+ the ship, that the sea was going down. Dan sprang to the port
+ hole and peered out, and was thankful to realize that the
+ peep hole of his prison gave upon the shore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though it had stopped raining, the clouds were still grey and
+ lowering, and the morning light was weak and pale. The Dunes,
+ beyond the disturbed waters of the little cove, looked dirty
+ and bedraggled. The snow had been washed off the hillocks,
+ the little streams that here and there emptied into the Cove
+ had swollen to the size of respectable brooks, and the high
+ water of the night had strewn the beach with brown tangled
+ seaweed. There was no sign of human life in evidence. Dan
+ could just see the upper story of the House on the Dunes, but
+ no other habitation save the deserted fisherman's huts that
+ straggled along the beach.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His watch showed half-past seven when the evil-visaged Jean
+ unbarred the door, opened it about a foot, and thrust in upon
+ the floor a tray of food. Dan sprang forward and succeeded in
+ getting his foot into the opening, so that Jean could not
+ close the door. He was prepared to fight for his liberty.
+ Despite Jean's superior strength, Dan had the advantage in
+ that his own body acted as a lever, and for a moment it
+ seemed that he was to be successful; but the Frenchman, with
+ a violent execration, suddenly let go his hold on the knob,
+ the door swung in, and Dan fell back on all fours upon the
+ floor. By the time he had recovered himself for another dash,
+ he was confronted by Jean, a disagreeable leer upon his
+ unpleasant countenance and a cocked pistol in his hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan stood in his tracks. "I want to see Captain Bonhomme!" he
+ demanded, making up in the tone of his voice for the vigor
+ his movements suddenly lacked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Je ne parle pas englais</i>," was the irritating reply,
+ as Jean, menacing the prisoner with the pistol, reached for
+ the door and closed it with a snap. Dan had the chagrin of
+ hearing the key turn in the lock and the heavy bar fall into
+ place across the panels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He sat down ruefully, but after a moment or so took up the
+ tray and placed it on the bunk before him. He made a bad
+ breakfast off thick gruel, black bread and villainous coffee,
+ and then kicked his heels impatiently for an hour or more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eventually Jean reappeared, this time pistol in hand, and
+ behind him, to Dan's relief, Captain Bonhomme. The captain
+ entered the little cabin, leaving the door open behind him
+ while Jean stood in the passage on duty as guard. The swarthy
+ unattractive face of Captain Bonhomme wore this morning an
+ expression of sarcastic levity that was more irritating to
+ Frost than its ferocious anger had been the night before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Bon jour, monsieur</i>," said the captain in a tone of
+ obnoxious pleasantry. "I trust the night has gone well with
+ you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You will oblige me," snapped Dan for reply, "by omitting
+ your hypocritical courtesy. I demand to know what you mean by
+ this proceeding,&#8212;capturing me like a common thief and
+ imprisoning me on this confounded ship?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Captain Bonhomme's countenance quickly lost its factitious
+ cheerfulness. "Monsieur," he replied sharply, "I did not come
+ to you to bandy words. If you will reflect on the occupation
+ you were indulging last night at the moment we surprised you,
+ you will comprehend that it was certainly to be inferred
+ that, if you were not a thief, you were an eavesdropper;
+ which, to my way of thinking, is as bad. If you address me
+ again in that insulting tone, I shall leave you till such a
+ time as you may be willing to listen at least with common
+ courtesy to what I have to say. You are, young gentleman, a
+ prisoner on my ship and very much in my power. You have
+ grossly offended a distinguished countrywoman who is under my
+ protection in your barbarous country. Madame de la Fontaine,
+ however, has been good enough to interest herself in your
+ behalf and to beg that I shall not unceremoniously pitch you
+ overboard to feed the fishes as you so richly deserve."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan bit his lips, but for the moment kept silent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am come this morning," continued Captain Bonhomme, "not
+ for the pleasure of entering upon a discussion, but to inform
+ you that a little later in the morning, when this infernal
+ wind of yours has blown itself out, Madame de la Fontaine
+ proposes to come aboard. For reasons of her own, she does you
+ the honor to desire a conversation with you. I have to ask
+ that you will meet my distinguished patroness as the
+ gentleman you doubtless profess to be, and that you will give
+ me your word not to attempt to escape while Madame is on
+ board the ship."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I shall not give my word," protested Dan, "under any
+ circumstances to a pirate such as I take you to be."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Eh bien, monsieur</i>; in that case, you will appear
+ before Madame in irons. From your window, so admirably small,
+ you will see at what hour Madame comes aboard. If in the
+ meantime you have decided to give us your word of honour,
+ well and good; if you continue to display your freedom of
+ choice by the exercise of your stupidity, also, well and
+ good. And now, <i>an revoir</i>." Captain Bonhomme smiled
+ grimly, bowed again with insulting politeness, and left Dan
+ alone in the cabin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An hour, two hours passed. The wind had abated, the sun was
+ struggling to dissipate the murky bank of cloud that hung
+ from zenith to the eastern horizon. From his coign of vantage
+ at the little port hole Dan saw Madame de la Fontaine pick
+ her way across the Dunes and come upon the little beach. A
+ small boat had put off from the schooner and was being rowed
+ to shore by two seamen. The French lady gathered her skirts
+ about her ankles, and stepped lightly into the skiff, as the
+ men held it at the edge of the surf. The little boat was then
+ pushed off and rowed briskly toward the <i>Southern
+ Cross</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Half-an-hour passed before the door of Dan's cabin was opened
+ again, and Captain Bonhomme, attended by the faithful Jean,
+ reappeared. In the skipper's hand was a pair of irons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Monsieur," said the captain, holding up the irons, "Madame
+ de la Fontaine does you the honour of desiring an interview
+ in the saloon. May I venture to enquire your pleasure?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ignominy of appearing before his charming acquaintance of
+ the day before manacled like a criminal, was too much for
+ Dan's vanity. "I give you my word of honour," he said
+ gruffly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah, monsieur," murmured the captain, "permit me to applaud
+ your good taste. But let us be exact: until you are returned
+ to this cabin and are again under lock and key, that is to
+ say until Madame is safely upon shore again,&#8212;you give
+ me your word of honour as a gentleman to make no attempt to
+ escape?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, yes," said Dan, striving to conceal his irritation.
+ "But spare me, I beg, your explanations. As you know, I am
+ practically helpless. We understand each other. I trust that
+ Madame de la Fontaine will give me an explanation of the
+ outrage that you have refused."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Sans doute, sane doute</i>!" exclaimed the captain. He
+ waved his hand toward the door. "<i>Apr&eacute;s vous,
+ monsieur</i>. Our worthy Jean will lead the way."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Without more ado they left the little cabin that had served
+ as Dan's prison and traversed a narrow passageway aft to the
+ door of a little saloon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the saloon, seated in a deep arm chair by the side of the
+ table, was Madame de la Fontaine. She was clad in some soft
+ green gown, with furs about her neck and wrists, and a little
+ bonnet, adorned by the gay plumage of a tropical bird, worn
+ close upon her head. At first glance she was as bewitchingly
+ beautiful, as entirely charming, as she had seemed to Dan the
+ day before. He blushed to the roots of his hair and for the
+ moment quite forgot the extraordinary predicament in which he
+ was placed. Madame de la Fontaine rose, a bright smile
+ beaming from her soft blue eyes, and waited for Dan to
+ approach.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Good morning, Mr. Frost. This is charming of you. And now,
+ Captain Bonhomme, if you will be so kind,&#8212;" she turned
+ with her delightful smile to the skipper. "<i>Eh bien</i>,
+ Jean!" This last remark was uttered in a sharp tone of
+ command, very different from the silvery accents in which she
+ had spoken to Frost and the captain. Dan wondered at it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The disagreeable impression was but momentary, for the lady
+ turned again to Dan, engaged him with her frank and pleasant
+ glance, and young Frost forgot everything in the presence of
+ the most charming woman he had ever met.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Captain Bonhomme and his watchdog had disappeared, closing
+ the saloon door behind them. Dan and Madame de la Fontaine
+ were alone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Will you not seat yourself, monsieur?" she said. "We shall
+ then talk so much more at our ease."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thank you," Dan murmured vaguely, and advancing a step or
+ two nearer, seated himself in the first chair within reach.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah, not there, Mr. Frost," the lady protested with a little
+ laugh of amusement. "It will never be that we are able to
+ talk at so great a distance." She indicated a more
+ comfortable chair at much closer quarters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan obediently changed his seat, and waited for Madame de la
+ Fontaine to begin the conversation. But she continued for a
+ moment silently to regard him with a naive air of interest
+ and of unconcealed admiration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "May I ask," said Dan at length, disturbed by this scrutiny,
+ and rising to a courtesy that was in reality beyond him, "for
+ what reason you have done me the honour to wish to speak with
+ me?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Vraiment</i>," replied Madame de la Fontaine; "after the
+ events of last night there is need that we should have some
+ conversation. You are very young and I have reason to be
+ grateful to you for courtesy and kindness, so I have yielded
+ to impulse, against my judgment, to interfere with Captain
+ Bonhomme who has great anger with you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You are very kind, madame," Dan replied with dignity. "I am
+ to infer then that my liberty or my further unwarranted
+ imprisonment on this ship is to be determined by you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Mais non, Monsieur</i>. It is true only that I have a
+ little influence with Captain Bonhomme. Last night you were
+ watching me, so it interests me to know why."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I was watching Mrs. Heath's house," Dan answered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah! but I and my maid were alone in the room into which you
+ so unceremoniously looked, monsieur!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, madame, but why should you infer that my motive in
+ looking into that room was interest in your affairs?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I do not altogether assume that, Mr. Frost," the lady
+ protested. "I infer simply&#8212;but, pardon! you were to
+ say&#8212;?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Merely to ask you, madame, what Captain Bonhomme proposes to
+ do with me, should you not be so good as to use your
+ influence in my behalf?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For reply the lady shrugged her shoulders a trifle. "I have
+ fear, monsieur," she said after a moment, "that Captain
+ Bonhomme will take you for a sail, perhaps a long sail, on
+ the <i>Southern Cross</i>."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then," said Dan, "since there is no doubt in my mind of your
+ influence with the captain, I beg that you will have him
+ release me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is that that I desire, monsieur; and yet&#8212;?" Madame
+ de la Fontaine paused and glanced at her companion with a
+ charming little air of interrogation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And yet?" repeated Dan, flushing a little as he looked into
+ the lovely blue eyes that met his so frankly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I confess, monsieur, I must first discover if you are really
+ deserving of my efforts. I care to know very much why you
+ watched me last night at the House on the Dunes. For what
+ reason do you watch me at midnight? a stranger, a woman? Why
+ is it that my affairs give you interest? I would know."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her voice, her countenance expressed now only her sense of
+ injury, an injury which, as it were, she was striving not to
+ regard also as an insult. Under the persistent searching of
+ her soft glance, Dan felt himself very small indeed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Answer me, if you please," she said. This time Dan detected
+ just a trace of the sharpness with which she had dismissed
+ the obsequious Jean. It gave him courage and a sense of
+ protection from the fascination he knew that this strange
+ woman was successfully exerting over him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he replied, his glance encountered hers with frankness.
+ "Madame de la Fontaine, I told you yesterday morning, my
+ sister, Nancy Frost, has disappeared. We searched for her all
+ day in vain. Not a trace of her has been found. But certain
+ strange events have led me to suspect that certain persons
+ have had something to do with her disappearance and must know
+ her whereabouts. I will be frank Madame. One of the persons
+ whom I so suspect is yourself."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I!&#8212;<i>mon Dieu</i>! and why is it that you believe
+ this, Monsieur?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I suspect you, madame, because I suspect the Marquis de
+ Boisdhyver."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah! the French gentleman who is staying with you at the Inn
+ at the Red Oak, is it not so?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But&#8212;why me?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Because, madame, I discovered that you and the Marquis de
+ Boisdhyver have been in secret communication with each
+ other."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>C'est impossible. Te me comprende pas, monsieur</i>. Will
+ you tell me why it is that you can think that this Marquis de
+ Bois&#8212;what is the name?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "De Boisdhyver."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Merci</i>. Why is it that you can think that the Marquis
+ de Boisdhyver and I have been in secret communication?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Lights, green and red lights, have been used as signals; by
+ the Marquis at the Inn; by you, madame, from the House on the
+ Dunes; and by some one,&#8212;Captain Bonhomme, I
+ suppose,&#8212;from this ship."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Lights, you have seen lights?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Several times last night, Madame. My suspicions were
+ aroused. I was determined to find my sister. I resolved to
+ learn the meaning of those mysterious signals. My method was
+ stupid: I blundered, and as you have several times so gently
+ hinted, I am in your power."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a moment Madame de la Fontaine was silent, then she
+ looked quickly up; a half-vexed, half-amused expression
+ curling her pretty lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Look at me, monsieur," she said. "Do you know what you tell
+ me? That I am an adventuress?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan flushed suddenly as he met her steadfast gaze. "I have
+ stated only a suspicion, madame, to account for my own stupid
+ blundering. But if you think that my suspicions are
+ extraordinary, don't you think that our present situation and
+ conversation are also extraordinary, and that they might
+ rather confirm my suspicions?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madame de la Fontaine dropped her eyes with a perceptible
+ frown of displeasure; but again she looked up, smiling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>C'est drole</i>, monsieur, but I find you very
+ attractive? You are at once so naive and so clever?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan, finding nothing to reply to this unexpected remark, bit
+ his lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Will you not trust me?" she asked him suddenly, and putting
+ out her hand she touched his own with the tips of her
+ fingers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Poor Frost tingled at this unaccustomed contact.
+ "I&#8212;I&#8212;" he stammered awkwardly. "I have certainly
+ no desire to distrust you, madame."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And yet it is that you do distrust me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But what would you have me do?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah!" Her hand spontaneously closed upon his with a clasp
+ that delighted and yet disconcerted him. "I hope that we
+ shall make each other to understand."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What would you have me do?" Dan repeated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Monsieur, let me make to you a confession. I understand your
+ suspicions; I understand your desire to find if they are
+ true. You have reason; Monsieur le Marquis de Boisdhyver and
+ I have exchanged the mysterious signals that you have
+ witnessed. Why should I deny that which already you know?
+ Monsieur de Boisdhyver and I are occupied with affairs of
+ great importance, and it is necessary that all is kept
+ secret. But I believe, that it is that I can trust you,
+ monsieur."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And Nancy&#8212;?" exclaimed Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Pas si vite, pas si vite</i>!" said the lady, laughing
+ gayly, Dan's hand still in her friendly pressure. "All in
+ good time, <i>mon ami</i>. It is necessary before I confide
+ in you our little secret that I consult Monsieur le Marquis."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan's face betrayed his disappointment. "But you do know
+ about Nancy," he insisted; "you will assure me&#8212;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Of nothing, dear boy,"&#8212;and she withdrew her hand. "But
+ it had been so much better for us all if only Monsieur le
+ Marquis had at the first confided in you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madame de la Fontaine had risen now and was holding out her
+ hand to say good-bye.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is necessary that I return to the shore. I will see
+ Monsieur le Marquis this afternoon, and immediately
+ afterward&#8212;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But, madame, surely," Dan exclaimed, "I am to accompany
+ you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah! monsieur," she replied with a charming little smile,
+ "for the present you must rest content to be <i>mon
+ captif</i>. We must quite clearly understand each other
+ before&#8212;well. But you are too impetuous, Monsieur Dan.
+ For the moment I leave you here."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But Madame de la Fontaine," cried Dan, "I cannot
+ consent&#8212;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No! no!" she said, as with a gay laugh, she placed a cool
+ little hand across his mouth to prevent his finishing his
+ sentence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What absurd impulse fired his blood at this sudden
+ familiarity, Dan did not know; but, quite spontaneously, as
+ though all his life he had been in the habit of paying such
+ gallantries to charming ladies, he kissed the soft fingers
+ upon his lips. Madame de la Fontaine quickly withdrew them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah, <i>mon ami</i>;" she said, "I expected not to find here
+ <i>une telle galanterie</i>."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have offended you," murmured Dan, blushing furiously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah, <i>pas du tout</i>!" said Madame de la Fontaine. "You
+ are a dear boy, monsieur Dan, and I&#8212;well, I find you
+ charming."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As she said this, to Dan's complete confusion, Madame de la
+ Fontaine lightly brushed his cheeks with her lips, and
+ passing him rapidly, went out of the door of the saloon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH12"><!-- CH12 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XII
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ TOM TURNS THE TABLES
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ Owing to his long watch during the greater part of the night,
+ Pembroke slept heavily until late the next morning. Indeed,
+ he did not waken until Jesse, alarmed that neither Dan nor he
+ had appeared, knocked on their door. He sprang up quickly
+ then, and began to dress hastily. Dan's bed had not been
+ slept in, and Tom wondered how the night had gone with him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a few moments he was down stairs and in the
+ breakfast-room. He found the Marquis de Boisdhyver already at
+ table, pouring out his coffee, which Deborah had just placed
+ before him. Mrs. Frost had not appeared.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom murmured an apology for being late, and delayed the black
+ woman, who was on the point of leaving the room, by a
+ question.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Where is Mr. Dan?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sure an, Mass' Tom, I ain't seen him dis mornin' yet. Ain't
+ he done over-slept hisself like you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No; but I dare say he is about the place somewheres. All
+ right, Deb; bring my breakfast quickly, please."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You will pardon me," said Monsieur de Boisdhyver, "for
+ having begun without you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, certainly," said Tom; "Don't know what was the matter,
+ but I slept unusually soundly last night; that is, after I
+ got to sleep, for the storm kept me awake for hours."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Et moi aussi</i>," said the Marquis. "What wind! I am but
+ thankful it has exhausted itself at last. And Monsieur Frost,
+ he has also over-slept, you say?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No. He got up early without disturbing me. I guess he will
+ be in any minute now."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Marquis stirred his coffee and slowly sipped it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom made a hasty breakfast, and then went outside to
+ reconnoitre. He discovered no trace of his friend. There was
+ but one inference in his uneasy mind: Dan had met with some
+ misadventure at the House on the Dunes. At last, after
+ wandering about aimlessly for some time, he decided to tell
+ Jesse of his uneasiness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If Mr. Dan is not back by dinner time, I shall go over to
+ the House on the Dunes and try to find out what has become of
+ him. Heaven knows what has become of Miss Nancy. I don't like
+ that schooner, Jess, and its ugly crew, lying there in the
+ Cove. It's all a darn queer business."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They're certainly a rough-looking lot, Mr. Tom, as I saw
+ when I was on the beach yesterday. And she don't appear to
+ have any particular business anchoring there. I hope they've
+ nothing to do with Miss Nancy's and Mr. Dan's being away."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't know, Jess, what to think. But listen here I want
+ you to go into the Port this morning and engage Ezra Manners
+ to come out here and stay with us for a week or so. Don't
+ tell him too much, but I guess Ezra won't balk at the notion
+ of a scrap. Bring him out with you, and offer to pay him
+ enough to make sure of his coming. And I want you to go to
+ Breeze's on the Parade and get some guns and powder, enough
+ to arm every blessed soul of us in the Inn. Charge the stuff
+ to me. And be careful how you bring it back, for I don't want
+ any one here to know about it, particularly the old
+ Frenchman. Understand? You ought to get back by dinner-time,
+ if you start at once. I'll stay here till you return."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I'll start right off, sir. Guess I'll have to drive, for the
+ rain'll have washed the snow off the roads. I'll be back by
+ halfpast twelve, Mr. Tom."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "All right," said Pembroke. "Be sure not to let any one know
+ what you are doing."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sure I won't, sir. I've been pretty much worried myself
+ about Miss Nancy. Didn't seem a bit like Miss Nance to go off
+ without sayin' a word to anybody.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, hurry along now, Jesse."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, sir."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom's next task was to try to explain to Mrs. Frost without
+ alarming her. She happily jumped to the idea that Dan had
+ gotten trace of Nancy, had gone to fetch her, and would
+ return with her before nightfall. So Tom left her quite
+ cheerfully knitting in her room for the day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From time to time during the morning Tom wandered into the
+ bar always to find Monsieur de Boisdhyver absorbed in his
+ writing before the fire. The morning passed&#8212;a long
+ restless morning for Pembroke&#8212;and nothing had happened.
