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"It would be wise also to keep out of the way of Jaffery Chayne. With my own eyes I've seen him pick up a man he didn't like and"--I made an expressive gesture--"throw him clean away."
"Right O!" said he.
He nodded, winked impudently and walked away. A thought struck me. I overtook him.
"Where are you staying in Havre?"
He looked at me suspiciously. "What do you want to know for?"
"To save you from being murdered, as you would most certainly be if we chanced upon the same hotel."
"I'm staying at the Phares--the swagger one on the beach near the Casino."
"Excellent," said I. "Go on swaggering. Good-bye."
"Good-bye, old pal," said he.
He tilted his white hat to a rakish angle and marched away.
I rejoined Jaffery and Liosha. He still held her wrists; but she stood unresisting, tense and rigid, with averted head, looking sidewise down.
Her lip quivered, her bosom heaved. Jaffery had mastered her fury, but now we had to deal with her shame and humiliation.
"Let her go!" I whispered.
Jaffery freed her. She rubbed her wrists mechanically, without moving her head. I wished Barbara had been there; she would have known exactly what to do. As it was, we stood by her, somewhat helplessly.
"_Monsieur_," said a voice close by, and we saw our little blue-bloused porter. He explained that he had been seeking us everywhere. If we did not make haste we would lose the Paris train.
I replied that as we were not going to Paris, we were not pressed for time; but this little outside happening broke the situation.
"Better give this fellow your luggage ticket, Liosha," said Jaffery.
She looked about her bewildered and then I noticed on the ground a leather satchel which she had been carrying. I picked it up. She extracted the ticket and we all went to the custom-house.
"What's the programme now?" I asked Jaffery.
"Hotel," said he. "This poor girl will want a rest. Besides, we'll have to stay the night."
"Our friend is staying at the Hotel des Phares."
"Then we'll go to Tortoni's."
An ordinary woman would have drawn down the motor veil which she wore c.o.c.kled-up on her travelling hat; but Liosha, grandly unconcerned with such vanities, showed her young shame-stricken face to all the world. I felt intensely sorry for her. She realised now from what a blatant scoundrel she had been saved; but she still bitterly resented our intervention. "I felt as if I was stripped naked walking between them"--that was her primitive account later of her state of mind.
"Barbara," said I, "sent you her very dear love."
She nodded, without looking at me.
"Barbara would have come too, if Susan had not been ill."
She gave a little start. I thought she was about to speak; but she remained silent. We entered the customs-shed, when she attended mechanically to her declarations.
On emerging free into the open air again, we found that the cheery sun had pierced the morning clouds and gave promise of a glorious day. The luggage was piled on the hotel omnibus. We took an open cab and rattled through the narrow flag-paved streets of the harbour quarter of the town. As we emerged into a more s.p.a.cious thoroughfare, suddenly from a gaudy column at the corner flared the name of Ras Fendihook. I caught the heading of the _affiche_: "Music-Hall-Eldorado." Part of the mystery was solved. Jaffery had been right in his deduction that he had left London on a professional engagement; but we had not thought of an engagement out of England. I had a correct answer now to my question: "Why Havre of all places?" Jaffery sitting with Liosha on the back seat of the victoria saw it too and we exchanged glances. But Liosha had eyes for nothing save her hands tightly clasped in her lap. We pa.s.sed another column before we entered the Place Gambetta, where already at that early hour, above its wide terrace, the striped awning of Tortoni's was flung.
We alighted at the hotel and ordered our three rooms; coffee and roll to be taken up to madame; we men would eat our pet.i.t dejeuner downstairs.
Liosha left us without saying a word.
Bathed, shaved, changed, refreshed by the good _cafe au lait_, gladdened by the sunshine and smugly satisfied with our morning's work, quite a different Hilary Freeth sat with Jaffery on the terrace from the sleepless wreck he had awakened two hours before. My urbane dismissal of Ras Fendihook lingered suave in my memory. The glow of conscious heroism warmed me, even like last night's dinner, to sympathy with my kind.
