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"I hope, in this instance," said Brett gravely, "that the Jolies Femmes is the name of a hotel."
"But certainly," replied the porter, elevating his eyebrows; "what else could it be?"
He meditated on this question for five minutes after Brett's departure, and then an idea struck him.
"Ah," he cried, slapping his thigh with a grin, "he is a droll dog, that Englishman."
Brett, secure in the knowledge that his quarry had been located, drove back to his hostelry. He found Edith, Fairholme, and Talbot just sitting down to breakfast. He joined them, and had barely communicated his startling intelligence when Sir Hubert Fitzjames put in an appearance.
"Dear me," said the genial old soldier, smiling pleasantly at the a.s.sembled party. "I see you are all nearly as lazy as I have been myself. I hope you slept well, and enjoyed a quiet night."
The burst of merriment which greeted this remark not only amazed the worthy baronet, but startled the other guests in the dining-room.
"That is a strange thing," whispered a Frenchman to his wife. "I thought the English never laughed!"
CHAPTER XVII
THE YACHT "BLUE-BELL"
After breakfast the party adjourned to their sitting-room, and there Brett detailed his immediate plan of action.
"The first point to determine is an important one," he said. "Which of you three--Sir Hubert Fitzjames, Talbot, or Fairholme--looks most like a Frenchman?"
The trio at once began to scrutinize each other carefully, to Edith's intense amus.e.m.e.nt.
"I am afraid, uncle," she laughed, "we must rule you out at once. You have 'British Major-General, late Indian Army' stamped so plainly on you that here in Ma.r.s.eilles, a port accustomed to the weekly transit of P.
and O. pa.s.sengers, the smallest child could not fail to identify you.
And as for you, Bobby! Good gracious! You are painfully Anglo-Saxon. I am afraid, Jack, that we must decide against you. That is to say, I suppose it hurts your vanity to be taken for a Frenchman; but you must not forget that Mademoiselle Beaucaire thought you were good-looking, and I suppose she adopts Parisian standards."
Jack was amused by his sister's raillery.
"It is gratifying to find," he said, "that there are some handsome Frenchmen. But may I ask, Brett, why you wish one of us to haul down the British flag?"
"Because it is necessary that someone should keep a close eye on Gros Jean and the Turks. As a matter of fact, Miss Talbot is doubly right.
Sir Hubert Fitzjames might possibly be made up to represent _un vieux moustache_, but it is essential that he should speak French well."
"Then," cried Sir Hubert decisively, "I am out of court, because my French is weak, and I always want to go off into Hindustani whenever I open my mouth. Why, even this morning, when I rang for my hot water, I said to the waiter, '_Gurrum pani lao_.' I am sure he thought I was swearing at him."
"Very well," concurred the barrister, "it comes back to you, Talbot, and I regret to inform you that for the next few hours you must be content with the inferior cooking and accommodation of the Jolies Femmes Hotel.
If you will come out with me now I will get you rigged up in a cheap French suit. That, and a supply of bad cigarettes, will provide a sufficient disguise for your purpose. You must pack a few belongings in a green tin box and betake yourself to the Jolies Femmes. Do not make any inquiries about Gros Jean. Simply watch him."
"But what about the Turks?" said Talbot. "Perhaps two of these scoundrels may be the identical pair who accompanied Dubois to Albert Gate. It is possible that they may recognize me at once."
"No," said Brett decisively. "This is a different gang. The two men who committed the murders never came to Paris. Dubois would not hear of it, I am certain. If you act with discretion, I am sure they will never suspect you."
"Can't you find me a job?" demanded Fairholme.
"Yes, a most pleasant one. It will be your duty to accompany Miss Talbot and Sir Hubert, and show them the sights of Ma.r.s.eilles. I will meet you here at luncheon, but we probably cannot see Mr. Talbot again until late to-night, when he will have an opportunity to come here quietly and detail the results of his observations. Of course," he added, addressing the young man directly, "if anything important happens during the day you know where to find me, either personally or by messenger."
It was natural that Edith's first steps with her lover and uncle would tend towards the scene of her overnight adventure. But Miss Talbot was a clearheaded girl and took no risks. She knew well that in a chance encounter the sharp eyes of Marie and Eugenie might pick her out unless she was to some extent shrouded from observation. So she donned a large Paris hat and a smart costume, which, with the addition of a thick veil, rendered her very unlike the girl who twelve hours earlier was pursuing a recalcitrant lover.
