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"But, d.i.c.k--"
Viviette interrupted her. "You must stay. It's only beginning to be exciting. If you only do the rest as beautifully as you did that, d.i.c.k, I'll stay here all day."
d.i.c.k, with a curious outward calm, contrasting with the fury of his mock encounter, put down the sword and went to the end of the table, where the case of pistols lay.
"At any rate, I must show you," said he, "the famous duelling pistols."
"They were the very pistols in the duel between his great-grandfather and Lord Estcombe," said Viviette.
"They've not been used from that day--he killed Lord Estcombe, by the by--till this. The case is just as it was left. I was going to tell you the story yesterday."
"I remember," said Katherine, by way of civility. "But Mrs. Ware stopped you."
She was a mild-natured woman, and the realistic conjuring up of gore-dripping ta.s.sels and b.l.o.o.d.y shirts upset her, and she desired to get away. She also saw that d.i.c.k was abnormally excited, and suspected that he had been drinking. Her delicate senses shrank from drunkenness.
"You must tell the story," cried Viviette. "It's so romantic. You like romantic things, Katherine. The great-grandfather was a d.i.c.k Ware too--Wild d.i.c.k Ware they used to call him. Go on, d.i.c.k."
d.i.c.k paused for a moment. He had a curious, dull, befogged sensation of being compelled to do things independently of volition. Presently he spoke.
"It happened in this very room, a hundred years ago. Lord Estcombe and my great-grandfather were friends--intimate friends from boyhood. Wild d.i.c.k Ware was madly in love with a girl who had more or less become engaged to him. Now, it came to his knowledge that Lord Estcombe had been using blackguard means to win away the girl's affections. And one day they were here"--he moved a pace or two to one side--"just as Austin and I are now. And the girl over there--"
Viviette, with a gay laugh, took up her position on the spot to which he pointed.
"Just in this identical place. I know the story--it's lovely!"
"An old Peninsula comrade of Wild d.i.c.k Ware's was here too--a man called Hawkins--"
"Katherine shall be Hawkins," cried Viviette.
"And in his presence," d.i.c.k continued, "Wild d.i.c.k Ware told the girl that he was mad for love of her, but that he would not force her choice; yet one of those two, himself or Lord Estcombe, she must choose, for good and all. She could not speak for shame or confusion. He said, 'Throw your handkerchief to whichever of us you love.' And they stood side by side--like this"--he ranged himself by Austin's side--"opposite the girl."
"And she threw the handkerchief!" cried Viviette.
"Throw yours!" said d.i.c.k. He looked at her with fierce intensity beneath rugged brows; Austin with laughing challenge. She knew that she was the object of each man's desire, and her s.e.x's triumph thrilled through her from head to foot. She knew that this jesting choice would have serious import. For some seconds the three remained stock still. She glanced flatteringly from one man to the other. Which should she choose? Her heart beat wildly. Choose one or the other she must. Outside that room no man lived whom she would marry. Each second strained the situation further. At last her spirit rose in feminine revolt against the trap which d.i.c.k had set for her, and, with a malicious look, she threw the handkerchief at Austin's feet. He picked it up and gallantly put it to his lips.
"In the story," exclaimed Viviette, "she threw it to Lord Estcombe.
Austin is Lord Estcombe."
"And I'm d.i.c.k Ware," cried d.i.c.k, in a strangled voice. "Wild d.i.c.k Ware.
And this is what he did. He dragged the girl out of the room first."
He took Viviette by the arm and roughly thrust her past the screen.
"Then--that case was on the table. And without a word Wild d.i.c.k Ware comes up to Lord Estcombe so--and says, 'Choose.'"
He gripped the pistols by the barrels, crossed them, and presented the b.u.t.ts to Austin. Austin waved them away with a deprecatory gesture and a smile.
"Really, old man, I can't enter into the spirit of it, like that. You're splendid. But if I took a hand, it would be tomfoolery."
"Oh, do, do," cried Viviette. "Let us go through with it and see just how the duel was fought. It will be thrilling. You'll have to fall dead like Lord Estcombe, and I'll burst into the room and tear my hair over your poor corpse. Do, Austin, for my sake."
He yielded. Any foolishness for her sake. He took a pistol.
"You'll have to be Major Hawkins, Katherine," he said lightly, as if inviting her to condescend to some child's game.
But Katherine put her hands before her face and shrank back. "No, no, no. I couldn't. I don't like it."
"Then I'll be Major Hawkins," said Viviette.
"You will?" d.i.c.k laughed harshly. "Then be it so."
"I know just what they did."
She placed the men back to back, so that Austin faced the further end of the room and d.i.c.k the open French window. They were to take three paces, count one, two, three, and, at the end of the third pace, they were to turn and fire.
d.i.c.k felt the touch of Austin's shoulder against his, and the flame at his heart grew fiercer and the h.e.l.l in his throat more burning, and the universe whirled round in a red mist. Viviette moved to the weapon-laden table.
"Now. One--two--three!"
[Ill.u.s.tration: d.i.c.k glared at him]
They paced and turned. d.i.c.k levelled his pistol instantly at Austin, with murderous hate in his eyes, and drew the trigger. The pistol clicked harmlessly. Austin, self-conscious, did not raise his pistol.
But d.i.c.k, broadening his chest, glared at him and shouted, wildly, madly:
"Fire, d.a.m.n you! Fire! Why the devil don't you fire?"
The cry was real, vibrant with fury and despair. Austin looked at him for an amazed moment; then, throwing his pistol on to one of the arm-chairs, he came up to him.
"What fool's game are you playing, d.i.c.k? Are you drunk?"
Katherine, with a low cry, flung herself between them, and, clinging to d.i.c.k's arm, took the pistol from his hand.
"No more of this--no more. The duel has been too much like reality already."
d.i.c.k staggered to a straight-backed chair by the wall, and, sitting down, wiped his forehead. He had grown deathly white. The flames had been suddenly quenched within him, and he felt cold and sick. Viviette, in alarm, ran to his side. What was the matter? Was he faint? Let her take him into the fresh air. Austin came up. But at his approach d.i.c.k rose and shrank away, glancing at him furtively out of bloodshot eyes.
"Yes. The heat has oppressed me. I'm not well. I'll go out."
He stumbled blindly towards the French window. Viviette followed him, but he turned on her rudely and thrust her back.
"I'm not well, I tell you. I don't want your help. Let me alone."
He pa.s.sed through the French window on to the terrace. The sky had clouded over, and a drizzle had begun to fall.
Viviette felt curiously frightened, but she put on an air of bravado as she came down the gallery.
"Have you all been rehearsing this little comedy?"