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The launch was now running far out from the sh.o.r.e, which was lined with pretty villas, set here and there in the midst of cocoanut palms and oleander trees. Following the boat's path of rippling waves came another launch much smaller than Mr. Warren's. It was manned by two men who had apparently not observed them. The men were deep in earnest conversation.
"Oh, Marian, there is the Count de Sonde with his friend!" exclaimed her mother. "How fortunate that we should run across them, just now."
"Which one is the count?" asked Maud Warren. She had taken very little interest in anything before. "I hope he is not the older man."
"No; he is the slender, dark-haired one," returned Mrs. Smythe. "He is dressed in white."
In the meantime Mr. Stuart had changed his seat. He had come to Palm Beach to enjoy his four "Automobile Girls." No fascinating widow should swerve him from his original plans. Like most hard-working successful men he loved a holiday like a schoolboy and resented deeply any interference with his pleasure.
"Are my girls having a good time?" he queried, smiling into four charming faces.
"Yes, indeed!" exclaimed four voices in chorus.
"We thought the scenery beautiful in the Berkshires and along the Hudson river, Mr. Stuart. But this is the most beautiful of all!" cried Mollie, clasping her small hands ecstatically.
"Do you suppose people ever really work here?" inquired Grace. "It is like fairy land. Everything happens by magic."
"You are right, Grace. This is a land of pleasure," returned Mr. Stuart.
"The only people who work are the employes in the hotels and the servants in the cottages."
"Palm Beach is dedicated to pleasure," explained Ruth, "because it was by accident that it came to be here at all. So it can just as well be spared for an earthly paradise."
"Why is Palm Beach an accident?" queried Mollie.
"Years ago this was just a wild, desolate coast," Ruth went on. "Even now the wilderness is only a mile away. There was a wreck out there, somewhere, on the other side of the peninsula," she pointed toward the ocean. "A ship was loaded with cocoanuts, which were washed ash.o.r.e. By and by the cocoanuts sprouted and grew into tall palm trees. So this barren sh.o.r.e was transformed into one of the most beautiful palm groves in the world."
Mr. Stuart pinched his daughter's cheek. "You've been stealing a march on us, Mistress Ruth," he said. "You have been reading a guide book."
Just then a shadow clouded the brilliant sunshine. The engineer of the launch glanced up uneasily.
"You don't think it is going to rain, do you?" asked Mr. Warren.
"It would be a very unusual thing if it did, sir," replied the man, without committing himself.
A fresh wind had come up, bearing with it the fragrance of many flowers.
It seemed to have blown over miles of lily beds and orange groves.
Barbara closed her eyes as she breathed in the warm, scented air. "How easy to forget all responsibilities, in an enchanted place like this!"
she thought. "How easy just to drift along."
"Papa, do tell the man to turn back," said Maud in a voice that broke unpleasantly into Bab's reflections. "It's getting a little chilly. And besides, we must have tea this afternoon in the cocoanut grove."
"Very well, my dear," replied her father, turning to give his order to the engineer.
The launch swung around. Immediately the whole party spied another boat bobbing helplessly on the water. One of the men in it was leaning over examining the machinery of the frail craft. The other one, in white, stood at the side of the boat, scanning the water.
No other launches were in sight. The many pleasure boats which had dotted the lake with flecks of white, only a few minutes before, had now put in to sh.o.r.e. A black cloud had spread itself over the whole sky, casting a dark and ominous shadow over the lake.
As all the world knows--at least the part of the world which lives on pleasure waters--a strict etiquette prevails among these small boats.
One boat always helps another in distress.
The engineer of Mr. Warren's launch did not wait for orders. He turned at once toward the drifting craft.
"Is your engine broken?" he asked, as the boats touched sides.
The young man in white was the Count de Sonde himself. He looked decidedly relieved at the appearance of the rescuers. He removed his Panama hat with a flourish and bowed low to the women. The other man answered the boatman.
"We are quite helpless, you see," the count e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed, shrugging his shoulders and raising his eyebrows at the same time. "My friend can do nothing."
In the meantime the friend had arisen from the engine. He was examining the boatload of people with guarded interest.
"How do you do, Count? How are you, Monsieur Duval?" called Mrs. De Lancey Smythe.
It was not a time for conventional introductions. The boatman made a line fast from the small craft to the larger one. He meant to tow the smaller launch toward home.
But Mrs. De Lancey Smythe persisted. Mr. Warren and his friends must meet the Count de Sonde and Monsieur Duval.
Suddenly the heavens were shaken by a terrific clap of thunder.
Mrs. Smythe gave a little scream. "I am always frightened during a storm," she averred. "Mr. Stuart, would it be too much to ask you to a.s.sist me into the cabin?"
Miss Sallie glanced rather contemptuously at the other woman, and wondered if her fright were real. Mr. Stuart rose and courteously a.s.sisted Mrs. De Lancey Smythe into the tiny cabin, just as a driving sheet of rain bore down upon them.
The "Automobile Girls" crouched in the centre of the boat. Maud and Marian followed Mrs. Smythe.
"Make for the nearest boathouse!" called Mr. Warren to his engineer. "We can't get back to the hotel in such a storm as this."
The storm now burst in all its West Indian fury. The waters were churned into foam. The wind whistled and roared. The two small boats tossed about on the water like chips.
"We are just in time!" exclaimed Mr. Warren, as they at last reached the boathouse. "In another five minutes I believe we should have been swamped." He helped the women from the boat to the pier.
"What an escape!" gasped Mrs. Smythe. "Marian, my darling, are you all right?"
"Perfectly, Mama," replied her daughter rather scornfully. It was plain to the four "Automobile Girls" that Marian did not entirely approve of her mother's display of fear, and the tone in which she had answered told its own story.
The little company sought the shelter of the boathouse. The two foreigners went with them. In one of the men, Bab recognized the stranger she had noticed that morning on the hotel piazza. Mrs. De Lancey Smythe introduced him as Monsieur Duval.
"We were very lucky to have met you, sir," Mr. Duval said to Mr. Stuart.
Bab noticed that he spoke very good English, with only a slight foreign accent. "I am afraid our boat would have sunk if you had not come to our rescue."
Mr. Stuart bowed politely, but coldly. He was wondering if his girls and Miss Sallie would have bad colds from their wetting. They were standing apart from the others, laughing at their plight.
The young Count de Sonde had joined Marian and her mother, as soon as he entered the boathouse, but Maud was with them. It was upon Maud that the count immediately bestowed his attention. He smiled upon her, until Maud's foolish head began to flutter. Just think of capturing the attentions of a real count so quickly! Mr. Warren saw his daughter's delight and frowned slightly. Maud must not get any foolish ideas about foreigners in her head. He would put an end to that nonsense. He was about to stride over and take charge of affairs when a man servant in plain livery appeared on the path near the boathouse door. He had come from the pretty villa, which was only a hundred yards back from the boathouse, set in a thick grove of palms. The man carried a large bundle of wraps and umbrellas. He paused respectfully when he reached the steps leading to the pavilion.
"My lady would be glad if you would seek shelter from the storm in her house," he said in broken English to Mr. Warren.
It was great fun to scamper through the pouring rain to the pretty villa. The foreign coats and capes kept everyone dry. Now that they were on land Mr. Warren's boat party had begun to regard their adventure somewhat lightly.
Once on the porch of the villa they were ushered into a large, low-ceilinged room at one end of which a fire of pine knots was burning brightly. The room was empty. The newcomers cl.u.s.tered about the blaze to dry their soaked shoes.