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<h2> XVIII </h2>
<p>That night, for almost the first time since he had adopted his dual role,
Loder slept ill. He was not a man over whom imagination held any powerful
sway—his doubts and misgivings seldom ran to speculation, upon
future possibilities; nevertheless, the fact that, consciously or
unconsciously, he had adopted a new attitude towards Eve came home to him
with unpleasant force during the hours of darkness; and long before the
first hint of daylight had slipped through the heavy window-curtains he
had arranged a plan of action—a plan wherein, by the simple method
of altogether avoiding her, he might soothe his own conscience and
safeguard Chilcote's domestic interests.</p>
<p>It was a satisfactory if a somewhat negative arrangement, and he rose next
morning with a feeling that things had begun to shape themselves. But
chance sometimes has a disconcerting knack of forestalling even our
best-planned schemes. He dressed slowly, and descended to his solitary
breakfast with the pleasant sensation of having put last night out of
consideration by the turning over of a new leaf; but scarcely had he
opened Chilcote's letters, scarcely had he taken a cursory glance at the
morning's newspaper, than it was borne in upon him that not only a new
leaf, but a whole sheaf of new leaves, had been turned in his prospects—by
a hand infinitely more powerful and arbitrary than his own. He realized
within the space of a few moments that the leisure Eve might have claimed,
the leisure he might have been tempted to devote to her, was no longer his
to dispose of—being already demanded of him from a quarter that
allowed of no refusal.</p>
<p>For the first rumbling of the political earthquake that was to shake the
country made itself audible beyond denial on that morning of March 27th,
when the news spread through England that, in view of the disorganized
state of the Persian army and the Shah's consequent inability to suppress
the open insurrection of the border tribes in the north-eastern districts
of Meshed, Russia, with a great show of magnanimity, had come to the
rescue by despatching a large armed force from her military station at
Merv across the Persian frontier to the seat of the disturbance.</p>
<p>To many hundreds of Englishmen who read their papers on that morning this
announcement conveyed but little. That there is such a country as Persia
we all know, that English interests predominate in the south and Russian
interests in the north we have all superficially understood from
childhood; but in this knowledge, coupled with the fact that Persia is
comfortably far away, we are apt to rest content. It is only to the eyes
that see through long-distance glasses, the minds that regard the present
as nothing more nor less than an inevitable link joining the future to the
past, that this distant, debatable land stands out in its true political
significance.</p>
<p>To the average reader of news the statement of Russia's move seemed
scarcely more important than had the first report of the border risings in
January, but to the men who had watched the growth of the disturbance it
came charged with portentous meaning. Through the entire ranks of the
opposition, from Fraide himself downward, it caused a thrill of
expectation—that peculiar prophetic sensation that every politician
has experienced at some moment of his career.</p>
<p>In no member of his party did this feeling strike deeper root than in
Loder. Imbued with a lifelong interest in the Eastern question, specially
equipped by personal knowledge to hold and proclaim an opinion upon
Persian affairs, he read the signs and portents with instinctive insight.
Seated at Chilcote's table, surrounded by Chilcote's letters and papers,
he forgot the breakfast that was slowly growing cold, forgot the interests
and dangers, personal or pleasurable, of the night before, while his
mental eyes persistently conjured up the map of Persia, travelling with
steady deliberation from Merv to Meshed, from Meshed to Herat, from Herat
to the empire of India! For it was not the fact that the Hazaras had risen
against the Shah that occupied the thinking mind, nor was it the fact that
Russian and not Persian troops were destined to subdue them, but the
deeply important consideration that an armed Russian force had crossed the
frontier and was encamped within twenty miles of Meshed-Meshed, upon which
covetous Russian eyes have rested ever since the days of Peter the Great.</p>
<p>So Loder's thoughts ran as he read and reread the news from the varying
political stand-points, and so they continued to run when, some hours
later, an urgent telephone message from the 'St. George's Gazette' asked
him to call at Lakely's office.</p>
<p>The message was interesting as well as imperative, and he made an instant
response. The thought of Lakely's keen eyes and shrewd enthusiasms always
possessed strong attractions for his own slower temperament, but even had
this impetus been lacking, the knowledge that at the 'St. George's'
offices, if anywhere, the true feelings of the party were invariably
voiced would have drawn him without hesitation.</p>
<p>It was scarcely twelve o'clock when he turned the corner of the tall
building, but already the keen spirit that Lakely everywhere diffused was
making itself felt. Loder smiled to himself as his eyes fell on the day's
placards with their uncompromising headings, and passed onward from the
string of gayly painted carts drawn up to receive their first consignment
of the paper to the troop of eager newsboys passing in and out of the big
swing-doors with their piled-up bundles of the early edition; and with a
renewed thrill of anticipation and energy he passed through the doorway
and ran up-stairs.</p>
<p>Passing unchallenged through the long corridor that led to Lakely's
office, he caught a fresh impression of action and vitality from the click
of the tape machines in the subeditors' office, and a glimpse through the
open door of the subeditors themselves, each occupied with his particular
task; then without time for further observation he found himself at
Lakely's door. Without waiting to knock, as he had felt compelled to do on
the one or two previous occasions that business had brought him there, he
immediately turned the handle and entered the room.</p>
<p>Editors' offices differ but little in general effect.</p>
<p>Lakely's surroundings were rather more elaborate than is usual, as became
the dignity of the oldest Tory evening paper, but the atmosphere was
unmistakable. As Loder entered he glanced up from the desk at which he was
sitting, but instantly returned to his task of looking through and marking
the pile of early evening editions that were spread around him. His coat
was off and hung on the chair behind him, axed he pulled vigorously on a
long cigar.</p>
<p>“Hullo! That's right,” he said, laconically. “Make yourself comfortable
half a second, while I skim the 'St. Stephen's'.”</p>
<p>His salutation pleased Loder. With a nod of acquiescence he crossed the
office to the brisk fire that burned in, the grate.</p>
<p>For a minute or two Lakely worked steadily, occasionally breaking the
quiet by an unintelligible remark or a vigorous stroke of his pencil. At
last he dropped the paper with a gesture of satisfaction and leaned back
in his chair.</p>
<p>“Well,” he said, “what d'you think of this? How's this for a
complication?”</p>
<p>Loder turned round. “I think,” he said, quietly, “that we can't
overestimate it.”</p>
<p>Lakely laughed and took a long pull at his cigar. “And we mustn't be
afraid to let the Sefborough crowd know it, eh?” He waved his hand to the
poster of the first edition that hung before his desk.</p>
<p>Loder, following his glance, smiled.</p>
<p>Lakely laughed again. “They might have known it all along, if they'd cared
to deduce,” he said. “Did they really believe that Russia was going to sit
calmly looking across the Heri-Rud while the Shah played at mobilizing?