+ Dan had not returned. He tried to think out a plan of action.
+ He went into the north wing of the Inn and barricaded the
+ door leading from the bowling alley into the hallway. He made
+ sure that all other doors and windows were fastened, and he
+ put the key of the door that opened from the bar into the old
+ wing into his pocket. Then he looked at the doors and windows
+ in the south wing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About noon, as he was standing at an upper window anxiously
+ scanning the landscape for any sign of his friend, Tom saw
+ the Marquis, wrapped in his great black cloak, emerge from
+ the gallery, go down the steps by the Red Oak, and walk
+ rapidly down the avenue of maples. He went along the Port
+ Road, to the point where a little road branched off and led
+ to the beach of the Cove; here he turned and walked in the
+ direction of the beach. With the field glass Tom could follow
+ him quite easily as he picked his way through the slush.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Beyond, on the waters of the Cove, the <i>Southern Cross</i>
+ rode at anchor. A small boat had put off from the schooner,
+ two seamen at the oars, and a woman seated in the stern. The
+ boat reached the shore, the lady was lifted out upon the
+ sands, the men jumped in again, pushed off and rowed briskly
+ back to the schooner. Tom could not distinguish the lady's
+ features, but from the style of her dress, cut in so
+ different a fashion than that the ladies of Caesarea were
+ wont to display, and from the character of her easy graceful
+ walk, he judged that that was the Madame de la Fontaine, of
+ whom Dan had told him the day before. The lady, whoever she
+ might be, advanced along the beach and turned into the road
+ down which the Marquis de Boisdhyver was going to meet her.
+ Tom could see her extend her hand, and the old gentleman,
+ bending ceremoniously, lift it to his lips. Then leaning
+ against a stone wall beside a meadow of bedraggled snow, they
+ engaged in animated conversation. The lady talked, the
+ Marquis talked. They shrugged their shoulders, they nodded
+ their heads, they pointed this way and then that. Poor Tom
+ felt he must know what was being said. At last, their
+ conference ended, they parted as ceremoniously as they had
+ met, the lady starting across the Dunes and the Marquis
+ retracing his steps toward the Inn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the meantime, fortunately before the Marquis reached the
+ Port Road, Jesse had returned, accompanied by the able-bodied
+ Ezra Manners, and laden with the supply of arms and
+ ammunition that Pembroke had ordered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Within half-an-hour Tom and Monsieur de Boisdhyver were
+ seated together in the dining-room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah, and where is Monsieur Dan?" asked the Marquis, with an
+ affectation of cheerfulness. "Is he not returned?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not yet, monsieur," Tom replied grimly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But you have heard from him?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, yes," was Tom's answer; "I have heard from him of
+ course."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And from Mademoiselle Nancy, I trust, also?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, from Nancy also."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah, I am so relieved, Monsieur Pembroke. I was most anxious
+ for their safety. One knows not what may happen. We shall
+ have a charming little reunion at supper, <i>n'est-ce
+ pas</i>?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Delightful," said Tom, but in a tone of voice that did not
+ encourage the Marquis to ask further questions or to continue
+ his comments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After dinner, Tom slipped the field glass beneath his jacket,
+ and ran upstairs to take another view of the countryside. To
+ his great satisfaction he saw a dark spot moving across the
+ snowy dunes and recognized the lady of the morning.
+ Apparently she was on her way to the Cove again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He took a loaded pistol, ran down stairs, gave Jesse strict
+ orders to keep his eye on the Marquis, saddled his horse, and
+ galloped off madly for Mrs. Meath's house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he reached the gate of the farmhouse, Tom hitched his
+ horse to the fence, went rapidly up the little walk, and
+ knocked boldly and loudly on the front door. Repeated and
+ prolonged knocking brought no response. He tried the door and
+ found it fastened. He walked about the house. Every window on
+ the ground floor was tightly closed and barred. There was no
+ sign of life. He knocked at the door of the kitchen, but with
+ no result. He tried it, and found it also locked. Determined
+ not to be thwarted in his effort to see Mrs. Meath, he kicked
+ vigourously against the door with his great hob-nailed boots.
+ Unsuccessful in this, he detached a rail from the top of the
+ fence and used it against the door as a battering-ram. At the
+ first crash of timbers, the sash of a window in the second
+ story, directly above the kitchen, was thrown open, and a
+ dark-eyed, dark-haired, excessively angry-looking, young
+ woman thrust her head out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Qui va la</i>?" she exclaimed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well," said Tom, smiling a little in spite of himself, for
+ the young woman was in a state of great indignation. "I want
+ to see Mrs. Meath. I may say, I am determined to see Mrs.
+ Meath."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Peste! Je ne parle pas anglais</i>!" snapped the damsel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Very well then, mademoiselle, I'll try you in French," said
+ Tom. And in very bad French indeed, scarcely even the French
+ of Dr. Watson's school for the sons of gentlemen, Pembroke
+ repeated his remarks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Je ne comprend pas</i>," said the young woman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom essayed his explanation again, but whether the youthful
+ female in the window could or would not understand, she kept
+ repeating in the midst of his every sentence "<i>Je ne parle
+ pas anglais</i>," till Tom lost his temper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Bien</i>, my fine girl," he exclaimed at last; "I am
+ going to enter this house. If you won't open the door, I will
+ batter it down. Understand? <i>Comprenez-vous</i>?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Je ne parle pas anglais</i>."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As you will." He raised the fence-rail again and made as if
+ to ram the door. "<i>Ouvrez la porte</i>! Do you understand
+ that?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Bete</i>!" cried the girl, withdrawing her head and
+ slamming down the window.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom waited a moment to see if his threats had been effective,
+ and was relieved by hearing the bar within removed and the
+ key turned in the lock. The door was opened, and the young
+ woman stood on the sill and volleyed forth a series of French
+ execrations that made Tom wince, though he did not understand
+ a word she was saying. Despite her protests, he brushed her
+ aside and stalked into the house. He went rapidly from room
+ to room, upstairs and down, from garret to cellar, the girl
+ following him with her chorus of abusive reproach. She might
+ have held her peace, thought Tom, for within half-an-hour he
+ was convinced that there was not a person in the House on the
+ Dunes save himself and his excited companion. All he
+ discovered for his pains was that old Mrs. Meath was also
+ among the missing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Ou est Madame Meath</i>?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Madame Meath! Que voulez vous? Je ne connais pas Madame
+ Meath</i>...." And infinitely more of which Tom could gather
+ neither head nor tail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Satisfied at last that there was nothing to be gained by
+ further search or parley with the woman, he thanked her
+ civilly enough and went out. He unhitched his horse, vaulted
+ into the saddle, and dashed back, as fast as his beast could
+ be urged to carry him, to the Inn. He was certain now that
+ the schooner held the secret of his vanished friends, and it
+ occurred to him to play their own game and turn the tables on
+ Monsieur the Marquis de Boisdhyver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arrived at the Inn, Tom turned his horse, white with lather,
+ over to Jesse; made sure that the Marquis was in the bar; and
+ then, with the help of Manners, rapidly made a few
+ preparations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was about five o'clock when, his arrangements completed,
+ he returned to the bar, where Monsieur de Boisdhyver was
+ quietly taking his tea. Tom bowed to the old gentleman,
+ seated himself in a great chair about five feet away, and
+ somewhat ostentatiously took from his pocket a pistol, laid
+ it on the arm of his chair, and let his fingers lightly play
+ upon the handle. The old marquis watched Pembroke's movements
+ out of the corner of his eye, still somewhat deliberately
+ sipping his tea. Manners, meanwhile, had entered, and stood
+ respectfully in the doorway, oddly enough also with a pistol
+ in his hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly Monsieur de Boisdhyver placed his teacup on the
+ table, and leaning back in his chair, surveyed Tom with an
+ air of indignant astonishment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Monsieur Pembroke," he said, "to what am I to attribute
+ these so unusual attentions? Is it that you are mad?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You may attribute these unusual attentions, marquis, to the
+ fact that from now on, you are not a guest of the Inn at the
+ Red Oak, but a prisoner."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah!" exclaimed the Marquis with a start, as he made a
+ spasmodic motion toward the pocket of his coat. But if his
+ intention had been to draw a weapon, Tom was too quick for
+ him. The Marquis found himself staring into the barrel of a
+ pistol and heard the unpleasant click of the trigger as it
+ was cocked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old gentleman paled, whether with fright or indignation,
+ Tom was not concerned to know. "You will please keep
+ perfectly still, marquis."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Monsieur Pembroke," exclaimed the old gentleman,
+ "<i>C'est</i> abominable, outrageous, <i>Mon Dieu</i>, what
+ insult!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Manners," said Tom, "kindly search that gentleman and put
+ his firearms out of his reach."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Monsieur, <i>c'est extraordinaire</i>. I protest."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Quick, Ezra," replied Tom, "or one of us is likely to know
+ how it feels to have a bullet in his skin. Up with your
+ hands, marquis."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Monsieur de Boisdhyver obeyed perforce, while Manners quickly
+ searched him, removed a small pistol from his coat pocket and
+ a stiletto from his waistcoat, and handed them to Tom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I thought as much," said Pembroke, slipping them into his
+ pocket. "Now, sir, you will oblige me by dropping that
+ attitude of surprised indignation."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Monsieur," said the Marquis, "What is it that you do? Why is
+ it that you so insult me?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Monsieur, I will explain. You are my prisoner. I intend to
+ lock you up safely and securely until my friend and his
+ sister return, unharmed, to the Inn. When they are safe at
+ home, when Madame de la Fontaine has taken her departure from
+ the House on the Dunes, and when the <i>Southern Cross</i>
+ has sailed out of the Strathsey, we shall release you and see
+ you also safely out of this country. Is that clear?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Mais, monsieur</i>&#8212;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am quite convinced that you know where Nancy is and what
+ has happened to Dan. As my friends are probably in your power
+ or in the power of your friends, so, dear marquis, you are in
+ mine. If you wish to regain your own liberty, you will have
+ to see that they have theirs. Now kindly follow Manners; it
+ will give him pleasure to show you to your apartment. There
+ you may burn either red or green lights, and I am sure the
+ snowbirds and rabbits of Lovel's Woods will enjoy them. After
+ you, monsieur."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sir, I refuse."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My dear marquis, do not make me add force to discourtesy.
+ After you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Marquis bowed ironically, shrugged his shoulders, and
+ followed Manners up the stairs. He was ushered into a chamber
+ on the west side of the Inn, whose windows, had they not been
+ heavily barred, would have given him a view but of the thick
+ tangles of the Woods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I trust you will be able to make yourself comfortable here,"
+ said Tom. "Your meals will be served at the accustomed hours.
+ I shall return myself in a short time, and perhaps by then
+ you will have reconciled yourself to the insult I have
+ offered you and be prepared to talk with me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With that Tom bowed as ironically as the Marquis had done,
+ went out and closed the door, and securely locked and barred
+ it outside. Monsieur de Boisdhyver was left to his
+ reflections.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH13"><!-- CH13 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIII
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ MADAME DE LA FONTAINE
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ For several hours after his return to the little cabin Dan
+ had ample leisure in which to think over his extraordinary
+ interview. There could be no doubt that the conspirators, for
+ such he had come to call them to himself, were determined and
+ desperate enough to go to any lengths in accomplishing their
+ designs. Whether his suspicions and activity in seeking Nancy
+ had precipitated their plans, his unexpected capture seemed
+ to embarrass his captors as much as it did himself. At least,
+ he gathered this from Madame de la Fontaine's conversation.
+ Whatever might be the motive of the lady's proposed
+ confidence, poor Frost could see nothing for it but to await
+ their disclosure and then seize whatever advantage they might
+ open to him. Notwithstanding the fact that Dan had cautioned
+ himself against trusting the flattery of his charming
+ visitor, notwithstanding that he told himself to be
+ forewarned, even by his own suspicions, was to be forearmed,
+ he was in reality unconscious of the degree to which he had
+ proved susceptible to the lady's blandishments, if indeed she
+ had employed blandishments and had not merely given him the
+ evidence of a good heart upon which his youth and
+ naivet&eacute; had made a genuine impression.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan's experiences with girls up to this time had been
+ limited. His emotional nature had never, as yet, been deeply
+ stirred. But no one could be insensible to Madame de la
+ Fontaine's beauty and charm, and her delightfully natural
+ familiarity; and, finally, her fleeting kiss had seemed to
+ Dan but evidence of a warm impulsive heart. To be sure, with
+ all the good will in the world, he could not acquit her of
+ being concerned in a mysterious plot&#8212;indeed, had she
+ not admitted so much?&#8212;though, also, he must in justice
+ remember that he knew very little of the nature of the plot
+ in question.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he paced restlessly back and forth the length of his
+ prison, he tried to think clearly of the accumulating
+ mystery. Was there a hidden treasure and how did the Marquis
+ know about it? What part had the <i>Southern Cross</i> to
+ play with its diabolical looking captain, and what could have
+ become of Nancy? Then why had Madame de la Fontaine&#8212;but
+ again his cheek would burn and remembrance of the bewitching
+ Frenchwoman blotted out all else.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At half-past twelve Captain Bonhomme appeared again. This
+ time he invited Dan to partake of luncheon with him on the
+ condition once more of a parole. And Dan accepted. He and the
+ Captain made their luncheon together, attended by the
+ faithful Jean; and, though no mention was made to their
+ anomalous position, the meal was not altogether a comfortable
+ one. Captain Bonhomme asked a great many questions about the
+ country, to which Frost was inclined to give but the briefest
+ replies; nor, on his part, did he show more disposition to be
+ communicative in response to Dan's questions about France.
+ Jean regarded the situation with obviously surly disapproval.
+ When the meal was finished, Frost was conducted back to his
+ little cabin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About two o'clock he saw the small boat put off for shore,
+ and glancing in that direction, he was relieved to see Madame
+ de la Fontaine already waiting upon the beach. Within
+ half-an-hour he was again in her presence in the Captain's
+ saloon, where their conversation had taken place in the
+ morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lady received him graciously. "Ah! monsieur Dan, I fear
+ you have had a weary day of it; but it was impossible for me
+ to return sooner."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is very kind of you to return at all," replied Dan,
+ gallantly enough.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now, Monsieur, you are anxious, I know, that I keep my
+ promise of the morning."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Most anxious," said Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Without doubt. Come here, my friend, sit near me and listen
+ attentively to a long story."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You have consulted with the Marquis?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Mais oui</i>. It was difficult, but I have brought him to
+ my way of thinking. I am certain that it was an error in the
+ first place not taking you into our confidence. <i>Eh
+ bien</i>! Tell me, do you know how your foster-sister came to
+ be in the charge of your mother at the Inn at the Red Oak?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, I know what my mother has told me. The child was
+ abandoned to her rather than left in her charge."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Mais non</i>" said Madame de la Fontaine; "General
+ Pointelle was impelled to act as he did by the strongest
+ motives,&#8212;nothing less than the tremendous task,
+ undertaken for his country, to liberate the Emperor Napoleon
+ from Elba. General Pointelle was a soldier,&#8212;more, he
+ was a mar&eacute;chal of the Empire; the greatest
+ responsibilities devolved upon him. It was impossible for him
+ to be burdened with a child."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But why, madame, did he not take my mother into his
+ confidence?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Secrecy was imperative, monsieur. Even to this day, you do
+ not know who General Pointelle actually was. His was a name
+ well-known in France, glorious in the annals of the Empire; a
+ name, too, familiar to you in a somewhat different
+ connection. 'General Pointelle' was the <i>nom-de-guerre</i>,
+ as it were, of Fran&ccedil;ois, Marquis de Boisdhyver,
+ mar&eacute;chal de France."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Fran&ccedil;ois! you say, <i>Fran&ccedil;ois</i>!" exclaimed
+ Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Mais oui</i>, monsieur; but that should hardly astonish
+ you so much as the fact that he was a Boisdhyver. Why are you
+ surprised?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Simply, madame," exclaimed Dan hastily, "by the fact that it
+ is the same name as that of our Marquis."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not quite," corrected the lady; "our Marquis&#8212;as you
+ say&#8212;is Marie-Anne-Tim&eacute;lon-Armand de Boisdhyver,
+ the General's younger brother."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah! and therefore Nancy's uncle?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, the uncle of Nancy Frost, or of Eloise de Boisdhyver."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I see," said Dan. "I begin to see."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Eh bien</i>, monsieur. General Pointelle&#8212;the
+ mar&eacute;chal de Boisdhyver,&#8212;left the Inn at the Red
+ Oak upon a mission for the Emperor, then at Elba.
