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"Do you really want to hear my views on your conduct?" he said.
"No, thanks. The discussion might prove interesting, but we can adjourn it to the coffee and cigar period after dinner."
His eyes fell under Spencer's contemptuous glance. Yet he carried himself bravely. Though the man he meant to kill, and another man who had read his inmost thought in time to prevent a tragedy, were looking at him fixedly, he turned away with a laugh on his lips.
"I am afraid, Miss Wynton, you will regard me in future as a broken reed where Alpine excursions are concerned," he said.
"You were mistaken--that is obvious," said Helen frankly. "But so was Barth. He agreed that the storm would be only a pa.s.sing affair. Don't you think we are very deeply indebted to Mr. Spencer and Stampa for coming to our a.s.sistance?"
"I do, indeed. Stampa, one can reward in kind. This sort of thing used to be his business, I hear. As for Mr. Spencer, a smile from you will repay him tenfold."
"Herr Spencer," broke in Stampa, "you go on with the _signorina_ and see that she does not slip. She is tired. Marcus Bauer and I have matters to discuss."
The old man's unwonted harshness appealed to the girl as did the host of other queer happenings on that memorable day. Bower moved uneasily.
A vindictive gleam shot from his eyes. Helen missed none of this. But she was fatigued, and her feet were cold and wet, while the sleet encountered on the upper glacier had almost soaked her to the skin.
Nevertheless, she strove bravely to lighten the cloud that seemed to have settled on the men.
"That means a wordy warfare," she said gayly. "I pity you, Mr. Bower.
You cannot wriggle out of your difficulty. The snow will soon be a foot deep in the valley. Goodness only knows what would have become of us up there in the hut!"
He bowed gracefully, with a hint of the foreign air she had noted once before. "I would have brought you safely out of greater perils," he said; "but every dog has his day, and this is Stampa's."
"_En route!_" cried the guide impatiently. He loathed the sight of Bower standing there, smiling and courteous, in the presence of one whom he regarded as a Heaven-sent friend and protectress. Spencer attributed his surliness to its true cause. It supplied another bit of the mosaic he was slowly piecing together. Greatly as he preferred Helen's company, he was willing to sacrifice at least ten minutes of it, could he but listen to the "discussion" between Stampa and Bower.
Therein he would have erred greatly. Helen was tired, and she admitted it. She did not decline his aid when the path was steep and slippery.
In delightful s.n.a.t.c.hes of talk they managed to say a good deal to each other, and Helen did not fail to make plain the exact circ.u.mstances under which she first caught sight of Spencer outside the hut. When they arrived at the carriage road, which begins at Lake Cavloccio, they could walk side by side and chat freely. Here, in the valley, matters were normal. The snow did not place such a veil on all things.
The windings of the road often brought them abreast of the four men in the rear. Bower was trudging along alone, holding his head down, and seemingly lost in thought.
Close behind him came Stampa and the Engadiners. Karl, of course, was talking--the others might or might not be lending their ears to his interminable gossip.
"We are outstripping our companions. Don't you think we ought to wait for them?" said Helen once, when Bower chanced to look her way.
"No," said Spencer.
"You are exceedingly positive."
"I tried to be exceedingly negative."
"But why?"
"I rather fancy that they would jar on us."
"But Stampa's promised lecture appears to have ended?"
"I think it never began. It is a safe bet that Mr. Bower and he have not exchanged a word since our last halt."
Helen laughed. "A genuine case of Greek meeting Greek," she said.
"Stampa is an excellent guide, I am sure; but Mr. Bower does really know these mountains. I suppose anyone is liable to err in forecasting Alpine weather."
"That is nothing. If it were you or I, Stampa would dismiss the point with a grin. You heard how he chaffed Barth, yet trusted him with the lead? No. These two have an old feud to settle. You will hear more of it."
"A feud! Mr. Bower declared to me that Stampa was absolutely unknown to him."
"It isn't necessary to know a man before you hate him. I can give you a heap of historic examples. For instance, who has a good word to say for Ananias?"
The girl understood that he meant to parry her question with a quip.
The cross purposes so much in evidence all day were baffling and mysterious to its close.
"My own opinion is that both you and Stampa have taken an unreasonable dislike to Mr. Bower," she said determinedly. The words were out before she quite realized their import. She flushed a little.
Spencer was gazing down into the gorge of the Orlegna. The brawling torrent chimed with his own mood; but his set face gave no token of the storm within. He only said quietly, "How good it must be to have you as a friend!"
"I have no reason to feel other than friendly to Mr. Bower," she protested hotly. "It was the rarest good fortune for me that he came to Maloja. I met him once in London, and a second time, by accident, during my journey to Switzerland. Yet, widely known as he is in society, he was sufficiently large minded to disregard the sneers and innuendoes of some of those horrid women in the hotel. He has gone out of his way to show me every kindness. Why should I not repay it by speaking well of him?"
"I shall lay my head on the nearest tree stump, and you can smite me with your ax, good and hard," said Spencer.
She laughed angrily. "I don't know what evil influence is possessing us," she cried. "Everything is awry. Even the sun refuses to s.h.i.+ne.
Here am I storming at one to whom I owe my life----"
"No," he broke in decisively. "Don't put it that way, because the whole credit of the relief expedition is due to Stampa. Say, Miss Wynton, may I square my small services by asking a favor?"
"Oh, yes, indeed."
"Well, then, if it lies in your power, keep Stampa and Bower apart. In any event, don't intervene in their quarrel."
"So you are quite serious in your belief that there is a quarrel?"
The American saw again in his mind's eye the scene in the creva.s.se when Bower had raised his ax to strike. "Quite serious," he replied, and the gravity in his voice was so marked that Helen placed a contrite hand on his arm for an instant.
"Please, I am sorry if I was rude to you just now," she said. "I have had a long day, and my nerves are worn to a fine edge. I used to flatter myself that I hadn't any nerves; but they have come to the surface here. It must be the thin air."
"Then it is a bad place for an American."
"Ah, that reminds me of something I had forgotten. I meant to ask you how you came to remain in the Maloja. Is that too inquisitive on my part? I can account for the presence of the other Americans in the hotel. They belong to the Paris colony, and are interested in tennis and golf. I have not seen you playing either game. In fact, you moon about in solitary grandeur, like myself. And--oh, dear! what a string of questions!--is it true that you wanted to play baccarat with Mr.
Bower for a thousand pounds?"
"It is true that I agreed to share a bank with Mr. Dunston, and the figure you mention was suggested; but I backed out of the proposition."
"Why?"
"Because your friend, Mr. Hare, thought he was responsible, in a sense, having introduced me to Dunston; so I let up on the idea,--just to stop him from feeling bad about it."
"You really meant to play in the first instance?"
"Yes."
"Well, it was very wicked of you. Only the other day you were telling me how hard you had to work before you saved your first thousand pounds."
"From that point of view my conduct was idiotic. But I would like to carry the story a little further, Miss Wynton. I was in a mood that night to oppose Mr. Bower for a much more valuable stake if the chance offered."