Gore left Banner's Post abruptly, to Evelyn's relief, and on the morning after his departure she and Cliffe stood on the steps before the other guests had come down to breakfast. It had rained all night, the mist hung low about Long Mountain's side, and a fresh wind woke waves of sound from the rustling pines. A creel hung round Cliffe's shoulders, and he contemplated the dripping woods with a smile of half-apologetic satisfaction. "The fishing should be great to-day!" he exclaimed. "But I feel that I'm playing truant. I ought to be back at the office. Guess the trout I catch will cost me high; but the temptation is pretty strong when I see the water rise." "I'm glad you have been rash for once," Evelyn replied. "Besides, you have an office full of people who can look after things for you." Cliffe shook his head. "That's the excuse I tried to make, but it won't quite work. If you want to be a successful operator, you have to sit tight with your finger on the pulse of the market. A beat or two more or less makes a big difference. Finance soon gets feverish." "And you are one of the doctors who send its temperature up or down." "I wonder whether you're to be pitied or envied. The work must be absorbing, and it's simple, in a way." "Simple!" Cliffe exclaimed. "Well, you have an object; your aims are definite and you know, more or less, how to carry them out. We others, who have no purpose in life, spend our time in amusements that leave us dissatisfied. When we stop to think, we feel that we might do something better, but we don't know what it is. The outlook is blank." Cliffe gave her a sharp glance. Evelyn had changed in the last few months, and she had been strangely quiet since her refusal of Gore. Seeing his interest, she laughed. "I'm not asking for sympathy; and I mustn't keep you from the trout. Go and catch as many as you can. It must be nice to feel that you have only to pick up a fishing-rod and be young again." She walked to the gate with him, but Cliffe stopped when they reached it, for a big automobile was lurching down the uneven road. The mud splashed about the car indicated distance traveled at furious speed, but it slowed at the bend near the gate, and Cliffe sighed as he recognized Robinson. "Wired for an auto' to meet me when I left the train," Robinson told him. "It was raining pretty hard, and they don't do much grading on these mountain roads, but I made the fellow rush her along as fast as he could." He took some letters from his wallet. "Read these and think them over while I get breakfast." Half an hour afterward they sat in a corner of the veranda, where Mrs. Willans' guests left them alone. These quiet, intent men of affairs obviously did not belong to their world. "Well?" Robinson said. "One of two things has got to be done; there's no middle course." Robinson nodded. "That's true. Middle courses generally lead to nothing." "Very well. We can cut out our deal with President Altiera, lose the money we have spent, and let the concessions go; or we can pay up again, hang on, and put the matter through." "What's your opinion? The fellow asks for more." "Do you mean to be guided by me?" "Yes," Robinson said. "Take which you think is the right line; I'll stand in." "It's pretty hard to see. We'll make good if we get Robinson had confidence in Cliffe's integrity and judgment. "An hour, if you like," he said; "then we'll have to pull out, whatever you decide." For a long while Cliffe sat silent with knitted brows. His wife made claims upon his means that he sometimes found it hard to satisfy; and it was his ambition that his daughter should be rich. After carefully pondering the letters, he saw that he might be involved in a conflict with forces whose strength he could not estimate, and defeat would cost him the fruit of several years' labor. Yet the prize to be won was tempting, and he could take a risk. Besides, they already had put a good deal of money into it. "Well," he said at last, "I've made up my mind." "To hold on, I guess," Robinson suggested with a smile. "That's so," Cliffe answered in a quiet voice. "What's more, I'm going out to look into things myself. We can talk it over on the way to town. I'll be ready as soon as I've told my wife." Robinson took out his watch. "Give you half an hour if we're to catch the train," he said. "Take me with you, won't you?" she begged. "I want to get away from Banner's Post." Cliffe hesitated a moment. "Why, yes," he then said; "I see no reason why you shouldn't go—particularly as your mother means to stay with Margaret Willans." When, a half hour later, the car started from the bottom of the steps and Mrs. Cliffe turned away with a wave of her hand, Evelyn stood in the drive, asking herself bluntly why she wished to accompany her father. A longing for change had something to do with it; she was getting tired of an aimless and, in a sense, uneventful life, for it was true that occupations that had once been full of pleasurable excitement had begun to pall. But this was not her only object. Grahame was somewhere on the coast she meant to visit, and she might meet him. Evelyn admitted with a blush that she would like to do so. The next morning a telegram arrived from Cliffe, directing her to join him in town, and ten days later she stood, at evening, on a balcony of the Hotel International, in Havana. It was getting dark, but a few lamps were lighted in the patio, and the moonlight touched one white wall. The air was hot and heavy, and filled with exotic smells, and the sound of alien voices gave Evelyn the sense of change and contrast she had sought. Yet she knew that, so far, the trip had been a failure. It had not banished her restlessness; Havana was as stale as New York. She remembered with regret how different it had been on her first visit. She turned as a man came out on the balcony that ran along the end of the house. He did not look like a Cuban, and she started when the moonlight fell upon him, for she saw that it was Grahame. He was making for the stairs at the corner where the two balconies joined and did not notice her. Evelyn realized that, as she wore a white dress, her figure would be indistinct against the wall, and, if she did not move in the next few moments, he would go down the stairs and disappear among the people in the patio. If he had meant to enter the hotel, he would not have come that way. She felt that if she let him go they might not meet