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Nor had the man any alternative but to vacate his seat.
Paul's spirits rose as for the first time in his life he found himself seated by the lady's side, playing on her behalf, to win a desperate game.
But the girl's inspiration was gone, and Paul's knowledge of this form of gambling availed him nothing. Time after time they lost until practically nothing remained of the great pile of money which had been stacked on the table before her when he had entered the room.
The girl watched the money dwindle with every evidence of consternation.
Paul sought to console her.
"Don't despair," he whispered. "I think I have enough with me to see us through."
When he had at first sat down to a.s.sist her she had stared at him with considerable astonishment. Now she appeared utterly confused.
"I don't understand," she said in a low voice. "You have certainly done your best to help me, but I cannot see why you wish me to win."
Paul turned and looked her full in the eyes.
"How long will it be," he asked in a low voice, "before you come to trust me?"
Without further word he drew from his pocket the liberal supply of bank-notes with which he had prepared himself for his evening's play, and laid them on the table before his astonished companion.
As this little scene had attracted more attention from those about him than pleased Verdayne, he indicated with a slight nod to the _croupier_ to proceed, and calmly placed a pile of gold pieces of large denomination on the green double nought.
The wheel spun. The ball clicked slower and slower. The gaming spirit of the devotees once more claimed them and the veiled lady and her chivalrous escort were forgotten in the interest centered on the little ivory sphere.
Slower and slower and slower it ran, until it settled in place with a last click.
The company drew a mingled long breath. The monotonous sing-song voice of the _croupier_ chanted, "Twenty-six and the black wins," and he raked away the stake from before the veiled lady.
Paul's face never changed, nor did the lady speak. Once more the gold was piled, and once more raked away. The other players, forgetting the strange entrance of the lady's champion, were now absorbed in following his failing fortune.
Again and again Paul lost, until finally the last of the generous pile was swept away. With a truly stoical British smile Paul reached for his cheque book, and glanced about him for some one who possibly could identify him. But the lady rose from the table with a little gasp and steadied herself with her hands on the back of her chair.
At the same moment the door by which Paul had entered opened again, and in there came two gentlemen in evening dress. A third man followed closely behind them, and a flush of irritation crept up the back of Paul's neck as he recognized Schwartzberger.
The room was quite hushed. The men about the table had been awed by the vast sum of money which the mysterious lady had staked and lost.
As she moved a step forward as though to go, they drew aside to give her free pa.s.sage, so that now she found herself face to face with the men who had just entered.
Looking over her head, Paul saw the pork-packer glance quickly at him, his face a complete study in astonishment. He bowed to the lady, but said nothing. It was Paul who spoke.
"This is most unfortunate," he said.
"What do you mean?" asked the lady.
"Your loss," said Paul hastily. "This is no fit place for you to remain in. Allow me to show you the way out at once."
He thrust himself between her and the two men who had entered, whereupon Schwartzberger burst forth in an angry voice that was perfectly audible to all.
"You d.a.m.ned British hypocrite!" he roared. His face was purple and he seemed suddenly to become inarticulate with rage.
Paul pushed the baize-covered door open and first bowed the lady out.
"Mademoiselle," he said, in a formal voice, "you will greatly oblige me by stepping to the other end of the pa.s.sage. I have something to say to these gentlemen."
Making a little inclination with her head, the lady walked slowly away, leaving Paul to confront Schwartzberger. And Paul by no means minced matters.
"Pardon me," he said, facing about once more, "but your a.s.sistance is not required. You will be kind enough to call on me at the _Hotel Metropole_ to-morrow morning, when I shall ask you for an explanation.
Till then I have no further need of you." And he turned and pa.s.sed through the door, leaving the man once more speechless.
With a few steps Paul reached the lady, who was waiting for him. As he approached she turned to him, lifting the heavy veil which had hid her features, and then, leaning toward her in the subdued light of the pa.s.sage-way, Paul gazed with amazement into the face of--the Comtesse de Boistelle.
CHAPTER XII
There come times in every one's life when explanations, even if one might give them, are useless. And Sir Paul Verdayne realized that fact to its fullest when he faced the quasi Countess in the Casino vestibule.
What unhappy inspiration had caused her to dress herself in a manner almost identical with that in which Mademoiselle Vseslavitch had appeared at Lucerne? Mentally, Paul roundly d.a.m.ned a score of times the imitative instinct of the s.e.x. He could not forgive himself for having mistaken a person of the Comtesse's stamp for the lady whom he had sought.
But there the Comtesse stood. And Paul was conscious that in the glance she bent on him there was more than amazement at his Quixotic replenishing of her vanished fortunes. In the excitement of the losing play, she had no thought of the motive which might have prompted Paul's act. Now that it was done, she had instantly decided, after the manner of her kind, that it was a tremendous bid for her favour. And the unconcern with which such a sum had been placed at her disposal appealed to just such a temperament as hers.
The Comtesse de Boistelle was not one to place too low a value upon her own attractiveness. The attentions lavished on her by her porcine American admirer had lacked the artistic touch of this _coup_ of the English n.o.bleman, and she was willing to capitulate on the spot in favour of the latter.
All this--and more--Paul read in the warm, admiring glance of the Comtesse which met his astonished gaze. The horrible futility of any attempt at explanation struck a chill to his heart, and started the perspiration on his forehead. Flight, ignominious flight, seemed the only escape, and yet at this, the st.u.r.dy British spirit of Sir Paul rebelled. A flash of inspiration--a memory from his school-days, came to mind, as he groped for a plan, in the line from Virgil, "In the middle way lies safety."
With a bow whose courtesy was irreproachable, Paul spoke first:
"Permit me to send you to your hotel, fair partner of a losing venture." He smiled grimly at the unconscious truth in his chance phrase. "To-morrow may give me the great pleasure of a further acquaintance--and under less depressing circ.u.mstances."
Then, before the Comtesse could quite marshal her vocabulary to reply in a fitting manner, Paul had bowed her through the great entrance; the door of the carriage shut, and she was driven away.
The uncomfortable sense of having made a thorough-going a.s.s of himself was not conducive to sound slumber on the part of Sir Paul that night.
Nor did it aid in preserving his temper during the unpleasant scene the following morning when Schwartzberger, still furious with rage, called at the _hotel._
It was a relief, however, to Paul to have some object on which to vent his pent-up feelings, and if the pork-packer did not quite understand all that he said, Paul at least left no mistake in Schwartzberger's mind as to the total lack of grounds for the latter's jealousy, and filled him with a proper awe of the wrath of an Englishman once aroused.
Paul realized that by the time she met Schwartzberger, if not before, the Comtesse would discover the veiled emphasis on mere probability in his parting suggestion as to any future meeting. So he was not surprised to see the tonneau of the big green motor car with its customary occupants whirling past him as he drove to the station that afternoon.
Well! the unbelievable _faux pas_ which he had committed--thanks to chance and his own imbecility--had turned him from his search. He no longer had the heart to linger about Nice peering into strange ladies'
faces. The Lord only knew what blunder he would make next if he continued to look for her there!