After despatching, by the cha.s.seur, a long telegram to Barbara, and sending up to Liosha's room a bunch of red roses we bought at a florist's hard by, I surrendered myself idly to the contemplation of the matutinal Sunday life of provincial France, while Jaffery smoked his pipe and uttered staccato maledictions on Mr. Ras Fendihook.
I love provincial France. It is narrow, it is bourgeois, it is regarding of its _sous_, it is what you will. But it lives a s.p.a.cious, out-of-door, corporate life. On Sundays, it does not bury itself, like provincial England, in a cellular house. It walks abroad. It indulges in its modest pleasures. It is serious, it is intensely conscious of family, but it can take deep breaths of freedom. It is not Sundayfied into our vacuous boredom. It clings to the picturesque, in which it finds its dignified delight. The little soldier clad in blue tunic and red trousers struts along with his _fiancee_ or _matresse_ on his arm; the cuira.s.sier swaggers by in bra.s.s helmet and horsehair plume; the cavalry officer, dapper in light blue, with his pretty wife, drinks syrup at a neighbouring table in your cafe. The work-girls, even on Sunday, go about bareheaded, as though they were at home in the friendly street. The cure in shovel hat and ca.s.sock; the workmen for whom Sunday happens not to be the _jour de repos hebdomadaire_ ordained by law, in their blue _sarreau_; the peasants from outlying villages--the men in queer sh.e.l.l-jackets with a complication of b.u.t.tons, the women in dazzling white caps astonishingly gauffered; the lawyer in decent black, with his white cambric tie; the fat and greasy citizen with fat and greasy wife and prim, pig-tailed little daughter clad in an exiguous cotton frock of loud and unauthentic tartan, and showing a quarter of an inch of sock above high yellow boots; the superb pair of gendarmes with their c.o.c.ked hats, wooden epaulettes and swords; the white-ap.r.o.ned waiters standing by cafe tables--all these types are distinct, picked out pleasurably by the eye; they give a cheery sense of variety; the stage is dressed.
So when Jaffery asked me what in the world we were going to do all day, I replied:
"Sit here."
"Don't you want to see the place?"
"The place," said I, "is parading before us."
"We might hire a car and run over to Etretat."
"There's Liosha," I objected. "We can't leave her alone and she's not in a mood for jaunts."
"She won't leave her room to-day, poor girl. It must be awful for her.
Oh, that swine of a blighter!"
His wrath exploded again over the iniquitous Fendihook. For the dozenth time we went over the story.
"What on earth are we going to do with her?" he asked. "She can't go back to the boarding-house."
"For the time being, at any rate, I'll take her down to Barbara."
"Barbara's a wonder," said he fervently. "And do you know, Hilary, there's the makings of a devilish fine woman in Liosha, if one only knew the right way to take her."
The right way, I think, was known to me, but I did not reveal it. I a.s.sented to Jaffery's proposition.
"She has a vile temper and the mind and facile pa.s.sions of a Spanish gipsy, but she has stunning qualities. She's the soul of truth and honour and as straight as a die. And brave. This has been a nasty knock for her; but I don't mind betting you that as soon as she has pulled herself together she'll treat the thing quite in a big way."
And as if to prove his a.s.sertion, who should come sailing towards us past the long line of empty tables but Liosha herself. Another woman would have lain weeping on her bed and one of us would have had to soothe her and sympathise with her, and coax her to eat and cajole her into revisiting the light of day. Not so Liosha. She arrayed herself in fresh, fawn-coloured coat and skirt, fitting close to her splendid figure, which she held erect, a smart hat with a feather, and new white gloves, and came to us the incarnation of summer, clear-eyed as the morning, our roses pinned in her corsage. Of course she was pale and her lips were not quite under control, but she made a valiant show.
We arose as she approached, but she motioned us back to our chairs.
"Don't get up. I guess I'll join you."
We drew up a chair and she seated herself between us. Then she looked steadily and unsmilingly from one to the other.
"I want to thank you two. I've been a d.a.m.n fool."