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"On deck, every one, if you please," he insisted. "Refreshments are being served there. There are inquisitive people who watch my launch, and it is inadvisable to remain here long."
People hurried out then as though their one desire was to escape from the scene of the tragedy. Lady Cynthia, still clinging to Francis' arm, led him to the furthermost corner of the launch. There were real tears in her eyes, her breath was coming in little sobs.
"Oh, it was horrible!" she cried. "Horrible! Mr. Ledsam--I can't help it--I never want to speak to Sir Timothy again!"
One final horror arrested for a moment the sound of voices. There was a dull splash in the river. Something had been thrown overboard. The orchestra began to play dance music. Conversation suddenly burst out.
Every one was hysterical. A Peer of the Realm, red-eyed and shaking like an aspen leaf, was drinking champagne out of the bottle. Every one seemed to be trying to outvie the other in loud conversation, in outrageous mirth. Lady Isabel, with a gla.s.s of champagne in her hand, leaned back towards Francis.
"Well," she asked, "how are you feeling, Mr. Ledsam?"
"As though I had spent half-an-hour in h.e.l.l," he answered.
She screamed with laughter.
"Hear this man," she called out, "who will send any poor ragam.u.f.fin to the gallows if his fee is large enough! Of course," she added, turning back to him, "I ought to remember you are a normal person and to-night's entertainment was not for normal persons. For myself I am grateful to Sir Timothy. For a few moments of this aching aftermath of life, I forgot."
Suddenly all the lights around the launch flamed out, the music stopped.
Sir Timothy came up on deck. On either side of him was a man in ordinary dinner clothes. The babel of voices ceased. Everyone was oppressed by some vague likeness. A breathless silence ensued.
"Ladies and gentlemen," Sir Timothy said, and once more the smile upon his lips a.s.sumed its most mocking curve, "let me introduce you to the two artists who have given us to-night such a realistic performance, Signor Guiseppe Elito and Signor Carlos Marlini. I had the good fortune," he went on, "to witness this very marvellous performance in a small music-hall at Palermo, and I was able to induce the two actors to pay us a visit over here. Steward, these gentlemen will take a gla.s.s of champagne."
The two Sicilians raised their gla.s.ses and bowed expectantly to the little company. They received, however, a much greater tribute to their performance than the applause which they had been expecting. There reigned everywhere a deadly, stupefied silence. Only a half-stifled sob broke from Lady Cynthia's lips as she leaned over the rail, her face buried in her hands, her whole frame shaking.
CHAPTER x.x.xVI
Francis and Margaret sat in the rose garden on the following morning.
Their conversation was a little disjointed, as the conversation of lovers in a secluded and beautiful spot should be, but they came back often to the subject of Sir Timothy.
"If I have misunderstood your father," Francis, declared, "and I admit that I have, it has been to some extent his own fault. To me he was always the deliberate scoffer against any code of morals, a rebel against the law even if not a criminal in actual deeds. I honestly believed that The Walled House was the scene of disreputable orgies, that your father was behind Fairfax in that cold-blooded murder, and that he was responsible in some sinister way for the disappearance of Reggie Wilmore. Most of these things seem to have been shams, like the fight last night."
She moved uneasily in her place.
"I am glad I did not see that," she said, with a s.h.i.+ver.
"I think," he went on, "that the reason why your father insisted upon Lady Cynthia's and my presence there was that he meant it as a sort of allegory. Half the vices in life he claims are unreal."
Margaret pa.s.sed her arm through his and leaned a little towards him.
"If you knew just one thing I have never told you," she confided, "I think that you would feel sorry for him. I do, more and more every day, because in a way that one thing is my fault."
Notwithstanding the warm suns.h.i.+ne, she suddenly s.h.i.+vered. Francis took her hands in his. They were cold and lifeless.
"I know that one thing, dear," he told her quietly.
She looked at him stonily. There was a questioning fear in her eyes.
"You know--"
"I know that your fattier killed Oliver Hilditch."
She suddenly broke out into a stream of words. There was pa.s.sion in her tone and in her eyes. She was almost the accuser.
"My father was right, then!" she exclaimed. "He told me this morning that he believed that it was to you or to your friend at Scotland Yard that Walter had told his story. But you don't know you don't know how terrible the temptation was how--you see I say it quite coolly--how Oliver Hilditch deserved to die. He was trusted by my father in South America and he deceived him, he forged the letters which induced me to marry him. It was part of his scheme of revenge. This was the first time we had any of us met since. I told my father the truth that afternoon.
He knew for the first time how my marriage came about. My husband had prayed me to keep silent. I refused. Then he became like a devil. We were there, we three, that night after you left, and Francis, as I live, if my father had not killed him, I should have!"
"There was a time when I believed that you had," he reminded her. "I didn't behave like a pedagogic upholder of the letter of the law then, did I?"
She drew closer to him.
"You were wonderful," she whispered.
"Dearest, your father has nothing to fear from me," he a.s.sured her tenderly. "On the contrary, I think that I can show him the way to safety."
She rose impulsively to her feet.
"He will be here directly," she said. "He promised to come across at half-past twelve. Let us go and meet him. But, Francis--"
For a single moment she crept into his arms. Their lips met, her eyes shone into his. He held her away from him a moment later. The change was amazing. She was no longer a tired woman. She had become a girl again.
Her eyes were soft with happiness, the little lines had gone from about her mouth, she walked with all the spring of youth and happiness.
"It is marvellous," she whispered. "I never dreamed that I should ever be happy again."
They crossed the rustic bridge which led on to the lawn. Lady Cynthia came out of the house to meet them. She showed no signs of fatigue, but her eyes and her tone were full of anxiety.
"Margaret," she cried, "do you know that the hall is filled with your father's luggage, and that the car is ordered to take him to Southampton directly after lunch?"
Margaret and Francis exchanged glances.
"Sir Timothy may change his mind," the latter observed. "I have news for him directly he arrives."
On the other side of the wall they heard the whinnying of the old mare, the sound of galloping feet from all directions.
"Here he comes!" Lady Cynthia exclaimed. "I shall go and meet him."
Francis laid his hand upon her arm.
"Let me have a word with him first," he begged.
She hesitated.
"You are not going to say anything--that will make him want to go away?"
"I am going to tell him something which I think will keep him at home."