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The Prince's face darkened.
"He will find my way a little hard to get out of," he said fiercely. "Go and get some dinner, Felix, and then try and find out whether Knigenstein has any notion of leaving England. He will not trust a matter like this to correspondence. Stay--I know how to manage it. I will write and ask him to dine here next week. You shall take the invitation."
"He will be at Arlington Street," Felix remarked.
"Well, you can take it on to him there," the Prince directed. "Go first to his house and ask for his whereabouts. They will tell you Arlington Street. You will not know, of course, the contents of the letter you carry; your instructions were simply to deliver it and get an answer. Good! you will do that."
The Prince, while he talked, was writing the note.
Felix thrust it into his pocket and went out. In less than half an hour he was back. The Baron had returned to the German Emba.s.sy unexpectedly before going to Arlington Street, and Felix had caught him there. The Prince tore open the answer, and read it hastily through.
"THE GERMAN EMBa.s.sY, "Wednesday evening.
"Alas! my dear Prince, had I been able, nothing could have given me so much pleasure as to have joined your little party, but, unfortunately, this wretched climate, which we both so justly loathe, has upset my throat again, and I have too much regard for my life to hand myself over to the English doctors. Accordingly, all being well, I go to Berlin to-morrow night to consult our own justly-famed Dr. Steinlaus.
"Accept, my dear Prince, this expression of my most sincere regret, and believe me, yours most sincerely, "KARL VON KNIGENSTEIN."
"The doctor whom he has gone to consult is no man of medicine," the Prince said thoughtfully. "He has gone to the Emperor."
CHAPTER XIX.
WOLFENDEN'S LOVE-MAKING.
"Lord Wolfenden?"
He laughed at her surprise, and took off his cap. He was breathless, for he had been scrambling up the steep side of the hill on which she was standing, looking steadfastly out to sea. Down in the valley from which he had come a small boy with a bag of golf clubs on his back was standing, making imaginary swings at the ball which lay before him.
"I saw you from below," he explained. "I couldn't help coming up. You don't mind?"
"No; I am glad to see you," she said simply. "You startled me, that is all. I did not hear you coming, and I had forgotten almost where I was. I was thinking."
He stood by her side, his cap still in his hand, facing the strong sea wind. Again he was conscious of that sense of extreme pleasure which had always marked his chance meetings with her. This time he felt perhaps that there was some definite reason for it. There was something in her expression, when she had turned so swiftly round, which seemed to tell him that her first words were not altogether meaningless. She was looking a little pale, and he fancied also a little sad. There was an inexpressible wistfulness about her soft, dark eyes; the light and charming gaiety of her manner, so un-English and so attractive to him, had given place to quite another mood. Whatever her thoughts might have been when he had first seen her there, her tall, slim figure outlined so clearly against the abrupt sky line, they were at all events scarcely pleasant ones. He felt that his sudden appearance had not been unwelcome to her, and he was unreasonably pleased.
"You are still all alone," he remarked. "Has Mr. Sabin not arrived?"
She shook her head.
"I am all alone, and I am fearfully and miserably dull. This place does not attract me at all: not at this time of the year. I have not heard from my uncle. He may be here at any moment."
There was no time like the present. He was suddenly bold. It was an opportunity which might never be vouchsafed to him again.
"May I come with you--a little way along the cliffs?" he asked.
She looked at him and hesitated. More than ever he was aware of some subtle change in her. It was as though her mental att.i.tude towards him had adapted itself in some way to this new seriousness of demeanour. It was written in her features--his eyes read it eagerly. A certain aloofness, almost hauteur, about the lines of her mouth, creeping out even in her most careless tones, and plainly manifest in the carriage of her head, was absent. She seemed immeasurably nearer to him. She was softer and more womanly. Even her voice in its new and more delicate notes betrayed the change. Perhaps it was only a mood, yet he would take advantage of it.
"What about your golf?" she said, motioning down into the valley where his antagonist was waiting.
"Oh, I can easily arrange that," he declared cheerfully. "Fortunately I was playing the professional and he will not mind leaving off."
He waved to his caddie, and scribbled a few lines on the back of a card.
"Give that to McPherson," he said. "You can clean my clubs and put them in my locker. I shall not be playing again this morning."
The boy disappeared down the hill. They stood for a moment side by side.
"I have spoilt your game," she said. "I am sorry."
He laughed.
"I think you know," he said boldly, "that I would rather spend five minutes with you than a day at golf."
She moved on with a smile at the corners of her lips.
"What a downright person you are!" she said. "But honestly to-day I am not in the mood to be alone. I am possessed with an uneasy spirit of sadness. I am afraid of my thoughts."