+ <i>H&eacute;las</i>! that mission ended with disaster after
+ the Hundred Days; for, as you know, the Emperor was sent in
+ exile to St. Helena; and, as you may not know, the
+ Mar&eacute;chal de Boisdhyver was killed on the plains of
+ Waterloo. <i>Allons</i>; when he left Deal, he concealed in a
+ hidden chamber, which one enters, I believe, from a room you
+ call the Oak Parlour, a large treasure, of jewels and gold.
+ This treasure, saved from the <i>debacle</i> in France, he
+ had brought with him to America, and he hid it in the Inn,
+ for the future of his little daughter Eloise. You remember
+ that your mother was to hear something of advantage to her
+ and the child, did not the General return. It was the secret
+ of the treasure and the directions to find it. Well,
+ Monsieur, at Waterloo, you must know, the Mar&eacute;chal and
+ his brother, the present Marquis, fought side by side.
+ Fran&ccedil;ois de Boisdhyver fell, nobly fighting for the
+ glory of France; Marie-Anne had the good fortune to preserve
+ his life, but was taken prisoner by the English. Before the
+ Mar&eacute;chal received his death wound, the two brothers
+ spoke with each other for the last time. In that moment,
+ monsieur, the Marquis Fran&ccedil;ois revealed to the Marquis
+ Marie-Anne that he had abandoned his daughter in America and
+ that he had concealed in your old inn a treasure sufficient
+ to provide for her future. He charged his brother to go to
+ America, if he survived the battle; claim the little Eloise;
+ rescue the treasure, and return with her to France and
+ restore the fallen fortunes of the House of Boisdhyver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It took the Marquis Marie-Anne a long time to carry out his
+ brother's dying injunctions," said Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah! but yes. You do not realize that the Marquis Marie-Anne,
+ after the fall of Napoleon, spent many years in a military
+ prison in England, for I have already told you that he fell
+ into the hands of the enemy on the field of Waterloo. When at
+ last he was released, he was aged, broken, and in poverty.
+ His brother, in those dreadful moments on the battlefield,
+ had been able to give him but the briefest description of the
+ Inn at the Red Oak and the hidden treasure. He did not tell
+ him where the treasure was, but only how he might obtain the
+ paper of instructions which the Mar&eacute;chal had concealed
+ in a curiously-carved old cabinet in the Oak Parlour. The
+ Mar&eacute;chal, monsieur, loved the mysterious, and chose
+ the device of tearing into two parts this paper of directions
+ and concealing them in different hiding-places of the
+ cabinet. Those directions, after many years, grew vague in
+ the younger brother's memory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Eh bien</i>, the Marquis was at last able to make the
+ journey to this country. You must remember he had nothing
+ wherewith to prove his story, if he gave you his confidence
+ at once; and so, he decided, to investigate quietly alone.
+ But he won the confidence of Mademoiselle Nancy,&#8212;that
+ is, of his niece, Eloise de Boisdhyver,&#8212;and revealed to
+ her the secret of her identity and the mysterious story of
+ the treasure. You follow me in all this, Monsieur Dan?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Perfectly, madame," Frost replied. "But as yet you have told
+ me nothing of your own connection with this strange history."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Pardon, dear boy," rejoined Madame de la Fontaine; "I was
+ about to do so, but there is so much to tell. My own
+ connection with the affair is quite simple. I am an old
+ friend, one of the oldest, of Monsieur le Marquis de
+ Boisdhyver, and, when I was a very young girl, I knew the
+ Mar&eacute;chal himself. It has been my happiness to be able
+ to prove my friendship for a noble and a fallen family. One
+ day last summer, Monsieur de Boisdhyver told me his brother's
+ dying words, and it was I, Monsieur Dan, who was able to give
+ the money for this strange expedition. The poor Marquis had
+ lost quite all his fortune."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I understand," said Frost. "But, yet, madame, I do not see
+ the necessity for the secrecy, the mystery, for these strange
+ signals at night, for these midnight investigations, for this
+ schooner and its rough crew, for Nancy's disappearance, for
+ my own imprisonment here."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Please, please," murmured Madame de la Fontaine, as she held
+ up her hands in smiling protest. "You go too fast for me.
+ <i>Un moment, mon ami, un moment</i>. It was sixteen years
+ ago that the Mar&eacute;chal de Boisdhyver was a guest at the
+ Inn at the Red Oak. You forget that the Marquis de Boisdhyver
+ had no proof of his right to the treasure, save his own
+ story, save his account of his brother's instructions on the
+ field of Waterloo. By telling all he might have awakened
+ deeper suspicions than by secrecy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That, I must say," Dan interrupted, "would hardly be
+ possible."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So!" exclaimed Madame de la Fontaine, with an accent of
+ displeasure. "<i>Ecoutez</i>! Monsieur le Marquis was to come
+ a month in advance, as he did come; take up his quarters at
+ the Inn; reconnoitre the ground; and win, if possible, the
+ confidence and aid of mademoiselle. He fortunately succeeded
+ in this last, for he found it otherwise impossible to enter
+ into the old wing of the Inn and examine the Oak Parlour.
+ With the assistance of Eloise, this was accomplished at last,
+ and the paper of directions was found; at least, found in
+ part.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then I, having impressed the services of Captain Bonhomme
+ and his ship the <i>Southern Cross</i>, set sail and arrived
+ at the House on the Dunes only a few days ago, as you already
+ know. The signals that you saw flashing at night were to
+ indicate that all was well."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The green light, I suppose," commented Dan, "was to indicate
+ that; and the red&#8212;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Was the signal of danger. Because the Marquis discovered
+ last night that you were not in the house; he flashed the
+ warning that made Captain Bonhomme go to the House on the
+ Dunes. Quite recently the manners of your friend,
+ Mr.&#8212;eh&#8212;?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Pembroke?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, Mr. Pembroke&#8212;led the Marquis to believe that he
+ was being watched.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I understand," said Dan, "but nothing you have told me so
+ far, madame, accounts for Nancy's disappearance, and I am as
+ anxious as ever to know where she is."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mademoiselle is perfectly safe, Monsieur Dan; I assure you.
+ She left the Inn because she had fear of betraying our plans,
+ particularly as she loved your friend, Mr. Pembroke."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is still strange to me, madame, that Nancy should
+ distrust her oldest and best friends. But now you will let me
+ see her?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Of course I shall soon, very soon, my dear boy. I have told
+ you all, and now you will aid me to find the treasure that is
+ your foster-sister's heritage, will you not?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why certainly I want Nancy to have what is hers," replied
+ Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Bravo, my friend. We are to count you one of us, I am sure."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Just a moment," said Dan, resisting the temptation to touch
+ the little hand that had been placed impulsively upon his
+ arm. "May I ask one more question?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A thousand, my dear, if you desire."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why then, since until last night everything has gone as you
+ planned it, why has not the treasure already been
+ discovered?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Because, <i>mon ami</i>; the Marquis has only been able to
+ visit the Oak Parlour at night. And also it was decided to
+ wait until I arrived."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "With the schooner?" suggested Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "With the schooner, if you will. And you may remember that it
+ was only the day before yesterday that I reached your so
+ hospitable countryside."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah! I understand; so then all that you desire of me, madame,
+ is that I shall permit the Marquis or anyone else whom you
+ may select for the purpose, to make such investigation of the
+ Oak Parlour as is desired."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, my friend; and also there is yet another thing that we
+ desire."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But suppose, madame, that I cannot agree to that?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah! <i>cher ami</i>, but you will. I confess&#8212;you must
+ remember that the Marquis de Boisdhyver has been a
+ soldier&#8212;that my friends have not agreed with me
+ entirely. It has seemed to them simpler that we should keep
+ you a prisoner on this ship, as we could so easily do, until
+ our mission is accomplished. But,&#8212;I like you too much
+ to agree to that."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan flushed a trifle, but he was not yet quite sure enough to
+ fall in entirely with his charming gaoler's suggestions.
+ "Madame de la Fontaine," he said after a moment's reflection,
+ "I am greatly obliged to you for explaining the situation to
+ me so fully. I shall be only too happy to help you,
+ particularly in anything that is for the benefit of Nancy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I was sure of it. Now, my friend, there is a service that
+ you can immediately render."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And that is?" asked Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To entrust to me the other half of the paper of directions
+ written by Fran&ccedil;ois de Boisdhyver, which you found in
+ a secret cubby-hole in the old cabinet."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What makes you think that I was successful in finding that,
+ when the Marquis failed?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Because, at first having forgotten his precise directions
+ after so many years, the Marquis could not find the fourth
+ and last hiding-place in the cabinet, in which he knew the
+ Mar&eacute;chal had placed the other half of the torn scrap
+ of paper. Another time he did find the cubby-hole, and it was
+ empty. So knowing he was watched by you and Mr. Pembroke, he
+ decided that you must have found it. Is it not so, that you
+ have it?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is certainly not in my possession at this moment," said
+ Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, but you have it?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And if I have?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is necessary for our success."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then, my first service, is to put you into complete
+ possession of the secret?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If you will so express it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Very well, madame, I will do so; but, on one condition."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And what is that, my friend?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That I be allowed to see Nancy, and that she herself shall
+ ask me to do as you desire."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a moment Madame de la Fontaine was silent. "<i>Eh
+ bien</i>," she said at last, "you do not trust me?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But, dear madame, think of my situation, it is hard for me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah! I know it, believe me. <i>C'est difficile</i>. But I
+ hoped you would trust me as I have you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Indeed, madame," exclaimed Dan, "I must try to think of
+ everything, the mystery, this extraordinary mission upon
+ which you are engaged, the fact that I am quite literally
+ your prisoner. When I think about you, I know only you are
+ beautiful, that you are lovely, and that I am happy near
+ you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She looked at him for a moment with a glance of anxious
+ interrogation, as if to ask were it safe for her to believe
+ these protestations. "You say, my friend," she asked at
+ length, "that you care a little for me, for just me? <i>C'est
+ impossible</i>. If Claire de la Fontaine could believe that,
+ understand me, monsieur, it would be very sweet and very
+ precious to her."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I do care," cried Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah!" she exclaimed. "You have touched my heart. I am not a
+ young girl, <i>mon ami</i>, but I confess that you have made
+ me to know again the dreams of youth."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Only let me prove that I care," cried Dan, considering but
+ little now to what he committed himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Let me prove," cried she, "that I too believe in you. I must
+ first see the Marquis, and then, tonight, if it can be
+ arranged, you shall receive from Eloise de Boisdhyver's own
+ lips the request I have made of you. But if, for any reason,
+ this cannot be arranged for to-night, you must be patient
+ till morning; you must trust me to the extent of remaining on
+ this ship. I cannot act entirely on my own judgment, but I
+ assure you that in the end my judgment will prevail. And now,
+ <i>au revoir</i>."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She placed her hand in his, and responded to the impulsive
+ pressure with which he clasped it. Their eyes met; in Dan's
+ the frankest expression of her conquest of his emotions; in
+ her's a glance at once tender and sad, above all a glance
+ that seemed to search his spirit for assurance that he was in
+ earnest. Suddenly fired by her alluring beauty, Dan drew her
+ to him and bent his head to hers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah! my friend," she murmured, "you are taking an unfair
+ advantage of the fact that this morning I too rashly yielded
+ to an impulse."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I cannot help it," Dan stammered. "You bewitch me." He bent
+ lower to kiss her cheek, when he suddenly thrilled to the
+ realization that his lips had met hers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A moment later Madame de la Fontaine was gone and Captain
+ Bonhomme had reappeared in the doorway.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH14"><!-- CH14 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIV
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ IN THE FOG
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ Tom Pembroke was as good as his word. He returned to the
+ little room, in which he had confined the Marquis, within an
+ hour after he had left him. It was then nearly supper-time
+ and dusk was fast settling upon the gloomy countryside. An
+ unwonted calm had fallen upon land and sea after the sharp
+ blow of the previous night, but the sky was still gray and
+ there was promise of more rain, if not of wind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To Tom's indignation and alarm, though scarcely to his
+ surprise, there had been no sign or word from Dan or Nancy.
+ Shortly after he had left the Marquis, he saw, by aid of the
+ field-glass, Madame de la Fontaine, attended by two seamen,
+ leave the schooner and return to the House on the Dunes. He
+ smiled a little as he thought of the account the lively young
+ maid-servant would give of his recent visit. But withal, he
+ felt very much as if he were playing a game of blind man's
+ buff and that he was "it." He was impatient for his interview
+ with the Marquis, though he was but little hopeful that an
+ hour's confinement would have been sufficient to bring the
+ old gentleman to terms. Nor was he to be surprised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He found Monsieur de Boisdhyver huddled in a great arm chair
+ near the fire that that been kindled on the hearth of his
+ prison. The Marquis glanced up, as Tom entered, but dropped
+ his eyes at once and offered him no greeting. Tom placed his
+ candle on the table and, drawing up a chair, seated himself
+ between the Marquis and the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, sir," he said at last, "as I promised you, I have
+ returned within an hour. Have you anything to say to me?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Have I anything to say to you!" exclaimed the Marquis. "For
+ why, monsieur? If I venture to express my astonishment and
+ indignation at the way I am treated, you subject me to a
+ barbarity that could be matched no where else in the
+ civilized world than in this extraordinary country. My life
+ is menaced with firearms. My protests are sneered at. I have
+ left but one inference&#8212;you have gone mad."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, marquis," said Pembroke, "I am not mad. I am simply
+ determined that the mysteries by which we have been
+ surrounded and of which you are the center, shall cease. You
+ have a free choice: put me in the way of getting my friend
+ and his sister back to the Inn, or resign yourself to a
+ prolonged confinement in this room."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But monsieur I have nothing to communicate to you concerning
+ the disappearance of your friends."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Pardon me, marquis," returned Pembroke; "you have much to
+ communicate to me. Perhaps you are not aware that I know the
+ motive of your coming to the Inn at the Red Oak; that I know
+ the reason for your prolonged stay here; that I know of the
+ influence that you have acquired over Nancy Frost; and that I
+ have been a witness of your midnight prowlings about the Inn.
+ Nor am I in ignorance of your connection with the
+ rascally-looking captain of the schooner at anchor in the
+ Cove and with the mysterious woman, who has taken possession
+ of the House on the Dunes. I am convinced that you know what
+ has become of Dan as well as what has happened to Nancy. And,
+ believe me, I am determined to find out."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Bien</i>!" exclaimed Monsieur de Boisdhyver, "permit me
+ to wish you good luck in your undertaking. I repeat, Monsieur
+ Pembroke, I have no information to give to you. I do not know
+ to what extent I have been watched, but I may say with truth
+ that my actions do not in the least concern you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They concern my friends," said Tom. "Dan, as you know, is
+ more to me than a brother; and as for his sister Nancy, I
+ hope and expect to make her my wife."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In that case," rejoined the Marquis with ill-concealed
+ irony, "I may be permitted to offer to you my
+ congratulations. But even so, monsieur, there is nothing that
+ I can do to facilitate your matrimonial plans."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You refuse then to come to terms?" asked Pembroke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Marquis raised his hands with a gesture of despair. "What
+ shall I say, monsieur? If you insisted upon my flying from
+ here to yonder beach, I might have all the desire in the
+ world to oblige you, but the fact would remain that I was
+ without the means of doing so. Since you are so little
+ disposed to accept my protestations, I will no longer make
+ them, but simply decline your proposal. And, pardon me, but
+ so long as I am submitted to the indignity of this
+ confinement, it would be a courtesy that I should appreciate
+ if you would spare me your company."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Very good," said Tom. "Your meals will be served regularly;
+ and you may ask the servant for anything necessary. I shall
+ not visit you again until you request me to do so."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Merci</i>," said the Marquis drily. He rose from his seat
+ as Dan turned toward the door, and bowed ironically.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pembroke went downstairs to have his supper with Mrs. Frost.
+ He said what he could to pacify her, not altogether with
+ success, for as darkness fell the old lady became
+ increasingly apprehensive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I know you are anxious, Mrs. Frost," said Tom, "but you must
+ not worry. Try to believe that all will come out right. I am
+ going out after supper, but I shall leave Jesse and Ezra on
+ guard, and you may be sure everything will be safe."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was some time before Mrs. Frost would consent to his
+ leaving the Inn. If she had yielded to her inclinations, she
+ would have spent the evening in hysterics with Tom at hand to
+ administer comfort. Pembroke, however, deputed that office to
+ black Deborah, and immediately after supper set about his
+ business.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He gave the necessary instructions to Jesse, Ezra and the
+ maids, saw that everything was closely locked and barred,
+ supplied himself with arms and ammunition, and slipped out
+ into the night. Having saddled Fleetwing, he swung himself on
+ the young hunter's back, and trotted down the avenue to the
+ Port Road. The night was intensely dark and still. The moon
+ had not yet risen, and a thick fog rolled in from the sea,
+ shrouding the countryside with its impenetrable veil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the Beach Road Pembroke dismounted, tied his horse to a
+ fence rail, and proceeded thence on foot toward the Cove.