Secure in the changed appearance effected by these garments, and especially in the escort of two such English-looking persons as Lord Fairholme and Sir Hubert Fitzjames, she walked with them down the Cannebiere and on the quay. She showed them the street up which she pursued Mlle. Beaucaire, and the point on the wharf whence the fis.h.i.+ng smack took her departure into the unknown.
Then they strolled back around the harbour, still pursuing the track of Edith's midnight wanderings, when Fairholme suddenly whistled with amazement.
"By Jove, look there!" he cried. "That's a piece of luck."
He pointed to the upper part of the basin, in which a number of smart yachts were anch.o.r.ed side by side. Ma.r.s.eilles is a natural point of departure for Mediterranean tours, and many yacht-owners send their vessels there to be coaled and stored for projected trips.
"What is it?" queried Edith, when she could see nothing in the locality indicated save the vessels and the small expanse of water dancing in the rays of a bright sun.
"The very best thing that could have happened. There is Daubeney's yacht, the _Blue-Bell_."
"Yes. So I see. It would be charming if we had time to go for a run along the Riviera, but I am afraid, whilst Mr. Brett controls our energies, amus.e.m.e.nt of that sort will be out of our reach."
"Not a bit of it. You do not see my point, Edith. Daubeney is a first-rate chap, and a thorough sportsman. Suppose it becomes necessary for us to follow up Dubois and his fis.h.i.+ng-smack, and we let Daubeney into the know. The _Blue-Bell_ would pursue the _Belles Soeurs_ to China. He would ask no better fun. I tell you that Brett will be delighted when he hears of it."
"Yes, dear, but we do not even know that Mr. Daubeney is in Ma.r.s.eilles."
"Let us go and see. It doesn't matter a pin anyhow, because a telegram from me to him would place the yacht at our disposal, and he would join us by express at the first possible stopping-place. You do not know what a good chap Daubeney is."
"No," said Edith shortly. "He is evidently a most useful acquaintance."
It is a most curious fact that young ladies in the engaged stage regard their _fiance's_ male friends with extreme suspicion; the more enthusiastic the man, the more suspicious the woman.
Fairholme, sublimely unconscious of this feminine weakness, continued to dilate upon the superlative excellences of Daubeney until they reached the yacht itself.
A smartly-attired sailor was pretending to find some work in carefully uncoiling a rope which did not satisfy his critical eye. Before Fairholme could hail the man, a rotund form, encased in many yards of blue serge, surmounted by a jolly-looking face on top of which was perched an absurdly small yachting cap, emerged from the companion.
"Why, there he is," shouted the earl. "Halloa, Daubeney! Yoicks!
Tally-ho!"
The person addressed in this startling manner stopped as though he had been shot. He gazed at the sky and then gravely surveyed the gilded statue that surmounts the picturesque church of Notre Dame de la Garde.
"Here I am, you idiot," continued Fairholme. "I am not in a balloon. I am on the quay. Come here quick. I want to introduce you to Edith and Sir Hubert."
Luckily Miss Talbot's dark doubts had vanished after one keen glance at Daubeney. He was eminently a safe friend for her future husband. Such a fat and hail-fellow-well-met individual could not possibly harbour guile. So she pa.s.sed over without reference the extent of Daubeney's acquaintance concerning herself, implied by the use of her Christian name. Indeed, was there not a compliment in Fairholme's unconscious outspokenness? If he only discussed her charms with Daubeney then Daubeney was a man to be cultivated.
The meeting on the quay was hearty in the extreme, and the Honourable James Daubeney further ingratiated himself by saying: "Even if Lord Fairholme had not told me who you were, Miss Talbot, I should have known you at once."
"That would be very clever of you," purred Edith.
"Oh, no, there is nothing remarkable in the fact, I a.s.sure you. He always sat in his chambers so that he could look at your photograph, and as, in addition to that speaking likeness, I know the colour of your hair, your eyes, your teeth even, I could not be mistaken."
Miss Talbot thought Mr. Daubeney rather curious. But still he was very nice, and unquestionably the services of the _Blue-Bell_ might be more than useful.