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<h2> CHAPTER X </h2>
<p>I had finished dressing, next morning, and was strapping my things
together for the day’s campaign, when I heard a shuffling step upon
the porch, and the door opened gently, without any previous ceremony of
knocking. To my angle of vision what at first appeared to have opened it
was a tray of coffee, rolls, eggs, and a packet of sandwiches, but, after
hesitating somewhat, this apparition advanced farther into the room,
disclosing a pair of supporting hands, followed in due time by the whole
person of a nervously smiling and visibly apprehensive Amedee. He closed
the door behind him by the simple action of backing against it, took the
cloth from his arm, and with a single gesture spread it neatly upon a
small table, then, turning to me, laid the forefinger of his right hand
warningly upon his lips and bowed me a deferential invitation to occupy
the chair beside the table.</p>
<p>“Well,” I said, glaring at him, “what ails you?”</p>
<p>“I thought monsieur might prefer his breakfast indoors, this
morning,” he returned in a low voice.</p>
<p>“Why should I?”</p>
<p>The miserable old man said something I did not understand—an
incoherent syllable or two—suddenly covered his mouth with both
hands, and turned away. I heard a catch in his throat; suffocated sounds
issued from his bosom; however, it was nothing more than a momentary
seizure, and, recovering command of himself by a powerful effort, he faced
me with hypocritical servility.</p>
<p>“Why do you laugh?” I asked indignantly.</p>
<p>“But I did not laugh,” he replied in a husky whisper. “Not
at all.”</p>
<p>“You did,” I asserted, raising my voice. “It almost
killed you!”</p>
<p>“Monsieur,” he begged hoarsely, “HUSH!”</p>
<p>“What is the matter?” I demanded loudly. “What do you
mean by these abominable croakings? Speak out!”</p>
<p>“Monsieur—” he gesticulated in a panic, toward the
courtyard. “Mademoiselle Ward is out there.”</p>
<p>“WHAT!” But I did not shout the word.</p>
<p>“There is always a little window in the rear wall,” he
breathed in my ear as I dropped into the chair by the table. “She
would not see you if—”</p>
<p>I interrupted with all the French rough-and-ready expressions of dislike
at my command, daring to hope that they might give him some shadowy,
far-away idea of what I thought of both himself and his suggestions, and,
notwithstanding the difficulty of expressing strong feeling in whispers,
it seemed to me that, in a measure, I succeeded. “I am not in the
habit of crawling out of ventilators,” I added, subduing a tendency
to vehemence. “And probably Mademoiselle Ward has only come to talk
with Madame Brossard.”</p>
<p>“I fear some of those people may have told her you were here,”
he ventured insinuatingly.</p>
<p>“What people?” I asked, drinking my coffee calmly, yet, it
must be confessed, without quite the deliberation I could have wished.</p>
<p>“Those who stopped yesterday evening on the way to the chateau. They
might have recognised—”</p>
<p>“Impossible. I knew none of them.”</p>
<p>“But Mademoiselle Ward knows that you are here. Without doubt.”</p>
<p>“Why do you say so?”</p>
<p>“Because she has inquired for you.”</p>
<p>“So!” I rose at once and went toward the door. “Why didn’t
you tell me at once?”</p>
<p>“But surely,” he remonstrated, ignoring my question, “monsieur
will make some change of attire?”</p>
<p>“Change of attire?” I echoed.</p>
<p>“Eh, the poor old coat all hunched at the shoulders and spotted with
paint!”</p>
<p>“Why shouldn’t it be?” I hissed, thoroughly irritated.
