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Behind the Throne Part 4

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"Because they are foreigners--eh?"

"Possibly. We are very insular here in Leicesters.h.i.+re, notwithstanding the increasing foreign element in the hunting-field."

George slowly knocked the ashes from his pipe, saying--

"We English hold the foreigner in too great contempt. We are apt to forget that there are other Powers constantly conspiring to undermine our strength and to overthrow our sovereignty. The rural stay-at-home entertains a belief in England's security that is really childish in its simplicity, and if we have not a wise king, a strong Cabinet, and shrewd men in our diplomatic service, the mine must explode some day, depend upon it."

"Ah," laughed the rector, "I suppose it's your parliamentary a.s.sociations that make you talk like that. You told me you sometimes prepare speeches for Morgan-Mason to deliver to his const.i.tuents. Is that one of his texts?"

"No, not exactly," replied the other, with a good-humoured smile. "I only speak what I think. The ignorance of the public regarding foreigners is simply appalling. They are in utter ignorance of the state of advancement of certain foreign nations as compared with our own. We are always slow and conservative, while they are quick to adopt new inventions, new ideas, and new schemes of progress."

"Mostly gingerbread," remarked the rector.

"Argument upon that point is unnecessary," said Macbean, growing serious. "I only emphasise the fact that a foreign family in England is at a far greater disadvantage than an English family on the Continent.

The former is held in suspicion or shunned, while the latter is feted and welcomed. Ah, my dear uncle, society, with all its sins and vices, is full of amazing prejudices."

"But of course there is another side to the question of the Morinis,"

his uncle said. "It got abroad last year that Morini held some very high position in Rome. Young Barton, the schoolmaster at Kilworth, went with one of Lunn's tours to Italy, and when he came back he told an extraordinary story of how the party were being shown the outside of one of the public offices when a gentleman descended from a carriage which drove into the courtyard, and as he entered the sentries saluted. To his surprise he recognised him as Mr Morini, and on inquiry understood from one of the doorkeepers that he was His Excellency the Minister of War. Of course n.o.body believed him. But I've looked in `Whitaker,'

and, strangely enough, it gives Signor Camillo Morini as Minister of War!"

"Ah, my dear uncle," laughed Macbean, "of course regard it as entirely confidential, but what Barton discovered is the truth. Signor Morini is a member of the Italian Cabinet, and one of the most prominent personages in Italy--and they actually believe him _here_ to be an adventurer!" he laughed. "But," he added, "you haven't told me about Dubard."

"I know practically nothing, except that he stayed at Orton for a month last summer, and was very attentive to Mary. And as he's here again this season, the gossips say they are engaged. He is a rich man, I hear, with estates in the Pyrenees."

George Macbean's lip curled slightly, and he gave vent to a distinct sniff of dissatisfaction. He had recognised him as they had pa.s.sed on the highroad, and yet, until his uncle had mentioned the name of Dubard, he had been puzzled as to the man's actual ident.i.ty.

To him, the fact that the Frenchman was guest at Orton, and engaged to the Minister's daughter, was utterly staggering. Yet rumour did not say there was really an engagement--or at least it had not been formally announced.

The young man relit his pipe and smoked on in silence, his brows knit, his mind full of a certain scene of the past--a scene conjured up in his memory by sight of that pale, narrow face with the brown moustache--a scene that caused his hands to clench themselves and his teeth to close together firmly.

"Do tell me what you know about the Frenchman," urged the rector.

"No, thank you, my dear uncle," responded the other. "I know too well these gossiping villages, and I hold the law of slander in too great a dread. The count is all right," he laughed. "A very nice fellow, you said."

His uncle saw that he had no intention of saying a word against the visitor at Orton, and yet at the same time it was apparent that he held him in distinct mistrust. Yet, after all, reflected the rector, it was curious that George had not recognised him at once.

Macbean sat back watching the smoke curl slowly up, plunged in deep reflection. That man of all others was to marry Mary Morini! What a cruel vagary of Fate! Did she really love the fellow? he wondered. Had his elegant airs and graces, his stiff poses, and French effeminacy really attracted her? To him it seemed impossible. She was too sweet and womanly, too modest and full of the higher ideals of life, to allow that veneer of polish to deceive her. It might be, of course, that the marriage was to be one of convenience--that the Minister wished his daughter to become a French countess with an ancient t.i.tle like that of Dubard--yet he could not conceive that she would of her own free will marry such a man.

Evidently His Excellency Camillo Morini was in blind ignorance of the character of his guest, or he would never for a moment entertain him in the bosom of his family.