+ Stumbling along through the heavy sand, he made his way to
+ the boathouse at the northern end of the little beach. There
+ he ventured to light his lantern, unlocked the door and
+ stepped within. On either side of the entrance were the two
+ sailboats that he and Dan used in summer and to the rear was
+ the old-fashioned whaleboat with which they did their deep
+ fishing. Over it, in a rudely constructed rack, was the
+ Indian birch-bark canoe which Dan had purchased in the
+ mountains a few years before. As the sea had fallen to a dead
+ calm, he decided to use this canoe, which he could paddle
+ quite noiselessly, and pulling down the little craft from its
+ winter resting-place, he carried it to the water's edge. The
+ sea, so angry the night before, now scarcely murmured; only a
+ low lazy swell, at regularly recurring intervals, slapped the
+ shore and hissed upon the sands. Tom pushed the nose of the
+ canoe into the water, leaped lightly over the rail, and with
+ his paddle thrust it off the beach. He was launched without
+ mishap.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not the faintest gleam of light showed the position of the
+ <i>Southern Cross</i>, but estimating as well as he could the
+ general direction, he paddled out through the enshrouding
+ fog. For ten minutes or so, he pushed on into the strange,
+ misty night. Then suddenly he found himself alongside an old
+ fisherman's yawl that had been rotting all winter at her
+ moorings, and he knew from her position that he could not be
+ far from the <i>Southern Cross</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few more strokes to leeward, and a spot of dull light broke
+ through the darkness. He headed directly for it. To his
+ relief it grew brighter; when suddenly, too late to stop the
+ progress of his canoe, he shot under it, and the bow of his
+ craft bumped with a dull thud against the timber side of the
+ schooner. Its dark outlines were just perceptible above him;
+ and at one or two points there gleamed rays of light in the
+ fog, green and red from the night lamps on the masthead, and
+ dull yellow from the port holes in the rear. A second after
+ the contact the canoe receded, then the wash of the sea drew
+ her toward the stern. Another moment and Pembroke felt his
+ prow scrape gently against the rudder, which prevented
+ further drifting. Apparently, since he heard nothing from the
+ deck above, he had reached his goal without attracting
+ attention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He kept perfectly still, however, for some little time, until
+ satisfied that there was no one at the wheel above, he pushed
+ the canoe softly back to the rope ladder, that a day or so
+ before he had seen hanging over the side. It was the work of
+ a moment to make his little boat fast to the lower rung. Then
+ slipping over the rail, he climbed stealthily up till his
+ head protruded above the gunwhale. The immediate deck seemed
+ deserted; but he was sure that some one was keeping the
+ watch, and probably near the point where he was, that is to
+ say, where access to the deck was easiest. But the fog and
+ the darkness afforded him protection, as he climbed over the
+ gunwhale and, without making a sound, moved toward the stern,
+ crossed the after-deck and found the wheel. As he had
+ surmised, it was deserted. The watch evidently was forward.
+ Beneath him, sending its ineffectual rays obliquely into the
+ fog, shone the light from the little cabin below.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Determined to get a look through the port, he climbed over
+ the gunwhale again, fastened a stern-sheet about his waist
+ and to a staple, and at the risk, if he slipped or if the
+ rope gave way, of plunging head foremost into the icy waters
+ of the Cove, he let himself down until his head was on a
+ level of the port.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Through the blurred glass he peered into a tiny cabin. There
+ with back toward him, just a few feet away stood Nancy Frost.
+ He steadied himself with an effort, and looking again saw
+ that she was alone. A moment's hesitation, and he tapped
+ resolutely on the pane with his finger tips. At first Nancy
+ did not hear, but presently, aroused by the slight tapping,
+ she glanced with a frightened expression toward the door, and
+ stood anxiously listening. Tom continued to knock on the
+ window, not daring to make it louder for fear of being heard
+ above. The alarm deepened on Nancy's face, and in sheer pity
+ Tom was tempted to desist; but at that instant her attention
+ was riveted upon the spot whence the tapping came. At last,
+ still with the expression of alarm on her face, she came
+ slowly toward the port. She hesitated, then pressed her face
+ against the pane over which Tom had spread his fingers. At
+ whatever risk, of frightening her or of danger to himself, as
+ she drew back, he pressed his own face against the outside of
+ the little window glass. She stared at him as if she were
+ looking at a ghost.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He moved his lips to form the word "Open." At length, in
+ obedience to this direction, Nancy cautiously unloosened the
+ window of the port and drew it back.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Good heavens, Tom!" she whispered. "Is it you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, yes," Pembroke whispered back. "But for God's sake,
+ speak softly. I'm in a devilishly unpleasant position, and
+ can hang here but a minute. Tell me quickly&#8212;are you
+ here of your own free will or are you a prisoner?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How can you ask?" she exclaimed. "For the love of heaven,
+ help me to escape."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That's what I'm here for," was Toms reply. "Now, quick; are
+ you only locked in or barred as well? I've brought some keys
+ along."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Only locked, I think."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Where does that door lead?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Into a little passage off the companion-way. Give me your
+ keys. They have but one man on watch. The captain is on shore
+ to-night, apt to return at any moment. And you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have a canoe tied to the ladder on the shore side. If the
+ captain returns, I'm caught. Try those keys." He slipped into
+ her the bunch of keys that he had brought along. "I was sure
+ you were here, and against your will."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Dan, too, is locked up on board."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I thought as much; but you first. Hurry."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nancy sprang to the door, trying one key after another in
+ feverish haste. At last, to Tom's infinite relief, he saw the
+ key turn in the lock, and the door open.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On deck," she whispered; "at the ladder. I'm not likely to
+ be caught." Then she waved her hand and disappeared into the
+ passage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom pulled himself up, unloosed the rope, and stole along the
+ rail toward the ladder. For a few moments, which seemed like
+ a thousand years, he stood in anguished suspense waiting for
+ Nancy. Then suddenly she came out of the mist and was at his
+ side. They stood for a moment like disembodied spirits,
+ creatures of the night and the fog. The next instant a hand
+ shot out and grasped the girl's shoulder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Peste! mam'zelle</i>," a rough voice hissed, "<i>ou
+ allez-vous</i>?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the man spoke Tom swung at him with the butt of his
+ revolver, and without a murmur the figure fell to the deck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Quick now," Pembroke whispered, "down the ladder."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Instantly Nancy was over the rail and Tom was climbing down
+ after her. As he knelt in the bow and fumbled with the
+ painter, the plash of oars sounded a dozen yards away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Ho! Croix du Midi</i>!" came a hail through the fog.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Curse it!" muttered Tom; "the painter's caught." He drew out
+ his knife, slashed the rope that bound them to the schooner,
+ got to his place amidships, and pushed the canoe free. The
+ lights of a small boat were just emerging from the dark a
+ dozen feet away. But the canoe slid by unobserved, in the
+ fog. They heard the nose of the small boat bump against the
+ schooner; then an oath, and a man's voice calling the watch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They've found my painter," whispered Tom, "and in a second
+ they'll find the sailor on their deck."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lights of the <i>Southern Cross</i> grew dim; vanished;
+ the sound of angry voices became muffled. They were half-way
+ to shore when they heard the noise of oars again. Evidently
+ some one had started in pursuit. For a moment Tom rested,
+ listening intently; but the sound was still some distance
+ away. Probably, he thought, they were heading directly for
+ the shore, whereas he, at a considerable angle, was making
+ for the boathouse at the north end of the beach. In ten
+ minutes he had beached the canoe within a rod of the point
+ from where he embarked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I can't hear them," whispered Tom, after a moment's
+ listening. "They've made for shore down the beach. They can't
+ find us in the dark. I've got Fleetwing tied to a fence in
+ the meadow yonder. Come."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was the work of a moment to stow the canoe, lock the
+ boathouse, run across the sands, and mount Nancy in front of
+ him on the back of his trusty hunter. A second later
+ Fleetwing's hoofs were striking fire on the stones that the
+ high tides had washed into the beach road. In the distance
+ there was a cry, the sharp ring of a pistol shot; but they
+ were safe on their way, racing wildly for the Inn. The
+ escape, the adventure had thrilled Nancy. Tom's arms were
+ around her, and her hands on his that grasped the bridle. At
+ last they were in the avenue, and Tom pulled in under the
+ great branches of the Red Oak. He slipped from the back of
+ the horse and held out his arms to Nance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We are safe, girl," he whispered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You are sure? Oh, thank God, thank God! Quick, let us in!
+ Can they be following?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, no. They won't follow. It's all right.
+ Easy,&#8212;before we go in&#8212;please,
+ dear&#8212;once&#8212;kiss me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, Tom, Tom," she whispered, as she lifted her face to his.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have you at last, sweetheart," he murmured. "You love me?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah!" she cried, "with my whole heart and soul."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH15"><!-- CH15 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XV
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ NANCY
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ It was after eleven before Nancy rejoined Tom in the bar. She
+ seemed more like herself as she slipped in and took her
+ accustomed seat beside the blazing logs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, I am all right, thank you," she insisted, declining the
+ glass of wine that Pembroke poured out for her. "I wonder,
+ Tom, if you killed that poor wretch on the deck?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Don't know," Tom answered. "I hope so. But what the deuce,
+ Nance, has been happening? I can wait till to-morrow to hear,
+ if you are too tired to tell me; but I do want awfully to
+ know."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am not tired," Nancy replied, "and I shan't sleep a wink
+ anyway. If I close my eyes I'll feel that hand on my shoulder
+ and hear the thud of that man's fall on the deck. I can't
+ bear to think that this miserable business will bring
+ bloodshed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But tell me, Nance, who is the Marquis&#8212;what
+ happened&#8212;how did they get you away?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah! the Marquis," exclaimed Nancy with a shudder. "I am glad
+ you have him locked up. I can't bear to think of him, but
+ I'll tell you what I know. You remember, Tom, he tried to be
+ friends with me from the first; and he seemed to fascinate me
+ in some unaccountable way. Then he questioned me about my
+ identity, and began to drop hints that he knew more than he
+ cared to let appear to the others, and my curiosity was
+ excited. I have always known of course that there was some
+ mystery about my being left to Mrs. Frost's care. She has
+ been kind, good, all that she should be; but she wasn't my
+ mother. Well, the Marquis stirred all the old wonder that I
+ had as a child, and before long quite won my confidence. He
+ told me after a time that I was the daughter of his elder
+ brother, the Marquis Fran&ccedil;ois de Boisdhyver, who in
+ 1814 stayed here at the Inn at the Red Oak under the name of
+ General Pointelle. I was not altogether surprised, for I have
+ always believed that I was French by birth, and his assertion
+ that I was his niece seemed to account for his interest in
+ me. My father, if this Marquis de Boisdhyver was my father,
+ was one of the Emperor Napoleon's marshals and was a party to
+ the plot to rescue the Emperor from Elba. He was obliged to
+ return to France, and since it was impossible for him to take
+ me with him&#8212;I was a little girl of two at the
+ time&#8212;he left me with Mrs. Frost. Thinking of my future,
+ he hid a large treasure in some secret chamber off the Oak
+ Parlour."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I know," Tom interrupted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What? You mean there is a treasure?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I think there is; but go on. I will tell you afterwards."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then he set sail for France, took part in the great events
+ of the Hundred Days, and fell at Waterloo. It was on the
+ field of Waterloo that he met his younger brother&#8212;our
+ Marquis&#8212;and told him about the child left in America
+ and about the treasure hidden in the Inn at the Red Oak."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well," Nancy continued, having answered a volley of
+ questions from Tom, "the Marquis&#8212;I mean our old
+ Marquis&#8212;was held for many years in a military prison in
+ England. Upon his release he was poor and unable to come to
+ America to seek his little niece and the fortune that he
+ believed to be hidden in the Inn. Tom, at first I didn't
+ believe this strange story about a treasure; but gradually I
+ became convinced; for the Marquis believed in it thoroughly,
+ and for proof of it he showed me a torn scrap of paper that
+ he found in the cabinet in the Oak Parlour the day after he
+ arrived at the Inn. It seems the old marshal had torn the
+ paper in two and hidden the parts in different cubby-holes of
+ that old Dorsetshire cabinet. He couldn't find an opportunity
+ to hunt for the other half, so at last he persuaded me to
+ help him in the search. Of course, he swore me to secrecy,
+ and I was foolish enough to give him my promise. I got the
+ key to the bowling alley from the ring in Dan's closet, and
+ two or three times went with him at night after you all were
+ asleep."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I know you did," said Tom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How could you know it&#8212;has the Marquis&#8212;?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, Dan and I saw you. I woke one night, happened to look
+ out of the window and saw the Marquis going into the bowling
+ alley. It was moonlight, you know. I woke Dan, we slipped
+ down stairs, saw a light in the Oak Parlour, peeped through
+ the shutters and saw you and the old Marquis at the cabinet."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When was this?" asked Nancy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The night&#8212;before our walk in the woods."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And you did not tell me! What could you think I was doing?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I didn't know. How could I know? It was that which first
+ made me suspicious of the Marquis. We made up our minds to
+ watch. But that day in the woods&#8212;well, I forgot
+ everything in the world but just that I was in love with
+ you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah!" exclaimed Nancy, flushing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But tell me," asked Tom, "What did you find in the cabinet?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We found nothing. I began to think that the Marquis had
+ deceived me. I didn't know what to believe. I didn't know
+ what to do. I threatened each day to tell Dan. And then came
+ our walk. When we came in that night&#8212;do you
+ recall?&#8212;we found the Marquis sitting in the bar before
+ the fire, and I went over and spoke to him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, I remember," Tom answered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I had made up my mind that I must take you all,&#8212;mother
+ and you and Dan,&#8212;into my confidence. I told him so. He
+ begged me to wait until the next day and promised that he
+ would tell you then himself. I was beginning to think he
+ might be a little crazy, that there was no hidden treasure."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I'm sure there is," said Tom. "There was another half of
+ that torn scrap of paper, hidden in one of the cubby-holes of
+ the old cabinet. Dan found it. It's the directions, sure
+ enough, for finding the treasure."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah! but what has it all to do with me?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't know; something I fancy, or the Marquis would not
+ have told you as much as he did. But here is the other half.
+ You can tell whether it is part of the paper he showed you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He drew from his pocket the yellowed bit of paper and spread
+ it on the table before them. Nance bent over and examined it
+ closely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I believe it is the other half. See, it is signed
+ ...'an&ccedil;ois de Boisdhyver'. I remember perfectly that
+ the signature of the other was missing, except for the
+ letters 'F-r-' It is, it must be, Fran&ccedil;ois de
+ Boisdhyver, who, the Marquis says, was my father. Then look!
+ here are the words '<i>tr&eacute;sor', 'bijoux et
+ monaie</i>'. I remember in the other there were phrases that
+ seemed to go with these&#8212;'<i>tr&eacute;sor cach&eacute;'
+ 'lingots d'or</i>'. Ah! do you suppose there really is a
+ fortune hidden away in the Inn all these years?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, I think so," said Tom. "And I feel certain you have
+ some claim to it, or they wouldn't have made such an effort
+ to involve you in their plot. But, please, Nance, tell me the
+ rest. You got to the night of your disappearance."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was a horror&#8212;that night!" exclaimed Nancy. "It must
+ have been about twelve that the Marquis came and tapped at my
+ door. For some reason I was restless and had not gone to bed.
+ I slipped out into the hall with him and we came in here to
+ talk. He begged me to make one more expedition with him to
+ the Oak Parlour. But I refused&#8212;I insisted that I must
+ tell Dan. Suddenly, Tom, without the slightest warning, I
+ felt my arms pinioned from behind, and before I could scream,
+ the Marquis himself had thrust a handkerchief in my mouth,
+ and I was gagged and bound. Everything was done so quickly,
+ so noiselessly, that not a soul in the house could have
+ heard. They carried me out of the Inn and into the avenue of
+ maples. From there on I was forced to walk. We went to the
+ beach. I was put into a small boat and rowed out to the
+ schooner, and there they locked me up in the little cabin in
+ which you found me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What time did you say it was?" asked Tom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "About twelve&#8212;after midnight, perhaps; I don't know for
+ sure. The Marquis went to the beach with us and pretended to
+ assure me that I was in no danger; that I would be released
+ in good time, and that he would see me again. As a matter of
+ fact for three days I have seen no one but Captain Bonhomme.
+ He brought my meals, and was inclined to talk about anything
+ that come into his head. Last night he told me that Dan was
+ also a prisoner on the <i>Southern Cross</i>, if that would
+ be of any consolation to me. Then he said he had to go ashore
+ and locked me up. Several times I was taken on deck for
+ exercise, but the captain kept close by my side."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And you haven't seen or heard from the Marquis again?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No! nor do I want to see him. But, Tom, what is the meaning
+ of it all? How are we going to rescue Dan? What are we going
+ to do? We can't keep the Marquis a prisoner indefinitely."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom gave her his own version of the last few days. He told
+ her of what he and Dan had suspected, of Dan's proposal to
+ visit the House on the Dunes and his disappearance, of his
+ own investigations there, and his determination to play the
+ same game with the Marquis as hostage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But what to do next, I confess I don't know," he continued.
+ "At present it seems to be stale mate. For to-night, any way,
+ we are safe, I think, for I shall take turns in keeping guard
+ with Jesse and Ezra. I have the idea that to-morrow, when
+ they realize something has happened to the Marquis we shall
+ hear from Madame de la Fontaine or from the schooner. In the
+ morning I am going to take you and Mrs. Frost to the Red Farm
+ for safety. I intend to fight this thing out with that gang,
+ whatever happens. If there is treasure, according to their
+ own story, it belongs to you. If I don't get a proposal from
+ them, I shall make the offer, through Madame de la Fontaine,
+ of exchanging the Marquis for Dan.... But I must go now,
+ Nance, and relieve one of the men. We must all get some sleep
+ to-night, and it's already after twelve. Go to bed,
+ sweetheart, and try to get some rest. One of us will be
+ within call all night, watching right there in the hall; so
+ don't be afraid."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was my wretched curiosity that got us into all this
+ trouble."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not a bit of it! The trouble was all arranged by the
+ Marquis; he was simply waiting for the schooner. Now that I
+ have you back again, my heart is fairly light. We shall get
+ Dan to-morrow, I am sure."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH16"><!-- CH16 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVI
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ MADAME AT THE INN
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ In the morning the fog lifted, a bright sun shone from a
+ cloudless sky, the marshes sparkled with pools of melted snow
+ and the long-promised thaw seemed definitely to have set in.
