He went straight to the writing-room. Only one or two of his fellow-passengers were up, and he had the place to himself. He wrote first:
This letter he sealed, addressed, and laid aside. He then wrote to the American Consulate, addressing the note to the Consul and Vice-Consul, saying that he committed to their care—
He then wrote out his telegram, wondering whether the United States Consul could put it through:
While Guild was busy writing and consigning what he had written to separate envelopes, he was aware of considerable movement and noise outside on deck—the passing to and fro of many people, whistle blasts from other craft—in fact, all the various species of bustle and noise which, aboard any steamer, indicate its approach to port. He raised his head and tried to see, but it was still raining and the air was dull with fog. Passengers, stewards, and officers came and went, passing through the writing-room where he sat in a corner sorting and sealing his letters. Twice, glancing up over his shoulder, he noticed a steward cleaning up, dusting and arranging the pens, ink, and writing paper on the several tables near by—one of those too And so it happened this time, for, as Guild, intent on what he was writing, reached out absently for another envelope, a package of them was thrust into his hand with a bustling, obsequious—"Paper, sir! Yes, sir"—Beg pardon, sir! I'm sorry!"—For somehow the inkwell had been upset and the pile of letters scattered over the floor. "Damn it!" said Guild savagely, springing back to avoid the streaming ink. The steward appeared to be overwhelmed; down he flopped on his knees to collect the letters, hopping up at intervals to sop the flowing flood of ink from the desk. Guild took the letters from him grimly, counted the sealed envelopes, then without a word went to the neighbouring desk, and, sitting down there, wrote on the last sealed envelope not yet addressed—the envelope which contained the cipher code, translation, and the information concerning the Edmeston Company. When he had written on it: "To be delivered to the British Consul in a week," he gathered all the letters, placed them in his breast pocket, buttoned his coat, and went out. For half an hour he walked to and fro under the shelter of the roofed deck, glancing absently across the rail where there was nothing to see except grey mist, grey water, and rain. After he had enough of this he went below. Karen was not in the cabin, but her luggage stood there beside his own. He found her on the starboard deck very comfortably established. The idiot deck steward who had upset his ink-well and scattered his letters was serving her obsequiously with marmalade. As Guild approached Karen looked up at him coolly enough, though a bright colour surged into her face. The steward bustled away to find more coffee and rolls. "Do you feel rested at all?" asked Guild pleasantly. "Yes, thank you." "May I take the next chair and have breakfast with you?" "Yes, please." He seated himself. She said nothing, ate nothing. Suddenly it occurred to him that in her quaint way she was waiting for his breakfast to appear before beginning her own. "You are not waiting for me, are you?" he asked. "Don't do that; everything will be cold." With an odd air of old-fashioned obedience, which always seemed to make her more youthful to him, she began her breakfast. "We'll be docking presently," he remarked, glancing out into the fog and thinly falling rain. "Yes." He lay back in his chair, not caring for her monosyllables, Neither the freshness of her clothes nor of her skin seemed to have suffered from the discomforts of the night; her hair was lustrous and crisply in order. From her hat-crown to the palms of her gloves rolled back over her wrists, she seemed to have just left the hands of a clever maid, so fresh, sweet, fragrant and immaculate she appeared to him, and he became uncomfortably conscious of his knickerbockers and badly wrinkled tweeds. The same fool of a steward brought his coffee. And as Karen offered no encouragement to conversation he breakfasted beside her in silence. Afterward he lighted a cigarette, and they both lay back on their steamer chairs watching the fog and the drizzle and the promenading passengers who all appeared to be excited at the approaching process of docking and over the terrible episode of the previous night. In all languages it was being discussed; Guild could catch fragments of conversation as groups formed, passed, and repassed their chairs. Another thing was plain to him; Karen had absolutely nothing to say to him, and apparently no further interest in him. From time to time he looked at the pure profile which never turned in response. Self-possessed, serene, the girl gazed out into the fog as though she were quite alone on deck. Nor did there seem to be any effort in her detached interest from her environment. And Guild The docking of the Feyenoord in the fog interested him very little; here and there a swaying mast or a black and red funnel loomed up in the fog, and the air was full of characteristic noises—that is all he saw or heard where he lay silent, brooding on fate and chance and on the ways of a woman in the pride of her youth. The idiot steward reappeared and Guild sent him below for their luggage. On the gang-plank