"I am only sorry," he said, "that you should have any that are not happy ones. Don't you think perhaps that you are a little lonely? You seem to have so few friends."
"It is not that," she answered. "I have many and very dear friends, and it is only for a little time that I am separated from them. It is simply that I am not used to solitude, and I am becoming a creature of moods and presentiments. It is very foolish that I give way to them; but to-day I am miserable. You must stretch out that strong hand of yours, my friend, and pull me up."
"I will do my best," he said. "I am afraid I cannot claim that there is anything in the shape of affinity between us; for to-day I am particularly happy."
She met his eyes briefly, and looked away seawards with the ghost of a sorrowful smile upon her lips. Her words sounded like a warning.
"Do not be sure," she said. "It may not last."
"It will last," he said, "so long as you choose. For to-day you are the mistress of my moods!"
"Then I am very sorry for you," she said earnestly.
He laughed it off, but her words brought a certain depression with them. He went on to speak of something else.
"I have been thinking about you this morning," he said. "If your uncle is going to play golf here, it will be very dull for you. Would you care for my mother to come and see you? She would be delighted, I am sure, for it is dull for her too, and she is fond of young people. If you----"
He stopped short She was shaking her head slowly. The old despondency was back in her face. Her eyes were full of trouble. She laid her delicately gloved fingers upon his arm.
"My friend," she said, "it is very kind of you to think of it--but it is impossible. I cannot tell you why as I would wish. But at present I do not desire any acquaintances. I must not, in fact, think of it. It would give me great pleasure to know your mother. Only I must not. Believe me that it is impossible."
Wolfenden was a little hurt--a good deal mystified. It was a very odd thing. He was not in the least a sn.o.b, but he knew that the visit of the Countess of Deringham, whose name was still great in the social world, was not a thing to be refused without grave reasons by a girl in the position of Mr. Sabin's niece. The old question came back to him with an irresistible emphasis. Who were these people? He looked at her furtively. He was an observant man in the small details of a woman's toilette, and he knew that he had never met a girl better turned out than his present companion. The cut of her tailor-made gown was perfection, her gloves and boots could scarcely have come from anywhere but Paris. She carried herself too with a perfect ease and indefinable distinction which could only have come to her by descent. She was a perfect type of the woman of breeding--unrestrained, yet aristocratic to the tips of her finger-nails.
He sighed as he looked away from her.
"You are a very mysterious young woman," he said, with a forced air of gaiety.
"I am afraid that I am," she admitted regretfully. "I can a.s.sure you that I am very tired of it. But--it will not last for very much longer."
"You are really going away, then?" he asked quickly.
"Yes. We shall not be in England much longer."
"You are going for good?" he asked. "I mean, to remain away?"
"When we go," she said, "it is very doubtful if ever I shall set my foot on English soil again."
He drew a quick breath. It was his one chance, then. Her last words must be his excuse for such precipitation. They had scrambled down through an opening in the cliffs, and there was no one else in sight. Some instinct seemed to tell her what was coming. She tried to talk, but she could not. His hand had closed upon hers, and she had not the strength to draw it away. It was so very English this sudden wooing. No one had ever dared to touch her fingers before without first begging permission.
"Don't you know--Helene--that I love you? I want you to live in England--to be my wife. Don't say that I haven't a chance. I know that I ought not to have spoken yet, but you are going away so soon, and I am so afraid that I might not see you again alone. Don't stop me, please. I am not asking you now for your love. I know that it is too soon--to hope for that--altogether! I only want you to know, and to be allowed to hope."
"You must not. It is impossible."
The words were very low, and they came from her quivering with intense pain. He released her fingers. She leaned upon a huge boulder near and, resting her face upon her hand, gazed dreamily out to sea.
"I am very sorry," she said. "My uncle was right after all. It was not wise for us to meet. I ought to have no friends. It was not wise--it was very, very foolish."
Being a man, his first thoughts had been for himself. But at her words he forgot everything except that she too was unhappy.
"Do you mean," he said slowly, "that you cannot care for me, or that there are difficulties which seem to you to make it impossible?"
She looked up at him, and he scarcely knew her transfigured face, with the tears glistening upon her eyelashes.
"Do not tempt me to say what might make both of us more unhappy," she begged. "Be content to know that I cannot marry you."
"You have promised somebody else?"
"I shall probably marry," she said deliberately, "somebody else."
He ground his heel into the soft sands, and his eyes flashed.
"You are being coerced!" he cried.
She lifted her head proudly.
"There is no person breathing," she said quietly, "who would dare to attempt such a thing!"