+ Soon after breakfast Tom sent Jesse to the Red Farm with
+ directions for the people there to make preparations for Mrs.
+ Frost and Nancy, whom he proposed to drive over himself in
+ the course of the afternoon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About the middle of the morning as Tom and Nancy stood on the
+ gallery discussing the situation, Tom drew her attention to a
+ small boat putting off from <i>The Southern Cross</i>. They
+ examined it through the glass, and Nancy recognized the
+ figure of Captain Bonhomme sitting amongst the stern-sheets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You may depend upon it," said Tom, "he is going to the House
+ on the Dunes to report your disappearance to Madame de la
+ Fontaine. The most curious thing about this whole business to
+ me is the mixing-up in it of such a woman as Dan described
+ Madame de la Fontaine to be."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is strange," Nancy agreed, "but from the bits of talk
+ I've overheard, I should say that she was the prime mover in
+ it all."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In a way I am rather glad of that," said Tom, "for with a
+ woman at the head of things there is less chance of their
+ resorting to force to gain their ends. But the stake they are
+ playing for must be a big one, and already they have done
+ enough to make me sure that we should be prepared for
+ anything. I shall be surprised if we don't get some
+ communication from them to-day. The old Marquis counts on it,
+ or he would not keep so still. At any cost, we must get Dan
+ back."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They talked for some time longer and were about to go in,
+ when Nancy pointed to a horse and rider coming down the
+ avenue of Maples. A glance sufficed to show that the rider
+ was a woman. Nancy slipped inside to escape observation,
+ while Tom waited on the gallery to receive the visitor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the lady drew rein under the Red Oak, he ran down the
+ steps, and helped her to dismount. Her grace, her beauty, her
+ manner as of the great world, made him sure that he was in
+ the presence of Madame de la Fontaine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Good morning, sir," said the lady, with a charming smile,
+ "if I mistake not, I have the pleasure of addressing Mr.
+ Pembroke?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, madam,&#8212;at you service," replied Tom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am come on a strange errand, monsieur; as an ambassadress,
+ so to say, of those whom I fear you take to be your enemies."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You are frank, madam. I believe that I am speaking
+ with&#8212;?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Madame de la Fontaine," the lady instantly supplied. "Events
+ have so precipitated themselves, monsieur, that pretense and
+ conventionality were an affectation. I am informed, you
+ understand, of your brilliant rescue of Mademoiselle Eloise
+ de Boisdhyver."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If you mean Nancy Frost by Mademoiselle Eloise de
+ Boisdhyver, madam, your information is correct. I gathered
+ that you had been told of this, when I saw Captain Bonhomme
+ make his way to the House on the Dunes this morning."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah! What eyes, monsieur!" exclaimed the lady. "But I have
+ grown accustomed to having my privacy examined over-curiously
+ during the few days I have spent on your hospitable shores.
+ <i>Mais pardon</i>&#8212;my purpose in coming to the Inn at
+ the Red Oak this morning was but to request that my name be
+ conveyed to Monsieur the Marquis de Boisdhyver."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You mean, madam, that you wish to see the Marquis?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, monsieur, if you will be so good as to allow me to do
+ so."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am sorry," Tom rejoined, "that I must disappoint you.
+ Circumstances over which the Marquis has no control will
+ deprive him of the pleasure of seeing you this morning."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah!" exclaimed Madame de la Fontaine, "I was right then.
+ Monsieur le Marquis is, shall we say, in confinement?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As you please, madam; as safe, for the time, as is my friend
+ Dan Frost."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Eh bien</i>, monsieur! It is that you have&#8212;do you
+ not say?&#8212;turned the tables upon us?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Precisely, madam," assented Tom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And you will not permit me even a word&#8212;ever so little
+ a word&#8212;with my poor friend?" murmured Madame de la
+ Fontaine plaintively.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Again I am sorry to refuse you, madam; but&#8212;not even a
+ little word."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So! <i>Mais oui</i>, I am not greatly surprised. I was
+ assured last night...."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When you did not see the signals?" suggested Tom quickly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When I did not see the signals," repeated the lady, with a
+ glance of the briefest enquiry, "I was assured that something
+ had befallen Monsieur le Marquis. <i>Mais vraiment</i>,
+ monsieur, you do us much dishonour in assuming a wicked
+ conspiracy on our parts. The Marquis is my friend; he is also
+ the friend of the charming Mademoiselle. All that we wish,
+ all that we would do is as much in her interest as in his
+ own. But it is impossible that my old friend shall remain in
+ confinement. On what condition, monsieur, will you release
+ the Marquis de Boisdhyver?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On the condition, naturally, that my friend Dan Frost is
+ released from the <i>Southern Cross</i>."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah! Is it that you are quite sure that Monsieur Frost is
+ confined on the ship?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Quite sure, Madame de la Fontaine. I was on board <i>The
+ Southern Cross</i> last night."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, I know it; and I congratulate you upon your
+ extraordinary success. Very well, then, I accept your
+ condition. Monsieur Dan Frost returns; Monsieur le Marquis is
+ released. And now you will perhaps have the kindness&#8212;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, madame; in this affair the Marquis and his friends have
+ been the aggressors. I cannot consent that you should hold
+ any communication with the Marquis till Dan returns free and
+ unharmed to the Inn."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And what assurance then shall I have that the Marquis will
+ be released?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "None, madame, but my word of honour."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Pardon, monsieur</i>. I accept your terms. Monsieur Frost
+ shall return. The instant he enters the Inn at the Red Oak,
+ you promise that the Marquis de Boisdhyver be released and
+ that he be given this note from me?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Certainly, madam."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lady took a sealed note from the pocket of her habit and
+ handed it to Tom. "There remains, monsieur," she murmured,
+ "but to bid you good-day. If you will be so kind&#8212;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She ran lightly down the steps, and held up her foot for Tom
+ to assist her into the saddle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your friend will return <i>tout de suite</i>, monsieur," she
+ cried gayly, as she drew in the rein.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And we shall have the pleasure of seeing you again?" asked
+ Tom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah! who can tell?" She touched the horse lightly with her
+ whip, inclined her head, and soon disappeared down the avenue
+ of maples.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some time later Nancy and Tom watched her cantering across
+ the beach. She waved her handkerchief as a signal to the
+ schooner; a small boat put ashore, and she was rowed out to
+ <i>The Southern Cross</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Once Dan is back, and we get rid of the old Marquis," said
+ Tom, "I shall breathe considerably easier."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I can't believe they will give the game up so easily," was
+ Nancy's reply. "Seizing the Marquis, Tom, was a check, not a
+ mate."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Out on the schooner in the Cove, Madame de la Fontaine and
+ Dan Frost were once more talking together.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Dear boy," said the lady. "I cannot do that which I
+ promised. It is impossible that your sister shall make to you
+ the request to give me the torn scrap of paper, for the
+ reason that Mademoiselle Nancy has chosen to disappear. Have
+ no fear, monsieur, for I have good reason to believe she has
+ returned to the Inn at the Red Oak. Our schemes, <i>mon
+ ami</i>, have failed. You are no longer a prisoner, you are
+ free. And this is good-bye. I abandon our mission. I leave
+ the House on the Dunes to-day; to-morrow I return to France."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But, madame, you bewilder me," exclaimed Dan. "Why should
+ you go; why should we not all join forces, hunt for the
+ treasure together, if there is a treasure; why this division
+ of interests?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>C'est impossible</i>!" she exclaimed impetuously.
+ "Monsieur le Marquis will not consent. He is treated with
+ intolerable rudeness by your friend Mr. Pembroke. He will not
+ accept that which I propose. And I&#8212;<i>vraiment, I</i>
+ desire no longer to work against you. No, monsieur Dan,
+ <i>tout est fini</i>, we must say good-bye."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She held out her hands and Dan impetuously seized them. Then,
+ suddenly, she was in his arms and his lips were seeking hers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I cannot let you go," he cried hoarsely. "I cannot say
+ good-bye."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a moment he held her, but soon, almost brusquely, she
+ repulsed him. "<i>C'est folie, mon ami, folie</i>! We lose
+ our heads, we lose our hearts."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But I love you," cried Dan. "You must believe it; will you
+ believe it if I give you the paper?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, no!&#8212;What!&#8212;you wish to give to me the secret
+ of the Oak Parlour?&#8212;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Aye, to entrust to you my life, my soul, my honour."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah, but you must go," she murmured tensely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Captain Bonhomme is returning. It is better that he knows of
+ your release after you are gone. <i>C'est vrai</i>, my
+ friend, that I risk not a little in your behalf. Go now,
+ quickly ... No! No!" she protested, as she drew away from
+ him. "I tell you, <i>C'est folie</i>,&#8212;madness and
+ folly. You do not know me. Go now, while there is time!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But you will see me again?" insisted Dan. "Promise me that;
+ or, on my honour, I refuse to leave. Do with me what you
+ will, but&#8212;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Listen!" she whispered hurriedly. "I shall meet you to-night
+ at ten o'clock, at the end of the avenue of maples near to
+ your inn; you know the place? <i>Bien</i>! Bring me the paper
+ there, to prove that you trust me. And I&#8212;<i>mais
+ non</i>, I implore you&#8212;go quickly!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan turned at last and opened the door. Madame de la Fontaine
+ called sharply to the waiting Jean, and he, motioning to Dan
+ to follow him, led the way on deck. In a moment they were in
+ a little boat heading for the shore. The afternoon sun was
+ bright in the western sky. The <i>Southern Cross</i> rode
+ serenely at anchor, and from her deck, Madame de la Fontaine
+ was waving him good-bye.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH17"><!-- CH17 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVII
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ THE MARQUIS LEAVES THE INN
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ By the time Dan was put ashore on the beach of the Cove it
+ was afternoon. During the short row from the schooner he had
+ been unable to exchange remarks with the surly Jean, for that
+ individual's only response to his repeated efforts, was a
+ surly "<i>Je ne parle pas anglais</i>," which seemed to
+ answer as a general formula to the conspirators. He gave up
+ at last in disgust, and waited impatiently for the small boat
+ to be beached, distrustful lest at the last moment some fresh
+ trick be played upon him. Not that his ingenuous faith in the
+ beautiful French lady failed him, but he was suspicious lest,
+ having acted independently of the Marquis and Captain
+ Bonhomme in releasing him, she should not have the power to
+ make that release genuinely effective.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But his apprehensions were groundless. The seaman rowed
+ straight for the shore, beached the boat with a last sturdy
+ pull at the oars, and leaping out into the curling surf, held
+ the skiff steady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thank you very much," said Dan, shaking the spray from his
+ coat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Eh?" grunted Jean.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh!&#8212;beg pardon!&#8212;<i>merci</i>," he explained,
+ exaggerating the pronunciation of the French word.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Huh!" was the gutteral reply, as the man jumped back into
+ the skiff, and pushed off. Dan looked once more towards the
+ distant schooner and the slight figure in the stern. Then he
+ started at a rapid pace for the Inn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he turned into the avenue of maples, he was surprised to
+ see Jesse standing on the gallery, musket in hand, as though
+ he were a sentinel on guard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Bless my soul, Mister Dan! I thought the Frenchies had made
+ way with you. You're a blessed sight to lay eyes on. But
+ Mister Tom was right, he said you'd be coming back this
+ afternoon."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, here I am, Jesse," Dan replied grasping his hand, "as
+ large as life and twice as natural, I guess. I feel as if I'd
+ been away for a year and a day. But tell me, what's the news?
+ Where is Tom? Has Nancy come back? How is Mother? Have you
+ been having trouble, that you are guarding the door like a
+ soldier on duty?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, now, Mister Dan, one at a time, <i>if</i> you please.
+ Can't say exactly as we've been havin' trouble; but we've
+ sort of been lookin' for it. And Mister Tom&#8212;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Where is Tom? I must see him at once.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He ain't here, sir; he left about an hour ago, driving the
+ old Miss and Miss Nancy to the Red Farm, sir; so as to be out
+ of harm's way. He'll be back before night, sir."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah, good! Then Nance is back? When did she come?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She come back last night, sir; leastways Mister Tom brought
+ her back. Mister Tom, he got the idea that they'd cooped Miss
+ Nance up on that there schooner laying in the Cove, and sure
+ enough, he found her there and got her off somehows last
+ night."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Good for Tom! How did he work it?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I ain't heard no particulars, Mister Dan. We've been too
+ busy watching things to talk much. We got Ezra Manners out
+ from the Port to help do guard duty."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Guard?&#8212;what?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, the Inn, sir. Mister Tom he's been sort of expectin'
+ some kind of attack. That's the reason he took the women
+ folks over to the Red Farm."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I see&#8212;and where's the old Marquis?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jesse chuckled. "The old Marquis's where he hasn't been doin'
+ any harm for the last twenty-four hours, sir. Mister Tom he
+ locked him up last night in one of the south bedrooms. That
+ reminds me, I was to let him out just as soon as you come
+ back."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why lock him up, and then let him out? Things have been
+ moving at the Inn, Jess, since I've been gone!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Moving&#8212;yes, sir. But them's my orders&#8212;first
+ thing I was to do soon as you come back was to let the old
+ Frenchy out and do as he pleased. Mister Tom was to arrange
+ everything else with you, sir."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Seems as if Tom had a whole campaign planned out. All
+ right&#8212;we'll obey orders, Jess. Let the Marquis out, and
+ tell him he can find me in the bar if he wants to see me.
+ What time will Tom be back?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Before dark, sir, I'm sure. He's been gone over an hour."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan ran up to his bedroom, made a quick toilet, took the torn
+ scrap of paper from his strong-box, and put it in his wallet.
+ Then he went down stairs into the bar. The Marquis, released
+ from his confinement, was awaiting him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah, Monsieur Frost!" the old gentleman exclaimed, coming
+ forward with outstretched hands, "I rejoice at your return.
+ Now this so horrible nightmare will end... Ah!" This last
+ exclamation was uttered in a tone of surprise and
+ indignation, for Dan faced him with folded arms, deliberately
+ refusing the handclasp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, Marquis," he said, "I have returned; but I cannot say
+ that I am particularly pleased to see you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Monsieur, <i>te me comprends pas</i>; this abuse, this
+ insult&#8212;it is impossible that I understand."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Pray, Monsieur de Boisdhyver," replied Dan, with dignity,
+ "Let us have done with make-believe and sham. For two days I
+ have been in prison on that confounded ship yonder, whose
+ villainous crew are in your pay."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You in prison&#8212;the ship&#8212;the villainous crew!"
+ repeated the Marquis. "What is it that you say?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Come, Marquis, your protests are useless," Dan interrupted.
+ "I know of the conspiracy in which you are engaged, of your
+ deceit and trickery here, of your part in my poor sister's
+ disappearance. You know that Madame de la Fontaine has told
+ me much. Do you expect me to meet you as though nothing had
+ happened?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But, <i>mon cher, monsieur</i>," continued the Marquis, "if
+ it is that you have been told anything by Madame de la
+ Fontaine, my so good friend, the bright angel of an old age
+ too-cruelly shattered by misfortune, you well know how
+ innocent are my designs, how sincere my efforts for your
+ foster-sister, for her who is my niece."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Marquis, I do not understand all that has taken place. I may
+ say further that I do not care to discuss the situation with
+ you until I have talked with my sister and Mr. Pembroke."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah! then Eloise&#8212;then Mademoiselle Nancy, is returned?"
+ exclaimed the old gentleman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I believe so. But I have not seen her. I must decline,
+ Marquis, to continue this conversation. I must first learn
+ what has taken place in my absence. When Tom returns&#8212;he
+ is out just now&#8212;I am perfectly willing to talk matters
+ over with you and him together."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Marquis's eyes flashed. "But, Monsieur," he protested,
+ "you must understand that I cannot submit to meet with
+ Monsieur Pembroke again. A Marquis de Boisdhyver does not
+ twice put himself in the position to be insulted with
+ impunity."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I should hardly imagine," Dan replied, "that it would be
+ more difficult for you to meet Pembroke again than it has
+ been difficult for me to meet you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How&#8212;me?&#8212;<i>je ne comprends pas</i>. But I have
+ been insulted, imprisoned, I have suffered much that is
+ terrible."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I found myself in an identical situation," said Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But, monsieur, <i>un moment</i>" protested the old
+ gentleman, as Dan made as if to leave the room, "give me the
+ time to explain to you this misunderstanding.&#8212;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, Marquis. I will not talk until I have seen Tom."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The black eyes of Monsieur de Boisdhyver gleamed
+ unpleasantly. "I have said to you, Monsieur Frost, that I
+ refuse to meet Monsieur Tom Pembroke once more. It would be
+ intolerable. <i>Impossible, absolutment</i>! I must insist
+ that you will be kind enough to facilitate my departure at
+ once."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Certainly, as you wish, Marquis."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old gentleman hesitated. For once indecision was shown by
+ the agitation of his features and the shifting of his eyes,
+ but he gave no other expression to the quandaries in his
+ mind. After a moment's silence he drew himself up with
+ exaggerated dignity. With one hand upon his breast and the
+ other extended, in a fashion at once absurd and a little
+ pathetic, he addressed Dan for the last time, as might an
+ ambassador taking leave of a sovereign upon his declaration
+ of war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Monsieur, I renew my gratitude for the hospitality of the
+ Inn at the Red Oak, so long enjoyed, so discourteously
+ withdrawn. I require but the presentation of my account for
+ the time, I have trespassed upon your good will, and I
+ request the assistance of a servant to facilitate my
+ departure. But I do not take my farewell without protesting,
+ <i>avec tout mon coeur</i>, at the misunderstanding to which
+ I am persistently subjected. The inevitable bitterness in my
+ soul does not prevent me even now to forget the sweet hours
+ of rest that I have enjoyed here. The unwillingness on your
+ part, monsieur, to comprehend my position, does not interfere
+ to stifle in my breast the consciousness but of honourable
+ purpose. I make my compliments to mesdames."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Very good, marquis&#8212;and at what time shall I have a
+ carriage ready for you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Marquis glanced nonchalantly at his watch, "In fifteen
+ minutes, monsieur."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It will be ready, Marquis."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your very obedient servant; Monsieur Frost."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your obedient servant, Marquis de Boisdhyver."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old gentleman bowed again with elaborate courtesy and,
+ turning sharply on his heel, left the room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Somewhat disturbed by the turn affairs had taken, Dan stood
+ for a moment lost in thought. There was nothing for it, he
+ supposed: Tom, who had been in command, had given orders, and
+ they should be obeyed; besides there was no reason that he
+ could see why the Marquis should be detained at the Inn if he
+ chose to leave it. So he sat down at a table, made out the
+ old gentleman's bill for the month, and then stepped to the
+ door to call for Jesse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Take this," he said when the man appeared in response to his
+ summons, "to the old Marquis. It is the bill for his board.