But what became of you last night? We had a regular prophesying of the
whole business at Bramfell's; the great Fraide looked in for five minutes.
I went on with him to the club afterwards and was there when the news came
in. 'Twas a great night!”</p>
<p>Loder's face lighted up. “I can imagine it,” he said, with an unusual
touch of warmth.</p>
<p>Lakely watched him intently for a moment. Then with a quick action he
leaned forward and rested his elbows on the desk.</p>
<p>“It's going to be something more than imagination for you, Chilcote,” he
said, impressively. “It's going to be solid earnest!” He spoke rapidly and
with rather more than his usual shrewd decisiveness; then he paused to see
the effect of his announcement.</p>
<p>Loder was still studying the flaring poster. At the other's words he
turned sharply. Something in Lakely's voice, something in his manner,
arrested him. A tinge of color crossed his face.</p>
<p>“Reality?” he said. “What do you mean?”</p>
<p>For a further space his companion watched him; then with a rapid movement
he tilted back his chair.</p>
<p>“Yes,” he said. “Yes; old Fraide's instincts are never far out. He's quite
right. You're the man!”</p>
<p>Still quietly, but with a strange underglow of excitement, Loder left the
fire, and, coming forward, took a chair at Lakely's desk.</p>
<p>“Do you mind telling me what you're driving at?” he asked, in his old,
laconic voice.</p>
<p>Lakely still scrutinized him with an air of brisk satisfaction; then with
a gesture of finality he tossed his cigar away.</p>
<p>“My dear chap,” he said, “there's going to be a breach somewhere—and
Fraide says you're the man to step in and fill it! You see, five years
ago, when things looked lively on the Gulf and the Bundar Abbas business
came to light, you did some promising work; and a reputation like that
sticks to a man—even when he turns slacker! I won't deny that you've
slacked abominably,” he added, as Loder made an uneasy movement, “but
slacking has different effects. Some men run to seed, others mature. I had
almost put you down on the black list, but I've altered my mind in the
last two months.”</p>
<p>Again Loder stirred in his seat. A host of emotions were stirring in his
mind. Every word wrung from Lakely was another stimulus to pride, another
subtle tribute to the curious force of personality.</p>
<p>“Well?” he said. “Well?”</p>
<p>Lakely smiled. “We all know that Sefborough's ministry is—well,
top-heavy,” he said. “Sefborough is building his card house just a story
too high. It's a toss-up what 'll upset the balance. It might be the army,
of course, or it might be education; but it might quite as well be a
matter of foreign policy!”</p>
<p>They looked at each other in comprehensive silence.</p>
<p>“You know as well as I that it's not the question of whether Russia comes
into Persia, but the question of whether Russia goes out of Persia when
these Hazaras are subdued! I'll lay you what you like, Chilcote, that
within one week we hear that the risings are suppressed, but that Russia,
instead of retiring, has advanced those tempting twenty miles and
comfortably ensconced herself at Meshed—as she ensconced herself on
the island of Ashurada. Lakely's nervous, energetic figure was braced, his
light-blue eyes brightened, by the intensity of his interest.</p>
<p>“If this news comes before the Easter recess,” he went on, “the first nail
can be hammered in on the motion for adjournment. And if the right man
does it in the right way, I'll lay my life 'twill be a nail in
Sefborough's coffin.”</p>
<p>Loder sat very still. Overwhelming possibilities had suddenly opened
before him. In a moment the unreality of the past months had become real;
a tangible justification of himself and his imposture was suddenly made
possible. In the stress of understanding he, too, leaned forward, and,
resting his elbows on the desk, took his face between his hands.</p>
<p>For a space Lakely made no remark. To him man and man's moods came second
in interest to his paper and his party politics. That Chilcote should be
conscious of the glories he had opened up seemed only natural; that he
should show that consciousness in a becoming gravity seemed only right.
For some seconds he made no attempt to disturb him; but at last his own
irrepressible activity made silence unendurable. He caught up his pencil
and tapped impatiently on the desk.</p>
<p>“Chilcote,” he said, quickly and with a gleam of sudden anxiety, “you're
not by any chance doubtful of yourself?”</p>
<p>At sound of his voice Loder lifted his face; it was quite pale again, but
the energy and resolution that had come into it when Lakely first spoke
were still to be seen.</p>
<p>“No, Lakely,” he said, very slowly, “it's not the sort of moment in which
a man doubts himself.”</p>
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