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"Ah!" exclaimed Madame de la Fontaine, "I was right then. Monsieur le Marquis is, shall we say, in confinement?"
"As you please, madam; as safe, for the time, as is my friend Dan Frost."
"_Eh bien_, monsieur! It is that you have--do you not say?--turned the tables upon us?"
"Precisely, madam," a.s.sented Tom.
"And you will not permit me even a word--ever so little a word--with my poor friend?" murmured Madame de la Fontaine plaintively.
"Again I am sorry to refuse you, madam; but--not even a little word."
"So! _Mais oui_, I am not greatly surprised. I was a.s.sured last night...."
"When you did not see the signals?" suggested Tom quickly.
"When I did not see the signals," repeated the lady, with a glance of the briefest enquiry, "I was a.s.sured that something had befallen Monsieur le Marquis. _Mais vraiment_, monsieur, you do us much dishonour in a.s.suming a wicked conspiracy on our parts. The Marquis is my friend; he is also the friend of the charming Mademoiselle. All that we wish, all that we would do is as much in her interest as in his own. But it is impossible that my old friend shall remain in confinement. On what condition, monsieur, will you release the Marquis de Boisdhyver?"
"On the condition, naturally, that my friend Dan Frost is released from the _Southern Cross_."
"Ah! Is it that you are quite sure that Monsieur Frost is confined on the ship?"
"Quite sure, Madame de la Fontaine. I was on board _The Southern Cross_ last night."
"Yes, I know it; and I congratulate you upon your extraordinary success.
Very well, then, I accept your condition. Monsieur Dan Frost returns; Monsieur le Marquis is released. And now you will perhaps have the kindness--"
"No, madame; in this affair the Marquis and his friends have been the aggressors. I cannot consent that you should hold any communication with the Marquis till Dan returns free and unharmed to the Inn."
"And what a.s.surance then shall I have that the Marquis will be released?"
"None, madame, but my word of honour."
"_Pardon, monsieur_. I accept your terms. Monsieur Frost shall return. The instant he enters the Inn at the Red Oak, you promise that the Marquis de Boisdhyver be released and that he be given this note from me?"
"Certainly, madam."
The lady took a sealed note from the pocket of her habit and handed it to Tom. "There remains, monsieur," she murmured, "but to bid you good-day.
If you will be so kind--"
She ran lightly down the steps, and held up her foot for Tom to a.s.sist her into the saddle.
"Your friend will return _tout de suite_, monsieur," she cried gayly, as she drew in the rein.
"And we shall have the pleasure of seeing you again?" asked Tom.
"Ah! who can tell?" She touched the horse lightly with her whip, inclined her head, and soon disappeared down the avenue of maples.
Some time later Nancy and Tom watched her cantering across the beach.
She waved her handkerchief as a signal to the schooner; a small boat put ash.o.r.e, and she was rowed out to _The Southern Cross_.
"Once Dan is back, and we get rid of the old Marquis," said Tom, "I shall breathe considerably easier."
"I can't believe they will give the game up so easily," was Nancy's reply. "Seizing the Marquis, Tom, was a check, not a mate."
Out on the schooner in the Cove, Madame de la Fontaine and Dan Frost were once more talking together.
"Dear boy," said the lady. "I cannot do that which I promised. It is impossible that your sister shall make to you the request to give me the torn sc.r.a.p of paper, for the reason that Mademoiselle Nancy has chosen to disappear. Have no fear, monsieur, for I have good reason to believe she has returned to the Inn at the Red Oak. Our schemes, _mon ami_, have failed. You are no longer a prisoner, you are free. And this is good-bye.
I abandon our mission. I leave the House on the Dunes to-day; to-morrow I return to France."
"But, madame, you bewilder me," exclaimed Dan. "Why should you go; why should we not all join forces, hunt for the treasure together, if there is a treasure; why this division of interests?"
"_C'est impossible_!" she exclaimed impetuously. "Monsieur le Marquis will not consent. He is treated with intolerable rudeness by your friend Mr. Pembroke. He will not accept that which I propose. And I--_vraiment, I_ desire no longer to work against you. No, monsieur Dan, _tout est fini_, we must say good-bye."
She held out her hands and Dan impetuously seized them. Then, suddenly, she was in his arms and his lips were seeking hers.
"I cannot let you go," he cried hoa.r.s.ely. "I cannot say good-bye."
For a moment he held her, but soon, almost brusquely, she repulsed him.
"_C'est folie, mon ami, folie_! We lose our heads, we lose our hearts."
"But I love you," cried Dan. "You must believe it; will you believe it if I give you the paper?"
"No, no!--What!--you wish to give to me the secret of the Oak Parlour?--"
"Aye, to entrust to you my life, my soul, my honour."
"Ah, but you must go," she murmured tensely.
"Captain Bonhomme is returning. It is better that he knows of your release after you are gone. _C'est vrai_, my friend, that I risk not a little in your behalf. Go now, quickly ... No! No!" she protested, as she drew away from him. "I tell you, _C'est folie_,--madness and folly. You do not know me. Go now, while there is time!"
"But you will see me again?" insisted Dan. "Promise me that; or, on my honour, I refuse to leave. Do with me what you will, but--"
"Listen!" she whispered hurriedly. "I shall meet you to-night at ten o'clock, at the end of the avenue of maples near to your inn; you know the place? _Bien_! Bring me the paper there, to prove that you trust me.
And I--_mais non_, I implore you--go quickly!"
Dan turned at last and opened the door. Madame de la Fontaine called sharply to the waiting Jean, and he, motioning to Dan to follow him, led the way on deck. In a moment they were in a little boat heading for the sh.o.r.e. The afternoon sun was bright in the western sky. The _Southern Cross_ rode serenely at anchor, and from her deck, Madame de la Fontaine was waving him good-bye.
CHAPTER XVII
THE MARQUIS LEAVES THE INN
By the time Dan was put ash.o.r.e on the beach of the Cove it was afternoon.
During the short row from the schooner he had been unable to exchange remarks with the surly Jean, for that individual's only response to his repeated efforts, was a surly "_Je ne parle pas anglais_," which seemed to answer as a general formula to the conspirators. He gave up at last in disgust, and waited impatiently for the small boat to be beached, distrustful lest at the last moment some fresh trick be played upon him.
Not that his ingenuous faith in the beautiful French lady failed him, but he was suspicious lest, having acted independently of the Marquis and Captain Bonhomme in releasing him, she should not have the power to make that release genuinely effective.