+ If he pays you, well and good; if not&#8212;in any case,
+ treat him courteously, and do not interfere with his
+ movements. He is leaving the Inn for good. I want you to have
+ the buggy ready within half-an-hour and drive him where he
+ wishes to go. I fancy he will want his stuff put on the
+ schooner in the Cove."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "All right, sir," replied Jesse. "Now that you and Miss Nance
+ are back, sir, I guess the sooner we get rid of the Marquis
+ the better."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jesse carried the bill to the Marquis, then came down and
+ went to the barn to harness the horse. A little later he
+ drove round to the courtyard, hitched the horse to a ring in
+ the Red Oak, and ran upstairs to fetch the Marquis's boxes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps half-an-hour had passed when he returned to Dan in
+ the Bar. "The old gentleman's gone, sir," he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Gone!&#8212;where?" cried Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Don't know, sir," Jesse replied. "To the schooner, I guess.
+ He left this money on his dressing-bureau."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan took the gold which Jesse held out to him. "Well, well,"
+ he murmured, "quite on his dignity, eh? All right, Jess, take
+ his stuff to the beach and hail the schooner. He will
+ probably have given directions. I hope we've seen the last of
+ him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="PART4"><!-- PART4 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ PART IV
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ THE ATTACK ON THE INN
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH18"><!-- CH18 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVIII
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ THE AVENUE OF MAPLES
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ The Marquis's belongings were sent after him to the schooner,
+ where, however, it appeared that they had not been expected,
+ for it was some time before Jesse could obtain an answer to
+ his hail from the shore, and still longer before he could
+ make the men on the ship understand what it was he wanted
+ with them. Eventually Captain Bonhomme had rowed ashore, and
+ the Marquis's bags, boxes, writing-desk, and fiddle were
+ loaded into the small boat and taken off to <i>The Southern
+ Cross</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It appeared from Jesse's report that the Captain had been
+ sufficiently polite, and had attributed the misunderstanding
+ of his men to their inability to speak English. They had not
+ gotten their orders for the Marquis. He had asked no further
+ questions about Monsieur de Boisdhyver or about his recent
+ prisoners, but had feed Jesse liberally, and dismissed him,
+ with his own and the Marquis's thanks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well," said Tom, who had returned an hour before and had
+ been exchanging experiences with Dan, "that seems to be the
+ end of him for the present. I don't know that I did right in
+ promising your French lady that I should release him, but
+ there seemed no other way to make sure of getting you back."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am glad you promised," replied Dan. "It is a relief not to
+ have him under our roof. For the last week I've felt as if
+ the place were haunted by an evil spirit."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So it has been, and so it still will be, I am afraid," was
+ Tom's reply. "If there is treasure here, you may be sure that
+ gang won't sail away without making a desperate effort to get
+ it. I move that we beat them out by hunting for it ourselves.
+ Why not begin to-night?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not to-night," protested Dan. "I am tired to death. You can
+ imagine that I didn't get much sleep cooped up on that
+ confounded ship."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No more have I, old boy. But I believe in striking while the
+ iron is hot. Every day's delay gives them a better chance for
+ their plans, if they mean to attack the Inn."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I doubt if they'll do that. I don't think force is precisely
+ their line. You know, I believe that the story Madame de la
+ Fontaine told isn't altogether a fiction."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Pshaw!" exclaimed Tom. "I don't believe a word of it.
+ Naturally they wouldn't use force, if they could help it. But
+ their plans have all been upset, and a gang like that won't
+ stop at anything."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But we live in a civilized community, my boy. This isn't the
+ middle ages."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We live in a civilized community, perhaps; but if you can
+ find a more isolated spot, a place more remote from help, in
+ any other part of the civilized world, I'd be glad to see it.
+ We might as well be in the middle of the Sahara desert. Find
+ the treasure and get it out of harm's way&#8212;that's my
+ idea."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "All right, but to-morrow; I swear I'm not up to it
+ to-night."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To-morrow! Well, then to-morrow. Though for the life of me,
+ I don't see why you want to delay things. Jesse and Ezra can
+ keep watch tonight."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But we must get some sleep, Tom."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The devil with sleep! However, you're the boss now. It's
+ your inn, your treasure, your sister, that are involved. I'll
+ take a back seat."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Come, come, Tom&#8212;don't let's quarrel. Give me to-night
+ to&#8212;to get myself together, and tomorrow I'll pull the
+ Inn down with you, if you wish."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps Dan was right, he did need rest and sleep and a few
+ hours would restore him. They had their supper, then,
+ apportioned the night into watches, and Dan went upstairs for
+ his first period of sleep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His brain was a-whirl. All through the afternoon, during his
+ talk with the Marquis, and later during his talk with Tom,
+ one idea had been dominating his thought, dictating his plan
+ of action, colouring his judgment. The fascination which
+ Madame de la Fontaine exerted over his senses was too strong
+ for him even to contemplate resisting it. She was confessedly
+ in league with a gang of adventurers upon a quest for
+ treasure. She had lied to him at first about the Marquis, she
+ had lied to him about Nancy, she had lied to him about his
+ release; and when she had left him under the pretext of
+ arranging his return to the Inn, she had in fact gone to Tom
+ to bargain an exchange of him for the old Marquis. Her lies,
+ her subterfuges, her flatteries, had been evidently designed
+ but to get possession of the torn scrap of paper which was so
+ necessary to their finding the hidden treasure. All this Dan
+ told himself a hundred times, and then, quickly dispelling
+ the witness of these cold hard facts, there would flash
+ before him the vision of her wonderful eyes, of her strange
+ appealing beauty, of her stirring personality; he would feel
+ once more the touch of her cheek and her lips pressing his,
+ intoxicating as wine; and delicious fires flamed through his
+ veins, and set his heart to beating, and made havoc of his
+ honour and his conscience. Whatever were the consequences, he
+ would meet her again that night as he had promised. It was
+ his first experience of passion and it was sweeping him off
+ his feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alone in his room Dan sat down at the table. He drew from his
+ pocket the torn paper, and as an act of justice to the
+ friends he felt that he was about to betray, he labourously
+ made a copy of the difficult French handwriting. This done,
+ he locked the copy in his strong box and put the original
+ back in his pocket. Then, like the criminal he thought
+ himself to be, he crept cautiously down the stairs. The door
+ into the bar was open, and he stood for a moment, shoes in
+ hand, peering into the dimly-lit room. Tom sat by the hearth,
+ reading, a pipe in his mouth and a cocked pistol on the table
+ by his side. A pang went through Dan's breast, but he checked
+ the impulse to speak, and stole softly across the hall and
+ into his mother's parlour. Ever so cautiously he closed the
+ door behind him, crossed the room, and raised the sash of one
+ of the windows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was dark, but starlight; the moon had not yet risen. In a
+ moment he had slipped over the sill and stood upon the porch.
+ Lowering the sash, he crept across the band of light that
+ shone from the windows of the bar, and into the shadow of the
+ Red Oak. There he buttoned his great coat tightly about him,
+ put on his shoes, and started softly down the avenue of
+ maples. Scarcely a sound disturbed the silence of the night,
+ save the lazy creaking of the windmill as it turned now and
+ then to the puff of a gentle breeze.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At every few steps, he paused to listen, fearful lest his
+ absence had been detected and he were followed by some one
+ from the Inn. Then he would start on again, peering eagerly
+ into the darkness ahead for any sign of her whom he sought.
+ At last he reached the end of the avenue. His heart was
+ beating wildly, in a very terror that she might not come.
+ Nothing&#8212;no catastrophe, no danger, no
+ disgrace,&#8212;could be so terrible to him as that the woman
+ he loved so recklessly and madly should not come. She must
+ not fail! He looked at his watch; it was already three
+ minutes past ten. If in five&#8212;then minutes she did not
+ come, he would go to seek her&#8212;to the House on the
+ Dunes, aye, if must be to <i>The Southern Cross</i> itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly a dark figure slipped out of the gloom, and Claire
+ de la Fontaine was in his arms. For a moment she let him
+ clasp her, let his lips again meet hers; then quickly she
+ disengaged herself. "Are we safe?" she asked in a whisper.
+ "Is it that we can talk here."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We are perfectly safe," he answered. "Nothing can be heard
+ from the Inn. No one is about."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You escaped without notice? Are you certain that no one
+ follows you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Absolutely. I am sure. And you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I?&#8212;Oh, no, no&#8212;. There is no one to question me.
+ I have been at the House on the Dunes all the evening. Marie,
+ my maid,&#8212;she thinks that I am gone to the schooner.
+ <i>Mon Dieu! cher ami</i>, what terrors I have suffered for
+ you. It had not seemed possible that Claire de la Fontaine
+ would ride and walk two so long miles in a desolate country
+ to meet a lover&#8212;It must be that we are gone mad."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Madness then is the sweetest experience of life," said Dan,
+ seizing her hand again and carrying it to his lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah <i>peut-etre, mon ami</i>. But now there are many affairs
+ to discuss. Tell me&#8212;the Marquis, he was released, as
+ your friend has promised me he should be?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Of course, didn't you know it?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I know nothing. Why then is it he has not left the Inn?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But he did leave&#8212;in the middle of the afternoon, half
+ an hour after I returned."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And where is it that he has gone?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To the schooner, I suppose. He left alone, giving directions
+ for his things to be sent after him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah! to the schooner, you say? You are certain?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes&#8212;that is, I think he went there. Jesse took his
+ boxes and bags down to the shore, and Captain Bonhomme
+ received them, and thanked him in the Marquis's name,''
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Mais non! Est-ce possible</i>?" For a moment she was
+ silent, considering deeply. "<i>Bien</i>!" she exclaimed
+ presently. "It is as you say, of course. And you, my friend?"
+ She stopped suddenly, for they had been walking slowly
+ forward, and withdrawing her hand from his arm, she held it
+ out before him. "The paper?" she demanded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Here it is," murmured Dan, fumbling in his pocket, and
+ pulling out the scrap of paper. She took it eagerly from his
+ hand and held it up before her eyes as though trying to see
+ it in the dark.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This is it, really?" she asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I swear it," he answered. "It is the piece of writing that I
+ found in the hidden cubby-hole of the old cabinet in the Oak
+ Parlour. It is written in French, you know."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, I know, I know," she assented absently. For a moment
+ she was quite still, and then, with a strange exclamation,
+ she put the paper to her lips. "<i>Quels souvenirs,
+ d'autrefois</i>!" she murmured. "<i>Ah, mon Dieu, mon
+ Dieu</i>!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Dearest, what is it?" asked Dan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nothing, nothing," she replied, withdrawing a little from
+ his touch. "I was unwell for the moment,&#8212;<i>ce ne fait
+ rien</i>. No, no, you are not to kiss me, please." Again she
+ unloosed his arm from about her neck, slipped the paper into
+ her muff, and pressed a little forward. For a space they
+ walked slowly, silently, toward the Inn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But, dearest one," murmured Dan, "this proves to you my
+ love, doesn't it? You no longer doubt me. For your sake, I
+ give my honour; it may be, the safety of my friends. You must
+ see how I love you with all my heart and soul. Won't
+ you,&#8212;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly she stopped again quite still and faced him. "My
+ poor boy," she said gently, "you really love me?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Love you! My God, have I not proved it! What more would you
+ have me do?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Mais oui</i>," she answered quickly. "You have proved it,
+ but I have thought that it was not possible."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And you&#8212;you do care&#8212;oh, tell me&#8212;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>H&eacute;las, mon paurve ami</i>. I love as tenderly as
+ it remains in me to love. Ah, dear, dear boy, so sincerely,
+ that I cannot have you to sell your honour for the futile
+ kisses of Claire de la Fontaine."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What do you mean? Have I&#8212;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, no, no! This&#8212;take the paper. You must not again
+ give it me, I desire that you will not." She drew the paper
+ from her muff with an impulsive movement and thrust it toward
+ him. "Take it, I implore you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But why&#8212;?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Because that you shall not give your honour to a woman such
+ as I am. <i>Mai vraiment</i>, I love you. That is why you
+ must take back the paper."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But you must explain&#8212;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Mon Dieu</i>! is it that I have not explained? There is
+ time for nothing more. I have fear, <i>mon ami</i>; a kiss,
+ and it is necessary that I go. It is good-bye."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But you love me, you have said so. I cannot, I will not let
+ you go."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Listen to me, my friend," she said, her voice rising for the
+ moment above the whisper in which she had cautiously spoken
+ heretofore. "From the first I have deceived you, betrayed
+ you, played upon your affection but to betray you afresh. And
+ now I find that I love you. I am not that which you call
+ good, but it is impossible that I injure you. Go back to your
+ friends."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Never! I love you. What matters now anything that you have
+ said or done? And you love me. Ah dearest one, what can that
+ mean but good?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Bien-aim&eacute;</i>, what will you that I say?" she
+ interrupted speaking rapidly, "I am what you Americans call
+ 'a bad woman',&#8212;the sort of woman that you know nothing
+ of. I was the woman who sixteen years ago stayed at the Inn
+ at the Red Oak with Fran&ccedil;ois de Boisdhyver, the woman
+ your mother called nurse, who cared for his little daughter.
+ And now I have told you all. Will you know from now that I am
+ a thousand times unworthy? <i>Pour l'amour de Dieu</i>, give
+ it to me to do this one act of honour and of generosity."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH19"><!-- CH19 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIX
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ THE ATTACK
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ With these words she thrust the scrap of paper into his hands
+ and turning swiftly, started forward as though to escape his
+ further importunities by flight. But Dan was instantly by her
+ side, trying to catch her hand in the darkness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again she faced him passionately. "<i>C'est folie</i>," she
+ cried hoarsely, "have I not told you that we are in great
+ danger? Go, go back to the Inn. It is there only that you
+ will be safe.&#8212;O, <i>mon Dieu!"</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A figure had sprung suddenly from the blackness of the trees.
+ Dan felt a sharp blow on his shoulder, and then he was
+ grappling with a wiry antagonist, striving to keep at safe
+ distance a hand that clutched an open knife. Locked in a
+ close embrace, swaying from side to side of the road, they
+ fought desperately. Dan striving to get at the pistol which
+ he carried, his assailant trying to use his knife.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seemed as if Dan could no longer hold the man off when two
+ small hands closed over the fist that held the gleaming knife
+ and a clear voice rang out in French. Dan felt his
+ antagonist's grip loosen and he wrenched himself free. Madame
+ de la Fontaine had come to his rescue. "Quick, quick&#8212;to
+ the Inn. I am safe. You have but one chance for your life,"
+ she cried. Already his assailant had put a boatswain's
+ whistle to his lips and was sounding a shrill blast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Dan hesitated, uncertain what to do, he heard a number of
+ men come crashing through the underbrush of the neighbouring
+ field. Again Madame de la Fontaine cried, "<i>Mon Dieu</i>!