again. After all, this might be wiser. Yet her heart beat fast, and she thrilled with a strange excitement as she stood irresolute, knowing that the choice she had to make would be momentous. Grahame reached the top of the stairs without turning, and was going down when she leaned over the balustrade. She did not consciously decide upon the action; it was as if something had driven her into making it. "Mr. Grahame!" she called softly. He looked up with the moonlight on his face and she saw the gleam she had expected in his eyes. Then he came swiftly toward her, and her indecision vanished when she gave him her hand. "This is a remarkably pleasant surprise, but I didn't see you until you spoke," he said. "Have you just come out of one of the rooms?" Grahame gave her a quick look, and she knew he was wondering why she had waited until the last moment. He was shrewd enough to see that the delay had some significance, but this did not matter. "Well," he said, "I'm glad you didn't let me pass, because I was going out into the street, and it's doubtful if I'd have come back." "Yes," said Evelyn; "I seemed to know that." He was silent for a moment, but his expression was intent and a faint glow of color showed in his brown face. Evelyn let him make what he liked of her admission. She had not been influenced by coquetry, but by a feeling that it was a time for candor. "I was thinking about an interview I'd just finished—that is why I didn't look round," he explained. "I came from Matanzas this afternoon." "Then the Enchantress isn't here?" "No; she's at Matanzas, but I can't get back to-night. Will you be here long?" "A day or two, waiting for a boat. I wonder whether you would stay and dine with us this evening?" Then a thought struck Evelyn, and she added: "That is, if it isn't undesirable for you to be seen here." She had not expected him to hesitate and was prepared for his reckless twinkle. "Of course I'll stay! But did you mean—if it was not unsafe?" "I suppose I did," she admitted with a smile. "You know I helped you in a mysterious plot the last time "There's no risk worth counting, and I'd take it if there was. When you have a temperament like mine it's hard to deny yourself a pleasure." "I shouldn't have thought you self-indulgent," Evelyn smiled. "Well," he said, "one's fortitude has its limits. I suppose it depends upon the strength of the temptation." He had answered in a light vein, and Evelyn followed his lead. "It's a relief to know you mean to stay. My father will be pleased to see you; but he may not have finished his business when dinner is ready, and I rather shrink from going down alone." They talked about matters of no importance for a time, and then went through the patio to the dining-room. It was not full, and Evelyn imagined that Grahame was glad there were several unoccupied chairs between them and the rest of the company. She noticed, moreover, that when people came in he glanced up quietly, as if he did not want her to notice his action, and she had a guilty feeling that she had made him take a risk that was greater than he would own. Yet she was glad that he had taken it. "Where are you going when you leave Havana?" he asked presently. "To Valverde, and afterward perhaps to Rio Frio." Grahame looked thoughtful, and Evelyn quietly studied him. Her training had made her quick at guessing what lay behind the reserve of people who "Why should I not go there?" she asked. "I don't know any good reason if your father's willing to take you, but the country's in a rather unsettled state just now." Grahame paused for a moment and added earnestly: "Don't trust Gomez." "Do you think we shall meet him?" "Yes," he said with a dry smile; "I think it very likely." "Then you must know something about my father's business, and what is going on in the country." "I believe I know more about the country than your father does. In fact, I'd like to warn him against Gomez, only that I imagine he's a good judge of character and already knows his man." Grahame wrote an address on a leaf of a small notebook and, tearing it out, put it on her plate. "I'm going to ask a favor. If you should meet with any difficulty at Rio Frio, will you send me a message through the man whose name I've written down? I might, perhaps, be of some use." "Do you expect us to get into any difficulty?" "No; but one can't tell—trouble might arise." "And, if it did, you could help us?" "Well," he said gravely, "I'd do my best." Evelyn's eyes sparkled. "I know you could be trusted! But all this mystery gives the trip an extra interest. Then, you have made it obvious that the Enchantress will be on the coast." "May I hope that this adds to your satisfaction?" Grahame said, smiling. "Now you're frivolous, and I was pleasantly ex Grahame looked up. An elderly Cuban gentleman, three or four places off, had once or twice glanced at them carelessly and then resumed his conversation with a lady beside him, but Grahame noticed that he stopped when Evelyn spoke. "Am I to tell my father what I have promised?" she asked. "You must use your own judgment about that." Evelyn understood him. He would not ask her to keep a secret from her father, and she liked his delicacy; but he looked thoughtful. She did not know that the Cuban gentleman engaged his attention. "Well," she said, "I'll tell him if it seems necessary; that is, if there's any reason for sending you word. Otherwise, of course, there would be no need to mention it." "No," he agreed with a smile that seemed to draw them closer because it hinted at mutual understanding. "One doesn't feel forced to explain things to you," Evelyn said impulsively. "That's an advantage. Explanations are a nuisance, and sometimes dangerous when they're important. I find them easiest when they don't matter." Cliffe came in and greeted Grahame cordially; and Grahame, glancing down the table without turning his head, saw the Cuban studying them. Something in the man's manner suggested that Cliffe's friendliness had surprised him. He made a few hasty pencil marks on the back of an old letter and then, looking up suddenly, caught Grahame watching him curiously. The Cuban pushed back his chair and left the room, al Evelyn, surprising the alert look on Grahame's face, was now more disturbed than ever on his account. Evidently there was danger for him here. Her fears would have been increased had she known the few words the spy wrote on his envelope. |