Then he looked out with her towards the sea, and they watched the long, rippling waves break upon the brown sands, the faint and unexpected gleam of wintry suns.h.i.+ne lying upon the bosom of the sea, and the screaming seagulls, whose white wings shone like alabaster against the darker clouds. For him these things were no longer beautiful, nor did he see the sunlight, which with a sudden fitfulness had warmed the air. It was all very cold and grey. It was not possible for him to read the riddle yet--she had not said that she could not care for him. There was that hope!
"There is no one," he said slowly, "who could coerce you? You will not marry me, but you will probably marry somebody else. Is it, then, that you care for this other man, and not for me?"
She shook her head.
"Of the two," she said, with a faint attempt at her old manner, "I prefer you. Yet I shall marry him."
Wolfenden became aware of an unexpected sensation. He was getting angry.
"I have a right," he said, resting his hand upon her shoulder, and gaining courage from her evident weakness, "to know more. I have given you my love. At least you owe me in return your confidence. Let me have it. You shall see that even if I may not be your lover, I can at least be your faithful friend."
She touched his hand tenderly. It was scarcely kind of her--certainly not wise. She had taken off her glove, and the touch of her soft, delicate fingers thrilled him. The blood rushed through his veins like mad music. The longing to take her into his arms was almost uncontrollable. Her dark eyes looked upon him very kindly.
"My friend," she said, "I know that you would be faithful. You must not be angry with me. Nay, it is your pity I want. Some day you will know all. Then you will understand. Perhaps even you will be sorry for me, if I am not forgotten. I only wish that I could tell you more; only I may not. It makes me sad to deny you, but I must."
"I mean to know," he said doggedly--"I mean to know everything. You are sacrificing yourself. To talk of marrying a man whom you do not love is absurd. Who are you? If you do not tell me, I shall go to your guardian. I shall go to Mr. Sabin."
"Mr. Sabin is always at your service," said a suave voice almost at his elbow. "Never more so than at the present."
Wolfenden turned round with a start. It was indeed Mr. Sabin who stood there--Mr. Sabin, in unaccustomed guise, clad in a tweed suit and leaning upon an ordinary walking-stick.
"Come," he said good-humouredly, "don't look at me as though I were something uncanny. If you had not been so very absorbed you would have heard me call to you from the cliffs. I wanted to save myself the climb, but you were deaf, both of you. Am I the first man whose footsteps upon the sands have fallen lightly? Now, what is it you want to ask me, Lord Wolfenden?"
Wolfenden was in no way disturbed at the man's coming. On the contrary, he was glad of it. He answered boldly and without hesitation.
"I want to marry your niece, Mr. Sabin," he said.
"Very natural indeed," Mr. Sabin remarked easily. "If I were a young man of your age and evident taste I have not the least doubt but that I should want to marry her myself. I offer you my sincere sympathy. Unfortunately it is impossible."
"I want to know," Wolfenden said, "why it is impossible? I want a reason of some sort."
"You shall have one with pleasure," Mr. Sabin said. "My niece is already betrothed."
"To a man," Wolfenden exclaimed indignantly, "whom she admits that she does not care for!"
"Whom she has nevertheless," Mr. Sabin said firmly, and with a sudden flash of anger in his eyes, "agreed and promised of her own free will to marry. Look here, Lord Wolfenden, I do not desire to quarrel with you. You saved me from a very awkward accident a few nights ago, and I remain your debtor. Be reasonable! My niece has refused your offer. I confirm her refusal. Your proposal does us both much honour, but it is utterly out of the question. That is putting it plainly, is it not? Now, you must choose for yourself--whether you will drop the subject and remain our valued friend, or whether you compel me to ask you to leave us at once, and consider us henceforth as strangers."
The girl laid her hand upon his shoulder and looked at him pleadingly.
"For my sake," she said, "choose to remain our friend, and let this be forgotten."
"For your sake, I consent," he said. "But I give no promise that I will not at some future time reopen the subject."
"You will do so," Mr. Sabin said, "exactly when you desire to close your acquaintance with us. For the rest, you have chosen wisely. Now I am going to take you home, Helene. Afterwards, if Lord Wolfenden will give me a match, I shall be delighted to have a round of golf with him."
"I shall be very pleased," Wolfenden answered.
"I will see you at the Pavilion in half an hour," Mr. Sabin said. "In the meantime, you will please excuse us. I have a few words to say to my niece."
She held out both her hands, looking at him half kindly, half wistfully.
"Goodbye," she said. "I am so sorry!"
But he looked straight into her eyes, and he answered her bravely. He would not admit defeat.
"I hope that you are not," he said. "I shall never regret it."