+ will you not run?" Then she turned and disappeared in the
+ darkness. Simultaneously came the crack of a pistol shot, and
+ a bullet whizzed by his ear. There was nothing for it but to
+ run; and run he did, shouting at the top of his voice the
+ while to Tom in the Inn. He probably owed his start to the
+ fact that for the moment his attacker, who had been held at
+ bay by Madame de la Fontaine, was uncertain whether to follow
+ her or Dan. That moment's delay saved Dan's life, for though,
+ with a curse, the man started after him now, he had a poor
+ chance of catching him in the darkness. But on he came only a
+ dozen yards or so behind, and after him the thundering steps
+ and harsh cries of those who had responded to the call of the
+ whistle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last Dan was at the door of the Inn, beating wildly upon
+ it, and calling, "Open, Tom; quick, for God's sake! It's
+ Dan." As the door was flung back, he sprang in and slammed it
+ shut. Already the attackers were in the courtyard, a volley
+ of shots rang against the stout oak, followed almost at once,
+ by the flinging against it of half-a-dozen men. But the great
+ oaken beam had been slipped into place and held firmly. Dan
+ was none the worse for his experience, save for a graze on
+ the cheek where the knife had glanced, and a slit on his
+ shoulder from a bullet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They're here!" he cried. "No time for explanations, Tom. I
+ went out&#8212;fool that I was!&#8212;was attacked. They're
+ here in force."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By this time Jesse had rushed into the bar, attracted by the
+ firing, and soon Ezra Manners came running down from the
+ floor above. After the first impact against the door those
+ without had withdrawn, evidently taking up a position in the
+ courtyard again, for almost at once there was a fusilade of
+ shots against door and windows, which luckily the heavy oak
+ was proof against.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They're welcome to keep that up all night," said Tom. "Only
+ a waste of ammunition. How many are there?" He would liked to
+ have asked Dan why he had gone out, but there was no time for
+ discussion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't know&#8212;half-a-dozen at least, I should guess,"
+ was Dan's reply. "Bonhomme is at their head, I'm sure. It was
+ he who tackled me in the avenue. They may have the whole crew
+ of the schooner here. That would mean a dozen or more."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well," said Tom, "we're in for it now, I guess. We'll have
+ to watch in different parts of the house, for we don't know
+ where they will attack. Unless they are all fools, it won't
+ be here."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You're right. I'll stay and look out for the south wing. You
+ go to the north wing, Tom; Jesse to the kitchen, and Ezra to
+ the end of the south passage. That'll cover the house as well
+ as we can cover it. They'll try to force an entrance
+ somewheres. Have you all got guns? Good. Leave the doors open
+ so that we can hear each other call."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Evidently the attacking party had concluded that they were
+ wasting their lead and their time in shooting at doors and
+ window-shutters, for as Tom had said, all was now quiet
+ outside. Fifteen minutes, half-an-hour passed, and nothing
+ occurred to alarm or to relieve the tension on the anxious
+ watchers within. At length Dan stole upstairs to reconnoitre.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was fortunate that he chose the precise moment he did, for
+ as his head emerged above the last stair, he saw that the
+ great shutters at the end of the south corridor were open,
+ and a man stood before the window, evidently on the top rung
+ of a ladder, trying the sash. It was locked to be sure, but
+ at the instant Dan saw him, he raised his fist and smashed
+ it. He was about to leap through the opening, fringed though
+ it was with jagged glass, when Dan aimed his pistol
+ carefully, and fired. There was a cry, and the form at the
+ window fell crashing to the ground below. Dan rushed to the
+ casement, and could hear in the court beneath him the curses
+ and exclamations of the surprised assailants. Quickly he
+ thrust the end of the ladder from the wall, then seizing a
+ fresh pistol from his belt, fired at random into the darkness
+ below. Another cry of pain attested to the fact that his
+ chance shot had taken effect. By this time Tom had rushed to
+ his assistance, and together they barred the window again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan gave a brief account of the incident. "But, for heaven's
+ sake, Tom," he concluded, "get back to the north wing. We are
+ in danger there every moment. I'll watch out here."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Tom returned to his post in the cold corridor of the north
+ wing, he heard heavy crashes, as of a battering-ram, against
+ the great door that opened into the gallery. A shrill whistle
+ brought Ezra Manners to his assistance. "Watch here!" he
+ commanded. "If the door crashes in, shoot, and shoot to kill;
+ then run into the bar and barricade the door between. I've a
+ plan."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He himself ran into the bar, blew out the candles, and
+ risking perhaps too much on the chance of success, cautiously
+ opened the front door. He could scarcely make out the group
+ at the farther end of the gallery, as he stepped out; but he
+ could hear the resounding crashes against the door into the
+ north hall, each one of which seemed to be the last that even
+ that massive frame could hold out against. Leveling his
+ pistol at the group; he took aim, and fired; snatched another
+ from his pocket, and fired a second time. Again, by good
+ luck, the defender's shots had told. There was a thud on the
+ gallery floor, and the besiegers scurried to cover beyond the
+ courtyard fence. Tom dashed safely back into the house, and
+ slipped the great beam into place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upstairs Dan's attention had been attracted by the commotion
+ in front of the inn. He opened a window on to the roof of the
+ gallery, climbed out, and crawled along on his belly till his
+ head just abutted over the eaves. For a few moments, after
+ the firing, he could hear the attackers moving about behind
+ the fence across the courtyard. At length, a couple of them
+ stole across the court and up on to the gallery beneath him.
+ In a moment they returned carrying the dead or wounded
+ comrade; then all of them seemed to go off together up the
+ dark avenue of maples. He waited till they could be heard no
+ more, then crept back into the house and ran down to tell Dan
+ of their temporary withdrawal. For an hour or more the four
+ defenders of the Inn kept themselves occupied parading the
+ corridors and rooms, on the watch for a fresh attack. But
+ nothing happened. They felt no security, however, and would
+ feel none till daylight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the silent watching of that night Dan had ample
+ opportunity to reflect upon his extraordinary interview with
+ Madame de la Fontaine. He loved her. Good heavens how he
+ loved her, but&#8212;had she been sincere in her refusal at
+ the last to keep the scrap of paper for the possession of
+ which she had so desperately intrigued? Had she decoyed him
+ to the rendezvous in the dark but to betray him to the
+ bandits with whom she was in league? At first it would seem
+ so. And yet the paper was in his possession; and, she it was
+ who had rescued him from the assassin's knife. Where was she
+ now? What had become of her? What was to be the end of this
+ mad night's work? That she was the woman who had accompanied
+ General Pointelle&#8212;or the Mar&eacute;chal de
+ Boisdhyver&#8212;somehow did not surprise him. And for the
+ time the full import of what that implied did not dawn upon
+ him. But what mattered anything now that he loved her?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He determined at last to reconnoitre again from the roof of
+ the gallery. It still lay in shadow, but it would not be long
+ before the moon, now rising over the eastern hills beyond the
+ Strathsey flooded it with light. In a moment, he had opened
+ the window, was over the sill, and, creeping cautiously along
+ the roof to the ledge, he worked his way toward the great oak
+ at the farther end.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All was still and deserted below as the Inn courtyard would
+ have been in the middle of any winter's night. While he stood
+ peering into the darkness, listening intently, the moon, just
+ showing above the distant tree tops, cast the first rays of
+ its light into the courtyard beneath him. At the instant the
+ figure of a woman stole across the flagged pavement and crept
+ fearfully to the Red Oak. With a strange thrill he recognized
+ Claire de la Fontaine. Reaching the shelter of the great
+ tree, she stooped, gathered a handful of gravel from the road
+ bed, and then cast it boldly at the shutters of the bar,
+ calling softly, "Dan, Dan."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Instantly he replied. "Claire! Is that you? What is it? I am
+ here, above you, on the roof."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah, <i>mon Dieu</i>!" she exclaimed, as she looked up
+ startled, and discerned his form leaning over the eaves, "for
+ the love of heaven, my friend, open to me. I am in danger and
+ I must tell you that which is of great importance to you.
+ <i>Mais vite, mon ami</i>. In ten minutes they will return
+ again."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It did not occur to Dan to doubt her. Careless of the risk,
+ he rushed back to the window, climbed in, and in a few
+ seconds had opened the door to the anxious woman without. She
+ seemed physically exhausted as she stepped into the warm bar.
+ Taking her in his arms, he carried her to a chair, and poured
+ out a glass of wine, which she eagerly drank.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It matters not what I have been doing," she murmured in
+ reply to his questions, "I have but little time to give you
+ my warning. <i>Ecoute</i>. Bonhomme and his men are gone only
+ to carry back their dead and wounded, and to bring cutlasses,
+ and the two or three sailors who were left on the schooner. I
+ have followed them&#8212;God knows how&#8212;and heard
+ something of their plans. They will make an attack&#8212;now,
+ in a moment&#8212;in two different places. But these attacks
+ will be shams,&#8212;is not that the word?&#8212;they will
+ mean nothing. It is the Oak Parlour that they desire to
+ enter. At the window of that so horrible room Bonhomme will
+ try to make an entrance without alarm while the others hold
+ your attention at the front and back of the Inn. Is it that
+ you understand? It is necessary that you are prepared for
+ these sham attacks, but the great danger is Bonhomme. The
+ window in the Oak Parlour is not strong. They have
+ information&#8212;recent information&#8212;from the Marquis
+ probably,&#8212;that it will not be difficult to break in.
+ One of you must conceal himself in the dark and shoot
+ Bonhomme when he enters; you must shoot and shoot to kill,
+ then we will be safe. I have no fear of Monsieur le Marquis.
+ The others&#8212;they are brutes&#8212;but they will flee.
+ And they know nothing, they do this for money,&#8212;ah,
+ <i>mon Dieu</i>, for money which I have furnished!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a moment, torn between his love and his deep distrust of
+ this woman, poor Dan stood uncertainly. Suddenly he knelt at
+ her side and clasped his arms about her. "Claire, you are on
+ our side? You swear it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah, <i>mon Dieu</i>! is it that I deserve this?" she
+ exclaimed bitterly. "Ah! I tell you truth," she cried. "You
+ must believe me&#8212;Listen! Are they come already?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, no, there is nothing. But I trust you, I will go."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly she sprang to her feet. "Let me go with you. It is
+ terrible to me to enter again that room; but I desire to
+ prove myself of honour. <i>Allous, allous</i>!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Tom is there."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah! send him here to the bar. But do you come, <i>mon
+ ami</i>. See, I go with you." She rose and forcing herself to
+ the effort, led the way across the bar and into the corridor
+ of the north wing, as if to show him that in sixteen years
+ she had not forgotten.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH20"><!-- CH20 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XX
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ IN THE OAK PARLOUR
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ "You know the way?" Dan exclaimed as he caught up with her,
+ and held open the door that led into the old north wing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But so well," she replied, catching her breath. "Would to
+ God that I did not!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah!" he murmured, "I forgot that you have been here before."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They pressed on silently. At the turn of the corridor upon
+ which the Oak Parlour gave, they discerned Tom Pembroke, a
+ weird figure, in the dim light of the tallow dip upon the
+ table, that cast fantastic shadows upon the whitewashed
+ walls.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he recognized them, he sprang forward in astonishment.
+ "Madame de la Fontaine! Dan! What does this mean?" he cried.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You know Madame?" Dan replied hastily and in evident
+ confusion. "At great risk she has come to warn us&#8212;she
+ is our friend, understand.&#8212;She has come to tell us how
+ Bonhomme and his men will attack the Inn."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom listened to his explanation with unconcealed dismay.
+ "Good heavens, Dan!" he protested, "You trust this woman? You
+ know she is in league with these ruffians. Do you want us to
+ fall into a trap?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, no, Monsieur Pembroke," interrupted Madame de la
+ Fontaine, "you must listen to me. I understand your fear. But
+ at last you can trust me. I repent that which I have done.
+ Ah, <i>mon Dieu</i>, with what bitterness! And now I desire
+ to do all that is possible to save you. You must trust me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I do not&#8212;I can not trust you," Tom cried sternly.
+ "Don't go in there, Dan. Don't I beg of you, trust this
+ woman's word. It is a trick."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Perhaps," said Dan grimly, "but go back. I take the
+ responsibility. I do trust her, I shall trust her&#8212;to
+ death. There is no time to lose, man. Go back!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What deviltry has bewitched you?" cried Tom passionately.
+ "Already once to-night you have risked our lives by your
+ fool-hardiness,&#8212;for the sake of this woman, eh? By gad,
+ man, I begin to see. But I tell you now, I refuse to be a
+ victim to your madness."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Mais non</i>, Monsieur Pembroke," Claire cried again. "By
+ all that is good and holy, I swear to you, that that which I
+ have said is true. You must go. They will attack the bar and
+ the kitchen. If those places are not defended, there will be
+ danger."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At any rate," said Dan, "I am going into the Oak Parlour. If
+ you refuse to act with me, barricade the door between the bar
+ and the north wing. If need be, I shall fight alone. Only now
+ we lose time, precious time."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pembroke looked at him as if he had gone mad, then shrugging
+ his shoulders he turned back into the bar, whistling for
+ Jesse and Ezra as he did so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a moment, glancing after Tom's retreating figure, shaken
+ to his soul by conflicting emotions, Dan stood irresolute.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But come," said Madame de la Fontaine, touching his arm.
+ Again like the weird genius of this strange night she led the
+ way on down the shadowy hall, and paused only when her hand
+ rested upon the knob of the door into the Oak Parlour. "It is
+ here," she said simply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Dan reached her side, she opened the door. The light of
+ the candle down the hallway did not penetrate the gloom of
+ the disused room. A musty smell as of cold stagnant air came
+ strong to their nostrils, and Dan felt, as they crossed the
+ threshold together, that he was entering a place where no
+ life had been for a long long time, a place full of dead
+ nameless horrors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The woman by his side was trembling violently. He put his arm
+ about her to reassure her, and there shot through him a
+ sensation of strange and terrible joy to be with her alone in
+ this darkness and danger. For the moment he was exulting that
+ for her sake he had risked his honour, that for her sake now
+ he was risking life itself. He bent his head to hers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No! no!&#8212;not here!" she whispered hoarsely, but yet
+ clinging to him with shaking hands. "It is so cold, so dark.
+ I have fear," she murmured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is like a tomb," he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The tomb of my hopes, of my youth," she breathed softly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Shall I strike a light?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, no,&#8212;no light, I implore you. <i>Ecoute</i>! What
+ is it that I hear?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I hear nothing. It is the wind in the Red Oak outside."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But listen!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is an owl hooting."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly she drew her hand from his, and he could hear her
+ moving swiftly about. "All is as it used to be?" she asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Precisely," he answered; "nothing has been changed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Here is the cabinet," she said, from across the room. "I can
+ feel the lion's head. It is opposite to the window and the
+ moonlight will stream in when the casement is opened, but if
+ I crouch low I shall not be seen. <i>Bien</i>! And you,
+ <i>mon ami</i>? Tell me, is the old <i>escritoire</i> still
+ to the left of the door?" Now she was back at his side once
+ again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The <i>escritoire</i>?" he repeated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The little table where one writes. Ah! yes, it is here. See,
+ behind this, <i>mon ami</i>, shall you hide yourself. The
+ moonlight will not reach here&#8212;and it is so arranged
+ that you will see plainly any one that appears at the window.
+ When the casement is opened, you will shoot, will you not,
+ and shoot to kill?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, I will shoot," said Dan, his voice trembling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You promise me?" she cried in a tense whisper, as she
+ grasped his arm and held it tight in her grip.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I tell you, yes."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You must not fail."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No. Shall I shoot at any one who opens?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Any one?&#8212;it will be Bonhomme,&#8212;no other."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly there came, from the front and the rear of the Inn,
+ at the same instant it seemed, the sharp staccato of a
+ fusilade of pistol shots, and the lumbering blows as of beams
+ being thrust at distant doors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They are come!" she whispered, "hide." Dan could hear the
+ swish of her garments as she rapidly glided across the room
+ to the old cabinet, then he turned and crouched low behind
+ the writing desk that she had chosen for his place of
+ concealment. He knelt there motionless, a cocked pistol
+ clenched in his right hand. His breath seemed to have
+ stopped, but his heart was pounding as though it must burst
+ through his breast. How could he shoot down in cold blood a
+ fellow man? The horror of it crowded out all other
+ impressions, sensations fears. He could fight, risk his life,
+ but to pull the trigger of that pistol when the casement
+ should open seemed to him an impossibility. He would wait,
+ grapple with him, fight as men should.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly a ray of moonlight fell across the dark floor. Dan,
+ looking up, seemed frozen by horror. The shutters had opened,
+ the casement swung back noiselessly, and there in the
+ opening, sharply outlined against the moonlight-flooded
+ night, was the great black hulk of Captain Bonhomme.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a moment he stood there irresolute, listening intently.
+ Dan was fascinated, motionless, held as in a vice by the
+ horror of the thing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly Bonhomme moved his head to one side as if to listen
+ more acutely. As he did so, the ray of moonlight fell upon
+ the cabinet, fell upon Claire de la Fontaine, upon something
+ that she held in an outstretched hand that gleamed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Nom de Dieu</i>!" There was the flash and crack of a
+ pistol, a sharp cry, and the great figure fell back and sank
+ out of sight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With that Dan sprang forward, reckless of danger, and ran to
+ the window. He heard without the confused sounds as of
+ persons scurrying to cover, saw their forms dash across the
+ moonlit courtyard, into the shadows of the trees and
+ outhouses. Beneath him on the floor of the gallery was
+ something horrible and still.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Almost instantly Claire de la Fontaine was by his side, and
+ as regardless of danger as he, she was calling sharply,
+ calling men by their names. Her hair had been loosened and
+ fell over her shoulders in black waves, her dark eyes flashed
+ with excitement and passion, and her face, strangely pale, in
+ the silver moonlight, was set in stern harsh lines. Even then
+ this vision of her tragic beauty thrilled the man at her
+ side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But she was as unconscious of him as she was of her danger.
+ With hand uplifted she called by name the desperados, who had
+ taken shelter in the darkness and to those who now came
+ running from front and rear where their attacks had been
+ unsuccessful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Appalled, spell-bound by the vision, even as Dan was, they
+ stopped, and stood listening mutely to the torrent of words
+ that she poured forth,&#8212;vehement French of which Dan had
+ no understanding.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last, ending the frightful tension of the scene, two of
+ the men came forward, crept up to the lifeless body of
+ Bonhomme, and grasping it by head and feet, carried it away,
+ across the courtyard, into the darkness of the avenue of
+ maples. One by one, still mysteriously silent, the others of
+ the gang followed, till at length the last one had
+ disappeared into the gloom. Weird silence fell once more upon
+ the Inn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was only then that Madame de la Fontaine turned to Dan.
+ "They will come no more," she said in a strained unnatural
+ voice. "We are saved, safe.... I have proved, is it not
+ so?&#8212;my honour, my love."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the words she sank at his feet, just as Tom, candle in
+ hand, appeared in the doorway.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH21"><!-- CH21 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXI
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ THE TREASURE
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ Owing doubtless to the death of Bonhomme and to the orders
+ given in no uncertain tones by Madame de la Fontaine, the
+ bandits from the schooner in the cove did not make a further
+ effort to attack the Inn that night. There was no rest,
+ however, for Madame de la Fontaine, after her heroic exploit
+ in the Oak Parlour, had swooned completely away. They carried
+ her to the couch in Mrs. Frost's parlour, and, awkwardly
+ enough, did what could be done for her by men. It was over an
+ hour before they succeeded in restoring her to consciousness,
+ and when they did so, she awoke to delirium and fever.
