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"Perhaps you are right--things are usually balanced in some such way.
We all have our enemies," he added. "I have read somewhere that the fewer the personal foes, the weaker the man. And since we must have them in order to prove our personality," with a laugh which sounded peculiarly unnatural, "why, we can consider ourselves fortunate if they but stand out where we can see them."
"Your businesslike enemy seldom fights in the open," commented Ashton-Kirk with the air of a man merely making talk. "Our American politicians could teach you that fact."
The physician nodded.
"The ambuscade is effective," he agreed. "I learned its use in the Russo-j.a.panese war."
"So!" The secret agent's brows went up. "You served in that war then?
What regiment?"
"The 47th infantry, Siberians."
"It is peculiar how things come about," smiled Ashton-Kirk. "While waiting for Warwick I noticed that the house in your rear is occupied by j.a.panese. Rather close quarters for old opponents, is it not?"
"The j.a.panese," spoke Dr. Morse, "were the opponents of Russia."
"I see. You are on good terms with your neighbors, then?"
"No. They have been there almost as long as I have been here; but I have never spoken to one of them."
Just then there came a tap upon the door; the old servant woman entered, but at the sight of those present, she halted.
"I beg your pardon, Simon," she said to Morse. "I did not know you were engaged."
He looked at her coldly.
"Well, Nanon," said he, "what is it now? Out again? There is no service at your church to-night."
There was a jeer in his voice, but the old French woman paid no attention to it. That she addressed him by his first name indicated that she felt no sense of inferiority. Indeed, as Ashton-Kirk regarded her, he detected a look of contempt upon her severe face.
"No," she answered, "there is no service to-night, as you know very well. I came to speak of Drevenoff."
A peculiar look came into the eyes of the secret agent; it was as though he were groping about for something hidden away in his memory; then like a flash, recollection seemed to come.
"Well, what of him?" asked Dr. Morse.
"He is no better. Even now while he clips the hedges, he shakes with cold; again he burns."
The physician gestured impatiently. Arising he went to a small cabinet and took out a jar partly filled with whitish pills. While he was so engaged, Warwick whispered to Ashton-Kirk.
"Don't wonder at Nanon's manner. You know I'd told you she'd been in the family for years--before the doctor was born. He has the bad taste to sneer at her religion; and I really think that she considers him somehow evilly possessed. It's a sort of truce between them."
Dr. Morse placed some of the pellets in an envelope upon which he scrawled some lines.
"Tell him to take these," he said, handing them to the old woman. "The directions are on the envelope."
"I hope it is nothing serious," said his niece.
"He needs some quinine, that is all," returned the physician.
Old Nanon moved toward the door. Her withered, large veined right hand hung at her side; Ashton-Kirk noted her dart a sidelong glance toward Morse; then the bony forefinger made a rapid sign of the cross between them.
And so the door closed behind her
CHAPTER III
AN INTERNATIONAL AFFAIR
Next morning Ashton-Kirk's car was drawn up at his door; in the hall, the secret agent pulled on a pair of gloves; at his side stood the alert Fuller.
"You carried out my instructions?" asked the former.
"Yes," answered Fuller. "I telegraphed the secretary that you would reach Washington by 11:40 and would call upon him at once."
"You urged him that the matter was possibly one of much importance?"
"Yes."
The secret agent turned to Stumph, who stood at the front door.
"Have Dixon meet every Washington train after dark," said he. "We shall be on one or the other of them."
Stumph threw open the hall door and then that of the car; the soft throb of the engine changed to a startled snort, and then the huge vehicle glided away.
A little later the two men sat facing each other upon the heavy "Limited"; Ashton-Kirk turned the pages of a magazine. For a time Fuller was silent and thoughtful. But at length he said:
"Do you know--I don't just understand those two fellows behind the house last evening, the j.a.p, you know--and the one who acted as though he were cold. What are we to make of men who edge toward each other, apparently bent upon some sort of a secret communication--and then when they get within speaking distance, work away doggedly and at last depart without exchanging a word?"
"You are quite sure that there was no message dropped across the hedge, or stuck among its branches?"
"Positive. I did not take my eyes off them for a moment; and later I made it my business to go out and look. That they exchanged signals is scarcely possible, unless they were remarkably ingenious ones. And then, had they desired to signal, they could have done so at a distance; it would have been unnecessary for them to risk attracting attention by drawing so closely together."
Ashton-Kirk did not reply; and after another period spent in cogitation, Fuller spoke again.
"The feeling which you have spoken of as existing between old Nanon and her employer is rather queer, isn't it?"
"Somewhat."
"But that she should remain with him--even accompany him to a new country--and all the time hate, or fear, him is perplexing."
Ashton-Kirk nodded, his eyes half closed.
"Yes," he said, "it is rather so. But," and he opened his eyes, "don't forget that this woman is, by her trace of accent, a Breton, and the peasantry of that section have very rigorous notions as to duty."