they descended with the throng, shoulder to shoulder in silence. Inspection did not take long; then a porter who had been following took their luggage. "Karen, do you speak Dutch?" asked Guild, mischievously. "Yes—a little." "I supposed you did," he said smilingly. "Please ask him the shortest way to the United States Consulate." She turned indifferently to the porter: "Wat is de Kortste weg naar——" She hesitated, then with a dainty malice indescribable—"—Naar the Yankee Consulate?" she added calmly. Guild reddened and strolled a few steps forward, thoroughly incensed. The porter smothered a smile: "Mejuffrouw—" he "Hoe ver is het?" The porter glanced sideways and cunningly after Guild, then sank his voice: "Freule—" he began, but the girl's haughty amazement silenced him. He touched his cap and muttered in English: "Madam is known to me. The chain is long from London to Trois Fontaines. I am only another link in that chain—at madam's service." "I am served—sufficiently. Find a motor cab and tell the driver to take us to the United States Consulate." The porter's visage expressed sullen curiosity: "Why," he asked in German, "does the gracious, well-born young lady desire to visit the American Consulate when the German Consulate is possibly expecting her?" At that she straightened up, staring at the man out of coldly insolent eyes. "That is enough," she said. "Take our luggage to a motor cab." "To the Yankee Consulate?" "To the Consulate of the United States! Do you hear? Move, then!" she said crisply. It was raining torrents; Guild held the sullen porter's umbrella while Karen entered the cab; the luggage was stowed, the vehicle wheeled out into rain-shot obscurity. Karen turned impulsively to the man beside her: "Forgive my rudeness; I am ashamed to have insulted your Consulate." "Do you?" "Does it matter?" he asked lightly. "Yes. Are my amends acceptable to you?" "Of course. But what am I—Karen——" "You are—amiable. It was very common of me." "It might have been rather common in anybody else. You couldn't be that. Somehow," he added, smiling, "as we say in America, you seem to get away with it, Karen." "You are very—amiable," she repeated stiffly. And constraint fell between them once more, leaving him, however, faintly amused. She could be such a little girl at times. And she was adorable in the rÔle, though she scarcely suspected it. At the American Consulate the cab stopped and Guild turned up his coat collar and sprang out. While he was absent the girl lay back in her corner, her eyes fixed on the rain-smeared pane. She had remained so motionless for some time when a tapping at the cabin window attracted her attention. A beggar had come to the street side of the cab and was standing there, the rain beating on his upturned face. And the girl hastily drew out her purse and let down the window. Suddenly she became rigid; the beggar had said something to her under his breath. The English shilling fell from her fingers to the floor of the cab. "Your steamer swarmed with English spies. One of them was your stewardess." The girl's lips parted, stiffly: "I don't understand," she said with an effort. "The stewardess spied on the deck steward, Ridder. They were all watching each other on that ship. And everybody watched you and the American. Ridder told me to follow you to the American Consulate." "Who are you?" "I served as one of the waiters in the saloon. GrÄtz knows me. If you are carrying any papers of value be careful." "What do you mean?" "Ridder gave you some papers. The stewardess saw him. She came ashore and watched you while your luggage was being inspected. She knows you have driven to the American Consulate. Your porter told her—the fool! Do you know what she is up to?" "I—I can—guess. I think you had better go—quick!" she added as the Consulate door opened and Guild came out. And she fumbled in her purse for a coin, thrust it hastily through the window, and turned in confusion to meet the young man's sternly questioning eyes. "What are you doing?" he asked bluntly. "A man—begging." "For what, Karen? For money or information?" The girl winced and avoided his gaze. The cab "Which was it he wanted, Karen?" repeated Guild quietly. "Was it money or—something else he wanted?" "Does—it—concern you?" she stammered. "Yes. Because I have just learned over the Consulate telephone that German agents are now attempting to do what you refrained from doing last night." "What?" "Steal the papers I had of you." "Do you mean the papers you stole?" "I mean the papers I took by highway robbery. There is a difference," he added. "But both are robbery, and I thought you were above such things." "I am!" she said, flushing. "No, you are not!" he retorted sternly. "What you were too fastidious to do for yourself last night—take the papers when you thought I was asleep—you had done for you this morning by a steward!" "I did not!" "Why do you deny it? What do you mean? Don't you know that while I was busy in the writing-room a steward upset my ink, scattered my papers, stole the envelope containing the papers I took from you, and left me a sealed envelope full of tissue paper?" "It isn't true!" "It is true." "How do you know?" "Your stewardess told me over the telephone a few moments ago. Karen, you are untruthful!" "I am not untruthful! It