+ Distracted by anxiety and by their helplessness, at the first
+ streak of dawn, Dan started for town to get a doctor, and
+ Ezra Manners volunteered to go to the Red Farm and bring back
+ Mrs. Frost, Nancy, and the maids.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About six o'clock in the morning the women folk returned to
+ the Inn. But the briefest account of the attack was given
+ them, though they were told in no uncertain terms of Madame
+ de la Fontaine's heroic action in coming to warn them and of
+ her courageous shot at the leader. Then Mrs. Frost and Nancy
+ turned all their attention to the sick woman, caring for her
+ as tenderly and devotedly as if she were their own.
+ Half-an-hour later Dan returned from Monday Port with the
+ family doctor, a grave silent old gentleman, in whose skill
+ and discretion they trusted. After making an examination of
+ his patient, he nodded his head encouragingly; gave a few
+ directions to Mrs. Frost, and then left, promising to return
+ later in the morning with medicines and supplies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last, utterly worn out, the four men threw themselves on
+ their beds and slept from sheer exhaustion. The sun was high
+ in the sky when they came down stairs again and found Nancy
+ waiting for them, and a smoking breakfast ready on the table.
+ After greeting them, she pointed to the window, across the
+ fields, almost bare of snow now and gleaming in the morning
+ sunlight, to the bright waters of the cove. "See!" she cried,
+ "the schooner has disappeared."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They both looked. "By Jove, it has!" exclaimed Tom, rushing
+ to the other side of the room, and peering out at the
+ shipless sea. "Heigho! that's a relief. Pray God we've seen
+ the last of her. The Marquis gone, the schooner
+ gone,&#8212;we three together once more! Perhaps we shall
+ begin to live again. Ah!" he added more softly, glancing with
+ sudden sympathy at Dan's white drawn face, "I forgot the poor
+ woman across the hall."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan turned aside to hide his emotion, for though a load of
+ anxiety had been lifted from his heart by the vanishing of
+ <i>The Southern Cross</i>, he was sick with fear for the
+ issue of the illness that had stricken down the woman he
+ loved,&#8212;the woman who had proved her love for him by so
+ terrible and so tragic a deed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As though aware that for the moment they were best left
+ together alone, Nancy slipped away into the kitchen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You love her, Dan?" asked Tom simply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, Tom, with all my heart and soul. I staked my honour, my
+ life, on her sincerity. And how she has proved that we were
+ right to trust her! It can't be&#8212;she mustn't die&#8212;I
+ couldn't bear it!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She'll be all right, old fellow, don't worry; trust to your
+ mother and Nance. It is only the shock of the terrible things
+ she went through last night. Come on, we must take something
+ to eat. Here is Nancy back again."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was no doubt of the fact, <i>The Southern Cross</i> had
+ sailed away, vanished in the night as mysteriously as a week
+ before she had appeared in the Strathsey and found moorings
+ in the Cove. They did not count on the certainty of her not
+ reappearing, however; and that night and for many nights
+ thereafter the Inn was securely barricaded and a watch was
+ kept, but neither then nor ever did <i>The Southern Cross</i>
+ spread her sails in those waters again. She and her crew
+ disappeared from their lives as completely as from the seas
+ that stretched around the coast of Deal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom at once was for making a search in the Oak Parlour for
+ the hidden treasure, but for the time Dan had no heart for
+ the undertaking. He urged delay at least until Madame de la
+ Fontaine had recovered; and as for Nancy she would not hear
+ of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I can't bear to think of it,&#8212;of the trouble, the
+ crime, the suffering of which it has been the cause. When our
+ poor lady recovers, she will tell us all we need to know. I
+ dread the Oak Parlour. I would not go into that room for
+ anything in the world. Nor, believe me, Tom, could Dan do so
+ now. You have guessed, haven't you, that he loves Madame de
+ la Fontaine?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Of course, dearest; poor fellow! he betrays his love by
+ every word and act. But good heaven, Nance, he couldn't marry
+ her!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No&#8212;I don't know. I suppose not. But Dan will do as he
+ will. To oppose him now would only make him the more
+ wretched."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Does your mother know?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, and it is best she should not. I don't think she has the
+ faintest suspicion."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, I suppose we had better let things rest awhile;" Tom
+ assented, "but I swear I would like to get at the Oak Parlour
+ and tear the secret out of it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We must wait a bit, Tom dear. Let's just be glad now of what
+ we have and are."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And with that he drew her toward him and pressed for a
+ definite answer to the question which so deeply concerned
+ their future.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When Madame has recovered, when we know all and the mystery
+ is solved," she replied; then she added inconsequently, "I
+ wonder if we shall ever hear of the old Marquis again."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I wonder too," Tom exclaimed. "Though he has sailed away on
+ <i>The Southern Cross</i>, I doubt if he will willingly leave
+ the treasure behind him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That dreadful treasure, Tom," cried Nancy. "I wish to
+ goodness that the Marquis had it and might keep it always. We
+ have each other."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The evening of the second day after the terrible night of the
+ attack, as Dan was entering the Inn from his work outside, he
+ saw Madame de la Fontaine standing on the gallery under the
+ Red Oak. It was the dusk of a mild pleasant day. She was clad
+ still in her soft grey gown with furs about her waists and
+ neck, and a grey scarf over her head. But there was something
+ infinitely pathetic to him in the listlessness of her
+ attitude, in the expression of a deep and melancholy that had
+ come into her face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He stole swiftly to her side, and taking her hand in his
+ pressed it to his lips, with a gesture that was as reverent
+ as it was tender. For a moment something of the old
+ brightness returned to her face as she bent her clear gaze
+ upon his bowed head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You love me, Dan?" she murmured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You know I love you," he whispered passionately.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, I believe that you do," she said simply. "I shall
+ always be thankful that I have won a good man's love." But
+ suddenly she withdrew her hand, as the door of the bar
+ opened. "See, here is Mademoiselle Nancy. She is coming for
+ me: she is to be with me to-night. There is much for me to
+ do."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His heart surged within him; for he knew that in her simple
+ words there was the tragic note of farewell; but he could not
+ speak, he could not plead from that sad and broken woman for
+ a passion that he knew but too well she could never give. He
+ knew that she would leave him on the morrow, that his
+ protests would be vain;&#8212;nay,&#8212;he would not even
+ utter them! With the gathering of the darkness about the old
+ Inn, he felt that the light in his heart was being obscured
+ forever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The evening passed, the night. Morning came, and Madame de la
+ Fontaine, accompanied by Nancy, left the Inn at the Red Oak
+ for Coventry. There remained to Dan of his brief and tragic
+ passion but one letter, which Tom handed to him that morning,
+ and which, with despairing heart, he read and re-read a
+ hundred times.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Mon cher ami</i>:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You would forgive that I do not know well how to express
+ myself as I desire, if you could read my heart. I bade you
+ good-bye to-night under the Red Oak, tree for me of such
+ tragic and such beautiful memories. I could not say farewell
+ otherwise, dear friend, nor could you. We have loved
+ sincerely, have we not? We will remember that in days to
+ come; you will remember it even in the happier days to come
+ that I pray God to grant you. I know all that you would say,
+ my friend, but it cannot be. I must vanish from your life, be
+ gone as completely as though I had never entered it. I love
+ you deeply, tenderly, but I could not be to you what I know
+ that now you wish. All the past forbids. The very tragedy
+ that proved to you that I was worthy of your trust forbids.
+ It is my only justification that I saved your lives, dear
+ friend; but oh how bitterly I ask pardon of God for what has
+ been done! Then also, dearest friend, my heart is no longer
+ capable to bear passion, but only to feel great tenderness. I
+ could not say these things, and yet they must be written. I
+ cannot go with them unsaid. Certain other things must be told
+ you in justice to all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The story I told you on the schooner that day was largely
+ truth. The General Pointelle, who was at the Inn at the Red
+ Oak in 1814, was in reality the Mar&eacute;chal de
+ Boisdhyver, the father of your foster-sister Nancy. She is
+ truly Eloise de Boisdhyver. The Mar&eacute;chal returned to
+ France to support the Emperor, as he wrote to madame your
+ good mother; and he fell, as I told you, on the field of
+ Waterloo. Admitting the importance of his mission, admitting
+ my ambiguous relation to him (indefensible as it was), to
+ have left the child as he did was an act of kindness. In
+ truth the treasure concealed in the Oak Parlour is
+ considerable, and it was always my purpose to return, but the
+ necessary directions for finding it were not entrusted to me,
+ but to the Marquis Marie-Anne, whom I didn't meet until many
+ years after Waterloo. Then I was induced by the
+ Marquis,&#8212;your old Marquis&#8212;to provide the money
+ for the miserable enterprise, of which we know the tragic
+ result. From the first I was uncertain about the method we
+ adopted; and then soon after our arrival here, from a hundred
+ little indications, I became convinced that Bonhomme was
+ prepared to betray us, once we secured the treasure. As for
+ the Marquis, I suppose that he sailed away on the schooner.
+ You need fear him no longer. It was he, I am convinced, that
+ conveyed to them the information of the loosened casement in
+ the Oak Parlour, and unwittingly arranged for his own undoing
+ and our salvation. At all events he will have realized now
+ that he has hopelessly lost the fight. As for the treasure,
+ by right it belongs to Eloise, who should not disdain to use
+ it. I enclose a transcription of the other half of the torn
+ scrap of paper, which will supplement the directions in your
+ possession.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And as for me, my friend, I shall seek a shelter in my own
+ country apart from the world in which I have lived so to
+ little purpose and for the most part so unhappily. Believe
+ me, so it is best. My heart is too full for me to express all
+ that I feel for you.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Dear, dear friend, do not render me the more unhappy to know
+ that my brief friendship with you shall have harmed your
+ life. Your place is in the world, to take part in the life of
+ your own country, not, dear Dan, to waste youth and energy in
+ the fruitless desolation of this beautiful Deal, not above
+ all to grieve for a woman who was unworthy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I commend you to God, and I shall never forget you.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "CLAIRE DE LA FONTAINE."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was with a heavy heart that Dan consented later in the
+ morning to Tom's proposal that they force at last the secret
+ of the Oak Parlour. He got the torn scrap of paper which he
+ had found,&#8212;such ages ago it seemed, though it was
+ scarcely a week,&#8212;in the old cabinet, and gave it to
+ Tom, with the copy of the other half which Madame de la
+ Fontaine had enclosed in her letter of farewell. The copy in
+ Madame de la Fontaine's handwriting did not dovetail exactly
+ into the jagged edges of the original portion, so that it was
+ some time before they could get it into position for reading.
+ But at last it was pasted together on a large bit of
+ cardboard, and Tom, with the aid of a dictionary, succeeded
+ in making a translation, which Dan took down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Learning of the attempt of my Emperor to regain his glorious
+ throne, I leave these hospitable shores to offer my sword to
+ his cause. In case I do not return, the person having
+ instructions for the discovery of this paper, which I tear in
+ two parts, will find herein the necessary directions for the
+ finding of my hidden treasure. This treasure, bullion,
+ jewels, and coins, is concealed in a secret chamber in this
+ Inn at the Red Oak. This secret chamber will be entered from
+ the Oak Parlour. The hidden door is released by a spring
+ beneath the hand of the lady in the picture nearest the
+ fireplace on the north side of the room. A panel slides back
+ revealing the entrance. Instructions as to the deposition of
+ the treasure will be found in the golden casket therewith.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "FRAN&Ccedil;OIS DE BOISDHYVER."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well?" said Tom, "the instructions are definite enough. Now
+ we can put them to the test. Let's get to work at once. Wait
+ a second till I get some wood, and well make a fire in the
+ Oak Parlour." He filled his arms with logs from the bin under
+ the settle in the bar, while Dan got the key for the north
+ wing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon they were at the end of the old hall. It was with an
+ effort that Dan brought himself to enter the room, for there
+ flashed into his mind the vision of the last time he was
+ there,&#8212;the cold silver moonlight, the dark burly form
+ at the casement, the white drawn face of Claire de la
+ Fontaine, and then the sharp flash and crack of the pistol.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But with an impatient gesture, as if to thrust aside these
+ tragic memories, he stepped across the threshold, and
+ kneeling at the hearth, took the wood from Tom's arms and
+ began to lay a fire. In the meantime his friend fumbled at
+ the window casements, opened them, and let in the light of
+ day and the pure air of out-of-doors. Soon the fire was
+ crackling cheerily on the great andirons and casting its
+ bright reflection on the dark oak panelling of the walls.
+ Nothing had been disturbed&#8212;the old cabinet with the
+ lions' heads stood opposite the window; the little
+ <i>escritoire</i>, behind which he had crouched on the fatal
+ night, was pushed back against the wall; the chairs, the
+ tables, thick with dust, stood just as they had been standing
+ for many years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do you realize, Tom," Dan said, as they stood side by side
+ watching the blazing logs, "that it is sixteen years since
+ General Pointelle stayed at the Inn and used this room? And
+ the treasure, if there is any treasure, has been mouldering
+ here all that time."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Let's get at it," said Tom. "I confess this place gives me
+ the creeps. Have you got my translation of the directions?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, here it is." Dan spread out the bit of paper on one of
+ the tables. "'The hidden door is released by a spring beneath
+ the hand of the lady in the picture nearest the fireplace on
+ the north side of the room.' Ah! that must be it&#8212;that
+ old landscape let into the panel there." He walked nearer and
+ examined it closely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a simple landscape, a garden in the foreground, forest
+ and hills in the distance; and in the midst a lady in
+ Eighteenth century costume caressing the head of a greyhound.
+ It was beautifully mellow in tone, and might well have been a
+ production of Gainsborough, though the Frosts had preserved
+ no such tradition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan began to fumble, according to the directions, beneath the
+ hand of the stately lady, pressing vigourously here and there
+ with thumb and forefinger. "What's that?" he cried suddenly.
+ A faint click, as of a spring in action, had sounded sharp in
+ the stillness, but apparently with no other effect. "By
+ Jove!" he exclaimed, "I believe there is something behind it.
+ You heard the click? See there! the panel's opened a bit at
+ the side." Surely enough, there was a long crack on the
+ right&#8212;the length of the picture. "Here, let's push."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Careless of the landscape, they put their hands upon the
+ panel and pressed with all their force to the left. It
+ yielded slowly, slipping back side-wise into the wall, and
+ revealed a narrow opening, beyond which was a little circular
+ stairway, leading apparently to some chamber above.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Here's the entrance to the secret chamber all right," Dan
+ exclaimed. "Let's see where it goes to." He climbed in and
+ started up the winding flight of stairs, Tom close behind
+ him. About half way up the height of the Oak Parlour he came
+ to a door. "Can't go any farther," he called to Tom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What's the matter?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There's a door here; it leads, evidently, into some little
+ room between the Oak Parlour and the bedroom next. Who would
+ ever have guessed it?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Can't you open the door; is it locked?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan fumbled about till he found and turned the knob. "No," he
+ answered. "I've opened it. But it's pitch dark inside. Get a
+ candle."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He waited anxiously while Tom went below again to get a
+ candle, a strange feeling of dread creeping over him now that
+ at last he was about to penetrate the secret which had been
+ of such tragic purport in his life. In a moment Tom had
+ returned, a candle in either hand, one of which he handed to
+ Dan, and together they entered the secret chamber. It was a
+ little room scarcely six feet square, without light, and so
+ far as they could see without ventilation. As they stood
+ looking about the candle flickered strangely casting weird
+ shadows over the walls. Suddenly they saw at their feet a
+ tiny golden casket, and then, in a corner of the room a row
+ of small cloth bags, several of which had been ripped open,
+ so that a stream of golden coin flowed out upon the floor.
+ Nearby stood another little golden chest; and Tom, lifting
+ the lid, started back astonished. For there sparkling and
+ glowing in the candle light as though they were living moving
+ things, lay a heap of precious gems&#8212;diamonds, rubies,
+ opals, sapphires, amethysts, that might have been the ransom
+ of a princess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It's a treasure right enough!" cried Dan. "But what's this?"
+ He turned to the opposite corner where there lay a heap of
+ something covered with a great black cloth. They approached
+ gingerly, and Dan stooped and picked up an edge of the
+ covering. "It's a cloak," he exclaimed. Startled, he paused
+ for a moment; then quickly pulled the cloak away, uncovering,
+ to their horror, a lifeless body.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Tom!" Dan cried in a ghastly whisper. "A man has died here."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom held the candle over the gruesome heap. "But who?" he
+ asked in a hoarse whisper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For reply Dan pointed significantly to the cloak which he had
+ dropped on the floor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What!" cried Tom. "Good God! the old Marquis! But how? I
+ don't understand&#8212;" he added, staring blankly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He must have come here the afternoon he pretended to leave
+ the Inn, must have learned the secret passage somehow. It was
+ he who loosened the casement in the Oak Parlour that night,
+ and got his message to Bonhomme. He was waiting here for him.
+ Can't you see it all&#8212;the panel slipped back; he
+ couldn't open it again; Bonhomme didn't come; he was caught
+ like a rat in a trap."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My God, what a fate!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We can't leave his body here. We must give it decent burial,
+ you and I, Tom, for we can't let this be known."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And the treasure?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah! there was treasure, wasn't there? Wait, let's see what
+ is in the little casket." He picked up the golden casket that
+ they had stepped over as they entered, and raised the lid. A
+ single scrap of paper was inside on the little velvet
+ cushion, inscribed in the same handwriting as the paper of
+ directions, "<i>Pour Eloise de Boisdhyver</i>."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But come," Tom whispered, holding back the door, "I can't
+ stand this any longer. We'll come back again, and do what
+ must be done. Come, Dan."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dan gave a last look into the strange horrible little room,
+ then he followed his friend. They closed the door behind them
+ and crept slowly down the narrow winding stairs to the Oak
+ Parlour, leaving the treasure in the secret chamber and the
+ Marquis guarding it in the silence and darkness of death.
+ What had been so basely striven for was sorrily won at last.
+ </p>
+ <center>
+ THE END.
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Inn at the Red Oak, by Latta Griswold
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+</pre>
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+ </body>
+</html>
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