“Do you take me for a racing marquis?”</p>
<p>“But monsieur has a coat much more as a coat ought to be. And Jean
Ferret says—”</p>
<p>“Ha, now we’re getting at it!” said I. “What does
Jean Ferret say?”</p>
<p>“Perhaps it would be better if I did not repeat—”</p>
<p>“Out with it! What does Jean Ferret say?”</p>
<p>“Well, then, Mademoiselle Ward’s maid from Paris has told Jean
Ferret that monsieur and Mademoiselle Ward have corresponded for years,
and that—and that—”</p>
<p>“Go on,” I bade him ominously.</p>
<p>“That monsieur has sent Mademoiselle Ward many expensive jewels, and—”</p>
<p>“Aha!” said I, at which he paused abruptly, and stood staring
at me. The idea of explaining Miss Elizabeth’s collection to him, of
getting anything whatever through that complacent head of his, was so
hopeless that I did not even consider it. There was only one thing to do,
and perhaps I should have done it—I do not know, for he saw the
menace coiling in my eye, and hurriedly retreated.</p>
<p>“Monsieur!” he gasped, backing away from me, and as his hand,
fumbling behind him, found the latch of the door, he opened it, and
scrambled out by a sort of spiral movement round the casing. When I
followed, a moment later—with my traps on my shoulder and the packet
of sandwiches in my pocket—he was out of sight.</p>
<p>Miss Elizabeth sat beneath the arbour at the other end of the courtyard,
and beside her stood the trim and glossy bay saddle-horse that she had
ridden from Quesnay, his head outstretched above his mistress to paddle at
the vine leaves with a tremulous upper lip. She checked his desire with a
slight movement of her hand upon the bridle-rein; and he arched his neck
prettily, pawing the gravel with a neat forefoot. Miss Elizabeth is one of
the few large women I have known to whom a riding-habit is entirely
becoming, and this group of two—a handsome woman and her handsome
horse—has had a charm for all men ever since horses were tamed and
women began to be beautiful. I thought of my work, of the canvases I meant
to cover, but I felt the charm—and I felt it stirringly. It was a
fine, fresh morning, and the sun just risen.</p>
<p>An expression in the lady’s attitude, and air which I instinctively
construed as histrionic, seemed intended to convey that she had been kept
waiting, yet had waited without reproach; and although she must have heard
me coming, she did not look toward me until I was quite near and spoke her
name. At that she sprang up quickly enough, and stretched out her hand to
me.</p>
<p>“Run to earth!” she cried, advancing a step to meet me.</p>
<p>“A pretty poor trophy of the chase,” said I, “but proud
that you are its killer.”</p>
<p>To my surprise and mystification, her cheeks and brow flushed rosily; she
was obviously conscious of it, and laughed.</p>
<p>“Don’t be embarrassed,” she said.</p>
<h3> “I!” </h3>
<p>“Yes, you, poor man! I suppose I couldn’t have more thoroughly
compromised you. Madame Brossard will never believe in your respectability
again.”</p>
<p>“Oh, yes, she will,” said I.</p>
<p>“What? A lodger who has ladies calling upon him at five o’clock
in the morning? But your bundle’s on your shoulder,” she
rattled on, laughing, “though there’s many could be bolder,
and perhaps you’ll let me walk a bit of the way with you, if you’re
for the road.”</p>
<p>“Perhaps I will,” said I. She caught up her riding-skirt,
fastening it by a clasp at her side, and we passed out through the archway
and went slowly along the road bordering the forest, her horse following
obediently at half-rein’s length.</p>
<p>“When did you hear that I was at Madame Brossard’s?” I
asked.</p>
<p>“Ten minutes after I returned to Quesnay, late yesterday afternoon.”</p>
<p>“Who told you?”</p>
<p>“Louise.”</p>
<p>I repeated the name questioningly. “You mean Mrs. Larrabee Harman?”</p>
<p>“Louise Harman,” she corrected. “Didn’t you know
she was staying at Quesnay?”</p>
<p>“I guessed it, though Amedee got the name confused.”</p>
<p>“Yes, she’s been kind enough to look after the place for us
while we were away. George won’t be back for another ten days, and I’ve
been overseeing an exhibition for him in London. Afterward I did a round
of visits—tiresome enough, but among people it’s well to keep
in touch with on George’s account.”</p>
<p>“I see,” I said, with a grimness which probably escaped her.
“But how did Mrs. Harman know that I was at Les Trois Pigeons?”</p>
<p>“She met you once in the forest—”</p>
<p>“Twice,” I interrupted.</p>
<p>“She mentioned only once. Of course she’d often heard both
George and me speak of you.”</p>
<p>“But how did she know it was I and where I was staying?”</p>
<p>“Oh, that?” Her smile changed to a laugh. “Your maitre d’hotel
told Ferret, a gardener at Quesnay, that you were at the inn.”</p>
<p>“He did!”</p>
<p>“Oh, but you mustn’t be angry with him; he made it quite all
right.”</p>
<p>“How did he do that?” I asked, trying to speak calmly, though
there was that in my mind which might have blanched the parchment cheek of
a grand inquisitor.</p>
<p>“He told Ferret that you were very anxious not to have it known—”</p>
<p>“You call that making it all right?”</p>
<p>“For himself, I mean. He asked Ferret not to mention who it was that
told him.”</p>
<p>“The rascal!” I cried. “The treacherous, brazen—”</p>
<p>“Unfortunate man,” said Miss Elizabeth, “don’t you
see how clear you’re making it that you really meant to hide from
us?”</p>
<p>There seemed to be something in that, and my tirade broke up in confusion.
“Oh, no,” I said lamely, “I hoped—I hoped—”</p>
<p>“Be careful!”</p>
<p>“No; I hoped to work down here,” I blurted. “And I
thought if I saw too much of you—I might not.”</p>
<p>She looked at me with widening eyes. “And I can take my choice,”
she cried, “of all the different things you may mean by that! It’s
either the most outrageous speech I ever heard—or the most
flattering.”</p>
<p>“But I meant simply—”</p>
<p>“No.” She lifted her hand and stopped me. “I’d
rather believe that I have at least the choice—and let it go at
that.” And as I began to laugh, she turned to me with a gravity
apparently so genuine that for the moment I was fatuous enough to believe
that she had said it seriously. Ensued a pause of some duration, which,
for my part, I found disturbing. She broke it with a change of subject.</p>
<p>“You think Louise very lovely to look at, don’t you?”</p>
<p>“Exquisite,” I answered.</p>
<p>“Every one does.”</p>
<p>“I suppose she told you—” and now I felt myself growing
red—“that I behaved like a drunken acrobat when she came upon
me in the path.”</p>
<p>“No. Did you?” cried Miss Elizabeth, with a ready credulity
which I thought by no means pretty; indeed, she seemed amused and, to my
surprise (for she is not an unkind woman), rather heartlessly pleased.
