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"You will ask her to do that?"
"Certainly; she can stop here very well on her way to Ostend. She would be at Ostend now but for this affair. Perhaps that is another reason why she is ill-humoured. She is so fond of life and gaiety, and in summer Markheim is rather dull. Besides, there is the tradition to maintain."
"How do you know that she is in an ill-humour," questioned Sue, "if you have not seen her?"
"Oh, she writes to me--I had a letter from her this morning. I can see she is not well-pleased--quite the opposite, in fact!--at the way things are going."
"And how are they going?"
"They seem to be going against us," said the Prince, with a touch of bitterness.
"But how _can_ they be? I thought things were at a stand-still until Lord Vernon got--got well enough to take them up again."
"So did I--that is what one would naturally suppose. Yet it seems that an undercurrent has set in against us. I fear that I made a mistake," he added, gloomily, "in agreeing with Lord Vernon not to proceed further for a week, though, under the circ.u.mstances, I could scarcely refuse. He seems well enough," and he glanced around, "to hear what I have to say."
"He _is_ well enough!" cried Sue, indignantly; and certainly at that moment, talking eagerly to Nell, that gentleman appeared quite the reverse of an invalid. "_I_ will speak to him--I am under no promise--I believe--"
She stopped, fearing that she might say too much--after all, she could not betray Lord Vernon; she could only appeal to him, warn him.
"Yes?" her companion encouraged her, his eyes on her face.
"I believe that I can help you," she concluded, a little lamely. "I want to help--the people. Of course, we Americans believe that a people ought to choose their own rulers--but where that isn't possible, the next best thing is to give them the best available. I should be proud to help do that!"
"But you are taking my word for it," he protested. "You ought to hear the other side. Perhaps they might convince you--"
"No, they wouldn't!" cried Susie. "Your word is all I need; you've explained things so clearly."
"Thank you," he said, in a vibrant voice, still looking at her.
"Besides," she added, with a glance upward, "dad agrees with you, and I've a great deal of faith in dad."
"I shall be very glad of your help on any terms," he said, refusing to be cast down.
"And you will tell me if anything unexpected happens? I may be able to help you more than you think."
"Yes," he promised, "I will tell you the moment I have any news."
"You haven't any real news--about the undercurrent, I mean? You don't _really_ know--"
"No; it is just in the air; I do not know where the rumours come from, but my aunt has heard them also. There is a vague impression that we are losing."
"But you shan't lose!" cried Susie. "You shan't lose; not even if I have to--to--"
"Not even if you have to--?" prompted the Prince, eagerly, as she stammered and stopped.
"To play my trump card," she finished, with a little unsteady laugh.
"Don't ask me what it is, but it's a good one!"
Meanwhile, as she walked beside the invalid chair, Nell was making her confession.
"Lord Vernon," she began, in a low voice, "for a time last night, I feared that I had utterly ruined your cause."
He glanced up at her quickly.
"In what way?" he asked.
"You remember the note you wrote m--us the first day?"
"Perfectly," he answered, noting the stammer, and understanding it, with a quick leap of the heart.
"I should, no doubt, have destroyed it at once, but I thought it would be perfectly safe in my desk."
"And it was stolen? No matter, Miss Rushford. It isn't worth worrying about. I'm sick of the whole affair, anyway--I shall rather welcome the catastrophe. You've lost sleep over it," he continued, looking at her keenly. "It has made you almost ill! I shall never forgive myself!"
"Thank you," she said, softly, her lips trembling, her eyes very bright.
"It is beautiful of you to be so generous. But fortunately the note was not stolen. I found it afterwards among some note-paper, where it had somehow found its way."
"And you destroyed it?"
"No," she said, and took it from her bosom. "I thought I would better restore it to you, so that you yourself could destroy it. Here it is,"
and she held it out to him with fingers not wholly steady.
He took it, his eyes still on her face.
"It has caused us enough trouble," he said, and made as though to tear it into bits.
But Nell laid her hand upon his arm.
"Without looking at it?" she protested.
"You are right," he agreed, and opened it and glanced at the contents.
His hands were trembling slightly as he folded it again.
"On second thought," he said, and there was a certain thickness in the words which Nell was too agitated to notice, "I believe that I shall keep it. It is the only souvenir I have, you know, of our first meeting."
And he smiled up at her--such a smile as Meamoun must have bent upon Cleopatra as he drained the poisoned cup.
CHAPTER XIV
A Bearding of the Lion
Susie Rushford was of that temperament which, so far from avoiding difficulties, rather rushes to meet them, welcoming "each rebuff that turns earth's smoothness rough," to quote again from her favourite poet.