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The Flying Mercury.
by Eleanor M. Ingram.
I
The roaring reports of the motor fell into abrupt silence, as the driver brought his car to a halt.
"You signaled?" he called across the grind of set brakes.
In the blending glare of the searchlights from the two machines, the gray one arriving and the limousine drawn to the roadside, the young girl stood, her hand still extended in the gesture which had stopped the man who now leaned across his wheel.
"Oh, please," she appealed again.
On either side stretched away the Long Island meadows, dark, soundless, apparently uninhabited. Only this spot of light broke the monotony of dreariness. A keen, chill, October wind sighed past, stirring the girl's delicate gown as its folds lay unheeded in the dust, fluttering her fur-lined cloak and shaking two or three childish curls from the bondage of her velvet hood. The driver swung himself down and came toward her with the unhasting swiftness of one trained to the unexpected.
"I beg pardon--can I be of some use?" he asked.
"We are lost," she confessed hurriedly. "If you could set us right, I should be grateful. I--we must get home soon. I have been a guest at a house somewhere here, and started to return to New York this afternoon. The chauffeur does not know Long Island; we can not seem to find any place. And now we have lost a tire. I was afraid--"
She broke off abruptly, as her companion descended from the limousine.
"We only want to know the way; we're all right," he explained. "This is my cousin; I came out after her, you see. Don't get so worried, Emily--we'll go straight on as soon as Anderson changes the tire."
He huddled his words slightly and spoke too rapidly, the round, good-humored face he turned to the white light was too flushed; otherwise there was nothing unusual in his appearance. And his caste was evident and unquestionable, in spite of any circ.u.mstance. There was no anger in the girl's dark eyes as she gazed straight before her, only pity and helpless distress.
"I can tell your chauffeur the road," the driver of the gray car quietly said. "Have you far to go?"
"To the St. Royal," she answered, looking at him. "My uncle is there.
Is that far?"
"No; you can reach there by ten o'clock. I will speak to your chauffeur."
"Do, like a good fellow," the other man interposed. "Awfully obliged.
You're not angry, Emily," he added, lowering his voice, and moving nearer her. "Since we're engaged, why should you get frightened simply because I proposed we get married to-night instead of waiting for a big wedding? I thought it was a good idea, you know. It isn't my fault Anderson got lost instead of getting us home for dinner, is it?"
"Hush, d.i.c.k," she rebuked, hot color sweeping her face. "You, you are not well. And we are not engaged; you forget. Just because people want us to be--" Too proud to let her steadiness quiver, she broke the sentence.
If the driver had heard, and it was scarcely possible that he had not, he made no sign. By the acetylene light he produced an envelope and pencil, and proceeded to sketch a map, showing the route to the limousine's chauffeur.
"Understand it?" he queried, concluding. He had a certain decision of manner, not in the least arrogant, but the result of a serene self-surety that somehow accorded with his lithe, trained grace of movement. A judge of men would have read him an athlete, perhaps in an unusual line.
"Yes, sir," the chauffeur replied. "I'll get Miss Ffrench home in no time after I get the tire on."
The indiscretion of the spoken name was ignored, except for a slight lift of the hearer's eyebrows.
"How long does it take you to change a tire?"
"About half an hour; it's night, of course."
An odd, choking gurgle sounded from the gray machine, where a dark figure had sat until now in quiescent muteness.
"Half an hour!" echoed the gray machine's driver, and faced toward the chuckle. "Rupert, it isn't in your contract, but do you want to come over and change this tire?"
"I'll do it for you, Darling," was the sweet response; the small figure rolled over the edge of the car with a cat-like celerity.
"Where are your tools, you chauffeur? Quick!"
The bewildered chauffeur mechanically reached for a box on the running-board, as the young a.s.sistant came up, grinning all over his malign dark face.
"Oh, quicker! What's the matter, rheumatism? They wouldn't have you in a training camp for motor trucks on Sunday. Hustle, _please_."
There never had been anything done to that sedate limousine quite as this was done. Even the preoccupied girl looked on in fascination at a rapidity of unwasted movement suggesting a conjuring feat.
"By George!" exclaimed her escort. "A splendid man you've got there!
Really, a splendid chauffeur, you know."
The driver smiled with a gleam of irony, but disregarded the comment.
"Would you like to get into your car?" he asked the girl. "You will be able to start very soon."
"I see that," she acknowledged gratefully. "Thank you; I would rather wait here."
"Is your chauffeur trustworthy?"
"Oh, yes; he has been in my uncle's employ for three years. But he was never before out here, in this place."
There was a pause, filled by the soft monotone of insults drifting from the side of the limousine, for Rupert talked while he worked and his fellow-worker did not please him.
"Wrench, baby hippo! Oh, look behind you where you put it--you need a memory course. You ought to be pa.s.sing spools to a lady with a sewing-machine. Did you ever see a motor-car before? There, pump her up, do." He rose, drew out his watch and glanced at it. "Five minutes; I'll have to beat that day after to-morrow."
The driver looked over at him and their eyes laughed together. Now, for the first time, the girl noticed that across the shoulders of both men's jerseys ran in silver letters the name of a famous foreign automobile.
"I am very grateful, indeed," she said bravely and graciously. "I wish I could say more, or say it better. The journey will be short, now."
But all her dignity could not check the frightened shrinking of her glance, first toward the interior of the limousine and then toward the man who was to enter there with her. And the driver of the gray machine saw it.
"We have done very little," he returned. "May I put you in your car?"
The chauffeur was gathering his tools, speechlessly outraged, and making ready to start. Seated among the rugs and cushions, under the light of the luxurious car, the girl deliberately drew off her glove and held out her small uncovered hand to the driver of the gray machine.
"Thank you," she said again, meeting his eyes with her own, whose darkness contrasted oddly with the blonde curls cl.u.s.tered under her hood.
"You are not afraid to drive into the city alone?" he asked.
"Alone! Why, my cousin--"
"Your cousin is going to stay with me."