does look like it but I am not! I did not know that the deck steward had robbed you. He came to my door and gave me the papers, saying that he had picked them up in the corridor outside our—my—door! I did not engage anybody to steal them—if it is stealing to recover—my own—property——" "That deck steward is a spy, but I don't understand how he could have known that I had taken the papers from you." "I don't know either," she said excitedly. "But everybody knew everything on board that ship. It was a nest of spies." His grim features relaxed. "I'm sorry I charged you with untruth, Karen. I never shall again. But—what was I to think?" "When I tell you a thing—that is what you are to think," she said crisply. "Yes.... I realize that now. I am sorry. May I ask your forgiveness?" "Yes—please." "Then—I do ask it." "Accorded." "May I ask a little more?" he continued. "What?" "May I ask you to tell me what you did with those papers after the deck steward gave them to you?" "I shall not tell you." "Then I am afraid that I shall have to tell you how The girl blushed hotly: "The contemptible creature!" she exclaimed. "A little sewing," repeated Guild, coolly. "And," he continued, "you sewed those papers to your clothing. The stewardess saw you do it." "Very well! Suppose I did." "You have them on you now." "And then?" "Why it was a silly thing to do, Karen." "Silly? Why?" "Because," he said calmly, "I must have them, and it makes it more awkward for us both than if you had merely put them back into your satchel." "You—you intend—to——" Her amazement checked her, then flashed out into wrath. "Do you know," she said, "that you are becoming impudent?" "Karen," he retorted very quietly, "a man of my sort isn't impudent. But, possibly, he might be insolent—if he chooses. And perhaps I shall choose." Checked, her lips still quivering, the girl, despite her anger, understood what he meant—knew that she was confronting a man of her own caste, where insolence indeed might happen, but nothing more plebeian. "I—spoke to you as though you were an American," she said slowly. "I forgot——" She bit her lip; her eyes filled and she averted her face. Presently the cab stopped. "We're at the station," he said briefly. Whether Guild had paid for the entire compartment or whether it happened so she did not inquire, but they had the place to themselves, so far. Guild paid no further attention to her except to lay a couple of Tauchnitz novels beside her on the seat. After that he opened a newspaper which he had brought away with him from the Consulate, and began to read it without troubling to ask her permission. As the paper hid his perfectly expressionless face she ventured to glance at it from time to time. It was the New York Herald and on the sheet turned toward her she was perfectly able to read something that interested her and sent faint shivers creeping over her as she ended it:
Before the train started a commissionaire appeared, hurrying. He opened the door of their compartment, set a pretty basket inside, which was to be removed at the first station beyond. The basket contained a very delicious luncheon, and Karen looked up shyly but gratefully as Guild set about unpacking the various dishes. There was salad, chicken, rolls and butter, a pÂtÉ, some very wonderful pastry, fruit, and a bottle of Moselle that looked like liquid sunshine. There was one pasteboard box which Guild gave to her without opening it. She untied the violet ribbon, opened it, sat silent. He seemed to pay no attention to what she was doing. After a moment she lifted out the cluster of violet-scented orchids, drew the long pin from them, and fastened them to her blouse. "Thank you—very much," she said shyly. "Do you care for orchids?" "Yes ... I am a little—surprised." "Why?" "That you should—think to offer them—to me——" He looked up, and his grey eyes seemed to be laughing, but his mouth—that perplexing, humorous, inscrutable mouth of his remained grave and determined. "I? Merciless?" "You are. You made me use force with you when you should not have resisted. And now you have done something more merciless yet." "W—what, Kervyn?" "You know ... I must have those papers." "Kervyn!" "Dear—look at me. No—in the eyes. Now look at me while I say, as seriously and as gently as I know how, that I am going to have those papers!... You know I mean what I say.... That is all—dear." Her eyes fell and she looked at her orchids. "Why do you speak that way to me—after giving me these?" "What have orchids to do with a man's duty?" "Why did you give them to me?" "Why? Because we are friends, if you will let us be." "I was willing—am still—in spite of—everything. You know I am. If I can forgive you what you did to me in our stateroom last night, surely, surely Kervyn, you won't take any more chances with my forgiveness—will you?" He said: "I shall have to if you force me to it. Karen—I never liked any woman as much as I like you. We have known each other two days and a night. But in that time we both have lived a long, long time." She nodded, thoughtfully. She remained silent, brushing her orchids with her finger-tips, absent-eyed, serene. After a moment he thought that the ghost of a smile was hovering on her lips, but he was not sure. Presently she looked up: "Shall we lunch?" she asked. |