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"Do you not resent it, this patronizing att.i.tude?"
"Oh, no--we are very proud to be patronized by England," cynically.
"It's a fine thing to have a lord tell you that you wear your clothes jolly well."
"I wonder if you are serious or jesting."
"I am very serious at this moment," said Fitzgerald quietly catching the other by the wrist and turning the palm.
M. Ferraud looked into his face with an astonishment on his own, most genuine. But he did not struggle. "Why do you do that?"
"I am curious, Mr. Ferraud, when I see a hand like this. Would you mind letting me see the other?"
"Not in the least." M. Ferraud offered the other hand.
Fitzgerald let go. "What was your object?"
"Mon dieu! what object?"
Fitzgerald lowered his voice. "What was your object in digging holes in yonder chimney? Did you know what was there? And what do you propose to do now?"
M. Ferraud coolly, took off his spectacles and polished the lenses. It needed but a moment to adjust them. "What are you talking about?"
"You are really M. Ferraud?" said the young man coldly.
The Frenchman produced a wallet and took out a letter. It was written by the president of France, introducing M. Ferraud to the amba.s.sador at Washington. Next, there was a pa.s.sport, and far more important than either of these was the Legion of Honor. "Yes, I am Anatole Ferraud."
"That is all I desire to know."
"Shall we return to the ladies?" asked M. Ferraud, restoring his treasures.
"Since there is nothing more to be said at present. It seems strange to me that foreign politics should find its way here."
"Politics? I am only a b.u.t.terfly hunter."
"There are varieties. But you are the man. I shall find out!"
"Possibly," returned M. Ferraud thinking hard.
"I give you fair warning that if anything is missing--"
"Oh, Mr. Fitzgerald!"
"I shall know where to look for it," with a smile which had no humor in it.
"Why not denounce me now?"
"Would it serve your purpose?"
"No," with deeper gravity. "It would be a great disaster; how great, I can not tell you."
"Then, I shall say nothing."
"About what?" dryly, even whimsically.
"About your being a secret agent from France."
This time M. Ferraud's glance proved that he was truly startled. Only three times in his career had his second life been questioned or suspected. He eyed his hands accusingly; they had betrayed him. This young man was clever, cleverer than he had thought. He had been too confident and had committed a blunder. Should he trust him? With that swift unerring instinct which makes the perfect student of character, he said: "You will do me a great favor not to impart this suspicion to any one else."
"Suspicion?"
"It is true: I am a secret agent;" and he said it proudly.
"You wish harm to none here?"
"_Mon dieu_! No. I am here for the very purpose of saving you all from heartaches and misfortune and disillusion. And had I set to work earlier I should have accomplished all this without a single one of you knowing it. Now the matter will have to go on to its end."
"Can you tell me anything?"
"Not now. I trust you; will you trust me?"
Fitzgerald hesitated for a s.p.a.ce. "Yes."
"For that, thanks," and M. Ferraud put out a hand. "It is clean, Mr.
Fitzgerald, for all that the skin is broken."
"Of that I have no doubt."
"Before we reach Corsica you will know."
And so temporarily that ended the matter. But as Fitzgerald went over to the chair just vacated by the secretary, he found that there was a double zest to life now. This would be far more exciting than dodging ice-floes and freezing one's toes.
Laura told him the news. Their guests would arrive that evening in time for dinner.
It was Breitmann's habit to come down first. He would thrum a little on the piano or take down some old volume. To-night it was Heine. He had not met any of the guests yet, which he considered a piece of good fortune. But G.o.d only knew what would happen when _she_ saw him. He dreaded the moment, dreaded it with anguish. She was a woman, schooled in acting, but a time comes when the best acting is not sufficient. If only in some way he might have warned her; but no way had opened. She would find him ready, however, ready with his eyes, his lips, his nerves. What would the others think or say if she lost her presence of mind? His teeth snapped. He read on. The lamp threw the light on the scarred side of his face.
He heard some one enter, and his gaze stole over the top of his book.
This person was a woman, and her eyes traveled from object to object with a curiosity tinged with that incert.i.tude which attacks us all when we enter an unfamiliar room. She was dressed in black, showing the white arms and neck. Her hair was like ripe wheat after a rain-storm: oh, but he knew well the color of her eyes, blue as the Adriatic. She was a woman of perhaps thirty, matured, graceful, handsome. The sight of her excited a thrill in his veins, deny it how he would.
She scanned the long rows of books, the strange weapons, the heroic and sinister flags, the cases of b.u.t.terflies. With each inspection she stepped nearer and nearer, till by reaching out his hand he might have touched her. Quietly he rose. It was a critical moment.
She was startled. She had thought she was alone.
"Pardon me," she said, in a low, musical voice; "I did not know that any one was here." And then she saw his face. Her own blanched and her hands went to her heart. "Karl?"
CHAPTER XIV