“Louise only said she knew it must be you, and that she wished she
could have had a better look at what you were painting.”</p>
<p>“Heaven bless her!” I exclaimed. “Her reticence was
angelic.”</p>
<p>“Yes, she has reticence,” said my companion, with enough of
the same quality to make me look at her quickly. A thin line had been
drawn across her forehead.</p>
<p>“You mean she’s still reticent with George?” I ventured.</p>
<p>“Yes,” she answered sadly. “Poor George always hopes, of
course, in the silent way of his kind when they suffer from such
unfortunate passions—and he waits.”</p>
<p>“I suppose that former husband of hers recovered?”</p>
<p>“I believe he’s still alive somewhere. Locked up, I hope!”
she finished crisply.</p>
<p>“She retained his name,” I observed.</p>
<p>“Harman? Yes, she retained it,” said my companion rather
shortly.</p>
<p>“At all events, she’s rid of him, isn’t she?”</p>
<p>“Oh, she’s RID of him!” Her tone implied an enigmatic
reservation of some kind.</p>
<p>“It’s hard,” I reflected aloud, “hard to
understand her making that mistake, young as she was. Even in the glimpses
of her I’ve had, it was easy to see something of what she’s
like: a fine, rare, high type—”</p>
<p>“But you didn’t know HIM, did you?” Miss Elizabeth asked
with some dryness.</p>
<p>“No,” I answered. “I saw him twice; once at the time of
his accident—that was only a nightmare, his face covered with—”
I shivered. “But I had caught a glimpse of him on the boulevard, and
of all the dreadful—”</p>
<p>“Oh, but he wasn’t always dreadful,” she interposed
quickly. “He was a fascinating sort of person, quite charming and
good-looking, when she ran away with him, though he was horribly
dissipated even then. He always had been THAT. Of course she thought she’d
be able to straighten him out—poor girl! She tried, for three years—three
years it hurts one to think of! You see it must have been something very
like a ‘grand passion’ to hold her through a pain three years
long.”</p>
<p>“Or tremendous pride,” said I. “Women make an odd world
of it for the rest of us. There was good old George, as true and straight
a man as ever lived—”</p>
<p>“And she took the other! Yes.” George’s sister laughed
sorrowfully.</p>
<p>“But George and she have both survived the mistake,” I went on
with confidence. “Her tragedy must have taught her some important
differences. Haven’t you a notion she’ll be tremendously glad
to see him when he comes back from America?”</p>
<p>“Ah, I do hope so!” she cried. “You see, I’m
fearing that he hopes so too—to the degree of counting on it.”</p>
<p>“You don’t count on it yourself?”</p>
<p>She shook her head. “With any other woman I should.”</p>
<p>“Why not with Mrs. Harman?”</p>
<p>“Cousin Louise has her ways,” said Miss Elizabeth slowly, and,
whether she could not further explain her doubts, or whether she would
not, that was all I got out of her on the subject at the time. I asked one
or two more questions, but my companion merely shook her head again,
alluding vaguely to her cousin’s “ways.” Then she
brightened suddenly, and inquired when I would have my things sent up to
the chateau from the inn.</p>
<p>At the risk of a misunderstanding which I felt I could ill afford, I
resisted her kind hospitality, and the outcome of it was that there should
be a kind of armistice, to begin with my dining at the chateau that
evening. Thereupon she mounted to the saddle, a bit of gymnastics for
which she declined my assistance, and looked down upon me from a great
height.</p>
<p>“Did anybody ever tell you,” was her surprising inquiry,
“that you are the queerest man of these times?”</p>
<p>“No,” I answered. “Don’t you think you’re a
queerer woman?”</p>
<p>“FOOTLE!” she cried scornfully. “Be off to your woods
and your woodscaping!”</p>
<p>The bay horse departed at a smart gait, not, I was glad to see, a parkish
trot—Miss Elizabeth wisely set limits to her sacrifices to Mode—and
she was far down the road before I had passed the outer fringe of trees.</p>
<p>My work was accomplished after a fashion more or less desultory that day;
I had many absent moments, was restless, and walked more than I painted.
Oliver Saffron did not join me in the late afternoon; nor did the echo of
distant yodelling bespeak any effort on his part to find me. So I gave him
up, and returned to the inn earlier than usual.</p>
<p>While dressing I sent word to Professor Keredec that I should not be able
to join him at dinner that evening; and it is to be recorded that Glouglou
carried the message for me. Amedee did not appear, from which it may be
inferred that our maitre d’hotel was subject to lucid intervals.
Certainly his present shyness indicated an intelligence of no low order.</p>
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