If they were really engaged, then her future was at stake. He alone knew the truth--that ghastly, amazing truth--and it was therefore his bounden duty to go to her and frankly tell her all that he knew--or better, to seek an interview with the Minister and place the facts before him.

When he had bidden his uncle good-night and mounted to the small old-fas.h.i.+oned bedroom, he blew out the candle and sat at the open window gazing out upon the wide stretch of pasture land white in the moonbeams, reviewing the whole situation and endeavouring to decide upon the best course of action.

Mary Morini had charmed him with her sweet face and piquante cosmopolitan manner, yet at that same moment he had made a discovery that held him dumb in amazement. He recognised that she was in deadly peril--how deadly she little dreamed, and that to save her--to save the honour of her family--he must tell the truth.

He saw before him the tragedy of silence, and yet, alas! his lips were sealed.

To utter one single word of what he knew would be to bring upon himself opprobrium, disgrace, ruin!

CHAPTER FIVE.

IS MAINLY ABOUT A WOMAN.

George Macbean had, after a long, sleepless night, made up his mind.

When he descended to breakfast next morning he announced to his uncle his intention of cycling into Rugby, well knowing that the rector had to give a lesson in religious instruction in the village school, and would therefore not be able to accompany him.

So, in determination to meet the Frenchman face to face, to expose him and thus save Mary, even at risk of his own disgrace, he mounted and rode away down the white, dusty highroad.

Instead of going into Rugby, however, he turned off at Lilbourne, and rode over the road along which they had driven the previous evening, to Orton.

Eleven o'clock was certainly a rather unconventional hour for calling, but as he dismounted at the gates and walked his machine up the long, well-kept drive he had already invented an excuse. As he pa.s.sed the study window he saw within a tall, elderly, grave-faced man in a suit of light grey tweed, and at once recognised that it was His Excellency himself.

In answer to his ring at the door, a young English footman appeared, whereupon he asked--

"Is Count Dubard at home?"

"The count left this morning by the nine o'clock train."

"Left!" echoed Macbean. "And is he not returning?"

"I think not, sir. He took his luggage. But I will inquire if you'll step in a moment."

The man had conducted him across the wide old-fas.h.i.+oned stone hall into a pleasant morning-room which looked out upon the flower-garden and was flooded with suns.h.i.+ne, and after the lapse of a few moments the door reopened and there entered Mary herself, a charming figure in a fresh white blouse and linen skirt.

"Why, Mr Macbean!" she cried, extending her hand gaily. "You are quite an unexpected visitor! Davis says you want to see Count Dubard. He left for Paris this morning."

"And is he not coming back?"

"No, I believe not," was her answer. "He received a letter this morning calling him to Paris at once, and dashed off to try and catch the eleven o'clock service from Charing Cross. He just had time, he said. He was anxious to see you, I think."

"Anxious to see me--why?" asked Macbean quickly.

"Last night he told me that he recognised you as you were driving home with Mr Sinclair, and asked if I knew you. I, of course, told him that you had been playing tennis here. He seemed very eager to see you, and made quite a lot of inquiries about you."

Her companion was silent. The recognition had been mutual, then, and the story of the urgent letter was only an excuse of the Frenchman's to escape from a very ugly and compromising position! His flight showed Macbean that the fellow was in fear of him, and yet he had fortunately avoided a scene between them, and a result which, in all probability, might have caused his own ruin.

He looked at the bright, sweet-faced woman before him, and wondered-- wondered how she could allow her affection to be attracted towards such a fellow. And yet what an admirable actor the man was! She was, alas!

in ignorance of it all.

How could he tell her? To explain, would only be to condemn himself.

No. He resolved that for the present he must conceal his secret--for his own sake. Nevertheless how strange it was, he thought, that he should thus suddenly be drawn so closely towards her. Yesterday she was a mere acquaintance of the tea-table and the tennis-lawn, like dozens of other girls he knew, while to-day he was there as her friend and protector, the man who intended to save her and her family from the ingenious trap that he now saw was already prepared.

"I'm sorry he's gone," he remarked in a tone of regret, adding, "I knew him long ago, and only after we had pa.s.sed, my uncle told me that he was a guest here."

"He too said he wanted very much to see you," she remarked brightly.

"But you'll meet again very soon, no doubt. I shall tell him of your inquiries when I write, for he spoke of you in the warmest terms. I did not know your address in London, so I gave him Mr Sinclair's. I'm so sorry he's gone," she added. "We were to have all gone for a picnic to-day over to Kenilworth."

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