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"Come along, Vic," said Harry.
"Don't hurry, my dear boy. So you have an estate in France, have you, Mr Pradelle?"
"Yes, sir."
"Humph; so has Harry--at least he will have some day, I suppose. Yes, he is going to get it out of the usurper's hands--usurper is the word, isn't it, Harry?"
Harry gave a kick out with one leg.
"Yes, usurper is the word. He's going to get the estate some day, Mr Pradelle; and then he is going to be a Count. Of course he will have to give up being Mr Van Heldre's clerk then."
"Look here, uncle," cried the young man hotly; "if you will not lend me the money, you needn't insult me before my friend."
"Insult you, my dear boy? Not I. What a peppery fellow you are! Now your aunt will tell you that this is your fine old French aristocratic blood effervescing; but it can't be good for you."
"Come along, Vic," said Harry.
"Oh, of course," said Pradelle. "I'm sorry, though. Fifty pounds isn't much, sir; perhaps you'll think it over."
"Eh? think it over. Of course I shall. Sorry I can't oblige you, gentlemen. Good evening."
"Grinning at us all the time--a miserable old miser!" said Harry, as they began to walk back. "He'd have done it if you hadn't made such a mess of it, Vic, with your free-and-easy way."
"It's precious vexatious, Harry; but take care, or you'll sling that locket out to sea," said Pradelle, after they had been walking for about ten minutes. "You'll have to think about my proposal. You can't go on like this."
"No," said Harry fiercely; "I can't go on like this, and I'll have the money somehow."
"Bravo! That's spoken like a man who means business. Harry, if you keep to that tone, we shall make a huge fortune apiece. How will you get the money?"
"I'll ask Duncan Leslie for it. He can't refuse me. I should like to see him say 'No.' He must and he shall."
"Then have a hundred, dear lad. Don't be content with fifty."
"I will not, you may depend upon that," cried Harry, "and--"
He stopped short, and turned white, then red, and took half-a-dozen strides forward towards where Madelaine Van Heldre was seated upon one of the stone resting-places in a niche in the cliff--the very one where Duncan Leslie had had his unpleasant conversation with Aunt Marguerite.
The presence of his sister's companion, in spite of their being slightly at odds, might have been considered pleasant to Harry Vine; and at any other time it would have been, but in this instance she was bending slightly forward, and listening to Duncan Leslie, who was standing with his back to the young men.
Only a minute before, and Harry Vine had determined that with the power given by Leslie's evident attachment to his sister, he would make that gentleman open his cash-box or write a cheque on the Penzance bank for a hundred pounds.
The scene before him altered Harry Vine's ideas, and sent the blood surging up to his brain.
He stepped right up to Madelaine, giving Leslie a furious glance as that gentleman turned, and without the slightest preface, exclaimed--
"Look here, Madelaine, it's time you were at home. Come along with me."
Madelaine flushed as she rose; and her lips parted as if to speak, but Leslie interposed.
"Excuse me, Miss Van Heldre, I do not think you need reply to such a remark as that."
"Who are you?" roared Harry, bursting into a fit of pa.s.sion that was schoolboy-like in its heat and folly. "Say another word, sir, and I'll pitch you off the cliff into the sea."
"Here, steady, old fellow, steady!" whispered Pradelle; and he laid his hand on his companion's arm.
"You mind your own business, Vic; and as for you--"
He stopped, for he could say no more. Leslie had quite ignored his presence, turning his back and offering his arm to Madelaine.
"Shall I walk home with you, Miss Van Heldre?" he said.
For answer, and without so much as looking at Harry Vine, Madelaine took the offered arm, and Pradelle tightened his hold as the couple walked away.
The grasp was needless, for Harry's rage was evaporating fast, and giving place to a desolate sensation of despair.
"Look here," said Pradelle; "you've kicked that over. You can't ask him now."
"No," said Harry, gazing at the departing figures, and trying to call up something about the fair daughters of France; "no, I can't ask him now."
"Then look here, old fellow, I can't stand by and see you thrown over by everybody like this. You know what your prospects are on your own relative's showing, not mine; and you know what can be done if we have the money. You are not fit for this place, and I say you shall get out of it. Now then, you know how it can be done. Just a loan for a few weeks. Will you, or will you not?" Harry turned upon him a face that was ghastly pale. "But if," he whispered hoa.r.s.ely, "if we should fail?"
"Fail? You shan't fail."
"One hundred," said Harry, hoa.r.s.ely. "Well, I suppose so. We'll make that do. Now then, I'm not going to waste time. Is it yes or no?"
Harry Vine felt a peculiar humming in the head, his mouth was hot and dry, and his lips felt parched. He looked Pradelle in the face, as if pleading to be let off, but there was only a cunning, insistent smile to meet him there, and once more the question came in a sharp whisper,
"Yes or no?"
"Yes," said Harry; and as soon as he had said that word, it was as if a black cloud had gathered about his life.
Volume 1, Chapter XV.
MY AUNT'S BETE NOIRE.
Duncan Leslie was a st.u.r.dy, manly young fellow in his way, but he had arrived at a weak period. He thought over his position, and what life would become had he a wife at home he really loved; and in spite of various displays of reserve, and the sneers, hints, and lastly the plain declaration that Louise was to marry some French gentleman of good family and position, Duncan found himself declaring that his ideas were folly one hour, and the next he was vowing that he would not give up, but that he would win in spite of all the Frenchmen on the face of the earth.
"I must have a walk," he used to say. "If I stop poring over books now, I shall be quite thick-headed to-morrow. A man must study his health."
So Duncan Leslie studied his health, and started off that evening in a different direction to the Vines'; and then, in spite of himself, began to make a curve, one which grew smaller and smaller as he walked thoughtfully on.
"I don't see why I should not call," he said to himself. "There's no harm in that. Wish I had found some curious sea-anemone; I could go and ask the old man what it was--and have her sweet clear eyes reading me through and through. I should feel that I had lowered myself in her sight."
"No," he said, emphatically; "I'll be straightforward and manly over it if I can."
"Hang that old woman! She doesn't like me. There's a peculiarly malicious look in her eyes whenever we meet. Sneering fas.h.i.+on, something like her old brother, only he seems honest and she does not.
I'd give something to know whether Louise cares for that French fellow.
If she doesn't, why should she be condemned to a life of misery? Could I make her any happier?"