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'Man designs his own game,' thought Rallywood as he followed the servant into whose charge he was given, 'or he is forced to stand out and circ.u.mstances play it for him. In the years all is one.'
Whichever way the issue of this night's work turned, Maasau and Valerie must both pa.s.s from his life forever. The one supreme obstacle which lurks always beside the mercenary's path had arisen to bar his advance at last.
Valerie opened the door softly. She was trembling and afraid, but she would not be outdone in generosity by Rallywood. She had determined to thank him for the words spoken at Kofn Ford, and to show him how entirely she comprehended their chivalrous intention. But when her eyes fell upon him all thought of self faded. He was standing midway between the gleaming wine and gla.s.s of the side-table and the flickering glow of the open stove, upright and stately as he ever appeared to her, but in his new att.i.tude her sharpened senses perceived a suggestion of disheartenment and solitude.
Swept away by the feeling of the moment, she crossed the room to his side and laid her hand upon his arm.
'What is it? Something has happened,' she said.
Rallywood looked down at her. The beautiful eyes like starlit darkness, her clear-hued loveliness, the soft dusky curls about her brow, her girlish reserves and petulances, all her sweet unapproachable personality enhanced to pain the knowledge that he was looking his last upon them.
'Nothing to distress you, Mademoiselle, because M. Selpdorf knows all about it.'
'Then tell me; I know so much already.'
'I wish I could. But I think his Excellency might prefer to tell you himself.'
'Is it good news, then? Major Counsellor has succeeded? Then why are you so sad?'
'Sad, Mademoiselle?' he answered with a smile. 'Men often look sad when they are only hungry and dog-tired.'
'Then eat,' she said. 'Let me give you some wine.'
She drew him to the table and poured out a gla.s.s of wine.
'To the success of Maasau and of England,' she said. Then touching it with her lips in the graceful fashion of Maasau, she handed it to him.
'Hark! I think I hear my father arriving, and there is something I must say to you before he comes.'
She clasped her hands nervously, the bare shapely hands with their gleaming rings, and Rallywood watched her and felt as if he were dreaming.
'Captain Rallywood, I want to thank you. I can never thank you enough for that night at Kofn Ford. I understood--pray believe I understood it--and I think you are the n.o.blest gentleman alive!'
Rallywood did not hesitate. There was one thing Valerie should know and be certain of in the uncertain future.
'Give me a moment, Mademoiselle,' he exclaimed, detaining her. 'I see you do not quite understand. I could not expect you to understand. But now--now that I am leaving Maasau, I must tell you the truth. Perhaps you will believe it some day. I am proud----'
'I know it, and yet you--oh, say no more! For my sake you stooped to say it. It was not true! But I knew that.'
He took her hands between his own in a firm strong clasp.
'Listen, Mademoiselle. It was true! Since first I saw you it has always been true!'
'I remember!' she said breathlessly. She could not help saying it.
'Do you?' he answered; the temptation to wander a little was too sweet.
'You wore this cloak,' he touched it softly with his fingers, then laid his hand over hers deliberately, in the quiet confident way in which he did everything and which she had grown to love, 'and ever since I have carried the glove you despised. And though this is my good-bye, I will carry it--always.'
'But--but----'
'Oh, I don't ask you to believe me now,' he said bitterly. 'I am not n.o.ble, Mademoiselle. I was only too proud to say I loved you that night, as,' with another smile, 'I was only too proud not to say it before.'
Valerie raised her face and her eyes were full of light.
'Then it was true--thank G.o.d!'
But Rallywood, though he saw the purpose of her speech, would not understand its significance. He led her towards the door by which she had entered.
'You must go, Mademoiselle. I--dare not keep you with me longer.
Good-bye, and may G.o.d go with you, Valerie!'
She stopped suddenly and kissed the hand that held hers.
'I too am proud,' she whispered, and the door closed upon her.
CHAPTER XXVII.
THE MAN OF THE HOUR.
'Selpdorf is the man of the hour,' Counsellor once said to Rallywood, and the Major's sayings had a trick of lingering in the memory. With the Chancellor then still remained the key to the situation. He was implicated in the conspiracy, but he had less to gain and far more to lose than the others. A dangerous condition and one possible of development.
All this pa.s.sed in a flash through Rallywood's mind as the opposite door opened to admit M. Selpdorf, who replied stiffly to Rallywood's bow.
'I was not prepared to see you this evening,' began Selpdorf.
'I have brought the despatches, your Excellency,' replied Rallywood, taking the packet from his pocket but continuing to hold it in his hand.
Selpdorf eyed him.
'From whom?'
'Lieutenant Unziar.'
The affair was falling out in an unexpected manner. Selpdorf was a student of human nature as all of his craft must be, and Rallywood offered for his observation a character out of the common and hard for a Maasaun to read. How had he escaped from the dilemma in which he had been so carefully placed? The Chancellor was curious to hear. The man was an artist in the human pa.s.sions.
'From Lieutenant Unziar?' Selpdorf repeated tentatively. 'And your prisoner? The man whom I ordered you to keep at the block-house?'
The Chancellor half expected to hear that Counsellor was also in Revonde, and that Rallywood with an una.s.suming but unspeakable effrontery had called to explain his own view of the matter.
'Unziar is with him--with Major Counsellor at Kofn Ford. Unziar was unable to ride on at once after crossing the river, which is in flood.
Therefore I have come.'
Was it possible Rallywood had merely shirked facing the difficulty in this way? thought Selpdorf.
'Ah, Major Counsellor? And these are the despatches?'